KGB Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 Tollemache's name was a result of a dispute over money (hence initials LSD) The family just kept adding surnames. As for Wolfeslegelsteinhausbergdorff that again is invented. Lishington-Armstrong-Marshall is buried next to my Great Great Uncle. My Grandfather served with a Pte Shatwell. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
neverforget Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 Brigadier General Henry Brewster Percy Lion Kennedy. Bit of a mouthful. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
James Brown Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 RICHARD THOMAS CYRIL WILLIS-FLEMING, Second Lieutenant Royal Horse Artillery 1st/5th (Lowland) Bde.Age:20 Died of Wounds 4th August 1916 Egypt Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
David_Underdown Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 For confusion potential then Second Lieutenant Major William Booth has to be in there (a Yorkshire ad England/MCC cricketer) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Major_Booth Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 For confusion potential then Second Lieutenant Major William Booth has to be in there (a Yorkshire ad England/MCC cricketer) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Major_Booth Nice.. good find. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
seaforths Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 Try Harder. It's not a request it's, a name I came across on CWGC when my fingers were on the wrong keys and I hit return. I probably wouldn't be able to find him again if I was purposefully seeking him. Just struck me as a good name the guy was African. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ron Clifton Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 Not forgetting a certain French officer called Charles Andrew Joseph Mary de Gaulle. Ron Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
David Filsell Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 I haven't seen a bottle of Tolly for years. I seem to recall it was brewed in Norfolk, but I may be wrong. Is it still available or has I gone the way of many other local brews? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lawsyd Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 Wouldn't it be great (little bit of devilment here, so apologies) to see an unusual & multi-barreled name who was only a private. Then try & imagine the grief he probably got from some gruff, don't stand on ceremony, Sgt. Major Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NigelS Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 Following in Mike's (skipman) playground footsteps (post #25) Click (and in case anyone's wondering it isn't an Ancestry transcription error); there are also a handful of 'straight' S*x entries within the MIC records. NigelS Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NigelS Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 Talking of smut, there's always Click (although this should really be F.E.L rather than 'Fel') NigelS Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MelPack Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 Wasn't there a similar thread in times past? I remember a few hearty laughs and an ever changing title - which, of course, is the reason I can't find it now. Here you are: http://1914-1918.invisionzone.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=47738 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mark Hone Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 Tolly Cobbold was taken over by Ridley's, then by the Greene King conglomerate. The brand now doesn't exist as such, although I believe Greene King do produce Tolly-labelled brews occasionally. I preferred Tolly to Greene King when I was at Cambridge in the 1980s but even then it was getting a bit difficult to track down in Cambridge's multitude of pubs and college bars. My real favourite, Ruddles County, is still made by Greene King, but no longer brewed in Rutland. I recently discovered that it was the favourite brew of author Laurie Lee who used to have it specially imported to Gloucestershire. Sorry, going off topic. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Terry_Reeves Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 Major James Hardress de Warrenne Waller DSO OBE RE. - who was an Irishman. He served with 66 Field Company in Gallipoli and Salonica as well as WW2. An architect by profession, he was a specialist in concrete structures and came up with idea of a concrete battleship. The Royal Navy were interested and a 170 ft long , 1000 ton barge was constructed to see if the idea was viable. Unfortunately the end of the war killed the project off and the test vessel ended up on a French waterway. TR Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
KGB Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 Hardress de Warrenne Waller. Doesn't sound redolent of Ireland. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Steven Broomfield Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 Presumably a Norman descendant who followed the Conqueror, or of Huguenot descent going to sort out a few Catholics for King Billy. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 Ok... Big-Gen Hon. John Frederick Hepburn-Stuart-Forbes-Trefusis DSO 1st Bn Irish Guards. Commanded the battalion coming out of First Ypres when the unit ws reduced to less than two companies. See here Allegedly the youngest Brigadier in the ARmy in his day. Someone asked about soldiers with multiple barreled names. This gentleman ranker started as a Trooper in the Imperial Yeomanry. Sadly he died of wounds. Had he lived and married a cousin he may well have beaten our man in the Leicestershire Regt. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 They is a 2587 Sepoy Ali Shah Mad, Baluchistan Infantry. I believe some of his descendants are still kicking around. ...and a 2200 Pte Grenade, Mauritius Labour Battalion No forename though. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ron Clifton Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 Major-General E Montagu-Stuart-Wortley is not exactly regarded as one of the more successful divisional commanders. A posh label is no guarantee as to the quality of the contents. Ron Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Admin Michelle Young Posted 3 September , 2014 Admin Share Posted 3 September , 2014 http://1914-1918.invisionzone.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=122531&hl=tollemache Michelle Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 For confusion potential then Second Lieutenant Major William Booth has to be in there (a Yorkshire ad England/MCC cricketer) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Major_Booth There is a 10244 Sgt Captain A Bowen King's Liverpool Regt. Ended up as a WOII. ..and a MS 618 Sgt Captain Blake ASC there are 26 men with a forename 'Captain' but the most alarming is 36662 Cpl Captain Whipp MGC Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
johnboy Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 Leading Seaman R [ Reginald] SOLE. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JWK Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 Some names that caught my eye on a recent trip to Flanders: Not "outrageous", but just beautiful: Captain Gilbert Jocelyn Basil Fazakerley-Westby 1st DCLI cemetery, the Bluff and right slap-bang in the middle of Tyne Cot (a cemetary visited by many a teenage schoolgirl on schooltrips) a German soldier: Landsturmmann Otto Bieber Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
archangel9 Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 Always liked - GRAHAM de MONTMORENCEY ARMSTRONG-LUSHINGTON-TULLOCH, 1st Bn. Connaught Rangers. KIA 05/11/1914. See Michelle's post #45 John Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Old Owl Posted 3 September , 2014 Share Posted 3 September , 2014 Lieutenant Elphinstone D'Oyly Aplin, 1st Bn Gloucestershire Regiment. Died of wounds May,1915. Major Reinhold Meitzen Adams, 51st Sikhs, I.A. Died of wounds April,1917. I believe that his mother was of German origin. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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