Tag Archives: WW1

Stories from the First World War: The Costello Family

During my time as intern at Te Papa, I have been working to try to discover the identities of the sitters who appear in a collection of photographic portraits held in the museum’s collection.  The portraits depict soldiers who had their photographs taken at the studio of Berry & Co. in Wellington before they embarked for service in the First World War.

Read more about the Berry & Co. collection

While it has been difficult to identify many of the soldiers, with only the photograph and a hand-written family name on the top of each negative as a starting point for research, some of my searching has proved successful.  You can read the fascinating story of Sergeant Major Vandersluysthe sad story of two brother from the Jessen family and more First World War Stories in my previous blog posts.

Black and white glass negative (Costello);1914-1920; Berry & Co; Wellington
Black and white glass negative (Costello);1914-1920; Berry & Co; Wellington

Black and white photograph, gelatin silver print, Evans Bay; unknown date; Chapman-Talyor, J. W.; 145(height) x 200 (length)

In 1898, William Costello married Phoebe Olive Wilton, the youngest of the 15 children of Elijah and Priscilla Wilton.  Relatives of the Wilton family were responsible for the donation of Wilton’s Bush to the city of Wellington. 

William and Phoebe had ten children: Irene (b. 1899), Eric Wilton (b. 1902), Lionel Lenton (b. 1903), Kenneth Wilton (b. 1904), Frederick William (b. 1906), Mildred Olive Wilton (b. 1909), Eileen Joyce (b. 1911), Nola Kathleen (b. 1913), Esma Wilton (b. 1914), and Herbert Lawrence Lenton (b. 1917).  They lived in Douro Avenue in Newtown, where William provided ‘next-of-kin’ details for his younger brothers who went to serve in The Great War.  Sadly, Irene was stillborn, Lionel died aged 1, and Esma was killed aged 23 in the Ratana rail crash in 1938.  Phoebe died in September 1940, and husband William passed away in Wanganui in 1943.  They are buried in the same (unmarked) grave in Karori Cemetery.

William’s brother Frederick Lawrence Costello was born in 1875.  However when he enlisted for the New Zealand Rifle Brigade in 1915, he used a false birth date of 23rd July 1880 to ensure he was not too old to be sent away on active service.  He had previously been living in Te Kuiti in the Waikato region, working as a tailor for a Mr. Hackett.  He embarked from Wellington in February 1916 as a Rifleman with the 4th Battalion of the New Zealand Rifle Brigade on board the Mokoia.  After training in the Suez he went to France in April 1916 where he served on the front for the entirety of the war.  At the end of the conflict he sailed from Liverpool on the Northumberland, arriving home to be officially discharged on the 28th March 1919. Frederick Costello died at Napier on the 4th May 1942.

It is Frederick’s uniform which has provided significant clues as to the identification of the subjects in the Costello photograph.  The collar and hat badges of the lion holding a pennant are consistent with the New Zealand Rifle Brigade, but the confirming item is the black triangle on the cap. Early on the New Zealand Rifle Brigade used these in various shapes but only the 4th Battalion wore a triangle with the point downwards. 

The sitter on the left of the photograph is the youngest of the brothers, Herbert Lenton Costello.  He was born in 1882, and was self-employed as a bushman before enlisting in the New Zealand Expeditionary Force.  He became a Private in the Canterbury Infantry Regiment and went to train at Trentham Camp in December 1915.  He was punished in March 1916 for overstaying his leave.  However, he seems not to have learnt his lesson – after travelling to France on the SS Caledonia with the 1st Company of the 2nd Battalion, he was punished again at Rouen for overstaying leave, and later at Marseilles for being absent without leave.  Each time he was deducted eight days pay.

Herbert was wounded on the 12th October 1917 during the Battle of Passchendaele (the Third Battle of Ypres), suffering the hit of a machine-gun bullet to his left forearm.  He was invalided to the New Zealand General Hospital No. 1 for six days, and then sent to Hornchurch Hospital on the 17th October.  The Medical Board at Hornchurch decided that he would be unfit for active service for six months, and for home service for at least three months, and so he was sent home.  Sailing on the Maunganui on the 18th March 1918, he was discharged from the NZEF on the 26th July of the same year.  Herbert died inWellington in January 1950.

