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Wardle, Percy George

Rank : Lance Corporal

Army Number : 12352

Unit : 7th Bn

Biography :

Enlisted at Burton on Trent, Staffs. Served with the 7th Battalion during World War One. Died of wounds (gas) in France and Flanders campaign 4.10.1917, aged 21. He is buried at Lijssenthoek Military Cemetery, Poperinge, West-Vlaanderen, Belgium.

Army Ancestry Research records the following:

Died of wounds on the 4th October 1917. Percy had been gassed and died at 8.15pm at No 3 casualty clearing station which was located close to Lijssenthoek Military Cemetery where he is now buried.

Percy Wardle in the 1911 Census

Percy Wardle was the son of Charles & Sarah Annie Wardle of 651 Oak Street, Burton-on-Trent, Staffordshire. The 1911 Census, taken in April that year, records Percy's age as 14, but he would have been closer to 15 as he was baptised at Hornington parish church, Staffordshire, on the 6th May 1896. Charles and Percy's older brother, also Charles (aged 23), are both listed as brewery workers on the 1911 census, whilst 14-year-old Percy is recorded as an errand boy.

Percy Wardle, Leicestershire Regiment

There is no surviving service record for Lance-Corporal Wardle but his regimental number indicates that he must have joined the Leicestershire Regiment in the first week of September 1914 and therefore he was probably an original member of the 7th Battalion which was formed at Leicester in September 1914. The battalion would subsequently form part of the 110th Brigade as part of the 37th Division.

Percy Wardle - wounded on the Somme

Percy's medal index card indicates that he arrived in France on the 29th July 1915 and so he would have been entitled to the 1914-15 Star, British War Medal and Victory Medal. He was wounded on the Somme in July 1916 and admitted to No 34 Casualty Clearing Station with a bullet wound to his left thigh. The brief report from that CCS indicates that he was serving with A Company.

Percy Wardle - witness to an accidental killing

It is not clear how long Percy's recuperation took, but he was certainly back with his battalion by June 1917 and witness to the accidental shooting and killing of 10086 Pte W Wickens by 25264 Cpl T Hickin at about 4am on the 14th June 1917. His badly damaged witness statement survives in WO 363.

Place of Birth : & Horninglow & Staffordshire

Date of Death : 4.10.1917

Place of Death : & & Belgium

Period of Service : 1910s

Conflicts : WW1

Places Served : & & Belgium

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