Top Navigation

Robert SPENCER

Main CPGW Record

Surname: SPENCER

Forename(s): Robert

Place of Birth: Skipton, Yorkshire

Service No: 3242

Rank: Private

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

Battalion / Unit: 6th (Reserve) Battalion

Division: ---

Age: 21

Date of Death: 1917-02-12

Awards: ---

CWGC Grave / Memorial Reference: 362.

CWGC Cemetery: SKIPTON (ST. STEPHEN’S) ROMAN CATHOLIC CEMETERY

CWGC Memorial: ---

Non-CWGC Burial: ---

Local War Memorial: SKIPTON, YORKSHIRE

Additional Information:

Robert Spencer was the son of Peter and Martha Spencer, née Emmott. Peter was born at Liverpool, Lancashire and Martha at Skipton, Yorkshire.

1901 Skipton, Yorkshire Census: 29, Commercial Street - Robert Spencer, aged 6 years, born Skipton, son of Peter and Martha Spencer.

1911 Skipton, Yorkshire Census: 29, Commercial Street - Robert Spencer, aged 16 years, born Skipton, son of Peter and Martha Spencer.

The British Army Service Record for Robert Spencer exists but may be incomplete.

Army Registers of Soldiers' Effects: Pte Robert Spencer, 3242, 6th Bn W. Riding. Date and Place of Death: 12.2.17 Mil. Hos. York. To whom Authorised/Amount Authorised: Father - Peter. £16 7s. 0d.

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:

SPENCER, Robert, aged 21, West Riding Regiment, son of Mr. and Mrs. Spencer, 29, Commercial Street, [Skipton], died York Military Hospital Feb. 12. 1917.

---

Click the thumbnail below to view a larger image.

Private Robert SPENCER

Private Robert SPENCER

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

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

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

Soldiers Died Data for Soldier Records

Surname: SPENCER

Forename(s): Robert

Born: Skipton, Yorks

Residence:

Enlisted: Skipton

Number: 3242

Rank: Private

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

Battalion: 2/6th Battalion

Decorations:

Died Date: 12/02/17

Died How: Died

Theatre of War: Home

Notes:

Data from Commonwealth War Graves Commission Records

CWGC Data for Soldier Records

Surname: SPENCER

Forename(s): Robert

Country of Service: United Kingdom

Service Number: 3242

Rank: Private

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

Unit: 1st/6th Bn.

Age: 21

Awards:

Died Date: 12/02/1917

Additional Information: Son of Peter and Martha Spencer, of 29, Commercial St., Skipton. (CWGC Headstone Personal Inscription: REST IN PEACE)

---

View Additional Image(s)

Additional Photo(s) For Soldier Records

St Stephen's Churchyard, Skipton

St Stephen's Churchyard, Skipton

CWGC Headstone

View Craven Herald Articles

View Craven Herald Articles

Craven Herald and Wensleydale Standard Logo

16 February 1917

SPENCER – February 12th, at the Military Hospital, York, Robert Spencer, of Commercial Street, Skipton, aged 21 years.

16 February 1917

SKIPTON SOLDIER DIES IN HOSPITAL

We regret to record the death, in the Military Hospital at York on Monday, of Pte. Robert Spencer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Spencer, of 29, Commercial Street, Skipton. Deceased had undergone an operation for an abscess in the ear and had only been in hospital two days when death took place. Twenty-one years of age and formerly a weaver at the Embsay Shed, he enlisted soon after the outbreak of war in the 2nd West Riding Regiment, and after training in various parts was transferred for service to an Instruction School at Leeds and afterwards to a similar school at York. Subsequently, while at York, he was transferred into the West Yorkshire Regiment. He was a keen athlete and was formerly a playing member of one of the local junior Association teams. Deceased’s brother, Pte. Edgar Spencer, who is only 19, is with the Howitzer Brigade in France.

23 February 1923

ODDFELLOWS’ WAR MEMORIAL

UNVEILING CEREMONY AT A SKIPTON LODGE

OVER 200 WHO SERVED

There was a large attendance of local members of the Independent Order of Oddfellows at the Friendly Societies’ Hall, Skipton, on Saturday afternoon, on the occasion of the unveiling of a war memorial to the members of the Loyal Traveller’s Friend Lodge, I.O.O.F, M.U., who fell in the war.

The Memorial takes the form of a beautifully designed scroll within an oak frame with a glass front, the work of Mr. H. Spencer, junr., and it bears the inscription:–

LOYAL/TRAVELLER’S FRIEND LODGE,/SKIPTON DISTRICT ./I.O.O.F. ROLL OF HONOUR M.U./OF/THOSE MEMBERS OF THIS LODGE WHO FOUGHT FOR THEIR KING AND COUNTRY TO UPHOLD THE SACRED CAUSES OF BROTHERHOOD AND HUMANITY IN THE GREAT WAR, 1914–1918.