Read more blog entries on World War I

More Stories from the First World War

During my internship with the Te Papa History Team, I have been working to try to identify the sitters who appear in a number of photographic portraits which are held in the museum’s collection.  Using military personnel files, databases and online resources I have tried to discover more information about the soldiers who had their photographs taken by Berry & Co. in Cuba Street, Wellington, before leaving for service in World War I. 

Read more about the Berry & Co. Collection

With only a family name handwritten on the top of each negative, this has been a challenging task, but I have had some success.  My previous blog posts have told the stories of Sergeant-Major Charles Vandersluys; the two brothers Donald and John Jessen; and the New Zealand soldiers buried at Walton-on-Thames churchyard in Surrey whose names appear on another object in the collection, a memorial banner.

I have recently been able to make some more identifications, and discover more fascinating life stories:

Private Roy Houchen

Black and white glass negative (Houchen);1914-1920; Berry & Co; Wellington

Black and white glass negative (Houchen);1914-1920; Berry & Co; Wellington

This photograph is almost certainly a portrait of Roy Houchen, a soldier with the rank of Private in the New Zealand Expeditionary Force Medical Corps. 

Former home of Roy Houchen and his mother, 94 Constable Street, as it looks today. Photo: Kiera Gould, 2011.

Former home of Roy Houchen and his mother, 94 Constable Street, as it looks today. Photo: Kiera Gould, 2011.

Houchen was born in Wellington on the 15th January 1892.  He worked as a cabinetmaker for an S. S. Williams and lived with his mother in Constable Street, Newtown.  He was also a member of the Wellington Naval Boating Society before he enlisted for war service in 1914.  As a volunteer from the early days of the conflict, he left with the Main Body of the New Zealand Expeditionary Force from Wellington in October, bound for Egypt and the Suez.

He served in Malta and at Gallipoli in 1915 but was admitted to the Fifth General Hospital at Leicester in October of that year.  When he had recovered, he served in France, but had another stay in hospital at the New Zealand General Hospital No. 2, Walton-on-Thames, in 1917.  Recovering again, he continued to serve, but became very ill in May 1918 and was again admitted to Walton-on-Thames hospital.  He was discharged as no longer fit to serve as he was unfortunately suffering from chronic diarrhoea(!!), and returned to Wellington in February 1919.

Black and white glass negative (Houchen);1914-1919; Berry & Co; Wellington

Black and white glass negative (Houchen);1914-1919; Berry & Co; Wellington

In 1921, Roy Houchen married Eileen May Lake, the daughter of Charles Jessen Lake and Jane Kirkland Lake.  The couple lived at 50 Ross Street, Kilbirnie.  In 1927 Eileen gave birth to a daughter. 

Roy Houchen was a member of the Grand United Order of Oddfellows, a global fraternal organisation which was established in New Zealand in 1843.  In England, it is claimed that the brotherhood can trace its roots back to the trade guilds of the 12th and 13th centuries, but is now based in the USA and known as the Independent Order of Oddfellows.  The organisation was historically organised by membership to a particular lodge, which also operated a fund to which members contributed, and could then me used to support brethren in their times of need, for example contributing towards the cost of funerals.  Membership became less popular throughout the 20th century as governments established public welfare systems, and there was less need for people to contribute to a central fund for times of need.  

However, up until his death Roy Houchen belonged to the Loyal William Bain Branch in Kilbirnie, and the Brethren of Tutanekai Lodge were invited in an advert placed in the Evening Post to attend his funeral.

Roy Houchen died following illness on 17th July 1934, aged 42.  He was buried on the 19th July at Karori Cemetery in Wellington.  His grave is in the public section in plot 496N.  His wife Eileen had a very sad year in 1934 as her mother passed away just four months after her husband had died.

 

Lieutenant William Gallen

This is probably a photograph of William James Gallen, the eldest son of Katie and Hugh Gallen.  He is wearing the uniform of a non-commissioned sergeant, which allows the photo to be dated between January and April 1917, when he held this rank. 

