Reginald Pimble was a convalescent
patient at Hickwells after being wounded at The First Battle of Ypres in November 1914.
His entry in Nurse Oliver’s album reads:
A trouble’s a ton
A trouble’s an ounce
A trouble is what you make it
It isn’t the fact that you’re hurt that counts
But just - how did you take it
7480 Pte R Pimble
1st Batt Gloucestershire Regt
Stopped two bullets at Ypres Nov 7th 1914
He shares this page with Private
W Brown of the 1/9th Middlesex Regiment, Private 41441 Thomas George Clarke of the Norfolk Regiment and 3655 Private Martin Donnelly of the 1st East Surrey Regiment.
Reginald was born in Ross Workhouse,
Ross-on-Wye, Herefordshire on 22nd May 1888. He
was the son of Ann Pymble (born c1862) and is probably the same three year old Reginald Pimble who appears on the 1891 census
as a three year old “nurse child” living at 42 Suffolk Street, Gloucester. The household in 1901 comprised: George Phelps (head, married, aged 35, a grocer), his wife Isabella (aged
31), Albert Rea (brother-in-law, single, aged 25, working as a dock labourer), Sarah Rea (mother-in-law, married, aged 58),
Reginald, and Mary Roach (visitor, single, aged 20). Reginald’s place of
birth is recorded as “not known”.
I have been unable to locate him
on the 1901 census but his entry on the silver war badge roll at The National Archives in London states
that he enlisted in the army on 12th
March 1904. He
would have been two months short of his sixteenth birthday at the time and would have enlisted for boys’ service. His reckonable service would have counted from his eighteenth birthday – 22nd May 1906.
On 19th April 1909 he married Florence
Helen Limbrick in Gloucester and their first child – Ivy Annie Pimble –was born in Gloucester
in August 1910. A son, George Henry Pimble followed three years later in September
1913.
By the time war was declared on
Germany in August 1914, Reginald was on the army reserve and was recalled to the colours on 5th
August. He arrived in France in late
August 1914 and served with the 1st Gloucestershire Regiment until wounded at Ypres on 7th November. The following information regarding the 1st Gloucestershire Regiment in its early days on The Western
Front, is adapted from Part 6 of The Hospital Way:
Although Reg Pimble arrived in France
on the 27th of August, only two weeks after the battalion had disembarked at Havre, it had been an eventful fortnight. Arriving at Haulchin, some ten kilometres south east of Mons on the 23rd, the 1st
Gloucesters had Stood-To all day on the northern edges of the village only to receive orders at 7am the following morning
to retire. They had then commenced the 200 mile march to the Marne
and it was at Rozoy, on 5th September that Pimble, amongst a draft of 100 men, joined his footsore colleagues. This was the first reinforcement that the battalion had received since leaving England and with it came
an inadequate supply of shirts, socks and boots which was nevertheless gratefully received by a number of the men, the condition
of whose boots had reduced them to marching in bare feet.
Now though, they were in Flanders, rushed up to prevent the Kaiser’s armies from breaking through at Ypres. On the 23rd October they’d successfully repelled determined German attacks north of Langemarck and
re-claimed trenches recently taken by the enemy. Terrible casualties had been
inflicted on the advancing Germans, but the 1st Division, to which the 1st Gloucesters belonged, had also suffered heavily. By the time it was relieved on the morning of the 25th, the Division had suffered
fourteen hundred casualties over the previous few days’ fighting.
Four days’ later, they were back in the thick of it, thrown into the Battle of Gheluvelt and suffering further casualties. Even when they had withdrawn to Inverness Copse on the 1st of November the men from the Cotswolds had been shelled mercilessly
and suffered a further seventy five casualties during the relief. The battalion
was now reduced to just 240 other ranks and they badly needed a rest.
The next few days however, were hardly what they had in mind. On November
2nd there were further casualties: three officers and fifty eight other ranks; some of these caused by ‘friendly fire’
from the British artillery which was unaware, during the ebb and flow of battle that the ground they were shelling was back
in Allied hands. On the 3rd November, 200 reinforcements arrived.
“These numbers,” recorded the author of the 1st Gloucesters’ battalion diary later, “were
particularly welcome after the previous week’s casualties and greatly helped to put fresh life into the Regiment.” On 5th November however, having been rushed back into the line and ordered to
hold it for twenty four hours at all costs, the battalion had suffered a further forty one casualties from artillery fire
which completely destroyed many of the trenches and buried a number of the men.
The 6th was spent re-organising the battalion, a task completed only just in time for there was a fresh emergency
south at Zillebeke. The Germans had pushed back the French troops holding that
part of the line and were threatening to break through. Leaving at four in the
afternoon, the Gloucesters had arrived at their new positions north of the village of Zwartelen in darkness and amid much confusion. The frontage the battalion occupied was lengthy, too large really for an already depleted battalion which
nevertheless did its best by dividing the line up roughly into sectors and posting batches of men to them. What few officers remained were distributed amongst the scattered outposts as effectively as their limited
numbers allowed.
“7th November,” says The Official History, “was misty and marked the definite commencement of winter
weather: mud henceforth seriously interfered with operations and cold at night made sleeping in the open difficult, if not
impossible.” Certainly, there had been little sleep for Reg Pimble and
his pals on the eastern edges of Zwartelen and in the woods further to the north. Now
as the morning advanced, the order to assist the neighbouring 22nd Brigade in a counter attack on the left had been cancelled
because it was just too foggy to see where they were firing. The 22nd Brigade
however, had pushed ahead and secured its objectives, reporting back that the trenches opposite the Gloucesters were empty. Orders were issued for an immediate advance and for the enemy trenches to be
seized; the rest of the 3rd Brigade would provide support.
The battalion pushed forward in two lines but no sooner had they emerged
from Zwartelen than they were met with intense rifle and machine gun fire from German troops still holding on to some of the
houses in the village. “The whole advance,” continues the battalion
diarist, “had been far too hurried and no definite orders had ever been given.
Officers and men were much too exhausted to do more than clear a few of the houses.
Most of the men had to lie down in the open all day and only a few could get back to the trenches they had dug the
night before.” At roll call that night, only three officers and 213 men
answered their names. Private 7480 Pimble, R was not one of them; shot twice,
he’d received his Blighty wound and would not return to Flanders.
Reg Pimble’s wounds were
severe enough to cause him to be discharged from the army on 7th July 1915 as no longer physically fit for war service
and in due course he would receive his silver war badge (number 98887) and later his 1914 Star and British War and Victory
Medals.
Three more children were born to
Reginald and Florence Pimble: Bertha Pimble in March 1916, Kathleen I Pimble in September 1918 and Violet Christine Pimble
in June 1922. At one time the family lived at 6 St Paul's
Street, Gloucester and in civilian life Reginald was associated with Iron Acton and was a Gloucestershire
County Council Workman.
A photo of Private Pimble (reproduced
on this page) was published in the Bristol Times and Mirror on 8th January 1916.
Sources and Acknowledgements
· The
National Archives: Medal Index Card
· The
National Archives: British War and Victory Medal Roll: L/101 B21: Page 3741: WO
329/1148
· The
National Archives: 1914 Star Roll: L/2/7: Page 106: WO 329/2450
· The
National Archives: Silver War Badge Roll: L/279: WO 329/3114
· The
National Archives: War Diary 1st Gloucestershire Regiment: WO 95/1278
· Thanks
to Gerald Cooke, Joe Devereux and Christopher Davis (Reg Pimble's relative) who all provided additional information
on Reginald Pimble and his family
Read more about Reg Pimble in Part 6 of The Hospital Way