EDDY Family of Cornwall

James Henry EDDYAge: 28 years18871915

Name
James Henry EDDY
Given names
James Henry
Surname
EDDY
Birth 1887 38 38
Death of a brotherGeorge Arthur EDDY
1887
Birth of a brotherRobert William EDDY
1888 (Age 12 months)
Death of a brotherRobert William EDDY
1888 (Age 12 months)
Birth of a sisterEster Ellen EDDY
1889 (Age 2 years)
Birth of a brotherGeorge Arthur EDDY
1891 (Age 4 years)
Death of a fatherGeorge Edward EDDY
2 September 1891 (Age 4 years)
Birth of a sisterLillian Mary EDDY
1892 (Age 5 years)
Death of a sisterLillian Mary EDDY
1892 (Age 5 years)
Death of a sisterEster Ellen EDDY
1894 (Age 7 years)
Death of a paternal grandmotherEleanor NOY
1896 (Age 9 years)
Death of a maternal grandfatherJohn ANDREWARTHA
17 September 1901 (Age 14 years)
Death of a motherElizabeth ANDREWARTHA
15 November 1906 (Age 19 years)
Death of a maternal grandmotherMary BONEY
16 December 1915 (on the date of death)
Occupationyes

Note: Storekeeper; Miner
Militaryyes

Note: Eddy, James Henry
Death 16 December 1915 (Age 28 years)
Cause of death: WW1 - Died of wounds at sea
Burial December 1915 (Age 28 years)
Family with parents - View this family
father
mother
Marriage: 2 December 1876Victoria, Australia
13 months
elder sister
Mary Ellen EDDY
Birth: 1877 28 28Pleasant Creek (Now Stawell), Victoria, Australia
Death: 1877Ballarat, Victoria, Australia
2 years
elder sister
Elizabeth EDDY
Birth: 1878 29 29Eaglehawk, Victoria, Australia
Death: 1878Eaglehawk, Victoria, Australia
2 years
elder sister
Jane EDDY
Birth: 1879 30 30California Gully, Bendigo, Victoria, Australia
Death: 1879California Gully, Bendigo, Victoria, Australia
2 years
elder sister
Annie EDDY
Birth: 1880 31 31Eaglehawk, Victoria, Australia
Death: 1880California Gully, Bendigo, Victoria, Australia
2 years
elder brother
Edward John EDDY
Birth: 1881 32 32Eaglehawk, Victoria, Australia
Death: 12 November 1917Bendigo, Victoria, Australia
2 years
elder sister
Rebecca May EDDY
Birth: 1882 33 33Eaglehawk, Victoria, Australia
Death: 1883Eaglehawk, Victoria, Australia
3 years
elder sister
Ethel Ellen EDDY
Birth: 1884 35 35Eaglehawk, Victoria, Australia
Death: 1885Eaglehawk, Victoria, Australia
3 years
elder brother
George Arthur EDDY
Birth: 1886 37 37Eaglehawk, Victoria, Australia
Death: 1887Eaglehawk, Victoria, Australia
2 years
himself
James Henry EDDY
Birth: 1887 38 38Eaglehawk, Victoria, Australia
Death: 16 December 1915At Sea Off Gallipoli
2 years
younger brother
Robert William EDDY
Birth: 1888 39 39Eaglehawk, Victoria, Australia
Death: 1888California Gully, Bendigo, Victoria, Australia
2 years
younger sister
Ester Ellen EDDY
Birth: 1889 40 40Eaglehawk, Victoria, Australia
Death: 1894Eaglehawk, Victoria, Australia
3 years
younger brother
2 years
younger sister
Lillian Mary EDDY
Birth: 1892 43 43Eaglehawk, Victoria, Australia
Death: 1892Eaglehawk, Victoria, Australia

Occupation

Storekeeper; Miner

Military

Eddy, James Henry Number: 1024 Rank: Private [Pte] Unit: 24th Bn Service: Army Conflict: 1914-1918 Date of Death: 16/12/1915 Place of Death: Cause of Death: Died of wounds Memorial Panel: 101 Cemetery or Memorial Details: 6 Lone Pine Memorial Next Of Kin: Place Of Enlistment: Eaglehawk, VIC Native Place: Notes: EDDY, Pte. James Henry, 1024. 24th Bn. Died of wounds at sea 16th Dec., 1915. 66. Source: AWM145 Roll of Honour cards, 1914-1918 War, Army

In Memory of JAMES HENRY EDDY Private 1024 24th Bn., Australian Infantry, A.I.F who died on Thursday, 16th December 1915.

