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About
300890Pte. Walter Rogers
British Army 18th Btn. Durham Light Infantry
from:Bishop Auckland
(d.16th Dec 1914)
Pte Rogers was killed during the Bombardment of the Hartlepools He was born in Bishop Auckland in 1889.
Bishop Auckland had never seen anything like it. The unpolished oak coffin, wrapped in a Union flag, led a procession more than a mile long through the streets to the cemetery. There were so many wreaths and floral tributes that they couldnt all fit in the funeral coach and so some had to be carried by the hundreds of soldiers behind the coffin. Thousands of people lined the route, no doubt bowing their heads as the coffin passed and the Durham Light Infantry band played Handel’s sombre Dead March. This, on Monday, December 21, 1914, was Bishop Auckland’s first taste of the horrors of the First World War. The victim was Private Walter Rogers, 25, who, five days earlier, had been among the first people to die on home soil during the war. On December 16, 1914, three German warships had unexpectedly opened fire from a mile out on Hartlepool. The flagship battle cruiser Seydlitz fired the first shells at the Heugh battery on the Headland, which was guarded by members of the 18th (Service) Battalion of the DLI. They were volunteers who had responded to the call by Lord Kitchener, the Secretary of State for War, to form “pals†regiments – groups of friends who all joined up together. For the previous six weeks, the County Durham Pals had been billeted at West Hartlepool for training purposes, and this was their first, terrifying experience of war. Five Durham Pals died in the bombardment, earning them an unwanted place in British history. Corporal Alix Liddle, of Darlington, was one of the first to go down, and Pte Rogers rushed to his aid. He was killed while in the act of covering up Cpl Liddle, who was cut up with one of the first shells, said the Northern Despatch newspaper. Pte Rogers received the full force of another splinter from a shell in the chest, but he lingered for three hours. Pte Rogers’ obituaries say that at the time of his death, he was acting chief clerk at Lingford’s famous baking powder factory in the town. He was a member of the local photographic society, hockey club, golf club, Cockton Hill Tennis Club, the Civilian Rifle Club and St Peters Church choir. All organisations sent wreaths for the coffin and members for the procession which, said the Despatch, was “at least a mile in lengthâ€. In the cemetery, the service was conducted by the Rev A E Douglas, formerly vicar of St Peters, and at the conclusion, the Last Post was sounded and a volley fired over the grave. So Bishop Auckland laid to rest its first victim of the Great War. - Northern Echo
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