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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 24627 Thomas McNally


  • Age: 30
  • From: Liverpool
  • Regiment: The King's (Liverpool Regiment) 17th Btn
  • K.I.A Sunday 30th July 1916
  • Commemorated at: Guillemont Rd Cem
    Panel Ref: II.O.7

Thomas McNally was born in Liverpool on 05th April 1886, the son of William McNally and his wife Jane (née Penlington). His father, from Carrick, Monaghan, Ireland, and his mother, born in Liverpool, married on the 30th Dec 1866 at Our Lady of Immaculate Conception, Everton, and had ten children.  Thomas had older siblings Mary, Jane, Cecelia (who died at age 12), Patrick, Maria (died in infancy), William, and Maria, and younger siblings Henry (died in infancy) and Gerald. Thomas was baptised on 25th April 1886, in St. John’s Roman Catholic Church, Liverpool, his parents’ residence given as 3 Hailley(?) Bodley Street. 

  

In the 1891 Census the family is living at 179 Lathom Street, Kirkdale, with seven children.

His father William is aged 46, a freight clerk, mother Jane is 44, Mary 23 a schoolteacher, Jane 20 a schoolteacher, Patrick 15 a clerk, William 10, and Maria 8, Thomas is 4, and Gerald 4mths. 

In April 1894 Thomas, age 8, entered St. Anne’s Roman Catholic Primary School, Overbury Street, the family then living at 296 Athol Street. He had previously attended Our Lady Immaculate school.

 
His mother died, aged 53, in February 1899, when Thomas was 12.
 

The 1901 Census finds his widowed father with six children living at 27 Thomaston Street, Kirkdale. 

Father William is aged 54, a commercial clerk, Mary 33 a schoolteacher, Jane 30 a schoolteacher, Patrick P. 25 a commercial clerk, Maria E. 18 a schoolteacher, Thomas is 14, and Gerald 10. 

 
The 1911 Census shows they have moved to 169 Walton Lane (near Goodison Park). 
 
His father is 65, a retired education committee clerk.  His aunt Bridget McNally, 54 born in Carrick, is living with the family.  Patrick, 35, is a secretary for a forwarding agent.  Thomas and his three sisters all work for Liverpool Education Committee; Mary, 43, is an elementary school headmistress, Jane, 40, and Maria, 28, are teachers, and Thomas 24, is a clerk.  His youngest brother Gerald is a student at a Catholic teaching college in London. 
 
His father died in the new year 1914 and was buried on 06th January, age given as 66.
 
Thomas enlisted in Liverpool and was serving in the 17th Battalion, The King’s Liverpool Regiment as Private No 24627. The amount of the War Gratuity suggests that he served over 18 months, enlisting in late 1914 or early 1915.
 
He embarked for France on 29th December 1915.
 
He was killed in action on the 30th July 1916, aged 30, at the village of Guillemont, France, during the Somme Offensive.

17th Battalion Diary 30th July 1916

The Battalion was in support to 19 & 20 Battalions K.L.R. 2 Coys. behind 19th & 2 Coys. behind 20th. Very thick mist. The attack was pushed home to the objective in places but in the main was held up by machine gun fire from hidden machine guns.

Fighting continued all day swaying backwards and forwards until by 6pm about 300 yards in depth had been gained & consolidated all along our front.

Casualties in the 17th Battalion were 15 Officers and 281 Other Ranks

Further details are reported in more detailed by Everard Wyrall in his book The History of the King’s Regiment (Liverpool) 1914-1919 Volume II 1916-1917

The 17th King’s had advanced (two companies each behind the 19th and 20th Battalions) in small columns. They too suffered heavily from machine-gun fire and were quickly absorbed into the waves that preceded them. They also shared the gains and losses of that terrible day.

When darkness fell on the battlefield the 30th Division held a line from the railway on the eastern side of Trones Wood , southwards and including Arrow Head Copse, to east of Maltz Horn Farm. On this line the division was relieved by the 55th Division during the early hours of the 31st July. 

The events of 30th July 1916 were regarded at the time as Liverpool’s blackest day. There follows an extract from The History of the 89th Brigade written by Brigadier General Ferdinand Stanley which gives an indication of the events of the day.

Guillemont

Well the hour to advance came, and of all bad luck in the world it was a thick fog; so thick that you couldn’t see more than about ten yards. It was next to impossible to delay the attack – it was much too big an operation- so forward they had to go. It will give some idea when I say that on one flank we had to go 1,750 yards over big rolling country. Everyone knows what it is like to cross enclosed country which you know really well in a fog and how easy it is to lose your way. Therefore, imagine these rolling hills, with no landmarks and absolutely unknown to anyone. Is it surprising that people lost their way and lost touch with those next to them? As a matter of fact, it was wonderful the way in which many men found their way right to the place we wanted to get to. But as a connected attack it was impossible.

