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Capt Arthur de Bells Adam (MC)
1885 - 1916


CPL David Wallace Crawford
1887 - 1916


Lce-Corpl John Joseph Nickle
1894 - 1916


Pte 17911 Morton Neill
1897 - 1916


Lieut Edward Stanley Ashcroft
1883 - 1918
Lieut Edward Stanley Ashcroft

2nd Lieutenant James Stewart


  • Age: 39
  • From: Wavertree, Liverpool
  • Regiment: 4TH KINGS
  • Died on Saturday 28th October 1916
  • Commemorated at: Guards Cem Lesboeuf
    Panel Ref: XI.W.5

The tale of James Stewart and his extended family is, in the context of war, one of real heartbreak.

James Stewart was born in Everton on the 10th March 1877, and was baptised on the 18th March 1877 at Our Lady of Immaculate Conception, Liverpool, the son of Charles Colledge Stewart, a Scot who hailed from Leith, near Edinburgh, and his wife, Mary (nee Doyle), who was born in Portlaw, County Waterford, in Ireland. Charles and Mary were married on the 01st June 1868 at St Peter's Priory, Liverpool. Charles was of Duke Street, his father, Charles, whilst Mary was also of Duke Street,  her father, Patrick. They had eight children, six of whom survived to adulthood. James was the eldest son; he had older sisters Annie and Elizabeth, and a younger sister Mary, and two younger brothers, Percy and Francis.

The 1881 census finds the family at 36 Cochrane Street, Everton. His father, is aged 46, and an insurance clerk, his mother, Mary, is aged 37, they have five children all born in Liverpool are: Elizabeth I. 12, Annie C. 10, James is aged 4, Mary 2, and unnamed baby.

By 1891 they are living at 74 Eastbourne Street, Everton, his father, is aged 56, and still an insurance clerk, his mother, Mary, is aged 46, Elizabeth is aged 22, Annie is aged 20, at school are James aged 14, Mary aged 12, Percy D. aged 10, and Francis J. aged 5.

In 1901 they are at 1 Prince Alfred Road., Hunter’s Lane, his father, is aged 67, and still an insurance clerk, his mother, Mary, is aged 56, Elizabeth is aged 32, Annie is aged 30, James is aged 14, and a book keeper, Mary is aged 22, Percy is aged 20, and an insurance clerk and Frank  is aged15.

In 1911 they live at Corinthian House, Hunter’s Lane, Wavertree, his father is aged 76, a retired insurance clerk, his mother, Mary, is aged 67. They advised that they had been married for 42 years, and have had 8 children, 6 of whom have survived. Elizabeth is aged 42, James is aged 24, a mercantile clerk, Mary is aged 32, Percy is aged 30, an insurance clerk and Frank is aged 25, a mercantile clerk. 

Commissioned from the 4th King’s (Liverpool) Regiment to Second Lieutenant with the 22nd Battalion, James was wounded in the field in France on 28 October 1916. Having had his injuries treated, he was being carried from the dressing station when a shell dropped nearby. James and the two stretcher bearers carrying him were killed instantly.

James Stewart had joined the Liverpool Pals on their establishment, along with several fellow old boys of Saint Francis Xavier’s College in Liverpool, many of whom would also fall so bravely in combat.

James was a man to be relied on, as the report in the Liverpool Daily Post, published on the 07th November 1916, in announcing James’ death states:

Exceedingly popular with his comrades in the ranks, he revealed as an officer fine qualities of valour and devotion to duty.’

Medal Cards he was Lance Corporal 5958, and whilst at the Inns of Court Officers Training Corps was commissioned on the 23rd April 1916 with the King’s Liverpool Regiment. 

His death was reported in the Nottingham and Midland Catholic News on Saturday 11 November 1916: 

Second-Lieut. James Stewart was killed in action on October 28th. Deceased, who belonged to a Wavertree family, was an "Old boy" of St. Francis Xavier's College, and joined the Liverpool "Pals" at their formation. After several months he obtained a commission. On the date mentioned he was wounded, and had his injury attended to at the dressing station. but whilst being carried away a shell burst in his vicinity and he and his two stretcher bearers were killed instantaneously. He was 39 years of age and unmarried. 

Probate was granted at Liverpool as follows:

STEWART James of Corinthian House, 1 Hunters Lane, Wavertree Liverpool second lieutenant 22nd Battalion attached 4th Battalion K.L.R. died 28 October 1916 in France Probate Liverpool 9 January to Percy Douglas Stewart insurance official. Effects £801 14s 9d. 

