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Rfn. Robert McIntosh MM. British Army 7th Bn Kings Royal Rifle Corps


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World War 1 One ww1 wwII greatwar great 1914 1918 first battalion regiment

213280

Rfn. Robert McIntosh MM.

British Army 7th Bn Kings Royal Rifle Corps

from:Atherstone, Warwickshire.

Charles and Robert McIntosh

Charles and Robert McIntosh

My grandfather was Robbie McIntosh, a signaller in the 7th Battalion of the Kings Royal Rifle Corps. He joined up on the 1st Sep 1914 (under age) in Crystal Palace and survived until the end of the war. He won a Military Medal for gallantry on 2nd June 1917 which was awarded by Captain M.J. St. Aubyn. We believe the medal was given when he volunteered to keep the communication lines open and crawled for many days in the mud of No Man's Land. He ran out of food and was disorientated from the shelling. He was lucky to survive. I am in possession of his papers and the award notification.

Robert McIntosh also had an older brother, Charles (Chas), who served in India (North West Frontier Expedition Medal) and France (the Retreat from Mons on the 15th July 1914, with Kitchener's Army). He became a Sgt Major, also won the Military Medal, and was apparently Mentioned in Despatches.

I also have a copy of a sad poem, "Egypt Lost", that has both my grandfather's name and that of Rifleman J.C. Lapworth, 8th Battalion written on the paper. My grandfather did not write the poem and we concluded that Rfn. Lapworth wrote it, but are not certain.

Tell me not in mournful numbers

Egypt’s but an empty dream

And the Staff that often blunders

Is the washout that they seem.

Mugs we are, as Mugs returning

To the trenches as before

With out hearts in anger burning

We, the Scapegoats of the Corp.

From the trenches, East of Ypres

We returned and blessed the day

And we mocked the Hunnish Snipers

As we West-ward wound our way

Off we went our hearts all joyous

Going to a brighter land

Where we hoped they’d soon employ us

Digging trenches in the sand.

Gladly did we send our spare kit

To the Quartermasters store

Full of Souvenirs we packed it

For we hoped we’d see no more

You; You land of Mud and Water

And it made the fellows smile

For they thought that Pharaoh’s daughter

Called them to the Sunny Nile.

But the shining vision vanished

When the order came to stay

And our fondest hopes were banished

That we’d ever get away.

Mugs we are, as Mugs returning

To the trenches as before

Doomed to rot in mud and water

Till the Hun has Lost the War.

Egypt Lost Poem

Egypt Lost Poem

Rfn. Robert McIntosh Transfer to Reserve

Rfn. Robert McIntosh Transfer to Reserve









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