William Arthur Stone

Name

William Arthur Stone
21 Nov 1889

Conflict

First World War

Date of Death / Age

17/03/1915
27

Rank, Service Number & Service Details

Private
3640
Hertfordshire Regiment
1st Bn.

Awards: Service Medals/Honour Awards

1914 /15 Star, British War and Victory medals

Cemetery/Memorial: Name/Reference/Country

BETHUNE TOWN CEMETERY
IV. A. 77.
France

Headstone Inscription

None

UK & Other Memorials

Bishop's Stortford Town Memorial, All Saints' Church Memorial(s), Hockerill, Hertfordshire Regimental Memorial, All Saints Church, Hertford

Pre War

William Arthur Stone was born on 21 Nov 1889 (baptised 26 Jan 1890 at Hockerill)  to William, agricultural labourer, and Francis (Fanny) Victoria (nee Trundle).

On the 1891 Census the family of parents, Clara (born 1886), Walter (born 1887) and William Arthur were living at Dunmow Road. Bishop's Stortford where his father was working as an agricultural labourer. In the 1901 Census the family of parents, Clara, Walter, William Arthur and Hilda (born 1893) were living at 6 Dunmow Road, Bishops Stortford. By 1911 the family of Parents, Clara, Bertie (born 1903) and William Arthur had moved to 11 East Road, Bishop's Stortford, and William Arthur was working as an Under Stockman on a farm.

Wartime Service

William Arthur enlisted in Hertford as a Territorial with the Hertfordshire Regiment as Private 3460, this was possibly about Sep/Oct 1914 as serial 3697 was issued on 4 Nov 1914.


Following his training he went to join 1st Battalion (with B E F since Nov 1914) on 23 Jan 1915 arriving in their positions near Givenchy on 31 Jan 1915 in a draft of 2 Officers and 195 men. By 1 Mar 1915 the Battalion had moved to Bethune and when the trenches the evenings were occupied by digging trenches (improving or extending). William Arthur was wounded during this activity, dying of his wounds on 17 Mar 1915 at the French Military & Civilian Hospital in Bethune.

Additional Information

His father William received a War Gratuity of £3 and arrears of £2 13s 10d.

Acknowledgments

Brenda Palmer, Neil Cooper
Jonty Wild