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Roll of Honour
Second Lieutenant John Hanna Adams Lieutenant Archie Dunlap Lemon
Second Lieutenant Cecil Vincent Boyd Sub-Lieutenant Norman Giles Paton
Private Frederick G Cooke Captain William Alan Smiles
Lieutenant Edward Workman MC
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Introduction
Some of you may have noticed, at one time or another, the two highly polished and
well-worn plaques above the fireplace in the Club bar. One of these records the names
of those County Antrim Yacht Club members who served in the Armed Forces in the
First World War, with particular prominence given, rightly, to the seven members
who made the supreme sacrifice.
In this, the 100th anniversary year of the Battle of the Somme, it is perhaps a
particularly opportune time to remember these gentlemen, all of whom, as will be
seen, left very comfortable environments to “answer the call”. This document has
been compiled in grateful remembrance of these club members and in the earnest
hope that the details included below may, in some measure, lift each beyond being
merely names on an old Club plaque but hopefully bring some elements of their short
lives into focus and highlight their respective sacrifices - so many years after their
untimely deaths.
The following pages set out therefore what the author knows currently about each of
these members, their personal circumstances and tragically, their deaths. As will be
noted, some of the information which follows is perforce limited; should any member
have additional information on any of these gentlemen, I should be very grateful to
receive it.
Background
At the time of their deaths, membership of sailing clubs across Ireland was largely the
preserve of the more affluent members of the community, indeed the author was
struck at the outset by the importance of the roles some of the casualties’ families
played in the social and economic development of this country. These range from
Shipbuilding, through Ropeworks and Distilleries to Linen Mills and their successes
are reflected in the home addresses and backgrounds of most of the members
honoured on the club plaque. What became noticeable and slightly puzzling in the
earlier stages of research is the number of members who came from East Belfast yet
were members of this Club at a time when travelling 20 or so miles “across town” just
to sail or partake in the young club’s activities would have been a significant venture.
One possible explanation, of course, is that the wealthy families had “holiday homes”
in or around Whitehead, or simply took advantage of the developing train linkage
from the city, which in turn, would facilitate access to, and membership of, this Club.
Members may be aware that this club was founded originally as Whitehead Sailing
Club in 1902 and indeed in March 1909 changed its name to County Antrim Yacht
Club to actually “reflect the large number of members who lived in Belfast”. In the
following year the Annual Report membership list included messrs. Smiles, Adams,
Boyd, Cooke and Lemon. It is highly likely therefore that East Belfast’s Captain
Smiles, Lieutenant Lemon and Private Cooke were acquainted or indeed friends as
well as near neighbours with Lieutenant Workman MC in their “well to do” part of
Belfast. It is a matter of record that Lieutenants Workman and Lemon died only a few
months apart but what is not immediately evident is that Lieutenant Lemon was
related through marriage to Lieutenant Workman. The resultant grief visited upon
both these families cannot be imagined.
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It is an indication of the hellish conditions these Club Members endured that of the six
soldiers remembered only two have known graves. Reasons for this are many and
include lack or absence of durable ID “tags”, impromptu battlefield burials, constant
shellfire (and the resultant ground and graves disturbance), continual
advances/retreats, inability to recover bodies (and indeed wounded) from “No Mans
Land” and later, several-times repeated relocation of battlefield graves. Together these
conspired to make proper identification extremely difficult or nigh on impossible in
this “The War to end all Wars”. Indeed, this is clearly evidenced in the case of
Whitehead’s own John Adams who was not found until some ten months after his
death.
It may well be therefore that some of the other “missing” members’ remains are
indeed buried in Commonwealth War Grave Commission Cemeteries but at time of
final interment their mortal remains simply could not be identified. It is a fact that in
many Commonwealth War Grave Cemeteries more than half of those interred were
not identified. In these cases their headstones, like so many others, would thus carry
the simple inscription of those words provided by Rudyard Kipling, who lost his own
son (Jack) at the Somme, and who also is listed among “The Missing”: -
KNOWN UNTO GOD
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John (Jack) Hanna Adams - Second Lieutenant, Prince of Wales’ North
Staffordshire Regiment. Born in Larne and eldest son of William George Adams and
Mrs. Emily Adams of Annadale, Whitehead Village. John had a brother, Alfred, and a
sister, Kathleen. He is recorded as a member of the Club in the 1910 Annual Report.
