« Reply #7 on: Friday 29 November 24 21:51 GMT (UK) »
I wasn’t doubting his rise through the ranks so much as finding it surprising – my entire family is as working class as they come (and proud!) and it seems to me that class divisions were difficult to overcome in military ranking.
Your explanation about “dead men’s shoes” makes sense though.
Some men (whether from the upper or working class) are born leaders and some may have had practice at leading because they were the oldest sibling or oldest boy in the family.
Co-incidentally my grandfather was in the Royal Army Medical corp as a stretcher bearer and was upgraded to "Sergeant" receiving the equivalent of a sergt's pay. He was eventuallly gassed and invalided out of the army..
After the war he worked in our town as a "Labourer" for a wonderful local Quaker company.
In those days education cost parents money and his parents were poor. My grandmother taught him how to read and write. According to the family he and his company were mentioned in Despatches but I've not found him so I expect the ambulance station where he worked in WWI would have had a general mention.
Aberdeen: Findlay-Shirras,McCarthy: MidLothian: Mason,Telford,Darling,Cruikshanks,Bennett,Sime, Bell: Lanarks:Crum, Brown, MacKenzie,Cameron, Glen, Millar; Ross: Urray:Mackenzie: Moray: Findlay; Marshall/Marischell: Perthshire: Brown Ferguson: Wales: McCarthy, Thomas: England: Almond, Askin, Dodson, Well(es). Harrison, Maw, McCarthy, Munford, Pye, Shearing, Smith, Smythe, Speight, Strike, Wallis/Wallace, Ward, Wells;Germany: Flamme,Ehlers, Bielstein, Germer, Mohlm, Reupke