Harrogate Herald – 24th February 1915
Harrogate men who are serving with the Colours, and
are in the Harrogate Herald list to receive papers every week :
399 Lance Corporal W H Jeffrey, GHI, Railway
Police, British Expeditionary Force
Harrogate Herald - 3rd March 1915
Serving with the Colours and receiving the Harrogate
Herald every week
Lance Corporal W H Jeffrey, 399 Military
Police, British Expeditionary Force
Harrogate Herald - 3rd March 1915
Lance Corporal W H Jeffrey, 399 Military
Police, British Expeditionary Force, France, served three years in
the 5th West Yorkshire Regiment and got his discharge to join the L
and Y Railway Police. He enlisted for foreign service on October
26th, and returned to France on Monday. He is a Harrogate lad and
lived with his widowed mother at 14 Craven Street. Previous to the
war he was railway policeman at Victoria Station, Manchester, and at
Wakefield, and joined the Military Police at France in September.
His photo appears on our picture page.
Harrogate Herald - 27th February 1918
Breare Letter
G F Jeffrey, son of our Jeffrey at the works, who,
by the way, used to work for the Harrogate Billposting Company, is
in the Koylies. A brother and another son of Jeffrey are in
the Military Police. They are cousins of AB Seaman F Bussey. The
latter passed through a series of training ships before being
commissioned, these including HMS Redoubtable, Prince of Wales,
Venerable, and is now on the Hindustan. With Bussey came Private S
Fawcett, of the Royal Marines Light Infantry. The pair were on the
same ship for some time, but Fawcett is now in barracks. He is a son
of Mrs J Fawcett, 66 Mayfield Grove, and has been in the service
over three years, having enlisted at Liverpool in 1914, two or three
months before the war started. He wished me to express his thanks to
the Rev S T Dawson, of St Luke's, or the St Luke's people who sent
him a Christmas parcel. He did not know who to write to, hence his
delay in acknowledging. Fawcett has had a fair experience of war,
being at the Dardanelles in 1915 when the Allies attempted to force
passage through the Straits. He was in hospital at Malta for a time,
then came home on 21 days' leave. Later he was commissioned to the
Hindustan. He has two brothers serving with the Colours, Private
Edwin Fawcett being in the Highland Light Infantry. This chap was
wounded on the 1st July, 1916, but has been at the Front again two
or three months. His other brother, Trooper Harry Fawcett, of the
Royal Engineers, has been two years in Egypt and is still there. A
message came from him that he was seriously ill will diphtheria, but
a later letter announced he was improving. It is some time, however,
since his friends heard from him. During one of my visitor's trips
ashore he dropped across Tom Lawson, son of Mr G Lawson, of the
Window Cleaning Company, Chatsworth Place. These boys expressed
gratitude for the Harrogate Herald, but they all seem to feel that
way.