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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 37395 James Lomas


  • Age: 19
  • From: Ashton-under-Lyne, Lancs
  • Regiment: The King's (Liverpool Regiment) 20th Btn
  • K.I.A Thursday 12th October 1916
  • Commemorated at: Warlencourt Brit Cem
    Panel Ref: VI.G.23
James Lomas  was born Ashton Under Lyne, Lancashire, in the March quarter of 1897, the eldest son of Jesse Lomas and Betty (née Crooks), both born in Ashton and who married in 1894 at St Peter’s, Ashton.  James had an older sister Alice, born in 1895,  and younger siblings Alfred, born in 1899, Harold 1901, William 1903-04, Jesse 1904, Edith 1908, and Herbert 1912.  

In 1901 Jesse and Betty are living at 32 Buckley Street with three children. His father is aged 30, a self-employed market gardener, mother is aged 29, Alice A. is 5, James is 4, and Alfred is 2. They have two boarders, William and Mary Parker, both cotton mill workers. Lomas relatives live down the street at number 18.   

They are still at 32 Buckley Street in 1911. His father, 40, is a market gardener, his mother is 39, they have been married for 16 years and declare that they have had 7 children, 6 of whom have survived. Six children are in the household; Alice, 15, is a cloth weaver in a cotton mill, James is 14, a cotton mule piecer, Alfred is 12, Harold 9, Jesse 6, and Edith 2.  

He enlisted in Ashton Under Lyne and was serving in the 20th Battalion, The King’s Liverpool Regiment as Private No 37395 when he was declared Missing, and death in action later presumed to have occurred on or since 12th October 1916 during the Battle of the Transloy Ridges which was part of the ongoing Somme Offensive. He was 19 years of age.

According to the 20th Bn War Diary, on 10th October 1916 the battalion marched from Dernancourt via Mametz to Bazentin Le Grand where it bivouacked for the night. The next day the battalion moved up to site for assembly trenches, arriving about 11 p.m., where it dug in two good trenches, Nos.1 and 2 Coys front and Nos.3 and 4 Coys in rear.

From the War Diary:

Near Eaucourt L’Abbaye.  12/10/1916. The 4th British and 6th French armies continued the attack. Zero 2.5 p.m.  The whole XVth Corps attacked […]  The attack of 89th Inf Bde was carried out with 2nd Bn Bedf Regt on right, 17th Bn KLR on left, 20th Bn KLR in support, 19th Bn KLR in reserve.  Battalions attacked in four waves. On the departure of the attacking battalions Nos. 1 and 2 companies advanced, each in two waves, to garrison the front line trench vacated by 2nd Bn Bedf Regt on right and 17th KLR on left. On Nos 1 and 2 Coys vacating front assembly trench, it was occupied by two platoons of Nos. 3 and 4 Coys respectively, from rear assembly trench. As the assaulting waves left their trenches they were met by intense machine gun fire, especially on our left. The enemy also opened heavy barrages on our front support and assembly trenches. […] Capt. H. Beckett, commanding No.1 company, reached the front line with few casualties, but Lieut R.D. Paterson leading No.2 company was killed. His company also had few casualties. The assaulting battalions were held up by very heavy machine gun fire, and made little progress.  […] At 4.20 p.m. two platoons, No.4 Coy, under Cpl Brighouse, were sent up to reinforce the left, and No.3 Coy under Cpl Sutton followed at 4.45 p.m.  Battalion HQ moved up to front line at 4.55 and remaining two platoons of No.4 Coy moved up to join Cpl Brighouse. 

Casualties during action: 

Officers – Killed Lieut. R.D. Paterson, 2nd Lieut G.L. Grennan, Wounded – 2nd Lieuts A.E. Griffin, L.E. Mclean Hayes, C. Buttemer, Wounded Cpl g. Brighouse.

Other Ranks killed – 20. 

It had rained incessantly at the beginning of October 1916 and the ground was full of mud. In his book ‘The Liverpool Pals’ Graham Maddocks describes the 12th of October:

It was obvious that the Germans knew an attack was coming and from which direction it would be mounted. On the evening of the 11th the 20th Battalion moved up the line and dug two deep assembly trenches behind the 17th Battalion’s position for the attack the next day. The 19th Battalion also moved into its reserve positions known as Flers Trench. Although the rain has stopped, the ground was like a morass, with all the natural vegetation destroyed, it was difficult to tell exactly where the objectives lay. On the afternoon of the 12th at exactly 2.05pm, the attack began along the whole Corps line, covered by the local batteries of the Royal Field Artillery which still had line of sight. As the whistles blew, the 17th Battalion left its trenches to move forwards, at the same time No.1 and 2 Companies of the 20th Battalion moved forward and occupied the trenches vacated by the 17th. As they too went over the top, No.3 and 4 Companies took their place and waited in their turn to follow. No.2 and 3 Companies of the 19th Battalion moved up to occupy the assembly trenches dug the previous night by the 20th.

