Thursday, 8 November 2018

Leicester Gurrs in WWI

All of George Collins Gurr's sons of eligible age — George, Alf, Frank and Tom — served in the British Army during the First World War. One was killed in the first month of the war aged just 21, one near the end, and one left with life-changing injuries.

In the 1911 census, Alf was still at home in Leicester (in full time employment), aged 23. Tom was just 13 and still at home. George and Frank were both at the Aldershot barracks.

George and Frank, 1914

Frank Gurr, 1st Jan 1912
George Henry Neal Gurr (known as Harry) was the eldest son, born in 1887. Around 1906, aged 19, he'd joined the 19th (Queen Alexandra's Own Royal) Hussars. His younger brother Frank had joined up in December 1910, aged 17.

Both had clearly signed up as "career" soldiers, as this was long before the outbreak of war. The 19th Hussars was a cavalry regiment — elite soldiers, the cream of the crop. In the earlier Boer Wars, they had been decisive; few armies could stand up to a full-blown cavalry charge.

But as they would discover, this was to be a very different war. The most advanced weapon in the Boer Wars was a single shot rifle with a 10-round magazine. WWI introduced high-velocity ammunition, grenades, machine guns, gas, flamethrowers, ballistic long-range heavy artillery and air warfare. Against this — particularly against machine guns — the cavalry were no longer the devastating force they had once been.

George Henry Neal Gurr
Frank Cyril Gurr

The father of Irish TV presenter, Gabriel (Gay) Byrne was also in the 19th Hussars at the outbreak of the war. An RTE TV special "Gay Byrne: My Father's War" broadcast in 2014 follows the 19th Hussars through the war. I have a DVD of the programme, courtesy of the director, happy to share on request. The most interesting excerpt is available by clicking here.

When war was declared on 4th August 1914, the 19th Hussars were stationed at Hounslow. Both George and Frank were allocated to B Squadron. On the 18th they departed for France as part of the 4th Cavalry Brigade under the direction of Major General Allenby (Allenby was later posted to Palestine where he became part of the legend of Lawrence of Arabia).

The story of their first few weeks of the war is told in a diary kept by a Sergeant in B Squadron: the first week largely idyllic, then all hell breaking loose in Rouen on the 26th. Two days later at St. Quentin the diary reports:
"Refugees are now pouring through this town and it is a most pitiful sight to see them. Some are carrying babies in their arms, others pushing prams or carrying bundles. They have left their homes and all they possess to the mercy of the Huns."
Over the next week they encountered friendly fire, spies, witnessed British troops shot for disobeying orders, saw bridges destroyed, lost a third of their men and almost half their horses, saw the beginning of the air war with some of the first dogfights, and surprised an encamped German cavalry regiment killing all those who did not escape. On the 4th September they had their first rest on the banks of the River Marne at Gournay-sur-Marne, swimming in the river and washing their clothes.

la Rue du Not, at the point of attack
In the early hours of the 8th, moving north-east along a country road "la Rue du Not"
from the village of le Vautron towards Sablonnières, Frank's troop came under machine gun fire from across le Petit Morin river. The Germans had largely pulled out of Sablonnières but had left a few divisions behind to cause as much trouble as possible. Frank was cut down and killed, alongside a comrade. His brother George would not have been far away.

The machine-gun post was across the river, firing through a slit or "meutriere" in the wall that can still be seen today:
Wooden lintels reinforcing the horizontal machine gun slits can be seen in this wall - click for more

The location is shown in two contemporary sketches of the battlefield:


Grave of Pte. F. C. Gurr
In the battle that followed 19 soldiers died, including those from the Black Watch and the Cameron Highlanders.

Frank is buried in a small cemetery in Sablonnières. Each year, on Armistice Day, the inhabitants still give thanks to those soldiers who lost their lives liberating their village.

The 19th Hussars were later formed into dismounted divisions, taking part in hand-to-hand bayonet combat in the trenches at the 2nd Battle of Ypres in 1915.

Sources:







Alf and Tom, 1916

Alfred Ernest Gurr
Neither Alf nor Tom joined up until the start of conscription. The Derby Scheme, launched in November 1915, asked men of suitable age and not in protected occupations to "attest" - effectively, sign up into the Army reserve and await notice of posting (with 14 days notice). Married men were exempt and so Alf, married in July of that year would have been (temporarily) exempt. 

Conscription was launched in January 1916 and required eligible single men to either enlist, attest, or be automatically enlisted on 2nd March. 

Tom joined the Staffordshire Yeomanry on 11th May, and so presumably had attested either in 1915 or at the start of conscription. It's likely that he was part of the mounted troops in the 1st line of the 1st Staffs Yeomanry and so posted to the Egyptian campaign in 1917, taking part in the battles of Gaza.

