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The Great War (1914-1918) Forum

Remembered Today:

LCpl Coltman VC DCM & Bar MM &Bar


Doug Lewis

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If your great great great great grandfather is somebody else's great grandfather then you are 2nd cousins three times removed :)

 

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First cousins share a grandparent

Second cousins are the children of first cousins (one generation down on each side)

Three times removed means three more generations down on one side only

Thus 2c3r = great grandchild of a second cousin

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My head is swimming. I have enough problems with my kids ...

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He is buried in the church high up on a hill in Winshill Burton.  Outside Burton College right in front of the war memorial there is a fairly large memorial to him and the burton mail have got a good amount of info and photos of him.  The tiny school up at Rangemore has a wonderful photo of him in their hall.  He was a council gardener following the war.  

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6 hours ago, Alisonmallen62 said:

He is buried in the church high up on a hill in Winshill Burton.  Outside Burton College right in front of the war memorial there is a fairly large memorial to him and the burton mail have got a good amount of info and photos of him.  The tiny school up at Rangemore has a wonderful photo of him in their hall.  He was a council gardener following the war.  

I have noticed that he seems to be highly honoured in the local area

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1 hour ago, madgarry said:

I have noticed that he seems to be highly honoured in the local area

 

Revered, I imagine, and rightly so. I think you are quite right to be proud of your connection to the great man, remote as it is.

 

Mike

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Looking at photos of him he is just an ordinary man.  However, the school he attended is tiny and they display him as a hero, those who didn't know him are told of him. Rangemore

 is about two streets big but when I enquired no one knew which house he grew up in!  That was around 20 years ago. There seems to be a sense of awe that he rose through the the ranks but yet was a conscientious objector but a caring, brave man. 

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The Staffordshire Museum houses the medals of William Harold Coltman VC DCM+Bar MM+Bar, the most decorated other rank in World War One. He served with the  1 / 6th Battalion North Staffordshire Regiment as a stretcher bearer.

He won the Military Medal in March 1917. The bar to the MM was awarded for actions between 6th to 14th June 1917, the Distinguished Conduct Medal being earned  at the end of that month. On 28th September 1918 his actions would lead to a bar to the DCM.

His continuing gallantry earning him the Victoria Cross for his conduct 2rd / 4th October 1918.

William Henry Coltman survived the First World War
 

William_Coltman.jpg
William Harold Coltman
VC DCM+Bar MM+Bar

 

ColtmanVCMedals.jpg
William Coltman's medals.

 


Military Medal  

[ London Gazette, 26 March 1917 ], ( listed without citation ) For the award of the Military Medal, 241028 Private William Harold Coltman, 1 / 6th Bn, North Staffordshire Regiment.

Near Monchy on 17th February 1917, during misty weather, an officer took out a party to repair the wire in front of the trenches. The mist suddenly cleared and the enemy opened fire. The officer sent the party in, and was himself the last to withdraw.

When getting through our wire he was shot through the thigh and fell. Private Coltman, with conspicuous gallantry, in full view of the enemy, without hesitation went out from the trenches to this officer, and with difficulty succeeded in bringing him in through the wire, and while doing so he displayed great courage in keeping himself between his officer and the enemy although being only 85 yards from the hostile trenches and under rifle fire the whole time.
Private Coltman has previously shown great gallantry as a Stretcher-Bearer, particularly on 1st July 1916.


Military Medal Bar

[ London Gazette, 16 August 1917 ], ( listed without citation ) For the award of a Bar to the Military Medal, 241028 Lance Corporal William Harold Coltman, 1 / 6th Bn, North Staffordshire Regiment.
Several incidents: In the trenches near Lens, Lance Corporal ( Stretcher-Bearer ) Coltman has shown great gallantry, devotion to duty and disregard for personal danger on three occasions:

6th June 1917. A mortar bomb set fire to the Company dump wherein bombs and rockets were stored. Lance Corporal Coltman immediately removed the bombs and Very-lights.7th June 1917. The Company HQ was set on fire by a trench mortar bomb causing several casualties. Lance Corporal Coltman tended the wounded and amongst others bound up one with both legs broken.14th June 1917. A tunnel through an embankment was blown in and 12 men buried. He immediately organised a party to dig out the buried men and supervised the removal of the wounded and was undoubtedly responsible for saving the lives of several men.

Distinguished Conduct Medal

[ London Gazette, 25 August 1917 ], For the award of the Distinguished Conduct Medal ( DCM ), 241028 Lance Corporal William Harold Coltman, 1 / 6th Bn, North Staffordshire Regiment

For most conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty during operations south-west of Lens between 28th June and 2nd July 1917. Lance Corporal Coltman's conduct was magnificent.

