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First Name: William John Last Name: SPAUL
Date of Death: 14/07/1916 Lived/Born In: Limehouse
Rank: Battery Sergeant Major Unit: Royal Field Artillery C Battery 162 Brigade
Memorial Site:

Current Information:

Enlisted-Stratford

Dartmoor Cemetery, Becordel-Becourt, Somme

 

The Battle of the Somme (July-November, 1916)

On 1st July 1916 The British Army launched a massive offensive along a section of the front line running north of the River Somme. The French attacked south of it. The first day was a disaster for the British army which suffered nearly 60,000 casualties, 19,000 of whom were killed, and made hardly any inroads into the enemy lines. But the battle had to go on, if for no other reason than to relieve pressure on the French at Verdun where they had been facing the full onslaught of the powerful German Army. So it continued all the way through to November with nearly every battalion and division then in France being drawn into it at some stage. In the end the German trenches had been pushed back a few miles along most of the line but the cost in lives had been staggering. By the end of the fighting in November, 1916, British Army casualties numbered over 400,000, killed, wounded and missing.

 

162 Brigade of the Royal Field Artillery had been raised in Camberwell by the mayor and a committee and after initial training joined 33rd Division. The Brigade arrived on the Somme battlefield on 10th July, 1916 and on 14th July moved forward through Becordel-Becourt to Meaulte where the wagon line was shelled and William Spaul was killed. The Brigade Diary gives no information regarding his death. 

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