A. H. R. Barnes (Albert Herbert Robert Barnes aka Herbert Robert Albert Barnes) (Barnes, Albert Herbert Robert) Service no 721131 Private, London Regiment, 24th Battalion Enlisted at Kennington Died of wounds at age 20 on 18 September 1918 Remembered at Epehy Wood Farm Cemetery, Epehy, Somme, France and at Stockwell War Memorial, London SW9 Information from the Barnes Family website Mike Barnes, who runs the Barnes Family History website, tells how he searched for Herbert Robert Albert Barnes, his first cousin twice removed, after his father showed him a letter written by his Aunt Violet in 1996. In the letter Aunt Violet told of two brothers, one of whom died in the First World War of a stomach wound. The letter identified him only as 'Bob'. After a lot of digging around in the 1901 census and the Commonwealth War Graves Commission database, Mike found that 'Bob' was Herbert Robert Albert Barnes of the 24th Battalion, London Regiment. He is listed as Albert Herbert Robert. Herbert Robert Albert Barnes was born on 26 January 1898 and was therefore only 16 when war broke out in 1914. He probably enlisted soon after his 18th birthday. His medal card shows his original 4-digit service number and the later 6-digit service number. Re-numbering took place late 1916, early 1917 and this fits with an enlistment early in 1916. The 24th Battalion was of the Territorial Force (hence the 4-digit service number) and was split into three:
Information from the 1911 census In 1911 Herbert Albert Robert Barnes, then 14, was living in 4 rooms at 31 Cobbett Street, South Lambeth (it runs off Dorset Road) with his father, Thomas George Barnes, 46, a cellerman from Reading, Berkshire, mother, Annie Barnes, 48, from Belfast, Ireland (this was before Irish Independence and the creation of the Six Counties), and a brother, Thomas Charles Barnes, 21, a butcher. There were two other children, not on this census return. |