Leslie Surgenor of Belfast, Ireland
Died 19th July 1916 - Fromelles, France
I am trying to help in the search for the
family of Leslie Surgenor (aka
Surgeoner, Surgener, Sargent) who is
listed as one of those soldiers who died at the Battle of
Fromelles in France on the 19th July 1916. Leslie's body
has never been found and he therefore has no known grave
at present so is amongst the thousands of casualties whose
bodies are still to be found and identified.
After the discovery in 2008 of
a mass burial pit at Pheasant Wood
near Fromelles work began in May
of 2009 to exhume the remains of up to 400 unknown soldiers
buried there. These unknown Soldiers are a mixture of
Australian and British forces who fought in the battle The
task of trying to identify the bodies through DNA samples
and other means is being overseen by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.
Researchers are hopeful that they can make contact with
living relatives, identify these bodies and finally lay them
to rest.
Leslie Surgenor (aka
Surgeoner, Surgener, Sargent) enlisted at
Bournemouth, England into the Hampshire
Regiment, number 2151. His address was
given as Belfast, Ireland but I have never to date come
across a birth record to link Leslie to his family. He later
served with the 2/6th Battalion of
the Royal Warickshire
Regiment as a Private (6276) and
it was that regiment he was serving with at the time of his
death.
If you can shed any light on the origins of Leslie
Surgenor or he appears in your genealogy please do get in touch
through the email at the top of this page.
Military Record
Surname - Surgenor
Christian name - Leslie
Enlisted - Bournemouth
Residence - Belfast, Ireland
Died date - 19 July 1916
Died how - Killed in Action
Theatre of War - France & Flanders
Regiment - Royal Warickshire Regiment
Battalion - 2/6th Battalion
Rank - Private
Number - 6276
Notes - Formerly 2151, Hants regiment
Possible 1911 Census matches
| Name |
DOB
|
Census
Place |
| SARGEANT TOM
LESLIE |
1900
|
11 Dartford
Kent |
| SARGENT ALBERT
LESLIE |
1896
|
15 Newhaven
Sussex |
| SARGENT BERTRAM
SAMUEL LESLIE |
1899
|
12 Uxbridge
Middlesex |
| SARGENT FRANK
LESLIE |
1901
|
10 Ecclesall Bierlow
Yorkshire |
| SARGENT HARRY
LESLIE |
1896
|
15 Sunderland
Durham |
| SARGENT
LESLIE |
1896
|
15 Greenwich
London |
| SARGENT
LESLIE |
1902
|
9 Croydon
Surrey |
| SARGENT WALTER
LESLIE |
1896
|
15 Tonbridge
Kent |
| SURGENOR
LESLIE |
1899
|
12 West Derby
Lancashire |
Please get in touch even if only to definately rule
out some of the above individuals.
The Battle of Fromelles started
on July 19th 1916 and
lasted until the following day. The battle was an attempt to
stop the Germans moving troops away from this sector to the
Battle of the Somme that was being fought fifty miles to the
south. The area around Fromelles was seen as a “quiet” sector
where the Germans could move their troops around with some
ease. The battle was an attempt to disrupt this and possibly
force the German High Command to move more troops to Fromelles
from the Somme battlefield to support their troops
there.
On July 19th Australian and British
troops from two divisions (61st Division and the 5th Australian
Division) attacked German positions at Fromelles. The lines had
been shelled for seven hours by 200,000 artillery
rounds.
However, Allied intelligence had
failed to pickup that the Germans had abandoned these lines and
had set up new positions about 200m behind them where they had
built concrete bunkers that housed machine guns. The
expectation was that those in the German trenches would be
killed or totally demoralised from the
bombardment.
The end of a bombardment was
followed by an infantry attack and the Germans were well aware
of this. When the Allies attacked, they were hit by a German
artillery bombardment that left many dead in their own
trenches. Those who got through had to face well dug in machine
guns that had escaped the Allied bombardment. The 61st was
badly hit and they were forced to retire to their own lines
after suffering heavy casualties. The Australians did better
and reached what they thought were the German front lines, only
to find them flooded and indefensible. By July 20th, they like
the 61st had to retreat after suffering very high
casualties.
The attacks were failures and very
costly in terms of manpower. 5,533 Australians (about 90% of
those involved) and 1,547 British troops (about 50% of those
involved) were casualties. Ironically, the failure of the 61st
to reach the German lines saved it from heavier casualties – as
suffered by the Australians.
Many men lay wounded in ‘No Mans
Land’. However, a plan for a temporary truce with the Germans
to allow the wounded could be collected was vetoed by senior
officers.
The organisation behind the battle
was poor as so much planning and energy was being invested in
the Somme campaign. Few would doubt that the planning was a
fiasco. Fromelles was one of the worst disasters to befall the
Australian Army in the whole of World War One and it did a
great deal to sour relations between British and Australian
senior army commanders.
In 2008 a mass grave of about 400
Allied soldiers was discovered at Pheasant Wood near to
Fromelles. It is believed that the Germans quickly put as many
bodies as they could into a mass grave to prevent the spread of
disease. The bodies will be reburied in individual graves near
to Pheasant Wood, a process that will be supervised by the
Commonwealth War Graves Commission.
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