First Name: | Horace James | Last Name: | OXENBURY | |
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Date of Death: | 23/08/1914 | Lived/Born In: | Tooting | |
Rank: | Private | Unit: | Royal Fusiliers4 | |
Memorial Site: | Tooting, St Nicholas Memorial | |||
Current Information:
Born-Holborn St Symphorien Military Cemetery, Belgium
The Battle of Mons August 23, 1914 This was the first battle fought by the British Army (BEF) in the war. Since landing in France ten days earlier the four infantry divisions and five cavalry brigades of the BEF had advanced to a position on the left flank of the French Armies only to find themselves directly in the line of the advance of the German First Army as they swept through Belgium and headed for Paris. With orders to hold the German advance for 24 hours and outnumbered two to one, the BEF dug in along the Mons-Conde canal. The battle, which commenced at 9 am, lasted all day and by nightfall the BEF had withdrawn to a position along the Valenciennes-Maubeuge road, from where the Great Retreat back to the River Marne began the next day. On 23rd August, British casualties, killed, wounded or missing, amounted to 1600 but German casualties were higher. Along with 4th Middlesex, the 4th Royal Fusiliers battalion of 9 Brigade, 3rd Division held the Mons-Obourg salient on the right of the line, where the main German attack was focused. At 6 am shots were fired at approaching German patrols and between 8 and 9 am both battalions were shelled. This was followed by German infantry attacks supported by heavy artillery fire. The Germans advanced in close formation, shoulder to shoulder but rapid rifle fire drastically thinned their ranks. After that the Germans attacked more warily and their attack was extended along the whole line west of the salient. At 10 am massed ranks of Germans approached the 4th Royal Fusiliers positions but they were mown down. At 11 am they were still holding out but by 2 pm 4th Royal Fusiliers withdrew south from Nimy. They reformed in Mons and then moved south to Ciply, having suffered 100 casualties. One of these was Horace Oxenbury who was killed in action.
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