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Albert BLADES

Main CPGW Record

Surname: BLADES

Forename(s): Albert

Place of Birth: Bradley, Yorkshire

Service No: 306999

Rank: Private

Regiment / Corps / Service: Duke of Wellington’s (West Riding Regiment)

Battalion / Unit: 2/7th Battalion

Division: 62nd (2/West Riding) Division

Age: 22

Date of Death: 1917-04-14

Awards: ---

CWGC Grave / Memorial Reference: I. B. 2.

CWGC Cemetery: MORY ABBEY MILITARY CEMETERY, MORY

CWGC Memorial: ---

Non-CWGC Burial: ---

Local War Memorial: BRADLEY, YORKSHIRE

Additional Information:

Albert Blades was the son of Walker and Isabella Blades, née Petty. Walker was born at Bradley near Skipton and Isabella at Darley, Yorkshire.

1901 Bradley, Skipton, Yorkshire Census: College - Albert Blades, aged 6 years, born Bradley, son of Walker and Isabella Blades.

1911 Bradley, Skipton, Yorkshire Census: 6, Prospect Terrace - Albert Blades, aged 16 years, born Bradley, son of Walker and Isabella Blades.

British Army WW1 Medal Rolls Index Cards: Pte Albert Blades, 306999, W. Rid. R.

British Army WW1 Medal and Award Rolls: Pte Albert Blades, 306999, 2/7 W. Rid. R. D. of W. 14.4.17.

Army Registers of Soldiers' Effects: Pte Albert Blades, 4604, 306999, 2/7th Bn W. Riding. Date and Place of Death: 14.4.17. France. To whom Authorised/Amount Authorised: Father - Walker. £11 16s. 7d.

UK, WW1 Pension Ledgers and Index Cards, 1914-1923: card(s) exist for Albert. Name(s) on card(s): Dependant: Mrs Isabella Blades. Relationship: Mother. Deceased. Address: Glen Cottage, Bradley Via Keighley, Yorks. Dependant: Mr Walker Blades. Relationship: Father. Address: 5, Hill Crest, Bradley Via Keighley, Yorks.

Data Source: Craven’s Part in the Great War - original CPGW book entry

View Entry in CPGW Book

Entry in West Yorkshire Pioneer Illustrated War Record:

BLADES, Albert, aged 22, West Riding Regiment, Prospect Terrace, [Bradley], killed in action, France, April 14, 1917.

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Private Albert BLADES

Private Albert BLADES

Regiment / Corps / Service Badge: Duke of Wellington’s (West Riding Regiment)

Regiment / Corps / Service Badge: Duke of Wellington’s (West Riding Regiment)

Divisional Sign / Service Insignia: 62nd (2/West Riding) Division

Divisional Sign / Service Insignia: 62nd (2/West Riding) Division

Data from Soldiers Died in the Great War 1914 - 1919 Records

Soldiers Died Data for Soldier Records

Surname: BLADES

Forename(s): Albert

Born:

Residence: Bradford, Yorks

Enlisted: Skipton, Yorks

Number: 306999

Rank: Private

Regiment: Duke of Wellington's (West Riding Regiment)

Battalion: 2/7th Battalion

Decorations:

Died Date: 14/04/17

Died How: Died of wounds

Theatre of War: France & Flanders

Notes:

Data from Commonwealth War Graves Commission Records

CWGC Data for Soldier Records

Surname: BLADES

Forename(s): Albert

Country of Service: United Kingdom

Service Number: 306999

Rank: Private

Regiment: Duke of Wellington's (West Riding Regiment)

Unit: 2nd/7th Bn.

Age: 22

Awards:

Died Date: 14/04/1917

Additional Information: Son of Walker and Isabella Blades, of Glen Cottage, Bradley, Keighley, Yorks. (CWGC Headstone Personal Inscription: LOVED AND REMEBERED)

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Craven Herald and Wensleydale Standard Logo

27 April 1917

BLADES - April 14th, 1917, killed in action in France, Private Albert Blades, Duke of Wellington's West Riding Regiment, and only son of Mr. and Mrs. Walker Blades, of Prospect Terrace, Bradley, aged 22 years.

