Roll of Honour WW2
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Roll of Honour WW2

The above list is all that was available. The following is an alphabetical list of the men on
our war Memorial followed by details of the ships and information gathered from the Commonwealth War Graves Commission, the 1939 Register of electors, the Birth, Deaths and Marriages records and other sources.

Edward Richard Bailey
Born: 7 March 1922
Age: 17
Died: 4 Oct 1939
Parents:
No record



Service Number: P/JX157908
Boy 1st Class Royal Navy
Southbourne Sea Scout
Welbeck, Inlands Rd, Nutbourne



HMS Royal Oak
Scapa Flow, Orkney
Commemorated:
Portsmouth Naval Memorial

John Wentworth Balcomb
Born: 19 Sep 1905
Age: 37
Died: 16 Feb 1942
Mother: Annie,
6 Church Road



Service Number: P/JX276534
Able Seaman Royal Navy


HMS Sultan (Shore Base,
Singapore) Fall of Singapore
Commemorated:
Portsmouth Naval Memorial

Geoffrey Vivian Beardsley
Born: 1917
Age: 23
Died: 24 May 1941
Wife: Peggy



Service Number: P/MX 58969
Joiner 4th Class Royal Navy


HMS Hood Battle of Denmark Strait
Commemorated: Portsmouth Naval Memorial

Arthur Boyns
Born: 1920
Age: 23
Died: 28 Jul 1943
Parents: Arthur and Florence



Service Number: 1461069
Gunner Royal Artillery


80 Anti-Tank Regiment Burma Railway:
P O W Japanese Hands
Commemorated: Kanchanaburi War Cemetery, Thailand

James Edward Brundrett
Born: 1921
Age: 23
Died: 30 Sep 1944
Parents:
Sir Frederick and Enid, Prinsted


Service Number: 180924
Lieutenant 647 H A A Bty
Royal Artillery
attd 9th Bn Royal Fusiliers (City of London Regiment)



Italy
Commemorated: Gradara War Cemetery, Italy
 

William Frederick Richard Burningham
Born: 1901
Age: 39
Died: 24 May 1941
Wife: Ann Martha




Service Number: P/J 79704
Chief Petty Officer
Royal Navy


HMS  Hood Battle of Denmark Strait
Commemorated: Portsmouth Naval Memorial

Nigel John Crossley
Born: 1904
Age: 35
Died: 27 Nov 1939
Wife: Marjorie May 


Service Number: Not known
Lieutenant Commander
Royal Navy


HMS Gypsy, Struck a mine off Harwich
Commemorated:
Shotley St Mary's Churchyard, Suffolk

Frank Norris Horner
Born: 19 Feb 1912
Age: 31
Died: 13 July 1943
Wife: Margaret 



Service Number: 1092265
Gunner Royal Artillery



Italy
Commemorated:
Cassino Memorial, Italy

Joseph Kennett
Born: 1901
Age: 40
Died: 25 Nov 1941
Wife: Alice Jane



Service Number: P/K 55113
Chief Stoker Royal Navy


HMS  Barham
Sunk by U-boat in the Mediterranean
Commemorated: Portsmouth Naval Memorial

John Arthur Nicholas
Born: 1918
Age: 27
Died: 15 Oct 1945
Wife: Phyllis Marcelle 



Service Number: 1497948
Gunner Royal Artillery


2nd Searchlight Regt
Commemorated: Reichswald Forest War Memorial, Cleves

Frederick Richardson
Born: 1922
Age: 18
Died: 16 Apr 1941
Parents: William + Lucy 



Service Number: P/JX155712
Able Seaman Royal Navy


HMS  Mohawk Sunk by Italian torpedoes,
Kerkennah Islands, Tunisia Commemorated: Portsmouth Naval Memorial

William John Richardson 
Born: 1915
Age: 27
Died: 26 Sep 1942
Wife: Phyllis Annie May 



Service Number: C/JX134282
Petty Officer Telegraphist
Royal Navy


HMS Veteran
Sunk by German submarine U404
Commemorated:
Chatham Naval Memorial

James Percival Russell
Born: 1920
Age: 24
Died: 3 Aug 1944
Wife: Peggy  



Service Number: Not known
Lieutenant R N V R

HM Trawler Gairsay
Sunk off Normandy, France
by a German explosive motor boat 
Commemorated: Lowestoft Naval Memorial

Cecil James Spencer
Born: 1922
Age: 17
Died: 4 Oct 1939
Parents: Cecil and Lily
Undertakers + Coachbuilders, Nutbourne



Service Number: P/JX157889
Boy Seaman Royal Navy
Southbourne Sea Scout



HMS Royal Oak, Scapa Flow Orkney
Commemorated:
Portsmouth Naval Memorial

Norman Stubbs
Born: 1921
Age: 23
Died: 26 Jun 1944
Parents: Samuel and Charlotte


Service Number: P/MX54062
Engine Room Artificer 4th Class
Royal Navy



P O W Japanese Hands
Commemorated:
Portsmouth Naval Memorial

Reginald Thomas Tricker
Born: 19 Aug 1911
Age: 31
Died: 8 Apr 1943
Wife: Phyllis



Service Number: 5513277
Private Hampshire Regiment


1/4th Batallion North Africa
 Commemorated: Enfidaville War Cemetery, Tunisia

William Harold Walker
Born: 1908
Age: 34
Died: 18 Nov 1942
Wife: Rosie Lilian



Service Number: RMB/2945
Royal Marine Bandmaster


HMS Arethusa Sunk by Italian torpedo launched from an aeroplane.
Commemorated: Portsmouth Naval Memorial

