Showing 935 results

People & Organisations
GB-2014-WSA-03926 · Person · 1895-?

Brown, John Russell Ray, son of William Ray Brown, of Malvern, Wares, by Effie, daughter of Edward Long Fox, of Clifton; b. March 26, 1895; adm. Sept. 24, 1908 (R); left July 1912; served in France Aug. 1915 - Aug. 1917 and on the N. W. Frontier 1925; mentioned in despatches; m. Dec. 3, 1922, Margaret Letitia, daughter of Thomas Toler, of Saltersford Hall, Cheshire.

GB-2014-WSA-03989 · Person · 1887-?

Browne, Wallis Cazalet, son of Edward William Browne, of South Kensington; b. April 23, 1887; adm. April 26, 1901 (R); left Easter 1904.

GB-2014-WSA-04012 · Person · 1891-1951

Bruce-Joy, Arthur William, son of Albert Bruce-Joy, R. H. A., of Hindhead, Surrey, by Emilie Gaillard; b. March 23, 1891; adm. Sept. 27, 1906 (R); left Easter 1907; served in Great War I; temp. 2nd Lieut. R.E. June 16, 1915; Lieut. Aug. 1, 1916; a railway engineer; joined the Great Indian Peninsula Railway 1920; divisional superintendent 1924-6; general manager, Barsi Light Railway 1946-9; m. April 12, 1924, Valerie Marguerite Marie, daughter of Leon Ehrmann, of L'Estague, Marseilles; d. March 29, 1951.

GB-2014-WSA-04041 · Person · 1899-?

Buchanan, Alexander Paton, son of R. K. Buchanan, of Finsbury Park; b. July 13, 1899; adm. Sept. 26, 1912 (R); left Dec. 1916.

GB-2014-WSA-04057 · Person · 1901-?

Bucknall, Michael Allen, posthumous son of E. Allen Bucknall, of Deane House, Whitchurch, Hants; b. Nov. 9, 1901; adm. April 29, 1915 (R); left April 1919; Worcester Coll. Oxon. 1920-2; a farmer; R. N. V. R. 1940-5; m. April 30, 1932, Violet Beatrice, eldest daughter of Sir Dennis Fortescue Boles, Bart., of Bishops Lydeard, Somerset.

GB-2014-WSA-04058 · Person · 1910-?

Buckney, Lionel Arthur Faraday, son of Arthur Buckney of Tokyo and Harriet Gladys, d. of Wil­liam Roberts, of Clifton, Bristol; b. 15 Dec. 1910; adm. Jan. 1925 (R); left July 1929; Imperial Coll. of Science; a welding engineer in Australia.

GB-2014-WSA-04134 · Person · 1895-1946

Burford, Francis Rupert Roberts, son of George Henry Burford, M.B., of London, Senior Physician, London Homoeopathic Hospital for Diseases of Women, by Elizabeth Horraine, daughter of Charles Roberts Hollybrook, of co. Cork; b. June 22, 1895; adm. as exhibitioner Sept. 23, 1909 (R); elected head to Ch. Ch. Oxon. July 1914, matric. Michaelmas 1914; M.A. 1921; 2nd Lieut. 4th Batt. London Regt. Jan. 16, 1915; Lieut. July 1, 1917; demob. Jan. 1919; called to the bar at the Inner Temple Nov. 17, 1925; d. Jan. 23, 1946.

GB-2014-WSA-04136 · Person · 1902-1981

Burford, Patrick Gerald Roberts, brother of Francis Rupert Roberts Burford (q.v.); b. Aug. 23, 1902; adm. Sept. 23, 1915 (R); non-resident K.S. Sept. 1917; elected to an exhibition at Ch. Ch. Oxon. July 1921, matric. Michaelmas 1921; B.A. 1925; admitted a solicitor 1928; secretary of the Liverpool Chamber of Commerce 1946; 2nd Lieut. Artists Rifles, T. A., Dec. 1928; Lieut. Dec. 1931; Capt. Sept. 1932; Major Feb. 28, 1938; Lieut.-Col. 1943; T. D.; mentioned in despatches (N. W. Europe) L. G. Aug. 2, 1945; U. S. Bronze Star Medal and French Croix de Guerre; m. April 20, 1938, Joan Lillian, daughter of Charles Gifferd, of Westgate-on-Sea, Kent; d. 11 Mar. 1981.