Killed in Action 18/11/16. Aged 25 years. Buried in the Commonwealth War Graves
Commission Cemetery at Grandcourt.
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John is the only “Whitehead village” resident fatality remembered on the club’s
plaque. He had enlisted early in the war, was posted to France on 29th May 1916 and
was serving with the North Staffordshire Regiment rather than, more typically, any of
the local Irish Regiments, when he was killed at Grandcourt, France. He was a
member of the Ulster Volunteer Force and received his commission, paradoxically, on
12th July 1915. Tragically, he was listed as missing on 18th November 1916 but like so
very many others, it was not until September of the following year that his mother
was told that his body had been found and buried by British soldiers at Grandcourt,
Ancre, France.
John had been the Rector’s churchwarden in the Parish of Templecorran and worked
as a bank clerk in the Ulster Bank for three years but had entered the family firm of
John Adams, North Street, before enlisting. His name is on the Queen’s University
Memorial and a Memorial Plaque in St. John’s Parish Church, Templecorran, which
bears the regimental insignia of the Prince of Wales’ North Staffordshire Regiment
and which was unveiled in October 1918, only a month before the end of the war. He
is also mentioned on the Whitehead Memorial. At a memorial service in St Patrick’s
church it was stated that “John took an active interest in everything pertaining to the
welfare of the church. As a lad he was an example, and as a young man he was a
pattern for others…. A staunch and loyal friend, whose loss was well-nigh
irreparable”.
Queen’s University Memorial, Belfast
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St. John’s Parish Church, Templecorran
John’s Family Plot
John’s barely legible memorial on the family plot
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Cecil Vincent Boyd - 2nd Lieutenant, 8th Battalion Royal Irish Rifles.
Son of Samuel Wilson Boyd JP (also Member) Wholesale Merchant (Distillers, Hill
Street, Belfast) and Mrs Anne Boyd, Claremont House, Ardenlee Avenue, Belfast.
Born on 6th April 1897, he had 4 brothers and 4 sisters and is recorded as a member of
the Club in the 1910 Annual Report. Cecil was educated at Campbell College,
Belfast, where he was a member of the Officers Training Corps. He received his
commission on the 24th May 1917 and went to France in June that year.
Killed in Action 23/11/17. Aged 20 years.
Missing - no known grave.
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Second Lieutenant Cecil Vincent Boyd
Cecil is commemorated on Panel 10 of the Cambria Memorial, Louverval, France
which commemorates more than 7,000 servicemen of the United Kingdom and South
Africa who died in the Battle of Cambrai in November and December 1917 and who
also have no known grave.
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Frederick St.George Cooke – 41694 Private, 9th Battalion Royal Irish Fusiliers,
North Irish Horse.
Son of Francis and Anne Cooke, Gortermore House, Carrigallen, County Leitrim. A
merchant and husband of Jeannie Cooke of “Norton”, 6 Hawthornden Road, Knock,
Belfast. Frederick joined the club on 27th April 1909 and is recorded as a member of
the Club in the 1910 Annual Report.
Killed in Action 19/4/18. Aged n/k.
Missing - no known grave.
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Frederick is unusual in that despite his wealthy family background which invariably
guaranteed a Commission, he enlisted as a Private; this was usually by choice and
says much about the man and those others who chose this way of serving their
country. Frederick is commemorated on Panel 140 at the Tyne Cot Memorial,
Passchaendale, near Ypres, Belgium. This cemetery took its name from the heavily
fortified area where the Tynesiders’ regiments’ first thoughts on arrival were that the
opposing hillside had many white cottages, so reminiscent of home; sadly, the
“cottages” were numerous German reinforced machinegun bunkers, which in time,
took a dreadful toll.