James now rests at Guards Cemetery, Lesboeufs where his headstone bears the epitaph:

“Eldest beloved son of Charles C and Mary Stewart of Liverpool R.I.P.”

Lesboeufs was attacked by the Guards Division on 15 September 1916 and captured by them on the 25th. It was lost on 24 March 1918 during the great German offensive, after a stubborn resistance by part of the 63rd Bn. Machine Gun Corps, and recaptured on 29 August by the 10th Bn. South Wales Borderers.

At the time of the Armistice, the cemetery consisted of only 40 graves (now Plot I), mainly those of officers and men of the 2nd Grenadier Guards who died on 25 September 1916, but it was very greatly increased when graves were brought in from the battlefields and small cemeteries round Lesboeufs.

There are now 3,137 casualties of the First World War buried or commemorated in this cemetery. 1,644 of the burials are unidentified but there are special memorials to 83 soldiers known or believed to be buried among them. Other special memorials record the names of five casualties buried in Ginchy A.D.S. Cemetery, whose graves were destroyed by shell fire, and three officers of the 2nd Bn. Coldstream Guards, killed in action on 26 September 1916 and known to have been buried together by the roadside near Lesboefs, whose grave could not later be located.

The cemetery was designed by Sir Herbert Baker.

Probate was granted in Liverpool in 1917:-  

STEWART James of Corinthian House, 1 Hunters Lane, Wavertree Liverpool second-lieutenant 22nd Battalion attached 4th Battalion K.L.R. died 28 October 1916 in France Probate Liverpool 9 January to Percy Douglas Stewart insurance official. Effects £801 14s 9d. 

Soldiers Effects to brother Percy Douglas, no pension card found.

James earned his two medals.

Soldiers Effects of over £50 went to his Executor, Percy Douglas Stewart, no pension record found. 

He was remembered on the second anniversary of his death in the Liverpool Echo on Monday 28 October 1918: 

STEWART— In loving memory of JAMES STEWART, eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Stewart, Corinthian House, Wavertree, killed in action, France, October 28, 1916. 

James is commemorated on the following memorials - 

Bishop Eton War Memorial

St. Francis Xavier School, Wavertree 

Our Lady of the Annunciation, Childwall

Liverpool’s Hall of Remembrance, Panel 40

Charles Stewart, who had trained in Glasgow, worked as an insurance clerk. An acknowledgement in the Liverpool Echo of 1 June 1918 marks the fact that he and Mary were celebrating the occasion of their golden wedding anniversary. Charles died a year later, aged 85, and was buried on the 06th May 1919 in the Roman Catholic section at Anfield Cemetery in a family plot.

Probate 1919:- 

STEWART Charles Colledge of Corinthian House, Hunter’s Lane, Wavertree Liverpool retired insurance official died 2 May 1919 Probate Liverpool 27 May to Percy Douglas Stewart insurance official and Elizabeth Josephine Stewart spinster. Effects £681 0s 8d. 

His wife Mary died, aged 92, in 1936 and their children Elizabeth and Francis, neither of whom ever married, would join their father in the family plot by the end of the 1940s.

Charles and Mary’s second son, Percy Douglas Stewart, had married Josephine Dawson at the Church of the Blessed Sacrament, in Walton, on 29 September 1915. They had six children; Helen, Charles, Philip, Francis, John and Mary. Tragically for Percy and Josephine, following the outbreak of hostilities in 1939, the horror of war would again cast its cruel shadow.

Philip James Stewart – his middle name very likely a tribute to his late uncle – was a Sergeant in the RAF by the age of 21 and would die in an accident at Hawarden airfield in Flintshire on 03rd August 1942. Sergeant Stewart was attempting an emergency landing, after the Blenheim Mk. IV R3813 aircraft he was piloting suffered an engine failure during a training flight. He was buried at St. Austin’s Churchyard in Grassendale, Liverpool, where his parents and sister Mary would later be laid to rest beside him.

Little over a year later, on 9 September 1943, John Paul Stewart would perish at sea while serving an apprenticeship with the Merchant Navy. A Japanese submarine would torpedo the MV Larchbank, which was transporting general cargo and military equipment from Baltimore to Colombo and Calcutta via the Indian Ocean. 46 men, including an 18-year-old John Paul Stewart, would lose their lives.

Grateful thanks are extended to Jamie Yates for the detailed family biography of James. 

We currently have no further information on James Stewart, If you have or know someone who may be able to add to the history of this soldier, please contact us.

 

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