Sunday, July 26, 2015

Remembering Douglas Arthur Binns


Douglas Arthur Binns (1921-1943)


'Dougie' Binns was baptized on 18 May 1921 at Stowell Memorial Church in Salford.  He was the son of Lilian (née Cawdery) and Frank Binns, who were married on 24 July 1920. [1]   Frank had been employed by the Ford Motor Company in Trafford Park, but he moved his family to Ilford in Essex, when the car plant relocated to Dagenham in 1931.  At the age of 20, Douglas married Catherine Bell during the closing months of 1942.   By that time, he was already in uniform.


1942 Marriage of Douglas and Catherine
click on images to enlarge

To the left of Douglas are Frank and Lilian Binns, and. on the far
right, his sister Dorothy


Douglas was a Trooper (service number 7956678) in the 50th Royal Tank Regiment (50 RTR), a constituent part of the 23rd Armoured Brigade and the Royal Armoured Corps.  50 RTR was formed in Bristol during April of 1939, when Territorial Army Battalions were converted to Tank Battalions in preparation for war with Germany.  The 23rd Armoured Brigade left England for the Middle East in May 1942 to join the Eight Army, and became active in early July.  Considering the timing of Douglas' wedding, it is uncertain whether he saw action in the Second Battle of El Alamein.  By May 1943, Allied forces had driven Rommel's Afrika Korps and their Italian allies from North Africa, leaving Sicily as the next objective in the Mediterranean theatre.



video: Invasion of Sicily

Operation Husky


Operation Husky was the code name given to the planned invasion of Sicily. It was to be the largest seaborne operation to that date. Beginning on 10 July 1943, an armada of over 2500 ships would transport 160,000 Allied troops to the island.  Their objective was to defeat Axis forces, and establish a base for the eventual conquest of Italy.  The British Eighth Army landed on the beaches at the Gulf

click on image to enlarge
source: Garland & Smith

of Noto and then pushed northward along the island's eastern coast.   By 13 July, Augusta had been captured, and three days later the Primosole Bridge, which spanned the River Simeto, was secured, giving the British forces access to the plain of Catania. However, German resistance was stiffening, and casualties were mounting, which slowed the advance. The 50th Royal Tank Regiment, as part of XXX Corps, was assigned to the left flank.  Operating in support of the 51st Highland Division, the 50th RTR moved toward Gerbini, with its well defended aerodrome defences.  On the night of July 18/19, they met fierce resistance from the Panzer-Division Hermann Göring and its Italian allies.  It was a particularly bloody engagement that lasted until 21 July.  Douglas Binns was killed in action during this battle. He was 22 years old.


Source: Virtual Catania War Cemetery
Thank You

Plot: I. C. 17.

Dougie and his sister, Dorothy

Manchester Evening News 8 May 1944
 ROLL OF HONOUR
LILY and FRANK BINNS.—Treasured birthday memories of our beloved grandson and nephew, DOUGLAS, presumed killed July, 1943, Sicily. Many a silent tear is shed for one we loved so well. Grandma CAWDERY, Aunty MAY, Uncle JOHN, and COUSINS. Birthday memories of one who was dear to us all. ELSIE. CHARLIE, and CHILDREN. 



Notes

[1] Parish record:

Marriage: 24 Jul 1920 Stowell Memorial, Salford, Lancashire, England
Frank Binns - 20, Coil Winder, Bachelor, 23 West Brownbill Street, Salford
Lilian Cawdery - 20, Armature Winder, Spinster, 23 West Brownbill Street, Salford
Groom's Father: Thomas Binns, Joiner
Bride's Father: Arthur Cawdery, Joiner [i.e. Francis Arthur Cawdery]
Witness: John Taylor; May Cawdery

Baptism: 18 May 1921 Stowell Memorial, Salford, Lancashire, England
Douglas Arthur Binns - [Child] of Frank Binns & Lilian
    Abode: 23 West Brownbill Street Salford
    Occupation: Labourer
    Baptised by: C. E. Leytham Rector
    Register: Baptisms 1921 - 1942, Page 7, Entry 49

Friday, July 17, 2015

First World War Centenary. 10 : Michael Charles Cawdery

Sargeant Michael Charles Cawdery






Michael Charles 'Charlie' Cawdery was born on the 20th of September 1873 at no. 20 Queen's Square, Dublin, Ireland.  He was the son of George Cawdery and Teresa Scott. 

