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William Henry TEAL

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Surname: TEAL

Forename(s): William Henry

Place of Birth: Steeton, Yorkshire

Service No: 12161

Rank: Private

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

Battalion / Unit: 9th (Service) Battalion

Division: 17th (Northern) Division

Age: ---

Date of Death: 1916-07-07

Awards: ---

CWGC Grave / Memorial Reference: Pier and Face 6 A and 6 B.

CWGC Cemetery: ---

CWGC Memorial: THIEPVAL MEMORIAL

Non-CWGC Burial: ---

Local War Memorial: SILSDEN, YORKSHIRE

Local War Memorial: STEETON-WITH-EASTBURN, YORKSHIRE

Additional Information:

William Henry Teal was the son of Richard Henry and Alice Teal, née Howarth. Richard was born at Silsden and Alice at Skipton, Yorkshire. William was the cousin of Gunner John William Wilson (83664) (q.v.).

1891 Steeton, Yorkshire Census: 2, Cowling Row - William Henry Teale, aged 2 years, born Steeton, son of Richard Henry and Alice Teale.

1901 Steeton, Yorkshire Census: 15, Chapel Road - William H. Teal, aged 12 years, born Steeton, son of Richard H. and Alice Teal.

1911 Steeton, Yorkshire Census: 12, Hill Top - William Henry Teale, aged 22 years, born Steeton, son of Richard Henry and Alice Teale.

William was married Annie Hillary in 1912.

British Army WW1 Medal Rolls Index Cards: Pte Wm. H. Teal, 12161, West Riding Regiment. Theatre of War first served in: 1 - France. Date of entry therein: 15 July 1915.

Data Source: Local War Memorial

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Entry in West Yorkshire Pioneer Illustrated War Record: ---

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Private William Henry TEAL

Private William Henry TEAL

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: 17th (Northern) Division

Divisional Sign / Service Insignia: 17th (Northern) Division

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

Soldiers Died Data for Soldier Records

Surname: TEAL

Forename(s): William Henry

Born: Steeton, Yorks

Residence: Silsden, Yorks

Enlisted: Keighley, Yorks

Number: 12161

Rank: Private

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

Battalion: 9th Battalion

Decorations:

Died Date: 07/07/16

Died How: Killed in action

Theatre of War: France & Flanders

Notes:

Data from Commonwealth War Graves Commission Records

CWGC Data for Soldier Records

Surname: TEAL

Forename(s): William Henry

Country of Service: United Kingdom

Service Number: 12161

Rank: Private

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

Unit: 9th Bn.

Age:

Awards:

Died Date: 07/07/1916

Additional Information:

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BRITISH BATTALIONS ON THE SOMME, by Ray Westlake (Pen & Sword Books Limited 1994)

9th (Service) Bn. Duke of Wellington’s (West Riding Regiment)

At Bois des Tailles (1/7) awaiting orders to move forward. To Morlancourt (2/7), trenches around Fricourt (3/7). In action during operations at Contalmaison (4/7)-(7/7). Relieved and to Méaulte.

[William Henry Teal was killed in action on the 7 July 1916.]

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Marriage Register of St Stephen’s Church, Steeton, Yorkshire

Marriage Register of St Stephen’s Church, Steeton, Yorkshire

Entry for the marriage of William Henry Teale to Annie Hillary, 5 August 1912

Courtesy of West Yorkshire Archive Service

Private William Henry Teal

Private William Henry Teal

Courtesy of Jeff Wallbank, Silsden

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05 November 1915

STEETONIANS RE-UNITE

In a letter to his parents, Pte. W. H. Teale, 9th Battalion Duke Wellington’s, described and expressed the pleasure it gave to those present at a gathering of Steeton soldiers at a town behind the firing line “Somewhere in France.” The party included, in addition to Private Teale, Privates Tom Fitzimmons, Prince Dawson, Robert Anderson, G. Stott, and Tom Roberts, along with a trio of Steeton soldier brothers – Privates Willie Dove, Jim Dove, and Matthew Dove, the two last-named being in the Northumberland Fusiliers. The first-named five were several years’ ago prominent players in the Steeton Association football team and are now figuring in the ‘greater game.’ Privates W. Dove, Dawson, and Fitzimmons are with the 6th Battalion (Territorials), and the remainder of the party are ‘Kitchener’s Boys.’ It had been expected that a trio of Steetonians from the 10th Battalion of the ‘Dukes’ should be present, but the ‘Huns’ claimed their respectful attention.