Black and white glass negative (Gallen);1917; Berry & Co; Wellington

Black and white glass negative (Gallen);1917; Berry & Co; Wellington

Before enlisting, Gallen had worked as a draughtsman for the New Zealand Government.  He had joined the Public Service at Gisborne in 1910 and during his service had taken a keen interest in military matters, particularly signalling.  After working as a draughtsman for three and a half years, he qualified for the field branch of his department.  By this time he was living and working in Nelson, where he married Wanda (Vanda) Myra Natalie Ellis, the only daughter of William Alfred Ellis and his wife Emily, on the 4th July 1917.  

William Gallen was Roman Catholic, and a loyal member of the Hiberian Catholic Benefit Society in Nelson.  He was elected to President of the society in 1916, where he also acted as a trustee.

On the eve of his departure from Nelson, an evening event was held in his honour at the Crown Lands Office where his colleagues made him the presentation of a wrist watch to wish him good luck and a safe return.

Gallen spent time training at Trentham Camp before embarking from Wellington on 16th November 1917 on the Tahiti, with the rank of Second Lieutenant, part of the 25th Specialist Company.  He returned to New Zealand following injury on the Kigoma and was discharged on the 13th August 1919.

 

 Private Eric Marchant

Black and white glass negative (Eric Marchant);1918-1919; Berry & Co; Wellington

Black and white glass negative (Eric Marchant);1918-1919; Berry & Co; Wellington

This is an image of Eric Edward Marchant who was born to parents Henry Edward Marchant and Henrietta Laura Marchant (nee Freeman), both of Wellington, on 30th January 1898.

Marchant was part of the New Zealand Garrison Artillery, a voluntary service in Wellington for 8 months before enlisting for the Expeditionary Force on 1st February 1918 at the age of 20.  Medical examination judged him to be under-size and underweight, and therefore unfit for active service.  He was 5 feet and 3 inches (1.52 meters) tall but weighed only 97 pounds (about 44 kg). He was however judged to be fit to go to Samoa, but his military file contains little information about his duties during wartime. 

His service was complete and he was discharged on the 13th March 1919.

It is likley that Eric Marchant and his parents left New Zealand after the war, as there is no registered record of their deaths occurring in the country, and I have been unable to discover any newspaper articles or advertisements which may refer to them.  If you know of any further information relating to the Marchant family, or any of the soldiers pictured, please leave a comment below.

Stories from the First World War: Soldiers commemorated at Walton-on-Thames

In my work as an intern with the History Department here at Te Papa, one of the objects I’ve had the opportunity to work on is a memorial banner commemorating New Zealand soldiers from the First World War.  I have been working to add more detail to the museum’s records around the lives of the soldiers who are named on the banner, and in doing so have had the opportunity to learn more about the story behind this fascinating object.

Memorial Banner; circa 1919; unknown maker; cloth, cotton, silk, metal, wood and cord; Walton-on-Thames, Surrey.

Memorial Banner; circa 1919; unknown maker; cloth, cotton, silk, metal, wood and cord; Walton-on-Thames, Surrey.

Early in the First World War, the New Zealand War Contingent Hospital was established at Mount Felix in Walton-on-Thames, Surrey, England.  It was the first New Zealand hospital set up in England, and was soon re-named the New Zealand General Hospital No. 2. 

Read more about the New Zealand General Hospital at Walton-on-Thames.org

Nurses and patients in the ward at New Zealand General Hospital No. 2, Image courtsey of Walton-on-Thames.org

Nurses and patients in the ward at New Zealand General Hospital No. 2, Image courtsey of Walton-on-Thames.org

Initially plots in the nearby parish cemetery were acquired for soldiers who died in the hospital.  Expecting a large number of burials, the War Graves Commission arranged for more than one burial to take place in each grave.  However, a larger plot became available in the nearby Brookwood Cemetery, and so fewer burials than was first expected took place at Walton-on-Thames churchyard.  This meant that some of the grave sites which were used early-on contained multiple burials, while others remained empty.

