Broadbottom
Community Association
History
Project
World War I:
Casualties and Survivors

Hudson
Ashworth
died
Ypres 26.7.17 lived at 18 Bank Gate
Frank
Beard
died Belgium 26.4.18 lived at Ashlar House
Harold
Beard
died of wounds
30.10.18 brother of Frank
Archie
Birtwhistle
died of wounds 2.11.16 lived at 14 Bank
Gate
Albert
Broadbent
died of wounds 13.10.18 aged 21
Frank
Brown
died 2.2.20 served at Somme went a.w.o.l after mother’s
funeral
Clarence
Chatterton
died 5.11.17 aged 26
Eric
Cumming
died of wounds at Montauban 13. 7.16 aged 25
Arthur
Dawson
died Bilgny 30.5.18 aged 35
Robert
Etchells
died of meningitis in hospital 10.7.16 lived at the
Bungalow
James
Hadfield
captured near Ypres died as POW 30.10.18 lived 5 Brick
St
Fred Hall
died at Rieux 11.10.18 lived at 15 Well Row
Ira Hall
died at Loos 25.5.16 lived at Lower Market St
Harold
Hancock
died at Passchendaele 9.10.17 lived at 16 Market St
Charles Hemmings
died near Armentieres 17.4.17 lived 84 Mottram Rd
Fred
Higginbottom
died of pneumonia at Etaples 11.6.17 lived at 88
Mottram Rd
John
Ibbotson
died at Boezinghe 26.7.16
lived at 5 Lymefield Terrace
Albert Littlewood
missing in action Menin Gate 25.5.15 lived 23
Old St
Alec
McCulloch
killed in action Aubers 30.9.18
Harry
Porter
died Laventie 12.3.18 lived 17
Summerbottom
Fred
Robinson
died Masnieres, Hindenburg Line 24.11.17 aged 32
Arthur Sidebottom
died of wounds at Arras 15.6.17 lived 60
Crescent Row
Ben Sidebottom
died at Becordelbecourt 12.2.16 aged 28
brother of Arthur
Tom
Slack
died of wounds Beaumont Hamel 28.9.16 lived
at 4 Olive Terrace
David
Smith
died at Croisilles
28.3.17 lived at 2 St Ann’s St
John
Smith
died as POW in Ras-el-Ain, Turkey 17.8.17
lived at 43 Lwr Market St
Stanley Strutt
died at Ypres 14.
9.17 lived at 106 Mottram Rd
George Titterington
died at Ypres 27.3.16
lived at 83 Highfield Terrace
Tom
Titterington
died of wounds at Loos 6.7.16
lived at 7 Ogden St brother of George
Arthur Wainwright
wounded at Ypres, died of wounds 24.10 .21 lived
60 Lwr Market St
John
Arthur Young
killed in action at Ecoivres 24.10.17 lived 5
Lymefield Terrace
William Smith
died of TB in Hyde Sanatorium 18.1.21.
lived at 11 Gorsey Brow
Ben Sidebottom, pictured here in the brass band
before the war (second row, left hand side,
detail below.) Right is a letter he wrote home 3
weeks before he was killed in February 1916.

Dear Brother
Just a line to let you know I am still
living and hope this will find you in good
health. My father tells me that J Gregory is
working at Broad Mills now. He is a lot
better off than being here, I’ll tell you.
Never come in the army. I don’t know what it
is like in peace time but it’s rotten in war
time. They treat us something awful, me and
Bill I’m billeted with. We sleep on the
floor with a blanket under us. Me and Bill
sleep together, and we sometimes waken in
the night starved to death nearly. You get
up in the morning at 6. Parade and 6.45 for
what they call dirty parade. Breakfast at 8
o’clock. We fetch the Dixie up in our turn.
It is a big pan with potatoes and lumps of
beef and carrots all mixed up together.
Dr. Bennett is the army doctor for the
Cheshires. There is a lot of cases with
measles here. A lot of the troops have got
them.
You should here them sing a little anthem
here- it goes to the tune of “There is a
happy land, far, far way."
“Here we get bread and jam, three
times a day
Oh you should see it spread,
When you put it on your bread.
Some day they’ll find us dead,
far, far away.”
I have got all right after the inoculation.
From
your brother Ben.
(Letter
and photograph courtesy of Jean Sidebottom)
Frank Beard
Frank Beard (photo right, from Glossop
Chronicle) was educated at Hyde and
later went to the Manchester College of
Technology and Salford Royal Technical
Institute. He was a member of the Poor
Children’s Mission at the Chapel, and of
the Sons of Temperance. He was a gifted
musician who played the violin, and a
member of the Hyde Philharmonic Society.
Frank enlisted on 3 February 1915 in the
Royal Welsh Fusiliers and went to France
in December 1915. He was engaged in
various trench battles on the Somme
including Mametz Wood (July 10-12) where
he gained a commission with distinction.
His division withdrew from the Somme and
moved north to the Ypres sector where
Frank was in the trenches again when the
Germans began a heavy artillery
bombardment. Frank was seriously wounded
on 3 September by an exploding shell. He
received wounds to the head, back, right
arm, and shoulder and thigh after being
crushed by the parapet falling in on
him. He was sent home via Calais to
Folkestone on 26 December 1916. He
returned to duty on 31 September 1916.
He suffered a relapse in 1917 and was
transferred to hospital and them home
where he died of wounds in 1918, 6
months after his brother Harold was
killed.
Frank Brown
Born in Mottram, on 15 October 1895,
Frank was one of five children of
Horace and Mary Brown, then at 19
Church Brow, Mottram. Horace was a
labourer and Mary a winder in the
mills. By 1908 they had moved to 4
Hodge Fold, Broadbottom. He enlisted
in September 1914 and was posted to
12th (Service) Battalion
Kings Liverpool Regiment. He went to
France on 27 July 1916 but by
mid-November was home on sick-leave
due to a back wound and shattered
arm from a shell explosion in the
trenches at Givenchy. Back in France
by September 1916 on the Somme he
was again injured by shrapnel in
three places in his legs. He was
hospitalised in Manchester, and when
recovered he was posted to the 5th
Kings Liverpool Regiment and placed
on garrison duties at Pembroke Dock,
Liverpool. Frank attended his
mother’s funeral at the family grave
in Mottram Cemetery in February
1917, and did not return to
Liverpool. He appeared at Dukinfield
court on 20 February on the charge
of being absent without leave. He
was remanded in custody awaiting the
arrival of a military escort to take
him back to barracks. The arresting
officer was given a reward of five
shillings (25 p). Later that June he
was absent without leave again, and
this is the last time anything
appears in the papers about him. His
death is listed as
February 2nd
1920, so he did not suffer the fate
of many other deserters, nor was he
excluded from the roll of honour.

