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James McLoughlin

Photograph of James McLoughlin Damaged Prayer book Small Crucifix
James McLoughlin (1895-1966) from Kilcorney, Enfield, County Meath, Ireland enlisted in the Royal Garrison Artillery, British Army, in Dublin on 3 November 1915 and served as a Corporal on the Western Front from 1916-18. He was wounded in action in March 1917 and carried a piece of shrapnel in his head for the rest of his life. He remained in the British army until June 1922 when he was serving with Q Coast Battery in Cork. The only surviving material from his war service is a crucifix and prayerbook which he had with him in France. The prayerbook shows the signs of shrapnel damage. He enlisted in the newly formed Irish Free State army in July 1922 retiring as Director of Artillery in 1955.

Official document
Attestation record
Attestion
Letter from General Emmet Dalton appointing James McLoughlin as Lieutenant in command of Innishannon, County Cork.
Letter
Photograph
Front
Photograph of Corporal James McLoughlin, Royal Garrison Artillery
Postcard from James McLoughlin
JAmes McLoughlin
Postcard
Artillery
Back
Shrapnel damaged prayer book of James McLoughlin, Royal Garrison Artillery, British Army.
Prayer book of James McLoughlin
Publication
Memorabilia
Crucifix carried by James McLoughlin during World War 1.
Crucifix belonging to James McLoughlin
James McLoughlin and his sister Elizabeth
Photograph of James McLoughlin and his sister Elizabeth McLoughlin on leave after his wounding in 1917.

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CONTRIBUTOR

Mark McLoughlin

DATE

1914 - 1915-11-03

LANGUAGE

eng

ITEMS

13

INSTITUTION

Europeana 1914-1918

PROGRESS

START DATE
TRANSCRIBERS
CHARACTERS
LOCATIONS
ENRICHMENTS

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METADATA

Source

UGC

Contributor

europeana19141918:agent/320e491ed3d688e965cfd894a7ca39ba

Date

1914
1915-11-03

Type

Story

Language

eng
English

Country

Europe

DataProvider

Europeana 1914-1918

Provider

Europeana 1914-1918

Year

1914

DatasetName

2020601_Ag_ErsterWeltkrieg_EU

Begin

1915-11-03

End

1914

Language

mul

Agent

Mark McLoughlin | europeana19141918:agent/320e491ed3d688e965cfd894a7ca39ba
James McLoughlin | europeana19141918:agent/aaabff48eb6309dca5d75d08e6532e98

Created

2019-09-11T08:12:56.864Z
2020-02-25T08:08:30.040Z
2012-03-16 17:57:21 UTC
2014-08-02 11:32:02 UTC
2014-08-02 11:32:16 UTC
2014-08-02 11:39:13 UTC
1922-10
2014-08-02 11:39:16 UTC
2014-08-02 11:39:19 UTC
2014-08-08 16:59:08 UTC
2014-08-08 16:59:52 UTC
2014-08-08 17:01:17 UTC
1918
2012-03-16 18:02:13 UTC
2012-03-16 18:27:06 UTC
1915
2012-03-16 18:30:28 UTC
2012-03-16 18:34:20 UTC
1917
2012-03-16 18:40:29 UTC

Provenance

UNKNOWN

Record ID

/2020601/https___1914_1918_europeana_eu_contributions_3289

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Album/folder of documents re J Wedge. Folder includes soldiers' small book and an Effects form with family entitlement. || James Wedge was a professional soldier in the rank of sergeant in the West Riding Regiment. He had fought in the Boer War and also served in India. A letter from 2nd Lt. Dacre describes how he died - he was hit by a German sniper during a trench raid. A rupee coin that James Wedge was carrying was broken when he was killed. The album contains copies and originals of documents relating to his service and death and include a dog tag and a broken rupee. There is also a soldier's small book in the folder.

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Rifleman James McCann

1 Item

Photo || James McCann joined the 1st Battalion the Royal Irish Rifles. Born on the 18th of July 1893 in Lusk Co Dublin he was killed in action on the 9th of December 1914 in Northern France. Page 281 of Ireland war memorial records 1914 - 1918 lists him as... McCann, James. Regimental No. 9769. Rank, Rifleman, Royal Irish Rifles, 1st Batt. ; killed in action, France, December 9, 1914; born Lusk Co Dublin. (A number of the men in the photo appear to wear Royal Engineers uniform - cataloguer's note) || || Group photo of 11 men || Photograph || This a photograph that was given to the James McCanne's decedents by another person who believes her ancestors names McLaughlin is also in the picture. We believe that James McCann is the second from left on the second Row due to family resemblance and due to the fact he is the only person in the picture with no stripes on his sleeves which denotes a private or rifleman. One of the other men is believed to be a McLaughlin from Ratoath Co Meath, Ireland. James McCann is believed to be buried at the Commonwealth War Graves Cemetery, Le Touret, Calis, France. || Northern France (believe)

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