Two officers and six
men of the 1st Life Guards served in the campaign in Natal to
relieve Ladysmith, all earned the Relief of Ladysmith clasp but only two, Lt JS
Cavendish and Trpr T Pearce, the Tugela Heights clasp. A civilian groom also
earned these two clasps.
Name
|
Clasp
|
Remarks
|
Cpt Hugh C Keith-Fraser
|
CC,RoL
|
Adjutant SALH, died 1906
|
Lt Lord John S Cavendish
|
J,DH,W,CC,TH,RoL
|
1914 Star trio KiA 30-10-1914
|
Cpl 2051 WW Brown
|
P,D,J,CC,RoL
|
|
Trpr 1860 Charles W Clark
|
P,D,CC,RoL
|
1914 Star trio
|
Trpr 2036 Richard Collett
|
P,D,J,CC,RoL
|
|
Trpr 1918 Thomas M Grayson
|
P,D,J,CC,RoL
|
|
Trpr 999 JJ Nye
|
CC,RoL
|
Servant to Cpt HC Keith-Fraser
|
Trpr 1122 Robert Pearce
|
CC,OFS,TH,RoL
|
|
Civilian W Head
|
Bronze QSA (J,DH,W,CC,TH,RoL)
|
Groom to Lt Lord JS Cavendish
|
Only one squadron of
the 1st Life Guards was sent fight in a composite Household Cavalry
regiment composed of a squadron each from the 1st and 2nd
Life Guards and the Royal Horse Guards. They arrived at the end of December
1899 and were posted to the Western Front.
What was this group of
eight men doing away from their regiment on the other side of south Africa? Cpt
HC Keith-Fraser was Cpt and Adjutant attached South African Light Horse (SALH)
with his servant Trpr JJ Nye. Cpt Keith-Fraser was appointed assistant Press
Censor at the Cape in October 1899. Obviously he wanted to fight and secured
himself the adjutancy with a premier colonial unit, the SALH. However,
Keith-Fraser returned, probably invalided, to England in January 1900. In April
he was appointed a Special Service Officer for service in South Africa but it
does not appear he returned to the front as his name does not appear in the
Shipping Lists published in The Times. Keith-Fraser is on the March 1901 census
at the barracks at Windsor. Trpr Nye has not been traced on the 1901 census.
Lt Lord JS Cavendish
was a Special Service Officer sailing on the SS Moor with Trpr Pearce (at
least) on October 21st, 1899. Cavendish had been appointed
Divisional Signalling Officer, 2nd Division (Major-General CF Clery),
Natal Field Force. It would seem most likely that the other troopers were
involved in signalling too, but no evidence has been found to support this. Papers
have been traced for Clark, Collett, Grayson and Pearce, none indicate any
training in skills such as signalling for which a soldier would have been
employed extra-regimentally. On Trpr Pearce’s discharge in 1903 his “Special
qualifications for employment in civil life” is “Valet”, perhaps he was Lt
Cavendish’s servant.
Brown, Clark, Collet,
Grayson earned the Paardeberg clasp, to qualify they had to be within 7,000
yards of General Cronje's final laager, or within 7,000 yards of Koodoe's Rand Drift between
17-26th February 1900. The Household Cavalry regiment was present at
Paardeberg. Meanwhile Lt Cavendish, Trpr Pearce and civilian groom W Head
qualified for the Tugela Heights clasp; they were employed in the operations
north of an east and west line through Chieveley Station between the 14th and
27th February. It is most likely they were present for the actual relief of
Ladysmith on February 27th. Pearce probably accompanied Cavendish
and Head to the Western Front, but was struck down with enteric fever and
separated from Cavendish. Pearce was in hospital in Bloemfontein on March 10th,
moving south to hospital in Norval’s Pont in July and invalided to England
aboard the SS Gascon which arrived back in August 1900. Pearce is on the March
1901 census in the barracks at Windsor.
Lt Cavendish was mentioned
in despatches (08-02-1901) and awarded the DSO (19-04-1901) for his work in
South Africa. Cavendish was attached the West African Field Force from 1907 to
1910. He was killed in October 1914 in France.
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