Hunts in World War 1

The South African Infantry in Delville Wood 15th – 20th July, 1916

A short introduction to Reggie & Donald’s war.

This is the main set of timelines that tracks Reggie’s and Donald’s activities through the war.

The sources used in the preparation of the timelines.

How this page came about

I had been aware for some time that my great uncles Reggie and Donald Hunt had served in WW1. I knew I had a letter that was written from the trenches by Reggie to my grandma which described something about life in the front line. But I had no real idea of what these two brothers had done during the war.

At a family event in the middle of the year, my sister asked me to do some research into a name the she and her husband had found on a church war memorial. The name was the same as her married name but neither she nor her husband knew anything about any person of that name or whether he was even a relation. I found the name of the unit that the soldier was serving in and also that he was my brother in-law’s great-grandfather but then I wanted to find more about the circumstances of his death.

The hunt led me to discover the WO 95 war diaries which are available to download from the UK National Archives. The war diaries were written by British Army units involved in action. Each diary was written up every day and detailed the activities of the unit over the course of the day. Where they were, what they did, (sometimes) who did it, what was the result. The diaries are downloadable free from the National Archives to those with an account on the website.

With this new resource, I was able to track the circumstances of the death of the soldier and the events leading up to it.

This page is the result of using the WO 95 diaries and many other sources to trace the activities of the units of and (very often) the individual actions of my great-uncles Reggie and Donald themselves. We follow them through the lead up to their involvements in the war. We follow them as they get involved in battles whose names are imprinted on the consciousness of all who know anything at all about the Great War. The Somme. Ypres, Passchendaele. Arras. Armentières. Vimy. Every one of those places and many, many others feature in this story.

Even after they left the Western Front towards the end of the war there were still stories to tell about these two brothers. They were each selected for separate missions in the middle east that could almost be described as “Boy’s Own” adventures in themselves. Donald joined Dunsterforce and Reggie joined the Desert Mounted Corps. However, those stories will have to wait for future detailed research.