On The War Memorial Trail…..Duty Sacrifice Resilience Part 2: The WWI Soldier Who Was Seriously Wounded By An Exploding Grenade During The Battle Of Amiens

May 24, 2026. Since Pieter began the On The War Memorial Trail research project in 2014, we’ve often had a chance to meet families of those who served.  While much of the focus is on those who served our country and lost their lives while in service, most military service personnel in WWI and WWII returned home. We don’t often know much about their time in service, or what happened afterwards.  As families come forward with information, we are trying to tell these stories.

Brenda Graves of North Tryon, Prince Edward Island shared that both of her husband Stuart’s grandfathers served in WWI and returned home with major injuries.  “…Stuart’s paternal grandfather lost a leg in 1917 and his maternal grandfather was grievously injured in the nose, shoulder, and throat by an exploding grenade in 1918…

Both men had immigrated to Canada from the United Kingdom, overcame difficult challenges as a result of their war injuries, and went on to marry and live productive lives in Winnipeg, Manitoba.

We decided to tell the story of both grandfathers. Part 1 of this series began with Stuart’s paternal grandfather, Francis Edmund GRAVES. (See https://onthewarmemorialtrail.com/2026/05/18/on-the-war-memorial-trail-duty-sacrifice-resilience-part-1-the-wwi-soldier-whose-war-injuries-didnt-stop-him-from-living-his-life/) Now, in Part 2, this series concludes with Stuart’s maternal grandfather, Charles STUART.

Charles Stuart.  (Photo courtesy of Michael Figsby)

….Charles immigrated to Canada as a young child…

Born January 28, 1897 in Sheffield Notts, England, Charles was the son of Charles and Kate Ellen (nee Hulley) Stuart.  He arrived in Montreal, Quebec from Liverpool, England aboard the SS Canada on September 30, 1904, accompanied by his mother and siblings. (See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Canada)

When he enlisted with the 144th Battalion (Winnipeg Rifles), Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF) in Winnipeg, Manitoba on January 7, 1916, he stated that he had served in the 90th Winnipeg Rifles as a drummer, and was a plumber and steamfitter by trade. He also was a bugler, with his bugle in the possession of grandson Michael Figsby. (See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/8th_Battalion_(90th_Winnipeg_Rifles),_CEF)

Charles Stuart’s bugle is from June 1911 and his time with the 90th Winnipeg Rifles.  (Photo courtesy of Michael Figsby)

Charles continued being a drummer in the 144th Battalion (Winnipeg Rifles).

The 144th Battalion band. Charles Stuart identified by orange arrow. (Photo courtesy of Brenda and Stuart Graves)

…..Charles left Canada for overseas service…..

SS Olympic.  (Photo source: http://www.greatships.net)

Charles and his battalion sailed from Halifax aboard SS Olympic on September 18, 1916, arriving in England.  The battalion was absorbed into the 18th Reserve Battalion on January 12, 1917.

…..Charles sent to France AFTER the Battle of Vimy Ridge….

On April 20, 1917, Charles was drafted to the 8th Battalion, the active army of the Winnipeg Rifles, a key unit in the 2nd Infantry Brigade, 1st Canadian Division.  Charles was one of the many reinforcements needed to replace the casualties suffered during the Battle of Vimy Ridge earlier in the month.  The following day he arrived at the Canadian Base Depot (CBD) in France.

On May 7, 1917, he was sent from the CBD to the 8th Battalion, which was still in the trenches in the Vimy Ridge area, responsible for holding and consolidating front-line positions in the Vimy sector, training, and performing trench raids to harass the enemy and gather intelligence.

June 1917 found Charles and the 8th Battalion still in France, holding lines near the Lens-Loos area.  By July 1917 they had moved up to the border between France and Belgium, engaged in intense, ongoing trench warfare.

August 17, 1917 Winnipeg Tribune photo of Charles Stuart, restored and colourized by Pieter Valkenburg

As July ended and August began, the 8th Battalion prepared for the offensive against Hill 70, which aimed to draw German reserves away from the Allied offensive in Belgium. The Battle of Hill 70 began on August 15, 1917, but Charles missed this battle, as he’d received a gunshot wound to his right arm on August 5, 1917.

He was taken to No. 1 Casualty Clearing Station, and then sent on August 9, 1917 to No. 22 General Hospital in Camiens.  On August 12, 1917, he was transferred to No. 6 General Hospital in Camiens for a few days before going on August 14, 1917 to No. 2 Convalescent Depot in Rouen.

On September 10, 1917, Charles was discharged and returned to the 8th Battalion as they prepared for the Battle of Passchendaele, enduring harsh conditions as they held their line during late summer.

Early in October 1917, as part of the 2nd Canadian Brigade, they moved from France to the Ypres salient in Belgium to relieve exhausted and battered ANZAC (Australia and New Zealand) forces and take part in the final push to capture Passchendaele during the months of October and November 1917.

Charles survived the Battle of Passchendaele, and, along with the rest of the battalion, returned to the trenches in France for the winter. They were tasked with holding their sectors, as well as training, trench maintenance, and defensive preparations for the German Spring Offensive a series of German attacks along the Western Front that began on March 21, 1918.

