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Tuesday 8 July 2014

Upchurch in the Opening Months of the Great War in 1914 by David Wood




HMS Bulwark 1904.
As a small Swale village with a population of little more than 1,000 inhabitants and where the male population mainly worked locally on farms, on barges or in the brickfields, life in Upchurch continued as usual with joyous events like weddings periodically taking place. In August 1914 James Button and Gertrude Seal became the first Upchurch couple to have a motor wedding to take people’s minds away from the European conflict that had recently broken out.

When war broke out in July 1914 it would have felt like a distant conflict to most residents as they lived out their daily lives in the village. Government propaganda indicated that the war would be a short and glorious affair with heroic cavalry charges and brave infantry attacks, similar to what had taken place during the 19th century. The reality became very different as the opposing armies soon got bogged down in trench warfare with few gains being made by either side.


In the early months Upchurch felt few effects of the European conflict although an article in the parish magazine during the summer of 1914 contained forebodings of what followed.

Little thought that it would be a chronicle of real war. War, with all its horrors, its terrible dangers, its fearful sorrows, is upon us. Our army has gone to France to help against the German foe; our fleet patrols the ocean and guards our shores. Captured vessels have lain in the Medway, ships of our navy, injured in the fight for freedom, have passed our sea wall. We have heard the muffled anger of guns fired in dread earnest. Night after night the beams of light play with the silent softness over the heavens. Day after day airships glide forth on their mission of discovery. The future looms darkly but we know our cause is just.

As the war progressed things began to happen in Upchurch. By the end of September 1914 Mr Marsh from Forge Lane had gathered the names of all soldiers and sailors in the village serving in the war. The vicar’s wife Mrs Trew volunteered to be the recipient of bad news for families of fatalities and an appeal on behalf of the Red Cross raised £20. Money was also collected for the Soldiers and Sailors Family Association.

In September 1914 Cecil Dawson from The Street became the first man from Upchurch to officially join up to fight although there were others who were already full time professional soldiers like Percy Hales from Horsham Farm who served in the Grenadier Guards and Tom Anderson who served with the Northumberland Fusiliers. Both men participated in the early conflicts of 1914.


David Wood.

It wasn’t until October that news of casualties first appeared in the village magazine with a report that Ernie Carter, Henry Mason and Tom Anderson were fatalities and that George Sharp had been wounded by shrapnel and was recovering in Warrington Infirmary.

Of the early fatalities Henry Mason served as chief stoker aboard H.M.S Hogue but died when a torpedo fired by a German submarine sunk his vessel on September 22nd and Ernie Carter who served as a private in the Royal Marines Light Infantry died when his ship H.M.S Aboukir was torpedoed and sunk by a German U-boat in the North Sea. Army fatalities were also reported like John Allen from Gore Bank, Tom Anderson formerly of Upchurch, Albert Newman from Otterham Quay and Charles Gransden from Gore Bank. They were all killed in action in France and Belgium.

The general feelings of people in Upchurch towards fatalities appeared in the parish magazine report of October 1914.

Toll for the Brave:

Two husbands are missing (Mr Mason and Mr Carter) and whilst we naturally fear the worst, we feel that men who die like this, die a glorious death. They die that we may live in safety. Therefore, toll for the brave.

While Upchurch men fought on the European mainland money raising activities flourished in the village, particularly at the village schools where charitable efforts took place.

At the Infant’s School children made clothes for the Belgian Refugees Fund while at Holywell headmaster Mr. Maltravers and his wife Ethel organised a bazaar and raised money for the HRH Princess Mary’s Sailors and Soldiers Christmas Fund.

The harsh reality of war finally arrived in Upchurch at 7-50 a.m. on the morning of November 26, 1914 when a massive explosion rocked the village as the battleship HMS Bulwark moored in the Medway estuary exploded and sank to the bottom of the river with 750 crew members lost. Thick black smoke filled the air, debris scattered over a four mile radius and the Ham Green peninsular got covered in soot and debris according to eye witnesses. Although rumours spread that the incident had been the work of German agents, a forthcoming court of inquiry announced a verdict of accidental ignition of ammunition. The incident became the second worst accidental destruction of a naval vessel in British naval history and was the first major incident where the horror of war was brought directly to the parish of Upchurch.

As more men lost their lives and others joined the forces families in the village experienced the tragedy of war which very soon developed into a horrific, lengthy and bloody conflict of attrition that lasted for four years on the European mainland.

About David:
David Wood was born and raised in Upchurch and is able to write from personal experience about many people and aspects of the village and of changes that have taken place over the years making ‘Memories of Upchurch’ a very readable book and a detailed historical study of the village. David's book ‘Memories of Upchurch’ is available direct from David at: david3702001@yahoo.co.uk or from us here at Upchurch Matters. Price £12 + £3.50 postage and packing.

David Wood.
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