
Reginald Heath
In 1911 he was a coal miner ganager below.
- Family History
- Military history
- Extra information
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Reginald Heath was born in 1893 at Westwood, he was the son of John Herbert a coal miner and his first wife the late Caroline Grainger of Station Road, Carlton.
His father John Herbert was born in 1863 at Mansfield Woodhouse, his mother Caroline Grainger was born in 1869 at Codnor, Derbyshire she died in 1909 aged 40 yrs, they had 2 further children, Samuel born 1890 Westwood, and Walter James born 1897 at Sutton in Ashfield.
His father remarried in in 1901 at Nottingham to Elizabeth Pitt.
In the 1911 census the family lived at 107 Station Road Carlton John Herbert 48 yrs is a coal miner he is living with his secondwife Elizabeth 51 yrs and his childen Reginald 18 yrs a coal miner ganger and Walter 14 yrs a hosiery errand lad.
His parents later lived at 31 North Western Terrace Netherfield, Nottingham.
Private Reginald Heath served firstly with 1st Battalion Leicestershire Regiment entering theatre (France) 04/11/14 having been a reservist since 19/10/1911. He was transferred to 9th Battalion Sherwood Foresters Regiment and on 20/11/1915 was promoted to lance corporal. On 01/04/1917 he was sentenced to 6 months detention with hard labour for 1) absenting himself without leave, 2) offering violence to a superior officer and 3) being drunk. He was released early and was with the battalion as it moved out of the front line during the night of 26th August 1917. Deep mud, rain, heavy clouds and constant enemy activity made fighting arduous. It took the unit over five hours to walk back two miles. Reginald and three other members of the battalion disappeared and are all commemorated on the Tyne Cot Memorial.
John Morse
Nottingham Evening Post 24/3/1915
"GERMAN CHAINED TO A GUN.
INCIDENT IN THE NEUVE CHAPELLE FIGHT. ...
Writing from a convalescent home Bolton to his parents at Carlton, Private R. Heath states that he has been in five different hospitals — three in France and two in England —since March 10th, when he was in the big bayonet charge at Neuve Chapelle.
'I went through the attack all day,' he states, ' without a scratch, and then at night, when things had quietened down a bit, I stopped a piece of shrapnel shell in my left upper arm, which is not serious. It hit in one lump and came out in two different places, but did not catch any bones. I daresay you have read about the fight. It is supposed to be the biggest since the war began. The Germans were running with their arms up in the air. Our company captured two machine guns from them, and there was one man chained to the gun so he could not run away.'"
Courtesy of Jim Grundy and his facebook pages Small Town Great War Hucknall 1914-1918
Neuve Chapelle (March 10th to 13th) was one of three costly but inconclusive allied offensives on the Western Front during the first half of 1915 (the others being at Aubers Ridge and Festubert). 40,000 Allied troops took part at Neuve Chapelle and suffered 7,000 British and 4,200 Indian casualties.
David Nunn