…..Charles was seriously wounded during the Battle of Amiens….

WWI on the battlefield ended for Charles on August 10, 1918 during the Battle of Amiens (also known as the Third Battle of Picardy), the opening phase of the Allied offensive which began on August 8, 1918 and lasted 10 days. (For more information, see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Amiens_(1918) and a short video clip at https://finance.yahoo.com/video/battle-amiens-started-century-ago-173913821.html)

During the fighting, Charles received multiple shrapnel wounds in scalp, jaw, larynx, neck, hand, and chest.  He suffered a compound fracture of his lower right jaw as well as a compound fracture of the left clavicle and 1st and 2nd ribs with bone loss.

Brenda explained that Michael Figsby, one of Charles’ grandsons, told her that when Charles “… was grievously injured by an exploding grenade in August 1918 (a terrible repeat), he was ‘left for dead’. Both Stuart’s mother and Michael confirmed that he grabbed at the pant leg or sleeve of one of the guys on death/grave detail. His nose was half blown off and his shoulder and throat were badly torn apart so he was unable to talk and they assumed him to be dead….

Charles was taken to No. 5 Casualty Clearing Station at Crouy-sur-Somme, where a tracheotomy was done.

…..Charles’ next battle was one of recovery….

Charles was removed from the battlefield, but he now faced a long period of rehabilitation and recovery.  On August 21, 1918 he was taken to No. 10 General Hospital in Rouen, where the tracheotomy tube was removed.

Then, on September 6, 1918, he was evacuated to Queens Sidcup Hospital in Kent, England, where another tracheotomy was done, as well as plastic surgery on his nose.  Charles remained in Kent until May 10, 1919, when he was sent to No. 16 Canadian General Hospital in Orpington, in preparation for returning to Canada.

On May 21, 1919, he was invalided to Canada aboard HMHT Araguaya and arrived in Portland, Maine. He was admitted to Ste Anne de Bellevue Hospital in Montreal, Quebec on June 1, 1919, where it was noted that he had limited movement of left arm, and the tracheotomy tube from August 1918 was still in position.

Cover of a souvenir booklet for the Dominion Orthopedic Hospital in Toronto.

Charles remained at the hospital until December 1, 1919 when he was transferred to the Facial Section of Dominion Orthopedic Hospital in Toronto, Ontario (known as Christie Street Hospital), where he underwent reconstructive surgery, and the tracheotomy tube placed in Kent was finally removed.

Brenda recalled that “…Stuart’s mother advised that he marry his sweetheart in hospital because it was uncertain of his survival of his critical injury…”  Charles had been writing to his girlfriend Williamina ‘Nina’ Hood Menzies, a tele-operator, all during his military service.  On April 21, 1920, they were married at the Christie Street Hospital.  The marriage record noted that the witnesses were Robert R. Brown (likely a soldier) and Alice Davis (likely a nurse).

….Charles returned to Winnipeg after being discharged…

After being discharged from the hospital on June 12, 1920, Charles returned to Winnipeg, where he and Nina raised two daughters – Rae and June – and a son Charles. He worked at the CNR (Canadian National Railway) until his retirement at the age of 60.

Charles Stuart with a bowling trophy, circa 1940s.  (Photo courtesy of Brenda and Stuart Graves)

Charles lived a full life, even serving with the Armoured Corps Reserve during WWII.  In addition, he was one of the founders of the Winnipeg Sports Club, and a member of the Ten-Pin Bowling Congress.

1954 photo of Charles and Nina with grandsons Bill (left) and Stuart (right).  (Photo courtesy of Brenda and Stuart Graves)

….Charles is buried in Elmwood Cemetery in Winnipeg…

Grave of Charles Stuart and his wife Nina at Elmwood Cemetery in Winnipeg.  (Photo source: Find A Grave)

Charles died on September 23, 1977 in Winnipeg, aged 80, and was buried in Elmwood Cemetery on September 27, 1977.

Brenda and Stuart Graves. (Photo courtesy of Brenda Graves)

Thank you to Brenda and Stuart Graves and Michael Figsby for providing information and photos, to Shawn Rainville for newspaper searches, and to Judie Klassen and Kristen den Hartog for help with the post WWI research.

Pieter’s research efforts to find photos and families of soldiers continue. Do you have a story to tell? Email Pieter at memorialtrail@gmail.com, or comment on the blog.

© Daria Valkenburg

….Stories about WWI soldiers who were in the Battle of Amiens…

Over the years, we’ve told several stories of WWI soldiers who were in the Battle of Amiens.  Of the listing below, only Maynard Foy survived the battle and returned home to Canada.

