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PRISONER OF WAR HOLLAND WW1 1914 STAR 6/2677 AB BLYFIELD COLLINGWOOD BATTALION MEDAL

Offered is a 1914 Star, impressed named L6/2677. H. BLYFIELD. A.B. R.N.V.R. COLLINGWOOD BTTN. R.N.D. comes with copies of service records, medal roll and 1911 census. Harold Frederick Blyfield was born on 5/3/1894 at Greenwich, Kent. An electrical instrument maker he enlisted into the Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve on 16/5/1914 with the service No 6/2677. He was mobilised for the war and posted to the 4th (Collingwood) Battalion on 22/8/1914. As part of the 1st Naval Brigade, 63rd (Royal Naval) Division, he landed in Holland on 6/10/1914 and was in action during the defence of Antwerp. They were ordered to withdraw on the 7th September and suffered badly from confused orders and the chaotic condition of the roads. Eventually, they made their way to St-Gilles-Waes, where a train had been sent to evacuate them. Unfortunately, the Germans were attacking now at Moerbeke, just down the line. The men were in no condition to fight and they were ordered to march across the Dutch frontier three miles to the north, where some 1,500 of them were disarmed and interned. Blyfield being one of them on 8/10/1914. Bizarrely he was twice granted home leave in 1916 and 1918, he returned to the internment camp each time. He was demobilised at […]

$125.00

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Offered is a 1914 Star, impressed named L6/2677. H. BLYFIELD. A.B. R.N.V.R. COLLINGWOOD BTTN. R.N.D. comes with copies of service records, medal roll and 1911 census.

Harold Frederick Blyfield was born on 5/3/1894 at Greenwich, Kent. An electrical instrument maker he enlisted into the Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve on 16/5/1914 with the service No 6/2677.

He was mobilised for the war and posted to the 4th (Collingwood) Battalion on 22/8/1914. As part of the 1st Naval Brigade, 63rd (Royal Naval) Division, he landed in Holland on 6/10/1914 and was in action during the defence of Antwerp.

They were ordered to withdraw on the 7th September and suffered badly from confused orders and the chaotic condition of the roads. Eventually, they made their way to St-Gilles-Waes, where a train had been sent to evacuate them. Unfortunately, the Germans were attacking now at Moerbeke, just down the line. The men were in no condition to fight and they were ordered to march across the Dutch frontier three miles to the north, where some 1,500 of them were disarmed and interned. Blyfield being one of them on 8/10/1914.

Bizarrely he was twice granted home leave in 1916 and 1918, he returned to the internment camp each time. He was demobilised at the end of the war on 5/2/1919. He died in March 1977 at Cuckfield, Sussex.

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