10 December 1915

SILSDEN SOLDIERS' APPRECIATION – INTERESTING LETTERS

Mrs. Charles Sugden, Lady Superintendent of the Silsden St John Ambulance Nursing Division, has received a number of interesting letters from local soldiers and sailors conveying their thanks to the inhabitants of Silsden for the parcels which have recently been forwarded to them.

Private W.H. Teal, of the 9th West Riding Regiment, writes:–“Many thanks for the parcel from the inhabitants of Silsden, the contents of which I found very useful. It helps us a lot to think that the people at home are not forgetting us, and we find nearly as much satisfaction in them as in the enjoyment of the parcel itself. We are finding the conditions rather difficult out here to what they were when we first came out. The weather is turning colder, and we are getting plenty of rain, but so far it has not dampened our spirits,–in fact, I think we shall have to have a lot more than what has come before that happens. We get into all kinds of curious corners out here. I am writing this letter in a brewery cellar where we have slept this last night, and where expected to be for four days, and then we are going up into the trenches. We have just had six days rest, previous to which we had a week in a wood just in the rear of the firing line. It was fairly warm there; shells were flying about in all directions all day long, although I am glad to say that our company escaped without casualties. Although we have been out four months, we have had remarkably few casualties, and we hope we shall continue to be so lucky.”

28 July 1916

SILSDEN – PTE. W.H. TEALE REPORTED MISSING

Pte W.H. Teale, of the 9th Duke of Wellington’s West Riding Regiment, and who resides at Steeton (son of Mrs. Wilson, of No. 8, Mill Bank, Silsden), has not been heard of for the last three weeks, and his wife is naturally anxious to hear news of his whereabouts. Several Silsden soldiers in letters they have sent home report Pte. Teale to be missing.

28 July 1916

STEETON-WITH-EASTBURN

Private W.H. Teale, eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. R.H. Teale, of High Street, Steeton, is reported missing from his battalion, the 9th West Ridings, since the opening days of the big offensive. Private Teale, who is married, and has one child, worked and resided at Silsden for a few weeks previous to enlisting in August, 1914.

04 August 1916

SILSDEN SOLDIER POSTED AS MISSING

Mrs. Teale, of 8, Mill Bank, Silsden, has received official information from the York Record Office that her husband, Pte. W. H. Teale, has been posted as missing since July 7th last. Pte. Teale was seen by two Steeton soldiers when his regiment was being relieved in the trenches. Pte. Teale was dispatch carrier, and it is thought he had been sent with a message and that he has been taken a prisoner of war, although news to that effect has not been received. He is 28 years of age and married with one child. His wife is anxious as to his whereabouts, as she has not heard from him for the last five weeks.

01 September 1916

SILSDEN – REPORTED MISSING, NOW KILLED

Pte W. H. Teale of the West Riding Regiment, who has previously been reported as missing, is now officially reported as killed. The sad news was received yesterday morning by Mrs. Teale, who lives at 8, Mill Bank, Silsden. Deceased was formerly a member of the Steeton Football Club and Steeton Glee Union, and up to enlisting was a twister at the mill of Messrs. John Clough and Sons, Steeton. His wife had not heard any news of him for a considerable time, and it was believed that he was a prisoner of war in Germany.

