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WEST HARTLEPOOL

Risbey, A., L/Cpl., 1915
In Hazenbrouck Communal Cemetery south east of Calais, France is the Commonwealth War Grave of 21934 Lance Corporal Albert Risbey serving with the 5th Battalion Canadian Infantry who died 27/04/1915.

Jean Longstaff has submitted the following:-

Bristol born Thomas Risbey had married Teesside girl Hannah Weightman in 1862 and they had nine children, the first John was born in 1866, and Albert, the youngest was born on 1st February 1883. The family lived in the same house in Stranton from the mid-1870s until after the outbreak of war and all the younger children, including Albert, were born there. Thomas and Hannah died within five days of each other in November 1893.

By 1900 Albert was living and working in Canada in Carman, Manitoba; his older sister Ada had married John Stonehouse and they and their family moved to the same area in 1903. Albert returned once to England in 1904, travelling via New York, and stayed for three months, returning to Manitoba in April 1905. The 1911 Canadian census shows him living with Ada and her family in Macdonald, Manitoba and working as a teamster for the railroad.

23rd September 1914 saw Albert one of the many men who flocked to the newly established army camp at Valcartier, Ontario to enlist in the Canadian Expeditionary Force, naming his brother Edward at the family home in England as his next of kin he became Private 21934 attached to the 11th Battalion. He mentioned his time spent in the 4th Durham Royal Garrison Artillery in England and as a member of a local militia group in Canada. Promoted to Lance Corporal after just one day, two weeks later the battalion sailed on the SS Royal George as part of a flotilla of ships making for Plymouth, England, where they arrived sixteen days later, and made their way to Larkhill camp on Salisbury Plain.

It was here at the beginning of February 1915 that Lance Corporal Risbey was transferred to the 5th Battalion and after sailing from Avonmouth on 10th found himself with his new unit in France in billets at Armentieres. April saw the 5th Battalion involved in the fighting at the 2nd Battle of Ypres and it was here on 27th near Gravenstapel that Albert Risbey received a shrapnel wound from which he later died.

Albert Risbey is remembered in the Hartlepool on H115.18, and at West Hartlepool on W111.60 and W111.86 page 32.

He is also remembered in Canada on their Virtual War Memorial and in their Book of Remembrance.


Canadian Book of Remembrance
Canadian Virtual War Memorial
The CWGC entry for Lance Corporal Risbey

If you know more about this person, please send the details to janet@newmp.org.uk