Below the inscription are the names of 173 members who served in the war, and of the 40 members who were killed. The names of the fallen occupy a central position on the scroll, and above them are the following words:–

IN MEMORIAM
OF THOSE WHO MADE THE
SUPREME SACRIFICE.
THEIR HEARTS ARE LIFTED UP
THEIR HEARTS
THAT HAVE FOREKNOWN
THE UTTER PRICE,
THEIR HEARTS BURN
UPWARD AS A FLAME
OF SPLENDOUR AND OF
SACRIFICE

The names of the fallen are as follows:– H. Armstrong, J.J. Brown, J. Barrett, Robt. Brown, W.W. Bell, A. Clayton, W.H. Coles, T.C. Chew, Tom Downes, T.M. Drummond, Jos. Emmott, Thos. Edmondson, J. Easterby, F. Gallagher, J.W. Garwood, G.E. Godwin, S.J. Hargreaves, M. Hargreaves, A. Hebden, J. Hebden, A. Hawkswell, T.E. Inman, M. Lund, R.C. [R.G.] Metcalfe, Hbt. Maudsley, Hy. Maudsley, A.J. Pimnock [Pinnock], H.Y. [Harry] Riley, T.W. Storey, J.H. Stewart, R. Spencer, J.W. Shuttleworth, Wm. Tempest, Hbt. Thompson, Fred Thornton, J.W. Varley, John Ward, J.A. Whittaker, J.W. Whittaker, and R.D. Whittaker.

The Unveiling Ceremony

The unveiling ceremony was presided over by Bro. Thos. Bellamy, and was performed by Bro. Amos Culpan, Prov. C.S., and a simple service included the singing of the hymns, ‘O God our help’ and Kipling’s Recessional, ‘God of our fathers,’ and the reading of a portion of Scripture, and the offering of a prayer by Bro. James Greenwood, of Bradford, and formerly of Skipton.

Bro. Bellamy observed that those members of the Lodge whom they were met to honour went into battle, suffered untold privations, and, in many cases, made the supreme sacrifice. They gave their lives in defence of their homes and their country. Further than that, they gave their lives for justice and freedom, and in order that we might live. It was the duty of Oddfellows, equally as much as other sections of the community, to do everything within their power to make the country better for that sacrifice. “In the time of our prosperity,” concluded Bro. Bellamy, “never let us forget those who served us in the time of our adversity.”

A Lesson of the War

Prior to unveiling the memorial, Bro. Culpan described the ceremony he had been asked to perform as one not unattended by sorrow. It was an occasion upon which one felt a desire to make their Order better for the sacrifice of its members, and to extend the true spirit of brotherhood. In nearly 4,000 of their Lodges they would find a roll of honour. Over 22,000 of their members made the supreme sacrifice, and thousands of others were ruined and shattered in health and without prospects for the future. Each and all of them ought to perform some daily service that would make the sacrifice of those men worth while. One result of the terrible ordeal of 1914 to 1918 was the creation of a better feeling between men, and a desire to break down the class barriers that formerly existed. That was one of the great lessons of the war.

View West Yorkshire Pioneer Articles

View West Yorkshire Pioneer Articles

West Yorkshire Pioneer Logo

16 February 1917

SPENCER – Pte. Robert Spencer. of the West Yorkshire Regiment, son of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Spencer, of 29, Commercial St., Skipton, died in hospital at York, Feb. 12, aged 21 years.

16 February 1917

SKIPTON SOLDIER DIES IN HOSPITAL

The death of Pte. Robert Spencer, son of Mr. and Mr. Peter Spencer, of 29, Commercial Street, Skipton, took place on Monday last at Military Hospital, York. Pte. Spencer enlisted soon after the outbreak of war in the Duke of Wellington’s West Riding Regiment, and after undergoing training at various places in this country he was transferred to Leeds, where he was engaged in the Officer’s Instruction School, and afterwards at the School of Instruction at York. While at York he was drafted into the West Yorkshire Regiment. Recently he underwent an operation for an abscess in the ear, and had only been in hospital two days when death took place. He was 21 years of age, and prior to enlisting he was employed as a weaver at the Embsay Shed. He was a keen athlete, and was formerly a playing member of one of the Skipton Junior Association Football teams. Mr. and Mrs. Spencer have another son, Driver Edgar Spencer, who is attached to the Howitzer Brigade, and is at present in France. He is only 19 years of age.

Submit a Correction

    Name (required)

    Email Address (required)

    Telephone (required)

    Soldier Reference - Name:

    Soldier Reference - URL:

    Details of the correction to be made (required)

    Comment on this Soldier Record

    You can leave comments on this soldier record. Please note all comments will be manually approved before they appear on the website.

    No comments yet.

    Leave a Reply

    Pin It on Pinterest

    Share This