George Charles Halsey

Name

George Charles Halsey

Conflict

First World War

Date of Death / Age

08/07/1916
21

Rank, Service Number & Service Details

Lance Corporal
12974
Bedfordshire Regiment
7th Bn.

Awards: Service Medals/Honour Awards

1914 /15 Star, British War and Victory medals

Cemetery/Memorial: Name/Reference/Country

THIEPVAL MEMORIAL
Pier and Face 2C.
France

Headstone Inscription

Not Researched

UK & Other Memorials

Watford Borough Roll of Honour, St James' Church Memorial, Watford Fields, Not on the Bushey memorials

Pre War

Son of George Alfred and Elizabeth Mary (nee COTTRELL) HALSEY; husband of Elizabeth (nee QUICK) HALSEY.

His parents married 30 June 1894 at St Peter’s, Bushey Heath, Herts.  George died 1928 aged 65; Elizabeth died 1930 aged 65; both in the Watford district.

George was born 9 September 1894 in Bushey, and baptised 19 October 1894 at St Matthew’s, Oxhey, Herts.  He attended Callow Land Boys’ School, Watford, from 1 January to 11 October 1901; then Alexandra School, Watford, from 21 October 1901 to 11 June 1903.  He married 24 April 1915 at St Mary’s, Watford; they possibly had one child.  He resided in Watford.  Elizabeth never remarried and died 1975 in the Hillingdon, Middx, district aged 84.

On the 1901 Census, aged 6 he lived in Watford, with his parents and three siblings.  On the 1911 Census, a billiard marker aged 16, he still lived in Watford, with his parents and six siblings.

Wartime Service

He enlisted in Watford; was entitled to the Victory, British War and 1914-15 Star medals, his qualifying date being 12 August 1915, and was killed in action in the front line between Montauban-de-Picardie and Mametz when a machine-gun team of four was killed by a shell.  

Additional Information

There is an article about George in the West Herts and Watford Observer dated 29 July 1916; plus an In Memoriam in the issue dated 6 July 1918. His brother Frederick died 6 June 1915 and also features on Watford Borough Roll of Honour. Unfortunately, George’s Service Record appears to be one that did not survive the World War Two bombing.

Acknowledgments

Dianne Payne - www.busheyworldwarone.org.uk, Jonty Wild, Sue Carter (Research) and Watford Museum (ROH on line via www.ourwatfordhistory.org.uk)