The Great Wooster Tree


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Matches 701 to 750 of 2,599

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701 Cemetery Section: S04, Grave Number: 38781 Wooster, Rene Hilda (I1836663)
 
702 Cemetery Section: Section A, Grave Number: 1629, Interment Number: 510
 
Wooster, Frederick John (I607679)
 
703 Cemetery Section:C11, Grave Number:63983 Worster, William Alfred (I15)
 
704 Cemetery Section:Ground B Division New Cemetery, Grave Number:20 Hh Wooster, Thomas Frederick (I1245139)
 
705 Cemetery Section:Ground B Division New Cemetery, Grave Number:20 Hh Bambrook, Edith Emma (I1245146)
 
706 Cemetery Section:Ground B Division New Cemetery, Grave Number:20 Hh Wooster, Vera May (I1245149)
 
707 Cemetery/memorial reference: II. E. 5 Worster, Captain Alexander Frederick (I496)
 
708 Cemetery/memorial reference: Panel 17. Worster, Donald Edward (I497)
 
709 Charles and his younger brother Edward, both died as civilians in WWII. I am not sure if it was fact or fiction but one of the brothers took shelter during a bombing raid underneath the stair case in his house. When found he had no wounds but had died from gas leaking from the ruptured gas pipe located under the stairs. The other brother was killed by a device hanging from a small parachute caught on a lamp post. I don't know what happened but the device exploded and allegedly took his head off. Possibly true or a good tale. Wooster, Edward J (I108796)
 
710 Charles and his younger brother Edward, both died as civilians in WWII. I am not sure if it was fact or fiction but one of the brothers took shelter during a bombing raid underneath the stair case in his house. When found he had no wounds but had died from gas leaking from the ruptured gas pipe located under the stairs. The other brother was killed by a device hanging from a small parachute caught on a lamp post. I don't know what happened but the device exploded and allegedly took his head off. Possibly true or a good tale. Wooster, Charles Philip (I108769)
 
711 Charles IVES, 23, Bachelor of Alscott, Carter son of William Ives, Farm Labourer
Alice WALKER, 24, Spinster of Longwick daughter of Joseph Walker, Ag.Lab. decd.((
 
Family: Charles Ives / Alice Walker (F164024)
 
712 Charlotte was the daughter of Matilda Gulliver and Joseph Potter and the step-daughter of Thomas Wooster. She was Christened as Charlotte Rebecca Potter. She is recorded on the 1851, 1861 and 1871 census as Charlotte Wooster and may well have used Wooster as her surname throughout her life. Wooster, Charlotte Rebecca (I1110)
 
713 Christened as Alice Mary Wooster-Carter Wooster, Alice Mary (I1908790)
 
714 Christened as Catherine Wooster Wooster, Kathleen (I02482)
 
715 Christened George John Wooster we believe this to be the man known as George William Wooster. He used the middle name William when he married and was recorded as George William Wooster on his death record. Wooster, George John (I1125520)
 
716 Christened George Ramsey Barnes. His mother was Eva Louisa Barnes and there was no father on the baptism record. However, his mother married William J Ramsey in 1900. Ramsey, George Barnes (I108751)
 
717 Christened Heine John Arthur Gort Gort, John Arthur (I1751470)
 
718 Christened Woster Worster, William (I37)
 
719 Christened Woster Worster, Thomas (I38)
 
720 Clara must have been an infant death since her parents named a younger sister Clara, born in 1884. There are other infants called Clara Phillips who died in London in this timeframe, but this is geographically the best fit and therefore the most likely. Phillips, Clara (I1278966)
 
721 Clara Stimpson (a widow) formerly Knight daughter of William Knight.
He was 26 a Bachelor whose occupation was a "Carman" He was living at 23 Brook St. Hammersmith at the time of the marriage. She was 22 and a widow.
 
Family: William John Wooster / Clara Knight (F00771)
 
722 Clarence GOMME, aged 24, Bachelor of Lacey Green, Soldier son of John Gomme, Engineer, deceased
Florence Louisa IVES, aged 24, Spinster of Princes Risborough daughter of Joseph Ives, Labourer, deceased
 
Family: Clarence Gomme / Florence Louisa Ives (F164018)
 