Conscription was extended to married men in May. Alf joined the Leicester Regiment at some point in 1916 (exact date unknown) and was enlisted into the 6th Battalion.

Tom Gurr in Hospital Blues, 21 Dec 1918
Both survived the war, Alf largely unscathed, receiving the Victory Medal and British Medal.

But Tom, who had been gassed, was honourably discharged as unfit for service in 1919 and awarded the Silver War Badge alongside his Victory Medal and British Medal. Gas shells had been widely used in Gaza — by British Forces. He suffered from a weak chest for the remainder of his life.

George, 1918

By the beginning of 1918, George was now a Lance Corporal. The 19th Hussars was part of the 9th Cavalry Brigade, itself part of the 1st Cavalry Division. Still operating largely as a mounted division, they sometimes formed a dismounted unit and served in the trenches. Such it was on the 24th - 25th March, in the first Battle of Bapaume.

The Germans had mounted their Spring Offensive on the 21st with "Operation Michael". Over 3.5m shells were fired in 5 hours, concentrated on rear areas to destroy artillery and supply lines, while trench mortars, mustard gas, chlorine gas, tear gas and smoke canisters were concentrated on the trenches. It was designed to break through the Allied lines, seize the Channel ports and drive the British Army into the sea. This action ultimately failed, leading to an Allied counter-offensive in August and the end of the war in November.

Most of the battle was fought on the wasteland that had been left by the first battle of the Somme in 1916.
Somme trench, 1918
The men were exhausted, hungry, sleep-deprived and shell-shocked. An officer wrote:
"What remains in my memory of this day is the constant taking up of new positions, followed by constant orders to retire, terrible blocks on the roads, inability to find anyone anywhere; by exceeding good luck almost complete freedom from shelling, a complete absence of food of any kind except what could be picked up from abandoned dumps."
George lost his life here on 25th March 1918, aged 30. According to the official regimental war diaries, due to various trench parties being dispatched in different directions he could have been anywhere in the Somme valley between Frise in the east and Bussy-lès-Daours in the west. His body was never identified and probably never recovered. Along with 14,000 other casualties from the Somme between March and August 1918 with no known grave, his sacrifice is commemorated at Pozieres Memorial near Amiens. 




Postscript

The play, "Journey's End," by R. C. Sherriff is set in the period 18-21 March 1918, in the run-up to the start of Operation Michael. Alf's son Alan, a keen amateur actor, appeared in the play as Osborne at the Leicester Little Theatre in 1973. Hamish, Alan's great-grandson, also played Hardy in a production at Durham University in 2016. A film based on the play was released in 2017 and at the time of writing is available on most paid streaming services. If you want to understand more about the mood of the troops at the time, there is no better way.
Alan Gurr as Osborne (R), 1973
Hamish Inglis as Hardy (R), 2016



Friday, 9 February 2018

Edward Gurr (1836-1890) - England to New Zealand, love and business lost - and won

Edward Gurr was born in Chatham, Kent in May 1836, the seventh child of William and Emma Gurr (née Collins). His grandfather William ran a butcher's shop (the family trade for many generations) in Chatham High Street from at least 1791, a trade continued by his father.

Two more siblings were born before Edward's mother Emma passed away in August 1846 from heart failure, aged just 42. William married again in early 1847 to Mary Elizabeth Sunnex and had a further three children.

Unlike his brother George, who learned his trade as a draper through apprenticeship in London, Edward is listed in the 1851 census at home with his family, presumably learning the butchery trade.

His father William passed away on December 1857.


Like his brother, with both his parents gone the young Edward evidently saw little point in remaining in the squalor and filth of the Chatham of the time. Edward left "home and sweetheart" at the time of the Melbourne gold-rush to seek his fortune; he
Bendigo Town Hall 1861
boarded "The Agincourt" in Plymouth on 14th December 1859 together with George and George's new wife Mary Ann, bound for the new colony of Victoria
. The Agincourt arrived in Melbourne almost three months later on 6th March 1860. He was at "ground zero" of the gold-rush in Bendigo, Victoria, before going to New Zealand.


Hurt, Theodore (1860-1871), Hokitika, Westland, N.Z. 1865.
Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington.
Both characters appear to be scratching themselves,
presumably from the Sand Flies.

He was in New Zealand sufficiently long to have been successful for a ballot for a town section in Queenstown. Newspaper records suggest that he was in Queenstown by February 1864. Gold was discovered in Hokitika in 1864 and hearing the news Edward had moved to Hokitika by June 1866. By 1866 the town had quickly grown to be the most populous settlement in New Zealand. At Hokitika he established himself in partnership in a butchery business by December 1867 and, went home again to England in May 1868 aboard the "Vimiera" to claim his bride, now a man of means.

