Skip to content
WW1 Roll Of Honour
  • About
    • Q and A
    • Ancestry
  • Graves & Memorials
    • Hastings War Memorial
    • Hastings Cemetery
    • Ore War Memorial
    • Battle War Memorial
    • Westfield War Memorial
  • They Lived Here
    • Add a Serviceman
    • Commemoration Certificates
    • Contact Me
  • Individual Records
    • Regiments, Ships and Places
  • War Stories
Rackliff Family & P Robertson

Robertson, P

  • 18th June 2022
  • by admin

Rackliff Family & P Robertson

P Robertson

Rank: Second Lieutenant

Regiment: Royal Air Force

Father-in-Law: Benjamin Rackliff

Wife: Mrs Robertson

Brothers-in-Law: B E Rackliff & William Jesse Rackliff & A F Rackliff

Address: 91a Hughenden Road, Hastings

Other Info: The family portrait was published in the Hastings & St Leonards Observer on 27th July 1918.

Published: July 1918

Please use the comments box below if you can provide more information about this person.

Charles Williams & Frederick George Williams

Williams, Charles

  • 21st May 2022
  • by admin

Charles Williams & Frederick George Williams

Charles Williams

Rank: Air Mechanic

Regiment: Royal Air Force

Parents: Mr Charles & Mrs Minnie H E Williams

Wife: Mrs Williams

Brother: Frederick George Williams

Parent’s Address: 97a Hughenden Road, Hastings

Other Info: An article published in the Hastings & St Leonards Observer on 15th June 1918 reads; “Mr Charles Williams (Father), who lost his life on December 28th 1896, at Brede Waterworks. Charles is pictured in photo 3.

Published: June 1918

Please use the comments box below if you can provide more information about this person.

John William Washington Nason

Nason, John William Washington

  • 19th March 202210th April 2022
  • by admin

John William Washington Nason

John William Washington Nason

Rank: Captain

Regiment: 46th Squadron, Royal Flying Corps / Formerly 11th Battalion, Royal Sussex Regiment

Parents: Dr & Mrs Nason

Address: 23 Grosvenor Crescent, St Leonards formerly of Corse Grange, Gloucester

Other Info: An article published in the Hastings & St Leonards Observer on 13th January 1917 reads; “It is as difficult as it is most hateful to thing of Pat (the inner circle of friends knew him as Jack) Nason as dead.

He was ever so very much alive, and it was because he saw or recognised no limit to the activity of life that he seemed later from time to time to have over-run himself. J. W. Nason, some twelve years ago, shot into the firmament of local sport, like some bright and brilliant meteor, just wonderful as a big school lad, rapidly earning the full right to do himself justice before a bigger public in sport than we here provide..

Hundreds of Hastings folk must still recall the calm, strong nerve and perfect mastery of the bat, with which Nason faced county bowling in the Central Ground when not more than seventeen, earning well merited and loud applause. At Cambridge he rapidly received his ‘Blue’ and what was true of him at cricket applied also to football, golf and other games; indeed Jack was just a fine typical example of that first class all-round lad who excel splendidly in games, a produce of no country in Europe save England.

Surely the gainsayers of our field games must for ever hold their carping tongues in the face of the superb and magnificent work which has been so freely done in all branches of the services during this war by the men and lads of our public and big private schools, and four Universities – work which could never have been done a quarter so well but for the ‘playing fields’ of the Empire, where they learnt both to obey and to command, to know when to hit with all their might and when to play the waiting game; how to hold the harder catch and how to field with a quick and accurate return; and above all and before all, how to play, then and afterwards, cricket with a straight bat, however sticky the pitch and tricky the bowling.

It is to me a fine and comforting thought that Captain J. W. W. Nason on that mid winter day, piloting his machine, died especially that the boys and girls of the Empire should year by year play all their games freely and happily (and if possible as well as he did), innocent of the iron heel of the hated Hun who knows no true sport in spite of all his vaunted love of English games, the true spirit of which he has not, and cannot have, any true understanding or grasp. ‘Playing the game’ is a term unknown in the German vocabulary, but it may it ever be the golden rule of the British Empire.

In asking you to publish these few lines to express my warm and affectionate regard for a friend of whom the brightest future was hoped, I am not one bit again unminded of the scores of Hastings men who have also fearlessly and equally bravely given up their lives for us all. Men may be never much in the public eye like Jack Nason, but none the less splendid in their service and in facing their duty when their call comes. Of them one and all it can be said, as for Captain Nason, that they fully earned that very finest, truest, noblest and grandest epitaph; This land inviolate your monument.

