Auty | J | | | 2nd Battalion
Source: QSA and KSA medal rolls | South Wales Borderers |
Auty | J | 3104 | Private | 1st Battalion
Source: QSA roll | Loyal North Lancashire Regiment |
Auty | J | | | 1st Battalion
Source: QSA and KSA medal rolls | Loyal North Lancashire Regiment |
Auty | W | 7058 | Private | 2nd Battalion
Demise: Died of disease - enteric fever 29 Apr 1902
Place: Heilbron
Source: In Memoriam by S Watt | (Queen's Own) Royal West Kent Regiment |
Auty | W | 7058 | Private | Died of disease. Heilbron, 29 April 1902
2nd Battalion.
Source: South African Field Force Casualty Roll | (Queen's Own) Royal West Kent Regiment |
Auty | W J | | | 2nd Battalion
Source: QSA and KSA medal rolls | (King's Own) Yorkshire Light Infantry |
Auxelson | F O | | | Source: QSA and KSA rolls | Imperial Light Infantry |
Auys | H | | | 4th Battalion
Source: QSA and KSA medal rolls | Bedfordshire Regiment |
Ava | | | Lord | Wounded at Ladysmith. 6 Jan 1900.
Source: Natal Field Force Casualty Roll, page 236 line 14 | Unknown |
Ava | A J L T | | Lieutenant | Demise: Died of wounds 11 Jan 1900
Place: Ladysmith, Wagon Hill
Source: In Memoriam by S Watt | Staff |
Ava | Earl of | | Lieutenant | QSA (3)
Source: List of QSAs with the clasp Elandslaagte | Staff |
Ava | Earl of | | Lieutenant | QSA (3) CC Eland DoL
Provisional list of recipients
Source: Ladysmith Siege Account and Medal Roll | Staff |
Ava, Earl of | Archibald James Leofric Temple | | | Son of 1st Marquis of Dufferin and Ava. | 17th (The Duke of Cambridge's Own) Lancers |
Ava, Earl of | Archibald James Leofric Temple | | | He was wounded in the attack on Wagon Hill, Ladysmith, on January 6th, 1900, and died on the 11th. He was the eldest son and heir of the Marquis and Marchioness of Dufferin and Ava, was born July 28th, 1863, and educated at Eton. He joined the 17th Lancers, in which as Lord Clandeboye, he served for some years in India as a Lieutenant during the Marquis of Dufferin's term of office as Viceroy. Later on Lord Ava retired from the army. When the war broke out he went to South Africa as a War Correspondent and proceeded to Ladysmith. Being a keen sportsman and a first rate horseman, adventure of all kinds attracted him. He had served previously in South Africa under Lieutenant-General Lord Methuen, and had also prospected in the North-West of Canada. At Wagon Hill he was wounded, shot in the temple while taking a message from Sir Ian Hamilton. He was buried in the cemetery, close to Cemetery Hill. He was a Fellow of the Royal Colonial Institute, and his name was inscribed on a Memorial Tablet in the hall of the building in Northumberland Avenue, London.
Source: Donner | 17th (The Duke of Cambridge's Own) Lancers |
Avage | E | | | Source: QSA and KSA rolls | Natal Police |
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