27 April 1917

A BRADLEY HERO

Mr. and Mrs. Walker Blades, of Prospect Terrace, Bradley, have received the following letter, dated April 15th:- " It is with deepest regret and sympathy that I beg to inform you of your son's death. He was killed by shrapnel yesterday, the 14th, and was buried last night. He was a good workmate and soldier, and I sincerely regret his 1oss.

"Yours sincerely, LANCE-CORPORAL J. LITTLEWOOD, Shoemaker's Shop, Duke of Wellington's Regiment. "

"P.S. He was buried in an English grave and had a proper funeral service."

Private Albert Blades, of the West Yorkshire Regiment, who was 22 years of age, was the only son of Mr. and Mrs. Blades, and enlisted on March 28th, 1916. He went to France in the following January. He was of a quiet and retiring disposition, but all his letters breathed a love of home and of his parents, for whom the deepest sympathy is felt. He was formerly employed as shoemaker by Mrs. Walker, of Skipton.

A memorial service was held in the Wesleyan Chapel, Bradley, on Sunday morning, conducted by Mr. Herbert Thornton, who said that it was their painful experience to have to record the passing away of another of their lads on the field of battle. Never surely in the history of mankind was there so much anguish and heartbreak on account of loved ones who had been prematurely cut off. Well might they cry out "How long, O Lord, how long?" When would the toll for human misunderstanding, avarice and inordinate ambition be expiated? They little thought a week ago, when paying a tribute to Sydney Mattock, that even then Albert had found a last resting place upon a foreign shore. Yet so it was, and his death made the sixth of their lads who had laid down their lives in their country's cause, viz., Willie Brayshay, while in training on Salisbury Plain; Robert Henry Mawson, Leonard Troup, John Sydney Mattock, James Henry Peel, and lastly, they hoped, and so far as they knew, Albert Blades. Albert was of a quiet disposition; he didn't wear his heart upon his sleeve, his innermost thoughts and aspirations were rarely, if ever, expressed. He was diligent and plodding, kind and considerate, strongly attached to all at home, purposely avoiding in his letters anything calculated to give uneasiness or anxiety; consequently, it was not known definitely whether he was killed in action or hit with shrapnel behind the line. He was one of their own lads, having passed through the Sunday School and previous to enlisting was connected with Mr. Bray's Young Men's Class. He was also a frequent attender at public worship and in their name and his own he extended to the bereaved relatives their sincere sympathy. It was some consolation to know that his death brought no remorse; that his end had not been hastened by fast and profligate living, but that he had died fighting the country's cause. Might some comfort come to all those who were bitterly mourning the loss of loved ones at this time from the thought that their lives were given up in the most momentous struggle in history, and that they sacrifice their all in order that right and freedom should triumph and the world be made a brighter and a happier place in which to live.

At the close of the service 'O rest in the Lord' was played by the organist, Mr. Chapman.

The following letter was received by his parents yesterday morning from Private Joe Harry Mawson, another Bradley lad:-

April 19th 1917

"Dear Mr. Blades, - I beg to extend to you and your family my deepest sympathy in your sad bereavement, and I most sincerely pray that God will comfort and sustain you until that day dawns when you will be re-united in the better land. The news came as a great shock to me this morning. I made enquiries about him and learnt that he was wounded in the back and died in hospital. I have seen the place where he is buried, and let me assure you that he has been buried respectably. At present there is nothing but a bottle with his name and number and date of burial as follows: 'Private A. Blades. No. 4,604, 14/4/17' but in the course of a few days there will probably be a small wood cross put up to mark the place. I have been talking to his sergeant, and he told me he was a good soldier. There is only one consolation for you, that is that he has done his duty and paid the highest sacrifice for the sake of humanity."

12 April 1918

BLADES - In ever loving memory of a dear son and brother, Private Albert Blades, killed in action, April 14th, 1917.

Like ivy on the withered oak,
When all things else decay;
Our love for him shall still keep green
And never fade away.

From his loving Father, Mother and Sisters, Glen Cottage, Bradley.

View West Yorkshire Pioneer Articles

View West Yorkshire Pioneer Articles

West Yorkshire Pioneer Logo

27 April 1917

BLADES - Killed in France on April 14th, Pte. Albert Blades, Duke of Wellington's West Riding Regiment, only son of Mr. and Mrs. Walker Blades, of Prospect Terrace, Bradley, aged 22.

