- Joseph Harcourt Tombs
Joseph Harcourt Tombs VC (
1884 -28 June 1966 ) was an English recipient of theVictoria Cross , the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces.VC action
A resident of
Grantham ,Lincolnshire , and Old Boy ofThe King's School, Grantham , he was about 31 years old, and aLance-Corporal in the 1st Battalion,The King's (Liverpool Regiment) ,British Army during the First World War when the following deed took place for which he was awarded the VC.On
16 June 1915 nearRue du Bois ,France , Lance-Corporal Tombs, on his own initiative, crawled out repeatedly under very heavy shell and machine-gun fire to bring in wounded men who were lying about 100 yards in front of our trenches. He rescued four men, one of whom he dragged back by means of a rifle sling placed round his own neck and the man's body.Later life
He later achieved the rank of
Corporal . DuringWorld War II Tombs enlisted in theRoyal Canadian Air Force and served at the Flying School in Trenton, Ontario. A 1952 operation to remove some of the shrapnel still embedded in his stomach was not completely successful, and in 1964 he suffered a strokeHis Victoria Cross is displayed at the
Museum of the King's Regiment "(Liverpool, England)".References
*
Monuments to Courage (David Harvey, 1999)
*The Register of the Victoria Cross (This England, 1997)
*VCs of the First World War - The Western Front 1915 (Peter F. Batchelor & Christopher Matson, 1999)External links
* [http://www.northwest.co.uk/kingsreg.htm The King's Regiment] "(regiment history)"
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=7033985 Find-A-Grave biography]
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