Hi Adele The only Virgo Fidelis Convent I can find mention of is as follows (1942 Kellys directory) Virgo Fidelis Convent Preparatory School, 189 Old Brompton rd SW5 In the 1939 NIR 189 Old Brompton Rd is under Kensington Dorothy KING born 1892 is listed as Teacher, religious superior 2nd enumerated was Grace ADOLF born 1887 teacher religious (but more interestingly) ARP Warden Along with some other teachers, servants and a few on private means, no sign of pupils In the newspapers there are mentions of both Old Brompton Rd and Central Hill Upper Norwood But no mentions before 1950 Nivard Ovington in Cornwall (UK) On 05/12/2019 22:05, Adele Pentony-Graham wrote: > During WW2, my school was taken over by NAFFI, according to the Headmistress > when I got asking questions, the school was in Upper Norwood. London.. Virgo > Fidelis Convent, I would welcome any history relating to their stay at the > lovely school thanks.. Nivard.. help please! > > > > I had no idea about it when a pupil from 1950-1958, we live and learn, but > it came through an article about 20 years ago in New Zealand Society of > Genealogy, but I now know more, from old school magazines in the 1970s plus. > there is an article lodged with BBC about it, but I need more information as > the school have destroyed all the records OUCH! The school has a lot of > history, built in 1840s, had an orphanage attached, and a free paying school > Our Lady's Convent, but my part was not free!! But still a lovely place, all > the pupils were so happy there, we had huge grounds, they still have the > massive grounds, the Primary School was once the Hunting Lodge for Royalty. > > > > Bit more history, when I was on London Rootsweb years ago, a lady was asking > which school in London had an Orphanage attached, I told her my old school > near Crystal Palace, turned out her Grandmother, when a teenager attended > the school as a pupil teacher early 1900, but even more surprising, she said > you have Pentony so we are related, turns out she was in Sydney and I spent > 2006 Christmas with my newly found cousin!!! She lives there and has lovely > old photographs of the school when her Grandmother was a teacher there. > > > > I do have it that Peter Fraser visited the pupils when down in Sussex where > they were whilst the School was taken over by NZEF, now cannot find any > information in NZ about the School being taken over. but I can remember > visiting the school back in 1976 just before we were to return to NZ, the > Head said, please get in touch with Capt. & Mrs Caldwell they have been in > constant touch with the Convent since the War. I sent them a letter when I > returned to NZ. I can still remember the article in NZSG Magazine early > 2000, as rang the lady in Palmerston North, Fay Roy think it was, and > surprised her saying that is my old school, we have met she came to > Carterton to meet up with me. > > > > History is amazing!!! > > > > > > Thanks.. > > > > > > Adele Pentony_Graham.
During WW2, my school was taken over by NAFFI, according to the Headmistress when I got asking questions, the school was in Upper Norwood. London.. Virgo Fidelis Convent, I would welcome any history relating to their stay at the lovely school thanks.. Nivard.. help please! I had no idea about it when a pupil from 1950-1958, we live and learn, but it came through an article about 20 years ago in New Zealand Society of Genealogy, but I now know more, from old school magazines in the 1970s plus. there is an article lodged with BBC about it, but I need more information as the school have destroyed all the records OUCH! The school has a lot of history, built in 1840s, had an orphanage attached, and a free paying school Our Lady's Convent, but my part was not free!! But still a lovely place, all the pupils were so happy there, we had huge grounds, they still have the massive grounds, the Primary School was once the Hunting Lodge for Royalty. Bit more history, when I was on London Rootsweb years ago, a lady was asking which school in London had an Orphanage attached, I told her my old school near Crystal Palace, turned out her Grandmother, when a teenager attended the school as a pupil teacher early 1900, but even more surprising, she said you have Pentony so we are related, turns out she was in Sydney and I spent 2006 Christmas with my newly found cousin!!! She lives there and has lovely old photographs of the school when her Grandmother was a teacher there. I do have it that Peter Fraser visited the pupils when down in Sussex where they were whilst the School was taken over by NZEF, now cannot find any information in NZ about the School being taken over. but I can remember visiting the school back in 1976 just before we were to return to NZ, the Head said, please get in touch with Capt. & Mrs Caldwell they have been in constant touch with the Convent since the War. I sent them a letter when I returned to NZ. I can still remember the article in NZSG Magazine early 2000, as rang the lady in Palmerston North, Fay Roy think it was, and surprised her saying that is my old school, we have met she came to Carterton to meet up with me. History is amazing!!! Thanks.. Adele Pentony_Graham.
