H o o k N o r t o n L o c a l H i s t o r y G r o u p. William Bloxham. A man of stirling worth

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Transcription:

William Bloxham A man of stirling worth William Bloxham was born in 1885 in Hook Norton, but sought his fortune in Australia. Perhaps it was his sense of adventure that brought him back to Europe to fight in the war to end all wars: it is more likely it was a sense of duty to his homeland and its values. Will's family had come to Hook Norton from Tadmarton in 1880 and on the 1881 census they are farming 130 acres at Horwood Farm. Later they farmed at Grounds Farm. The Bloxham Family in about 1901 Back row: William, Joseph, John, Bessie, Leonard, George Front row: Leonard, James, May, Charles, Elizabeth née Adkins 1 www.hook-norton.org.uk/history

At the age of 14 Will was apprenticed to John Spatcher who had a general store in the High Street. After his five year apprenticeship was completed in 1904, Will got a job as a book keeper at the Brewery. His older brother John had worked there, but by 1904 he had moved to Wales. Will was involved in various village societies. He sang in the Choir and the Choral group: this photograph shows three members of the Bloxham family in the second row. From the left: James Bloxham, Will, Reverend Freeman, George Bloxham He was also a bellringer and clearly had a great sense of fun as these photographs show: 2 www.hook-norton.org.uk/history

But Will had a serious side: he was a member of the Primrose League which, as the certificate says, aimed to maintain religion, the constitution and the honour of the British Empire. Will decided to emigrate to Australia accompanied by his friend Walter Newth who was engaged to be married to Will's sister Bessie. It's not clear what prompted Will to seek his luck abroad. What is known is that the Brewery was going through a difficult time. There was talk of redundancy and perhaps Will was worried about his job. The two young men booked their passage to Australia for July 1912. Will would be missed in Hooky, not just by his family. Walter would never return. 3 www.hook-norton.org.uk/history

Before they left Will received a letter from Miss Margaret Dickins 1 (shown here with the choir in 1912: she is in the front row, holding a baton) inviting him to the school at 8 o'clock on Saturday evening "when we hope to have the pleasure of presenting you with a slight expression of our great regard for you". The gift was a Gladstone bag. community. Will also received glowing testimonials from leading members of the village We have always found him steady, industrious and trustworthy and well capable of occupying any post of trust and responsibility for which he may wish to apply. Alban A. Clarke (Managing Director of the Hook Norton Brewery Co Ltd) I feel that I can mostly conscientiously & confidently speak of him as a man of stirling worth, & of entire trustworthiness & reliability. He will be found temperate, industrious, straitforward & loyal. I very much regret that he contemplates leaving the village, for he has been a good influence here & will be wherever he goes. Ernest C Freeman (Rector of Hook Norton) 1 Miss Dickins, the church organist, became the village historian 4 www.hook-norton.org.uk/history

I have great pleasure in saying that I have known M r. W m. Bloxham from infancy. I have the greatest possible esteem & respect for him, he is a most temperature, industrious & altogether trustworthy young man His disposition & character have fitted him for any position of trust & although I have given many references to other young men, I will here add what I have never written in any other, that I feel it a pity that England should loose [sic] a young man of M r W m. Bloxham's worth and general good character. James W m. Harris (County Councillor for Oxfordshire Member of Banbury Rural District Council Chairman, Hook Norton Parish Council) The Journey And so on 19 July 1912 Will and Walter began the six week journey to Sydney aboard RMS Orantes. For a young man from a small inland village a journey to the other side of the world was a great adventure. Will, as was his wont, made the most of it. He joined in all the activities and collected keepsakes of the voyage. 5 www.hook-norton.org.uk/history

