Monday, December 9, 2013

Armistice brought fighting to an end


Armistice brought fighting to an end but not the family losses.


The Armistice signed on 11th November, 1918 brought the fighting of the Great War to an end (except in East Africa where it continued for several more days). The joy for some at home however was often shattered by the continuing receipt of news that a loved one had died of wounds or was discovered to have died in a prisoner of war camp.

In addition, the poor state of health of many who had served in the war, brought on by the conditions in the battlefields, meant that many men succumbed to general illness. We do not know when Lieutenant George Frederick Ball was sent to Ireland at Balla, County Mayo, when he died in December, 1918 serving with the 2nd/1st Highland Cyclist battalion but many troops had been deployed to Ireland in the wake of the continuing political agitation and disorder surrounding the campaign by nationalists for separation from the United Kingdom.

The Shields Daily News announced on 10th December, 1918 that George Ball, who was the younger son of Henry and Mary Ball, of 3 Milton Terrace, North Shields, and Lately Assistant Scout Master of the Christ Church Troop Boy Scouts would be interred at Preston Cemetery that week.

The Tynemouth Parish Church Monthly Magazine in January 1919, noted in its IN MEMORIAM. Section ‘Our sympathy goes out to the relatives of three of our promising young men, who have given their lives as part of the toll exacted by the War... Dec. 6th brought the news of the death in Ireland from pleurisy of 2nd Lieut. Geo. F. Ball, our Assistant Scoutmaster, who was exceptionally keen in all that he undertook. We shall miss them all tremendously, and to the relatives of each we offer our deepest sympathy. The friends of Geo. Ball had the melancholy satisfaction of a military funeral here at home, which was attended by a large number of Scouts’.

George Ball had attended Tynemouth High School and is remembered in the school’s Record of Service compiled by the Headmaster, Wallace Heaton who knew every pupil who served in the war and followed their lives during the war. (The school opened in 1904, and of 381 former pupils who were known by Heaton to have served in military or naval service, some 69 had died on active service or through war related causes).

Ball is named on several memorials including on the Honour Boards of the High School – now part of the Queen Alexandra Sixth Form College, on the bronze tablets set into the school gates (one of which was stolen in 2010), and on the Pulpit in Christ Church which carries the names of members of the parish who were regular attenders at the church before enlistment. His parents at least had the comfort denied to most of being allowed to repatriate his body for burial in Preston Cemetery (picture).
The toll of deaths from war related causes would continue for years to come and the last death recorded in the Tynemouth Roll of Honour is for a man who died in July, 1921 – just two months before the last qualifying date for the grant of an Imperial (now Commonwealth) War Graves Commission headstone.