Kim
I don't think this has been posted here, but this is the detail from the CWGC's Debt of Honour Register:
http://www.cwgc.org/search/casualty_details.aspx?casualty=1767440This is a memorial to the missing, which means that there is no known grave for him.
This is
part of the CWGC's description:
The Loos Memorial commemorates over 20,000 officers and men who have no known grave, who fell in the area from the River Lys to the old southern boundary of the First Army, east and west of Grenay. On either side of the cemetery is a wall 15 feet high, to which are fixed tablets on which are carved the names of those commemorated. At the back are four small circular courts, open to the sky, in which the lines of tablets are continued, and between these courts are three semicircular walls or apses, two of which carry tablets, while on the centre apse is erected the Cross of Sacrifice. The memorial was designed by Sir Herbert Baker with sculpture by Charles Wheeler. It was unveiled by Sir Nevil Macready on 4 August 1930.
A