There were concerts and memorable excursions ashore at Gibraltar and Naples (with the possibility of a trip to Pompeii), exhausting heat on the Suez Canal, a few hours for a rickshaw ride in Columbo. Sports for prizes were a great success and on 20 August Will and Walter reached their first Australian port, Freemantle, where a large number of "our jolly company" left. Will and Walter parted in Sydney: Walter sailed on to New Zealand where he had the promise of employment on a farm. New South Wales Will stayed in New South Wales, travelling 375 miles north to Bingara, a boom town where gold, copper and diamonds had been discovered. Whether he expected to make his fortune by mining or not, he settled for a more reliable job: he became a book keeper in a general store in Upper Horton, south of Bingara. There Will was befriended by John Brodbeck who had a garage. John took Will home to Millie Creek, Barraba, to meet his family and the second oldest sister, Louie. 6 www.hook-norton.org.uk/history

By the summer of 1914 Will and Louie had become engaged to be married and when the news reached Grounds Farm the family were delighted. Will's mother wrote to Louie, "I am so glad you are happy together, and I pray as time goes on that you may be a blessing to each other". But that summer war was declared. For the Honour of the Empire Poster, Alfred Leete. First published in London Opinion, 5.9.1914, this image was to spawn a number of recruiting posters 7 www.hook-norton.org.uk/history

It seems that Will had promised Louie that he would not go to war. It was a promise he would be unable to keep. His brothers John, James and Charles had all enlisted. His friend Walter Newth had been killed at Gallipoli on 27 August 1915. (Walter had hoped for a re-union with Bessie at Grounds Farm, but his batallion was diverted to Egypt instead of England: so Bessie and Walter were never to meet again.) Late in 1915 Will wrote to Louie: Doubtless this letter will give you much pain, my darling. I want you to let me off the promise I made to you some time ago about going to enlist. I promised I would not go. Darling, I really think it's my duty to go. They are wanting men badly and if the men at home don't respond readily enough I fear conscription will be enforced. Will was right: Britain brought in conscription for those aged 18 to 42 in June 1916. He would have been conscripted if he had stayed at home in Hook Norton. Australia, though, did not introduce conscription during the first World War. 8 www.hook-norton.org.uk/history

Will enlisted on 9 December 1915. His record tells us that he was 30 years old, 5'8" tall, single, and that his mother was his next of kin. He became 4595 Private W.T. Bloxham of the 18 th Battalion of the Australian Imperial Force. In his last will and testament made on 5 January 1916 at Millie Creek Will left all his personal possessions to his fiancée Louie Brodbeck. Five days later Will was at the Recruit Training Camp at Casula near Sydney. His letter "To my own darling Louie" tells her that he has been trench digging. He goes on to complain about the fleas and other insects at the camp and hopes the rain won't last "for it makes things unpleasant". He could not have known it was a foretaste of the misery of life in the trenches. A sea of mud In April 1916 Will was sent to England, to the Rolleston Training Camp at Salisbury. 9 www.hook-norton.org.uk/history

At least he got the chance to go home to Grounds Farm before he joined his comrades on mainland Europe on 30 September 1916. His letters to Louie show a certain amount of enthusiasm for war: "We are not feeling a bit downhearted but getting ready, engaged cheerfully to do our bit, only waiting for the word now". But with more experience of the reality of war he later wrote: I shall not write of war, but will give you the news when I return. It is too horrible to write in letters, but I am pleased to say that I've had a bath and shave and clean underclothes this after a week's dirt and hair on the face cleaning my teeth was a blessing. The conditions for Will and the rest of the Allied soldiers were atrocious; the weather was terrible and the battlefields became an insanitary sea of mud. Will was listed as sick and confined to hospital in November 1916 and he didn't rejoin his unit on the front line again until March 1917. Until then he was engaged in administration behind the lines at Camiers and Etaples: Etaples was the bridgehead used for supplies and for men going to the front line. He was stationed in and around Passchendaele in the 3 rd Battle of Ypres. The human cost of these battles was staggering. Between 1914 and 1917 the Allies suffered 430,000 casualties; 90,000 men were reported missing and 42,000 bodies have never been recovered. One soldier is recorded as saying: It's a sea of mud, literally a sea, you can drown in it. It was the thought of being drowned in that awful stuff. It's a horrible thought. Anyone would rather be shot and know nothing about it. The stench was horrible for the corpses were not corpses in the normal sense. The whole place was just a mess of filth, slime and bones. Lt J.W. Naylor, Royal Artillery 2 2 From They Called it Passchendaele: The Story of the Battle of Ypres and of the Men Who Fought in it, Lyn MacDonald, Penguin, (1993) 10 www.hook-norton.org.uk/history

