Pte
Ernest Elias Cartner

Informations sur naissance

Année de naissance:
1898
Lieu de naissance:
Egremont, Cumberland, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni

Informations générales

Profession:
Apprenti boucher

Informations service militaire

Pays:
Angleterre, Royaume-Uni
Force armée:
British Expeditionary Force
Rang:
Private
Numéro de service:
244809
Unités:
 —  Loyal North Lancashire Regiment, 4/5th Bn.  (Dernière unité connue)

Informations sur décès

Date de décès:
26/10/1917
Lieu de décès:
Van Dyck Farm, Belgique
Cause du décès:
Killed in action (K.I.A.)
Âge:
19

Mémorial

Tyne Cot Memorial
Panneau: 103

Distinctions et médailles 2

British War Medal
Médaille — 15/10/1920
Victory Medal
Médaille — 15/10/1920

Points d'intérêt 1

#1 Lieu de naissance

Mon histoire

Ernest Elias Cartner, son of James and Elizabeth Cartner, was born in 1898 in Egremont, Cumberland. After school, Ernest took up an apprenticeship to learn to become a butcher. This all changed however when, in 1916, he was conscripted into the British Army. Ernest served as a Private with the 4/5th Battalion of the Loyal North Lancashire Regiment, in the 170th brigade of the 57th (2nd West Lancashire) Division.

On the 23rd and 24th October 1917, Ernest’s Division was stationed on the front line between the Houthulst Forest and the ruins of Poelkapelle. An attack took place along the front from Ypres-Roulers railway to Poelkapelle on the 26th October and the Loyal North Lancashire Regiment was involved, advancing towards the hamlet of Schaap-Balie. The attack began at 5.40am, and despite the boggy ground and the heavy fire from pill boxes and German snipers, the Battalion made it short of its first objective, capturing a pillbox at Van Dyck Farm.

Any further progress was however impossible, and the men had to lie low in waterlogged shell holes, to escape the sweeping machine-gun fire. Shellfire rained down on their new positions and although the 4/5th Loyal North was able to fend off a small German counter-attack, coming from Davoust Farm, the situation of the Battalion became dire. Any movement was answered with machine-gun fire, making it difficult to retreat or to maintain communication. The 4/5th Loyal North had no other option then to wait until they could pull back under cover of darkness.

Ernest’s battalion faced heavy casualties that day. The barely 19-year old was one of the soldiers who was possibly killed during the fighting at Van Dyck Farm. Ernest has no known grave, as most of the dead were left behind in no man’s land, when the Battalion withdrew. The young man is remembered on the Tyne Cot Memorial.

Fichiers 1

Sources 5

"Passchendaele. The Day-by-Day Account", McCarthy C., London, Uniform, 2018, pg. 148-149.
Sources utilisées
Ancestry
https://www.ancestry.com
Autre référence
CWGC
https://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/1628241/cartner,-ernest-elias/
Sources utilisées
The Long, Long Trail
https://www.longlongtrail.co.uk/
Sources utilisées
War Diary Loyal North Lancashire Regiment, 4/5th Bn.
http://www.nmarchive.com/
Autre référence