The soldiers commemorated on the banner

The names of eighteen soldiers and one nurse of the Voluntary Aid Detachment (VAD) are recorded on the banner, which was originally installed in the Walton-on-Thames Parish Church.  It also shows the date they died, their military serial number, their rank and the unit they were serving with – very useful to the History team at Te Papa for locating their Military Personnel files and finding out more information about them.

Detail of Memorial Banner; circa 1919; unknown maker; cloth, cotton, silk, metal, wood and cord; Walton-on-Thames, Surrey.

Detail of Memorial Banner; circa 1919; unknown maker; cloth, cotton, silk, metal, wood and cord; Walton-on-Thames, Surrey.

Private James Livingstone Porter served with the Otago Infantry Battalion.  He worked as a moulder before joining up early in the war and departing from Port Chalmers in October 1914.  He died of wounds sustained at Gallipoli in October 1916.

Corporal Thomas Wallace Phillips was part of the Auckland Mounted Rifles and the 2nd Reinforcements, he is mentioned on the War Memorial at Cambridge, New Zealand. 

Private William Fox’s name is recorded wrongly on the banner as ‘Cox’.  He was a member of the Canterbury Infantry Battalion with the 4th Reinforcements.  The spelling mistake has been transferred once more from the banner to the modern commemorative plaque which is now installed in the church! (See photograph below).

Acting Corporal John Brian Dalton had previously had a long association with the Hawera Mounted Rifles Volunteer Force.  He embarked from Wellington on 17th April 1915 to serve with the Otago Mounted Rifles as part of the 4th Reinforcements.  He was slightly wounded at Gallipoli but had become seriously ill by the time he reached England, where he was admitted to the hospital at Walton-on-Thames and died on the 2nd December 1915.

Corporal Henry Hudson was part of the Main Body of the Wellington Infantry Battalion who left Wellington in 1914.  He died two years later from heart failure following pneumonia.

Driver Arthur Hall was part of the Army Service Corps.  He died of heart failure following an operation at Walton-on-Thames in June 1916.

Driver William Henry Russell was part of the 9th Reinforcements of the New Zealand Field Artillery, he died of his wounds in September 1916.

Rifleman Edward Rout was employed as a general labourer by J. Cole of Papatoetoe before joining the 1st Battalion of the New Zealand Rifle Brigade.  He died of wounds inflicted to his right shoulder and right leg in October 1916.

Private Kingi Hamana was part of the 1st Maori Contingent, B Company.  He died of tuberculosis in October 1916.

Private John Lewis Boyd was part of the Auckland Mounted Rifles and the 7th Reinforcements.  His injuries left him paralysed from the waist down.  He remained in England after being discharged from the New Zealand Expeditionary Force as his mother lived in Hampshire.  He died in 1932 and was buried at Walton-on-Thames, so his name must have been added to the banner long after it was originally installed in the church, and only shortly before it was removed to make way for a more permanent memorial.

Sapper Jack Fleming was married to Anne Charleswood and had two daughters, Annie Elizabeth and Nellie.  He left his family in Auckland when he embarked in April 1916 with the New Zealand Field Engineers.  He died of disease in October the same year.

Private Montrose Baker from Gisbourne was a member of the Wellington Infantry Battalion and the 7th Reinforcements.  He died from his wounds.

Private Ramera (Raniera) Wairau embarked from Wellington in September 1915 as part of the 2nd Maori Contingent.  He died of tuberculosis in October 1916.

Private William Henry Rishworth of Dunedin was wounded by shrapnel whilst serving with the Otago Infantry Regiment in the 12th Reinforcements.  He later died of his wounds at Walton-on-Thames.

Rifleman George Blinko was a cabinetmaker from Hastings who served with the New Zealand Rifle Brigade before contracting pneumo-coccal meningitis and dying on 6th January 1917.

Private Taura from Atiu, Rarotonga, joined the Rarotongans Unit of the 3rd Maori contingent, despite not being able to speak any English.  He contracted tuberculosis and died in January 1917.

Private Robert Black was husband of Alice Ann Black from Rarotonga and an accountant before he joined the Wellington Infantry Regiment.  He died of disease in April 1917.

Miss T. W. Bennet was a nurse in the VAD (Voluntary Aid Detachment) who worked at the New Zealand General Hospital No. 2.  Unfortunately we have so far not been able to uncover any more information about her.

