04 August 1916
STEETON-WITH-EASTBURN – REPORTED MISSING
Last weekend Mrs. Joseph Hales, who along with her three young children, reside in Victoria Street, Steeton, received official information that her husband, Private J. Hales of the West Yorkshires (Bradford ‘Pals’) had been missing since July 2nd. The missing Steeton soldier, previous to enlisting a year ago, was employed at Eastburn.
18 August 1916
STEETON-WITH-EASTBURN – A LENGTHENING LIST
Another Steeton soldier in the person of Private Joseph Hales, of the West Yorkshires (Bradford Pals), has made the supreme sacrifice, as after being reported missing since July 2nd, he is now officially reported killed. Hales, who was 33 years of age, enlisted a year ago and leaves three young children. He was a quarryman at Eastburn Quarries.
25 August 1916
HALES – July 14th, 1916, killed in action in France, Pte. Joseph Hales, West Yorkshire Regiment and late of Steeton, aged 33 years.
25 August 1916
PRIVATE JOSEPH HALES, STEETON
Private Joseph Hales, of the West Yorkshire (Bradford Pals), was killed in action July 14th, and had been reported missing since July 2nd. Hales, who was 33 years of age and enlisted a year ago, leaves three young children. He was a quarryman at Eastburn Quarries, near Steeton.
15 September 1916
CRAVEN VILLAGE INSTITUTES – IDEALS AND ASPIRATIONS FOR THE FUTURE
The quarterly meeting of the Craven and District Village Institutes’ Association was held at the Steeton Mechanics’ Institute on Saturday afternoon, under the chairmanship of the Rev. A.C. Blunt, of Gargrave, the newly-appointed president for the ensuing year. Delegates were present from Gargrave, Oakworth, Cross Roads, Kildwick, Steeton, Cononley, and Gisburn.
Mr. Alfred Stell, president of the Seeton Institute, extended a cordial welcome to the new president and the delegates…
Appreciative Letter from the Trenches
The Secretary (Mr. J. Holdsworth) next read the following letter from Captain Cedric F. Horsfall, the late president, written from the trenches in France:–“Many thanks for your letter which I received a few days ago in the front trenches. You have, of course, done quite right in electing another president, and just as I should have wished you to do. I feel as though I have been of little or no use during my two years of office, owing to the circumstances over which I have had no control. After the war I assure you and your Association that you shall have my active support, as I know there is much scope for your work, especially after this war, and when unavoidably the home ties of many of the men will be weakened. I can see some difficulty in preventing wholesale emigration from our villages to the towns and the colonies, and every inducement will be required to keep them in the villages. I think the Institutes might do much to meet this need. I wish you to convey to your Committee my sincerest thanks for the honour they have done to me in allowing me to keep the position of president during these two eventful years. I wish you every success in your work in the future and I am sure that you will get much valuable advice and assistance from your new president, Mr. Blunt. I hope it is not out of place if I add a word of admiration of the men in this Battalion, many of whom come from our villages, and most of whom have been members of the various Institutes. They have not had an easy time lately, but they seem to thrive on work and do it with a good heart, and shelling hardly disturbs them at all.”
STEETON’S ROLL OF HONOUR
Mr. W.J. Johns, of Oakworth, moved that the Association express its sincerest sympathy with the village of Steeton in the great sacrifice that it had been called upon to make in the prosecution of the war. Mr. Weatherall, of Cononley, having seconded.
The Secretary read a list of the Steeton men who have been killed and wounded as follows:–
Killed – W. Dawes, Herbert Dove, Prince Dawson, Wm. Brooksbank, James Dove, Fred T. Ellison, Spencer Cliff (missing), Joseph Hales, Ewart Myers, Thos. Fitzsimmons, Wm. Robson, Thos. Robson, Arthur Smith, Wm. A. Teale, Richard Nicholson, Norman Waterhouse, Clarence Wilson, J. Nelson, Wm. Naylor.
Wounded – John Brooksbank, Wm. Brayshaw, Matthew Dove, Robert Anderson, Percy Race, Fred Baldwin, Fred Greenwood, Frank Throup, Ernest Cooper, Robert Williams.
The Secretary added that many of the wounded men were back in the trenches again, and it was also stated that several of the soldiers had been members of the Steeton Institute.
The resolution of sympathy was carried by the delegates rising in their places…
12 January 1917
STEETON’S GALLANT DEAD
Happily there has during the closing months of the past year been few casualties amongst Steeton’s soldiers to report. Since the commencement of the war the following well-known local soldiers who have been residents in the village have given their lives for the cause of right and humanity.–Arthur Smith, Willaim Dawes, Herbert Dove, Thomas Robson, James Walker (died in training period), Willie Brooksbank, Ewart Myers, Thomas Fitzsimons, Prince Dawson, Fred Ellison, R. Nicholson, W.H. Teale, William Naylor, William Robson, Joseph Hale, Clarence Wilson, Mathias Dove, James Dove, John Nelson, whilst to add to the above are the names of Spencer Cliff missing since the ever-to-be-remembered landing at Suvla Bay in August, 1915, and Wright Cockshott who has been included in the list of those missing since the early autumn of 1916. Several soldiers whose occupations necessitated residence in the village previous to the war have ‘made the sacrifice’ but are not included in the list.
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