Hello,
I'm doing a bit of research into my wife's relatives after watching Testament of Youth. Three brothers from Forres, all served in the Seaforths. It seems one, John, may have survived. He served in the 1/6, service number 273249.
William (6188) was in the 5th and is buried in Mailly Wood Cemetery. We are going to divert our route home on our way back from Italy (via Austria and Germany) at the end of May so we can visit his grave. My wife had tears in her eyes when I told her I had found the grave of her dad's uncle.
The real purpose of my message is the final brother, James. He served in the 2nd, service number 21370. From what I can establish he died on the 28th of March 1918 and is commemorated on the Arras Memorial. The Morrayshire Roll of Honour states he was buried between the villages of Maricourt and Montauban. I cannot see any CWGC grave sites between those two villages although there is one immediately north of Montauban. That is, Bernafay Wood. If he is buried there, I fear that, since he is recorded at Arras, he is in a grave marked as "A soldier of the Great War" and that he was reburied there from his original grave between the two villages. Some of the graves there are reburials because some original graves were destroyed by shellfire, perhaps graves between the villages? The area was in allied hands until the end of March 1918 and since James died on the 28th of March 1918, there is a good chance he died here or hereabouts.
Anyway, I was wondering if you could give me any information that is in the war diary for the 28th of March 1918. There was an entry in that of the 5th for the day William died, not that he was mentioned but it gave an idea of the circumstances of the day. It may be that I could get some details from the diary of the 2nd.
Hope you can help.
Thanks, Ranald.