Tyne Cot is the largest Commonwealth War Grave and bears the names of 33,783
soldiers of the UK forces, and 1,176 New Zealanders whose bodies simply
disappeared into the Flanders’ mud in what was to become known generically as
Passchaendale. To give a sense of the scale of slaughter, these c.35,000 missing
soldiers are in addition to the c.55,000, also listed as missing, on the Menin Gate,
Ypres (a very wealthy, large and historic walled city), just a few miles down the road
and quite visible from this cemetery. Such was the devastation in this city that by the
end of the war it was said that a mounted soldier could see from one side of the city to
the other. In addition to the missing, 11,956 Commonwealth soldiers do have a grave
in Tyne Cot cemetery, of these 8,369 are unidentified.
The Battalion War Diary at the time of Frederick’s death records simply:-
“2am. Moved to Kemmel as composite Battalion with 1st Royal Irish Fusiliers
commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel Kelly. Heavy casualties, while moving into position,
from enemy shelling. Relieved by French troops and marched to Siege Camp.”
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Tyne Cot Commonwealth War Graves Cemetery, Passchaendale, Belgium
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Section of Tyne Cot Cemetery commemorating Frederick St.George Cooke
What passed for trenches in the Flanders’ mud
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Passchaendale Village before and after the War
The sole remaining (barely) identifiable wreckage is the Church in the centre of the “village”
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Archie Dunlap Lemon - Lieutenant, No. 6 Platoon, B Company, 12th Battalion,
Royal Irish Rifles. Date of Birth 2nd April 1875. Son of AD Lemon JP and Mrs
Lemon (nee Workman), Edgcumbe House, Strandtown, Belfast. Recorded as a Club
Life Member on 21st June 1909 and in the 1910 Annual Report where he is listed as
owner of the 5.5 tonnes Sloop “Vega”.
Killed in Action 1/7/16. Aged 41 years.
Missing - no known grave.
A note on the back of his WWI Medal Rolls Index card states that a Miss Lemon
(presumably a sister or perhaps a daughter) applied for his medals.
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Archie is just one of some 2,000 36th Ulsters killed on the Somme on the 1st of July
1916. Casualties exceeded 50,000 for the day, c.20,000 of whom were fatalities - most
of them before lunchtime. More than 73,000 of the men (including, sadly, Archie and
one other Club member – Captain William Smiles – see below) killed at the Battle of
the Somme between July and November have no known grave and are
commemorated on what is the largest Commonwealth War Graves Commission’s
Memorial in the world – “The Memorial to the Missing” at Thiepval, France. Archie
is also commemorated on the Strandtown War Memorial.
LIEUTENANT ARCHIBALD LEMON, ROYAL IRISH RIFLES
In 1911, Archie lived at 38 Scotch Quarter, Carrickfergus (now “The Courtyard”) and
enlisted in Carrickfergus in 1915. He was related through marriage to Lieutenant
Edward Workman MC (listed above), had two sisters, Ellen and Marie and one
brother Edward (a solicitor). He was educated at Methodist College, Belfast and was
described as an active member of the County Antrim Yacht Club and Royal North of
Ireland Yacht Club. Before joining up with the 12th Royal Irish Rifles, this Club
Member worked as Flax Spinning Manager at Barn Mills, Carrickfergus.
Archie’s army record shows that shortly after enlistment he was promoted from
Temporary Second Lieutenant to Temporary Lieutenant in the Royal Irish Rifles
w.e.f. 1 Feb 1915 (Supplement of 8 May 1915 to London Gazette 29157 of 7 May
1915), travelled to England in July and on to France in October the same year.
