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Albert WILSON

Main CPGW Record

Surname: WILSON

Forename(s): Albert

Place of Birth: Rosgill, Westmorland

Service No: 31087

Rank: Private

Regiment / Corps / Service: Loyal North Lancashire Regiment

Battalion / Unit: 2/4th Battalion

Division: 57th (2/West Lancashire) Division

Age: 23

Date of Death: 1918-09-13

Awards: ---

CWGC Grave / Memorial Reference: Sp. Mem. C. 3.

CWGC Cemetery: MOEUVRES COMMUNAL CEMETERY EXTENSION

CWGC Memorial: ---

Non-CWGC Burial: ---

Local War Memorial: STAINFORTH, YORKSHIRE

Additional Information:

Albert Wilson was the son of Thomas and Mary E. Wilson (née -) and brother of Private Thomas Wilson (G/14565) (q.v.). Their father was born in Lambrigg (township) and mother at Reagill, Westmorland.

1901 Stainforth, Yorkshire Census: Albert Wilson, aged 5 years, born Shap, Westmorland, son of Thomas and Mary E. Wilson.

Albert was married to Violet Powell in 1916.

British Army WW1 Medal Rolls Index Cards: Pte Albert Wilson, 40435, East Lancashire Regiment; 31087, Loyal North Lancashire Regiment.

British Army WW1 Medal and Award Rolls: Pte Albert Wilson, 40435, 1/5 E. Lan. R.; 31087, 2/4 N. Lan. R.

Army Registers of Soldiers' Effects: Pte Albert Wilson, 31087, 2/4 Loy N. Lacs. Date and Place of Death: 13.9.18. K. in A. France. To whom Authorised/Amount Authorised: Widow and Sole Legatee - Violet. £6 2s. 2d.

Albert is commemorated on the Clitheroe War Memorial.

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: ---

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Private Albert WILSON

Private Albert WILSON

Regiment / Corps / Service Badge: Loyal North Lancashire Regiment

Regiment / Corps / Service Badge: Loyal North Lancashire Regiment

Divisional Sign / Service Insignia: 57th (2/West Lancashire) Division

Divisional Sign / Service Insignia: 57th (2/West Lancashire) Division

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

Soldiers Died Data for Soldier Records

Surname: WILSON

Forename(s): Albert

Born: Rosgill, Westmorland

Residence: Clitheroe, Lancs

Enlisted: Blackburn, Lancs

Number: 31087

Rank: Private

Regiment: Loyal North Lancashire Regiment

Battalion: 2/4th Battalion (Territorial Force)

Decorations:

Died Date: 13/09/18

Died How: Killed in action

Theatre of War: France & Flanders

Notes: Formerly 40435, East Lancs Regiment

Data from Commonwealth War Graves Commission Records

CWGC Data for Soldier Records

Surname: WILSON

Forename(s): A

Country of Service: United Kingdom

Service Number: 31087

Rank: Private

Regiment: The Loyal North Lancashire Regiment

Unit: 2nd/4th Bn.

Age:

Awards:

Died Date: 13/09/1918

Additional Information: (CWGC Headstone Inscription: THEIR GLORY SHALL NOT BE BLOTTED OUT)

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‘Clitheroe Times’ (29 November 1918)

(Kindly supplied by Shirley Penman of Clitheroe and Dorothy Falshaw of Gisburn)

FALLEN IN THE FIGHT

WILSON – In loving memory of Pte. Albert Wilson, of the Loyal North Lancashire Regt., who was killed in action (or died of wounds), on the 13th September, 1918, aged 23 years.

Nobly he did his duty,
Bravely he fought and fell;
But the sorrows of those that mourn him,
Only aching hearts can tell.

–From his Wife and Child. 9, Brook Street, Clitheroe.

We little thought when we said good-bye,
We parted for ever, and you were to die;
Oh, the grief that we feel, words cannot tell,
For we could not be with you to bid you farewell.

–From his Mother and Family.

We shall meet with many a loved one
That was torn from our embrace;
We shall listen to their voices,
And behold them face to face.

–From Mrs. Ridsdale and Children. 64, Lowergate, Clitheroe.

‘Clitheroe Times’ (29 November 1918)

(Kindly supplied by Shirley Penman of Clitheroe and Dorothy Falshaw of Gisburn)

Mrs. Wilson, 9, Brook-street, received official news, on Friday last, that her husband, Pte. Albert Wilson, Loyal North Lancashire Regt., was presumed to have been killed, or died of wounds, on the 13th September. Pte. Wilson who had been previously reported missing, was 23 years of age, and a quarryman, and had been in France about five months. He leaves a widow and one child with whom we sympathise in their great loss.

100 Years On Guard

A Grenadier Guard in full battle dress and mourning pose has stood in a leafy and flower-filled Memorial Garden, keeping guard over the town of Clitheroe, for almost a century. Unveiled on 18th August 1923 by the Mayor of Clitheroe, Alderman John Thomas Whipp, the sculpture was the work of Frederick Louis Roslyn R.B.S. of London, who attended the unveiling. Two identical statues stand at Slaidburn and Denholme and are amongst the many memorials which Roslyn created in the British Isles plus one as far afield as Jamaica. The Scots granite plinth was designed by Mr. A. E. Blezard, Clitheroe Town Council’s surveyor, who also oversaw the construction of the cenotaph and the memorial garden. The finance for the cenotaph at Clitheroe Castle was sourced from part of the public donations which the citizens of Clitheroe had raised for the purchase of the castle, and the six point four hectare grounds surrounding it, from the Duke of Buccleuch as a war memorial for the princely sum of £9,500. His Lordship had asked for more but reduced the sum when told that the purchase was for a war memorial. More cash was accrued after this time to pay for making the grounds into a public park.

