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(10410 Records)

 Surname   Forename   reg_no   Rank   Notes   Unit 
RichardsonTrooperBSACM Rhodesia 1896 (0).
Source: BSACM rolls
Mangwe Field Force
RichardsonATrooperBSACM Rhodesia 1896 (0).
Source: BSACM rolls
Salisbury Field Force
RichardsonArthur B291CorporalBSACM Mashonaland 1897 (0).
Source: BSACM rolls
British South Africa Police
RichardsonArthur G STrooperBSACM Rhodesia 1896 (0).
Source: BSACM rolls
Gwelo Volunteers
RichardsonC BTrooperBSACM Rhodesia 1896 (0).
Source: BSACM rolls
Salisbury Field Force
RichardsonC WTroop Sergeant MajorBSACM Rhodesia 1896 (0).
Source: BSACM rolls
Matabeleland Relief Force
RichardsonCharles348CorporalBSACM Rhodesia 1896 (1) Mashonaland 1897.
Source: BSACM rolls
British South Africa Police
RichardsonETrooperBSACM Rhodesia 1896 (0).
Source: BSACM rolls
British South Africa Police
RichardsonE BTrooperBSACM Rhodesia 1896 (0).
Source: BSACM rolls
Salisbury Field Force
RichardsonEdward WilliamTrooperBSACM Matabeleland 1893 (1) Rhodesia 1896. 1896: Tpr. MRF.
Source: BSACM rolls
Raaff's Column
RichardsonG BTrooperBSACM Rhodesia 1896 (1) Mashonaland 1897. 1897: Tpr. Garrison Vols.
Source: BSACM rolls
Salisbury Rifles
RichardsonG TTrooperBSACM Rhodesia 1896 (0).
Source: BSACM rolls
British South Africa Police
RichardsonHTrooperBSACM Rhodesia 1896 (0).
Source: BSACM rolls
Gifford's Horse
RichardsonHoraceTrooperBSACM Rhodesia 1896 (0). Jameson Raider. Tpr. C Troop MMP.
Source: BSACM rolls
Matabeleland Relief Force
RichardsonJ PTroop Sergeant MajorBSACM Rhodesia 1896 (0).
Source: BSACM rolls
Bulawayo Field Force
RichardsonJames152TrooperBSACM Rhodesia 1896 (1) Mashonaland 1897.
Source: BSACM rolls
British South Africa Police
RichardsonSTrumpeterBSACM Mashonaland 1897 (0).
Source: BSACM rolls
Garrison Volunteers
RichardsonSTrooperBSACM Rhodesia 1896 (0).
Source: BSACM rolls
Victoria Rifles
RichartzFTrooperBSACM Rhodesia 1896 (0).
Source: BSACM rolls
Salisbury Field Force
RichartzF TReverendBSACM Rhodesia 1896 (0). Father Francis T. Richartz was born in Coblentz, Germany, in June 1854. He was ordained in August 1886, and served as Head of Mission at Chishawasha, in Mashonaland. Founded in 1891 the Jesuit mission was granted over 25,000 acres of land about 25 kilometres north-east of Salisbury (now Harare) by the British South Africa Company. In July 1892 the first band of seven missionaries arrived, including Father Richartz and six Brothers. The first site of the mission, near Mtenje stream, was rife with malaria, and two Fathers died within four years, and four more within the next three years. A brick and thatch community house and chapel were built followed by farm buildings and ploughing the land. The school was initially opened for boys only in 1893 and it started as a farm school. The school was approved by the colonial government in 1894 (with girls later admitted in 1898). In June 1896 the Mashona Uprising broke out, and despite the missionaries being warned, they decided they could defend their property and themselves. The Zambesi Mission Record gives the following:'In October, 1897, Chishawasa was at a critical period of its career. Some fifteen or sixteen months before, the Fathers and the Brothers at the station were attacked by their own natives, had to seek refuge in an upper storey of their premises and sustain a siege at the hands of those who would have murdered them without mercy, but whose efforts were fortunately frustrated. Their cattle were all driven off; they themselves were rescued by a patrol sent from Salisbury, where they went through the perilous and inconvenient experiences of the days of the laager. Meanwhile, Chisawasha was left unprotected for the natives to do with as they liked. Fortunately they spared the buildings, though it would have been easy to have fired them, as at the time nearly all the roofs were of thatch. When, after the weary days of the laager, the Fathers and Brothers came back to their home the prospects were black indeed. ' The Jesuits had in fact spent five weeks in Salisbury, where they suffered some abuse for being friends of the Mashona. †The first relief party, led by Captain St. Hill, had been forced to turn back on the†outskirts of what is now the suburb of Highlands, but early on 25th June,†Captain Taylor of the Natal Troop, with 43 men and a Maxim gun reached Chishawasha Mission. The mission had been evacuated within half an hour. A new chapel was built in 1898, and a new church in 1902. Richartz was employed at the Mission of Empandeni, 1907-09, before retuning to Chishawasha. After his brief sabbatical he remained at Chishawasha until April 1920, after which he was employed for the next seven years at a Mission in Bulawayo. Richartz was appointed Chaplain at St John's School, Avondale, in 1927. He died in May 1928, and was buried at his beloved Chishawasha. 1 of 17 medals to the Chisawasha Garrison, Salisbury Rifle Corps. BSACM Rhodesia 1896 (Rev. Father S.R.). DNW March 2017 £1700.
Source: BSACM rolls
Salisbury Rifles
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