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  • My Marternal Grandmother came from Woolwich. Her maiden name was Povey and she had a brother who was Percy Povey he was in the Suffolk
     Regiment during the first war. Sadly he died of his wounds aged 18 in April 1918 in Belgium. I have been tracing family on Ancestry and
     Find My Past for several years. If anyone should know of any family's from the Woolwich area with the name of Povey I would like to know
  • thanks for the heads-up DA9. I have now discovered, despite my Dad's insistence otherwise, that my paternal grandfather did serve in WW1 in both the London Regiment and the Labour Corps and was in fact injured on 09/07/2017, in France or Belgium (not sure which as he served in both), an injury which I believe led to his discharge. I am now going to make further investigations. I now find it bizarre, and also quite sad in a way, that I have organised two trips in recent years to first Ypres and then the Somme and listened to stories from those on the trip of their relatives who had served and died, and who knows I may have stood on or close to the place my own grandfather was injured without even knowing it. I will have to revisit once I know more.
    Very interesting to read that Large. my Grandad served in the London Fusiliers, but ended the war in the Labour Corps as well. When I was researching some 20 years ago I couldn't find much about the formation of the Labour Corps, but got the impression it was for soldiers with injuries or from regiments that were shattered in the German 1918 Spring Offensives. Did you find anything definitive on the Labour Corps? Because he finished in the labour corps there were no records to indicate which London Battalion he joined, and I believe there were over 30 which made it difficult to work out where he served exactly. I'll pick up the research again when I retire in a couple of years
  • edited May 2020
    thanks for the heads-up DA9. I have now discovered, despite my Dad's insistence otherwise, that my paternal grandfather did serve in WW1 in both the London Regiment and the Labour Corps and was in fact injured on 09/07/2017, in France or Belgium (not sure which as he served in both), an injury which I believe led to his discharge. I am now going to make further investigations. I now find it bizarre, and also quite sad in a way, that I have organised two trips in recent years to first Ypres and then the Somme and listened to stories from those on the trip of their relatives who had served and died, and who knows I may have stood on or close to the place my own grandfather was injured without even knowing it. I will have to revisit once I know more.
    Very interesting to read that Large. my Grandad served in the London Fusiliers, but ended the war in the Labour Corps as well. When I was researching some 20 years ago I couldn't find much about the formation of the Labour Corps, but got the impression it was for soldiers with injuries or from regiments that were shattered in the German 1918 Spring Offensives. Did you find anything definitive on the Labour Corps? Because he finished in the labour corps there were no records to indicate which London Battalion he joined, and I believe there were over 30 which made it difficult to work out where he served exactly. I'll pick up the research again when I retire in a couple of years

    I found my Grandad's War records on ancestry.co.uk which gave great details as to his service. If you sign up in the next couple of days you can view the records for free and even print them out to keep. Then, thanks to Clive being able to tell me what Regiment he was in, I signed in to the National Archive and was able to download the War Diary for his regiment and printed out the pages for the dates he was injured which gave details of exactly where it happened. National Archives are also free to access during lockdown although you have to register which isn't a hassle.

    PS - I will say hello when we are both next allowed on the Hastings coach to The Valley.

  • thanks for the tips mate, much appreciated. I'll look at both websites tomorrow. Yes I miss the banter on the coach. I'm hoping the old boys are all ok. Hope George's pub still survives the lockdown as well.
  • thanks for the heads-up DA9. I have now discovered, despite my Dad's insistence otherwise, that my paternal grandfather did serve in WW1 in both the London Regiment and the Labour Corps and was in fact injured on 09/07/2017, in France or Belgium (not sure which as he served in both), an injury which I believe led to his discharge. I am now going to make further investigations. I now find it bizarre, and also quite sad in a way, that I have organised two trips in recent years to first Ypres and then the Somme and listened to stories from those on the trip of their relatives who had served and died, and who knows I may have stood on or close to the place my own grandfather was injured without even knowing it. I will have to revisit once I know more.
    Very interesting to read that Large. my Grandad served in the London Fusiliers, but ended the war in the Labour Corps as well. When I was researching some 20 years ago I couldn't find much about the formation of the Labour Corps, but got the impression it was for soldiers with injuries or from regiments that were shattered in the German 1918 Spring Offensives. Did you find anything definitive on the Labour Corps? Because he finished in the labour corps there were no records to indicate which London Battalion he joined, and I believe there were over 30 which made it difficult to work out where he served exactly. I'll pick up the research again when I retire in a couple of years
    My grandfather started off in the  Gloucestershire regiment but ended up in the Labour Corps. I know he was made completely deaf and suffered shell shock after being caught up in an explosion, so maybe the Labour Corps was for soldiers who weren't fit for front line duties but were able to carry out construction/support work.
  • Derek1952 said:
    My Marternal Grandmother came from Woolwich. Her maiden name was Povey and she had a brother who was Percy Povey he was in the Suffolk
     Regiment during the first war. Sadly he died of his wounds aged 18 in April 1918 in Belgium. I have been tracing family on Ancestry and
     Find My Past for several years. If anyone should know of any family's from the Woolwich area with the name of Povey I would like to know
    I went to school with a lad named Povey in the mid 70s, but he was from the Dartford area.
  • Is it me  or is that website crap? I signed in, and gave my name and date and place of birth, and pressed search. It then gave me a list of 60 pages with variants on the name, place of birth anywhere in the UK. The dob was also spread over a wide range, which made me wonder why they asked.. By accident I found my dad on page 4, but again, it demanded names of his parents plus birth/death details, which I sort of assumed it would find for me. If the search engine ignores the data  it seems like I'm doing all the work. And as I doubt I'm related to anyone wildly important, I gave up.
    Either we are doing it all wrong, or yes it is crap @ken_shabby. I found my Dad okay, birth and death, but can only find my Mum's birth, that was because I already knew that information, and input it myself. I am unsure of my Mum's exact date of death, and as a result the site can't seem to find it?

    How do you link beyond a document telling you what you already know to previous generations?        
  • thanks for the heads-up DA9. I have now discovered, despite my Dad's insistence otherwise, that my paternal grandfather did serve in WW1 in both the London Regiment and the Labour Corps and was in fact injured on 09/07/2017, in France or Belgium (not sure which as he served in both), an injury which I believe led to his discharge. I am now going to make further investigations. I now find it bizarre, and also quite sad in a way, that I have organised two trips in recent years to first Ypres and then the Somme and listened to stories from those on the trip of their relatives who had served and died, and who knows I may have stood on or close to the place my own grandfather was injured without even knowing it. I will have to revisit once I know more.
    Very interesting to read that Large. my Grandad served in the London Fusiliers, but ended the war in the Labour Corps as well. When I was researching some 20 years ago I couldn't find much about the formation of the Labour Corps, but got the impression it was for soldiers with injuries or from regiments that were shattered in the German 1918 Spring Offensives. Did you find anything definitive on the Labour Corps? Because he finished in the labour corps there were no records to indicate which London Battalion he joined, and I believe there were over 30 which made it difficult to work out where he served exactly. I'll pick up the research again when I retire in a couple of years
    My grandfather started off in the  Gloucestershire regiment but ended up in the Labour Corps. I know he was made completely deaf and suffered shell shock after being caught up in an explosion, so maybe the Labour Corps was for soldiers who weren't fit for front line duties but were able to carry out construction/support work.
    Thanks for that foresthillred. Rather confirms what I thought. I'll do some digging if i can this weekend
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