Colonel Charles Mackie Begg was a surgeon in the New Zealand Medical Corps and became the Director of Medical Services for the New Zealand Expeditionary Force.  He died at his home in Twickenham from influenza and pneumonia in 1919. 

Memorial panel, Walton-on-Thames churchyard. Image courtesy of Darren Bayley, Walton-on-Thames.org, 2011.

Memorial panel, Walton-on-Thames churchyard. Image courtesy of Darren Bayley, Walton-on-Thames.org, 2011.

In the 1930s, Colonel Begg’s brother wrote to the High Commissioner of New Zealand with several complaints about the visibility of his brother’s grave.  After visiting Walton-on-Thames, he claimed that the graves were hard to find, that he found his brother’s name quite illegible on the gravestone, and that it did not list his full honours.  As the Beggs were an influential family, the High Commissioner took the complaint very seriously, and sent the Director of Works from the Imperial War Graves Commission, a Mr. Sheppard who worked for the Imperial War Graves Commission, but was also a New Zealander, and a representative from the Office of the High Commission, all to inspect the site. 

A rubbing and a plaster impression were taken on the headstone and sent to New Zealand, where they are still held at Archives New Zealand in Wellington.  The reports of all three officials concluded that the headstones were quite clear, and located just inside the entrance to the churchyard, so easy to find.  As was standard practice with war graves, they listed only each soldiers’ rank and serial number, and were not separated into a separate section of the churchyard as so few burials had actually taken place.  Still concerned that Dr. Begg would not be satisfied, the High Commission passed on all the recorded evidence to the Prime Minister in case the complaint should be taken higher!

Use of the banner

In January 1920, a ceremony was held at Walton-on-Thames Parish Church to install this embroidered banner which recorded the names of nineteen New Zealanders buried in the adjoining cemetery.  After its installation, this banner was taken out of the church to the graveside once every year as part of the Anzac Day service held on 25th April. 

Wreath placed at Walton-on-Thames parish churchyard to remember New Zealand soldiers. Image: Courtesy of Darren Bayley, Walton-on-Thames.org, 2011

Wreath placed at Walton-on-Thames parish churchyard to remember New Zealand soldiers. Image: Courtesy of Darren Bayley, Walton-on-Thames.org, 2011

In 1932, it was proposed that a brass tablet should be installed to replace the ageing banner.  The Returned Soldiers Association of New Zealand raised money from their members to pay for the tablet, which also included the names of two further soldiers who were recorded as ‘Missing in the UK’, Captain C. K. Ward and Private W. O. McDiarmid.  This was installed inside the parish church where it can still be seen today (below).

Memorial plaque in Walton-on-Thames Parish Church. Image: Courtesy of Darren Bayley, Walton-on-Thames.org, 2011.

Memorial plaque in Walton-on-Thames Parish Church. Image: Courtesy of Darren Bayley, Walton-on-Thames.org, 2011.

The banner eventually found its way to New Zealand where it was presented to the Dominion Museum in 1961 by Adjutant General Brigadier McKinnon on behalf of the New Zealand Army Headquarters in Wellington.

Remembering New Zealand in Britain

New Zealand Avenue street sign, Walton-on-Thames. Image courtesy of Darren Bayley, Walton-on-Thames.org, 2011

New Zealand Avenue street sign, Walton-on-Thames. Image courtesy of Darren Bayley, Walton-on-Thames.org, 2011

Today, Walton-on-Thames still celebrates its entwined history with that ofNew Zealandand the NZEF.  The former site of the hospital atMountFelixis now at one end of a road built in the 1930s named ‘New Zealand Avenue’.  There is also a tribute to our capital in the naming of a local pub – the Wellington!

The Wellington, Walton-on-Thames.  Image courtesy of Darren Bayley, Walton-on-Thames.org, 2011

The Wellington, Walton-on-Thames. Image courtesy of Darren Bayley, Walton-on-Thames.org, 2011

See more historic and contemporary photographs of Walton-on-Thames and the New Zealand General Hospital No. 2

The making of the banner

The banner was made or ‘worked’ by one or maybe more soldiers during recovery at the New Zealand General Hospital.  As well as a commemoration for those who had died, the process would have acted as a form of rehabilitation and way to pass the time.  The apron pictured below is another example from the museum’s collection of an object made as a form of occupational therapy for an injured soldier.