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, William 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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13 November 1914

STEETONS ROLL OF HONOUR

Up to date there are now 30 Steeton men who are either serving as regulars, Kitchener’s men or Territorials, who have all volunteered for foreign service. This is considered a fairly good percentage for so small a village, but more men are wanted, and no doubt more will respond to the urgent appeal of Lord Kitchener. The roll of honour is as follows:–

Officers: Charles M. Bateman, Sam H. Clough, Hugh Dixon, Will Clough.

Privates: James Anderson, Willie Barber, John Brooksbank, Colin Casson, Wm. Coppack, Prince Dawson, Fred Ellison, Fred Greenwood (wounded but returned to his regiment), Tom Roberts, Wesley Shone, William Wademan, John Wilson, Alfred Metcalfe, John Peake, William Naylor, Herbert Pickles, Arthur Lee (wounded), James O’Hara, Harry J. Mason. Robert Anderson, Willie Brayshaw, Harold Brooksbank, Spencer Cliffe, Wm. Dove, Tom Fitzsimons, Edgar Geldard (wounded), Tom Moyle, George Stott, Cyril Race, Wm. Henry Teale, John W. Wardman, Archie Metcalfe, Arthur Smith (killed in action), James Walker, Fred Haggas, Cuthbert L. Clarke, Frank Jones, Christopher Walton, Thos. Hinkley, Joseph Jackson (wounded), Thomas Robson, Alfred Taylor, Frank Taylor, Harry Sayers, James Jackson, Clifford Cockshott.

28 July 1916

SILSDEN SOLDIER REPORTED MISSING

Pte. W.H. Teale, of the 9th Battalion Duke of Wellington’s West Riding Regiment, son of Mrs. Teale, and who resides at No. 8, Mill Bank, Silsden, has not been heard of for the last three weeks and his wife is naturally anxious to hear news as to his whereabouts. Several Silsden soldiers in letters they have sent home report Pte. Teale to be missing.

04 August 1916

SILSDEN SOLDIER BELIEVED PRISONER OF WAR

Mrs. Teale, of 8, Mill Bank, Silsden, has received official word from the York Record Office that her husband, Pte. W. H. Teale, has been posted as missing since July 7th last. Pte. Teale was seen by two Steeton soldiers when his regiment was being relieved in the trenches. Pte. Teale was a dispatch carrier, and it is thought he had been sent with a message and has been taken a prisoner of war, although news to that effect has not yet been received. He is 28 years of age, and married with one child. His wife is anxious as to his whereabouts, as she has not heard from him for the last five weeks.

01 September 1916

SILSDEN SOLDIER KILLED

Private W. H. Teale, of the West Riding Regiment, husband of Mrs. Teale, of 8 Mill Bank, Silsden, who was reported in our issue of August 4th as having been posted missing since July 7th last, is now officially reported to have been killed, the sad news being received from the War Office by his wife yesterday morning. As Mrs. Teale had not heard from her husband for some time it was feared he had been taken a prisoner of war.

Private Rolbert Anderson, a Steeton soldier, writing to his mother last week, stated that Private Teale’s body had been found in a wood.

Private Teale was 28 years of age, married and had one child. He was formerly a member of the Steeton Football Club and also a member of the Steeton Glee Union. Prior to enlisting he was employed as a twister by Messrs. John Clough and Sons, manufacturers, Steeton. He was the son of Mr. Richard Teale of High Street, Steeton.

05 January 1917

INTERCESSION AND MEMORIAL SERVICE AT SILSDEN – Impressive Sermon by Rev. W. Dickinson

An intercession and memorial service for the fallen heroes in the war was held at the Silsden Primitive Methodist Church on Sunday evening last. There was a large congregation, and the officiating minister was Rev. Wm. Dickinson (pastor). During the service the hymns 'O God our help in ages past,’ ‘Lord God of hosts, Whose Almighty hand,’ ‘God the all terrible! King Who ordainest,’ and ‘When wilt Thou save the people’ were sung. Miss Clara Fortune also ably sang the solo ‘O rest in the Lord,’ and at the close of the service the organist (Mr. Bernard Longbottom) played the ‘Dead march’ in ‘Saul,’ and the National Anthem was sung.

