Although the majority of my blogs usually involve men from the 3rd (Toronto) Battalion, I have a affinity to men from the 23rd Battalion as well. This could involve soldiers from the 3rd, 4th, 13th, 14th, and PPCLI Battalions.So it was with this in mind when I purchased and probably overpaid for the British War Medal of CSM George Edward Geary who was Killed In Action in the field July 8/9, 1916 while serving in the 4th (Central Ontario) Battalion. Subsequently while researching the man on Ancestry.ca I came across a post and medal photographs from Susan Carlisle who as it turned out, resides in Scotland. Susan and I exchanged communication and she kindly has authored the following details on George's life.
"George was born in 1884 in Bishop
Auckland, and grew up in Evenwood a few miles to the south west. He seems to have been an unsettled person. In 1901 he
was working as a coal miner, but shortly afterwards he
joined the merchant navy only to be invalided out a year later. He said that he
then served for a time in the Durham Light Infantry, but I have been unable to
prove this. I do know that in 1911 George was working as a contract miner near
Penrith, and that two years later he emigrated to Canada. By this time both of
his parents had died and his only near relation was a married sister in Bishop
Auckland, although he did have lots of cousins.
The 1914-15 Star and Victory medal awarded to CSM George Geary #63395, 4th Battalion |
The outbreak of the First
World War in August 1914 found George working as a clerk in Calgary, and he enlisted with the Canadian Army a few months later. It
is possible that he was homesick and saw this as a route home, because he named as his next-of-kin a non-relation in
Evenwood who could be a girlfriend. The Canadian volunteers were sent to
Salisbury Plain for training, where George was transferred into the Fourth Battalion (also known as the Central Ontario Regiment)
and started to move up the ranks. Then in 1915 George was given leave prior to
departing for active service in France, and set off for County Durham. I do not
know where he stayed; what I do know is that he visited a house in Chopwell. He
had been invited there by a man called Robert Smith, a coal miner who had
enlisted with the Medical Corps despite being a married man and in his late
thirties. Robert will also have had embarkation leave in 1915, and the family
story is that he ‘brought a Canadian home with him’. So George met Robert’s
daughter Margaret, and seems to have fallen in love with her.
CSM George Geary #63395 seated front along with Herbert Sutcliffe # 63835 |
George was a successful
soldier in that when he died he had reached the rank of Company Sergeant Major.
He was also posthumously awarded the Military Cross. The citation reads:
London Gazette, No. 29684, 27-7-16
‘For conspicuous and consistent gallantry when in charge of battalion bombers and when leading patrols. On one occasion he took up a position 25 yards in front of our trenches in order the better to knock out the enemy, and succeeded in doing so, although himself wounded’.
‘For conspicuous and consistent gallantry when in charge of battalion bombers and when leading patrols. On one occasion he took up a position 25 yards in front of our trenches in order the better to knock out the enemy, and succeeded in doing so, although himself wounded’.
And the
Military Cross was sent to Chopwell, because before he died George had adjusted
his record and made Margaret Smith his next-of-kin. The 1914-15 Star and the Victory
Medal followed after the Armistice.
George Edward Geary is
commemorated on the Menin Gate in Belgium. He is one of nearly 55,000 men who had
died in the Ypres Salient by August 1917 and have no known grave. He is also commemorated
in Chopwell on the plaque inside the Anglican Church, and could be the ‘G.E.Gray’
on the roadside memorial. I searched the North
East War Memorials website but could not find his name anywhere else. So it was
the Smith family who remembered him. If that
is what George had wanted, then he made the right decision when he changed the
name of his next-of-kin. Margaret Smith’s descendants still have his medals
today.
***NOTE***
George E. Geary arrived in Halifax, Canada July 21, 1913 from Liverpool, England on the vessel "S.S. Mongolian". Ship's manifest lists his occupation as a "miner" and destined for Stellerton, Nova Scotia, presumably the coal mines.
