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Nothing is truly Gone until it is Forgotten
Number 10418 : Private James Lock 2nd Battalion Hampshire Regiment

Military Citation GALLIPOLI
Number 10418 : Private James Lock 2nd Battalion Hampshire Regiment

Took part in Gallipoli landings with 2nd Battalion Hampshires. 29th Division, 89th Brigade.

Went out on ‘KING EDWARD’, later sunk in landing Landed SULVA BAY

About six hours before got off beach. Held up mainly by machine gun fire - no cover from fire. Captain DAY, Platoon Commander killed. Second in command Corporal BRIGHT killed. Senior soldier took over section. Eventually pushed into hills towards ACHI BABA. Dug in as much as possible with entrenching tool and use of captured enemy trenches. There was barbed wire. Existed on iron rations. Turks counter attacked the first night, but were driven off. Lock himself was in the reserve section. Gradually re-organised and after 3 weeks Lock was wounded by machine gun fire in hip and head. Evacuated to Egypt and then to the UK on Hospital Ship ASTURIAS.

Summary of Press reports dated 1915

JAMES LOCK : SECOND HAMPSHIRE REGIMENT


SOLDIER AT 15

Among the soldiers landing in Gallipoli in May 1915 was a 15 year-old boy named James Lock and it was not until he had been wounded several times and sent back to England that ‘the authorities’ learned that their eager young recruit who had volunteered at the outbreak of the First World War was not 18 years old, as he had said, but a boy of 14 who had just left school. Lock came of a ‘soldiering family’ was determined to become a soldier himself and as soon as he had left school at 14 badgered his mother to write to the officer commanding the regiment in which his late father had served, asking to be allowed to join as a boy member of the band. His mother agreed to do this but in the meantime Lock could not contain his impatience. Without waiting for the promised ‘first vacancy’ in the band, he presented himself at the Hampshire recruiting centre and gave his age as 18. As Lock was 5’8” tall without his shoes, the harassed recruiting officer was easily deceived and Lock was soon training on the Isle of Wight.

He reveled in shooting practice and eventually qualified as the crack shot of the company, earning an extra sixpence per day as a qualified marksman. He spent three months on the Island, was to have been sent to the Western Front in France but at the last moment was drafted to the Second Hampshires in Gallipoli, now aged 15.

A quaintly worded report of his story at the time says that” his mother debated whether it would be wise to let so young a boy to go to face the difficulties which it was known older men had to encounter in Gallipoli” - something of an understatement : but Lock had not done a man’s training for nothing and went out in May with the force which landed at Suvla bay, and two hours after landing, with a large number of his comrades still on board, his Troopship, the ’King Edward’ was torpedoed and sunk

The position taken up by the force to which Lock was attached was found to be untenable and they re-embarked to go further down the Peninsula. They arrived off the coast near Achi Baba and went ashore at night to move into the trenches. Of this manoevre Lock said, in 1915, “We were aboard ship in the evening, and next morning we were defending the first line trenches. Had to land at night because of the shelling in the day time”.

His force returned to Suvla Bay for another landing : “It was just a case of tumbling overboard into the mud and wading ashore as best we could. Full kit, of course. We got some way inland before they spotted us, and then the fun began”. Later they returned to Achi Baba. This was a disastrous battle for the 2nd Hampshires and their losses were heavy. Lock was wounded six times by shrapnel and had a bullet from a Turkish sniper struck him behind the right ear. Along with other wounded he was shipped to Alexandria where he remained for two days before being sent on to England. Here the bullet (eventually made into a broach for his mother) was finally extracted. Lock’s mother this time put her foot down and let the authorities know how old he was. In fact, her soldier son was faced with the anomaly of a boy drawing a man’s pay they discharged him

Lock was still anxious ‘to do his bit’ until he could join up again at 18, he worked at the Army stables at Chilcombe. His exploit is more amazing in that, as a child, he had undergone numerous operations to cure a spine curvature and at one stage doctors had declared that he would always be deformed. Fortunately they were proved wrong.

Footnote: James Lock died peacefully in The Royal Hospital Chelsea as a Chelsea Pensioner in 1977 aged 77

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Meredith's 37th Regiment Foot. The Royal Hampshire Regiment Articles catalogue

Electronic vending machines have become an icon of many commercial establishments. Early of 1880s, the first coin operated Vending Machines were invented in London. They were postcards vending machines.

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