Frederick William Puddefoot

Name

Frederick William Puddefoot

Conflict

First World War

Date of Death / Age

09/04/1918
28

Rank, Service Number & Service Details

Gunner
230281
Royal Field Artillery
“B” Battery, 95th Brigade

Awards: Service Medals/Honour Awards

British War and Victory medals

Cemetery/Memorial: Name/Reference/Country

RIBEMONT COMMUNAL CEMETERY EXTENSION, SOMME
II. C. 5.
France

Headstone Inscription

NOT GONE FROM MEMORY NOT GONE FROM LOVE BUT TO HIS FATHER'S HOME ABOVE

UK & Other Memorials

Abbots Langley Village Memorial, Church of Ascension Memorial, Bedmond

Biography

Frederick William was born in 1890 in Bedmond, Abbots Langley, to William Puddifoot, gardeners’ labourer and Elizabeth (nee Bunker). The family were living at Bell Meadow, Bedmond. There were 8 sisters but only one son. On the 1901 Census the family were living at Bell Field, Bedmond. On the 1911 census Frederick was employed as a gardeners’ labourer and was the only sibling living with his parents at Bell Field. Frederick married Lilian M G Surridge in 1913 and there was a son, Stanley William, born 1913 and a daughter, Gwendoline Lily born 1916.


Frederick was recorded as Gunner 230281 in the Royal Field Artillery. There are no service record available. (In many records variations of the family surname spelling occur). His unit as recorded at his death was B Battery XCV (95) Brigade RFA, a howitzer battery which attached to 21 Division. March/April 1918 was the period of the German Spring Offensive when considerable advances were made. Fredrick is reported to have Died of Wounds on 9 Apr 1918.


Frederick was first recorded in the Abbots Langley Parish Magazine Roll of Honour in June 1916, serving with the Army Veterinary Corps (AVC), having joined up earlier in April of that year. He went to France in November 1917, and by January 1918 was serving with the Royal Field Artillery (RFA). It is not known when he transferred from the AVC.


On 21st March 1918 the Germans launched their Spring Offensive, and after a surprise attack pushed back the British Front Line 40 miles in the following weeks. Frederick was killed in action on 9th April 1918 during one of the defensive actions along the path of the retreat.
The Abbots Langley Parish Magazine reported Frederick’s death in May 1918: “Frederick William Puddefoot, R.F.A, of Bedmond, was killed in action in France on April 9th. He leaves a wife and two little children, with whom and for whom all will feel real sorrow”.


His death was also reported in the Hertfordshire Advertiser on 1st June 1918: “Gunner F.Puddifoot (sic), of the RFA, who in civil life, lived and worked at Gotshouse Farm, Ardleigh, was killed in action on April 9th. He was 28 years of age, and was born at Bedmond. A Corporal writes of him "He had done very good work during this push and he is very much missed by us all’. Gunner Puddifoot (sic) joined up in April 1916, and he had been in France since November of last year (1917). He leaves a widow and two children. Lieutenant Tomlin writes ‘He was struck in the chest by a shell splinter, death being instantaneous. We miss a companion whose cheerful and hard-working disposition was often the mainstay of our little party through many a bad day”.

Frederick was one of five men from Abbots Langley, who were killed during the German Spring Offensive – Edward Mullins, Leonard Chalk, Joseph Belsham and Ernest Roome.

Frederick Puddefoot was buried at Ribemont Communal Cemetery Extension, to the south-west of Albert, on the Somme. He was commemorated on the Abbots Langley War Memorial and was also commemorated on the War Memorial at the Church of the Ascension at Bedmond.

Acknowledgments

Neil Cooper
Roger Yapp - www.backtothefront.org