Childers | Robert Erskine | | | He was born in Jun 1870 in London but raised as an orphan in Wicklow, Ireland. He was educated at Cambridge and started work as a clerk at the House of Commons between 1895 to 1910. During the Boer War, he served as an officer of the City Imperial Volunteers, Honourable Artillery Company and was invalided home after being wounded. He wrote 'In the ranks of the CIV'. He was responsible for volume 5 of the 'Times' History of the War in South Africa'. He was the author of 'The Riddle of the Sands' (1903) which predicted war with Germany and was based on his own sailing trips around the coast of Germany. It was also one of the first modern spy stories. Churchill later credited it with causing the establishment of naval bases at Scapa Flow, the Firth of Forth and at Invergordon. He also wrote two books on cavalry warfare based on his experiences, War and the Arme Blanche (1910) and the German Influence on British Cavalry (1911). Both books were critical of the British Army. he volunteered for naval service in August 1914 and was commissioned in the RNVR. He was awarded the DSC and promoted to Lieutenant Commander in 1916. Despite being a Protestant, he was convinced of the need for Irish Home Rule and devoted himself to this cause from around 1910 when he resigned from the House of Commons. The Easter Rising angered him and he moved to Dublin. In 1919 he was made Director of Publicity for the First Irish Parliament and represented the Irish Nationalists at the Versailles Peace Conference and was a member of the delegation that negotiated the Anglo-Irish Treaty with Britain (1921). As a result of his opposition to the Treaty, he was branded a traitor by both the pro-Treaty Irish and the British. He was arrested and shot as a traitor in Dublin on 24 November 1922. | City Imperial Volunteers |
Childerstone | S | 1906 | Private | Frontier Wars. SAGS (0) | South Staffordshire Regiment |
Childes | A E | | | 1st Battalion. Volunteer Service Company
Source: QSA and KSA medal rolls | Durham Light Infantry |
Childley | T | 4070 | Lance Corporal | Died of disease. Kimberley, 7 July 1900
1st Battalion.
Source: South African Field Force Casualty Roll | Royal Welsh Fusiliers |
Childlow | John | 4260 | | Source: Medal rolls | Canada, 2nd Royal Canadian Regiment of Infantry |
Childres | Augustus Campbell | | | Source: Attestation paper in WO126 | Brabant's Horse |
Childs | | | Sister | Civil Staff, Kimberley. MID LG: 10 September 1901, page: 5968. Source: Field Marshal Roberts. 4 September 1901. Re: General mentions
This page contains all the London Gazette pages for the Boer War | Unknown |
Childs | A | | Private | Natal 1906 (1)
Source: Recipients of the Natal 1906 Medal | Natal Royal Regiment |
Childs | A | | | B Division
Source: QSA and KSA medal rolls | South African Constabulary |
Childs | A | | | 3rd battalion
Source: QSA and KSA medal rolls | Grenadier Guards |
Childs | A | | | 2nd Battalion
Source: QSA and KSA medal rolls | Bedfordshire Regiment |
Childs | Alfred | 38466 | Private | Source: QSA Medal Rolls | 143rd Company, 32nd Btn, IY |
Childs | Alfred | 1662 | | Attested: Sep 1902. Source: CMP7 | Cape Police |
Childs | Arthur | 22191 | Trooper | Source: QSA Medal Rolls | 82th Company, 21st Btn, IY |
Childs | Arthur Edgar | | | Source: Attestation paper in WO126 | Brabant's Horse |
|