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Charles Brammar

Service Number 21587
Military Unit 11th Bn Sherwood Foresters (Notts & Derby Regiment)
Date of birth Unknown
Date of Death 01 Jul 1916 (Age Unknown)
Place of Birth North Wheatley
Employment, Education or Hobbies Unknown
Family History

Charles was born in 1890 .His father William Brammar was a wood man who lived in North Wheatley and had married Mary Elizabeth Hets. William and Mary had a family of nine children. In 1901 Mary, by then a widow, was living at Bottom Street, North Wheatley and working a corn threshing machine. At the address were her 9 children Ellen - John Thomas - Charles born 1890 - Fanny - Harry - Fred born 1893 - Kitty - Frank and William. In 1908 Mary became Mary Elizabeth Sharman. By the 1911 census , she was still living at North Wheatley with her two sons Charles 21 years a farm labourer and Fred 17 years a grocers assistant. The rest of the children were living elsewhere.

Military History

Charles enlisted at Retford. He was killed on the first day of the Somme. Battalions attacking Ovillers on 1st July 1916 had to cross 'Mash Valley' one of the widest expanses of No Man's Land (750 yards) along the entire Somme front. Today, looking from Ovillers Cemetery (German front line) towards distant houses (British front line) across open fields offering little cover, the magnitude of their task is still evident. 11th Battalion Sherwood Foresters' War Diary recorded: 'Casualties along the whole line were very heavy and a general attempt was made to crawl forward under intense machine gun and shrapnel fire, any available cover being made use of.... Lt Colonel Watson, walking diagonally across the front collecting men as he went gave fresh impetus to the advance by his personal example... A third attempt, led by Captain C E Hudson*, to reach the German trenches by the sunken road on the right flank was made but... was brought to a standstill by heavy frontal and flank fire as they came over the brow of the hill in the last 80 yards. The casualties sustained by the battalion during the day amounted to 21 officers and 508 men. The strength of the battalion on entering the trenches on 26th June was 27 officers and 710 men.' 11th Bn Sherwood Foresters War Diary TNA WO95/21871(3). 125 men from 11th Battalion Sherwood Foresters were killed during the attack on Ovillers (CWGC Debt of Honour Register). *John Cotterill adds 'The man who brought the 11th Foresters out of action on 1 July and, one of the 6 unwounded officers, was Capt Edward Hudson who would go on to get a VC as CO of 11th Foresters on Asiago Plateau in Italy in 1918'. 2nd Battalion Middlesex Regiment suffered 264 fatalities during the same advance. Concerns of their CO Lieutenant Colonel Edward Thomas Falkiner Sandys DSO, a brave and well respected officer, that his battalion would be badly mauled crossing such an expanse of open ground with uncut wire an added hazard, did not impress his superiors. Sandys was wounded during the attack and evacuated to the UK. Depressed at the fate of so many men who had trusted him, Sandys shot himself in a London hotel room and died a few days later. 8th Division's Official History records a total of 5,121 casualties on 1st July 1916. Military Research by David Nunn

Extra Information

Thiepval memorial Charles's brother, Frederick also served with the 10th battalion Lincolnshire Regiment and was killed on 10th April 1917.

Photographs