First Name: | Frederick John | Last Name: | NICHOLS | |
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Date of Death: | 09/06/1915 | Lived/Born In: | Acton | |
Rank: | Private | Unit: | Royal Fusiliers2 | |
Memorial Site: | ||||
Current Information:
Age-26
2, Colville Road, South Acton Lancashire Landing Cemetery, Gallipoli Gallipoli 1915 On 25 April, British, Australian and New Zealand forces landed on the Gallipoli peninsula. The plan was that these forces would soon defeat a demoralised Turkish army, knock Turkey out of the war, open up the Mediterranean to the Russian navy and threaten Austro-Hungary from the south. None of these things were achieved despite nine months of hard fighting in terrible conditions. It was an heroic failure. By the middle of June 1915, there had been three attempts at Helles to capture the village of Krithia and the heights of Achi Baba beyond it and all three had failed at great cost of human life. Future plans now revolved around fresh divisions arriving from Britain but that was still six weeks off and in the meantime it was a matter of holding the line and through a series of small attacks and raids trying to undermine, often literally, the Turkish positions. 2nd Royal Fusiliers, 86 Brigade, 29th Division had been in the thick of the fighting since the landings. On 7th June, 1915, they were relieved from the front line. Frederick Nichols died of wounds on 9th June, 1915, wounds that he had probably received at the 3rd Battle of Krithia. |
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