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Messages - stewart_r

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1
World War Two / Re: 110th army troop royal engineers,East Lancashire.
« on: Saturday 29 January 22 14:21 GMT (UK)  »
I believe a field troop was 44 men commanded by a lieutenant.
I have the 1939 war diary, very basic stuff, rarely mentions the men. But you can get an idea of geography...i.e where they were. I would send it to you, but it's on my laptop which is kaput at the moment.
I would assume the troop would stay together, and follow the same timeline. Depending on when they joined. My grandfather was in from 1939..up to 1943. So although he did get to Sicily, he did not go to Greece.

ah wow, just 44 men. They surely would all have known one another. My grandad did not join 110th till 1943 so maybe they didn't even overlap! The 1939 diary wouldn't cover any time my grandad was with the unit. What's involved with ordering copies? Just fill in the form on national archives website?

2
World War Two / Re: 110th army troop royal engineers,East Lancashire.
« on: Saturday 29 January 22 14:13 GMT (UK)  »
Just checked to see if his tracer card was on findmypast.  There is one card, but it has no detail.
Ah, that's a shame. Thanks for checking

3
World War Two / Re: 110th army troop royal engineers,East Lancashire.
« on: Saturday 29 January 22 14:01 GMT (UK)  »
Hi there welcome to the gang. What was his service number ?

Thanks! :-) His service number was: 2020258

4
World War Two / Re: 110th army troop royal engineers,East Lancashire.
« on: Saturday 29 January 22 13:27 GMT (UK)  »
Hi,

We have just recently found out that my paternal Grandfather served with 110th from March 1943 until his "notification of impending release" papers were written in Vienna in 1946. He very rarely spoke of his time in the army in the years that followed until his death in 1990 and the family respected his wishes and didn't ask too many questions so we don't know much about his service or where he went. He showed no interest in reunions and never claimed the medals he was entitled to until the early 80s (under strong encouragement from his family) whereupon he scarcely looked at them before passing them to me as a young child. He was awarded the Italy Star and North Africa star so until now that's about all we knew about his wartime whereabouts!

My Dad (Grandad's only child) had until recently never really sought to find out about Grandad's service until recently - I assume out of respect for his wishes to forget about the wartime and just live his life - but has recently started showing an interest and hence we ordered a copy of his service records and found out he served in this unit.

My Grandfather's name was Alexander (Sandy) Robertson and was from Bathgate, West Lothian, Scotland. I know there was mention of another Scot from Aberdeen in the unit too. His army trade was a Turner. I have looked closely at the photos and can't recognise him in any of them.

I wonder if some of you more knowledgeable folks might indulge me with some (probably very basic) questions:

1 - Do you know roughly how many men would make up the unit?
2 - Would the men in the unit remain together throughout? I read that Elaine had pieced together her relative's timeline - can I assume my grandfather shared the same timeline and went to the same places for the time they served in the same unit or does it not necessarily work like that?
3 - Is my next step to order the unit's war diaries for the time period my granddad was in the 110th? Do I just order them in full from National Archives website or am I supposed to search for subsets somehow?
4 - Any idea what a Turner did in the army in WW2!? Repairs to machinery??

It amused me that, on discharge, his conduct was recorded as exemplary and amongst his remarks the CO noted that he'd been with the unit "for about a year". By that point it had been well over 3 years. Perhaps Grandad liked to keep his head down!! :-)

Any help gratefully appreciated!


5
Handwriting Deciphering & Recognition / Re: Cannot decipher ww2 army unit
« on: Thursday 27 January 22 10:14 GMT (UK)  »
Ah, yes that looks likely. Thanks so much everyone

6
Handwriting Deciphering & Recognition / Re: Cannot decipher ww2 army unit
« on: Wednesday 26 January 22 20:10 GMT (UK)  »
Hi Simon,

Thanks for taking a look. The whole document is here: https://photos.app.goo.gl/pB6Rq7SEEZ4ip4nGA

The person (my grandfather) was in the Royal Engineers

7
Handwriting Deciphering & Recognition / Cannot decipher ww2 army unit
« on: Wednesday 26 January 22 18:46 GMT (UK)  »
Hi,

Can anyone make out the WW2 British Army unit in the second column next to 6.3.43 in this image: https://photos.app.goo.gl/Ar9Ck3xhMppN9ab88

Any help gratefully appreciated!

8
Family History Beginners Board / Re: Illegitimate Children (Edinburgh 1860s)
« on: Sunday 02 January 22 14:34 GMT (UK)  »
And James death just a few days later... :(

Neale's excellent point about the parents on the death cert being only as good as the informant's knowledge is particularly well demonstrated on his certificate  :-\

9
Family History Beginners Board / Re: Illegitimate Children (Edinburgh 1860s)
« on: Sunday 02 January 22 13:24 GMT (UK)  »
Found Mary's death certificate. They moved to Linlithgow.

Not managed to pin them down on the 1881 census yet but got her parents names now so really feel like its progressing. Thanks again to everyone for your help.

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