Author Topic: Buried at a Holmfirth Cemetery in 1918. But which one?  (Read 9002 times)

Offline mirf

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Re: Buried at a Holmfirth Cemetery in 1918. But which one?
« Reply #18 on: Monday 21 May 12 11:24 BST (UK) »
Gamiel buried New Mill Church age 29 Abode Hospital Holmfirth  Militiary
 record on Ancestry West Yorks Parish Reg  regards Mirf
kilner ( Wombwell/Huddersfield )Atkinson Darley Yorks Fewston Shaw Mills Bishop Thornton Marsden (Masham)
Imeson Kirby Malzeard

Offline Tony Lund

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Re: Buried at a Holmfirth Cemetery in 1918. But which one?
« Reply #19 on: Monday 21 May 12 17:46 BST (UK) »
Thank you for that.  I will have to take another look around New Mill there the next time I am out there.

Thanks again,

Tony.
Lund or Lunn and Hatfield of Pontefract.

Holmfirth & District during the First World War.

Online dobfarm

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Re: Buried at a Holmfirth Cemetery in 1918. But which one?
« Reply #20 on: Monday 21 May 12 19:36 BST (UK) »
In my opinion the marriage residence is not always the place of birth. Never forget Workhouse and overseers accounts records of birth

Offline bykerlads

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Re: Buried at a Holmfirth Cemetery in 1918. But which one?
« Reply #21 on: Monday 21 May 12 22:31 BST (UK) »
Whilst browsing this thread, 2 things have occured to me-
    -what are the origins of the name Gamiliel? seems very unusual, especially for Holmfirth.
    -I would have expected the man to have served in the Dukes (1st 5th?), that seems to be where most Holmfirthers enlisted including mygrandfathers and greatuncles.



Online dobfarm

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Re: Buried at a Holmfirth Cemetery in 1918. But which one?
« Reply #22 on: Monday 21 May 12 23:19 BST (UK) »
I am trying to find which cemetery a man who died in 1918 was buried in.  It will be in Holmfirth, but there are a few and none that seem obvious.  I have seen four different spellings for his Christian name plus two short versions.

He is Gamaliel Boothroyd who was a Private (23419), 20th Battalion, Durham Light Infantry.   He died on the morning of Sunday 20th October 1918 at the Holmfirth Auxiliary Hospital.  He was twenty-nine years old.  He lived at Pog Ing, Holmfirth, as a boy he had attended Wooldale Council School and Wooldale Town End Primitive Methodist Sunday School and later worked with his father in the Yeast Business.  He enlisted in June 1916 with the Durham Light Infantry and went to France in October 1916. 

In June 1917 he was severely wounded in the left thigh and his left hand.  The hand became almost useless and he was medically discharged as disabled.  Back in Holmfirth the doctors wanted to operate but felt it necessary to wait until his health improved and he grew stronger, eventually it was decided to go ahead with the operation, however he became much worse as a result and subsequently died.

His death is registered in the ordinary home deaths, December Quarter 1918.  But not on the Commonwealth War Graves Commission Register, which is a pity because they always give the cemetery details.  He is one of a small number of Holmfirth men who died in or as a result of the war that I still do not have the burial details of.

I would greatly appreciate any information, it will probably be somewhere that will seem obvious once known, but I need to have positive information whenever possible.

Thanks,

Tony.

1) ~Gamiliel - origins Greek, Hebrew, Jewish (Biblical name)

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Quote (above)

2)~He is Gamaliel Boothroyd who was a Private (23419), 20th Battalion, Durham Light Infantry
In my opinion the marriage residence is not always the place of birth. Never forget Workhouse and overseers accounts records of birth