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Capt Arthur de Bells Adam (MC)
1885 - 1916


CPL David Wallace Crawford
1887 - 1916


Lce-Corpl John Joseph Nickle
1894 - 1916


Pte 17911 Morton Neill
1897 - 1916


Lieut Edward Stanley Ashcroft
1883 - 1918
Lieut Edward Stanley Ashcroft

Pte 26068 Edward Johnson


  • Age: 29
  • From: Liverpool
  • Regiment: The King's (Liverpool Regiment) 17th Btn
  • D.O.W Thursday 13th July 1916
  • Commemorated at: Peronne Rd Cem Maricourt
    Panel Ref: I.G.17

Edward Johnson was born in Liverpool on the 10th January 1887. His parents, Joseph Johnson, born in Bangor, Wales, and Jane (née Stobbart), from Farlam, Cumberland, married in Brampton, Cumberland in 1883. Edward was the second of five children all born in Liverpool; his siblings were Charles, William, Maria Ann, and Thomas. Edward was baptised at aged 2, together with his brothers Charles and William, in St. Peter’s Church, Liverpool, on 30th July 1889, their parents living in Holt Road, and father’s occupation foreman. 

In 1891 the family is living at 73 Albert Edward Road, his father, is aged 38, a foreman of stables/groom,his mother, Jane, is aged 31, Charles is 5, and at school, Edward is aged 4, William is aged 1; also in the household is Joseph’s brother-in-law Charles Stobbart, 26, bookkeeper. 
 
By 1901 they have moved to 48 Smollett Street, Kensington, Liverpool where they remain. His father, is aged 49, a foreman horsekeeper, his mother Jane is 42, Charles, is aged 15, and is a broker’s office boy, Edward, is aged14, and is a printer’s office boy, William is aged 12, Maria Ann, is aged  5, and Thomas is aged 2.    

His father died in 1906 at age 54. 

In 1911, still at 48 Smollett Street, his mother, Jane, is aged 51, and now widowed, she is head of household. Charles, is aged 25, and is a photographer, Edward is  aged 24, single, a general printer’s engineer, William, is aged 22, a grocery shop assistant, Ann is aged 15, Thomas is aged 12.  

Edward enlisted in Liverpool as Private 26068, joining the 17th (Pals) Battalion of The King’s Liverpool Regiment.

He trained locally at Knowsley, then at Belton Camp in Lincolnshire, and finally at Larkhill Camp on Salisbury Plain.  As his record has not survived, the details of Edward's military service are not known.   

The battalion was on the Somme front at the beginning of 1916, and in the front lines at Maricourt for the ‘Big Push’ on 01st July.  Edward was wounded at some point during the Battle of the Somme, most probably during the murderous fighting in Trones Wood.  He died of his wounds on 13th July 1916, aged 29, and he now rests at Peronne Road Cemetery, Maricourt, Somme.

Maricourt was, at the beginning of the Battles of the Somme 1916, the point of junction of the British and French forces, and within a very short distance of the front line; it was lost in the German advance of March 1918, and recaptured at the end of the following August.

The Cemetery, originally known as Maricourt Military Cemetery No.3, was begun by fighting units and Field Ambulances in the Battles of the Somme 1916, and used until August 1917; a few graves were added later in the War, and at the Armistice it consisted of 175 graves which now form almost the whole of Plot I. It was completed after the Armistice by the concentration of graves from the battlefields in the immediate neighbourhood and from certain smaller burial grounds.

There are now 1348, 1914-18 war casualties commemorated in this site. Of these, 366 are unidentified and special memorials are erected to 26 soldiers from the United Kingdom known or believed to be buried among them. Other special memorials record the names of three soldiers from the United Kingdom, buried in other cemeteries, whose graves could not be found.

The cemetery covers an area of 3,787 square metres and is enclosed on three sides by a low red brick wall.

The only report of his death was listed in London, in the London Daily Chronicle on Thursday 07th September 1916; 

Died Of Wounds. 

LPL – Johnson, 26068, E.; 

Edward’s Soldiers Effects, Army Pay of £2 8s 10d and a £5 War Gratuity went to his mother, Jane, at the request of his brothers Charles and William.  Jane received a war pension of 5/- a week until she died in 1922, aged 61. 

Edward is commemorated on Liverpool’s Hall of Remembrance, Panel 60 Right.

We currently have no further information on Edward Johnson. If you have or know someone who may be able to add to the history of this soldier, please contact us.

 

Killed On This Day.

(110 Years this day)
Thursday 13th July 1916.
Pte 26068 Edward Johnson
29 years old

(110 Years this day)
Thursday 13th July 1916.
Pte 23636 John Skirrow
24 years old

(110 Years this day)
Thursday 13th July 1916.
Pte 16848 William James Truby
22 years old

(110 Years this day)
Thursday 13th July 1916.
Pte 23989 Walter George Usherwood
25 years old