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This data is related to World War 1
Gnr

Thomas Alfred Buggins

Service Number 55150
Military Unit 36th Siege Bty Royal Garrison Artillery
Date of birth Unknown
Date of Death 10 Apr 1917 (22 Years Old)
Place of Birth Church Stretton, Shropshire
Employment, Education or Hobbies Farm servant then asylum attendant at Notts County Asylum (Saxondale).
Family History

Thomas Alfred Buggins was born in 1895 in Church Stretton, Shropshire and was the son of Thomas James a game keeper and Phyllis Buggins née Millership of , Buggins Cottage, Fosse Road, Bingham. His father Thomas James was born in 1868 in Alerston, Warwickshire and his mother Phyllis Millership was born in 1871 in Oldbury, Birmingham, they were married in 1893 their marriage was recorded in the West Bromwich Registration area, they went on to have two further children , Harry Robert b1896 Church Stretton ad Phyllis May b1899 Church Stretton. In the 1911 census the family are living at Fosse Road, Bingham and are shown as Thomas 43 yrs a game keeper he is living with his wife Phyllis 40 yrs and their children Thomas 16 yrs a farm servant, Harry Robert 15 yrs a farm servant and Phyllis May 12 yrs a scholar.

Military History

Gunner Thomas Alfred Buggins enlisted at Nottingham on 24th November 1914 using the surname Baggins he gave his age as 21 yrs and 7 months, his address was Nottinghamshire County Asylum, and his occupation was an asylum attendant, his next of kin was his father Thomas James Baggins of Fosse Road, Bingham. He served as a gunner with the Royal Garrison Artillery and he landed in France on 3rd August 1915. He was returned to England and admitted to the 2nd Western General Hospital at Manchester with Bronchitis on 22nd December 1915. He spent 91 days in hospital and was released on 21st March 1916. He was discharged from the services on 16th April 1916 with bronchitis and TB being no longer physically fit for war service. He died aged 22 yrs on 10th April 1917 of pulmonary TB and buried in a paupers grave in Bingham Cemetery In 2015 his grave was marked with a wargraves commission headstone.

Extra Information

Article published in the Newark Advertiser 4th August 2011 The grave of a first world war soldier is set to be marked with a headstone — 94 years after his death. Gunner Thomas Alfred Baggins is buried in an unmarked pauper’s grave in Bingham Cemetery. However, the Commonwealth War Graves Commission is looking to install a headstone after the Ministry of Defence confirmed the soldier had been awarded war grave status. 55150 Gunner Baggins, who served in the Royal Garrison Artillery, died in 1917 from pulmonary tuberculosis, aged 22, as a result of his service. The search for Gunner Baggins’ grave was made more difficult because the name on his death certificate is not Baggins but Buggins. He changed his name to Baggins when he enlisted because, apparently, he did not like Buggins. The Commonwealth War Graves Commission has asked Bingham Town Council to confirm Gunner Baggins’ burial plot so an application can be made for a headstone. Its inscription is likely to read: ‘Gunner Thomas Alfred Buggins — served as Baggins.’ The chairman of the council’s recreation and cemetery committee, Mr John Stockwood, praised the efforts of the commission who, he said, were going to great efforts to find soldiers who were buried in unmarked graves. “It is important to remember those who made the greatest sacrifice,” he said. “There are too many unmarked graves of soldiers who died in the Great War. The very least we owe this man is a name.” Gunner Baggins was born around 1894 in Shropshire. The 1911 census records the family as living in Bingham, in Buggins Cottage, Fosse Road, which still exists today. His father, Thomas James Buggins, was a gamekeeper and, before he enlisted, Gunner Baggins was an asylum attendant at Nottingham County Asylum, Radcliffe. Gunner Baggins was discharged on April 14, 1916, after being deemed no longer fit for service. His younger sister, May, was with him when he died, and buried with him is his brother, Mr Harry Buggins, who died in 1945. Representatives of the War Graves Commission are due to visit the plot next month. Mr Pete Stevens, a Commonwealth War Graves Commission stonemason, said the headstone application could take between three and 18 months to process. “Many soldiers changed their names when they enlisted, some because they lied about their age, some because they wanted to escape the law,” he said. “In this instance it was simply a matter of not liking his name. “If the soldier had no family, or the family had no money, they were buried by the local parish.”

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