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Hilary Payne recalls her grandmother and the devastating effect the death of her great-grandfather had on his widow and family

Transcript of interview with Hilary Payne

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CONTRIBUTOR

Age Exchange

DATE

1913 - 2007

LANGUAGE

eng

ITEMS

8

INSTITUTION

Europeana 1914-1918

PROGRESS

START DATE
TRANSCRIBERS
CHARACTERS
LOCATIONS
ENRICHMENTS

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METADATA

Source

UGC

Contributor

europeana19141918:agent/0c05bcb07657044ed74c915aeefca367

Date

1913
2007

Type

Story

Language

eng
English

Country

Europe

DataProvider

Europeana 1914-1918

Provider

Europeana 1914-1918

Year

1913
2007

DatasetName

2020601_Ag_ErsterWeltkrieg_EU

Begin

1913

End

2007

Language

mul

Agent

Age Exchange | europeana19141918:agent/0c05bcb07657044ed74c915aeefca367
George Ralph | europeana19141918:agent/67e87e710d6b56d8184666c4ad39ca75
Ina Payne (Ralph) | europeana19141918:agent/b1be9a07ed4c4c88f17d2ec4dce21236

Created

2019-09-11T08:45:08.124Z
2020-02-25T08:57:55.521Z
2014-06-23 16:20:30 UTC
2014-06-23 16:20:44 UTC
2014-06-23 16:20:45 UTC
2014-06-23 16:20:53 UTC

Provenance

COTGW_CLA

Record ID

/2020601/https___1914_1918_europeana_eu_contributions_16476

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Fighting in the Middle East and death on the Marquette

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JOSEPH PRIOR was under age when he signed up as a regular in 1915 aged 15 years and one month. He joined the 5th Essex Brigade - one of the first Kitchener brigades - which the family says shows how the recruitment campaigns were working. Joseph hero-worshiped his older brother, Bertie Augustus, who was a regular soldier 10 years older than him. In the 5th Essex Brigade, an older soldier, P.Oliver, looked after the younger boys and quickly worked out that Prior was underage and told him to “wet his razor”. Joseph was born on 8th October, 1899, in Chesham, Bucks. He was the last of 12 siblings - his mother was aged 49 when she fell pregnant with him. His father, Robert, was a railway engine driver, so the children were all born near railway stations. Joseph was very short and took only a size 6 in shoes. His wife-to-be worked in a boot factory back in England so Joseph would teasingly blame her for the fact they didn't make boots small enough for him. Instead he had to wear boots that were too big with two pairs of socks underneath. Out of the 20 photos of Joseph Prior, only three were placed on show in an album for the family to see. These included a photograph of the 5th Essex Brigade with the old Anzac boys; the first photograph of Joseph when he signed up as a regular and a group picture of the 5th Essex Brigade. The other photographs were found in an envelope. As Joseph was posted to the Middle East, he had many stories about the enjoyment of seeing new places in the world. One he told related to riding camels around the pyramids in Egypt. However, Joseph said: “I would walk the whole of Egypt and Palestine leading a mule rather than riding a camel again. This hatred of riding camels was due to the sea sickness feeling he encountered when riding a camel. When Joseph's brigade discovered he couldn't swim, they threw him in the Suez Canal. He soon found out how to do it .... Remarkably, Joseph Prior managed to keep his war rifle. At home he used it to shoot rabbits for the pot. He died on Easter Day April 1993 at the age of 93. This was despite being invalided out of the army 22/7/19 due to recurring attacks of malaria for which he was entitled to free treatment and a pension until 20/1/20! He was considered to have a temporary 10% disablement. BERTIE AUGUSTUS PRIOR was Joseph’s older brother - and someone he hero-worshiped. He was born in either October or November, 1889, at Marylebone, London. His baptism was held on 1st Dec 1889 at St Barnabas, Marylebone. He is listed in the 1911 census as being in the military, England. However, it says the 59th Battalion, Royal Field Artillery, Institution: India. The family understand that Bertie was in the regular army and was initially posted to Belgium. He was in the Royal Horse and Royal Field Artillery as a driver. However, he was soon transferred to Salonika on the HT Marquette, which was carrying a number of New Zealand doctors and nurses when it sank on the 23rd October 1915. Dying aged 26, Bertie is commemorated on the Mikra Memorial at Kalamaria, Greece. || Photos and postcards

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Little Mabel and her parents

1 Item

Not only has this photograph aged badly, but, originally printed on a postcard mount, it was subsequently cut into an oval shape (partially cropped here) to fit a picture frame. Written on the back of the postcard in pencil is the name ‘Mabel’, and ‘3½’. Presumably the small girl pictured with her mother and soldier–father is therefore three-and-a-half-year-old Mabel. || A real photographic postcard || || Front || Postcard || A photograph of a British soldier's family

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Esther Couplan and her 4 sons

382 Items

Book of Jewish Thoughts, issued to soldiers || || Foundation of Religious Fear (special war edition) || Book || || Book || Song book

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