The Diplock family and the Great War; from south London to the Somme | and the mystery of John
In the interview attached here, Kathleen Betts and family shine some light on her cousin John Diplock - a teenaged soldier who died before Kathleen was born. Mystery may have been created by the family's reluctance to divulge details about John; but the digital age has proved powerful in uncovering his elusive story. Conversely, Kathleen tells the stories of her father David's war, who relayed his experiences more openly during his lifetime.Contributed via Age Exchange (http://www.age-exchange.org.uk) as part of the Children of the Great War project (http://www.childrenofthegreatwar.org.uk) at a collection day at the Greenwich and Bexley Community Hospice, Kent, UK. To see all material contributed by Age Exchange, or to see more contributions from this collection day, follow the links at http://www.childrenofthegreatwar.org.uk/archive.html - For further information email: greatwar@age-exchange.org.uk
Interview
John and David Diplock
Transcript of interview with Kathleen Betts
CONTRIBUTOR
Kathleen Betts
DATE
-
LANGUAGE
eng
ITEMS
6
INSTITUTION
Europeana 1914-1918
PROGRESS
METADATA
Discover Similar Stories
The Davies and the Great War
6 Items
Lyndhurst road in Peckham, 1915 || || The family at Uncle Billy's grave || Photograph || || Interview || Interview with Kathleen davies
My Father and the Battle of the Somme
3 Items
Photograph of Lieut. Leslie Gordon Lee, MC, MA (Oxon) || This story is about my father Leslie Gordon Lee. In November 1914 he was living in Cowley in Oxford and studying Classics at Jesus College; he was 22 years old (he took his war B.A. in 1916). He was commissioned in November 1914 as a lieutenant in the 9th Yorks (Service) Battalion, stationed at Folkestone and Maidstone in Kent in February 1915 and landing at Boulogne in August 1915. On 5th July 1916, he fought in the assault and capture of Horseshoe Trench at the Battle of the Somme and on 10th July 1916 his brigade took part in the Battle of Contalmaison, to capture a heavily defended position known as 'Bailiff Wood'. He was shot in the head and evacuated via Rouen to the hospital ship 'St Andrew' and from there to the Queen Alexandra Military Hospital in London. He was awarded the Military Cross in January 1917 and in February 1917 was appointed to the Contracts Department in the Ministry of Munitions. After the war, he became a senior civil servant in the Ministry of Labour but suffered from very poor health (and had to have many examinations and health checks). He died in 1936 of tuberculosis as a result of the chlorine gas he had breathed in during the war. || || Photograph || A portrait photograph of my father, Leslie Gordon Lee, in the uniform of the 9th Yorks.(Service) Battalion. || Leslie Gordon Lee || A photograph of my father, Leslie Gordon Lee || || Leslie Gordon Lee || Trench Life || Other