We will remember them, January 1916

42cb1b6b156404202a249fa84b20417b

Each month Michael Scaife is producing articles for the St Philip and St James Church news sheet to remember those local residents who died in that month 100 years ago.

There are 71 men recorded on the Alderley Edge War Memorial, along with one member of the British Red Cross and a further 6 are remembered in the annual Remembrance Day service.

Below is Michael's most recent article.

Last month we commemorated Private Gilbert Edward Davies, one of two men from Alderley Edge who were killed in the last weeks of the Gallipoli campaign. This month we commemorate the other: Corporal Frank Barrow.

In Memory of Corporal Frank Barrow 2305 1st/7th Bn.,

Cheshire Regiment who died on 5th December 1915. Age 22

Frank Barrow was born in Mobberley on 21st January 1893, the son of John and Annie Barrow. John was a bricklayer. By 1911 the family had moved to London Road, where Annie kept a confectioner's shop. By this time, Frank, aged 18, was an apprentice in the warehouse of S and J Watts, Manchester.

His army number (2305) indicates that he joined the Cheshire Regiment soon after the outbreak of war. The 1/7th battalion was despatched to Gallipoli in July 1915, landing at Suvla Bay on 9th August. The landing was totally mismanaged by the incompetent Lieutenant-General Sir Frederick Stopford, who was dismissed after a week.

By that time, however, Turkish reinforcements had confined the British forces to a narrow bridgehead from which they were unable to break out. Trench warfare ensued, but what was worse was that the troops had to endure appalling conditions. The summer heat and lack of sanitation led to epidemic sickness. Frank Barrow was one of the many who were killed not by the enemy but by the conditions.

On 5th December he died from pneumonia at a Field Ambulance Station at Mudros on the Greek island of Limnos, where a number of hospitals had been established to receive casualties from Gallipoli. He is buried at East Mudros Military Cemetery. His brother Fred also served in the 1/7th Cheshires and was wounded in the Gallipoli campaign, but appears to have survived the war.

Tags:
First World War
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement