Royal Horse Artillery.
The Royal Horse Artillery was formed in 1793 as a distinct arm of the Royal Regiment of Artiller of the British Army.
The Commonwealth War Graves Commission has 1589 recorded WW1 deaths for the Royal Horse Artillery.
BAILEY, (MC).
Guy Horsman. Major. Commanding "L" Battery, 15th Brigade, Royal Horse Artillery. Guards Cemetery, Combles, Somme, France. 28-02-1917. Age 25. Son of Colonel Edward Horsman Bailey V.D. ,T.D. & Jane Bailey of "Foxholes", Kingham, Oxfordshire, UK. Major Guy Horsman Bailey's father, Colonel Edward Horsman Bailey, encapsulated his son's military career on his headstone inscription. Guy Bailey took part in the Gallipoli landings on 25 April 1915, the first day of the campaign, and served there until the last Allied troops were withdrawn on 8 January 1916, the very last day of the campaign. He went to France in March 1916 and was killed nearly a year later on 28 February 1917. Peter Bell, on the Bledington War Memorial site, offers additional information: "He was hit in the side by a piece of shrapnel from an airburst shell as he ran to the gunpits from his dugout to retaliate to the German shell fire. He was carried back to the dugout and attended by the doctor but he died about half an hour later." With my thanks to www.epitaphsofthegreatwar.com/404 |
SMITH,
E.J.
Driver, 24363.
5th Brigade,
Royal Field Artillery.
Loker Churchyard,
West-Vlaanderen, Belgium.
29-05-1917.
E.J.
Driver, 24363.
5th Brigade,
Royal Field Artillery.
Loker Churchyard,
West-Vlaanderen, Belgium.
29-05-1917.