FOOTNOTES:

FOOTNOTES:[A]Changed to “Lancashire” in 1781 when they were sent to that County to recruit.[B]According to tradition.[C]C.Q.M.S. Lester and Private Cowburn (S. B.) brought him in to L 8.[D]Captain Caldwell, M.O., was specially mentioned for attending to 243 wounded and getting them clear.[E]Fifty-one men actually answered the roll, the rest being accounted for.[F]On the 26th, R.S.M. Farnworth, who for a long time had been suffering great pain in his limbs, was sent to hospital. He was eventually discharged unfit for further service. A man of arresting personality, steeped in Army tradition, and the possessor of a biting tongue, his influence in the Battalion was great and lasting.[G]Captain Baker—formerly Quartermaster—had volunteered for a combatant Commission when we were short of Officers after the Somme Battles—and was given command of B Company which he held until killed in September, 1917. The high qualities which had made him an ideal Quartermaster, made him equally successful as a Company Commander.[H]From “The Story of the 55th Division,” by the Rev. J. O. COOP. “Liverpool Daily Post.”[I]A post normally consisted of an N.C.O. and 6 men.[J]Two years afterwards his parents received this pocket book. The last entries are as follow:—“Remainder of section to follow L/C. Price. Tell Sergeant.”“You have done damn well, but you aren’t finished yet! Read this to him.”“Bomb the Boche out. See that gap in the parapet? I want to get the whole section there.”“Can we get a message back to Capt. Swaine? I suggest let one man take Farnworth back and also message. Tell O.C. A Co....”So it ends.

[A]Changed to “Lancashire” in 1781 when they were sent to that County to recruit.

[A]Changed to “Lancashire” in 1781 when they were sent to that County to recruit.

[B]According to tradition.

[B]According to tradition.

[C]C.Q.M.S. Lester and Private Cowburn (S. B.) brought him in to L 8.

[C]C.Q.M.S. Lester and Private Cowburn (S. B.) brought him in to L 8.

[D]Captain Caldwell, M.O., was specially mentioned for attending to 243 wounded and getting them clear.

[D]Captain Caldwell, M.O., was specially mentioned for attending to 243 wounded and getting them clear.

[E]Fifty-one men actually answered the roll, the rest being accounted for.

[E]Fifty-one men actually answered the roll, the rest being accounted for.

[F]On the 26th, R.S.M. Farnworth, who for a long time had been suffering great pain in his limbs, was sent to hospital. He was eventually discharged unfit for further service. A man of arresting personality, steeped in Army tradition, and the possessor of a biting tongue, his influence in the Battalion was great and lasting.

[F]On the 26th, R.S.M. Farnworth, who for a long time had been suffering great pain in his limbs, was sent to hospital. He was eventually discharged unfit for further service. A man of arresting personality, steeped in Army tradition, and the possessor of a biting tongue, his influence in the Battalion was great and lasting.

[G]Captain Baker—formerly Quartermaster—had volunteered for a combatant Commission when we were short of Officers after the Somme Battles—and was given command of B Company which he held until killed in September, 1917. The high qualities which had made him an ideal Quartermaster, made him equally successful as a Company Commander.

[G]Captain Baker—formerly Quartermaster—had volunteered for a combatant Commission when we were short of Officers after the Somme Battles—and was given command of B Company which he held until killed in September, 1917. The high qualities which had made him an ideal Quartermaster, made him equally successful as a Company Commander.

[H]From “The Story of the 55th Division,” by the Rev. J. O. COOP. “Liverpool Daily Post.”

[H]From “The Story of the 55th Division,” by the Rev. J. O. COOP. “Liverpool Daily Post.”

[I]A post normally consisted of an N.C.O. and 6 men.

[I]A post normally consisted of an N.C.O. and 6 men.

[J]Two years afterwards his parents received this pocket book. The last entries are as follow:—“Remainder of section to follow L/C. Price. Tell Sergeant.”“You have done damn well, but you aren’t finished yet! Read this to him.”“Bomb the Boche out. See that gap in the parapet? I want to get the whole section there.”“Can we get a message back to Capt. Swaine? I suggest let one man take Farnworth back and also message. Tell O.C. A Co....”So it ends.

[J]Two years afterwards his parents received this pocket book. The last entries are as follow:—

“Remainder of section to follow L/C. Price. Tell Sergeant.”“You have done damn well, but you aren’t finished yet! Read this to him.”“Bomb the Boche out. See that gap in the parapet? I want to get the whole section there.”“Can we get a message back to Capt. Swaine? I suggest let one man take Farnworth back and also message. Tell O.C. A Co....”

“Remainder of section to follow L/C. Price. Tell Sergeant.”

“You have done damn well, but you aren’t finished yet! Read this to him.”

“Bomb the Boche out. See that gap in the parapet? I want to get the whole section there.”

“Can we get a message back to Capt. Swaine? I suggest let one man take Farnworth back and also message. Tell O.C. A Co....”

So it ends.


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