Albert Percy Wellsted
Born: 1905
Age: 37
Died: 28 Mar 1942
Wife: Edna May



Service Number: P/J 98586
Chief Petty Officer Royal Navy

HMS Campbeltown,
St Nazaire Raid
Commemorated: Portsmouth Naval Memorial

Hugh Deane Wyldbore Smith
Born: 1907
Age: 34
Died: 24 May 1941
Parents: Hugh and Kate


Service Number: Not known
Lieutenant Commander Royal Navy


HMS Hood Battle of Denmark Strait
Commemorated: Portsmouth Naval Memorial

Arthur George Stear
Age: 23
Died: 24 Sept 1944
Parents: Riley & Evelyn
Hermione Cottage,
Main Rd
Nutbourne


Service Number: 271482
Lieutenant 133 Field Regt.4
Royal Artillery Arnhem Netherlands
Killed by a mine reconnoitring a
position for his guns


Arthur does not appear on our war memorial nor on Chidham, but is remembered by a resident.
Attended: Chichester High School for Boys 1933 - 1939

H M S Hood - May 24th 1941 When war with Germany was declared, Hood was operating in the area around Iceland, and she spent the next several months hunting for German commerce raiders and blockade runners between Iceland and the Norwegian Sea. After a brief overhaul of her propulsion system, she sailed as the flagship of Force H, and participated in the destruction of the French Fleet at Mers-el-Kebir. Relieved as flagship of Force H, Hood was dispatched to Scapa Flow, and operated in the area as a convoy escort and later as a defence against a potential German invasion fleet. In May 1941, she and the battleship Prince of Wales were ordered to intercept the German battleship Bismarck and the heavy cruiser Prinz Eugen, which were en route to the Atlantic where they were to attack convoys. On 24 May 1941, early in the Battle of the Denmark Strait, Hood was struck by several German shells, exploded and sank within three minutes, with the loss of all but three of her crew. Due to her perceived invincibility, the loss affected British morale.

H M S Campbeltown - March 28th 1942 The St Nazaire Raid was a successful British amphibious attack on the heavily defended Normandie dry dock at St Nazaire in German-occupied France during the Second World War.
The operation was undertaken by the Royal Navy and British Commandos under the auspices of Combined Operations Headquarters on 28 March 1942. St Nazaire was targeted because the loss of its dry dock would force any large German warship in need of repairs, such as the Bismarck's sister ship Tirpitz, to return to home waters via either the English Channel or the GIUK gap, both of which were heavily defended by British units including the Royal Navy's Home Fleet, rather than having a haven available on the Atlantic coast in Nazi-occupied France

HMS Royal Oak - October 14th 1939 as one of five Revenge-class battleships built for the Royal Navy during the First World War. Completed in 1916, Royal Oak first saw combat at the Battle of Jutland as part of the Grand Fleet.
On 14 October 1939, Royal Oak was anchored at Scapa Flow in Orkney, Scotland, when she was torpedoed by the German submarine U-47. Of Royal Oak's complement of 1,234 men and boys, 833 were killed that night or died later of their wounds. The loss of the outdated ship—the first of the five Royal Navy battleships and battlecruisers sunk in the Second World War—did little to affect the numerical superiority enjoyed by the British navy and its Allies, but the sinking had considerable effect on wartime morale. The raid made an immediate celebrity and war hero out of the U-boat commander, Günther Prien, who became the first German submarine officer to be awarded the Knight's Cross of the Iron Cross. Before the sinking of Royal Oak, the Royal Navy had considered the naval base at Scapa Flow impregnable to submarine attack, the raid demonstrated that the German Navy was capable of bringing the war to British home waters.

HMS Gipsy mined 21 November 1939, was a G-class destroyer built for the Royal Navy during the 1930s. She spent most of the pre-war period as part of the Mediterranean Fleet.  The ship was transferred to the British Isles to escort shipping in local waters shortly after the beginning of World War II. Less than a month after her arrival she struck a mine outside Harwich and sank with the loss of 30 of her crew. Her wreck was salvaged and slowly scrapped over the course of the war.

HMS Mohawk - 16th April 1941 Tribal Class Destroyer she was struck by two torpedoes fired by the Italian Navigatori-class destroyer Tarigo as she attacked an Italian convoy and sank off the Kerkennah Islands in eastern Tunisia on the early hours of 16 April, with the loss of 43 of her crew.

HMS Barham - 25th November 1941 was a Queen Elizabeth-class battleship built for the Royal Navy during the early 1910s. Often used as a flagship, she participated in the Battle of Jutland. She helped to sink an Italian heavy cruiser and a destroyer during the Battle of Cape Matapan in March 1941 and was damaged by German aircraft two months later during the evacuation of Crete.
Barham was sunk off the Egyptian coast on 25th November by the German submarine U-331. As the battleship began to capsize Barham was torn apart by a massive explosion caused by her 4in and 15in Magazines.  Of her crew of 1,311, only 450 would survive.