The Rushden Echo Friday 24th August 1917, transcribed by Kay Collins
Rushden Soldiers’ Thanks Gifts from the Roll of Honour
The Committee of the Roll of Honour for Glassbrook-road and Brookfield-road, Rushden, have received from the soldiers whose names appear on the roll many letters of thanks for gifts sent to them by the committee. We append a few extracts:-
Pte. G. Morris, R.A.M.C., with the Salonica Forces, says: It makes one feel that the boys who are away doing their bit are not forgotten by the people of the good old town when they receive gifts like that from them, and they would be wonderfully cheered up by the knowledge that the people who had known them in their everyday life during times of peace were thinking of them and trying to make things a little brighter for them during the dangerous times most of them have been passing through. In this country we have to fight malaria and dysentery more than anything, but the boys out here are as cheerful as ever.
Pte. H. Hornsby, F.E.B. Salonica Forces: I am very sorry to hear that so many Rushden lads have fallen.
Gunner A. Downing, -- Siege Battery, R.G.A., France: It is up to every man to do his part to help to save the country from ruin, and it is a great work you ladies are doing at home. I am in a battery of guns. We go in for 24 hours and out for 24. We had a very rough night last night. We had given the Germans a rough handful, and about 10p.m. he set off. We had to set him down again, and it was an awful night, dark and raining hard, but the boys stuck to it and came through without a scratch.
D. E. Tomlin: If you could see the men on the look-out for letters, I am sure you would understand the pleasure one feels when they come our way.
Pte. H. Garley, M.G.C.: I shall be glad when the war is over, but I do not expect that will be just yet.
S. Dickens: We out here must keep on smiling.
H. F. Ball: I am with many fellows from other parts of the country, but I never hear of any such gifts, so I am sure we who live in Rushden should be proud of the efforts everyone at home is making for us. I myself am more than thankful, and shall never forget your great kindness.
Pte. H. Cooke, Labour Coy., B.E.F.: It is the most welcome gift anyone can have sent out here, and it shows the boys are not forgotten while they are giving the Germans a strafing. I am sure the boys are doing their best. I have seen a lot of Rushden fellows out here, and they all speak well of the Rolls of Honour.
Harry Bryant, writing from Southwark Military Hospital, says: I have been here ten weeks. I thought I should have been out and ready for service again by now, but I am getting on a little now.
Pte. A. Foreman writes thanking the Committee for their most cheerful letter and the gift of money.
Pte. L. Bazeley: I was surprised to have another gift in so short a time. I think the friends in the street are doing extraordinarily well with the Roll of Honour.
J. Hinde: I am afraid it will be a long time before the war is over.
Lance-Corpl. S. J. Hornsby says he is looking forward to the time when we shall have a lasting peace not a peace based on German ideas, but one in which a large nation does not strive to smash smaller nations for its own gain.
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