Name
Edmund Johnson
Conflict
First World War
Date of Death / Age
12/04/1918
31
Rank, Service Number & Service Details
Private
G/40280
The Queen’s (Royal West Surrey Regiment)
1st Bn.
Awards: Service Medals/Honour Awards
Not Yet Researched
Cemetery/Memorial: Name/Reference/Country
PLOEGSTEERT MEMORIAL
Panel 1 and 2.
Belgium
Headstone Inscription
NA
UK & Other Memorials
St Peter’s Church Memorial, Bushey Heath
Pre War
Edmund Johnson was born in Hampstead, London, in about 1888, the only son of Edmund Littler Johnson. His grandfather, James H Johnson, was a coal proprietor and iron master in Lancashire, who employed 1,500 men. His father, a colliery manager by the age of 23, moved to London, where he became a metal merchant, trading in tin plate. He married Marian Sidebotham in 1886 and they lived with their three children and three servants at ‘Lawn Bank’, John Street, London, originally the home of the poet, John Keats.
Edmund Johnson was born in Hampstead, London, in about 1888, the only son of Edmund Littler Johnson. His grandfather, James H Johnson, was a coal proprietor and iron master in Lancashire, who employed 1,500 men. His father, a colliery manager by the age of 23, moved to London, where he became a metal merchant, trading in tin plate. He married Marian Sidebotham in 1886 and they lived with their three children and three servants at ‘Lawn Bank’, John Street, London, originally the home of the poet, John Keats.
In 1909 the house was leased to Mrs Susan Chewett from Canada and her family. At that time of the 1911 census the Johnson family was resident at 50 Downshire Hill, N W London and employed a cook and a parlourmaid. Edmund’s father had retired and his two sisters, Barbara and Helen aged 22 and 20, were living at home. Edmund was not at home at the time of the census and may have been abroad.
Wartime Service
Additional Information
In February 1915 his younger sister, Helen, married Thomas Hende Roughton in Hampstead. A few months later, Edmund’s father died at the age of 58. Edmund served in France and transferred to the 1st battalion of the Queen’s Royal West Surrey Regiment.
On 24 March 1918, his mother received the news that Helen’s husband, Captain Thomas Hende Roughton MC, had died of wounds in Belgium and on the 12 April Edmund was killed in action. He was 31 and is commemorated on the Ploegsteert Memorial.
‘Reveley Lodge’, in Bushey Heath, where Edmund spent his teenage years, was purchased by Albert Chewett, a former Herkomer art student, in 1921. It remained a private property in the hands of Albert and later of his wife Eila. She died in 2003 and bequeathed the house to Bushey Museum.
Also see ‘Additional Information’ provided with kind permission of Bushey First World War Commemoration Project – Please visit www.busheyworldwarone.org.uk.
Acknowledgments
Dianne Payne - www.busheyworldwarone.org.uk, Jonty Wild