Walter Taylor

Rank: 
Private
Regimental number: 
11404
Unit at enlistment: 
4th Battalion
Force: 
C.E.F.
Volunteered or conscripted: 
Volunteered
Survived the war: 
Yes
Wounded: 
Yes
Cemetery: 
Farringdon Cemetery, Brantford, Ontario
Birth country: 
England
Birth county: 
Sussex
Birth city: 
Crowborough
Address at enlistment: 
54 Rose Avenue, Brantford, Ontario
Next of kin address: 
Pilmer Road, Crowborough, England
Trade or calling: 
Carpenter
Religious denominations: 
Church of England
Marital status: 
Single

Letters and documents

BX May 4, 1915

According to a telegram received in the city yesterday morning, two more Brantfordites are numbered among the wounded in the fighting which took place about two weeks ago in the vicinity of Ypres. Rev. C.E. Jeakins, rector of St. Judes Anglican church received the following cablegram from Herbert Harrington, a member of St. Judes Anglican Church, who is on active service in France. "Taylor and Dadswell wounded. Progressing inform mother."

Private W. Taylor, who is referred to in the cable, formerly resided at 54 Rose Avenue, but since his departure his relatives have all removed from this city. He served for six years in the Royal Sussex Regiment prior to his coming to Canada. He was a carpenter by trade.

BX October 30, 1916

Five Returned Heroes are Home on Furlough – Sergeants. Stodden and Pilley and Privates Houlding, Batson and Taylor – Acted as Escort

Five more Brantford heroes, Sergeants Stodden and Pilley and Privates Harry Houlding, George Batson and Taylor, all of whom have been wounded, returned to the city on Saturday evening on a short furlough. These men all came back as an escort of soldiers whose minds have given way under the strain of war.

All five men were members of the original Fourth Battalion, and all wear the gold stripes which quietly acclaim the fact that they have been wounded. Pte. Houlding, who is a brother of Mrs. Frank Leeming, was wounded three times and spent some months in the hospital. He was first wounded at Ypres in April of last year, then again in October, and in December he received two more wounds during bombardments.

All of the five men are now much better and after they reach England, which they will do by November 25, they will return to France again.

That it is figured at the front that no more than 17 of the original Fourth Battalion, both officers and men, remain was a remark made by Pte. Houlding. He was born and brought up in Brantford and was greeted all along the street by old friends this morning.

Private George Batson is a son of Mrs. James Batson, 111 Murray Street. He was wounded last May and has since been in a convalescent home at Epsom, England, Sergt. G. Pilley formerly resided at 124 Spring Street. He is a married man and prior to enlisting had eight years service with the Welsh regiment and three years with the 38th D.R.S. Sergeant Stodden’s home is at 102 Aberdeen Street. He is also a married man and laborer. He was for 16 years a member of the 16th Dragoon Guards.

BX April 5, 1976

TAYLOR, Walter – At the Brantford General Hospital, Monday, April 5, 1976, in his 88th year; Walter Taylor, formerly of 392 Marlborough Street; beloved husband of the late Edith Anne Taylor, who predeceased him, in October 1975; dear father of Mrs. Fernley (Joan) Dowden, Brantford; Mrs. Donald (Dorine) Davidson, Brantford and Mrs. Alex (Marjorie) Ramsay, London; also survived by six grandchildren and 4 great grandchildren.  Mr. Taylor was a veteran of World War 1 and served with the 4th Battalion.  By request of the family, there will be no visitation.  The family welcome friends to join them for the service in the chapel of McCleister Funeral Home Ltd., 30 Brant Avenue, Tuesday at 2 p.m.  Rev Kris Jensen of Elm Avenue United Church officiating.  Interment in Farringdon Burial Ground.  In Lieu of Flowers, donations to Elm Avenue United Church Memorial Fund, the Holy Trinity Anglican Church Memorial Education Fund of your favorite charity gratefully appreciated.

Additional information from family: Walter Taylor left England for Canada in 1911. He had training as a carpenter and was hoping for more opportunities. He came to Brantford alone and I don't know if he had friends here. All his family were in England. He enlisted August 9, 1914 in Brantford, arrived in Plymouth England on Oct. 14, 1914, and sailed to France in February 1915. He was in the Ypres area by April sustaining injuries at Hill 60 on April 23, 1915. He was in hospital in France for three months and returned to England in June 1915. For the remainder of the war, once he was declared 'fit for batman duty', he served as a cook in several camps across the south of England. During this time, while visiting family in Crowborough, Sussex, he became reacquainted with my grandmother who lived in Tunbridge Wells, Kent and they married June 3, 1916. My grandmother would follow Walter from camp to camp - Folkestone, Hythe, Brighton, etc - and my mother was born in Folkestone in 1917. Walter returned to Canada on July 3, 1919 and settled in Brantford where my grandmother & their young daughter joined him. In Brantford, Walter worked as a carpenter and had a very large garden. However, he continued to have a 'chest condition' as a result of a chlorine gas attack on April 22, 1915. He was treated at Christie Street Hospital in Toronto for several years and had to be 'on welfare'. Eventually he found employment at Cockshutts but still pursued some carpentry and gardening. Walter Taylor died on April 5, 1976.