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This Site Has Changed address To www.bartonuponhumber.org.uk Click Here Or Any Link
G. P Harrold
LANCE CORPORAL GEORGE PHILLIMORE HARROLD This photograph from
September 1914 shows George Phillimore HARROLD and his son George Snr. was already
49 years of age, his earlier service in the Yorks & Lancs. having
already earned him the rank of sergeant. In 1911, and living at Preston,
East Yorkshire, his son had left Craven Street Secondary School in
Hull, where he gained the highest marks ever awarded a scholar, before
becoming apprenticed at Fenners Leather Works, in Marfleet, where
his father was already employed. Father and son served alongside
each other in France until George Snr. was wounded at the Battle
of Loos in September of 1915 and eventually returned to England to
the Northern Military Hospital. In the summer of 1916 he was discharged,
returning to the family home at 28 Lower Ings Road, It was Lance Corporal George Phillimore Harrold's19th birthday when he lost his young life on the 3rd July 1916 at Fricourt. The news was to devastate the rest of the family too, with George's brother, Arthur Harrold, a 13-year-old telegraph delivery lad, immediately running away to Hull with, we feel with hindsight, the intention of enlisting. Young George is commemorated on the War Memorial inside Barton's St. Peter's Parish Church, on the Cenotaph on Barrow Road and on the Thiepval Memorial, Somme, France. It is wondered whether the two Georges had left their employ across the Humber before volunteering, with their move over to Lincolnshire signifying employment at Hall's Rope Works, situated close to their home. Rope and Belt making was the family trade, with the Harrold Rope and Belt Works in Dursley, Gloucestershire, founded by George Snr's father in the mid 19th century, and still operating today. Eventually George and his wife moved their remaining family of two daughters and surviving son Arthur to Lincoln, where he took up the position of Factory Manager at the belt-making works of James Dawson, bringing with him his family firm's invention of the 'endless belt'. However, sadness was still to play its part, as their only daughter to marry was to die young, leaving two small daughters, whom George and Eliza helped to bring up. The great grandson of George Snr. and great nephew of George Junior, who also has an army background, would be very pleased to have any further information, which might help to fill in gaps in the family's history during these early years of the 20th century. Please make any initial contacts via info@bartonuponhumber.org.uk |
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