Exceptionally, we have substantial details of how, and indeed where, Archie actually
lost his life. The following is an extract from the Royal Irish Rifles, 12th Battalion,
War Diary for the 1st July 1916, which describes graphically the courage and fortitude
of this Club Member and the men who served under him. Indeed, it is an example of
the same qualities shown by many thousands of others, from many nations, who in
bright sunshine on 1st July 1916 at 07:30hrs went “Over the Top” (or in the case of
many of the 36th Ulsters, crept out 15 minutes early, and lay out in “No Mans Land”)
until the by then, week-long artillery barrage stopped. For the benefit of the reader:-
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a “sap” is a shallow hastily-dug (usually overnight and at great risk) trench
protruding out into “No Mans Land” - the most dangerous position to be in at
any time; and
a World War One platoon typically comprised up to 50 men, was led by a
lieutenant and supported by sergeants and corporals.
JP Beadle’s “The Attack of the Ulster Division”
The War Diary 12th Royal Irish Rifles 1st July 1916 states:-
“No.6 Platoon, 12th R.I.R ~ This Platoon was under Lieut. Lemon and was made
responsible for the Railway Sap.
The Platoon left our own trenches before Zero at the same time and on the right of the 9th
Royal Irish Fusiliers but before reaching the Ravine the whole Platoon with the exception of
Lieut. Lemon and twelve men were all casualties.
On reaching the Ravine, Lt. Lemon looked for some support, but as none were available he
advanced with his twelve men to enter the Sap. When he reached the Sap he had only nine
men left, but he entered the Sap at the Railway bank.
L.Sergt. Millar and three men moved to the right to bomb down the Sap, but, these were
soon all casualties. Lieut. Lemon and the remainder of the men advanced up the main
Sap. The thick wires running into the first large tunnel was cut by Rfmn. Gamble who was
the first bayonet man.
There was a Machine-gun firing across the sap from the small tunnel. Lieut. Lemon,
however, climbed above the small tunnel with some bombs in order to catch any Germans who
might come out and sent the men on.
Lieut. Lemon was then shot by two German Officers who fired their rifles at him from the
top of a dug out which apparently led into the tunnel. The two German officers were
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afterwards killed by a bomb which exploded right at their feet.
The remaining men got cut off between the 1st and 2nd German line and only two of them
escaped.”
Remarkably, the Railway Sap where Lieutenant Lemon led his platoon attack on 1st
July 1916 still exists and though heavily overgrown and more resembling a ditch, it is
still just visible today. It is situated between the road and railway line immediately
opposite the very large CWGC Ancre Cemetery where many of the 36th Ulsters are
interred or commemorated. The bank and tunnels referred to in the Battalion War
Diary extract are believed to have been on the left hand side of the road just beyond
the bend shown in the photograph below.
The Railway Sap, Ancre, Somme, France.
Author’s Note
Having been able to discover a portrait of this member and, rather uniquely, to find
out so much about his outstanding courage and the moments leading to his death it
was indeed a very poignant experience for the author and those with him to stand
beside this sap on a recent visit to the Somme.
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The view from the recently excavated Ulster’s Front Line Trench in Thiepval Wood
looking uphill across several hundred yards of open “No Man’s Land” to the very
heavily fortified German position – the Schwaben Redoubt - now the site of the 36th
Ulster Division’s Helen’s Tower memorial.
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Memorial to the Missing of the Somme, Thiepval, France
Thiepval Memorial, Pier and Face 15A and B, which commemorates Lieutenant Archie Lemon and
Captain William Smiles
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The view through the central arch of Thiepval Memorial looking beyond the Anglo/French cemetery
and down towards Thiepval Wood and the Ancre Valley where the 36th Ulsters went over the top at
07:15hrs on the 1st July 1916. From this site heavily fortified German machine gun posts caught the
Ulster’s advance in enfilade fire causing very heavy casualties.
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Helen’s Tower Memorial to the 36th Ulster Division
This very impressive memorial was unveiled by Field-Marshall Sir Henry Wilson on
19th November 1921 and was one of the first Memorials to be erected on the Western
Front with the funds used to complete it having been raised locally at unmatched
speed.
The memorial is a close replica of Lady Helen’s Tower, Clandeboye Estate, Bangor
beside which was situated a major training camp for the then Ulster Volunteer Force.