In September 1917 Will got leave and returned to England. He managed a visit to his family in Hooky and in a letter to Louie he writes: "Jove, I had a great time, it was not half long enough". Will with his friend Dave Evans, whom he had taken home to meet his family. This dark and desolate time During the eight weeks that the Australians had been fighting around Ypres they had suffered 38,000 casualties. But by early October the Allied commanders began to believe that a breakthrough was possible so further attacks were planned at Poelcappelle and Passchendaele. 9 October 1917 was "cold, with a coldness cutting men with the sharp sword of the wind, and there was no glimmer of light ". Then Will's mother received a telegram informing her that her son was missing in action; a month later came a letter from his chaplain. 11 www.hook-norton.org.uk/history

I do not know if you have had any official news from the War Office about your son Pte Bloxham? I write to tell you what I can about your son. He took part in the offensive of the 9 th October and when last seen he was moving forward in the attack and no one saw him fall. However the supposition is that he was hit by a sniper. There is a possibility that he is wounded and a prisoner of war. Will's mother sent a copy of the letter to Louie, but Louie had already read the list of names of those missing in action in her local paper. 12 www.hook-norton.org.uk/history

Will's body was found in February 1918. He was only identified by his disc. His mother was officially informed that he had been killed in action on 8 October. She later received a letter from the Red Cross, giving an eye witness account of the last time her son had been seen alive. 13 www.hook-norton.org.uk/history

Remembered with Honour Will's grave simply gives his name, rank and number, with the inscription: Found Faithful. Deeply Beloved by his Father, Mother, Sisters and Brothers. His name is on the Memorial in Barraba, New South Wales, as well as in our church, together with the names of 32 other young men from Hook Norton who had given their lives. 14 www.hook-norton.org.uk/history

Will's brothers John and Charles both returned safely. Charles later emigrated to Canada to begin a new life, but James died in 1922 from trench fever. Charles James After Will's death Louie and Mrs Bloxham corresponded for some time. The last letter is dated 1919; it is long and rambling and Mrs Bloxham begins by saying: "I know I ought to have written before but really have felt too heartsick, as for a long time the memory of my dear lad's loss is so hard to get over. You will be pleased to hear my other three boys came safely through. Jim came home just after the Armistice was signed. The other two do not expect to be released for some time". After sending kind love and every good wish she writes: "I must not say that I shall be pleased to hear from you again". This sounds ambiguous but perhaps she was giving Louie permission to get on with her own life. Louie did just that. She married in the 1920s and had two daughters, Shirley and Betty. But she kept Will's letters and photographs, and when she died in 1982, her family found them. 15 www.hook-norton.org.uk/history

The grandson Will never had, Martyn Killian, was fascinated by Will's story and got in touch with our Museum. We are indebted to him for the material he shared with us which became first a talk for the Local History Group and for Carry on Learning, and now for this article commemorating Will Bloxham. Martyn, standing by Will's grave, in the 1990s Pat and Barbara Summerell and Barbara Hicks Copyright for the photographs rests with the family. Further reading Most of the material for this article came from the box of photographs, souvenirs and letters kept by Louie Brodbeck. Lyn MacDonald,They Called it Passchendaele: The Story of the Battle of Ypres and of the Men Who Fought in it, Penguin, (1993) 16 www.hook-norton.org.uk/history