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This data is related to World War 1
Stoker 1st Class

Arthur Bert Pollington

Service Number SS/116444
Military Unit HMS Veteran Royal Navy
Date of birth 04 May 1895
Date of Death 02 Jul 1919 (24 Years Old)
Place of Birth Nottingham
Employment, Education or Hobbies In 1911 he was working as a sugar boiler (confectionary). He joined the Royal Navy on 11 December 1914 when his occupation was given as labourer
Family History

Arthur Bert (Bertie) was the son of Robert Walter John and Harriett Pollington. His father was born in Norfolk and baptised in Upwell, Norfolk on 29 July 1855. His mother was born in Wisbech, Cambridgeshire. They were married in 1876 (O/N/D Wisbech) and had ten children of whom seven were still living at the time of the 1911 Census: Ernest Walter John b. Wisbech 3 February 1878 (J/F/M Wisbech), Ethel May b. Wisbech 1881 (J/F/M Wisbech), Robert Oscar (Oscar) b. Grantham 26 November 1884 (O/N/D Grantham), Albert Victor (Victor) b. Grantham 17 June 1887 (J/A/S Grantham), Celia Violet (Violet) b. Grantham 13 February 1890 (J/F/M Grantham), Percy Claude (Claude) b. Nottingham 29 March 1892 (A/M/J Nottingham and Arthur Bert (Bertie) b. 4 May 1895 (A/M/J Nottingham). In 1881 Robert (25) an agricultural labourer and Harriet (24) wereliving in Wisbech. They had two children, Ernest Walter John (3) and Ethel May (2). Also in the house was Robert's neice, Jesse Margaret Stone (11m). By 1891 the family had moved to 3 Spring Gardens, Spitalgate, Lincoln. Robert was now working as an iron dresser and he and Harriet had five children: Ernest (13), Ethel (10), Oscar (6), Victor (4) and Violet (1). Robert and Harriett were living at 5 West Street, Nottingham, by 1901. Five children were in the home on the night of the census: Oscar (17) who like his father was an iron dresser, Victor (13), Violet (11), Claude (9) and Bertie (6). The family had moved again by 1911 when they were living at 12 Lower Eldon Street, Sneinton, Nottingham. Only Percy (19), a twisthand (lace nets), and Bertie, a sugar boiler confectionery, were still living at home. Bertie joined the Royal Navy on 11 December 1914 and died on 2 July 1919. His father Robert died in 1924 (A/M/J Nottingham, buried 12 May) and his mother Harriett died in 1933 (A/M/J Nottingham, buried 7 April). Of Bertie's siblings: Ernest Walter married Sarah Ann Denny (b. 21 February 1878), the daughter of Henry Denny, at Coventry St Thomas on 6 February 1897. They were both living at 93 Sovereign Place, Coventry. In 1911 they were living at 18 Lower Eldon Street, Sneinton Road, with their two children Grace (13) and Archie (9). Ernest (33) was an iron planer at an ironworks and Sarah (33) was a lace mender. At the time of the 1939 England & Wales Register Ernest and Sarah were living at 39 Plantaganet Street, Nottingham. Ernest died aged 93 in 1971 (A/M/J Basford, buried 16 June 1971). Ethel May married William Ainsworth in 1900 (O/N/D Nottingham). In 1911 they were living at 7 Bayford Cottages, Bathley Street, Meadows, Nottingham. They had not had any children. Ethel died aged 54 in 1935 (J/A/S Nottingham, buried 3 September). Robert Oscar (Oscar) joined the Machine Gun Corps 68 Coy on 11 February 1916 (35329 Private); he was then living at 100 Sneinton Road, his mother's address. He served in France from 15 July 1916 and was wounded in June 1917 suffering a gundshot wound to the left knee and medically evacuated to the UK where he was treated at the War Hospital Huddersfield. He returned to France and in June 1918 was wounded in a gas shell attack and admitted to the General Hosptial Rouen. He was demobilized on 12 February 1919. He married Lizzie Lavinia Bream (b. 6 September 1887) in 1933 (J/A/S Nottingam) and in 1939 they were living at 33 Cambell Grove, Nottingham; Oscar was a labourer in an iron foundry. He died aged 72 in 1957 (J/F/M Nottingham). His wife Lizzie survived him (d. 1958). Albert Victor (Victor) served in the Militia but on 9 April 1904 at the age of 18 years and 1 month he joined the Lancashire Fusiliers. He served continuously from 9 April 1904 until his discharge on 27 March 1919. He served in Malta (1905-06), Egypt (1906), Malta (1906-07), India (1907-1912), and then Home Service (1912-14). He served in France from 22 August 1914 to 3 March 1916 when he was sent to Egypt where he remained until September 1918. He returned to the UK on 16 September and was discharged from the army on 27 March 1919. He returned to his mother's home at 100 Sneinton Road. He married Lily Anne Dare (b. 14 May 1892) in 1919 (A/M/J Wandsworth London) and they were living in Wandsworth at the time of the 1939 England and Wales Register. He was working as a pipe fitter's mate. Their son, Arthur V. b. 6 February 1921 (d. 1989 Bent Greater London), a lorry driver's mate, was also in the household. Victor died on 23 August 1957 at the Wilston Hospital Mitcham, Surrey; he was then living at 29 Freshwater Road, Tooting. Lily Anne survived him. Celia Violet (Violet) married Edgar Sherwood in 1909 (A/M/J Nottingham) and in 1911 Edgar (22) a packer of stationery goods, and Violet (21) a lace worker were living at 13 Storer Street, Carlton Road, Nottingham, with their daughter, Ivy Winifred (1, b. 5 November 1909, married 'Carrington' 1930, at least one child, Edgar Carrington, d. 2002 aged 92). Edgar died aged 26 in 1914 (A/M/J Nottingham, buried 11 May 1914) and in 1915 (J/A/S Nottingham) Violet married Ernest Woodward (b. 26 July 1891). In 1939 Violet and Ernest, a milk roundsman, were living at 17 Rosedale Road, Nottingham, with their daughter Audrey E Woodward [Tinkler] b. 15 August 1930. Celia Violet died aged 90 in 1980 (J/A/S Basford). Percy Claude (Claude) married Celia Johnson (b. 31 March 1891) in 1912 (O/N/D Notingham). In 1939 they were living in Nottingham. Claude was working as an engineering main belt man. Also in the home were their two children, Frederick C. b, 13 November 1914 a lorry driver in the fish trade, and Beatrice M. [Warrington] b. 29 June 1917 a seamstress soft furnishing. His son Frederick served with the 1/5th Sherwood Foresters in the Second World War and became a Japanese prisoner of war (NEP reports 1945). Claude died on 17 November 1972 (O/N/D Nottingham) aged 80.