723 Col C, Row 5, Plot 91 Milliken, Thomas Millar (I1348926)
 
724 Col C, Row 5, Plot 92 Wooster, Alice Ellen (I90)
 
725 Commemorated at Singapore Memorial, Singapore Craddock, George William (I1498911)
 
726 Commonwealth War Graves Commission
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Casualty Details
Name: CLIPSON, ARTHUR LASCELLES
Initials: A L
Nationality: United Kingdom
Rank: Sergeant (Pilot)
Regiment: Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve
Age: 20
Date of Death: 09/03/1942
Service No: 1314119
Additional information: Son of Arthur Frederick and Edith Elsie Clipson, of Barnes.
Casualty Type: Commonwealth War Dead
Grave/Memorial Reference: Sec. G. Grave 576.
Cemetery: BARNES (EAST SHEEN) CEMETERY 
Clipson, Arthur Lascelles (I00003)
 
727 Commonwealth War Graves Commission
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Debt of Honour Register
In Memory of

ARTHUR DAVID FRYER

Flight Sergeant
430750
Royal Australian Air Force

who died on
Saturday 4 November 1944 . Age 20 .

Additional Information: Son of David and Madeline Lily Fryer, of Dubbo, New South Wales, Australia.
Cemetery: REICHSWALD FOREST WAR CEMETERYKleve, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany
Grave or Reference Panel Number: 13. B. 13.
Location: The cemetery is 5 kilometres south west of Kleve. From Kleve take the Hoffmannallee from the town centre, which becomes the Materbornerallee. This road enters Reichswald Forest and becomes the Grunewaldstrasse. Follow the directions for Gennep, and on entering Reichswald Forest the cemetery is situated 500 metres on the left.
Historical Information: Reichswald Forest War Cemetery was created after the Second World War when burials were brought in from all over western Germany and is the largest Commonwealth cemetery in the country. Some of those members of the land forces buried there died in the advance through Reichswald Forest in February 1945. Others died crossing the Rhine, among them members of the airborne forces whose bodies were brought from Hamminkeln, where landings were made by the 6th Airborne Division from bases in England. Some of the airmen buried in the cemetery lost their lives in supporting the advance into Germany, but most died earlier in the war in the intensive air attacks over Germany. Their graves were brought in from cemeteries and isolated sites in the surrounding area. There are now 7,416 Commonwealth servicemen of the Second World War buried or commemorated in the cemetery. 161 of the burials are unidentified. There are also 79 war graves of other nationalities, most of them Polish.

Note from Lesley Dimmock
--------------------------------------------
Name on war memorial in St Clemens Church, UK 
Fryer, Arthur David (I01793)
 
728 Commonwealth War Graves Commission
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In Memory of
THOMAS WILLIAM CLARK
Stoker 1st Class
K/9966
H.M.S. "Hawke.", Royal Navy
who died on
Thursday, 15th October 1914. Age 23.
Additional Information: Son of Thomas William and Mary Clark, of 9, Eastfield St., Stepney, London.

Commemorative Information
Memorial: CHATHAM NAVAL MEMORIAL, Kent, United Kingdom
Grave Reference/
Panel Number: 4.

Location: The Memorial overlooks the town of Chatham and is approached by a steep path from the Town Hall Gardens.
 
Clark, Thomas William (I01122)
 
729 Commonwealth War Graves Commission
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In memory of
J G CLARK
Private
20371
1st Bn., Dorsetshire Regiment
who died on
Tuesday, 26th March 1918.

Commemorative Information
Cemetery: CANADA FARM CEMETERY, ELVERDINGHE, Ieper, West-Vlaanderen, Belgium
Grave Reference/
Panel Number: III. H. 10.

Location: Canada Farm Cemetery is located 8.5 kilometres north-west of Ieper town centre, on the Elzendammestraat, a road leading from the Veurnseweg (N8) connecting Ieper to Elverdinge and on to Veurne. From Ieper town centre the Veurnseweg (N8) is reached via Elverdingsestraat, then turning right onto Haiglaan. Veurnseweg is a continuation of Haiglaan. On reaching the village of Elverdinge the Steentjesmolenstraat, N333, leads towards Poperinge. 2 kilometres along the Steentjesmolenstraat lies the right hand turning onto Elzendammestraat. The cemetery itself is located 1 kilometre along the Elzendammestraat on the right hand side of the road.

Historical Information: Canada Farm was the name given to a farm house 800 metres South-West of the Poperinghe-Woesten road. The farm was used as a Dressing Station during the operations known as the Flanders Offensive, which lasted from June to October 1917; and Plots I and II of the Cemetery and the greater part of Plot III contain the graves of men who fell in that advance and died at the Farm. There are now over 900, 1914-18 war casualties commemorated in this site. The Cemetery covers an area of 3,422 square metres. 
Clark, James George (I01127)
 
730 Commonwealth War Graves Commission, Source Medium: Other
Source (S00007)
 
731 Commonwelath War Graves Commission
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Debt of Honour Register
In Memory of

KENNETH JAMES FRYER

Telegraphist
23888
H.M.A.S. Sydney, Royal Australian Navy

who died on
Thursday 20 November 1941 . Age 22 .

