DAKIN Frederick Thomas

  • First Name(s):
    Frederick 
    Thomas 
  • Surname:
    DAKIN
  • Service Number:
    2834
  • Rank:

    Sub-Conductor Deputy Assistant Director of Ordnance Supplies Staff

  • Conflict:
    WW1
  • Service:
    Army
  • Army Sector:
    Support Services
  • Corps:
    Royal Army Ordnance Corps
  • Unit:
    23rd Division
  • Former Units:
    None
  • Date of Death:
    17th August 1917
  • Age At Death:
    23
  • Place of Death:
    Unknown
  • Place of Burial:
    Reninghelst New Military Cemetery, Belgium, Grave III. B. 19.
  • Place of Birth:
    Unknown
  • Home Town:
    Unknown
  • Casualty's Relatives:

    Son of Elizabeth Dakin, of Wollaston, Stourbridge, and the late Henry Dakin

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Further Information About DAKIN Frederick Thomas

Frederick Dakin was born in 1894 at Wollaston. He attended Wollaston C. of E. School and was keen on sports, playing both football and cricket with local teams. He was living in 1914 at 167 Bridgnorth Road, Wollaston, and was employed in the office of Thomas Webb and Sons at the Dennis Glassworks. Frederick volunteered in 1914 and joined the Army Ordnance Corps at Woolwich. In July 1915 he went to France and within 3 years he had reached the rank of Warrant Officer in the Office of the Deputy Assistant Director of Ordnance Supplies for the 23rd Division. This Division was engaged on the Somme in 1916 and at Third Ypres in 1917. On the 17th August Warrant Officer Frederick Dakin was seriously wounded by a shell which destroyed his hut and killed an Australian N.C.O. at the same time. His C.O. wrote to his mother, ‘While I lose a very efficient Warrant Officer, his comrades will miss a good friend and an excellent fellow.’ Frederick is commemorated on his parents’ grave in Wollaston churchyard.

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Credits: Researched by the Black Country Society.