Apron; 1917-1918; Fred Hansen, sewer; silk.

Apron; 1917-1918; Fred Hansen, sewer; silk.

Read more about the after care of disabled soldiers

Find out more about the re-training of New Zealand soldiers for their lives after World War I

Stories of the First World War: John and Donald Jessen

As an intern with the History Department at Te Papa, I have been given the challenging task of researching the sitters who appear in a number of photographic portraits held in the collection. 

Looking closely at some of the pictures, it seems that the images contained on the museum’s glass plate negatives are not all original photographs.  Some were taken in their frames by family members to the premises of Berry & Co. in Wellington for copies to be made.  This would often have happened if the picture had been sent from family members abroad, or if the soldiers pictured had died.

Read more about the Berry & Co. collection

Two of the images which seem to have produced this way were each marked with the handwritten name ‘Jessen’, and although there are sometimes two or three images among the collection with the same sitter, these two were certainly not the same man.

Through using database records and military personnel files, I believe I have identified these two men as brothers John and Donald Jessen.  Both were members of the New Zealand Field Artillery who died while away at war in Europe.

Black and white glass negative (Jessen);1914-1920; Berry & Co; Wellington

Black and white glass negative (Jessen);1914-1920; Berry & Co; Wellington

Elder brother John Jessen was born in Mauriceville to parents William August and Christine in the same year as their marriage, 1890.  The family had moved to Wellington by 1908, when John joined the D Battery of the New Zealand Field Artillery Volunteers.  In 1914 he joined the New Zealand Expeditionary Force who departed for Samoa on the 8th August.  Returning from Samoa on the 22nd March 1915 he was discharged on his own request and went to work as a clerk in the New Zealand Government Thorndon Railway Station.  On discharge he held the rank of Battery Sergeant Major.

At the end of 1915 John Jessen was among a number of non-commissioned officers called up to join the 14th reinforcements for the Western Front.  He was killed in action in France during the Battle of Bapaume on the 24th August 1918, aged 28.  By this point he held the rank of Bombardier and was part of the 9th Battery.  He is buried in Achiet-le-Grand Communal Cemetery Extension in grave IV.P.3. 

Black and white glass negative (Jessen); 1914-1920; Berry & Co; Wellington

Black and white glass negative (Jessen); 1914-1920; Berry & Co; Wellington

 

Younger brother Donald Jessen worked as a warehouseman in Wellington and also served in the D Battery volunteer force until 1915 when he joined the New Zealand Field Artillery as part of the 10th reinforcements.  He went into Trentham Camp on the 16th November 1915 and embarked on the Willochra or Tofua to Egypt on 4th March 1916.  His unit on embarkation was the No. 5 Field Battery (2nd Field Artillery Brigade).

Although he survived the war, Donald contracted a bout of influenza in 1919 which became pneumonia, and he died at Endell Street Military Hospital in London on the 23rd February 1919.  He is buried at Brookwood Military Cemetery, grave reference II.J.4. 

Both soldiers were commemorated by their parents and sisters in adverts placed in the Evening Post.  They are just two casualties of an estimated 14,000–17,000 New Zealand citizens who were killed in action or died as a result of their wounds. New Zealand had one of the highest casualty rates as a proportion of the total population of all the countries involved in the war.

Read another ‘Story of the First World War’ here – Sergeant-Major Vandersluys

Read about Herman Rolfes, also killed during the Battle of Bapaume on the same day as John Jessen, 24th August 1918, whose personal effects are held in Te Papa’s collection

Stories from the First World War: Sergeant-Major Vandersluys

As an intern with the History Department at Te Papa, I have been given the challenging task of researching the sitters who appear in a number of photographic portraits held in the collection. 

Read more about the Berry & Co. collection 

My task is to try to identify the soldiers who appear in these photographs, using military personnel files, reference books relating to uniform and badges of military regiments, and online databases and resources.  Unfortunately, apart from an image of the person, the only other information I have to go on is the person’s family name, which is handwritten on the top of each negative.

