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Mendinghem Military Cemetery, Belgium Mendinghem Military Cemetery, Belgium
First Name: Frederick Last Name: LAVENDER
Date of Death: 11/04/1917 Lived/Born In: Harlington
Rank: Private Unit: Machine Gun Corps 113th Company
Memorial Site:

Current Information:

Enlisted-Hounslow

Mendinghem Military Cemetery, Belgium

 

At the outbreak of war in 1914 there were two machine guns to each battalion which was far from adequate and substantially fewer than the German Army. The need for more of these weapons and the specialised training they required led to the establishment of Machine Gun Corps in the autumn of 1915 with each infantry brigade being furnished with their own machine gun company, usually taking the same number as the brigade. These companies were equipped with the new Vickers machine gun whilst the individual infantry battalions were supplied with the lighter, hand-held Lewis guns. Machine Gun Battalions were formed in the Divisions in the early months of 1918, by bringing together the four MGC Companies into a single command structure. The Battalions took the number of their Division.

The Battle of Arras was a series of offensives by the British Army between 9th April 1917 and 16th May 1917. It had been planned in conjunction with the French who would attack in Artois and between them the Allies would force the Germans out of the large salient they had held since the line of trenches was first established. But the Germans had spoiled this plan by falling back to the new and very strong Hindenburg Line in January 1917 and the salient no longer existed.  For the want of an alternative plan the attack went ahead anyway. It all started well for the British who made substantial gains on the first two days but then the offensive ground to a halt and by the end their losses amounted to over 150,000.

Frederick Lavender died from unspecified causes on 11th April, 1917, while serving with the 113th Company of the Machine Gun Corps, part of 113 Brigade, 38th Division, at Ypres. It is not known if he died from wounds or from illness, both of which took their toll of the men on the Western Front.

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