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- 10th Battalion, Border Regiment during the Great War -


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

10th Battalion, Border Regiment



   10th (Reserve) Battalion, The Border Regiment remained in England throughout the war as a training battalion.

19th Jun 1916 Transferred

13th of April 1918 Under Heavy Attack  location map

If you can provide any additional information, please add it here.





Want to know more about 10th Battalion, Border Regiment?


There are:5232 items tagged 10th Battalion, Border Regiment available in our Library

  These include information on officers, regimental histories, letters, diary entries, personal accounts and information about actions during the Great War.


Those known to have served with

10th Battalion, Border Regiment

during the Great War 1914-1918.

  • Bankhead Hugh. Lt.
  • Barron Louis. Lt. (d.19th July 1916)
  • Benner Sidney. CSM.
  • Britton Frederick William. Pte. (d.21st March 1918)
  • Britton Frederick William. Pte. (d.21st March 1918)
  • Moritz Oscar Frank. 2nd Lt. (d.27th July 1916)
  • Rhodes John Kenneth. 2nd Lt. (d.16th Jul 1916)

All names on this list have been submitted by relatives, friends, neighbours and others who wish to remember them, if you have any names to add or any recollections or photos of those listed, please Add a Name to this List

Records of 10th Battalion, Border Regiment from other sources.


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  CSM. Sidney Benner 10th Btn. Border Regiment

Sidney Benner had served for 22 years with the Border Regiment and was allowed to re-enlist for the duration of the war. He was immediately promoted CSM. He transferred from 10th Battalion, Border Regiment and served with the 9th Battalion, Queens Royal West Surrey Regiment and 117th Coy. Labour Corps in France from February to October 1917.

John Berry






  Pte. Frederick William Britton 8th Battalion Border Regiment (d.21st March 1918)

Frederick Britton joined the 3rd Battalion the Norfolk Regiment in 1898 when he was 18 and served in South Africa during the Boer War leaving the Army in 1904 to marry and start a family.

He re-enlisted in the same regiment on 7th of July 1915. On 9th of November 1915 Frederick was transferred to the 10th Battalion, Border Regiment and then further transferred to the 8th Battalion in France on 30th of December 1915. He remained in France with the Battalion until his death on 21st of March 1918.

Dennis Clive Hall






  Pte. Frederick William Britton 8th Battalion Border Regiment (d.21st March 1918)

Frederick Britton had previously served in the Boer War with the 3rd Norfolk Regiment. He enlisted with the same regiment on 17th of July 1915 but was transferred to the 10th Battalion of the Border Regiment on 9th November 1915 and then transferred to 8 Battalion of the Border Regiment on 30th of December 1915 and was promptly posted to France.

The battalion took part in many actions on the Western Front and he was killed in action on 21 March 1918 leaving a widow and six children. He is commemorated at the Arras Memorial Records have his surname variously spelled Britton/Britain/Brittain

Clive Hall






  Lt. Hugh Bankhead 10th Battalion Border Regiment

Hugh Bankhead was a student at University of Glasgow. The entry in the University's Roll of Honour 1914-1918 is the only reference to him that I have found.

Matt Bankhead






  Lt. Louis Barron 10th Btn. Border Regiment (d.19th July 1916)

Louis Barron was the son of Hyman A. and Esther Barron, of 38 South Circular Rd., Portobello, Dublin. He was attached 2nd/6th Battalion, Royal Warwickshire Regiment when he was killed in action age 27. Louis is remembered on the Loos Memorial. He was a Solicitor and is also remembered at the Clontarf Cricket and Football Clubs

s flynn






  2nd Lt. Oscar Frank Moritz 99th Btn Machine Gun Corps (d.27th July 1916)

Sherborne School Book of Remembrance Oscar F Moritz

Oscar Frank Moritz was the fifth son of the late Hermann Moritz (of the London Stock Exchange) and Elisa Mathilda Moritz (nee Kronhelm) of West Bank, Broadlands Road, Highgate, London. Born at Edmonton, Middlesex, on 21 March 1885. He had two brothers: Arnold Moritz and Julius Hermann Moritz. He attended Cholmeley's Preparatory School in Highgate, and from 1898-1903 Sherborne School in Dorset. After leaving School he became a Barrister-at-Law (Middle Temple) in 1910.

Oscar Moritz enlisted in the Royal Army Medical Corps (RAMC) on 5th of September 1914 as a stretcher bearer and rapidly rose to be a Staff Sergeant. On 30 April 1915 commissioned to the Border Regiment, 10th Bn.; transferred to the Machine Gun Corps (99th) in January 1916. He served with the Expeditionary Force in France and Flanders from April 1916 and saw much fighting on Vimy Ridge. He was reported wounded and missing after heavy fighting at at Delville Wood on 27th July 1916 while trying to bring up reinforcements for his gun, having previously received a wound in the thigh. During the battle every officer in his section of the Machine Gun Corps was either killed or wounded. Moritz's body was found some seven weeks later by an old school friend who buried him. He is commemorated at Thiepval Memorial, on the Walkerburn War Memorial and in the Sherborne School Book of Remembrance.

Rachel Hassall






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