The fog was intense it was practically impossible to keep direction and parties got split up. Owing to the heavy shelling all the Bosches had left their main trenches and were lying out in the open with snipers and machine guns in shell holes, so of course our fellows were the most easy prey.

It is so awfully sad now going about and finding so many splendid fellows gone.

Thomas was initially declared Missing in Action. His family appealed for information in the Liverpool Echo on 31st August, and his name appeared in the list of King's. Liverpool. Regiment. missing published in the Liverpool Post & Mercury on 14th September 1916.
 
The CWGC Graves Registration form shows that he was buried with Pte. 15736 J.G. Goodfellow when their bodies were found on 05th September 1916 by men of the 4th Bn Loyal North Lancs Regiment.
 
After the Armistice, when graves were concentrated, his body was exhumed and reinterred in Guillemont Road Cemetery, Somme, where he now rests.  

Guillemont was an important point in the German defences at the beginning of the Battle of the Somme in July 1916. It was taken by the 2nd Royal Scots Fusiliers on 30 July but the battalion was obliged to fall back, and it was again entered for a short time by the 55th (West Lancashire) Division on 8 August. On 18 August, the village was reached by the 2nd Division, and on 3 September (in the Battle of Guillemont) it was captured and cleared by the 20th (Light) and part of the 16th (Irish) Divisions. It was lost in March 1918 during the German advance, but retaken on 29 August by the 18th and 38th (Welsh) Divisions.

The cemetery was begun by fighting units (mainly of the Guards Division) and field ambulances after the Battle of Guillemont, and was closed in March 1917, when it contained 121 burials. It was greatly increased after the Armistice when graves (almost all of July-September 1916) were brought in from the battlefields immediately surrounding the village and certain smaller cemeteries, including:-

HARDECOURT FRENCH MILITARY CEMETERY. The village of Hardecourt-au-Bois was captured by French troops on the 8th July 1916, and again by the 58th (London) and 12th (Eastern) Divisions on 28 August 1918. Five British Artillerymen were buried by their unit in the French Military Cemetery, in the middle of the village, in September 1916; and in 1918 the 12th Division buried in the same cemetery 14 men of the 9th Royal Fusiliers and two of the 7th Royal Sussex.

Guillemont Road Cemetery now contains 2,263 Commonwealth burials and commemorations of the First World War. 1,523 of the burials are unidentified but there are special memorials to eight casualties known or believed to be buried among them.

The cemetery was designed by Sir Herbert Baker. 

Thomas earned his three medals.
 
Probate in the amount of £32-17s-2d was granted to his eldest sister Mary, giving Thomas’ address as 169 Walton Lane.  Mary also received Thomas’ Army effects and a War Gratuity of £6-10s.  As next of kin she would have received his medals also.  When she died in 1923 her estate went to her unmarried sister Maria, who died in 1969.
 
Sadly, Thomas’ military paraphernalia went up for auction in June 2021: his three medals in their original boxes, memorial plaque, and identity disc were sold for £829.

He is commemorated on the following Memorials:

Catholic Institute, situated at St Edwards College, West Derby

St. Clare's Roman Catholic Church, Liverpool
 

His sister Minnie(Mary) died aged 55 on the 3rd January 1923, she was headmistress of St Francis de Sales’ School. 

 

We currently have no further information on Thomas McNally, 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.

(108 Years this day)
Tuesday 30th April 1918.
L/Cpl 29203 Valentine Alexander
26 years old

(108 Years this day)
Tuesday 30th April 1918.
Pte 27948 Joseph Atherton
26 years old

(108 Years this day)
Tuesday 30th April 1918.
Pte 51896 Richard Edward Banks
34 years old

(108 Years this day)
Tuesday 30th April 1918.
Pte 46630 Watson Bell
38 years old

(108 Years this day)
Tuesday 30th April 1918.
Lieut Roland Henry Brewerton
27 years old

(108 Years this day)
Tuesday 30th April 1918.
Pte 51708 Charles Norman Dod
21 years old

(108 Years this day)
Tuesday 30th April 1918.
L/Cpl 94246 Frank Emison
24 years old

(108 Years this day)
Tuesday 30th April 1918.
Pte 23056 John William Jones
27 years old

(108 Years this day)
Tuesday 30th April 1918.
Pte 49572 John Henry Leadbeater (MM)
27 years old

(108 Years this day)
Tuesday 30th April 1918.
Sgt 22462 James Lowe (MID)
25 years old

(108 Years this day)
Tuesday 30th April 1918.
Pte 51712 Edgar Domenico Murray
21 years old

(108 Years this day)
Tuesday 30th April 1918.
Pte 269899 Harry Pitts
21 years old

A total of 14 Pals were killed on this day. View All