Harrogate Herald - 24th January 1917
Letters
Private George H Clayton writhes :
I am writing these few lines to ask if you will
kindly send me a Herald occasionally. I always found the same to be
the best for news of any importance locally. I have not had one for
a considerable time. My mother used to send them to me whilst in
civil life. I left the Sulphurland 4.5 years ago to take charge of a
branch shop of Mr James Coombes, boot repairer, at Newark. I was in
their employ up to enlisting in the RE. Now we have been transferred
into the Welsh regiment. The weather here is very bad, rain and snow
for seven days. I am the second son of the late G H & Mrs
Clayton, of High Harrogate. I see by an old Herald I picked up
here, my brother Alf Clayton still writes to you. I am
leaving hospital today. We don't hear much peace talk now. Fritz
will get the peace he doesn't like (bayonet piece). I must now
conclude, wishing your paper every success.
Harrogate Herald - 8th August 1917
W H Breare letter
It is rather singular that I should have had a visit
from another soldier named Clayton. It was Signaller A
Clayton, son of Mrs G H Clayton, Wilton House, Devonshire
Place, Harrogate. I told him how worried I had been about the
missing Clayton and how pleased I was to find that he was not the
man. Clayton was on leave after 19 months in France. Of
course I knew him by name because he is one of my boys to whom I
send the Herald. He looked exceedingly well, and I was proud to find
in him such a fine fellow. He has the nicest manners - that kind
which makes a conversation pleasant. I grieve to tell you that the
day Signaller A Clayton came on leave his brother, G H
Clayton, the second son, was killed in action. He did not learn
of this until he arrived home.
Harrogate Herald – 8th August 1917
Private G H Clayton, son of Mrs Clayton, Wilton
House, Devonshire Place, Harrogate, has been killed in action on the
day his brother, Signaller A Clayton, came home on leave.