Guardsman of 19
George Grisdale Atkinson was born in Staveley in Cumbria to Robert and Mary Atkinson and was employed by the Kendal Cooperative Society before the war.
He joined the Grenadier Guards in November 1916 and was wounded in the Summer of 1917 but recovered and rejoined the battalion in September.
At 5.25am on 12 October 1917 the Guards attacked on the opening day of the 1st Battle of Passchendaele. George was one of more than 300 Grenadiers who were killed during the day. He received a bullet wound in the neck and died on the ambulance train. He was 19.
The muddy conditions on the battlefield were so bad and the losses so great that 1st Passchendaele was called off 24 hours later. George is also commemorated at Staveley and his Skelsmergh link is not known, although his although his mother, Mary Grisdale, was from Selside.
Photograph
Photo of George Grisdale Atkinson
News-clipping
New-clipping relating to George Grisdale Atkinson's death
CONTRIBUTOR
Anthony Cousins
DATE
-
LANGUAGE
eng
ITEMS
2
INSTITUTION
Europeana 1914-1918
PROGRESS
METADATA
Discover Similar Stories
WWI diary of Welsh Guardsman Sydney Bland
8 Items
Syd Bland, my grandfather, joined the Welsh Guards in the Spring of 1915 and was posted to the front line of the French/Belgium border. His diary, which I transcribed, recounts his experiences from August 17, 1915 to December 6, 1916. || WWI diary transcription
Brief war experience of a 19 year old at the Battle of Loos
1 Item
My grandfather, James Roarty came from Letterkenny in Co Donegal, Ireland. He enlisted in the Royal Scots on 6th January, 1915 at Clydebank, Scotland. His service rank was Private and his service number was 16977. He was 19 years old. I have no idea why he signed up. I believe he was injured during the early days of the battle of Loos. I have a newspaper clipping listing him as one of the solders invalided to Dundee, and James is listed as being admitted in the Dundee Hospital book on 8th October, 1915. He only fought on the Western Front for a while. He never spoke of his experience or why he was sent back to Dundee. His discharge papers have a stamp stating that he was discharged in consequence of being ‘no longer physically fit for war service’. The stamp is so faint it will not be picked up in the accompanying image of the discharge papers. He was awarded: 1. The 1914-15 Star. The reverse has his service number, rank, name and unit 2. The British War Medal, 1914-18. His service number, rank, name and unit are impressed on the rim; 3. The Allied Victory Medal. His service number, rank, name and unit are impressed on the rim; 4. The Silver War Badge. The badge was originally issued to officers and men who were discharged or retired from the military forces as a result of sickness or injury caused by their war service. He was discharged on 6th November, 1917. My grandfather never discussed his experience in the war. I was aware that he had participated in WW1 but in the 1970’s in Donegal no one spoke about WW1. James returned to Letterkenny where he married and had two sons. He died on 7th November, 1973. || Image WW1-26-1 Army Form B2067 Character Reference for James Roarty, first page; Image WW1-26-2 Character Reference James Roarty, second page; Image WW1-26-3 Certificate of discharge for James Roarty, first page; Image WW1-26-4 Certificate of discharge for James Roarty, second page; Image WW1-26-5 Photo of medals awarded to James Roarty (front of medals); Image WW1-26-6 Photo of medals awarded to James Roarty (back of medals)