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Debt of Honour Register

In Memory of

WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE 

Driver
T4/213706
XX Corps Troop Train, Army Service Corps

who died on
Thursday 23 May 1918 . Age 41 .


 

Additional Information: Son of William and Fanny Elizabeth Shakespeare, of 3, Crewe Terrace, Norton St., Radford, Nottingham. Born at Clay Cross, Derbyshire.
Cemetery: JERUSALEM WAR CEMETERYIsrael
Grave or Reference Panel Number: V. 19.
Location: Jerusalem War Cemetery is 4.5 kilometres north of the walled city and is situated on the neck of land at the north end of the Mount of Olives, to the west of Mount Scopus. Follow the signs for Mount Scopus. At the crossroads with the Hyatt Hotel, which is on the left, turn left. There is an orange sign which reads "Military Cemetery". Go to the top of the hill, cross almost straight over the junction, then turn right and sharp left. The cemetery will be visible at this point.
Historical Information: At the outbreak of the First World War, Palestine (now Israel) was part of the Turkish Empire and it was not entered by Allied forces until December 1916. The advance to Jerusalem took a further year, but from 1914 to December 1917, about 250 Commonwealth prisoners of war were buried in the German and Anglo-German cemeteries of the city. By 21 November 1917, the Egyptian Expeditionary Force had gained a line about five kilometres west of Jerusalem, but the city was deliberately spared bombardment and direct attack. Very severe fighting followed, lasting until the evening of 8 December, when the 53rd (Welsh) Division on the south, and the 60th (London) and 74th (Yeomanry) Divisions on the west, had captured all the city's prepared defences. Turkish forces left Jerusalem throughout that night and in the morning of 9 December, the Mayor came to the Allied lines with the Turkish Governor's letter of surrender. Jerusalem was occupied that day and on 11 December, General Allenby formally entered the city, followed by representatives of France and Italy. Meanwhile, the 60th Division pushed across the road to Nablus, and the 53rd across the eastern road. From 26 to 30 December, severe fighting took place to the north and east of the city but it remained in Allied hands. JERUSALEM WAR CEMETERY was begun after the occupation of the city, with 270 burials. It was later enlarged to take graves from the battlefields and smaller cemeteries in the neighbourhood. There are now 2,514 Commonwealth burials of the First World War in the cemetery, 100 of them unidentified. Within the cemetery stands the JERUSALEM MEMORIAL, commemorating 3,300 Commonwealth servicemen who died during the First World War in operations in Egypt or Palestine and who have no known grave.

 

Notes:
1881 Census:
  Household:

 
 Name  Relation Marital Status Gender Age Birthplace Occupation Disability
 William SHAKESPEARE   Head   M   Male   33   N K, Leicester, England   Coal Miner    
 Fanny SHAKESPEARE   Wife   M   Female   32   Greenhill Lane, Derby, England       
 Anne SHAKESPEARE   Daur      Female   10   Clay Cross, Derby, England   Scholar    
 Sarah SHAKESPEARE   Daur      Female   8   Clay Cross, Derby, England   Scholar    
 Agnes SHAKESPEARE   Daur      Female   6   Clay Cross, Derby, England       
 William SHAKESPEARE   Son      Male   3   Clay Cross, Derby, England       
 Mary SHAKESPEARE   Daur      Female   2   Clay Cross, Derby, England       
 William WRIGHT   Boarder   U   Male   27   Burton On Trent, Stafford, England   Coal Miner    


 


Source Information:
 

  Dwelling   Elliotts Row
  Census Place Claylane, Derby, England
  Family History Library Film   1341820
  Public Records Office Reference   RG11
  Piece / Folio   3428 / 27
  Page Number   11

From the IGI:

  • born 10 Jan 1848, and bapt 13 Feb 1848, at Coleorton, Leics., William son of William Shakespeare and Emily Doman (William Shakespeare and Emily Doman married 1845)

 

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