Hi Lyn
He attested in the 10th Hussars in Dublin on 18 November 1891 and given the number 3051. He was 22 years old. He was born in Hendon, Sunderland. His occupation was Miller. NoK was his brother Mark Smith, of 21 Whickham Street, Sunderland.
He spent 7 years in unnamed locations at ‘Home’ which was anywhere in the then UK, and elected to be transferred to the Army Reserve on 17 Nov 1898. You will need a Historical Records of the 10th Hussars to find where he was during these years. At the start of WW1 these reservists were paid 3s 6d a week and had to do 12 days training a year, so he would have earned a similar sum.
He was recalled in Oct 1899 and joined the 14th Hussars; embarked for South Africa 13 December 1899. You can tell a lot from the clasps earned with his SA medals. He was involved firstly in the Relief of Ladysmith - my GF was in besieged there with the Liverpools – then moved to the western front in time for the battles of Johannesburg and Diamond Hill. After the fall of the Boer capitals he spent two years chasing them over the Veldt in a guerrilla war. Arrived ‘Home’ 20 August 1902, and went back to the Army Reserve in April 1903 and discharged on 17 November 1903 after 12 years.
He elected to join the Section D Army Reserve (for time-expired men) on 16 May 1904, for four years, again at 3s 6d a week, and again had to do 12 days training a year. From November 1902 he would have received a pension (about 5 or 6d a day), so with the 6d AR money he would be getting almost as much as he would get while serving, and he could have found other work.
As well as the Queens South Africa medal, he earned the Kings South Africa medal for serving more than 18 months in SA. The QSA clasps – Johannesburg, Diamond Hill, Cape Colony, Orange Free State, Tugela Heights and Relief of Ladysmith – matches a G Smith, number 101, in the 14th Hussars. But I think that is a mistake in his number, as he would almost certainly have had a 4-digit number. Surprisingly his papers do not seem to have his 14th Hussars number.
http://www.stephen-stratford.co.uk/boer_war.htmKen