Born in 1881 in Harrogate, Yorkshire, the son Charles
Edward, a Solicitor's Clerk, & Marian Elizabeth (nee Booth). Obituary From a letter from Lieut. R.C. Fielding, Civil Service Rifles, we learn with deep regret that Lieut. Lascelles, the announcement of whose death appeared in our last issue, was killed in action on September 1st, 1918. He lost his life while gallantly leading his Company to the attack against a strong enemy position, and in the face of heavy rifle and machine-gun fire, death being instantaneous. It is a meancholy consolation to know that the attack in which he was killed was entirley successful. [The Londoner magazine, Mar 1919 - V.III, No.3 pg.83.]
Name: |
Edward Rowley Lascelles |
Death Date: |
2 Sep 1918 |
Rank: |
Lieutenant |
Regiment: |
London Regiment |
Battalion: |
25th (County of London) Battalion (Cyclist) |
Type of Casualty: |
Killed in action |
[Soldiers Died in the Great War, 1914-1919]
In Memory of
Lieutenant Edward Rowley LASCELLES
25th Bn., London Regiment (Cyclists)
who died age 37 on 02 September 1918
Husband of Maud Mary Lascelles, of 56, Forest Rd., Kew, Surrey.
Remembered with honour Hem Farm Military Cemetery,
Hem-Monacu, Grave Ref. I. A. 9.
Commemorated in perpetuity by
the Commonwealth War Graves Commission
Hem Farm Military Cemetery, Hem-Monacu
Hem-Monacu was captured by French troops in the
Battles of the
Somme
1916, and taken over by British troops later in the year.
Hem
Farm
Military
Cemetery
was begun by British troops in January 1917, and used until the following
March, and again in September 1918; and these graves now form part of Plot
I, Rows E, F and G. It was greatly enlarged after the Armistice by the
addition of graves from the battlefields on both sides of the Somme and
from the following smaller cemeteries:- ACHILLE BRITISH CEMETERY,
FLAUCOURT, on a trench named Achille Alley, about 1 kilometre East of
Flaucourt. This cemetery, begun by French troops, was continued in
February and March, 1917, by units of the 48th (South Midland) Division,
and contained the graves of 55 soldiers from the
United Kingdom
.
CLERY-SUR-SOMME
FRENCH
MILITARY
CEMETERY
, near the road to Marrieres Wood, where seven soldiers from the
United Kingdom
and one from
Canada
were buried in January-March 1917 (the present
French
National
Cemetery
is on the Maricourt road).
CLERY-SUR-SOMME
GERMAN
MILITARY
CEMETERY
, midway between Hem and Clery, which contained the graves of two R.A.F.
Officers.
CURLU
FRENCH
MILITARY
CEMETERY
, midway between Curlu and Hem Farm. Curlu was captured by the French on
the 1st July 1916, and again by the 3rd Australian Division on the 28th
August 1918, and the cemetery contained the graves of 46 Australian
soldiers who fell in August and September 1918, and seven from the
United Kingdom
, all but one of whom fell in the same months. Thirty-two of these graves
were taken to Hem Farm and 21 to Suzanne Military Cemetery No.3.
FEUILLERES
BRITISH
CEMETERY
, in the South part of the village, which contained the graves of 27
Australian soldiers who fell in August and September 1918.
FRISE
FRENCH
MILITARY
CEMETERY
, FEUILLERES, on the South bank of the Canal, midway between the two
villages, in which one soldier from the
United Kingdom
was buried in April 1917.
MEUDON
BRITISH
CEMETERY
, FLAUCOURT (also known as
Meudon
Quarry
Cemetery
), near the North-East corner of Meudon Wood. This cemetery was made by
the 1st Division in February and March 1917, and contained the graves of
22 soldiers from the
United Kingdom
.
NEEDLE
WOOD
CEMETERY
, CLERY-SUR-SOMME (also known as
Andover Place
) between Clery and Rancourt, which contained the graves of 18 soldiers
from the
United Kingdom
who fell in the winter of 1916-17. There are now nearly 600, 1914-18 war
casualties commemorated in this site. Of these, one-third are unidentified
and a special memorial is erected to one soldier from the
United Kingdom
, believed to be buried among them. Another special memorial records the
name of a soldier from the
United Kingdom
, buried in
Clery-sur-Somme
French
Military
Cemetery
, whose grave was destroyed by shell fire. The cemetery covers an area of
2,198 square metres and is enclosed by a red brick wall.
Monacu and Hem-Monacu are two villages about 13
kilometres south-east of Albert, a little south of the road from Albert to
Peronne and north of the River Somme.
Hem
Farm
Military
Cemetery
lies to the west of the
village
of
Hem
. 16 kilometres from Albert on the D938 (Albert-Peronne), turn south on to
the D146 to Hem-Monacu. After 500 metres turn west onto the D1 to Curlu.
Continue for 1.2 kilometres and then turn south.
Hem
Farm
Military
Cemetery
can be seen next to a large farmhouse 300 metres down this road.
[Courtesy of
Commonwealth War Graves Commission]
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