Active-Service Diary - 21 January 1917-1 July 1917

Nonfiction, History, Military, World War I, Germany, British
Cover of the book Active-Service Diary - 21 January 1917-1 July 1917 by Lieutenant Edward Hornby Shears, Lucknow Books
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Lieutenant Edward Hornby Shears ISBN: 9781782892670
Publisher: Lucknow Books Publication: August 15, 2014
Imprint: Lucknow Books Language: English
Author: Lieutenant Edward Hornby Shears
ISBN: 9781782892670
Publisher: Lucknow Books
Publication: August 15, 2014
Imprint: Lucknow Books
Language: English

The short, but poignant and action filled diary of a public school officer who fought with the Irish Guards in the Ypres Salient.
EDWARD HORNBY SHEARS was born in Liverpool On December 4, 1890. His preparatory school was The Leas, Hoylake (1900-1904). In July, 1904, he obtained a Foundation Scholarship at Bradfield, and in December 1908 a History Exhibition at Trinity College, Oxford. He went up to Oxford in October, 1909, and obtained a ‘second’ in ‘Mods’ in 1910, and a ‘first’ in ‘Greats’ in 1913. In September, 1913, he passed into the Home Civil Service, and was appointed to the Secretaries’ Department of the General Post Office. A year later (October, 1914) he became Principal Private Secretary to the Postmaster-General, Mr. (now Sir Charles) Hobhouse. He had been refused official permission to join the army at the outbreak of the War, but he received it in May, 1915, and obtained a commission in the 3/4th Queen’s (Royal West Surrey) Regiment. A few months later he was promoted to lieutenant. After training for a year and a half in England, and having no apparent prospect of being sent to the front, he obtained a transfer to the Irish Guards, in which he received his commission as ensign in November, 1916. In January, 1917, he joined the 1st Battalion in France, where he was shortly promoted to lieutenant (dating from October 18, 1916). He was killed in action at Boesinghe on July 4, 1917, and on the following day he was buried at Canada Farm, Elverdinghe, near Ypres.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

The short, but poignant and action filled diary of a public school officer who fought with the Irish Guards in the Ypres Salient.
EDWARD HORNBY SHEARS was born in Liverpool On December 4, 1890. His preparatory school was The Leas, Hoylake (1900-1904). In July, 1904, he obtained a Foundation Scholarship at Bradfield, and in December 1908 a History Exhibition at Trinity College, Oxford. He went up to Oxford in October, 1909, and obtained a ‘second’ in ‘Mods’ in 1910, and a ‘first’ in ‘Greats’ in 1913. In September, 1913, he passed into the Home Civil Service, and was appointed to the Secretaries’ Department of the General Post Office. A year later (October, 1914) he became Principal Private Secretary to the Postmaster-General, Mr. (now Sir Charles) Hobhouse. He had been refused official permission to join the army at the outbreak of the War, but he received it in May, 1915, and obtained a commission in the 3/4th Queen’s (Royal West Surrey) Regiment. A few months later he was promoted to lieutenant. After training for a year and a half in England, and having no apparent prospect of being sent to the front, he obtained a transfer to the Irish Guards, in which he received his commission as ensign in November, 1916. In January, 1917, he joined the 1st Battalion in France, where he was shortly promoted to lieutenant (dating from October 18, 1916). He was killed in action at Boesinghe on July 4, 1917, and on the following day he was buried at Canada Farm, Elverdinghe, near Ypres.

More books from Lucknow Books

Cover of the book Slightly Out Of Focus by Lieutenant Edward Hornby Shears
Cover of the book Short Flights With The Cloud Cavalry by Lieutenant Edward Hornby Shears
Cover of the book Letters From Flanders Written By 2nd Lieut. A. D. Gillespie, Argyll And Sutherland Highlanders by Lieutenant Edward Hornby Shears
Cover of the book United States Army in WWII - Europe - the Last Offensive by Lieutenant Edward Hornby Shears
Cover of the book The Peak of the Load; by Lieutenant Edward Hornby Shears
Cover of the book From Montreal To Vimy Ridge And Beyond; The Correspondence Of Lieut. Clifford Almon Wells, B.A., by Lieutenant Edward Hornby Shears
Cover of the book When Johnny Comes Marching Home by Lieutenant Edward Hornby Shears
Cover of the book The Second Front: Grand Strategy And Civil-Military Relations Of Western Allies And The USSR, 1938-1945 by Lieutenant Edward Hornby Shears
Cover of the book The German Defense Of Berlin by Lieutenant Edward Hornby Shears
Cover of the book Germany's High Sea Fleet In The World War by Lieutenant Edward Hornby Shears
Cover of the book Reasons To Improve: The Evolution Of The US Tank From 1945-1991 by Lieutenant Edward Hornby Shears
Cover of the book Concepts Of Information Warfare In Practice: by Lieutenant Edward Hornby Shears
Cover of the book Rommel, Operational Art And The Battle Of El Alamein by Lieutenant Edward Hornby Shears
Cover of the book The Influence Of British Operational Intelligence On The War At Sea In The Mediterranean June 1940 - November 1942 by Lieutenant Edward Hornby Shears
Cover of the book WE SURVIVED - The Stories Of Fourteen Of The Hidden And The Hunted Of Nazi Germany [Illustrated Edition] by Lieutenant Edward Hornby Shears
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy