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First Name: Thomas Last Name: BRIMSON
Date of Death: 04/09/1914 Lived/Born In: Stepney
Rank: Private Unit: Grenadier Guards2
Memorial Site:

Current Information:

Age-28

20, Calvert Buildings, Watts Street, St George-in-the-East

Guards Grave, Villers Cotterets Forest, France

 

After the opening battles of the war at Mons on 23rd August, 1914 and Le Cateau on 26th August, the British Army (BEF), in conjunction with the French Army, began a retreat that took them all the way back to the River Marne, 200 miles to the south. With the Germans in hot pursuit they were forced to fight a series of rear guard actions as they fell back in extremely hot weather. The Great Retreat, as it became known, came to an end on 5th September, 1914 when the allied forces attacked along the River Marne and drove the Germans back to the River Aisne.

 

The records show that Thomas Brimson was killed in action on 4th September 1914, but as he was buried in Villers Cotterets it is much more likely that he was killed on 1st September when 2nd Grenadier Guards were in action. Along with the rest of 4 (Guards)Brigade they covered the withdrawal of 2nd Division, from a position to the east of Taillefontaine, five miles from Villers Cottérêts. 2nd Grenadier Guards were in the second line of this defensive formation when, at 10am, it was attacked by a large German force. 3rd Coldstream Guards and 2nd Grenadier Guards were drawn up on a grass ride along the highest ridge of the Villers Cottérêts forest which passes through an open space, Rond de la Reine, to another open space, Croix de Belle Vue, a mile on.  Here they were very extended with wide gaps between the companies which the Germans were able to penetrate. Nevertheless the two battalions were able to fall back slowly and eventually they were joined by the 1st Irish Guards. There was a degree of confusion and much intermingling as the three battalions fought their way back through the forest to Villers Cottérêts which they reached by 2pm. However, two platoons of 2nd Grenadier Guards were, surrounded and killed at Rond de la Reine, fighting to the last. They had been engaged against a much larger German force and 4 Brigade suffered over 300 casualties.

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