Originally formed by the Unionist Community to oppose the proposed Home Rule for
Ireland it became the foundation for the 36th Ulster Division. Simultaneously, the then
Nationalist Community also created a force to support Home Rule - many members of
this latter “army” set aside their political aspirations and enlisted in the British Army’s
10th and 16th Irish Divisions to fight the common enemy. In a further paradoxical
juxtaposition these “politically opposing” forces were close neighbours at the Battle
of the Somme and such was the fearsome fighting reputation earned by each at that
time that they were later brigaded, and actually fought side-by-side, with equally great
resolve, élan and distinction at the Battle of Messines, Belgium.
As a historical footnote, Lieutenant Edward Workman’s father was a significant
contributor to the fund raised to erect this memorial.
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The Sydenham Memorial which includes the names of Lieutenant Lemon, Lieutenant Workman MC
and Captain Smiles (and his Lieutenant brother).
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Norman Giles Paton - Sub-Lieutenant, RNVR, HMML (Mine Layer) No. 403,
RNVR. Date of Birth 2nd October 1886. Son of John, Linen Merchant and Maysie
Paton, Ardmore, Seaforth Road, Bangor. A Manufacturer’s Agent by profession,
Norman had two sisters and two brothers. He was educated at Methodist College,
Belfast and appointed to the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve on 31st May 1918 less
than three months before his death. Norman was described in a death notice as “an
enthusiastic and skilful yachtsman”.
Lost at Sea 22/8/18. Aged 32 years.
Like so many others, little is known of exactly how this member died – what records
that are available show that he drowned after his ship was torpedoed in the North Sea.
The Imperial War Graves Commission records simply that he was:-
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“killed while (sic.) salving German Torpedo in Runswick Bay”.
This Club Member was just one of the 8,517 sailors of the First World War who are
commemorated on the Chatham Naval Memorial, England. A photograph of the
“Death Penny” given to his family is below.
Norman is also commemorated on the Bangor War Memorial, Ward Park, County
Down.
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William Alan Smiles - Captain, 2nd Battalion, Royal Irish Rifles.
Date of Birth - 29th April 1882. One of eleven children born to William Holmes
Smiles and Lucy Smiles, Westbank, Palmerstown Road, Strandtown, Belfast.
Killed in Action 9/7/16. Aged 34 years.
Missing - no known grave.
William was a Solicitor who joined this Club on 21st June 1909 and is recorded as a
member in the 1910 Annual Report. William’s father together with Gustav Wolff of
shipyard fame founded the Belfast Ropeworks in 1878 and his mother was half-sister
to Mrs Beeton – the famous Victorian cookery expert and author. The Smiles family
was a particularly significant part of Belfast and Ireland’s social and business fabric
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and a plaque to commemorate them is to be erected on the site of the now demolished
“Westbank”.
Like Archie Lemon, William is the second Club member to die and disappear at the
Somme and less than two weeks after him. He, again like Archie Lemon, is just one of
more than 73,000 of the men who were killed in those few months and have no known
grave. He too is commemorated on what is the largest Commonwealth War Graves
Commission Memorial in the world – “The Memorial to the Missing” at Thiepval,
France. More locally this Club Member is also commemorated on the Sydenham Roll
of Honour and the Strandtown Memorial, Belfast.
As a poignant footnote and a second family tragedy, William’s brother – Lieutenant
Samuel Smiles, was killed at Passchaendale on 16th August 1917 and is buried in
Tyne Cot Cemetery, Belgium.
The Sydenham Roll of Honour which includes the names of Captain Smiles (and his Second Lieutenant
brother Samuel).
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The Strandtown Memorial which includes the names of CAYC Club Members Captain Smiles and
Lieutenants Smiles, Lemon and Workman MC
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Edward Workman - Military Cross – Lieutenant, 2nd Battalion, Royal Irish Rifles
Date of Birth – 4th August 1886. Son of Frank and Sarah Workman, The Moat,
Strandtown, Belfast.
Wounded in Action, River Lys, Le Touquet, France.
Died of Wounds 26/1/16. Aged 29 years.
