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Lieutenant Colonel John Hennessy

Born on the 5th Feb 1867 in Inniscarra, Cork, Ireland to Daniel Hennessy and Julia Callaghan. He married Mary Teresa O'Flynn, on 26 Septh 1893 daughter of Edmond O'Flynn of E & P O'Flynn Builders of Cork City. In 1890 to 1895 he attended Queens College Cork and qualified MB B Ch BAO of the Old Royal University of Ireland. From 1899 to 1902 he was part of The Boar War in South Africa and was awarded Queens Medal with 3 clasps and the Kings Medal with 2 clasps. In 1914 he was part of the Mesopotamian Expedition in India until 1918 He served A.D.M.S (Assistant Director of Medical Services). In 1915 he was awarded C.B. The Most Honourable Order of the Bath, C.B. (Military) Companions neck badge conversion from a breast badge, silver-gilt and enamel; On 29 April 1916 as part of the Siege of Kut Al Amara he was captured by the Turks when Kut fell and put in prison. In Nov of that year he was freed as part of a prisoner swap. In 1919 he was awarded C.M.G. The Most Distinguished Order of St. Michael and St. George, C.M.G., Companions neck badge, silver-gilt, gold and enamel. He retired in 1921 from the RAMC and returned to Cork. Was one of the first directors of Mallow race Course Company. Loved the Turf. He was also a Irish champion walker. He died on 13 May 1954 and is buried in St Finbarrs Cemetery in Cork, Ireland. Exact Military History: 7351' John Hennessy. S. Lt. 30 Jan. 1892. S. Capt. 30 Jan. 1895. R.A.M.C. Capt. 30 Jan. 1895. Maj. 30 Jan. 1904. Lt. Col. 7 July 1914. South Africa 1899-1902. Great War of 1914-. C.B.
Death notice and history - newspaper clipping

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Death Notice with history
Cork, Ireland

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Richard O'Flynn

DATE

-

LANGUAGE

eng

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1

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Europeana 1914-1918

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Creator

Richard O'Flynn

Source

UGC

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europeana19141918:agent/e6d21c6de251f946ee73b5befbc8012a

Type

Story

Language

eng
English

Country

Europe

DataProvider

Europeana 1914-1918

Provider

Europeana 1914-1918

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2020601_Ag_ErsterWeltkrieg_EU

Language

mul

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Lieutenant Colonel John Hennessy | europeana19141918:agent/86546ceecc639e07e726e2876637421f
Richard O'Flynn | europeana19141918:agent/e6d21c6de251f946ee73b5befbc8012a

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2019-09-11T08:15:19.046Z
2020-02-25T08:14:02.760Z
2014-04-10 11:10:10 UTC
1954-05-14
2014-04-10 11:12:26 UTC

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INTERNET

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/2020601/https___1914_1918_europeana_eu_contributions_14958

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Photo 1: John Hinde on a 30 Bobber. The picture was taken at Shipton Under Wychwood in 1919. The horse named The Boy was a New Zealand bred Hackney. Photo 2: A portrait Photo 3: The Battery at Fargo Camp, Larkhill in 1915. John is 3rd row down and 9th in from left. Photo 4: A photo of gun team going to war, at Fargo Camp, Larkhill. John is on the last horse, an officer's charger Trench map of the Somme: Germans in red, Allies in blue. One of several trench maps belonging to John. || This story was submitted by Hugh Hinde, concerning his father John Egerton Berthon Hinde who was born on 3 February 1896. He enlisted in 1914 as a private in the Inns of Court Regiment (The Devil's Own). He was later commissioned as a 2nd Lieutenant in the Royal Field Artillery. He joined D Battery, 91st Brigade RFA, 20th (Light) Division and was wounded in 1918. Hugh recounts that towards the end of the war, his father had been wearing a Pickelhauber (picked up by someone as a souvenir) and a shrapnel burst blew it apart on his head fracturing his skull. His own helmet was elsewhere and he had put on the one that was handed to him - this was just as well because he would otherwise have been more badly injured. John used to get quite emotional about the war. He was in the mounted unit and so many horses were killed. Hugh says the war destroyed a lot of horses. At the end of the war, officers were entitled to buy horses from Remount Depots for £1.50, called the 30 Bobbers. John's horse named The Boy was a New Zealand bred Hackney.

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