John Taylor

John William Taylor

Personal Details

John William Taylor, born in Whitchurch in 1897, the eldest son of Samuel and Martha Taylor of 1 Jones Yard, High Street, Whitchurch.

John was living in Runcorn in August 1914; he enlisted in Wigan in 1916.

Military Details

Regiment : 2/5th (Territorial) Battalion Manchester Regiment
Rank : Lance Corporal
Service Number : 202057

Died of Wounds; France 30th March 1918 Age 20

Medals and Awards
John was awarded the Campaign Medals (British War Medal and Allied Victory Medal)

Campaign Medals


Great War History Hub Whitchurch Shropshire Medals Front Image

The British War Medal (also known as 'Squeak') was a silver or bronze medal awarded to officers and men of the British and Imperial Forces who either entered a theatre of war or entered service overseas between 5th August 1914 and 11th November 1918 inclusive. This was later extended to services in Russia, Siberia and some other areas in 1919 and 1920. Approximately 6.5 million British War Medals were issued. Approximately 6.4 million of these were the silver versions of this medal. Around 110,000 of a bronze version were issued mainly to Chinese, Maltese and Indian Labour Corps. The front (obv or obverse) of the medal depicts the head of George V. The recipient's service number, rank, name and unit was impressed on the rim.

The Allied Victory Medal (also known as 'Wilfred') was issued by each of the allies. It was decided that each of the allies should each issue their own bronze victory medal with a similar design, similar equivalent wording and identical ribbon. The British medal was designed by W. McMillan. The front depicts a winged classical figure representing victory. Approximately 5.7 million victory medals were issued. Interestingly, eligibility for this medal was more restrictive and not everyone who received the British War Medal ('Squeak') also received the Victory Medal ('Wilfred'). However, in general, all recipients of 'Wilfred' also received 'Squeak' and all recipients of The 1914 Star or The 1914/1915 Star (also known as 'Pip') also received both 'Squeak' and 'Wilfred'. The recipient's service number, rank, name and unit was impressed on the rim.



Further Information

If you can provide any further information on John William Taylor please get in touch by leaving a comment below, using our Contact Form or by calling in to Whitchurch Heritage Centre.


Information provided by Terry Evanson Whitchurch, Shropshire and Whitchurch Museum and Archives


Comments

John Taylor — 2 Comments

  1. john william was my grandads brother.he moved to runcorn when the family splitup after the death of their mother in 1912.his cousin mason leslie bostock born in whitchurch but living in runcorn joined the welsh fusiliers and died in 1915 . his name is on the ring of remembrance in arras.

  2. Comment from Karen Bayley
    john william was my grandads brother.he moved to runcorn when the family splitup after the death of their mother in 1912.his cousin mason leslie bostock born in whitchurch but living in runcorn joined the welsh fusiliers and died in 1915 . his name is on the ring of remembrance in arras.

    Many thanks
    Judith
    (volunteer curator)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

We want to make sure you're human! * Time limit is exhausted. Please reload the CAPTCHA.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.