Additional Information: Son of David and Madeline Lily Fryer, of Dubbo, New South Wales, Australia.
Cemetery: PLYMOUTH NAVAL MEMORIALDevon, United Kingdom
Grave or Reference Panel Number: Panel 57, Column 2.
Location: The Memorial is situated centrally on The Hoe which looks directly towards Plymouth Sound. It is accessible at all times.
Visiting Information: Copies of the Memorial Register are kept at the Tourist Information Office at Island House, 9 The Barbican, Plymouth, PL1 2LS, and also in the Naval Historical Section at Plymouth Library.
Historical Information: After the First World War, an appropriate way had to be found of commemorating those members of the Royal Navy who had no known grave, the majority of deaths having occurred at sea where no permanent memorial could be provided. An Admiralty committee recommended that the three manning ports in Great Britain - Chatham, Plymouth and Portsmouth - should each have an identical memorial of unmistakable naval form, an obelisk, which would serve as a leading mark for shipping. The memorials were designed by Sir Robert Lorimer, who had already carried out a considerable amount of work for the Commission, with sculpture by Henry Poole. After the Second World War it was decided that the naval memorials should be extended to provide space for commemorating the naval dead without graves of that war, but since the three sites were dissimilar, a different architectural treatment was required for each. The architect for the Second World War extension at Plymouth was Sir Edward Maufe (who also designed the Air Forces memorial at Runnymede) and the additional sculpture was by Charles Wheeler and William McMillan. In addition to commemorating seamen of the Royal Navy who sailed from Plymouth, the First World War panels also bears the names of sailors from Australia and South Africa; the governments of the other Commonwealth nations chose to commemorate their dead elsewhere, for the most part on memorials in their home ports. After the Second World War, Canada and New Zealand again chose commemoration at home, but the memorial at Plymouth commemorates sailors from all other parts of the Commonwealth. Plymouth Naval Memorial commemorates more than 7,000 sailors of the First World War and almost 16,000 from the Second World War. 
Fryer, Kenneth James (I01792)
 
732 Constance re-married to Herbert Tolley in 1932 Parry, Constance Muriel (I50)
 
733 Could be 10th Jan. The newspaper report doesn't give a date but quotes "last Thursday". Family: Alfred Nelson Brown / Elsie Shaw (F543077)
 
734 Could be 10th Jan. The newspaper report doesn't give a date but quotes "last Thursday".  
735 Could these be the same couple as on the Miscellaneous tree? i.e. Ann's name was Sicker? The timing is right but the geography doesn't look right.
Richard and Ann on the Misc tree 
Worster, Richard (I3)
 
736 Could these be the same couple as on the Miscellaneous tree? i.e. Ann's name was Sicker? The timing is right but the geography doesn't look right.
Richard and Ann on the Misc tree 
Unknown, Ann (I4)
 
737 Could this Richard and Ann be the same ones at the head of the Edward Worster Tree? The timing is right for their son Edward to be born in 1760, but the geography doesn't look right.
Richard and Ann 
Sicker, Ann (I2469)
 
738 Could this Richard and Ann be the same ones at the head of the Edward Worster Tree? The timing is right for their son Edward to be born in 1760, but the geography doesn't look right.
Richard and Ann 
Worster, Richard (I2468)
 
739 Crematorium B, Position 0151 Smith, Albert Edwin (I1917935)
 
740 Crematorium B, Position 0151 Beard, Ruby Florence (I1742691)
 
741 Crematorium Rose Gardens-Wall L-0049 Bousley, Henry (I1131)
 
742 Crematorium Rose Gardens-Wall L-0049 Bousley, Henry (I1131)
 
743 Crematorium Rose Gardens-Wall O-0301 Rule, Horace Richard (I1379)
 
744 Date may be incorrect as the document is difficult to read. Also, it may be the departure date rather than the arrival date. Wooster, George Horace (I1980142)
 
745 Date may be incorrect as the document is difficult to read. Also, it may be the departure date rather than the arrival date. Walker, Catherine Martha (I1980143)
 
746 Date may be the interment date Beazley, Vida (I1011)
 
747 Date partly obscured on baptism record. Either 8th, 18th or 28th. Worster, Alice (I789)
 
748 Dates on gravestone are one year early Worcester, Wilfred Verne (I75)
 
749 Daughter of Alexander Eyles and Hannah Catterall Eyles, Annie Winifred (I46915)
 
750 Daughter of Edward and Lydia Gilbert Gilbert, Millicent Mary (I22634)
 

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