Thank you, Bryan. Let's see, as I understand it, this book has lists called "Nominal Rolls" broken down for each Regiment, and those rolls ostensibly include every Jewish person who fought for England in World War I, whether they died or not. Is that correct? For us, the individual in question--Jacob BARNETT--was definitely not killed, as he died in 1970. Nor do we know of any injuries. We're not even certain if he was in the War to End All Wars, but we had heard that he was. If I correctly understand what is being said in all these emails on this topic, we should be able to determine if he did fight in World War I by going through this book, regiment by regiment, looking for any BARNETTs and hoping there is only one Jacob BARNETT. Is that a proper understanding of what this book contains? Does it give additional information, such as age or citizenship? Our Jacob would have been about 31 when the war broke out, and he had been in the UK since sometime before 1907 and after 1901. From at least 1907 on, he lived in Swansea, South Wales. <==Hey! That could be a clue as to the regiment--right? Wouldn't he be associated with some Welsh regiment? Brian Neil Burg Fullerton, CA, USA In a message dated 6/28/2008 6:42:44 AM Pacific Daylight Time, bryan@bjdiamond.plus.com writes: <I have a copy of the "Book of Honour", 1922. It has a list of those killed, Officers then men,alphabetically, then those awarded medals, then from p 189 the Nominal Rolls by each Regiment. Finally at pp 611- 636 an index to the following Illustrations [portraits], and the captions to these give the regiments, so this index is my first resource and may likely lead to the regimental list. <The index includes the portrait of my father Claude Diamond at plate 303 and my uncle Wallter at Pl 28. <Bryan Diamond <London> **************Gas prices getting you down? Search AOL Autos for fuel-efficient used cars. (http://autos.aol.com/used?ncid=aolaut00050000000007)