Charlie's father was a master carpenter, who specialized in making stage sets. He had moved to Dublin from England, and chose to live in Queen's Square, because of its association with, and proximity to, the Queen's Royal Theatre located on Pearse Street,  The Theatre Royal was also nearby on Hawkins Street.  The family remained in Dublin throughout much of the 


No. 20 Queen's Square
(now Pearse Square) Dublin


Video: Pearse Square

1870s, but, sometime before 1881, Teresa died, and George moved back to England with Michael Charles and his siblings, Francis Arthur and Mary Georgina.  George's other daughter, Susan, appears to have died in her youth.  Upon returning to England, the family lived in Camberwell, Surrey. George died at 109 Blackfriars Road in Southwark on 15 July 1898.  By 1894. Francis was living in Salford, having followed in his father's occupational footsteps, as did Charles. In the 1901 census his occupation is given as a "stage carpenter theatre". By 1911 Charles was living in Pendleton.

click on images to enlarge

                  
                       Francis (left) and Charlie
Francis (left) and Charlie



                  
                     George Cawdery and offspring
Teresa Scott Cawdery
   
Susan holding Mary Georgina ?

To Arms!


When Charlie joined the Lancashire Fusiliers, he was already 41 years old, and at the upper age limit for recruitment, but he dutifully answered the call to arms as Kitchener began his task of building a new all-volunteer army. Charlie was one of the ''Salford Pals", who joined the ranks as a Lance Sargeant in the 16th (Service) Battalion (2nd Salford Pals). His service number was 11723.  The 16th 


Charles appears to have misrepresented his age in 1914



Lance Sergeant Michael Charles Cawdery
Lancashire Fusiliers 11723 [1]

was formed in Salford on 5 November 1914 by Sir Montague-Barlow, MP for Salford South, and the Salford Brigade Committee. After some intitial training carried out locally, the battalion moved to Conway Camp on the 11th of February 1915.  The 16th Bn was assigned to the 96th Brigade, 32nd Division, and was moved to Prees Heath Camp in Shropshire for trench-warfare training. However, conditions there were too wet, and, on 20 June 1915, it was moved to Catterick. North Yorkshire. This was followed by a stint at the Ponteland Rifle Ranges in Northumberland. On the 13 August 1915, the battalion was transferred to Codford Camp [2] on Salisbury Plain, and, in the following month, it was formally adopted by the War Office.

In November 1915, the 32nd Division received orders to prepare to sail for France. Charlie and the 2nd Salfords left Codford on a slow-moving train in the early hours of the morning with full packs.  After an eight hour journey, the battalion arrived at Folkestone, embarking on an Isle of Man Packet Co. steamer, bound for Boulogne-sur-Mer.  After a smooth crossing, the ship arrived on the 22nd of November 1915. [3]  From the port, Charlie travelled by train to Longpré, and then continued to move south and east to the front at  La Boisselle. Christmas Day was spent in reserve at Albert.

The 16th Battalion (2nd Salfords) spent the first six months of 1916 confined to a relatively small area just north of the Rive Somme. Its principal job, when not in reserve, was to man the trenches at Authuille, Theipval and Aveluy.  On 1 July 1916, this same small area turned out to be the most deadly place on earth.  This fateful day, the 'First Day on the Somme' was the blackest day in the British Army's long history. It marked one of the beginning of one of the bloodiest military battles in history. Charlie and the Salford Pals Battalions were in the thick of it.   In preparation for the Battle of the Somme, British artillery fired more than 1.5 million shells at the German lines, more than in the first year of the war and another 250,000 shells were fired on 1 July. The noise was horrendous, and could be heard on Hampstead Heath, 300 miles (480 km) away. The object was to neutralize the


enemy and obliterate their defences.  British commanders were so confident that the artillery had been effective that they ordered their men to walk slowly toward the German lines.  It was a slow walk toward German machine guns, and they were cut to pieces.  By the end of the day, 20,000 corpses and 40,000 wounded littered the landscape of no-man's land.

We assume that Charlie was one of the wounded, and that, upon his recovery, he was transferred to the Labour Corps, though his age may have militated against front line service. He served with the 9th Labour Company with the rank of Sargeant. His service number was 566128.


Charles married Adelaide "Ada" Rebecca Rollings, presumably before their first child was born, in 1893.  Ada was born in Ancoats, Manchester in 1875. They had seven children:


Michael Charles Cawdery's death was registered at Barton, He died on 22 June 1951, and is buried in the Southern Cemetery, Chorlton-cum-Hardy, Manchester. He was 77.  Ada died on 31 August 1940, and is buried with her husband.

[1] Probably taken during training (1915). [see Manchester Courier, 16th January 1915]. The photograph was sent to Charlie's niece, May Cawdery, who was also engaged in the war effort. The verso reads: " To May with Best Wishes from Uncle Charlie".
[2] Diary: conditions at Codford Camp
[3] sources: Tattersall Diary ; History of the Lancashire Fusiliers, 1914-1918, v.2. The Isle of Man packet steamer was either Empress Queen or Mona's Queen.
[4] son: Edward Hilton born 1925
[5] children: Arthur Cawdrey born 1925; Harold born 1927
[6] children: Charles born 1924; Hilda born 1932
[7] children: John R. born  1927 ; Irene born 1929 ; Rita born 1936
[8] son: Brian H. Eaton born 1942