View Single Post
  #4  
Old 09-07-19, 12:32 PM
leigh kitchen's Avatar
leigh kitchen leigh kitchen is offline
Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 9,147
Default

There were a few men named Harry or "H" Amos in the Army Service Corps during WWI.

This may or may not be "the" H Amos, the birth year is about right but other than initial, surname and corps.......

Any little of snippet of information may help - did he or anyone in the family mention that he was a farrier or a sergeant, that he served in Egypt, that he was treated for a toe injury, contracted malaria, rode horses, drove motor vehicles, was Mentioned in Despatches, awarded a Military Medal?
A middle initial?
Such info. may help point to the right man

First Name:
H
Surname:
Amos
Age:
25
Index Number of Admission:
Tr12317
Rank:
Driver
Service Number:
1180
Years Service:
2 years
Months With Field Force:
1 year
Ailment:
Malaria
Date Discharged Back to Duty:
29/09/1916
Date of Transfer From Other Hospitals:
13/09/1916
Number/Designation of Ward:
SO4
Notes written in the Observations Column:
No. 2 Convalescent Depot
Religion:
Church of England
Regiment:
Army Service Corps
Battalion:
No. 109 Company
Archive Reference:
MH106/1321 MH106/1321 can be found at The National Archives in Kew, and contains First World War Representative Medical Records of No. 28 General Hospital: British Other Ranks SALONIKA.
Reply With Quote