Pte. Chudleigh Inwoods Kirton

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Pte. Chudleigh Inwoods Kirton

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Waimea West, Tasman, South Island, New Zealand
Death: September 24, 1917 (21)
Bere Ferrers, West Devon, Devon, England (United Kingdom) (World War I: Killed by Express Train (railway accident))
Place of Burial: [Church C, 4877], Plymouth, Devon, England
Immediate Family:

Son of Robert Kirton and Frances Kirton
Brother of Matilda Isabella Allen Wilson; Annie Edith Kirton; Jessie Ella Hine; Florence Millicent Kirton; Robert Alfred Kirton and 6 others

Occupation: 28th Reinforcements H Company
Find A Grave ID: 59983287
Service No: WWI 56795
Managed by: Jason Scott Wills
Last Updated:

About Pte. Chudleigh Inwoods Kirton

Ten privates, serving in the 1NZEF (28th Reinforcements) were killed at Bere Ferrers Railway Station while getting out of the Troop Train on September 24 1917. They had just landed at Plymouth and were on their way to join their comrades on Salisbury Plain for preliminary training.The accident happened when a trainful of NZ troops who had just arrived in the country left Friary Station, Plymouth at 3pm. At 3.50 the train approached Bere Ferrers. The soldiers were raw, sick, tired and above all hungry, having eaten breakfast at 6am. They had been told that food would be provided on the journey. The arrangement was that when the train made its first stop at Exeter, two men from each carriage would carry provisions from the brake-van together with cups of tea and buns provided by the Mayoress' Comforts Fund. When the train made an unscheduled stop at Bere Ferrers, men in the rear section of the train decided that this must be Exeter, and breaking the rule of two from each carriage, jumped down. Some of them spilled onto the down-line track, just as the Waterloo -to- Plymouth Express rounded the sharp curve on its entry into Bere Ferrers. Although the fireman shouted a warning, and the train driver applied the brakes, the train pulled up about 400m beyond the station. Nine soldiers died instantly and another died the following morning in Tavistock Hospital. The inquest revealed that the men had got out of the train in the wrong side simply because they had assumed the door of entry was the correct door to exit by. Information was supplied by Mrs Kyle (England).

Sources

  1. New Zealand and World War One Roll of Honour: http://freepages.rootsweb.com/~sooty/genealogy/nzefrohK.html / Ref 11.4.2021
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Pte. Chudleigh Inwoods Kirton's Timeline

1896
July 11, 1896
Waimea West, Tasman, South Island, New Zealand
1917
September 24, 1917
Age 21
Bere Ferrers, West Devon, Devon, England (United Kingdom)
September 24, 1917
Age 21
Efford Cemetery and Crematorium, [Church C, 4877], Plymouth, Devon, England (United Kingdom)