He assisted in evacuating several badly wounded men from the front line and working untiringly until every wounded man had been taken out; undoubtedly saving the lives of several of these men, as otherwise they would have had to lie up in the front line without proper attention.During the night he searched the ground between and in front of the captured trenches and under shell and machine-gun fire brought in any men who had been wounded.

 

Lance Corporal Coltman's absolute indifference to danger and his gallant conduct had an insipiring effect on the rest of the men and was a splendid example to all. I cannot speak too highly of this NCO's gallantry on this and many previous occasions.

 Victoria Cross

[ London Gazette, 6 January 1919 ], For the award of the Victoria Cross. Mannequin Hill, France, 3 - 4 October 1918, 241028 Lance Corporal William Harold Coltman DCM, MM & Bar, 1 / 6th Bn, North Staffordshire Regiment.

For most conspicuous bravery, initiative and devotion to duty. During the operations at Mannequin Hill, N.E. of Sequehart, on the 3rd and 4th October 1918, Lance Corporal Coltman, a stretcher-bearer, hearing that wounded had been left behind during a retirement, on his own initiative, went forward alone in the face of fierce enfilade fire, found the wounded, dressed them, and on three successive occasions carried comrades on his back to safety, thus saving their lives.

This very gallant N.C.O. tended the wounded unceasingly for forty-eight hours.

Distinguished Conduct Medal Bar

[ London Gazette, 2 December 1919 ], Citation for the award of a Bar to the Distinguished Conduct Medal ( DCM ), 241028 Lance Corporal William Harold Coltman VC, DCM, MM & Bar, 1 / 6th Bn, North Staffordshire Regiment
 On 28th September 1918 near Bellinglise this Lance Corporal dressed and carried many wounded men under heavy artillery fire. The following day, during our advance, he remained at his work without rest or sleep, attending the wounded, headless of shell and machine-gun fire and never resting till he was positive that our sector was clear of wounded. In addition he was a most valuable means of communication, bringing back with his wounded accurate information of the advance.

In spite of very thick smoke and fog he always found his way and so far as his work allowed; served as a guide. He set the very highest example of fearlessness and devotion to duty.


The South Staffordshire Regiment Museum has a reconstruction of a First World War trench which is named after William Henry.
 

ColtmanTrenchCollage.jpg
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In these days of fake unearned celebrity the story of this gentleman stands out like a sore thumb. A man of courage both moral and physical. I had never heard of him 2 weeks ago. I suspect neither have 99.99% of the UK population. He deserves to be remembered and revered by the country as a whole. On a stamp, on a banknote..

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Agreed

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Further to this interesting thread on L/Cpl Coltman VC DCM MC, I began to ponder officers who had won the three main gallantry decorations.  Albert Ball comes to mind, as does Chaplain Hardy.  Then of course the amazingly charismatic and talented "Billy" Congreve.  From the RND we have Commander Daniel Beak, later to be a WW2 Brigadier and to be degommé by Monty after Op. Pugilist too.  The Canadian air aces "Billy" Barker and Billy Bishop and our own "Mick" Mannock were all grand slam men.  Major Allen of the RAMC also won all three.  Colonel Robertson of the Border Regt won all three too.

 

Richard Annesley West won his VC posthumously to add to earlier DSO and MC awards.  Frank Roberts added an OBE and lived to 90.  Percy Hansen was the most decorated Danish officer - including both sides! Scotland had George Stuart Henderson as its most decorated officer - not including Earl Haig of course.  He died fighting in Iraq in 1920 of course, winning his Cross posthumously.  His regimental colleague Wilfrith "Here we fight and here we die" Elstob won his VC defending Manchester Redoubt (Hill) in March 1918.  Elliot Cooper of   "The elegant extracts" was an Old Etonian VC, again posthumous.

 

I'll hazard a guess right now this is not an exhaustive list by any means.  However the sustained gallantry which is required to win all three is perhaps visible in wider distribution than one imagines at first.  Some of the triple award winners served throughout and into the peripheral campaigns of the early  1920s (Ireland, Afghan and Iraq, Russia etc).   Each of their individual contributions were heroic and seem to go above and beyond the "berserk" moment or the exceptional reaction to an exceptional event!

 

So merry Christmas pals...I hope you will have a bit of a Google or whatever research tool you use.  If you know of other triple award winners, please share?

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