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Widecombe World War 1: Leicester F Struben


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Widecombe WW1: Leicester F Struben
Widecombe WW1: Leicester F Struben

Leicester Frederick Struben

One of the 888,246 ceramic poppies from the 2014 Tower of London Commemoration
One of the 888,246 ceramic poppies from the 2014 Tower of London Commemoration

Leicester Frederick Struben was born in Torquay on 25th April 1893. He lived there with his parents Frederick and Mabel Struben, together with his sisters Gertrude and Florence Lillian, and for a short while his younger brother John (who died in early childhood).

At a later date the family moved to Spitchwick Manor, Poundsgate. However prior to war breaking out, they had travelled to South Africa to celebrate the wedding of Florence Lilian and were unable to return to Poundsgate once the war commenced.

Widecombe WW1: Spitchwick Manor Copyright: Rod Kruger The Heritage Portal
Widecombe WW1: Spitchwick Manor Copyright: Rod Kruger The Heritage Portal
Widecombe WW1: Leicester Struben at Cape Town. Copyright: Rod Kruger The Heritage Portal
Widecombe WW1: Leicester Struben at Cape Town. Copyright: Rod Kruger The Heritage Portal

Leicester was educated at Eton from 1907 to 1911. At some stage, after leaving Eton, and whilst in South Africa with his parents he served as a trooper in the Mounted Rifles South African Defence Force. (picture above)

On 25th August 1914 he was appointed, as a “University Candidate”, to a Second Lieutenancy in the Cheshire Regiment. In December 1914 he was transferred to the 7th (Princess Royal’s) Dragoon Guards,(London Gazette 15th December 1914 Page 10722).

Listen to the regimental quick march of the 7th Royal Dragoon Guards played by the Regimental Band of the Household Cavalry and the Regimental Band of the 14/20th Kings Hussars, “St. Patrick’s Day”:

This track was taken from ‘The Greatest Marching Songs Ever’.

In April 1916 he was seconded to the Royal Flying Corps and on 1st November 1916 was promoted to Lieutenant.

Sopwith Strutter

Following minimal training he was posted to LXX (70) squadron based at Fienvillers in the Pas de Calais region of France.

It is probable that Lieutenant Struben and other flyers from LXX squadron were in action over the battlefields of the Somme in September 1916 when the another man from Widecombe “Killed in Action” in 1916 (Private Henry James Broome) was taking part on the Battle of Flers/Courcelette with the 10th Battalion Queens Own Royal West Kent Regiment.

On the afternoon of 16th November 1916, Sopwith One and Half Strutter (Pictured above) registered number A 3432, took off from Fienvillers Airfield to fly south of Bancourt, near Bapaume, to observe troop displacements of the German Forces.

At approximately the same time Oberleutnant Stefan Kirmaier of the Jasta 2 squadron the German Air Service took off from the German Air Services airfield at Lagnicourt in an Albatross D1 or D2 (picture below).

Albatross D11. Picture copyright The Aerodrome
Albatross D11. Picture copyright The Aerodrome

Archive photographs of Fienvillers Airfield during the Great War:

Fienvillers Airport. Copyright: Archives Municipales de Fienvillers
Fienvillers Airport. Copyright: Archives Municipales de Fienvillers
Fienvillers Airport. Copyright: Archives Municipales de Fienvillers
Fienvillers Airport. Copyright: Archives Municipales de Fienvillers

Oberleutnant Kirmaier spotted the Strutter (A 3432), on this occasion being flown by one of the youngest and earliest Serjeant-pilots of the Royal Flying Corps Robert Stovell Evans (from Herne Bay in Kent) aged only 18. Leicester Frederick Struben was flying as observer on this mission. Kirmaier succeeded in shooting down the Strutter near Bancourt killing both occupants. (6 days later Kirmaier himself was shot down and killed in aerial combat with the Royal Flying Corps.)

Widecombe WW1: Robert Stovell Evans. Picture copyright The Aerodrome
Widecombe WW1: Robert Stovell Evans. Picture copyright The Aerodrome
Robert Stovell Evans Flying Pass Certificate. Picture copyright The Aerodrome
Robert Stovell Evans Flying Pass Certificate. Picture copyright The Aerodrome

The Western Front November 1916

Widecombe WW1: Map of 1916 Western Front
Widecombe WW1: Map of 1916 Western Front

Bancourt Military Cemetery, Pas de Calais

Bancourt Military Cemetery

Although Lieutenant Struben’s grave is at Bancourt British Cemetery, Pas de Calais, the plane crashed behind German lines and originally German forces buried Lieutenant Struben’s body at Cloudy Trench Cemetery Gueudecourt. When Commonwealth forces retook Bancourt in 1917 the graves were transferred to the newly created Bancourt Military Cemetery. The land where the original Cloudy Trench Cemetery was located has long since been returned to agricultural purposes.

Memorial Plaque St John the Baptist Church Leusdon

The tablet reads: HE WHOM THIS TABLET COMMEMORATES WAS NUMBERED AMONG THOSE WHO AT THE CALL OF KING AND COUNTRY LEFT ALL THAT WAS DEAR TO THEM. ENDURED HARDNESS, FACED DANGER, AND FINALLY PASSED OUT OF THE SIGHT OF MEN BY THE PATH OF DUTY AND SELF SACRIFICE. GIVING UP THEIR OWN LIVES THAT OTHERS MIGHT LIVE IN FREEDOM. NEVER THE SPIRIT WAS BORN, THE SPIRIT SHALL CEASE TO BE NEVER; NEVER THE TIME WAS NOT END AND BEGINNING ARE DREAMS; BIRTHLESS AND DEATHLESS AND CHANGELESS REMAINETH THE SPIRIT FOR EVER. DEATH HATH NOT TOUCHED IT AT ALL. DEAD THOUGH THE HOUSE OF IT SEEMS.

Memorial Plaque to Leicester Struben in Leusdon Church

The Fallen Subaltern by Herbert Asquith.

Listen to Lorraine Ashman reading The Fallen Subaltern:

The starshells float above, the bayonets glisten;

We bear our fallen friend without a sound;

Below the waiting legions lie and listen

To us, who march upon their burial ground.

Wound in the flag of England, here we lay him;

The guns will flash and thunder o’er the grave;

What other winding sheet should now array him,

What other music should salute the brave?

As goes the Sun-God in his chariots glorious,

When all his golden banners are unfurled,

So goes the soldier, fallen but victorious,

And leaves behind a twilight in the world.

And those, who come this way in days hereafter,

Will know that here a boy for England fell,

Who looked at danger with eyes of laughter,

And on the charge his days were ended well.

One last salute, the bayonets clash and glisten;

The shadowy file goes by without a sound;

One more has found the men who lie and listen

To us, who march upon their burial ground.

Herbert Asquith (11 March 1881 – 5 August 1947) was an English Poet, Novelist, and Lawyer. He was the second son of H.H. Asquith Prime Minister for part of the Great War. He was also younger brother of Raymond Asquith, who was an officer in the Grenadier Guards and “Killed in Action” fighting in the battle of the Somme.in September 1916. He was greatly affected by his own service with the Royal Artillery and also by his brother’s death, “The Fallen Subaltern” being a tribute to all fallen soldiers.

Copyright and Acknowledgments

Spitchwick Manor & Cape Town 1914: Rod Kruger The Heritage Portal. Sopwith Strutter, Albatross Aeroplanes and Sjt R S Evans: The Aerodrome. Fienvillers airfield: Archives Municipales de Fienvilliers. Bancourt Military Cemetery: CWGC. Leusdon tablet: David Ashman.

Thanks to Lorraine Ashman for reading the poem.