..........Oho - it unfortunately seems you scored only 3 / 10 I'm afraid you'll need to resit Stephen //// > On 03 December 2019 at 21:50 Bill <freeport11@comcast.net> wrote: > > test >
Received On Tue, Dec 3, 2019 at 9:54 PM Eileen Wootton <smpabu@gmail.com> wrote: > Received > > On Tue, 3 Dec 2019 at 9:51 PM, Bill <freeport11@comcast.net> wrote: > > > test > > > > _______________________________________________ > > > > The List Guidelines > > > > http://new-zealand-l.blogspot.com/ > > > > _______________________________________________ > > Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref > > Unsubscribe > > https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/new-zealand@rootsweb.com > > Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: > > https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 > > Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog > > RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb > > community > > > > _______________________________________________ > > The List Guidelines > > http://new-zealand-l.blogspot.com/ > > _______________________________________________ > Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref > Unsubscribe > https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/new-zealand@rootsweb.com > Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: > https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 > Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog > RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb > community >
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State Archives of Victoria, family search.org, trove. Papers past,ancestry, fiche...your local family history centre,...or try google...You want the outward passenger list... Jenelle. -----Original Message----- From: Karen & Peter [mailto:petert2@slingshot.co.nz] Sent: Tuesday, December 3, 2019 12:18 PM To: new-zealand@rootsweb.com Subject: [nz]Passenger List from Melbourne to Dunedin 1862 Hi Listers, I was wondering if anyone new where online I could find passenger lists from Melbourne to Dunedin in 1862. Many thanks Karen _______________________________________________ The List Guidelines http://new-zealand-l.blogspot.com/ _______________________________________________ Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref Unsubscribe https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/new-zealand@rootsweb.com Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb community -- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. https://www.avg.com
thank you Marina :) -----Original Message----- From: Borland Sent: Tuesday, December 3, 2019 3:52 PM To: new-zealand@rootsweb.com Subject: [nz]Re: Passenger List from Melbourne to Dunedin 1862 Hello Karen, https://prov.vic.gov.au Click Online collections. Scroll down to Passenger records and Immigration, then navigate to Outwards passenger lists. Regards, Marina -----Original Message----- From: Karen & Peter Sent: Tuesday, December 3, 2019 3:18 PM To: new-zealand@rootsweb.com Subject: [nz]Passenger List from Melbourne to Dunedin 1862 Hi Listers, I was wondering if anyone new where online I could find passenger lists from Melbourne to Dunedin in 1862. Many thanks Karen _______________________________________________ The List Guidelines http://new-zealand-l.blogspot.com/ _______________________________________________ Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref Unsubscribe https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/new-zealand@rootsweb.com Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb community _______________________________________________ The List Guidelines http://new-zealand-l.blogspot.com/ _______________________________________________ Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref Unsubscribe https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/new-zealand@rootsweb.com Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb community
