Country Life

‘Mother Dear... remember me in your prayer’

ON October 29, 1918, 22-year-old Gunner Ned Parfett, who had been awarded the Military Medal (MM) and mentioned in dispatches, was collecting clothes before going home on leave. A stray shell hit the quartermaster’s stores and he was killed instantly. His face was famous worldwide as the newsboy carrying the placard about the sinking of RMS Titanic, during which an estimated 1,517 people were lost. However, what was headlined a ‘GREAT LOSS OF LIFE’ in 1912 would pale into relative insignificance in view of what was to come.

On July 1, 1916, the first day of the Battle of the Somme, there were 57,470 British casualties. Of these, 19,240 were killed, most during the opening assault. These devastating numbers indicate the scale of death and injury caused by the First sets out to tell their stories.

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

More from Country Life

Country Life6 min read
Rock Around The Clock
DAVID HARVEY can’t believe his luck. Not only is he getting married next month, but his work as an antiques dealer never ceases to thrill him. ‘I rush to go to work because something wonderful happens every day.’ Mr Harvey grew up around antiques: in
Country Life5 min read
Mere Moth Or Merveille Du Jour?
THE names of our butterflies are so familiar now that it is easy to miss how strange they are. Some are baldly descriptive: there’s a large white (Pieris brassicae) and a small white (Pieris rapae); a large blue (Phengaris arion) and a small blue (Cu
Country Life2 min read
Bedtime Stories
The striking Chloe headboard, from £1,682, is available in the new Fable Woodland fabric featuring pretty floral embroidery, from Andrew Martin (020–3887 6113; www.andrewmartin.co.uk) Inspired by an early-19th-century French design, Salvesen Graham’s

Related Books & Audiobooks