Sunday 27 September 2015

Band of Brothers

On the 27th September 1915 Horace Hollins, my 2nd cousin twice removed, arrived in Boulogne, France with the 10th Royal Welch Fusiliers.

Horace was born in 1879 in Rugeley, Staffordshire to William and Sarah Ann Hollins (nee Wood). He had one older brother, William (born 1875) and two younger brothers, George (born 1886) and Charles (born 1884) as well as two sisters, Mary Ann (born 1877) and Harriet (born 1881). Both Mary Ann and Harriet were married, to Fred Williscroft and James Fisher respectively.

The family had a military background, Horace’s father; William had served in the army for 37 years as a colour sergeant and in the territorials and was well known in Rugeley as the local military band master. All his brothers and brothers in law played in the band and all had answered their country’s call out the outbreak of war.

Horace himself had previously been a solider with the Grenadier Guards, enlisting in 1900 and serving throughout the Boer War. Shortly after the outbreak of the Great War he re-joined his old regiment serving as an instructor in several depots before joining the Royal Welch Fusiliers as a Sergeant.

Horace had married Emily Leader (Born Rugeley 1882) in 1904 at St. Augustine’s church, Rugeley. They moved to Coventry shortly afterwards, where Horace joined the Coventry Military Band. They had two children Harold James (born 1906) and Mabel (born 1908). By 1911 Horace was working as an Iron Moulder and the family were living at 1 Francis St, Foleshill, Coventry.

His elder brother William had also moved to Coventry around the same time as Horace and was also working as an Iron Moulder (Motor parts) and was living with his wife Amy (nee Saunders) and his seven children (another son was born in 1912) at 11 Francis St, Coventry.

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