Hello Karen, https://prov.vic.gov.au Click Online collections. Scroll down to Passenger records and Immigration, then navigate to Outwards passenger lists. Regards, Marina -----Original Message----- From: Karen & Peter Sent: Tuesday, December 3, 2019 3:18 PM To: new-zealand@rootsweb.com Subject: [nz]Passenger List from Melbourne to Dunedin 1862 Hi Listers, I was wondering if anyone new where online I could find passenger lists from Melbourne to Dunedin in 1862. Many thanks Karen _______________________________________________ The List Guidelines http://new-zealand-l.blogspot.com/ _______________________________________________ Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref Unsubscribe https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/new-zealand@rootsweb.com Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb community
Hi Listers, I was wondering if anyone new where online I could find passenger lists from Melbourne to Dunedin in 1862. Many thanks Karen
David Wong-Hop & Lisa Truttman - Pacific Journeys Recorded at Auckland Central Library on October 13 2019 for the Auckland Heritage Festival Auckland Libraries SoundCloud For people making the journey to a new life in New Zealand in the 19th century, it was often a perilous journey across the Pacific. For those who did make it here, the welcome was also far from warm. NZ legislation was particularly severe on Chinese immigrants, as we heard in the previous talk with the introduction of a poll tax in various forms. The Immigration Restriction Act introduced in 1899 prohibited the entry of immigrants who were not of British or Irish parentage and who could not fill out an application form ‘in any European language’. In this talk David Wong-Hop and Lisa Truttman illustrate what this journey would have been like. After David’s introduction Lisa looks at the broader Asian immigrant experience particularly Indian and Syrian including some well known Auckland names. Haramai tētahi ahua! https://soundcloud.com/auckland-libraries/david-wong-hop-lisa-truttman-pacific-journeys/s-vRQVx Subscribe/follow Auckland Libraries' SoundCloud channel to get alerts when more talks are loaded! Ngā mihi | Kind regards - Seonaid Seonaid (Shona) Lewis RLIANZA BA ILS DipRIM | Senior research librarian, family history (Mon-Fri) Te Kohinga Rangahau mō Tāmaki Makaurau | Research Central Tāmaki Pātaka Kōrero - Central City Library Ngā Pātaka Kōrero o Tāmaki Makaurau - Auckland Libraries Phone 09 890 2411 | Extn (46) 2411 Auckland Council, 44-46 Lorne Street, Auckland Twitter: @Kintalk Facebook: Auckland Research Centre<https://www.facebook.com/AkldResearchCentre/?ref=settings> Come along to our FREE lunchtime HeritageTalks<https://www.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/pages/search-results.aspx?k=HeritageTalks> fortnightly on Wednesdays between February and November Subscribe to Central Library’s events newsletters by emailing centrallibraryevents@aucklandcouncil.govt.nz<mailto:centrallibraryevents@aucklandcouncil.govt.nz> Kura Heritage Collections Online is now live! Kura provides easy and free access to our world-renowned heritage collections. Explore Kura now: https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/<https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/?fbclid=IwAR02DuyNwn3XSVAwKlfaSUsG3NbreuWfVNB94AXGGUobgf-7r5W6z52_kh8> CAUTION: This email message and any attachments contain information that may be confidential and may be LEGALLY PRIVILEGED. If you are not the intended recipient, any use, disclosure or copying of this message or attachments is strictly prohibited. If you have received this email message in error please notify us immediately and erase all copies of the message and attachments. We do not accept responsibility for any viruses or similar carried with our email, or any effects our email may have on the recipient computer system or network. Any views expressed in this email may be those of the individual sender and may not necessarily reflect the views of Council.
