Thanks for getting back to me, Ermy. I am still not much closer to identifying the people in the photo but some new information has come to light - although how reliable it is, I cannot say. I am told that my great grandmother, Florence Mary Borrill b. 1892, is in this photograph.
If we are to take it that this picture was taken around 1914 then Florence would be about 22 years old. Now, I know for definite that the lady on the right of the photograph is not my grandmother - I have seen pictures of Florence when she was young and she looked nothing like this lady.
The elderly lady, is I am quite sure, her mother, Hannah Pogmore. The elderly man next to her will be William Borrill, Florence's father. This only leaves the little girl on the left who could be Florence and she did look like her in the photo's I have seen of her in her later years (only less scary looking!).
So, if that is Florence then she looks about 9 or 10 years old - which would date the photo as being taken in about 1902. This would be at around the time of the end of the 2nd Boer War. Now, notice how the soldier looks more tanned than the rest of the people? Could it be possible that he has just returned from Africa?
John Thomas Borrill b. 1876 was Florence's half brother - from William Borrill's previous marriage to Mary Fisher (she died), and John was 16 year's older than Florence, which would make him in his mid twenties in this photograph.
I Googled "John Thomas Borrill" and the first search result came up informing me that there was a man with that name who served in the 7th Battalion Australian Commonwealth Horse Regiment(!) during the Boer Conflict in Africa I would have dismissed this as just a coincidence - same name but different person, but I remembered what James said `certainly the bandolier is an indication of a mounted soldier'.
If this is the right JTB then according to the website (am I allowed to post links? Maybe not) he is `245 Trumpeter John Thomas BORRILL'.
This is where I get really stuck because my knowledge of wars and uniforms is quite scant and even with the use of the internet, I struggle to tell one uniform from another. And at the risk of making myself look foolish by showing my ignorance - is it possible that an Englishman could find himself fighting in an Autralian regiment?
Well, I will leave it here for now because no one likes reading long posts, but thanks for helping Ermy and everyone else.
David