Private William Beattie and his brothers
Photographs of Pt William Beattie and his sweetheart Madge; document showing grave of Pt Beattie
Private Willian Beattie died 1917 at Ypres. Member 77 Field Ambulance, R.A.M.C. His brothers James and Georga also signed up. His brothers survived. Each brother is understood to have served at the Somme. Submitted also with the photo of Private William Beattie is a photo of his girlfriend Madge. She sent a photo of herself (or gave a photo of herself) to William Beattie. He cut the photo down to fit his breast tunic pocket. The pocket was retrieved from his body and was returned with his personal effects. Agnes Beattie (married name Kennedy) is a niece of private William Beattie. Her family believe that the photo was bloodstained on its return. Private William Beattie is buried at Reninghelst New Military Cemetary Poperinge, West-Flanders, Belgium, 9.5 kilometres of ieper Town Centre
CONTRIBUTOR
Brendan Gogarty and Agnes Kennedy (nee Beattie)
DATE
1917-07
LANGUAGE
eng
ITEMS
5
INSTITUTION
Europeana 1914-1918
PROGRESS
METADATA
Discover Similar Stories
Ernie Blake and his two brothers
3 Items
The interview was conducted by Age Exchange in partnership with The University of Essex and The First World War Centre –University of Hertfordshire –as part of the Children of The Great War project. John Blake came to talk about his father Ernie. Sapper Ernie never talked about the war but John knows he served in 3 Regiments in Essex, Cambridge and the Kings Royal Rifles. He was at the Battle of the Somme and lost an eye during the war but John doesn’t know where. He was honourably discharged in 1918.He worked in Wivenhoe Shipyards before the war and volunteered from there. He had two brothers Reg and Bert and they all worked together at Wivenhoe. Working in the shipyards meant you were exempt from military service. But the three of them volunteered despite the fact that many men went to work in the shipyards to escape conscription. Luckily all three survived. After the war there was no job at Wivenhoe, which was not unusual for returning servicemen, so he ended up working on sea defenses at Blakeney in Norfolk. He was a very home loving man and rarely travelled far. John felt this was probably a legacy of the war. John brought in various pieces of documentation about Ernie’s army career including discharge certificates and pay book etc. Interesting there were certificates that showed how Ernie went back to a hospital in Ipswich where they upgraded Ernie’s glass eye to match the colour of his ‘good’ eye. A joint project between Age Exchange, the University of Essex and the Everyday Lives in War FWW Engagement Centre, University of Herts. For further information, please contact Everyday Lives in War, https://everydaylivesinwar.herts.ac.uk/ || || Ernie Blake, who lost an eye || Ernie Blake || Photograph || || Ernie Blake || Official document || Honourable Discharge Certificate of Ernie Blake || || Certificate re: eye injury of Ernie Blake || Official document || Ernie Blake
Photograph of George and his brothers
1 Item
Torn photograph (upper part only). Formal shot of three young men posing in civilian clothes. George is in the middle between his brothers. || Front