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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 50298 Richard Cobden Jones


  • Age: 30
  • From: Brynmawr, Breconshire
  • Regiment: LABOUR CORPS
  • Died on Thursday 13th February 1919
  • Commemorated at: Cologne South Cem Germany
    Panel Ref: II.C.9

Richard Cobden Jones was born in late 1888 in Brynmawr, the son of Thomas James Jones and his wife Caroline Maud (nee Richards). They had married in Merthyr Tydfil in 1878. He was one of 8 children, his siblings were; his twin brother William, Mildred, Caroline, Herbert (died aged 4) , Thomas, James and Horace. 

The Census of 1891 shows the family living at Old Castle Inn, Beaufort Street, Llanelli. His mother is the head of the house and is employed as a licensed victualler. His father would probably be away at sea as it appears he was a Master Mariner. There are seven children in the household; Horace B. aged 11, Mildred M. aged 10, Thomas G. 5, James E. 4, Caroline M. 3, Richard C. and his twin William are aged 2. Also recorded in the household are Elizabeth Richards, a 32 year old barmaid and also a servant nurse.      

By 1901 Richard Cobden and three of his brothers are living with their Aunt Elizabeth Richards at 27 Islwyn Street, Abercarn, Newport, Monmouthshire, Wales. His Aunt is a 42 year old housekeeper born in Llanellen. Richard is recorded as R. Cobden aged 12. His brothers are shown as; Thomas G. aged 16, James E. aged 14 and his twin W. Albany aged 12. 

Richard Cobden was educated at Pontywaun Grammar School.

The 1911 Census shows Richard Cobden and his mother living at 44 Oakfield Street, Cardiff. He is employed as a Clerk on a Colliery. His father had died in 1910 aged 61 and had left an estate worth over £4,000.

News of his father's death was featured in the South Wales Gazette

"The chairman regretted to report the recent death of the shareholders auditor, Mr T. J. Jones, 44 Oakfield Street, and moved a vote of condolence with the bereaved family. This was recorded in the usual manner."

Richard joined the 19th Battalion of The King's Liverpool Regiment as Private 74702. The CWGC show that Richard was transferred to 738th Area Employment Company Labour Corps as Private 50298. The  Labour Corps was manned by officers and other ranks who had been medically rated below the "A1" condition needed for front line service.  Area Employment Companies carried out a wide range of tasks including moving supplies, labouring and construction and salvaging equipment from the battlefield. They would support units based in a particular area.

He died on 13th February 1919, aged 30, and he now rests at Cologne Southern Cemetery in Germany. His headstone bears the King's Liverpool Regiment insignia of the White Horse of Hanover and his Regimental number is shown as 74702.  

More than 1,000 Allied prisoners and dozens of German servicemen were buried in Cologne Southern Cemetery during the First World War. Commonwealth forces entered Cologne on 6 December 1918, less than a month after the Armistice, and the city was occupied under the terms of the Treaty of Versailles until January 1926. During this period the cemetery was used by the occupying garrison. In 1922 it was decided that the graves of Commonwealth servicemen who had died all over Germany should be brought together into four permanent cemeteries at Kassel, Berlin, Hamburg and Cologne. Over the course of the following year, graves were transferred to Cologne Southern Cemetery from over 180 different burial grounds in Hanover, Hessen, the Rhine and Westphalia.

There are now almost 2,500 First World War servicemen buried or commemorated in the Commonwealth plots at Cologne. The Cologne Memorial, located inside the shelter building at the entrance to the Commonwealth plots, commemorates 25 British and Irish servicemen who died in Germany and who have no known grave. Of these, 19 are known to have died as prisoners but their places of burial are not recorded. The remaining six died after the Armistice by drowning and their bodies were not recovered. The Commonwealth section of the cemetery also contains over 130 Second World War graves, mostly those of servicemen who died with the occupying forces. In addition, the Commission maintains in this section 676 non-war graves, 30 graves of other nationalities and the graves of 4 members of the Commission staff.

Commonwealth Prisoners of War in Germany during the First World War

Between the outbreak of war in August 1914 and the Armistice of November 1918, the German forces captured almost 300,000 Commonwealth servicemen on the Western Front. Approximately one third of these prisoners were held in German occupied territory in France and Belgium, but most were transported to camps located throughout Germany. In common with the other belligerent states, Germany was poorly equipped to house, feed and clothe large numbers of enemy troops, but prisoners of war had been granted certain rights under international agreements established at Geneva in 1864 and at The Hague in 1899 and 1907. The Red Cross also monitored conditions in the camps and ensured that food, clothing, and personal correspondence sent from Britain was safely delivered to prisoners. In June 1917, and again in July 1918, the British and German governments agreed to exchange prisoners who were too badly wounded to fight again, and hundreds of prisoners were repatriated through the Netherlands. Finally, the fear that the thousands of German prisoners in Britain and France would be mistreated in retaliation meant that Allied POWs often enjoyed quite humane treatment. This was especially the case for officer prisoners, who were segregated into separate camps and not forced to work.

Despite these various checks on the mistreatment of prisoners, conditions in German camps varied widely and as many as 12,000 Commonwealth servicemen died in captivity. Some of these men were badly wounded when taken prisoner and died shortly after arriving in Germany. Some prisoners also died as a result of violence perpetrated by their captors, but although violence was common, particularly during the first year of the war, the killing of prisoners was rare. Non-commissioned officers and privates were often forced to work and some died of exhaustion or accidents while labouring in coalmines, stone quarries or steel works. Yet by far the most common cause of prisoner death in wartime Germany was disease. Prisoners weakened by wounds, poor diet, or fatigue were particularly susceptible to the effects of disease and an outbreak of typhus in 1915 and the influenza epidemic of 1918 had a devastating effect on the Allied prisoner population.

The amount of the War Gratuity suggests that he served for two years, enlisting in about February 1916.
 
The International Red Cross records were searched in case Richard had been taken as a POW. However, no trace could be found of him in those records and his place of death, at a CCS, suggests he was with the forces who entered Germany.
 
Soldiers’ Effects, shows his place of death as 64 Casualty Clearing Station, France.
 
However, Commonwealth forces had entered Cologne on 06 December 1918.

Richard Cobden Jones is commemorated on the Memorial at Pontywaun Grammar School as Cobden Jones.

His brother Thomas J. received his Army effects and a War Gratuity of £11.
 
One pension card in the name of his mother, at 17 Fair Oak Road, Cardiff, inexplicably shows date of death 6th December 1915.  Her address was later changed to Rhosllanerchrugog, Wrexham, and later changed back to Fair Oak Road. Another pension card records date of death as 12th February 1919 and cause of death bronchitis.

His twin brother William Albany Jones was gazetted as 2nd Lieutenant.

His mother died in Cardiff in 1928, aged 73.

We currently have no further information on Richard Cobden Jones. 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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