It's now exactly 70 years since the troopships Staffordshire and Derbyshire sailed from Liverpool on Christmas Day 1942. British Army units board the Staffordshire included the 16th Battalion Durham Light Infantry and the 70th Field Regiment, RA. Aboard the Derbyshire units included the 2nd/5th Battalion of the Sherwood Foresters. These are links to material already on my web site relating to the sailing of the ships on Christmas Day 1942:
Reminiscences of Christmas Day 1942 by C/Sgt W James, D Coy, 16 DLI.
A December 1942 Letter from the Troopship Staffordshire by Pte T Tunney, C Coy, 16 DLI.
A New Year's Day 1943 poem by C/Sgt W James, D Company, 16 DLI.
Memories of Christmas Day 1942 by CSM George Gates, HQ Coy, 16 DLI.
A signed 16th Durham Light Infantry Officers' Christmas Dinner Menu for 25/12/42.
Tuesday, 25 December 2012
Wednesday, 11 July 2012
16th DLI War Graves Photographs
I've now added a new section of the site with large format photographs of several 16th DLI war graves. I will be adding many more photographs to this section in due course.
Courtesy of ex-CSM W 'Jimmy' James, who revisited the Italian battlefields several times in the 1990s and 2000s, I have a good selection of photographs of CWGC 16 DLI headstones in Italy. However, I have none for the casualties suffered in Greece in 1944-45 and only a very few for the casualties suffered in Tunisia in 1943. Also there are several 16th Btn casualties who were buried with CWGC headstones in the UK, who died either prior to or after active service overseas.
If anyone reading has such photographs, your own work only please, large format, full headstone composition, I would be very keen to place them on the site--fully credited of course.
The new section starts here:
http://powbooks.atspace.co.uk/page20.html
The new section starts here:
http://powbooks.atspace.co.uk/page20.html
Thursday, 21 June 2012
The Password is Courage, My Detailed Book Review
I've now added a POW and DLI Book Reviews section to the site where I will post detailed reviews of books focussing on the British POW experience during World War Two. Three book reviews have been posted thus far:
The Password is Courage, by John Castle,1954
The Man Who Broke into Auschwitz, by Denis Avey and Rob Broomby, 2011
Stalag Doctor, by I Schire, 1956
Obviously when reading and reviewing such books, I will be paying particular attention to where these particular POWs feature in my consecutive listing of German POW numbers and thus who else was there and thereabouts with them on the day their POW numbers were issued.
The new DLI and POW book reviews index page is here:
http://powbooks.atspace.co.uk/page10.html
Friday, 27 April 2012
Sgts Danny Feasey and James Hood MM 16 DLI
I've now added several pages telling the fascinating story of Sgts Danny Feasey and James Hood MM. Both were ex Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire Regiment NCOs, who were with the 16th DLI from 1940.
Both were captured at Sedjenane in February 1943. They escaped while en route from Camp PG 82 to Germany. Feasey was later recaptured. Hood eventually regained Allied lines and was awarded the MM. They did not see each other again until 1987 and the new pages also include some 1987 newspaper coverage of their reunion. The item begins on this page:
http://powbooks.atspace.co.uk/page29.html
Saturday, 2 July 2011
German POW Numbers Circa 139000 and 153000
The latest addition to the site is an updated sequence of consecutively arranged German POW numbers assigned to British Army Other Ranks arriving from Italy in September 1943. As before, I am concentrating on DLI men but I have included a sampling of men from other units, particularly those with adjacent numbers to the DLI soldiers.
The numbers in the 139000 sequence include that assigned to to my father's friend and platoon mate Norman Cook, who was with him in Camp PG 53 and who is mentioned in almost all of his surviving correspondence from that era. Also included are B Coy 16 DLI Sergeants Gascoyne and Greaves, who, with adjacent POW numbers, obviously stuck together during their time as POWs.
The numbers in the the 153000 sequence also include several 16th DLI Sedjenane POWs, including Sgt Charles Bray, ex-D Company, Sgt David Friswell and Syd Shutt, ex-B Coy, of Thornley Co Durham.
The 139000 sequence begins on this page:
And the 153000 sequence on this page:
All of these men were at Camp PG 53 prior to their transfer to Germany.
Friday, 1 July 2011
16 DLI Signal Platoon 1945, New Detailed Caption
There's been a 1945 photograph of some of the Other Ranks of the 16 DLI Signal Platoon on the site for a while now. I've now updated it with a full listing of names, courtesy of information supplied by the daughter of Pte T H Gaffney, who joined the Battalion as part of a reinforcement draft in early March 1943.
Sunday, 12 September 2010
The 6th Battalion the Lincolnshire Regiment at Sedjenane
The latest pages added to the site include a heartfelt poem about the Battle of Sedjenane written by Cpl Eric Lowther of the 6th Battalion the Lincolnshire Regiment. Also included on the new pages is an excellent colourised portrait photograph of Cpl Lowther and two as yet unidentified NCO colleagues. The photograph also nicely shows off the distinctive 'oak tree' shoulderflash of the 46th Infantry Division.
This is the direct link to the page:
http://16dli.awardspace.co.uk/page322.html
And this is a smaller version of the photo which I have placed on the existing Battle of Sedjenane extract from the 1945 History of the 6th Battalion the Lincolnshire Regiment:
http://16dli.awardspace.co.uk/page257.html
This is the direct link to the page:
http://16dli.awardspace.co.uk/page322.html
And this is a smaller version of the photo which I have placed on the existing Battle of Sedjenane extract from the 1945 History of the 6th Battalion the Lincolnshire Regiment:
http://16dli.awardspace.co.uk/page257.html
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