Note his date of death. 141535 Private William Fred Ridley 4th C.M.R. (91st Bn.) Died of wounds 30 Nov. 1915 Born Kent, England Apr. 7th 1887 Attestation Hamilton, Ont., July 29th 1915. 28 years and 3 months. 5ft 7". Hair brown, eyes brown, complexion fair. Machinist. Arrived in England 4 May 1916. 18 July 1916 taken on strength in field. 16 Sept. 1916. Admitted to 2nd London Gen. Hosp. Chelsea, GSW face, left hand, right leg, 22 Nov. 1916 Dangerously ill. Leg became very septic. Amputation by calf. Died of wounds on Nov. 30th 1916 4.45 p.m.. Aftermath *Do you ever stop and ask, 'Is it all going to happen again?' Look down, and swear by the slain of the War that you'll never forget. Look up, and swear by the green of the spring that you'll never forget. * Siegfried Sassoon On Fri, 29 Nov 2019 at 22:36, Adele Pentony-Graham <pentonygraham@xtra.co.nz> wrote: > My Gt Uncle was William Frederick RIDLEY who served with Canadian Infantry > and his number was 141535. Died 30th November 1916. Battle of The Somme, > buried at Gillingham. Kent Cemetery.. GRANGE ROAD. But.. but. his > headstone > is now in another cemetery as Grange Road became a sports field. To me, its > wrong to leave the remains of the servicemen behind, should be with their > headstones! Not all Canadian Infantry buried there. others were from > England Have a list of names from Imperial War Graves Commission. > Details > of his wife were Mrs Edith Ridley. 23 Edinburgh Avenue. Hamilton. Ontario. > Canada. She came over but the time the ship berthed, William had died in > hospital in London. I was told when visiting a relation in Penrith back in > 2004, time Edith arrived with family hearing her husband had died, she > caught the next ship home to Canada, never making contact with relations in > UK and there were a few back those days, as I was told by this relation, > she > was sure Willie's sister Florence nursed him in London, my grandmother.. I > know she was a nurse.. > > His brother Arch was also in Canada, but after the war, returned to > England, > and worked at Buckingham Palace for over 30 years.. some time back our > local paper had a photograph of the then King and Queen surveying bomb > damage during WW2 outside some of the buildings at the Palace, and there > was > my Gt Uncle, knew it was him, no overalls like his men, but in a suit, I > have a copy of that very photograph, think it was printed by Daily Sketch > in > London. The family I also visited when in London in 2004, lived in Harrow, > and went to visit them, first time we had met, yet we lived in London > during > WW2 up until 1969 we never knew relations in London! My Grandparents were > in > Kent.. finding relations now though as well!! > > Adele > Clarevlle. > >
My Gt Uncle was William Frederick RIDLEY who served with Canadian Infantry and his number was 141535. Died 30th November 1916. Battle of The Somme, buried at Gillingham. Kent Cemetery.. GRANGE ROAD. But.. but. his headstone is now in another cemetery as Grange Road became a sports field. To me, its wrong to leave the remains of the servicemen behind, should be with their headstones! Not all Canadian Infantry buried there. others were from England Have a list of names from Imperial War Graves Commission. Details of his wife were Mrs Edith Ridley. 23 Edinburgh Avenue. Hamilton. Ontario. Canada. She came over but the time the ship berthed, William had died in hospital in London. I was told when visiting a relation in Penrith back in 2004, time Edith arrived with family hearing her husband had died, she caught the next ship home to Canada, never making contact with relations in UK and there were a few back those days, as I was told by this relation, she was sure Willie's sister Florence nursed him in London, my grandmother.. I know she was a nurse.. His brother Arch was also in Canada, but after the war, returned to England, and worked at Buckingham Palace for over 30 years.. some time back our local paper had a photograph of the then King and Queen surveying bomb damage during WW2 outside some of the buildings at the Palace, and there was my Gt Uncle, knew it was him, no overalls like his men, but in a suit, I have a copy of that very photograph, think it was printed by Daily Sketch in London. The family I also visited when in London in 2004, lived in Harrow, and went to visit them, first time we had met, yet we lived in London during WW2 up until 1969 we never knew relations in London! My Grandparents were in Kent.. finding relations now though as well!! Adele Clarevlle.