27 April 1917

ANOTHER BRADLEY SOLDIER KILLED

Mr. and Mrs. Walker Blades, of Prospect Terrace, Bradley, received the following letter last week from Lance-Corpl. J. Littlewood, of the Duke of Wellington's West Riding Regiment:- " It is with deepest regret and sympathy that I beg to inform you of your son's death. He was killed by shrapnel yesterday, the 14th, and was buried last night. He was a good workmate, and I sincerely regret his loss. He was buried in an English grave and had a proper funeral service."

Pte. Albert Blades, of the West Yorkshire Regiment, who was 22 years of age, was the only son of the above, and enlisted on March 28th, 1916. He went to France on Jan. 12th. The lad was of a quiet and retiring disposition, but all his letters breathed a love of home and parents, for whom the deepest sympathy is felt. He was formerly employed as shoemaker by Mrs. Walker, of Skipton.

The following letter was received by Pte. Blades's parents yesterday morning from Private Joe Harry Mawson, another Bradley lad:-

"I beg to extend to you and your family my deepest sympathy in your sad bereavement, and I most sincerely pray that God will comfort and sustain you until that day dawns when you will be re-united in the Better Land. The news came as a great shock to me this morning. I made enquiries about him and learnt that he was wounded in the back and died in hospital. I have seen the place where he is buried, and let me assure you that he has been buried respectably. At present there is nothing but a bottle with his name, number, and date of funeral, 'Pte. A. Blades. No. 4604, 14/4/17,' but in the course of a few days there will probably be a small wood cross put up to mark the place. I have been talking to his sergeant, and he told me he was a good soldier. There is only one consolation for you, that is that he has done his duty, and paid the highest sacrifice for the sake of humanity."

A memorial service was held in the Wesleyan Chapel on Sunday morning, conducted by Mr. Herbert Thornton, who said that it was their painful experience to have to record the passing away of another of their lads on the field of battle. Never surely in the history of mankind was there so much anguish and heartbreak on account of loved ones who had been prematurely cut off. Rachel's weeping for their children because they are not. Well might they cry out "How long, O Lord, how long?" When would the toll for human misunderstanding, avarice and inordinate ambition be expiated. They little thought a week ago, when paying a tribute to Sydney Mattock, that even then Albert had found a last resting place upon a foreign shore. Yet, so it was, and his death made the sixth of their lads who had laid down their lives in their country's cause, viz., Willie Brayshay, while in training on Salisbury Plain; Robert Henry Mawson, Leonard Throup, John Sydney Mattock, James Henry Peel, and lastly, they hoped, and so far as they knew, Albert Blades. Albert was of a quiet disposition; he didn't wear his heart upon his sleeve, his innermost thoughts and aspirations were rarely, if ever, expressed. He was diligent and plodding, kind-hearted and considerate, strongly attached to all at home, purposely avoiding in his letters anything calculated to give uneasiness or anxiety. Consequently, it was not known definitely whether he was killed in action or hit with shrapnel behind the line. He attested on his 21st birthday, and joined the Duke of Wellington's Regiment. He was one of their own lads, having passed through the Sunday School, and previous to enlisting was connected with Mr. Bray's Young Men's Class. He was also a frequent attender at public worship, and in your name and my own I extended to the bereaved relatives their sincere sympathy. It was some consolation to know that his death brought no remorse, that his end had not been hastened by fast and profligate living; he has died fighting your cause and mine. Death met him in the discharge of his duty. What worthier end? In the words of Mazzini, I would say "Life is a mission duty its highest aim," for unselfish actions never die. May some comfort come to all those who were bitterly mourning the loss of loved ones at this time, from the thought that their life was given up in the most momentous struggle in history, and that they sacrifice their all in order that right and freedom should triumph and the world be made a brighter and a happier place in which to live.

All through life I see a cross
Where sons of God yield up their breath,
There is no gain except by loss,
No life - except by death.

At the close of the service 'O rest in the Lord' was played by the organist, Mr. Chapman.

12 April 1918

In ever loving memory of a dear son and brother, Pte. Albert Blades, killed in action, April 14th, 1917.

Like ivy on the withered oak,
When all things else decay;
Our love for him shall still keep green
And never fade away.

- From his loving Father, Mother and Sisters. Glen Cottage, Bradley.

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