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Hannah Owen
Place of birth: Holyhead
Service: Stewardess, c.1905 - 1918
Death: 1918-10-10, RMS Leinster, Drowning / Boddi
Memorial: War memorial; Memorial Hyfrydle Chapel, Holyhead, Anglesey
Notes: aged 36. RMS Leinster was torpedoed in the Irish Sea. HO died together with Louise Parry
Sources: http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=107830381
Reference: WaW0040
M Jane Owen
Service: Munitions Worker
Memorial: Cenotaph, Swansea, Glamorgan
Reference: WaW0041
Louisa Parry
Place of birth: Holyhead
Service: Stewardess
Death: 1918-10-10, RMS Leinster, Drowning / Boddi
Memorial: War memorial, Holyhead, Anglesey
Notes: aged 22. RMS Leinster was torpedoed in the Irish Sea. LP died together with Hannah Owen
Sources: http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=15368549
Reference: WaW0042
Doris Patterson
Place of birth: Swansea
Service: Munitions Worker
Notes: Aged 34. Doris Patterson witnessed the explosion that killed Gwenllian Williams and Eleanor Thomas, and was uninjured although she was only 'two yards away'.
Reference: WaW0095
Witness account of explosion
Newspaper account: Doris Patterson's witness account of explosion, South Wales Daily Post 18 January 1919
Emily Ada Pickford (née Pearn)
Place of birth: Penarth
Service: Entertainer
Death: -1919-07.02, River Somme, Drowning / Boddi
Memorial: War memorial, Penarth, Glamorgan
Notes: aged 37. A member of one of Lena Ashwell's Concert Parties, she died when the car in which she was a passenger skidded into the River Somme on the way back from a concert. Buried Abbeville Community Cemetery Extension Plot V, Row G, Grave 23
Reference: WaW0043
Penarth War Memorial
Name of Emily Pickford on Penarth War Memorial. She was a singer who drowned in an accident in the Somme January 1919
Arvona (Fona) Powell Jones
Place of birth: Gorseinon July 10th, 1913
Service: Small child
Notes: Fona confirmed her address and date of birth: July 10th, 1913. She recalled a story about her mother during the First World War asking her, because her father had received call-up papers, ‘You don’t want your father to go to war do you? She replied’ ‘Oh! Yes!’, because she had seen her uncle, who was at sea, in a uniform with a whistle around his neck. She thought therefore that her father would have a uniform and a whistle too. So she was delighted at the prospect of her father dressed in a uniform and whistle. But she remembers her mother’s face falling. ‘Oh! She was terribly disappointed that I had said that I wanted my father to go to war.’ But her father worked in the steelworks and since steel was required during the war he worked there for the duration of the war. Her parent’s names were Mary Ann Powell and Richard Jones; her father came from Cydweli and her mother was local to Gorseinon area. Her father had worked in the steelworks in Cydweli too. She also talks of her uncle, Brynmor, who was in the navy and who hated the war. At the end of the war he gave his navy clothes to her mother and told her to do what she wanted with them. She made Fona a dress from the bell-bottoms – they were of serge and added flowers etc onto it. She wore it all the time – to chapel and all. This was when she was about 5-6 years old. She remembers wearing it and swinging of a tree branch in it. Her mother’s brother (Tom in 1915 according to the family’s family tree)) died of typhoid in Crystal Palace during the war and she has a photograph of a wedding during the war with the men dressed in black in memory of him. Another of her mother’s brothers (Baden) was called up but when he arrived at the mess plates were being thrown all over the place. The Armistice – peace agreement had just been signed. And that’s all he saw of the war. Fona also recalled how, for the duration of the war, her mother removed a model of an eagle which was on top of the family’s grandfather clock and stored it away in a drawer, because it was a reminder and symbol of Germany. After the war it was restored to its place on top of the clock! ‘Memory is a strange thing isn’t it.
Sources: fona_jones_gorseinon.wave_sound
Reference: WaW0075
Fona Jones bottom left (blurred) at family wedding.
A family wedding showing a blurred Fona Jones, bottom left. The women were all dressed in mourning for Fona's uncle Tom, who had died in 1915.
Lily Tobias (Shepherd)
Place of birth: Swansea
Service: Writer, activist, nationalist
Notes: Lily was the daughter of Russian Jewish parents who had fled Russia to avoid conscription, and settled first in Swansea and then in Ystalyfera; she was the first of their children to be born in Wales. She began writing for Lais Llafur at 14, and was heavily involved in suffrage, ILP and pacifist activities. Her brothers were conscientious objectors. She was described by the Labour politician Fenner Brockway as “an active and belligerent pacifist… showing great resourcefulness and courage in defying the authorities and assisting draft dodgers, and those in prison”. She later took up the cause of the establishment of a Jewish state, and wrote several novels.
Sources: Jasmine Donahaye The Greatest Need: The creative life and troubled times of Lily Tobias, a Welsh Jew in Palestine. Honno 2015 https://wciavoices.wordpress.com/2016/12/07/the-shepherd-family-of-ystalyfera-and-pontypridd-in-the-first-world-war
Reference: WaW0245
Gladys Irene Pritchard (née Harris)
Place of birth: Newport
Service: Munitions Worker
Death: TNT poisoning / Gwenwyno TNT
Notes: Gladys was a war widow aged 28. Her husband had been killed in July 1916. She had two small children. Her father was granted 2s a week for the upkeep of each child; the children also benefited from their father’s military pension.
Sources: http://1914-1918.invisionzone.com/forums
Reference: WaW0045
Gladys Pritchard
Gladys’s photograph was collected by the Women’s Subcommittee of the Imperial War Museum as part of its collection of women who died during the War.
Newspaper report
Report of maintenance grant to Gladys’s father, Joseph Harris, for the upkeep of her children. Weekly Argus 11th November 1916.rn
May (Mary) Prosser
Place of birth: Gilwern
Service: Munitions Worker, 1916 - 1917
Death: 1917-04-03, Rochdale, TNT poisoning / Gwenwyno TNT
Memorial: Recreation Ground gates; Market hall, Christchurch Govilon, Govilon, Monmouthshire
Notes: May, born 1891, was the fourth daughter of a farm labourer and his wife. She followed two of her sisters into domestic service in Rochdale. She began munitions work late in 1916, but soon became ill with ‘toxic jaundice’ and died at her sister Margaret’s home in Rochdale. She was also sister of Nellie Prosser [qv].
Sources: Ryland Wallace: May Prosser, Munitionette. AMC/WAW Newsletter, June 2016
Reference: WaW0046
Mimmi (Sarah) Richards
Service: Mother
Notes: Mother, Mimmi (Sarah) and sister, Edith, to her left, at Tom’s graveside, c.1920; Gunner Thomas Sidney Richards,‘killed in action’, Armentieres, France, 14 March 1918, aged 20 in northern France, c. 1920
Reference: WaW0079
Sarah (Mimmi) and Edith Richards
Photograph of Mimmi (Sarah) and Edith Richards, Mother and sister of Gunner Thomas Sidney Richards, at his grave in France, c.1920; Tom Richards was ‘killed in action’, Armentieres, France