Private William Ridley buried at Gillingham. Kent, but he was buried in one cemetery, then the powers to be later wanted the land for sport, so the headstones were removed and put in another cemetery. Back in 2014, it was my intention to visit his burials, but wasn't able to do it, as went down with vertigo for the whole five weeks in England, not travelling again, not even to see where he is, have photographs but its not the same as visiting his grave. so quite a few burials under the sports field.. also was sent from Canada his name on the Roll of Honour some years back, he was married, as when the family learnt he had been wounded they sailed for England to visit him, sadly time they got there he had died. This Ridley side of the family originally came from Tow House Green near Haltwhistle, places I visited in 2004 on my big trip home! as a family we didn't know many relations as my sister said the other day, shame families are like that even today! We grew up in London, never knew relations on both Dads side, yet, they were within a few miles off us!!!! I have photographs of William's headstone. In touch with his descendants in Canada.. thanks to the internet! Adele Clareville.
Indeed they did move around periodically However the enquiry referred to 1916, CCS 2 was at Bailleul Aug 1914 to Sep 1917 Nivard Ovington in Cornwall (UK) On 25/11/2019 18:56, spark@xtra.co.nz wrote: > Casualty Clearing Stations were not in permanently fixed locations, they moved as the source of the casualties moved, from one part of the battlefields to another. So there would have been several / many locations where a 'No.2 Casualty Clearing Station' would have been. A combination of understanding the date of injury, the location of the action in which the wound was suffered and looking at the correct battlefield map is needed to know where any particular CCS was at any specific date. > > If the soldier died, the place of burial can also provide a clue, since cemeteries were often located near a CCS. But many burials were relocated after the war - you would need to look at the CWGC records to see if the current place of burial was the original one. > > > _______________________ > Stuart Park > Kerikeri, New Zealand
Casualty Clearing Stations were not in permanently fixed locations, they moved as the source of the casualties moved, from one part of the battlefields to another. So there would have been several / many locations where a 'No.2 Casualty Clearing Station' would have been. A combination of understanding the date of injury, the location of the action in which the wound was suffered and looking at the correct battlefield map is needed to know where any particular CCS was at any specific date. If the soldier died, the place of burial can also provide a clue, since cemeteries were often located near a CCS. But many burials were relocated after the war - you would need to look at the CWGC records to see if the current place of burial was the original one. _______________________ Stuart Park Kerikeri, New Zealand spark@xtra.co.nz -----Original Message----- From: aotueka@xtra.co.nz <aotueka@xtra.co.nz> Sent: Tuesday, November 26, 2019 7:26 AM To: new-zealand@rootsweb.com; Olwyn Whitehouse <olwynbw@gmail.com> Subject: [nz]Re: [EXTERNAL] Soldier wounded in France November 1916 Gidday Olwyn. I am guessing that he was also wounded at Armentieres. His military record shows that he was wounded and died the same day as he was admitted to the No.2 Casualty Clearing Station, so it would make sense that he was in the area and not miles away. Seems he was hit by a shell or shrapnel from a shell. Beth > On 26 November 2019 at 00:45 Olwyn Whitehouse <olwynbw@gmail.com> wrote: > > > So the same would apply to 2nd Lt. Neville Joyce. > So probably wounded around Armentieres, right. > > > > 8/6/1916 2nd Lieutenant Neville Stanley Joyce 6/2901 7th > Reinforcements Canterbury Infantry. Nok: G.R. Joyce (father) Hay's Building, Timaru. > Embarked 9 Oct. 1915 for Suez. Died of wounds received in action at No > 2 Casualty Clearing Station, FRANCE, and buried Bailleul Communal > Cemetery Extension, Nord, France. Aged 23 while serving with 2nd > Company, 2nd Battalion, Canterbury Regiment, New Zealand Division. > Father: George Roderick Joyce; Mother: Florence Burfield Joyce (née > Galland). Neville was born on 14 August 1892 at Invercargill. Law > Clerk employed by Raymond, Raymond & Campbell, Solicitors, Timaru. He > served with the City Rifles Timaru Territorials for four years and No. 6 Field Ambulance. Presbyterian. > 5'11¾" 140 lbs. Promoted to 2nd Lieut. 