SURVIVORS
After the war, some returning soldiers were
recognised for their service:
On Friday 16th December 1921 a
special award ceremony was held
in the Mottram Council Room at
Market Place, Mottram. A
‘Distinguished Services
Recognition Fund’ had been set
up and an award of £5 was
presented to each of eleven men
from Mottram, Broadbottom, and
Hattersley, who had
distinguished themselves in the
war. These men were:
Fred Dutton, Military Medal
George Dutton, Military Medal
John W Yates, Meritorious
Service Medal
George Hobson, Military Medal
Wright Shirt, Military Medal
William Bailey, Military Medal
Percy Morris, Military Medal
James Sidebottom, Military Medal
Joe Williamson, Military Medal
George Bond, Distinguished
Conduct Medal
Sergeant John Gallagher,
Distinguished Conduct Medal and
Military Medal.
Illuminated addresses were also
presented to two officers who
had been awarded the Military
Cross: Captain H C Costabadie
and Captain Gordon Evill.
Unveiling the war memorial in July 1922.
(From Archive
Photographs of
Longdendale,
compiled by Bill
Johnson)

A Survivor's story
Samuel Middleton, born 1898.
Samuel had a tough start in
life when his parents left
him with his grandmother
while they went to America
to try and improve their
lot. His grandmother died
suddenly and he was taken
into the family of a young
widowed relative by
marriage, who had a small
child. As soon as he could,
aged 9, he took on work to
help support his adoptive
family. He enlisted in 1914
and served throughout the
war. He married in 1916. He
brought back with him
engraved shell cases and a
paperknife made from a
cartridge. The souvenirs
record battles he fought at:
Ypres, Mons, the Somme.
After the war he came back
to Broadbottom and hoped to
return to his old job at
Best Hill Mill but there was
a shortage of work and he
was made redundant.
Unemployment pay was
limited: six weeks with
benefit alternated with six
weeks without. In
desperation he traded his
young wife’s pet canary for
a bicycle to help in his
search for work. He turned
his hand to any job he could
find, vowing ‘I will never
let anybody’s trade be a
secret to me.’ He did casual
mill labour and worked as a
stone dresser in the Hague
quarry. Later he went on to
be a manager at the Shire
Hill Quarry in Glossop and
then to run a fish shop in
Gorton.
(Photograph
Ida George, Samuel's
daughter)
Footnote:On
the home front, Best
Hill Mill was used
during the war for
the manufacture of
munitions. Left is a
photograph of
workers at the
factory.



(Thanks
to Neil Shuttleworth for his research on which this
section is based)
32
Broadbottom men who served in World War I were killed or
died just after the war. The fuller stories can be found in
Tony Catchpole’s account of local casualties in the two
world wars: To be remembered.
The following
is a brief summary of what happened to the young men who
lost their lives. In the fuller versions there are glimpses
of young men who were footballers, cricketers, members of
orchestras and bands, Sunday school teachers. They were sons
and fathers, mill workers and young professional men.
Several families lost more than one member. Three Sidebottom
brothers served and two died. Of four Titterington
brothers, two died and two survived. They also lost a
brother-in-law, Arthur Wainwright.
Arthur
Wainwright’s grave Mottram Church
(Copyright
N Shuttleworth)

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