Burge, Frederick, 1870-1894
GB-2014-WSA-04137 · Person · 1870-1894

Burge, Frederick, son of Charles Burge, of London, by Sarah Catherine, daughter of John Angle, of Homsey, Middlesex; b. March 3, 1870; adm. April 1884 (R); left July 1887; R.M.A. Woolwich 1888; 2nd Lieut. R. A. Feb. 14, 1890; Lieut. Feb. 14, 1893; killed while playing polo at Jullundur, India, Oct. 3, 1894.

GB-2014-WSA-04149 · Person · 1916-1941

Burke, Edmund Seymour, son of Edmund Burke, of Kingston Hill, Surrey; b. 11 Aug. 1916; adm. Sept. 22, 1931 (R); left July 1935; Pembroke Coll. Oxon., matric. Michaelmas 1935; Sub-Lieut. (A) R.N.V.R.; killed in action 30 Jul. 1941.

Edmund Seymour Burke was born at Rathdown, Ireland on the 11th of August 1916 the elder son of Edmund “Edo” Burke, a company director, and Sylvia Jayne (nee Hardy) Burke of the Glenridge Hotel, Virginia Water in Surrey and of the Granby Court Hotel, 88/89, Queen’s Gate, Brompton in London. He was educated at Westminster School where he was up Rigaud’s from September 1931 to July 1935. He played the part of Jane West in the Rigaud’s House Play of “The Fourth Wall” in 1934. He matriculated for Pembroke College, Oxford on the 15th of October 1935.
On leaving university he worked as an assistant tea buyer. He appeared as an extra in “A Yank at Oxford”, released on the 18th of February 1938 and was credited for his role as the First Officer in the play “The Infinite Shoeblack”, which was released in 1939.
He was enlisted in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve where he trained as a pilot and was later commissioned as a Sub Lieutenant (A). He was posted to 800 Naval Air Squadron based on board the aircraft carrier HMS Furious.
On the 30th of July 1941, the Royal Navy launched Operation EF, an attack on enemy merchant shipping in the Norwegian port of Kirkenes and on the Finnish port of Liinakhamari in Petsamo. The aircraft on board the aircraft carrier HMS Victorious would attack the Norwegian port while those on board HMS Furious would attack the port at Petsamo. The operation was intended to catch the enemy by surprise but the fleet was spotted by a German aircraft and their presence was relayed back to the two ports. When the formation arrived over Petsamo little shipping was present in the port. Instead the aircraft attacked the harbour installations, hitting jetties, a warehouse and an oil tank, which was set on fire. They met enemy fighter opposition and heavy anti aircraft fire in the target area.
Edmund Burke and his Observer, Leading Airman Arthur James Beardsley, took off from HMS Furious in Fulmar Mk II N4029 one of six aircraft from the Squadron which were to form the fighter escort for the operation on Petsamo. On its way to the target the aircraft was flying over the Barents Sea when it suffered an engine failure and was forced to crash land on to the sea. The two men were seen to swim clear of the aircraft and pull themselves into their life raft. HMS Furious was unable to pick the two men up due to the presence of enemy aircraft and submarines in the area.
Theirs was one of sixteen aircraft which were lost during the two operations.
His father received the following telegram: - “From Admiralty. Deeply regret to inform you that your son Sub Lieutenant (A) E.S. Burke is reported missing on active service.”
In 2017 a Russian journalist contacted the British Consulate in Moscow to say the he had found two graves marked “two unknown English airmen” on the Rybachy Peninsular in Northern Russia. It was discovered that the two bodies had been found in their dingy by nomadic travellers who had buried them on the beach. It is believed that they had died from hypothermia. Their bodies were exhumed, identified and reburied at their present resting place in July 2017 with an honour guard made up of British and Russian servicemen.
His brother, Pilot Officer Ian Campbell Burke OW, 142 Squadron, Royal Air Force, was killed in action on the 20th of September 1941.
He is buried at Vaida Bay Military Cemetery Grave 5.