Cartwright | A | | | 2nd Battalion
Source: QSA and KSA medal rolls | South Wales Borderers |
Cartwright | A | 2787 | Private | 2nd Battalion
Source: QSA roll | (Duke of Cambridge's Own) Middlesex Regiment |
Cartwright | A | | | 6th Battalion
Source: QSA and KSA medal rolls | Royal Warwickshire Regiment |
Cartwright | A | 5228 | Private | 2nd Btn. Wounded at Spion Kop. 24 Jan 1900.
Source: Natal Field Force Casualty Roll, page 43 line 44 | (King's Own) Royal Lancaster Regiment |
Cartwright | A | | | 1st Battalion
Source: QSA and KSA medal rolls | Highland Light Infantry |
Cartwright | A B | | Private | Natal 1906 (1)
Source: Recipients of the Natal 1906 Medal | Durban Light Infantry |
Cartwright | A B | 561 | Trooper | Source: Nominal roll in WO127 | Natal Volunteer Composite Regiment |
Cartwright | A G | 6141 | Private | Drowned. Bethulie Bridge, 19 February 1901
2nd Battalion.
Source: South African Field Force Casualty Roll | Cheshire Regiment |
Cartwright | A G / J | 6141 | Private | 2nd Battalion
Demise: Drowned 19 Feb 1901
Place: Bethulie Bridge
Source: In Memoriam by S Watt | Cheshire Regiment |
Cartwright | A J | | | 2nd Battalion
Source: Medal rolls | Cheshire Regiment |
Cartwright | A J | | | 4th Battalion
Source: Medal rolls | Cheshire Regiment |
Cartwright | A J | | | 2nd Battalion
Source: QSA and KSA medal rolls | Cheshire Regiment |
Cartwright | A J | | | 4th Battalion
Source: QSA and KSA medal rolls | Cheshire Regiment |
Cartwright | Albert | | | Of Rosebank, near Cape Town, was born at Manchester, 25 Dec 1868, and is the son of a Lancashire bookseller. Educated at Davyhulme Wesleyan Grammar School, Lancs, he emigrated to the Cape at the beginning of 1889; served three years on the staff of the Cape Times, then founded a weekly paper, The South African, now defunct; became sub-editor and afterwards Assistant-editor of the Johannesburg Star, from which paper he resigned in connection with the Jameson Raid; then edited the Kimberley Advertiser, until in 1898 that paper's pro-Rhodes policy necessitated a change in the editorial direction. In 1889 he became first editor of the South African News, and was sentenced during the war to a year's imprisonment for reproducing from English papers the letter of an anonymous British officer, asserting that he had received orders, should he overtake General de Wet, to take no prisoners. In 1903 Prof. Fremantle became associated with Mr Cartwright in the editorship of the South African News. In 1905 he resigned his connection with the South African News and became London editor of the Rand Daily Mail cable service. He married, in 1891, Anne, daughter of Christopher H Robertson, shipbuilder, of Cape Town. | Unknown |
Cartwright | Andrew | 19988 | Trooper | Source: QSA Medal Rolls | 57th Company, 15th Btn, IY |
|