This name is on Stockwell War Memorial, London SW9 B. C. Peploe (Benjamin Charles Peploe) (Peploe, Benjamin Charles) Service no 453135 Rifleman, London Regiment (Finsbury Rifles), 1st/11th Battalion, formerly 6329, 9th London Regiment Born in Stockwell; enlisted in London; lived in Stockwell Killed in action on 2 November 1917, aged 25 CWGC: "Husband of Josephine Elsie Peploe, of 30 Lingham Street, Stockwell, London." Remembered at Gaza War Memorial, Israel, as well as on the Stockwell War Memorial, London SW9 and inside St Andrew's Church, Landor Road, London SW9 Information from the Commonwealth War Graves Commission At the end of March 1917, Gaza was attacked and surrounded by the Egyptian Expeditionary Force in the First Battle of Gaza, but the attack was broken off when Turkish reinforcements appeared. The Second Battle of Gaza, 17-19 April, left the Turks in possession and the Third Battle of Gaza, begun on 27 October, ended with the capture of the ruined and deserted city on 7 November. Information from censuses Stockwell-born Benjamin Charles Peploe, 19 in 1911, lived at 70 Lingham Street, Stockwell, where his family had four rooms. His widowed mother, Mildred Elizabeth Peploe, 54, was a greengrocer from Euston, north London. He had four siblings, two of whom lived at home: Violet Daisy Peploe, 16, who is described as "assisting in the business"; Milly Rebecca Savill, 30, a restaurant manageress born in Clapham. The household included Milly's husband, George Alfred Savill, 31, a meat carver born in Stockwell. The family at lived at 70 Lingham Street for at least 20 years (they are there on the 1901 and 1891 censuses). In 1881 the family were at 14 The Polygon, Clapham. The census gives Benjamin's father Charles Peploe's occupation as fishmonger and states that he was born in Bermondsey. |
