Family Tree UK

Your LETTERS

Buried in an unmarked grave

I enjoyed reading Paul Chiddicks’ story of ‘The Old Palace School Bombing’ (FT May) and my eye was drawn to the address near Chippenham of one of the victims. As this area of north-west Wiltshire is of ancestral interest to me, I decided to try and find out about 19-year-old motorcycle dispatch rider Ernest Herbert Henly of Grange Cottage, Silver Street, Kington Langley.

This proved to be his parents’ address as his was 25 Spey Street, Poplar. He had been born on 22 January 1922 in the Mile End area of London, the eldest child of Albert, who’d been born in Chippenham in 1900, but lived in London after his marriage to Irene Christie in 1921.

A few months after his birth his parents sought poor relief from Poplar Borough due to sickness. However there was a complaint that the family were Chippenham’s responsibility and on 15 June an order was made for their removal to their last legal place of settlement, Chippenham Within. But that doesn’t seem to have happened, as the following year a daughter was born in Poplar, followed by two brothers and another sister.

Sadly, in 1938 that sister died and around Christmas time 1940 the family were bombed out, so they went to live with relatives at Derry Hill, Albert securing work at a factory in Chippenham.

Mrs. Henly was in London during the raids of that fateful Saturday and the Wednesday before, having journeyed there to attend the funeral of her father. She even saw her son on the Saturday morning and returned home on the Sunday, the day before the sad news were received by the family.

Ernest had joined the AFS (Auxiliary Fire Service) as a boy cyclist messenger before the outbreak of war, and when hostilities began was called up for whole time service. Keen on his job, he made rapid progress to Dispatch Rider (Motor-cycle) and earned efficiency stripes. He had been in a number of raids and had been commended for his services.

His funeral was conducted at Derry Hill Church and attended by colleagues of the AFS and members of Chippenham Fire Brigade.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Family Tree UK

Family Tree UK2 min read
The Shetland FHS Monumental Inscription Project ‘Could Not Have Come Soon Enough’
Shetland Family History Society is a small society that has embarked on the ambitious project to photograph and transcribe all of the gravestones in Shetland, the goal being to provide an online database linking the images with the monumental inscrip
Family Tree UK5 min read
The value of INTERVIEWING OLDER RELATIVES
Hearing ancestors directly describe their lives in their own words through audio recordings can be incredibly valuable for future genealogists for several reasons. More personal connection: There is something very powerful about actually hearing an a
Family Tree UK5 min read
Your Letters
I have been interested in accounts that sometimes appear in Family Tree about lack of/ incorrect birth certificates and the problems it causes. Living in Spain, I am unable to pop to the local record office or churchyard! However, to follow are the d

Related