The money was collected in many ways – millworkers had one penny (1/2 p) stopped from their wages each week; school children sold bunches of wildflowers for a penny; mill owners provided multiples of tens of pounds at different times and there were fayres, bazaars, dances and auctions held to swell the funds. On the momentous day, almost 1,000 servicemen, – some horribly wounded or disfigured – lined the street through the town from the mayor’s parlour in Church Street to the entrance to the castle at the aptly named Castle Gate. The mayoral party, made up of the Mayor and Mayoress, Aldermen, Corporation councillors, magistrates, Town Clerk, Sergeant of the Mace and halberdiers, and members of the War Memorial Committee made their slow and dignified way between these men who grieved for their lost companions until they reached the locked gates of the castle grounds.

The little market town’s losses had been great – a goodly portion of the next generation gone for ever. Hardly a family or a street had been spared, with drawn curtains at many of the cottages in the little back-to-back houses in the Salford area, including the homes of the three Fielding brothers and the three McHales, – all of Harrop Street. Mrs. Annabella Park of High Street, Low Moor lost three of her sons, – one of whom enlisted from Canada to fight for the “mother-country”, one whilst a prisoner of war and one, so inhumanely treated whilst a prisoner of war, that he came home terminally ill and took his own life. Less than a hundred yards away, the aging Alston parents were left with only one son and a daughter from their family of five. The Boothman family of Pimlico, lost two sons, Frank and Bertram, both of whom worked in the offices of the local authority; the two Durham brothers, Joseph and Thomas from Brownlow Street, both unskilled workers. Many were the names and tragic stories of these “lost boys”; the very fabric of the township’s life was changed by these blows – the churches and Sunday schools, the football teams, cricket teams, industries and businesses. The lives of the parents, wives and children of all these brave men and boys had been changed forever; and so the mood was sombre as they gathered on this day of remembrance.

Here at the gates were waiting the Subscribers’ Committee, who had handled the weekly savings and the purchase of the castle, headed by Alderman Tom Garnett J.P. Whilst handing to the mayor the deeds to the castle and a key with which to open the gates, he voiced the hope that “the memory of the great dead would remain treasured and cherished in their hometown until time shall be lost in eternity.”

In the name of all Clitheronians, Mayor Whipp accepted these tokens of custody and said that “the Castle would stand as a perpetual reminder of the great deliverance wrought for our land by those who fought in the Great War. The Corporation would carefully guard the Castle and grounds as a sacred trust and would hand it on as a precious heritage to future generations.”

So began the council stewardship of the splendid and unique war memorial which the castle had become. Once more the mayoral party, followed by the servicemen and onlookers, made their slow, reverential way up the castle drive to the Garden of Remembrance where-in the Memorial, covered by the Union Jack, stood. Relatives of the fallen had been granted two tickets per family as entrance to this garden; other onlookers had to squeeze into every other available nook and cranny. A solemn unveiling by Mayor Whipp was followed by the Last Post, a two-minute silence and Reveille but then, instead of laying the first, Clitheroe citizens wreath himself, the mayor handed it to Mr. Thomas Snape and said, “Please, you have more right to lay this wreath than I.” Mr. Snape walked forward and took the beautiful arch of white lilies grown in the castle greenhouses which had the words “In Remembrance” picked out in purple flowers and laid it at the foot of the memorial. He, who had lost four sons and a son-in-law in the vicious five-year fight for peace, did indeed deserve this honour. The service continued with prayers, choir anthems, readings and hymns; culminating with the hymn “Abide with Me” and the National Anthem. Everyone was now allowed to place their own tributes at the foot of the Guard on his lofty, granite plinth. By the evening of that day over 400 floral tributes formed a beautiful token of love, gratitude and remembrance. Wreaths, anchors, crosses and cushions – had been laid in memory of the 334 men of the town who went away singing never to return.

Researched by Shirley Penman. August, 2023

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18 October 1918

STAINFORTH – Missing

Mr. and Mrs. Tom Wilson, who recently received news of the death of their third son in action, have just received news that their fourth son, Private Albert Wilson, of the Loyal North Lancashire’s is missing since early September.

06 June 1919

SETTLE – MISSING: NOW REPORTED KILLED

Private Albert Wilson, Loyal North Lancs. Regiment, was reported to his family at the Green, Stainforth, as missing since the 13th of September, 1918. His parents have recently received the sad information that he is now reported “killed in action or died of wounds in or about the above date.” He is the fourth son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilson, to whom we tender deep sympathy.

19 September 1919

WILSON – In loving memory of two dear sons and brothers, Private Albert Wilson, 2/4th Loyal North Lancs. Regiment, presumed killed on September 13th, 1918. Also Private Thomas Wilson, 1st East Kent Regiment, killed in action September 18th, 1918.

We often think of days gone by
When we were all together;
A shadow o’er our lives is cast,
Two dear ones gone for ever.

Ever remembered by Father, Mother, Sisters and Brothers, Green, Stainforth.

WILSON – In loving memory of my dear boy, Private Thomas Wilson, 1st East Kent Regiment, killed in action September 18th, 1918.

There is a link death cannot sever,
Love and remembrance live for ever.

Ever remembered by Mary (West Hartlepool).

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18 October 1918

Stainforth Family Hard Hit

Mr. and Mrs. Tom Wilson, of Stainforth who recently received news of the death of their third son in action, have just received the news that their fourth son, Pte. Albert Wilson, Loyal North Lancashires, is missing since early September.

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