Excerpt from a letter published in the Halifax Courier August 27, 1915 from Private Herbert Sutcliffe #63835 referring to Company Sergeant-Major Geary
Sgt Major Geary is in command and seemed to have got it into his head that I was indispensable to the cause so thinking that my sphere of usefulness might be extended somewhat I had no objections except being loath to leave my companions. Geary is an original, serving first in the navy and the army, he then turned his hand to mining. He is something of a philosopher, and we have many discussions in the dug-out. I am general factotum to this gentleman.
Excerpt from a letter published in the Halifax Courier November 30, 1915 from Private Herbert Sutcliffe #63835 referring to Company Sergeant-Major Geary
I am sorry to say that Sgt. Maj. Geary is at present placed hors de combat with shrapnel wounds. As a result, I am now in charge of the rifle grenade department. The Sgt.Maj. is in England, he wrote me from Boulogne, saying although he had about 50 shrapnel wounds, only four were very bad.
Excerpt from a Letter published in the Halifax Courier June 26, 1916 from Private Herbert Sutcliffe #63835 referring to Company Sergeant-Major Geary
***NOTE***
George E. Geary arrived in Halifax, Canada July 21, 1913 from Liverpool, England on the vessel "S.S. Mongolian". Ship's manifest lists his occupation as a "miner" and destined for Stellerton, Nova Scotia, presumably the coal mines.
S.S. Mongolian, Allan Steamship Lines, Montreal |
Excerpt from a letter published in the Halifax Courier August 27, 1915 from Private Herbert Sutcliffe #63835 referring to Company Sergeant-Major Geary
Sgt Major Geary is in command and seemed to have got it into his head that I was indispensable to the cause so thinking that my sphere of usefulness might be extended somewhat I had no objections except being loath to leave my companions. Geary is an original, serving first in the navy and the army, he then turned his hand to mining. He is something of a philosopher, and we have many discussions in the dug-out. I am general factotum to this gentleman.
Excerpt from a letter published in the Halifax Courier November 30, 1915 from Private Herbert Sutcliffe #63835 referring to Company Sergeant-Major Geary
I am sorry to say that Sgt. Maj. Geary is at present placed hors de combat with shrapnel wounds. As a result, I am now in charge of the rifle grenade department. The Sgt.Maj. is in England, he wrote me from Boulogne, saying although he had about 50 shrapnel wounds, only four were very bad.
Excerpt from a Letter published in the Halifax Courier June 26, 1916 from Private Herbert Sutcliffe #63835 referring to Company Sergeant-Major Geary
We of the Grenade section held ourselves in readiness to repel counterĂ¯·“attacks. We lay in our trench soaked through and through with the pitiless downpour of rain, shivering with cold and pelted with heavies, high explosives and shrapnel, envying the men who were in the charge, for they at least could keep themselves warm. We were all heavily laden with grenades, shovels and sandbags, ready for any emergency. At daybreak German prisoners began to come down, survivors from that hail of fire, most of them youths of 17 or 18 years, some carrying wounded comrades on their backs and otherwise propping each other along. Two stalwarts were carrying out their officer while others carried our own wounded.
Military Cross awarded to CSM G.E. Geary, #63395 by "The King" |
CSM George Geary, 4th Battalion name on the Menin Gate Memorial, Ypres |
According to the medal card in George Geary's service file, in addition to the BWM, Victory and 1914-15 Star medals which were mailed to fiance Margaret Smith, a Memorial Plaque and Scroll in 1922 and 1921 respectively. No Memorial Cross was issued.
While the Battalion War Diary does not specifically mention the death of George Geary, it has a very comprehensive detailed account of the attack late evening July 8, 1916 and early morning July 9 Mount Sorrel trenches whgich also involved the 3rd (Toronto) Battalion HERE.http://data4.collectionscanada.ca/netacgi/nph-brs?s1=4th+battalion&s13=&s12=&l=20&s9=RG9&s7=9-52&Sect1=IMAGE&Sect2=THESOFF&Sect4=AND&Sect5=WARDPEN&Sect6=HITOFF&d=FIND&p=1&u=http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/archivianet/02015202_e.html&r=1&f=G
Also a big thanks to Susan Carlisle, Scotland for sharing her profile on George Geary and photographs of his medals.
Thanks to CEF Study Group member Marc Tremblay for allowing me to reunite the Plaque with the British War Medal.