Fife | F J | | Private | Frontier Wars. SAGS (1) 1879. Royal Marines | HMS Forester |
Fife | G | | | Source: QSA and KSA medal rolls | Prince Alfred's Volunteer Guard |
Fife | G | 835 | Private | Source: Supplementary medal roll in WO100/277 | Uitenhage Volunteer Rifles |
Fife | Geo | 835 | Private | Source: QSA medal roll in WO100/277 | Uitenhage Volunteer Rifles |
Fife | George | 2285 and 339 | Trooper | 1st Battalion
Source: Nominal roll in WO127 | Imperial Light Horse |
Fife | George | | | 1st Battalion
Source: QSA and KSA rolls | Imperial Light Horse |
Fife | George James | 40502 | Trooper | Source: QSA Medal Rolls | 138th Company, 30th Btn, IY |
Fife | H W | | Lieutenant | Wounded. Paardeberg, 18 February 1900
2nd Battalion.
Source: South African Field Force Casualty Roll | Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry |
Fife | H W | | Lieutenant | 2nd Battalion
Demise: Died of wounds 29 May 1900
Place: Doornkop + Florida
Source: In Memoriam by S Watt | Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry |
Fife | Hugh Wharton | | Lieutenant | He was killed in action at Johannesburg May 30th, 1900, when serving with Sir lan Hamilton's division. He was born December 1870, and educated at Bradfield College, 1886-90, where he was in the cricket and football teams. He afterwards went to Cambridge University, and entered the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, as a University Candidate 1891, passing first on that list, and received his commission as 2nd Lieutenant April 1893, being promoted Lieutenant August 1896. In South Africa he first served with the Kimberley Relief Force and was wounded at Graspan. He was afterwards present at Paardeberg, and the advance on Bloemfontein and Johannesburg.
Source: Donner | Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry |
Fife | J H | | 2nd Officer | Transport Medal, clasp: South Africa. Ship: Sirsa (British India). Died. Issued to mother 1904
Source: Transport Medal roll | Transport ships |
Fife | Scott J | | Trooper | BSACM Rhodesia 1896 (0). Eldest son of Fife J. Scott, a well-known merchant of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, and a brother of Harry N. Fife-Scott, with whom he attested for the B. S. A. Company'sPolice on 2 December 1889. He served in B Troop in the Pioneer Column of 1890, which was the only troop present at the raising of the Union flag at Fort Hampden (Salisbury, now Harare) on 13 August 1890. Early in September 1891, Fife-Scott called at Fort Tuli on his return from Salisbury. He had had a most adventurous journey as he related to Captain A. G. Leonard, commanding E Troop at Fort Tuli. He set out from Salisbury, travelling by footpath to Tete on the Zambesi River in Mozambique, a distance he calculated to be 367 miles. From Tete he went down the river in a boat with a carrying capacity of two and a half tons, something like a large lifeboat, with reed matting to cover in the stern. At Quilimane he boarded a Portuguese steamer which took him to Delagoa Bay (Lourenco Marques), where he transferred to a Castle steamer which took him to Capetown. Then he completed the circuit to Fort Tuli and on to Salisbury by rail and road. Fife-Scott was discharged from C Troop on 15 October 1891. He subsequently served as a Trooper in the Gwelo Volunteer Corps in the Matabele Rebellion of 1896, and died in October 1933. BSACM undated (2) Mashonaland 1890, Rhodesia 1896 (L/Cpl. Scott, Fife J. - B. S. A. C. P.). DNW December 2004 unsold. DNW September 2010 £2,300.
Source: BSACM rolls | Gwelo Volunteers |
Fife | T | | | 1st Battalion
Source: QSA and KSA medal rolls | King's Own Scottish Borderers |
Fife-Scott | Harry N | | Trooper | BSACM Mashonaland 1890 (2) Matabeleland 1893 Rhodesia 1896. 1893: Cpl. Salisbury Horse; 1896: Lt. Gwelo Vols.
Source: BSACM rolls | British South Africa Police |
Fifefield | G O | | Trooper | Natal 1906 (1)
Source: Recipients of the Natal 1906 Medal | Transvaal Mounted Rifles |
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