C. B. G.”

According to CWGC, John died aged 27 on 26th December 1916. He is remembered at Vlamertinghe Military Cemetery, grave reference V.B.11.

The photograph of John Nason has been kindly provided by the Sussex Cricket Museum and Educational Trust.

Published: January 1917

Please use the comments box below if you can provide more information about this person.

Harvey Cecil Wood

Wood, Harvey Cecil

  • 2nd April 2021
  • by admin

Harvey Cecil Wood

Harvey Cecil Wood

Rank: Cadet

Regiment: No. 2 Officer’s Technical Training Wing, Royal Air Force, Canadian Expeditionary Force

Parents: Mr George T & Mrs Marion L Wood

Home Address: Stranraer, Saskatchewan, Canada

Other Info: Harvey Wood died of pneumonia aged 21 on 16th July 1918. He is buried at Hastings Cemetery.

More information available at Canadian Army Records; search here.

Please use the comments box below if you can provide more information about this person, or provide details through the ‘Add a Serviceman’ form found here.

Robert Ernest Wall

Wall, Robert Ernest

  • 6th February 2021
  • by admin

Robert Ernest Wall

Robert Ernest Wall

Rank: Private (2nd Class)

Regiment: 6th Squadron, Royal Air Force / Sherwood Foresters (Notts and Derby Regiment)

Other Info: Robert Wall died on 2nd November 1918. He is buried at Hastings Cemetery.

Please use the comments box below if you can provide more information about this person, or provide details through the ‘Add a Serviceman’ form found here.

Archibald Latimer Turner

Turner, Archibald Latimer

  • 9th January 2021
  • by admin

Archibald Latimer Turner

Archibald Latimer Turner

Rank: Cadet

Regiment: Royal Air Force

Parents: Mr Archibald George & Mrs Mary Elizabeth Turner

Address: 20 Belmont Avenue, Palmer’s Green, London

Other Info: Archibald Turner died aged 18 on 5th August 1918. He is buried at Hastings Cemetery. The inscription on his grave reads “Weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning”.

Please use the comments box below if you can provide more information about this person, or provide details through the ‘Add a Serviceman’ form found here.

E H Rice

Rice, Eric Harold

  • 17th October 202024th October 2020
  • by admin

E H Rice

Eric Harold Rice

Rank: Cadet

Regiment: Royal Air Force

Other Info: Cadet Rice died on 25th January 1918. He is buried at Hastings Cemetery. More information in the comments area below.

Please use the comments box below if you can provide more information about this person, or provide details through the ‘Add a Serviceman’ form found here.

Harold Walter Alfred Poole

Poole, Harold Walter Alfred

  • 11th October 2020
  • by admin

Harold Walter Alfred Poole

Harold Walter Edward Poole

Rank: Cadet

Regiment: 1st Cadet Wing, Royal Air Force

Other Info: Harold Poole, born on 28th November 1899 in Harpenden Hertfordshire died on 1st August 1918. He is buried at Hastings Cemetery. The inscription on his grave says “In loving memory”.

Please use the comments box below if you can provide more information about this person, or provide details through the ‘Add a Serviceman’ form found here.

William J Harris

Harris, William J

  • 14th June 2020
  • by admin

William J Harris

William J Harris

Rank: Cadet

Regiment: 2nd Wing, Royal Air Force

Home: Ystrad, Glamorganshire

Other Info: William Harris died on 8th June 1918. He is buried at Hastings Cemetery. Additional information from the Lives of the First World War website.

Please use the comments box below if you can provide more information about this person, or provide details through the ‘Add a Serviceman’ form found here.

James Robert Duncan Dundas

Dundas, James Robert Duncan

  • 27th February 2020
  • by admin

James Robert Duncan Dundas

James Robert Duncan Dundas

Rank: Cadet

Regiment: Royal Flying Corps

Parents: Mr Robert Napier & Katherine Elizabeth Dundas

Home Address: Kelowna, British Columbia

Other Info: James Dundas, aged 18, died on 1st February 1918. He is buried at Hastings Cemetery. The inscription on his grave marker reads “Only son of Robert N. Dundas, Kelowna, B.C. All Live Unto Him”. James had been discharged as medically unfit to serve overseas with the Canadian Expeditionary Force in 1917.

Additional Information taken from Canadian Army Records, search here.

Please use the comments box below if you can provide more information about this person, or provide details through the ‘Add a Serviceman’ form found here.

Posts pagination

1 2 3 … 6

Search this site

Search for a person by surname, regiment, ship or town

Useful Links

  • WW2 Roll of Honour
  • Compelling Photography
  • CWGC
  • Lives of the First World War
  • Everyone Remembered
Theme by Colorlib Powered by WordPress
No results found
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.Ok