Created by William Douglas Lowe, 1879-1922
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Created by William Douglas Lowe, 1879-1922
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Created by William Douglas Lowe, 1879-1922
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Biographical History
William Douglas Lowe was born at Kearsley Moor near Bolton on 27th July 1879 and attended Shrewsbury School from 1893 until 1898. In that year he obtained a scholarship at Pembroke College, Cambridge where he studied classics. He spent some time in Germany, taught at Radley School briefly, and in 1903 became Junior Censor and Classical Tutor at University College, Durham. He remained at Durham for the rest of his life with the exception of the war years. He was a keen athlete and oarsman and was one of the first members of the Durham University Officers' Training Corps. Some notes on OTC training have been incorporated by Lowe into later material assembled during his service in 18th Durham Light Infantry. He lectured on education as well as classics and became Bursar of University College in 1913. He translated a number of works from German and also edited textbooks for the Clarendon Press. After the war he returned to University College and in 1920 he wrote the War history of the 18th (S.) Battalion Durham Light Infantry which incorporated much material from the papers. His death on 24th May 1922 at the early age of forty-two was unexpected. He was buried at Hinton St. George in Somerset some days later.
18th Durham Light Infantry was formed at Cocken Hall in Co. Durham and the papers cover its training there and at Ripon in Yorkshire and Fovant in Wiltshire during 1914 and 1915. The battalion moved as part of 93rd Infantry Brigade, 31st Division to Egypt in December 1915 where it remained until March 1916. It was then transferred with 31st Division to France and took part in the Battle of the Somme near Serre in July 1916, served in the line in the area of Givenchy and Festubert, before returning to the Gommecourt area on the Somme over the winter of 1916 and spring of 1917. It was engaged in heavy fighting in May 1917 around Gavrelle during the Battle of Arras. Lowe was attending the Senior Officers' School at Aldershot at this period and was not therefore personally involved but obtained many operation orders, maps and reports relating to the attack on Gavrelle as well as retaining the Aldershot course notes. The battalion was subsequently in the Arleux and Fresnoy sector and trained on the old Vimy Ridge battlefield. Lowe was given temporary command of 11th (Service) Battalion, East Lancashire Regiment, better known as the Accrington Pals, in the autumn of 1917 and remained with them until the spring of 1918; some orders and training programmes for this battalion are amongst the papers. Lowe returned to 18th Durham Light Infantry as commanding officer during the German offensive in March 1918. Material for the action on Ayette Ridge includes letters written in 1920 from several officers who were asked by Lowe to record their experiences for the battalion history. The battalion spent much of the summer south of Meteren on the French/Belgian border where they conducted a number of minor operations and trench raids for which there are operation orders, after action accounts, aerial photographs and maps. The final action recorded is the battalion's part in the capture of Bailleul and Mont de Lille in late September with the account ending on 1st October 1918.
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