IN MEMORY OF OUR BAXENDEN LADS

1914 - 1918

& 1939 - 1946

Wm. Turner - November 1994


PTE. 44494 JOHN JAMES SKELLERN
28th October 1918
 Baxenden Lads 

Introduction
Baxenden War Memorial

 1914-1918 

ANDERSON, William
ANDERTON, John Henry
BAILEY, Harry
BARNES, James Albert
BATES, Thomas Henry
BOLTON, Jack
BOND, Harry Hargreaves
BRANDON, Tom
BURY, Percy
CHEVIN, William Thomas
DOBSON, Walter
DOWNES, Joseph
DUCKWORTH, Frank
DUCKWORTH, John (Jack) Pilkington
GORE, Elias
GREENWOOD, James
HAMBLING, Benjamin George
HAMBLING, Charles Buckingham
HAWKER, William
HEYS, James Edward
HEYS, John Lawson
HINDLE, Arnold
JOHNSON, Harry
KENYON, Ernest
LIVETT, John William
MARSDEN, Fred
MOSS, James
RATCLIFFE, Fred
RUSHTON, Fred
SKELLERN, John James
SMITH, James Edward
STOTT, Fred
TODD, Walter Counsell
WATERWORTH, David
WHITEHEAD, John William
WHITEHEAD, Riley


 1939-1946 

CUCKNELL, Alan
GIBSON, Edward
KAVANAGH, Wilfred
TAYLOR, Ernest
WINTERBOTTOM, Richard


 Links 

Accrington Pals
Visit to Serre
The Somme and Vimy
First World War pages



PTE. 44494 JOHN JAMES SKELLERN of the Loyal North Lancashire Regiment was killed in action in France on October 28th 1918, only fifteen days before the end of the war on November 11th. (N.B. He died eleven days after Pte. Anderson of the same regiment)

John was the last man from Baxenden to be killed in action. Before he enlisted he lived with his wife Clara and their daughter at 520 Manchester Road, Baxenden. He formerly worked as a spinner at Victoria Mill, Baxenden. He regularly attended St. John's Church, Baxenden, and he was also a respected member of Baxenden Working Men's Club in Hill Street. He was actually the first and only member of the Club to fall in action. At the time of his death John had been in the Army only four months. Fourteen weeks of these he spent in training in England, thus he was in France only two weeks before his death.

The secretary of the Working Men's Club, Mr. Nuttall, wrote to Mrs. Skellern expressing the members' "sincere condolences with you in the loss of your dear husband while fighting for King and Country - we hope you will be granted help and strength to overcome the very trying time you are going through".

John was killed with two of his friends by a shell whilst resting by the roadside near the small village of Wassigny, near Le Cateau, shortly after its capture by advancing British forces. All three were buried by their comrades in the village communal cemetery. There are a total of twenty nine British war graves in the cemetery -a lasting commemoration of the sacrifice made in the liberation of one small village.

©  Wm. Turner 1994