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THESE WERE OUR SONS: Stories from Stockwell War Memorial

by Naomi Lourie Klein. Every name is listed, with biographies for all those identified. The introduction gives an overview and the story of how the memorial was erected.
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Charles Parker - family man and engineer
The four Rance brothers
Triple tragedy: the Desaleux brothers
Samuel Levy's wife
Fran
k Mason, 16, the youngest
Cecil Philcox - Military Cross winner
Chris Dartnell - shell shocked
Cecil Philcox - killed in training
Harold J. Hill - a riddle solved
Harry Albert Nixon - syphilis treatment and conduct charges

LINKS
WWI and other resources

CONTACT
bathsheba99 'at' gmail.com

© Naomi Klein

Conrad O'Neill Daunt

This name is on Stockwell War Memorial, London SW
9

C. O'N. Daunt
(Conrad O'Neill Daunt)
(Daunt, Conrad O'Neill)
Lieutenant, Royal Air Force, South Lancashire Regiment, 8th Battalion
Died age 27 on 29 September 1918
Son of Francis Eldon Horsford Daunt, LRCP (Licenciate of the Royal College of Physicians of London), of 176 Clapham Road, Stockwell, London, and the late Annie Elizabeth Daunt (nee Vellacott).
Remembered at Bronfay Farm Military Cemetery, Bray-sur-Somme, France and Stockwell War Memorial, London SW9
Conrad Daunt appears to have been listed as Canadian - at least he is remembered as so on the Veterans Affairs Canada website. The RAF was established late in the war - on 1 April 1918.
He was the brother of Giles Vellacott Daunt
Photo by kind permission of Will Daunt

Conrad O’Neill Daunt, born in 1891, and his brother Giles Vellacott Daunt, born in 1895, were two of five children of Irish physician and surgeon Francis Eldon Horsford Daunt and Annie Elizabeth Daunt (née Vellacott) of 176 Clapham Road. Both boys were educated at City of London School.
Conrad returned to England from Canada to fight in the war and initially served as a Private with the Second Canadian contingent. He was offered a commission with the South Lancashires, and served with them through 1917. In 1918 he was transferred to the Royal Air Force (established in April) and promoted to Lieutenant.
Will Daunt, great-nephew to Giles and Conrad, writes: "Conrad and Giles Daunt were my great uncles, and, although we knew where they were buried (and have visited Conrad's grave), we had not realised
their names were on the memorial. My grandfather, Francis O'Neill Daunt, was their elder brother and, as a doctor (like his father), was probably a little safer (although he met mygrandmother on a hospital ship coming back from Gallipoli). Sadly, I never knew him because he died in the early 1950s. His two sisters, known as Dorothy and Peg, never married and, like him, spent most of their adult lives in Hastings/St. Leonards."

Information from the 1911 census
In 1911 Conrad O'Neill Daunt was living with his uncle, Walter John Vellacott at his farm at Tunnel House, West Thurrock, Essex. Walter Vellacott, 32, was born in Barnstaple, Devon. His wife, Elizabeth, 27 was from High Bickington, Devon. They had 2 children: Margaret Annie Vellacott, 4, born in Homehurst, Esex, and William Walter Vellacott, 7 months, born at West Thurrock. Conrad was 20 and working as a farm pupil. There was a visitor on the night of the census: Moss T. Reick, 44 and married, an evangelist from Berlin, Germany. The servants were Annie Suckling, a single 21-year-old domestic servant from Essex, and governess Ruth Florence Reynolds, 32, single and born in Singapore.
Meanwhile, Conrad's family lived at 118 Newington Causeway (convenient for Guy's Hospital). Physician and surgeon Francis Eldon Horsford Daunt, 51, born in Kinsale, County Cork, and his wife, Annie Elizabeth Daunt, 46, from Tavistock, Devon, had five children, including Francis Eldon Daunt, 22, a medical student, Giles Daunt, 14, Helena Margaret Daunt, 11. Frances Willmore, 40, a general domestic servant born in Lambeth, lived in.

Information from the 1901 census
In 1901 Irish-born Francis Eldon Daunt, a physician and surgeon, was 41 and living with his 36-year-old wife Annie, who was born in Tavistock, Devon, at 118 Newington Causeway in the parish of St George the Martyr, Southwark. At that time they had five children:
Francis Eldon, born 1889
Conrad O'Neill, born 1891, who died in September 1918
Dorothy, born 1894
Giles, born 1897, who died in April 1916
Helena, born 1900
They had two live-in servants: Nellie Hyatt, 17, born in London, described as a cook, and Ellen Ford, 20, a nurse-housemaid, born in Great Gransden, Huntingdonshire