Eric Charles Bird - St Mary - Everdon, Northamptonshire
Posted by: SMacB
N 52° 12.722 W 001° 07.866
30U E 627687 N 5786267
A memorial plaque dedicated to Eric Charles Bird, killed in France, 1917.
Waymark Code: WM138MW
Location: East Midlands, United Kingdom
Date Posted: 10/12/2020
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A memorial plaque dedicated to Eric Charles Bird, killed in France, 1917.
"Trooper 2266, Northamptonshire Yeomanry attached No. 5 General Base Depot. Died 19 February 1917. Aged 19. Born Everdon, enlisted Northampton, resident Daventry. Son of Richard and Mary Bird, of The Mill House, Everdon, nr. Daventry, Northants. Buried in Bois-Guillaume Communal Cemetery, Seine-Maritime. France. Plot II. Row D. Grave 1A."
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"TALES OF EVERDON by MICK MEGEARY (Originally published in the Everdon Newsletter - December, 2002)
TROOPER BIRD -
On the external wall of the north aisle of Everdon Church there stands alone a small discreet memorial to Eric Charles Bird who died in France on 19th February, 1917 aged 19. The memorial states that his home was the Mill House, Everdon. I knew a little of his story but I recently visited Joe and Lorna Kingston at the Mill House to find out more. Trooper Bird was in fact the uncle of Lorna. He joined the British Army with his two brothers, Frank and Reginald. Reginald was Lorna's father. What makes Eric's death particularly poignant is that he was probably the first "ordinary" young man of the village to win by competition, a place at Cambridge University. He was a scholar at Daventry Grammar School and was not only academically brilliant but a gifted sportsman. However he chose to volunteer in the Northamptonshire Yeomanry rather than take up his place at Cambridge.
His death in France at such a tender age was brought about not by a German shell or bullet (as I had assumed) but by an illness just as deadly - meningitis. He contracted this disease within the first few days of his arrival in France. He died in a hospital at Boisguillaume, a district about 5 kilometres north-east of Rouen. At that time the fighting front was some 50-70 miles east of the hospital. His body is interned in the local communal cemetery at Boisguillaume along with 319 other soldiers.
At the Mill, Lorna has a wonderful triptych with a photographic image of Eric flanked by his two brothers, three handsome young men all dressed in the uniform of cavalry troopers, with bandoleers of ammunition hanging from their shoulders. Eric's brother Frank survived the war relatively unscathed, but Lorna's father, Reginald, was taken prisoner and suffered the privations of a POW and he died at a relatively young age."
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