5 Oct. 1915. > > > On Mon, 25 Nov 2019 at 04:10, Nivard Ovington <ovington.one@gmail.com> > wrote: > > > Hi Beth > > > > A Casualty clearing station was just behind the lines, just out of > > artillery range > > > > CCS2 was at Bailleul until 1917 which is over 100 kilometres from > > the Somme > > > > So its highly unlikely anyone treated at CCS2 would have been > > wounded at the Somme > > > > Nivard Ovington in Cornwall (UK) > > > > On 25/11/2019 08:26, aotueka@xtra.co.nz wrote: > > > Hello. > > > > > > If a soldier was wounded in France in November 1916 and was > > > evacuated to > > the No. 2 Casualty Station, would he have been wounded at the Somme? > > > > > > The station seems a long way away. > > > > > > > > > Thanks, Beth > > > > _______________________________________________ > > > > The List Guidelines > > > > http://new-zealand-l.blogspot.com/ > > > > _______________________________________________ > > Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref Unsubscribe > > https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/new-zealand@rootsweb.com > > Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: > > https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 > > Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog > > RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal > > RootsWeb community > > > > _______________________________________________ > > The List Guidelines > > http://new-zealand-l.blogspot.com/ > > _______________________________________________ > Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref Unsubscribe > https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/new-zealand@rootsweb.com > Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: > https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog > RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal > RootsWeb community _______________________________________________ The List Guidelines http://new-zealand-l.blogspot.com/ _______________________________________________ Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref Unsubscribe https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/new-zealand@rootsweb.com Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb community
Gidday Olwyn. I am guessing that he was also wounded at Armentieres. His military record shows that he was wounded and died the same day as he was admitted to the No.2 Casualty Clearing Station, so it would make sense that he was in the area and not miles away. Seems he was hit by a shell or shrapnel from a shell. Beth > On 26 November 2019 at 00:45 Olwyn Whitehouse <olwynbw@gmail.com> wrote: > > > So the same would apply to 2nd Lt. Neville Joyce. > So probably wounded around Armentieres, right. > > > > 8/6/1916 2nd Lieutenant Neville Stanley Joyce 6/2901 7th Reinforcements > Canterbury Infantry. Nok: G.R. Joyce (father) Hay's Building, Timaru. > Embarked 9 Oct. 1915 for Suez. Died of wounds received in action at No 2 > Casualty Clearing Station, FRANCE, and buried Bailleul Communal Cemetery > Extension, Nord, France. Aged 23 while serving with 2nd Company, 2nd > Battalion, Canterbury Regiment, New Zealand Division. Father: George > Roderick Joyce; Mother: Florence Burfield Joyce (née Galland). Neville was > born on 14 August 1892 at Invercargill. Law Clerk employed by Raymond, > Raymond & Campbell, Solicitors, Timaru. He served with the City Rifles > Timaru Territorials for four years and No. 6 Field Ambulance. Presbyterian. > 5'11¾" 140 lbs. Promoted to 2nd Lieut. 5 Oct. 1915. > > > On Mon, 25 Nov 2019 at 04:10, Nivard Ovington <ovington.one@gmail.com> > wrote: > > > Hi Beth > > > > A Casualty clearing station was just behind the lines, just out of > > artillery range > > > > CCS2 was at Bailleul until 1917 which is over 100 kilometres from the Somme > > > > So its highly unlikely anyone treated at CCS2 would have been wounded at > > the Somme > > > > Nivard Ovington in Cornwall (UK) > > > > On 25/11/2019 08:26, aotueka@xtra.co.nz wrote: > > > Hello. > > > > > > If a soldier was wounded in France in November 1916 and was evacuated to > > the No. 2 Casualty Station, would he have been wounded at the Somme? > > > > > > The station seems a long way away. > > > > > > > > > Thanks, Beth > > > > _______________________________________________ > > > > The List Guidelines > > > > http://new-zealand-l.blogspot.com/ > > > > _______________________________________________ > > Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref > > Unsubscribe > > https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/new-zealand@rootsweb.com > > Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: > > https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 > > Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog > > RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb > > community > > > > _______________________________________________ > > The List Guidelines > > http://new-zealand-l.blogspot.com/ > > _______________________________________________ > Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref > Unsubscribe https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/new-zealand@rootsweb.com > Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 > Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog > RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb community
Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF) database http://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/military-heritage/first-world-war/personnel-records/Pages/search.aspx Canadian Virtual War Memorial https://www.veterans.gc.ca/eng/remembrance/memorials/canadian-virtual-war-memorial 58 who called New Zealand home gave their lives while in the C.E.F. (48 WW1 and 11 WW2). http://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/mass-digitized-archives/veterans-death-cards-ww1/Pages/veterans-death-cards.aspx On Mon, 25 Nov 2019 at 03:22, Adele Pentony-Graham <pentonygraham@xtra.co.nz> wrote: > One of my Gt Uncle's was shot in the leg at The Somme, he was sent over to > London to Hospital. Sadly died, was expected to survive. he was with the > Canadian Infantry, as was living in Canada, but originally from Gillingham. > Kent.. where he is buried. He was brother to my grandmother on Dad's side. > We believe he was nursed by his sister, my Nana as we called her years > later, she was a Nurse. Where was the No. Casualty Station please.. > > > > Adele > > Clareville > > > _______________________________________________ > > The List Guidelines > > http://new-zealand-l.blogspot.com/ > > _______________________________________________ > Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref > Unsubscribe > https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/new-zealand@rootsweb.com > Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: > https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 > Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog > RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb > community >
So the same would apply to 2nd Lt. Neville Joyce. So probably wounded around Armentieres, right. 8/6/1916 2nd Lieutenant Neville Stanley Joyce 6/2901 7th Reinforcements Canterbury Infantry. Nok: G.R. Joyce (father) Hay's Building, Timaru. Embarked 9 Oct. 1915 for Suez. Died of wounds received in action at No 2 Casualty Clearing Station, FRANCE, and buried Bailleul Communal Cemetery Extension, Nord, France. Aged 23 while serving with 2nd Company, 2nd Battalion, Canterbury Regiment, New Zealand Division. Father: George Roderick Joyce; Mother: Florence Burfield Joyce (née Galland). Neville was born on 14 August 1892 at Invercargill. Law Clerk employed by Raymond, Raymond & Campbell, Solicitors, Timaru. He served with the City Rifles Timaru Territorials for four years and No. 6 Field Ambulance. Presbyterian. 5'11¾" 140 lbs. Promoted to 2nd Lieut. 5 Oct. 1915. On Mon, 25 Nov 2019 at 04:10, Nivard Ovington <ovington.one@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi Beth > > A Casualty clearing station was just behind the lines, just out of > artillery range > > CCS2 was at Bailleul until 1917 which is over 100 kilometres from the Somme > > So its highly unlikely anyone treated at CCS2 would have been wounded at > the Somme > > Nivard Ovington in Cornwall (UK) > > On 25/11/2019 08:26, aotueka@xtra.co.nz wrote: > > Hello. > > > > If a soldier was wounded in France in November 1916 and was evacuated to > the No. 2 Casualty Station, would he have been wounded at the Somme? > > > > The station seems a long way away. > > > > > > Thanks, Beth > > _______________________________________________ > > The List Guidelines > > http://new-zealand-l.blogspot.com/ > > _______________________________________________ > Email preferences: http://bit.ly/rootswebpref > Unsubscribe > https://lists.rootsweb.com/postorius/lists/new-zealand@rootsweb.com > Privacy Statement: https://ancstry.me/2JWBOdY Terms and Conditions: > https://ancstry.me/2HDBym9 > Rootsweb Blog: http://rootsweb.blog > RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb > community >