BX June 30, 1916
Mrs. Harvey Yake, 220 West Street, this morning received a telegram from Ottawa to the effect that her brother, Trooper George Henry Fuller, of the 4th C.M.R., had been missing since June 15. Trooper Fuller enlisted here with the 25th Brant Dragoons and left early in the war with Lt. Harry Cockshutt’s squadron of the 4th C.M.R. Previous to enlistment he was employed as a polisher at the Buck Stove Works. He is a married man and his wife resides at 20 Dundurn Street, Hamilton.
BX July 18, 1916
Pte. George Henry Fuller German Prisoner – Trooper of 4th C.M.R. Was Captured in German Rush, June 2 – Was Badly Hurt
Word has been received by Mrs. H.B. Yake, that her brother Trooper George H. Fuller, of the 4th C.M.R., who was reported missing on June 2, when the Canadian trenches were overwhelmed, is a prisoner of war in a German hospital, his leg having been badly injured.
He resided at 220 West Street here and was a polisher at Buck’s before enlisting. Mrs. Yake’s other brother, William Fuller, who was recently sent to the hospital with shell shock, has recovered and has returned to the trenches.
BX January 29, 1917
Is Now Interned in Switzerland – Lance Corporal George Henry Fuller Tells of Ill-Treatment in Germany
Exchanged from a German prison camp in a recent batch of prisoners Lance-Corp. George Fuller, brother of Mrs. H.B. Yake, West Street, is now in Switzerland. Mrs. Yake has just had a letter from her bother giving this information. The exchanges are just of the badly wounded and sick men. Corp. Fuller expresses his pleasure at getting out of Germany, which he describes as a dreadful place to be in, especially for a Britisher. They were called English swine and fed and used as such.
As to the food he states he does not think they could have given them much better, as food was very scarce. Soup was made of cabbage water and boiled horse carrots. Bread was made of sawdust and potatoes and the men could not have got along at all had it not been for the parcels.
He describes Hotel Eiger, Murren, where he is now, as fine – right up in the mountains. They are living there as guests, being given a complete outfit of clothes when they arrived there. Lance-Corp. Fuller was with the 4th C.M.R. and was wounded last June.
BX September 19, 1917
Private G.H. Fuller is Repatriated
Lance Corporal George Henry Fuller is officially reported today as previously a prisoner of war and now repatriated.