Edward was the only son of Frank Workman, one of the founders of Workman Clark,
Shipbuilders, Belfast, fondly remembered locally as “the wee yard”, as opposed to
Harland and Wolff “the big yard”, though on a number of occasions the wee yard
produced a greater tonnage than its rival. Edward was educated at Charterhouse and
Trinity College, Cambridge where he graduated B.A. with Honours and was related
through marriage to Archie Lemon (another CAYC member - also on the club
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plaque). He was also a member of the North of Ireland Cricket Club and is
remembered in that club under the heading “They played the game”. On the 1911
Census and at only 24 years of age he was living at 401 Holywood Road, Belfast, had
four servants and, somewhat modestly – as the yard owner’s son, listed his occupation
as “Apprentice Shipbuilder”. He later became a Director and as the Workman Clark
Yard co-founder’s only son it is highly likely that his death contributed to the eventual
demise of the family shipbuilding connection. In addition to his CAYC membership,
Edward was a member of the Ulster Club together with the Royal Ulster and Royal
North of Ireland clubs.
Edward volunteered for service at the outbreak of the war and was gazetted Second
Lieutenant, 5th Battalion, The Royal Irish Rifles on 14th August 1914. He was
promoted Lieutenant on 22nd May 1915 and served with the British Expeditionary
Force attached to The York and Lancaster Regiment in France and Flanders from 1st
May 1915. Records show that he took part in the very fierce fighting in Hooge,
Belgium and was only one of three officers who were not listed Killed, Wounded or
Missing in that brutal action. The battalion was personally thanked by the Commander
of the Army who said of the Royal Irish Rifles “Your attack was most brilliantly
carried out….. when history comes to be written it will be looked on as one of the
finest achievement of the whole war”. Edward was Mentioned in Dispatches for his
part in the action by Sir John French in the London Gazette on 1st January 1916.
On 19th January 1916 in a raid to gather enemy trench information Edward was
mortally wounded and died in the Duchess of Westminster’s Hospital at Le Touquet,
France a week later. Tributes to him included from his Commanding Officer (who
wrote to his parents) “the enterprise was very successful, and the success was to my
mind, mainly due to the exceptional coolness, good leading and pluck of your poor
son”; from a brother officer “he did magnificently, and, as everyone says, the success
of his party was entirely down to him”; and finally, from one of his Sergeants who
wrote “I have lost the finest Company officer in the Army, the best soldier I ever
met”.
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Edward is buried in Camiers Road Military Cemetery, Etaples, near Boulogne,
France, which contains 11,771 British and Commonwealth graves. Boulogne at that
time was a major medical centre for treating casualties, many of whom, like Edward,
sadly did not survive their wounds, thus the substantial size of the cemetery. As an
interesting strand of this country’s social and wartime history this Club Member’s
silhouette forms the centrepiece of the sadly, much neglected, Family and Shipyard
Memorial (which lists over 120 yard men killed during the war) now situated on the
wall of the Pumphouse, Thompson Dock, Titanic Quarter, Belfast. Edward is also
listed on the Sydenham Roll of Honour.
The Family and Shipyard Memorial as it once looked
The Memorial as it is now
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As noted in the early part of this document, only scant information is to hand about a
number of the Club Members. This not withstanding, the information available in this
short tribute offers an opportunity to pause and reflect on these seven members and
their sacrifices. Perhaps just like you, they too had busy lives, families and day-to-day
problems when they “answered the call”. Like so many others across both
communities in Ireland they set aside their respective and diametrically opposing
political aspirations to give their tomorrows so that you and I could have our todays.
Dedications
This document is dedicated to the everlasting memory of those members of the Club
who served their country and especially to those gave their lives in both World Wars.
Lest we forget.
It is also particularly dedicated and with the fondest of memories, to the late Frederick
Evan Orr, County Antrim Yacht Club Trustee and long-time member; also founder
member of the WIJOFA and a very dear friend who visited the Somme and Ypres
battlefields with the author, on so many memorable occasions.
Gone but not forgotten.
BM
2016