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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 58712 James Crowther


  • Age: 24
  • From: Hyde, Cheshire
  • Regiment: The King's (Liverpool Regiment) 20th Btn
  • K.I.A Monday 9th April 1917
  • Commemorated at: Henin Crucifix Cem
    Panel Ref: Sp.Mem.5

James Crowther was born at 13 Port Street, Hyde, Cheshire on the 30th June 1892, to Pendleton born cotton mill manager James Crowther and his Hyde born wife, Sarah (nee Thorpe). They married in Stockport at Holy Trinity, Gee Cross, Hyde in the June quarter of 1892. James was their first born and was baptised on the 27th July 1892. Inexplicably, his birth was registered under the name James Crowder.

The April 1901 Census shows James aged 8, living with his parents and younger brother at 35 George Street, Newton, Cheshire.
His father, aged 29, is now shown as a greengrocer, whilst his mother is 28. His brother, Charles H. is one year old. 
 
By April 1911, the Census finds the family have moved to 11 Langholm Place, Winton, Eccles.
Now aged 18, James is shown a piecer in a cotton spinning mill. Both parents are in the household along with five siblings. His parents have been married for 19 years and have had nine children three of whom have died. James' surviving siblings are shown as; Charles 11, Elsie 9, Harold 5, Alice 3 and May aged 1.                       

He enlisted in Bury and was serving in the 20th Battalion, The King’s Liverpool Regiment as Private No 58712 when he was killed in action on the 09th April 1917 during the Battle of Arras.

17th,  19th & 20th  Battalion at the  Battle of Arras 09th April 1917

Everard Wyrall records the events of the day in Volume 2 of his History of the King's Regiment (Liverpool).

The 89th Brigade formed up for the attack with the 19th King's on the right and the 20th King’s on the left. The 17th King’s supplied the “mopping up" parties and he 2nd Bedfords were in close support.

It was just after 3pm when the advance began “According to scheduled time the waves advanced in good style and with determination; everyone was cheerful and in the best of spirits”

That advance is described by others as magnificent. From the OP’s the observing officers saw a wonderful sight – long lines of men advancing steadily up a long and gradual slope towards the enemy’ front line. Then suddenly they disappeared. The observers quite pardonably, imagined that the German front line had fallen into the hands of the assaulting troops and that the latter were on the way to the enemy’s support line. Alas something very different had happened. When the advancing troops had reached the summit of the long slope up which they advanced the ground suddenly dipped before the German front line , and when the observing officers thought they  were already in the Bosche lines they had not, as a matter of fact, even reached the wire. What the observers took to be the front line was really the support line; the front line could not be seen  - it lay just behind the crest of that slight rise in the ground.

The attacking waves of the 19th King’s got within 100 yards of the German wire but were then held up. They were faced by three belts of entanglements, practically untouched by our artillery, and nothing could be done but to dig in or else take shelter in the many shell- shell-with which “No Man’s Land" was pitted. By this time the battalion’s losses were very heavy, and when darkness fell “A" and “B" Companies (about 140 in all) lay in shell-holes, two or three hundred yards north east of St. Martin, but just south of the Cojeul River, and “C" and “D" Companies (140 all ranks) were along the river bank, but on the northern side about 150 yards north east of St. Martin.

The first waves of the 20th King’ advanced at 3.7pm. At 4pm Lieut Beaumont, commanding “A" Company, reported that he had had some forty casualties in passing through the enemy’s barrage. The next message, timed 4.40pm, stated that the position of the battalion at that period was on a crest in front of the enemy’s wire and about 100 yards from it. On the right the 21st Division was observed to have penetrated the enemy’s front line, but in the left the right Battalion of the 21st Brigade (the Wilts) was on the St. Martin- Neuville Vitasse road; the left flank of the 20th King's was, therefore, “ in the air”.

Urgent messages were sent up from Battalion Headquarters to “push on, keeping in touch with right” But little else could be accomplished until those formidable belts of wire had been cut sufficiently to allow the rapid passage of the attacking troops, headed by their bombers.

At 9:30 that night 89th Brigade Headquarters ordered both the 19th and 20th Battalions to withdraw, the former to the two sunken roads running south east from St. Martin, the latter to north west of St. Martin; the guns had been ordered to cut the enemy’s wire during the night in preparation for another attack during the 10th April.

Of the 17th King’s  - the “moppers up" – there is little to relate. There was nothing to “mop up" so that they did not function. Yet they had shared all the perils of the advance, and when  after they had fallen back and at midnight held the following positions, “B", “C", and “D" Companies in and around the sunken road north of Boiry-Becquerelle and “A" Company in trenches west of Henin, they lost 2 officers and 16 other ranks killed, and 3 officers and 48 other ranks wounded.  

James now rests at Henin Crucifix Cemetery, France with a headstone which bears the inscription at the top "Known to be buried in this Cemetery" and contains an epitaph which  reads:

“THEIR GLORY SHALL NOT BE BLOTTED OUT

The epitaph comes from Ecclesiasticus 44 verse 13 and was chosen by Rudyard Kipling. These headstones commemorate casualties whose graves in a cemetery were destroyed or who were known to buried in the cemetery but the exact whereabouts within the cemetery were not recorded. 

Henin-sur-Cojeul was captured on 02nd April 1917, lost in March 1918 after an obstinate resistance by the 40th Division, and retaken on 24 August 1918 by the 52nd (Lowland) Division.

Henin Crucifix Cemetery is named from a calvary standing on the opposite side of the road. It was made by units of the 30th Division after the capture of the village in 1917.

Henin Crucifix Cemetery contains 61 burials and commemorations of the First World War. Two of the burials are unidentified and eight graves, destroyed in later fighting, are now represented by special memorials.

The cemetery was designed by G H Goldsmith.

James is also commemorated on his parents headstone in Hyde Cemetery but for some reason his age is wrongly shown as 26 not 24.

 

Wigan Observer 16th May 1917

LOCAL WAR LOSSES.

KILLED.

KING'S LIVERPOOL REGIMENT.

Crowther, 58712, J. (Wigan).  

 
 
His Soldiers Effects of £2: 4s :5d was sent to his mother, Sarah, on 28th August 1917 followed by a War Gratuity of £3 on 22nd December 1919.She was also awarded a weekly dependents pension for him at 156a Chapel Lane, Coppull, Lancashire. 

His father died on 07th March 1940, aged 63.

His mother died on 11th October 1942, aged 70. 

His brother Charles died on 20th July 1978 aged 79.  

We currently have no further information on James Crowther, 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.

(109 Years this day)
Friday 20th April 1917.
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2nd Lieut Harry Crook
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Saturday 20th April 1918.
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Saturday 20th April 1918.
Pte 20781 John Green
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Saturday 20th April 1918.
Pte 90940 Frederick William Tomlinson
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Saturday 20th April 1918.
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