Transcribe

Diary of John Henry Fisher

Diary of John Henry Fisher. Photographs of John Henry Fisher and his wife.
John Henry Fisher was conscripted at the age of 37 to the 13th Infantry Labour Corps of the Lincolnshire Regiment. He was married with two children, Jack and Gladys and was employed as a clerk at Tetley's Brewery in Leeds. Within two weeks of being called up in March 1917 he was in France working behind the Front Line in the Arras area. His job was to ensure equipment and resources got to the soldiers who were fighting on the Front Line. This included loading shells in to cases which were then loaded on to wagons to be taken to the Front Line, and then unloading the wagons on their return. He was engaged in much dangerous work including the testing of gas masks. Whilst working here he witnessed the Canadians taking Vimy Ridge and saw German prisoners being marched back through his village. In September 1917 he was moved to the Ypres area of Flanders and was now attached to the Royal Artillery Garrison. Work continued to supply the Front Line with equipment under the constant shelling from Fritz. He also worked on digging trenches, laying barbed wire, concreting dug outs, clearing the Menin Road and working on the light railway at Sanctuary Wood. He had some narrow escapes and was invalided twice to hospital: once with dysentery and secondly with an injured hand which resulted in him being sent back home on sick leave. Even on Armistice Day he was out working building a railway bridge and dangerous work continued digging up mines the Germans had laid under the railway lines during their retreat. The men who served in the Labour Corps did essential logistic work during the war and yet are very much overlooked and forgotten. They served unarmed and frequently within the range of the German guns undertaking a wide range of menial, hard and dangerous tasks. They experienced the same sights and sounds of the fighting soldiers and I believe it is important to tell the stories of their experiences so we may appreciate the ehind the scenes activities during the Great War and give these men the recognition and thanks they so rightly deserve. John Henry Fisher survived the war and died peacefully at home at the age of 77. John Henry Fisher was my Great GrandFather. I was always led to believe that no one in my family had fought in World War 1 and yet this diary reveals that although he did not fight he was certainly there and very much involved in the hell of Flanders of 1917 - 1918.

Photograph
Photograph of John Henry Fisher
Photograph of John Henry Fisher and his wife.
Diary
Trench Life
Following 54 images comprise the diary kept by John Henry Fisher
John Henry Fisher

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CONTRIBUTOR

Jeanette Payne

DATE

1917-03 - 1918-12

LANGUAGE

eng

ITEMS

56

INSTITUTION

Europeana 1914-1918

PROGRESS

START DATE
TRANSCRIBERS
CHARACTERS
LOCATIONS
ENRICHMENTS

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METADATA

Source

UGC
Photograph
Book

Contributor

europeana19141918:agent/779f06607ca5e90d5c412b7222911319

Date

1917-03
1918-12

Type

Story

Language

eng
English

Country

Europe

DataProvider

Europeana 1914-1918

Provider

Europeana 1914-1918

DatasetName

2020601_Ag_ErsterWeltkrieg_EU

Begin

1917-03

End

1918-12

Language

mul

Agent

Jeanette Payne | europeana19141918:agent/779f06607ca5e90d5c412b7222911319
John Henry Fisher | europeana19141918:agent/8266395432bd88526147192e4912b596

Created

2019-09-11T08:05:07.631Z
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Provenance

BL01

Record ID

/2020601/https___1914_1918_europeana_eu_contributions_17098

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The WWI Diary of William Henry Finch

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19017---PTE. W.H. FINCH G.GDS The front inside cover has a small pocket inside which was a theatre ticket for 11th November---could this be from the first Veterans’ Day? Transcript of the diary: Battle on Hill 70 ; Damned hot ; Festubert just warm ; Grambell dead given up all hope of hearing from him ; Dernier ans Last year ; Augustine Dutoit Marie Charles 66 Norman St N Cotmanhay 1 Chester Derby _______________________________________________________ 14 September 1914 – enlisted in the Grenadier Guards ; 15 – Guards depot Caterham Surrey ; 22 November – Chelsea ; 23 November – Met M & H ; 28 February 1915 – Met L.J. ; 6 March – Croydon ; Drawing of the bay at Le Harve where William entered France ; 16 April – Béthane Below is a photo postcard of the destruction there ; Smoldering Bethane, ignited by Bosche guns to vent their spite for their costly defeat at Festubert'. ; 18 April – Givenchy ; 11 May – Lacoutre ; 16 May – Festubert ; 18 May – Wounded in Arm ; 19 May – Beuvry ; 20 May – Letters unsure of handwriting ; 21st May – Rouen ; 1st June – Cardiff ; 15th June – Penarth ; July – Marlow ; 15th August - Le Harve ; 17th August – St Omer Photo below shows men marching to St Omer ; 17th August – Blendecques ; 17th August – Wizernes ; 17th August – Arques ; September - Ecques, Lambres, Aines ; 25th September – Loos ; 25th September – Hill 70 ; 26th September – Poor Yell Killed This is the first of many deaths William reports in his diary ; 29th September – Grenay ; 3rd October – Trenches again ; 4 October – Hulluch ; 6 October – Vermelles ; 7 October – Hulluch ; 8 October – Vermelles ; 10 October – Sailly ; 12 October – Hulluch ; 13 October - Sailly-Labourse ; 14 October – La Bourse ; 15 October – Hulluch alley ; 16 October – La Bourse ; 17 October – La Bourse ; 18 October – La Bourse ; 19 October – Vermelles ; 20 October – Vermelles ; 21 October - Annequin ; 22 October – Annequin near Cambrin ; The below map illustrates areas where William’s regiment fought in the autumn of 1915 as described in his diary ; 23 October – North of Vermelles ; 24 October – Near Hohenzollen Redoute unsure of this transcription from the diary, cannot find on any maps ; 25 October – Near Hohenzollen Redoute ; 26 October – Allouagne ; 27 October – Allouagne ; 28 October – Allouagne ; 29 October – Allouagne ; 30 October – Lozinghem ; 31 October – Allouagne ; 1 November – Allouagne ; 2 November – Allouagne ; 3 November – Burbure ; 4 November – Burbure ; 5 November – Allouagne ; 6 November – Allouagne ; 7 November – Allouagne ; 8 November – Allouagne ; 9 November – Merville ; 10 November – Merville ; 11 November – Merville ; 12 November – Merville ; 13 November – Laventie ; 14 November – Laventie ; 15 November – Laventie ; 16 November – Laventie ; 17 November – Out of trenches ; 18 November – La Gorgue ; 19 November – La Gorgue ; 20-25 November – between Laventie and Epinette ; 26 November – Merville || This is the diary of W.H. Finch from WWI including a full scan of the diary with additional photographs and information || || Front || Diary || A full & complete transcript with images of this war diary. Wherever possible, information was added, such as reports, internet articles, maps, photos help illustrate his diary || William Finch's WWI Diary || English || William FInch

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