2nd Lt
Donald James Beavon

Informations sur naissance

Date de naissance:
16/09/1888
Lieu de naissance:
Bow, Middlesex, Angleterre, Royaume-Uni

Informations générales

Profession:
Commis au commerce de céréales

Informations service militaire

Pays:
Angleterre, Royaume-Uni
Force armée:
British Expeditionary Force
Rang:
Second Lieutenant
Numéro de service:
/
Unités:
 —  Gloucestershire Regiment, 1/4th Bn. (City of Bristol)  (Dernière unité connue)

Informations sur décès

Date de décès:
27/08/1917
Lieu de décès:
Keerselare - Springfield Farm, Belgique
Cause du décès:
Killed in action (K.I.A.)
Âge:
28

Mémorial

Tyne Cot Memorial
Panneau: 72

Points d'intérêt 1

#1 Lieu de naissance

Mon histoire

Donald James Beavon was born in 1888 in Bow, Middlesex. He was the second son of Alice Maud and Alfred Beavon. His father was a merchant in fancy goods & musical instrument, while Donald worked as a clerk in the corn trade. Early 1914 he married 24-year old Jessie Sarah Metcalfe. At the time of the Battle of Passchendaele Donald had enlisted and served as a Second Lieutenant with the 2nd Battalion Gloucestershire Regiment, 1/4th Bn. (City of Bristol), part of the 144th Brigade of the 48th (South Midland) Division.

On 22 August 1917 Donald’s Battalion was relieved in the frontline along the Steenbeek stream. And while the 144th Brigade attacked German positions along near the road junction at Keerselare on the 27th the 1/4th Gloucestershires moved to a camp near Poperinge.

On the 27th the 144th Brigade advanced with the 1/7th and 1/8th Worchestershires. The going was tough as the terrain had been shaped into a quagmire. Not much headway could be made and the 1/8th Worcestershires struggled to capture the concrete emplacements at Springfield Farm. Which only fell to the Worcestershires after nightfall.

The 1/7th Worcestershires on the left were held up at Vancouver near the road junction. Machine-gun fire from Vieilles Maisons made any progress neigh to impossible and the Battalion dug in to the west and the north of Vancouver. While the attack was on the way the German artillery heavily shelled the line at the Steenbeek stream and in the neighborhood of Maison du Hibou, where the Headquarters of both Worcestershire Battalions were.

Second Lieutenant Donald James Beavon was killed on 27 August 1917. He has no known grave and is remembered on the Tyne Cot Memorial.

Fichiers 1

Sources 6

"Passchendaele. The Day-by-Day Account", McCarthy C., London, Uniform, 2018, pg. 66-67.
Sources utilisées
Ancestry
https://www.ancestry.com/
Autre référence
CWGC
https://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/844476/beavon,-donald-james/
Sources utilisées
The Long, Long Trail
https://www.longlongtrail.co.uk/army/
Sources utilisées
War Diary 144th Bde.
http://www.nmarchive.com/
Autre référence
War Diary Gloucestershire Regiment, 1/4th Bn. (City of Bristol)
http://www.nmarchive.com/
Autre référence