- First Name(s):ThomasErnestEdmund
- Surname:WYRE
- Service Number:19016
- Rank:
Lance Corporal
- Conflict:WW1
- Service:Army
- Army Sector:Infantry
- Regiment:Worcestershire Regiment
- Battalion:2nd Battalion
- Former Units:None
- Date of Death:1st December 1917
- Age At Death:28
- Place of Death:Unknown
- Place of Burial:Commemorated on Tyne Cot Memorial, Belgium, Panel 75 to 77.
- Place of Birth:Unknown
- Home Town:Unknown
- Casualty's Relatives:
Son of S. Wyre, of Court St., Stourbridge; husband of M.M. Burton (formerly Wyre), 47 Union St., Stourbridge
WYRE Thomas Ernest Edmund Is Named On These Memorials
Notes About The Memorial(s) Listed Above
Old Swinford St Mary’s Church with the additional information: Cpl. Worcs
Further Information About WYRE Thomas Ernest Edmund
Thomas Wyre was born at Norton, Stourbridge, on 26th April 1889. His father was Richard Wyre, a chain-maker and he attended Oldswinford CE School. By 1914 he was working as a domestic gardener and living with his wife at 47 Court Street. He married Mary Garbett on 24th August 1910 and they had three children. He volunteered for the Worcestershire Regiment on 29th October 1914 and joined the 9th (Service) Battalion. His three brothers all volunteered. One was wounded on the Somme and another became a prisoner of war. Thomas served in the Dardanelles from the 28th August 1915 and suffered severe frost-bite in the notorious great freeze of the 26th November. He was shipped back to England in the SS Transylvania, arriving at Devonport in 3rd January 1916. After convalescence at home he was sent to the 2nd Worcesters. This battalion had been very active in the Battle of the Somme and in April and May 1917 fought in the Battle of Arras. Then they moved to Flanders in July for the Third Battle of Ypres. The battalion was much cheered by the fact that their orders were to push along the Menin Road and capture Gheluvelt, the site of their famed attack in October 1914. It was, however, a vicious task. The whole position was thoroughly targeted by the German artillery and so regularly shelled that it was unusable and this attack petered out with heavy losses. They returned to the front line at Passchendaele in late October to take part in the final push to capture the village. The line was never quiet and on the 1st December there was a heavy barrage. Lance Corporal Thomas Wyre was killed instantaneously by shell splinters on this day. He is also commemorated on the St. Thomas’s church memorial.
Thomas Wyre has no known grave, the photograph available shows his name on Tyne Cot Memorial.