As soon as the attacking waves left their trenches the enemy artillery began to register on them and at the same time the defending infantry commenced a murderous rain of fire. Those German regiments were trained and experienced soldiers, well dug in on high ground, and for the most part, looking out on uncut wire. As such it was virtually impossible for them to miss the City Battalion men struggling to advance in the mud towards them.

Brigadier-General F.C.Stanley wrote that the Battalions were also suffering casualties due to the short shooting of the British heavy artillery fire. “I know from practical experience that they were our own guns which were shooting, and which were causing us quite a considerable number of casualties. The fault lay at that time from the fact that the heavy gunners would not send their FOO’s (Forward Observation Officers) far enough forward, but were content to observe us from right back”

Some ground was gained that day, about 150 yards, the 20th Battalion were not relieved until 24 hours later causing the men to endure another day and night in the front line trench. 

He was reported as Missing in the Stalybridge Reporter 04th November 1916: 

Private J. Lomas, No. 37395, of the King’s Liverpool Regiment, son of Mrs. Lomas, 32 Buckley Street, Ryecroft, Ashton, is reported missing since October 12th. Previous to joining the army on the 8th April, 1916, he worked at Messrs. Buckley and Co., Ryecroft, as a piecer. 

Also in the Stalybridge Reporter 18th November 1916 

Ashton Soldier Missing  

An official communication has bree received from the Military Record Office, stating that Pte. James Lomas, of the King's Liverpool Regiment, has been missing since August(sic) 12th, 1916. Private J. Lomas is 19 years of age, and joined the forces on April 8th, 1916. He was drafted out to France on July 17. Before joining the Army he followed his employment as a piecer Messrs. Buckley and Co., Ryecroft. His mother, Mrs. Lomas, of 32, Buckley streetRyecroft, Ashton, would be glad of any information concerning him.  

After the war, when graves were concentrated, James’ body was removed and reburied in Warlencourt British Cemetery, Pas de Calais. (CWGC Graves Registration form shows 15/K.L.R., original name appears to be J. Symes, written over with Lomas, regimental number 373?5 amended.)

Warlencourt Cemetery is entirely a concentration cemetery, begun late in 1919 when graves were brought in from small cemeteries and the battlefields of Warlencourt and Le Sars.  The Graves Registration form shows graves from “Le Sars 6/1, 6/2, Hexham Road, Seven Elms”.

Graves were brought in from the original cemeteries at Hexham Road (Le Sars), and Seven Elms (Flers), as well as over 3,000 British graves due to the fighting which took place around the Butte de Warlencourt from the autumn of 1916 to the spring of 1917, and again in the German advance and retreat of 1918.   The cemetery now contains 3,505 Commonwealth burials and commemorations of the First World War, 1,823 of which are unidentified. 

His pension card, showing James as Missing on 18/10/1916, shows that his mother, Betty Lomas, at 32 Buckley Street, Ryecroft, Ashton Under Lyne, received a pension of 10/- a week. Another pension card shows James as Missing on 18/7/1916.  His parents received his effects, and a War Gratuity of £3.
 
His brother Alfred enlisted in 64th Training Reserve Battalion, in March 1917 when he turned 18, and was discharged in May, no longer physically fit for war service due to poor physique and goiter.
 
James is commemorated on the following Memorials:

Ashton Under Lyne Civic Memorial

Christ Church, Ashton Under Lyne 

His parents appear on the 1939 register still at Buckley Street. Father Jesse, dob 27th Sept 1870, mother Betty, dob 29th Dev 1872, with son Herbert. 

His father died, aged 79 in the March quarter of 1950.

His mother died, aged 83, in the June quarter of 1955.  

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

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(108 Years this day)
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Tuesday 30th April 1918.
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Tuesday 30th April 1918.
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Tuesday 30th April 1918.
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(108 Years this day)
Tuesday 30th April 1918.
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(108 Years this day)
Tuesday 30th April 1918.
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(108 Years this day)
Tuesday 30th April 1918.
Pte 51712 Edgar Domenico Murray
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(108 Years this day)
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A total of 14 Pals were killed on this day. View All