Commemorative Information Memorial: LONE PINE MEMORIAL, Turkey Grave Reference/ Panel Number: 66. Location: The Lone Pine Memorial is at the east end of Lone Pine Cemetery, which stands on the plateau at the top of Victoria Gully, and is located on the road from Gaba Tepe to Chunuk Bair. Both Lone Pine Cemetery and Lone Pine Memorial are named after the solitary pine tree that grew there. The Memorial stands on the site of the fiercest fighting at Lone Pine and overlooks the whole front line of May 1915. Many of those whose names are recorded on the Memorial were buried on that front, in graves made in haste and obliterated by shell-fire later. This Memorial records the names of all New Zealand soldiers who fought on the Gallipoli Peninsula and were buried at sea, and of those who fell in the Anzac Area prior to the fighting in August, 1915, and have no known graves. The Memorial is built of limestone from the Ulgar Dere quarries. It is a massive pylon in plain ash, about 45 feet square and 47 feet high. The names of over 4,200 Australian dead are carved on panels of Hopton Wood Stone let into the screen wall in front of the Memorial, and those of over 700 New Zealand dead appear on similar panels on the Memorial itself. The purpose of this Memorial is expressed in the inscription carved in the centre of the screen wall before the Memorial: TO THE GLORY OF GOD AND IN LASTING MEMORIAL OF 3,268 AUSTRALIAN SOLDIERS WHO FOUGHT ON GALLIPOLI IN 1915 AND HAVE NO KNOWN GRAVES, AND 456 NEW ZEALAND SOLDIERS WHOSE NAMES ARE NOT RECORDED IN OTHER AREAS OF THE PENINSULA BUT WHO FELL IN THE ANZAC AREA AND HAVE NO KNOWN GRAVES; AND ALSO OF 960 AUSTRALIANS AND 252 NEW ZEALANDERS WHO, FIGHTING ON GALLIPOLI IN 1915, INCURRED MORTAL WOUNDS OR SICKNESS AND FOUND BURIAL AT SEA. Historical Information: Since the engraving of this Dedicatory Panel a number of graves continue to be identified, these are now commemorated by name on a headstone in the relevant cemeteries. The engraved statistics are therefore subject to periodic revision. The Anzac Area, as defined by the Treaty of Lausanne, is an area of about 2 square miles, permanently conceded by the Turkish Government in its entirety on account of the number of cemeteries and unlocated graves that it contains. In a wider sense, it is the midmost of the three areas into which our operations on Gallipoli, and our cemeteries there, are divided. Its occupation was begun at half-past four on the morning of 25th April, 1915, when the 3rd Australian Brigade landed at Ari Burnu. That Brigade was followed by the remainder of the 1st Australian Division and by the New Zealand and Australian Division. Before the end of April the landing place had become "Anzac Cove," and the code name formed by the initial letters of the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps had been given to the semi-circular area, 1,100 yards across, held by the Corps. From April to August a series of desperate attacks and counter attacks took place on the edge of the Anzac Area. The 4th Australian Battalion attacked the position afterwards known as Johnston's Jolly on 26th April, and during the first few days both Australian and New Zealand troops made desperate attacks to gain possession of the Nek. The "Chessboard," further North, was attacked on 2nd May by the 13th, 15th and 16th Australian Battalions, the Otago Infantry Regiment and two battalions of Marines; and on the same day a Turkish Observation Post at Lala Baba was destroyed by New Zealanders. On 4th May the 11th Battalion raided Gaba Tepe. From the 9th to the 15th, and from the 28th to the 5th June, there was fierce fighting round Quinn's Post. From the 19th to the 21st May the Turks, in an engagement known to us as "The Defence of Anzac", assaulted the centre of the position; their casualties were very great and an armistice was arranged for the 24th May in order to bury the dead. On the night of the 29th-30th June they made another unsuccessful attack. On the 6th-10th August Australian, New Zealand and Indian forces, with part of the 13th Division, attempted to carry Chunuk Bair and Hill 971, inland from, and North-East of, the "original Anzac Area"; and New Zealand troops, with others, at one time reached the summit of Chunuk Bair and held it until they were relieved. By the 12th, Bauchop's Hill, Table Top, and a considerable salient covering Argyl Dere had been taken, and at the South end of the line Lone Pine was secured by the 1st Australian Division; but Baby 700, Chunuk Bair and Hill 60 (on the Suvla side) were still in enemy hands, in spite of the desperate bravery and the temporary successes of the main force. This fighting (the Battle of Sari Bair) was the climax of the effort to reach the central hills of the Peninsula. On the 21st-29th August, in conjunction with the forces at Suvla, Australian infantry and Light Horse, New Zealand Mounted Rifles, and some British and Indian infantry captured half of Hill 60. From that time onwards the line remained stationary. After long and anxious consideration, it was decided to withdraw from Gallipoli, and on the 18th-20th December, 1915, Anzac was evacuated without the loss of a single man. The proportion of dead whose names are on Memorials on Gallipoli, and not on headstones, is very high. But it was this close fighting, in a country of ridges and valleys, against a determined enemy, which established in history the name of the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps. The fighting which is summarised above is reflected in the panels of the Lone Pine Memorial. There are now 4929, 1914-1918 war casualties named on this memorial.

In Memory of Private JAMES HENRY EDDY 24th Bn., Australian Infantry, A.I.F who died on Thursday, 16th December 1915.

Remembered with honour LONE PINE MEMORIAL, Turkey.

Shared note

(Medical):Wounded at Gallipoli, Dardenelles, St. Blair