MYSTERY RESOLVED - AND ALL BECAUSE OF A
SPELLING
ERROR!
Anyone who has read Geoff Crompton's book
'34 MEN', the story of the Moulton men who died in WW1, will recall
that he was unable to discover any information on 2 of the 34 whose
names are inscribed on the village War Memorial and the Tablet
in the Parish Church of St Stephen the Martyr. They were Alfred
Barber and Ernest Blyth.
By following up a chance remark made by
Steve Woodward, a fellow member of the Western Front Association,
Geoff has now, 12 months after publication, unravelled the mystery of
Ernest Blyth. The major
stumbling block was that the surname Blyth was incorrectly spelt both
on the Memorial and Church Tablet with an 'e'.
None of the Blythe's listed by the Commonwealth War Graves
Commission had any apparent association with Moulton or indeed
Northwich. Sadly, the
solution to the mystery was sitting on the doorstep, for Ernest was
buried in Davenham Churchyard not 2 miles from the village.
When Andy Greenhough, our Vicar, and Geoff scraped away the grass and weeds from the small private headstone last November the faint lettering on the face of the stone revealed the last resting place of Ernest William Blyth.
Link to Moulton War Memorial
What follows is a belated dedication to Ernest.
Owners of the book should download and print the Adobe Acrobat ™ file from here.
Insert at page 191 of your copy
DEDICATED
TO THE MEMORY OF ERNEST WILLIAM BLYTH
ERNEST
WILLIAM BLYTH - PRIVATE No. 269543
1/7th
Battalion King's (Liverpool Regiment)
Died
of Wounds Wednesday 15th August 1917. Age c.34
He
is buried in Davenham (St Wilfrid) Churchyard. New 632
Medal
entitlement: 1914/1915 Star? - British War Medal - Victory Medal.
Ernest Blyth was not
a Moultoner. He was born in Downham Market, Suffolk in 1883/4 and was
the son of Frederick Blyth a carpenter and joiner. By 1901 the family
were living at 59, Lynn Road, Wisbech St Peter. Ernest is shown on the
Census for that year as the third of five siblings living in the
house. He is 17 and a Boot and Shoe-maker. Strangely, Mrs Blyth is
missing from the Census, however, as her husband Fred is listed as
'married' and not 'widowed' it looks very much as if she was away from
home for some reason.
Sometime after their
daughter Gladys was born Ernest and Annie moved to Strangeways,
Manchester. This area of the City, aside from housing that notorious
'Academy for bad lads!!' was also a hive of small workshops making
clothing and footwear for the retail trade. It may well be that Ernest
opened his own shoe-making business there or, alternatively, managed
one for someone else. In any case, it was from Strangeways that he
strode forth to enlist at the Manchester recruiting office sometime
after the outbreak of war.
Ernest was drafted
into the 2nd/7th Battalion of the King's
(Liverpool Regiment) to train as an infantryman. The 2nd/7th
King's along with five other King's Battalions made up the 57th
Division. Little could found in the records of exactly when he
enlisted or indeed, where he served until 1917. He may well have
waited until the Conscription Bill was placed on the statute book in
mid 1916, in which case he would not be entitled to the 1914/1915 Star
as shown above.
July 1917 was a very
mixed month for the 2/7th King's based on Armentieres.
According to the Battalions War Diary they began the month in the
Houplines Sector of the line and for the first fortnight nothing much
happened. However, all good things come to an end, for the enemy
opposite decided to subject the lads from Liverpool to a constant and
terrible barrage. During this time the Germans sent over two raiding
parties to try to take prisoners. They were given short shrift by the
'Scousers' who used bombs and Lewis guns to repel the foe. Losses
after these attacks were four killed and 30 wounded. On 21st
July a Gas shell fell on the Quartermasters Store with the result that
two men died of wounds and seven were gassed. Gas shelling was severe
and frequent at this time and on 22nd July 19 Officers and
men succumbed to this most dreadful of weapons.
The last entry in the
War Diary for the month of July is an account of casualties for the
month and gives some idea of the intense shelling to which the
Battalion had been subjected. A
total of 12 men had been killed with 144 wounded - of these 11 more
were to die. It is more that probable that Pte Ernest Blyth was one of
these. It is known that
Ernest survived his injuries long enough to be transported to a
Military Hospital at Bagthorpe, Nottingham where, on 15th
August he gave up the ghost.
After his death Annie, who may have returned to her old home in Moulton whilst Ernest was fighting on the Western Front, decided to bury her husband at St Wilfrid's, Davenham. The records show that her parents, Fred and Ellen, now living at 'Brackendale' 120, Main Road, Moulton, were the grave owners. In the School records for September 1918 Annie is show as having resumed teaching but is 'absent by permission'.
Note:
The book '34 MEN' can be purchased from the Village Newsagents
Price £9.95. All profits to the British Legion, Poppy Appeal Fund.