Military History

Bertie joined the Royal Navy on a Short Service Engagement on 11 December 1914 (5 years RN and 7 years Royal Fleet Reserve). He served in the following ships and shore establishments: Victory II, 11 December 1914-27 April 1915 (Stoker 2nd Class); HMS Verup, 28 April 1915-31 October 1917 (Stoker 1st Class, 24 February 1916); HMS Euryalus, 1 November 1917-20 December 1917; Victory II, 21 December 1917-5 October 1918; Glory I, 6 October 1918-2 July 1919. He was drowned at sea at Murmansk while serving in HMS Glory and his service record was annotated NP.974/19 ‘DD [Discharged Dead] 2nd July 1919 Drowning’ and NP.24022/19 ‘Court of Enquiry held on 4 July 1919 found that no blame could be attributed to any person, and that there was no evidence to suggest that Pollington me his death otherwise than by accidental drowning, probable caused by cramp.’ Bertie is buried in Murmansk New British Cemetery. HMS Glory, a Canopus class battleship, guardship at Archangel from 1916, flagship of the British North Russia Squadron until September 1919 when she returned to UK.

Extra Information

Nottingham Evening Post obituary (abridged) 7 July 1919: 'Pollington. On July 2nd, 1st Class Stoker Bert Pollington, son of Mr and Mrs Pollington, 100 Sneinton Road, who was drowned at sea at Murmansk on HMS Glory. Mother, father, Ernest, Sarah, Ethel, Oscar, Victor, Lily, Violet, Ernest, Claude, Celia and Grace.' Note: names include those of siblings' spouses)

Photographs

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