Fred Smith
Date of birth: 1889
Date of death: 17.11.1915
Area: Wrenthorpe
Regiment: York and Lancaster
Family information: Husband of Gertrude nee Nicholson
Service number: 15009
War Service
Fred enlisted with the 10th Battalion of the York and Lancaster Regiment who arrived at Boulogne on board the “Duchess of Argyle” on 10th September 1915. They marched to Vermelles arriving on 25th September 1915 where they went “straight into action towards HULLUCH-LENS Road and HILL 70” according to the war diary. They were relieved on 27th by which time they had lost 320 men killed, wounded or missing. Fred was reported missing on 26th September which was changed on 17th November to “killed in action”.
According to another researcher Gertrude died on 28th November 1915.
Fred was awarded the Victory Medal, the British War Medal and the 1915 Star. He is probably the F Smith that is commemorated on the Bolton upon Dearne Town memorial in the cemetery which was unveiled in September 2014. He is also remembered on the Loos Memorial at Pas de Calais.
Family Life
Fred was born in Wrenthorpe in about 1889 according to his service records. His early life is a bit of a mystery so I started with the facts found in his service records. He enlisted at Wath on Dearne on September 3rd 1914 aged 25 years and signed up for three years or the duration of the war. He was in the 10th Battalion of the York and Lancaster Regiment and was given the regimental number of 15009. The service records show that Fred was married to Gertrude Nicholson at Bolton Parish Church on 4th March 1911 and they had two children – Harold born 15th July 1911 and Vera born on 29th June 1914. At the time of his enlistment Fred was a pit contractor. In July 1915 there was some confusion with another man also called Fred Smith and there was some correspondence between the infantry records office and his commanding officer. This states that his wife Gertrude had lived at 25, Nora Street, Goldthorpe near Rotherham but had moved to 6, Cross Street, Goldthorpe. Sadly, shortly after Fred’s death, Gertrude also died and in 1916 Fred’s sister was recorded as his children’s guardian. His sister was Mary Ellen Gisbey of 15, Sydenham Street, Holbeck, Leeds and she was born in about 1884.
Using the above facts I tried to piece together Fred’s early life. I found Fred’s marriage record from the Parish Church in Bolton upon Dearne which recorded Fred as a miner aged 21 and living at 32, Cooperative Street. Gertrude was 27 and living at 35, Nora Street, Goldthorpe. Fred’s father was said to be called Stephen, however I found the marriage of Fred’s sister Mary Ellen to Herbert Gisbey in New Wortley in 1905. She names her father as Alfred!
In the 1911 census Fred and Gertrude were boarding with Gertrude’s brother William and his family at 4, Cross Street, Goldthorpe. Fred was a coal miner.