Transcribe

11626 Pte Ernest Edward Fitchett - S W B

Ernie was born on 6th February 1898 at Langford in the County of Berkshire, the ninth child and third son of Harry and Polly (Hacker) Fitchett. His father was a farm labourer who moved around Berkshire, Wiltshire and Gloucestershire with his work, and Ernie's ten siblings were born around these counties. At the English 1911 census Ernie is shown as a 13 year old farm labourer, living at Coleshill in Berkshire with his parents and four of his siblings. One of his older sisters moved away to Brecon in South Wales and Ernie must have been on holiday with her and her family in 1914 as he enlisted in the South Wales Borderers in August or September 1914 at Brecon. No enlistment papers have survived but the SWB Museum records confirm this. Ernie was, of course, under age at this time. His Medal Index Card indicates that he was sent to France on 26th January 1915, but this is actually when he was sent back to the front, as we have a letter from him to his sister, Millicent, or Cissie as she was known, from hospital in Edinburgh where he was recovering from wounds, Cissie received this letter on 7th December 1914. He then sent a postcard to Cissie on 12th February 1915 to say that he was back at the front but not yet at the 'firing line' as he described it. We have several other letters, some just asking for 'fags' (cigarettes) but others describing what he and his mates had gone through. He was taken into the 2nd Stationary Hospital on 24th November 1915 with a bad gun shot wound to his left thigh and we have several letters to his sister from the Army Nursing Sister and the Chaplain, as Ernie develops gangrene, has his leg amputated but to no avail and he dies on 1st December. He was buried at Abbeyville Cemetery. The Medal Index Card shows Ernie's entitlement to the 1914/15 Star, the British and the Victory Medals, but his December 1914 letter indicates that he may have been entitled to the 1914 Star. His Medals are believed to have been split among the family, but we do have his 'Death Penny' and Cap Badge. He was initially commemorated on the War Memorial at Coleshill, but as the family had moved away when this was raised, Ernie is noted as having served with the Royal Field Artillery, but subsequent to our research, he is now properly commemorated there, showing that he gave his life in the South Wales Borderers Regiment.
Story and photographs

Photograph
11626 Pte Ernie E Fitchett
Photo of Private Ernie Fitchett in uniform
11626 Pte Ernie Fitchett
Photo of Ernie's original grave in Abbeyville
Original grave of Pte E E Fitchett at Abbeyville
Abbeyville Cemetery, France & Flanders
Pte Ernie Fitchett, original grave and cross
Ernie Fitchett with mates from the SWB
Somewhere in France and Flanders
Ernie Fitchett and his mates behind the lines
Photo of Ernie Fitchett behind the lines with his mates (Ernie seated right, looking years younger that his mates)
Young soldier
Photo - Ernie Fitchett

Show More
 
 
 
 

CONTRIBUTOR

Alex McGahey

DATE

1898-02-06 - 1915-12-01

LANGUAGE

eng

ITEMS

4

INSTITUTION

Europeana 1914-1918

PROGRESS

START DATE
TRANSCRIBERS
CHARACTERS
LOCATIONS
ENRICHMENTS

Generating story statistics and calculating story completion status!

METADATA

Source

UGC
Photograph

Contributor

europeana19141918:agent/ec79b9d72a6d2579514c8d0af07fcba1

Date

1915-12-01
1898-02-06

Type

Story

Language

eng
English

Country

Europe

DataProvider

Europeana 1914-1918

Provider

Europeana 1914-1918

DatasetName

2020601_Ag_ErsterWeltkrieg_EU

Begin

1898-02-06

End

1915-12-01

Language

mul

Agent

Alex McGahey | europeana19141918:agent/ec79b9d72a6d2579514c8d0af07fcba1
Ernie (Ernest Edward) Fitchett | europeana19141918:agent/f9b34e24aa81f0ea659831eb25ddad83

Created

2019-09-11T08:28:31.416Z
2020-02-25T08:37:51.471Z
2013-10-29 15:56:30 UTC
1914-09
2013-10-29 16:02:00 UTC
1915-12
2013-10-29 16:06:06 UTC
1915-05
1915-11
2013-10-29 16:10:07 UTC
2013-10-30 09:43:23 UTC

Provenance

INTERNET

Record ID

/2020601/https___1914_1918_europeana_eu_contributions_7057

Discover Similar Stories

 
 
 
 

Pte Thomas Edward Dancer

14 Items

Pte Thomas Edward Dancer, Royal Sussex Regiment (4th & 16th Battalion) lived in Red Lion Street, King's Sutton, near Banbury. He was attested to the Army Reserve, 29 Nov. 1915 and mobilised 9 July 1917. He went to Egypt in Nov. 1917 and was wounded in action in Palestine on 10 March 1918 with a gunshot to the left thigh. On June 18 he was sent to France where he was wounded in action on 15 Sept. 1918, with a gunshot wound which penetrated the right-hand side of his chest. He was invalided to the UK on 30 Sept. 1918 and discharged 1919. He was the great-grandfather of contributor Kayley Northover. He was a miller, and his age on his attestation form dated 29 Nov. 1915 was 32 years and 5 months. On June 17th 1905 he married Gladys Emily Reeve at St. John's Church, Barford, Oxon. Records show that in 1917 he had four children. || Dog tag - T.E. Dancer Photo of Thomas in uniform, seated

Go to:
 
 
 
 

PTE 6675 W Kelly Connaught Ranges

5 Items

Medals and Christmas Box presentation || My Grandfather held the medals from the Great Wars.....along with the Christmas Box presented to him during this historic period. The original identification tag and string are also in the photos. He left Southern Ireland and brought his son's and daughters up in Middlesbrough.

Go to:
 
 
 
 

Lt. Col. Samuel Drury | Maurice William Drury RE & Pte. Edward Cyril Drury

52 Items

Mess dress miniature medals and explanatory note. Copy of 1918 letter from General Gorringe to the men of the 47th Division. Copy of embodiment form. || Samuel Drury joined the Royal Engineers as an enlisted sapper on 4th September 1914. He served on the Western Front throughout the Great War and on the Home Front during WWII. He ended his military career as a Lieutenant Colonel. In civvy street he was a history teacher. Edward Cyril Drury enlisted underage, as he was under the age of 18. He ran away from home and joined the Army. He died aged 18 years and 3 months, again underage, as soldiers should have been 19 before being posted to the Western Front. (Although soldiers could enlist at 18, they had to remain in the UK until they were 19).

Go to: