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Ploegsteert Memorial, Belgium Ploegsteert Memorial, Belgium
First Name: Herbert Joseph Last Name: WRIGHT
Date of Death: 15/11/1914 Lived/Born In: Battersea
Rank: Private Unit: Warwickshire2
Memorial Site: Ploegsteert Memorial, Belgium

Current Information:

Age-34

Born-Newington

 

First Battle of Ypres

Between 21st October and 22nd November, 1914 a desperate fight took place around the Belgium city of Ypres, the first of three major battles that were to be fought there during the course of the war. British troops entered Ypres in October. The 1st and 2nd Divisions plus the 3rd Cavalry Division had made their way up from the Aisne as part of the “Race to the Sea”, whilst the 7th Division came west to Ypres after Antwerp had fallen. The Germans knew that Ypres was the gateway to the Channel ports and that these were vital to Britain’s war effort so they poured reinforcements into the area. The fighting fell into three distinct battles; the Battle of Langemarck, 21-24 October, the Battle of Gheluvelt, 29-31 October and the Battle of Nonne Bosschen, 11 November. Ypres did not fall to the Germans but its defence during these two months resulted in the destruction of much of the old regular British Army.

On 14th November, 1914, the 2nd Royal Warwickshire battalion of 22 Brigade, 7th Division left Merris and moved into the trenches at Fleurbaix, bear Bethune where they remained until relieved six days later. Herbert Wright was killed on 15th November but the battalion diary provides no information about this. The attrition rate among British soldiers on the Western Front was on average 300 each day and 60% of these were as a result of shellfire. When not involved in an actual battle it was either shell fire or a sniper’s bullet that caused most deaths and injuries.

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