WAR A HARMFUL THING

Preaching from the text Psalm 46, 9th verse, ‘He maketh wars to cease unto the ends of the earth,’ Mr. Dickinson said it seemed almost superfluous to say in this sad day in which we lived that war was a serious and harmful thing. It was, however, a great outstanding fact. When they looked at the expense even in times of peace, when nations made preparations for war, it was even then a great expense, but in days of actual warfare as to-day, when the nation was spending at least £5,000,000 a day, then it was that they were reminded that war was a serious thing from a financial point of view. They tried to have dreams or visions as to what would have been done with that money for philanthropic purposes and for the social amelioration of the people of this country, but the country had put those dreams or visions in the back ground. Then we had the cruelty of it, and the passions that it excited. It marched to hunger and thirst and wounds and death. Then we had the bereavements. Children were made orphans, women were made widows, and parents mourned over children and many were left childless. Then we also had the deplorable feelings produced by war, feeling of revenge, feelings that produced quarrelsomeness, a desire for power and an unholy lust of ambition. That was seen by the works of the great Napoleon, and also by the Kaiser and the Prussian War Lords. The question that now forced itself to the front was ‘Is all war morally wrong?’ We had a very high ideal, and we believed that war was all wrong. They read in the Old Book that David was not allowed to build the temple of the Lord because his hands had been stained by blood, and he was spoken of as a man of war. But, in these days we had to look at actual facts. What was the actual state today? When one side would prepare for war and was determined to declare war, what then could we do? That great poet in Russia called Tolstoy preached the doctrine of being passive, but when we came to think of it, could we be passive? If our homes were to be destroyed and our wives and children to be taken from us, could we be passive? Did it not arouse within us that spirit of manhood that we must assert ourselves and that we must fight? If we were not prepared to do that, all he could think was that we were cowards. They ought to bury their heads and be ashamed of themselves. In days of peace with one breath they would denounce all war, and yet in the very next breath they would ask the question why the Congo atrocities were not stopped even if force were necessary. To-day they looked upon a devastated Serbia, Montenegro, Belgium, and alas Roumania, and they came to the conclusion that there were worse things than war – Armenia and the Congo, and the slavery of the South Americans; and what would have been the slavery of Europe had it not been for the call to arms in a cause that was just and righteous?

A JUST AND RIGHTEOUS CAUSE

If it were not for that conviction that the cause for which they were at war was just and righteous, many of them would have failed to preach, to pray, or to look to God. But, it was that which gave them strength that they looked to him Who was the present help and refuge in their trouble. In their fight against war whom should they attack? Often in the past the attack was made upon the soldier. They could not do that to-day as far as this country war concerned. They had a great civilian army, and they were fighting for freedom, for righteousness, and for justice. They never wanted to be soldiers, they never wanted to fight, but the call had come and they could do no other. Who made war, and why should there be war? Not the soldier. In the days that were gone, it was more the civilian than the soldier, the civilian because he was represented by his Parliament and that Parliament as the representative of the civilian often made war, because the lust for power and the lust for gold had got hold of them. Then in the commercial world, amongst what was known as the ruling classes, there was generally speaking a disposition to make war because there was the old saying that trade followed the flag. The soldier fought because he was ordered to do. It was neither Roberts, Kitchener, nor Buller who made the Boer War. If anybody made it, it was Kruger, Milner, and Chamberlain, and it was made because they had greed for power, and an unholy ambition and wish for gold. If they went back through the pages of history, they would find that that was the source of war as far as this country was concerned. He had come to the conclusion that the man who shouted for war had an axe to grind. The man who shouted for war ought to be made to go and face the music and not to send others. What did soldiery stand for? Generally speaking it stood for the aggressive, the quarrelsome, the brute force. They could not say that of the civilian army that had been raised by this country. They were not aggressive, they were not quarrelsome, and neither could they say that they were asserting brute force. He was sorry to have to say it of the Central Powers where conscription had been reigning for so many years. It was the brute force and the aggressive power that they would have to abolish. But when they had said that, they were bound to come to the conclusion that

SOLDIERY HAS ITS GOOD POINTS

The soldier side by side with the doctor stood to give his life for his country and that was a great deal. He would advise anyone to pause before he sneered at a soldier. He stood between them and the enemy, and if it had not been for the brave men who had stood thus, where would they have been to-day? They had no words too high in their commendation and admiration and love for the civilians of this Empire, who had stood between them and the enemy in this time of crisis. The question came to each one of them what was their position and what were they doing in the national crisis that was before them, and still after all they came to the conclusion that the soldier's life as they saw it to-day was a regrettable necessity, that all those brave men should have to shoulder the musket and defend our shores and fight for the freedom, righteousness, and justice of a cause that none of them disputed. They regretted in this the 20th century that such a thing should have happened. It ought not to have come to pass, and it never would have come to pass if the great Central Powers of Europe had taken heed of the sayings of Christ, and had seen His crucified hands instead of the mailed fist, and if they had listened to His beatitudes instead of the philosophy of the German teachers. How were they to lessen those evils? They must attack the root, that lust for power, that quarrelsome spirit, and that unholy ambition that had dominated the great Central Powers. How were they to attack the root? By educating the people for peace at the proper time, and that perhaps was not just yet. It was an easy matter to give descriptions of the horrors of war, to speak of its abominations, and even to denounce statesmen and people who sanctioned war, but how few people there were who searched for methods by means of which war could be put down and destroyed. When the history of the war and the part which the British Empire had taken in it came to be written – he was not a prophet or the son of a prophet – he ventured to say that the writer would pay a fine testimony to the ex-Foreign Minister of this country (Sir Edward Grey) who night and day at the beginning or before the declaration of war strove with all the brain power he had, and with every ounce of strength, he could put in, to avert this great catastrophe. If to-day he was in the back ground, he would looked upon as one of the finest statesmen this country ever had. On what lines were they to educate people for peace? There was a form of Government not only to arrest this demon war, but to bind him in chains. What was it? A cosmopolitan administration or a great Federal Government of the world. They might be dreamers, but certainly there would come a day either in London, Paris, or New York, when there would be a great Federal Government, and that Government would help them to the day when wars would cease.

THE CHURCH'S ROLL OF HONOUR

Proceeding, Mr. Dickinson said he was sure he was voicing the feelings of all present when he said they sympathised very deeply with the families of Pte. Percy Kellett and Lance-Corpl. T.C. Green, both of whom were in hospital suffering from wounds. They prayed for their speedy recovery, and also that their parents and relatives might he comforted. Then they had Ptes. Bernard Locker and Gannett Longbottom, who were reported as missing, and it was hoped that before long good news would be heard of them. They had to add two other names – Pte. Dan Faulkner and Gunner W.H. Sutcliffe, both of whom had been killed in action – to their list of fallen who had been intimately associated with their church and Sunday-school. Mr. Dickinson then read a list of Silsden soldiers who had died serving their King and Country. They were as follows:– Pte. Harold Snoddin [Snowden], Pte. B. Hodgson, Pte. I. Wade, Pte. R. Spence, Pte. E. Hustwick, Gunner E. Lund, Pte. W. Gill, Pte. J. Faulkner, Pte. N. Holmes, Pte. R. Read, Pte. J. Gill, Pte. S. Wrigglesworth, Sergt. J. Baldwin, Sergt. R. Hill, Pte. Wm. Richmond, Pte. W.H. Teale, Corpl. F. Taylor, Pte. H. Harper, Pte. D. Faulkner, and Gunner W.H.Sutcliffe.

Mr. Dickinson also read the church's roll of honour, which comprised 110 names.

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    One Response to William Henry TEAL

    1. Bryan Wilson August 5, 2017 at 5:45 pm #

      I have a medal, awarded to the above solider, he is not a relative of mine, and I would like to return the medal to any remaining family members. Please feel free to contact me.

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