So far, this is a slow process, but I have had some success.  Following an existing tentative identification, I have managed to bring to light quite a lot of information about this striking gentleman, who I believe to be Charles Vandersluys, a British national who became a Sergeant Major serving in the New Zealand Expeditionary Force at home at Trentham Camp, but making some enemies along the way!  I am currently working on more research which includes the life of Vandersluys along with many of his contemporaries who were photographed by Berry & Co. in Wellington.

Black and white glass negative (Vandersluys); 1914-1920; Berry & Co; Wellington

Black and white glass negative (Vandersluys); 1914-1920; Berry & Co; Wellington

Charles Calab Vandersluys was born on the 22ndAugust 1871 in Hanwell, Middlesex, England.  Despite his Dutch name, Vandersluys was British for at least two generations, and throughout his life often travelled under the name of ‘Berrold’ as he hated being referred to as a ‘Dutchman’.  His father was a soldier in the British Army, and later worked as a clerk in the Pension Office.

On 4th September 1893, Vandersluys married Letitia Ayres in Dublin, before returning to England where he was employed as a Private in the Gordon Highlanders, a British Army infantry regiment drawn mainly from Scotland and the north of England.  Vandersluys served twelve years and 120 days with this regiment, including service during the second Boer War in South Africa.  See the image below for an example of what his Gordon Highlanders dress uniform would have looked like.  After peace was declared he was discharged on the 15th September 1902.  He then joined section D of the Gordon Highlanders Reserve in January 1903.  Four years later, he completed his service but remained living in London where he was employed driving meat vans and buses.

Gordon Highlanders uniform; 1880s - 1950s; Hebbert & Co. Ltd.; wool; London

Gordon Highlanders uniform; 1880s – 1950s; Hebbert & Co. Ltd.; wool; London

In 1910, Vandersluys and his wife travelled to Buenos Aires, where, apart from occasional trips to England, they lived for around three years.  After returning to England in July 1914, they continued almost immediately on a voyage to Australia, taking a 3rd class passage on the SS Ruahine, departing on the 10th August 1914, under the name of Berrold.   Their son and three daughters remained in England.  Spending only six months in Australia, the couple moved on once again to New Zealand, where, within a few days, Vandersluys enlisted with the New Zealand Expeditionary Force. 

Due to an attack of rheumatic fever, Vandersluys was judged to be unfit for active service.  However he was fit to serve at home, and worked at Trentham Camp, as a member of the Army and of the Military Police.  He was promoted during his service, earning the rank of Sergeant Major and a large amount of respect amongst his colleagues. 

However, a case was brought against him in August 1918 by two recently discharged Privates, Fisher and Boosey.  Private Fisher had recently been arrested for assaulting Vandersluys, although the man’s statement maintained that the Sergeant had in fact started a fight with him, and enlisted the help of two corporals to give false witness statements.  He had then, along with his friend Private Boosey, been discharged as medically unfit to serve, in Fisher’s case due to shell-shock and mental disturbance. 

The two men decided to report that on the occasion of Fisher bringing Boosey to the military office to enlist, Vandersluys had made a disloyal remark, saying “The Germans are going to give the British all they asked for”.  After investigation, the detective in charge of the case recommended that no action be taken, as Vandersluys argued that his words had been misquoted and taken out of context, and there was no further evidence to suggest a disloyalty to the Allied forces. 

While the two men responsible for the accusation may well have held a grudge against the Sergeant, this demonstrates the level of paranoia and suspicion which was present during the war years, which was particularly high towards ‘aliens’ or those with foreign sounding names!   Many of these people spent the war years on an island in Wellington harbour - click on the object below to read more about their story.

Box; 1914-1918; Hansen, Hans; inlay of kohekohe, rewa rewa, and paua shell; kauri; marquetry; New Zealand

Box; 1914-1918; Hansen, Hans; inlay of kohekohe, rewa rewa, and paua shell; kauri; marquetry; New Zealand

Look out for more blog posts as I uncover more stories related to the soldiers who appear in the Berry & Co. collection photographs.

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