Hokitika, 1867

However the story goes that absence had not made her heart grow fonder (perhaps Edward’s roving life and the poor communications of the time maybe the reason).  Edward’s home-coming was not a happy one - he was jilted.  His brother William pacified him by saying, "Never mind, there are better fish in the sea. She's not worth worrying about – wait until you get home and see what I've got for you."

And who was it? Esther Tompkins, the sister of William's wife, Sophia, a young (on-the-shelf in those days) woman of 25 years old, holding down a job as head cook and with excellent prospects ahead of her.

The Couer de Lion at Port Adelaide
Edward claimed Esther as his bride and they married in December 1868, setting sail for Melbourne by the "Coeur de Lion" en route for New Zealand in late March 1869. Travelling with them was Charlie Gurr, Ted's younger brother. The shippers had taken on a load of gunpowder and tried to cancel the passengers' berths, but Ted wouldn't budge and a special hut was built on deck for these three and one additional passenger. Esther was woefully sick for three weeks and on the whole voyage did not set eyes on another woman. The boat called at Capetown and they stayed perhaps a week after arriving in Melbourne on the 2nd June 1869, getting their first mail with the news of the death of Esther's father confirming Esther's premonition.

The Rangitoto
They transhipped at Melbourne for Hokitika aboard the "S. S. Rangitoto" on the 10th June but when at last New Zealand was sighted the breakers were too heavy for the passengers to land, so they cruised round the coast delivering cargo for about a month before eventually reaching their destination a month later (presumably disembarking at Wellington and transferring to another ship) – a journey of about eight months. Ted is recorded as being back in Hokitika on 9th July.




Cooper, William M (1833-1921) Hokitika.
Chromolithograph of ship and paddlesteamer at Hokitika wharf.
1868-70.
Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington, New Zealand. 
When Ted Gurr had left New Zealand previously his butchery business in Hokitika had been flourishing in the care of his partner whilst he took a trip home to get his bride. On his return however, he discovered that his partner Reedy had sold the business and decamped with the proceeds.

Charlie operated a slaughterhouse in partnership in Hokitika and married a local girl, later moving to Dunedin.

It seems that Esther and Ted tried the business again, advertising the butchery in the West Coast Times in November 1869, but the hot weather spoiled the meat and times apparently weren't so good so they were forced to look elsewhere for sustenance. Ted took to gold prospecting, going back into the country of Ross. He acquired claims here and there, but without luck.

Two years after Ted and Esther's marriage along came their first child, Esther; but how Ted wanted a son! Emma Elizabeth was born seventeen months later and, at last, exactly two years after Emma, came the first son – Edward William.

By May 1874 they had moved to Greymouth. It is not known how the little family fared financially at this stage. Harry was born in May 1877. Four children now, and work and cash did not come easy. 1877 also brought the news of the death of Esther's brother Stephen, leaving four children, three girls and one boy, who are put in orphanages. The home ties are gradually breaking.

In December 1878 Ted dissolved the partnership for his butchery business and by about March 1879, Ted Gurr had "had the West Coast" and, leaving his wife and family at Greymouth, went to Wanganui to spy out prospects. Letters written to Esther indicate what a loving family man he was and how concerned he was for their welfare. May was born 1st May 1879, and when she was five weeks old, Esther packed her worldly possessions, four children plus the new baby, and moved home per "Wallibi" to Aramoho. Home was a rough hut somewhere in the vicinity of Gibson Street.

The first tragedy. On 11th April 1880, Esther dressed the four older children in their best clothes and sent them for a walk with Ted, him sending them home by themselves. She was bathing baby May when people rushed in to say that young Teddy was drowned; the children apparently had been playing near Field's Creek and the boy had fallen in and drowned in just two feet of water. Nobody knew of artificial respiration. Dementedly Esther rushed out leaving the baby in the bath, where she was discovered some time later.

Charlie was born in November 1881, and at about this time the family moved to a better house across the way. May Gurr remembers when she was about three or four years old, carrying the important only wooden doll, Moggy, as her share of the move.

Young Esther (Ett) and Emmy are now old enough to go to work. Ett was away in Wellington when, on 16th June 1890, came the sudden news of the death of Ted Gurr with a heart attack.

Ted's death evidently left the family in dire straits, with a benefit concert being staged for the benefit of the family, attended by an audience of around 200 and was clearly a major event raising £12 and 1s (around £1,400 today).

Esther (Ted's widow) ran a boarding house in Aramoho near the railway station from 1892 until at least 1897. The location is commemorated today by a street named "Gurr Place", though the railway station is long gone.




Extracts from "One Hundred Years 1869-1969, Gurr Family Centennial" by Louis Gurr
Thanks to Michael Chambers for additional research and contributions