….Want to follow our research?…

If you are reading this posting, but aren’t following our research, you are welcome to do so.  Our blog address: https://onthewarmemorialtrail.com/

4 countries, 6 weeks, 7,000 km – an unforgettable war memorial journey in Europe…. Daria’s book ‘No Soldier Buried Overseas Should Ever Be Forgotten‘ is available in print and e-book formats.  Net proceeds of book sales help support research costs and the cost of maintaining this blog. For more information see https://nosoldierforgotten.com/

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The Parallel WWI Experiences of John Lymon Wood & Clifford Almon Wells

September 16, 2019.  Sometimes we learn more about a particular soldier’s experience by reading about a soldier in a similar situation.  This was the case when I read “From Montreal To Vimy Ridge and Beyond: The Correspondence of Lt Clifford Almon Wells”, edited by his step-father, Pastor G.G.S. Wallace of a Baptist Church in Montreal, and published in 1917.  Wells was not from Prince Edward Island, but he enlisted in the Princess Patricia Canadian Light Infantry 4th University Company, as did John Lymon WOOD, whose story has been told previously in blog postings.  (See WWI Soldier John Lyman Wood’s Connection With Acadia University and Learning About The Two Names On The Vimy Memorial)

Wells enlisted in September 1915, Wood on October 12, 1915.  At the time of enlistment, Wells was doing graduate work towards his PhD in archeology at John Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland while Wood was a second year engineering student at Acadia University in Wolfville, Nova Scotia.

Photo Lyman Wood

Photo: John Lyman Wood shortly after enlistment in October 1915. (Photo courtesy of Gene Rogerson collection)

 

Lt Clifford Almon Wells in 1916

Clifford Almon Wells in summer 1916. (Photo courtesy of “From Montreal To Vimy Ridge and Beyond: The Correspondence of Lt Clifford Almon Wells”)

On October 19, 1915, in a letter to his brother, Wood explained that he was packing his trunk in preparation for leaving Wolfville for Montreal. Like so many university educated men, an officer’s commission had been suggested by the recruitment office. “….I wish I had gone in the heavy artillery at Charlottetown now, but I’ll get a commission as Lieutenant if I can.  A man stands a far better chance of coming back if he goes in the artillery, but I suppose that is not the right way to look at it though.  The men are needed more in the Infantry, so I suppose it is only right to go where you are the most needed and where you can do the most good….I never hated to leave a place so bad as I do Wolfville this time.  But I must be doing what is right for there seems no other way out of it.” (Excerpt of a letter on page 157 of ‘Remember Yesterday: A History of North Tryon Prince Edward Island 1769-1992 Volume 1’, published in 1993)

Both Wells and Wood were in Montreal, preparing for being sent abroad.  In a November 2, 1915 letter, Wells wrote that “… the 4th University Company, bring recruited overstrength already, has received orders to be ready to sail on the 11th. Thousands of troops sail from Montreal every month without anyone being any the wiser.  Trains come in at night, stop on the wharf alongside the transports and by daybreak the men are on the way.  So it will be with us… The city just swarms with soldiers at present, as two full battalions have been sent back from the camp at Valcartier, which is closed for the winter…

There was a delay in leaving Montreal, as in the end they didn’t leave until November 26, 1915, by train enroute to Halifax.  In a November 26, 1915 letter, Wells noted that “… We did not leave Montreal until nearly 11 o’clock, as we waited for several carloads of troops from Winnipeg to join us.”  He explained that sentries were posted at the train doors, and no one except officers and platoon sergeants were allowed to pass from car to car without special permission.

They arrived in Halifax in the afternoon of November 27, 1915, and Wells sent a brief letter to his mother, saying that “...We reached Halifax two hours ago, and came aboard the ‘Lapland’ almost immediately.

On November 28, 1915 the SS Lapland, which had arrived from New York, sailed from Halifax, arriving in Plymouth, England on December 7.  During the voyage, Wells wrote several letters.  On December 3, 1915, he made the observation that “….There are about 2,000 other troops aboard.  The 37th Battalion from the West, the 92nd Highlanders, units of the A.S.C. Cyclists, etc.”  Wells went on to explain that they had to be alert for U-boats.  “Today we are fairly in the danger zone.  Our company’s machine gun is mounted aft, while other guns are mounted forward.  The decks are lined with men armed with rifles.  So we are all ready for submarines.  Tonight every man must sleep on deck by the life-boat or raft to which he has been assigned.  All portholes are darkened at night and every precaution is taken to render the ship invisible.

Upon arrival, they were both sent to the 11th Reserve Battalion, stationed at St. Martin’s Plain in Shorncliffe, near Folkestone, for infantry training for needed reinforcements to the Canadian Corps in the field.  In a December 9, 1915 letter, Wells wrote about the culture shock he’d experienced.  “It has rained steadily, with an intermission yesterday, ever since we reached Plymouth Sunday morning until now.  The camp is one sea of mud – such mud as I never dreamed of before.  I never shine my shoes now, as the first step out of the hut buries them in 3 or 4 inches of slime.  We are quartered in huts which hold about 40 men each….

He then explained that “The streets in Shorncliffe are very dimly lighted by night on account of the danger from Zepps, and every window in every hut is covered with a blanket when the lights are switched on.  Outside it is pitch dark and one wallows in mud and water when compelled to go out at night.

Like Wood, Wells soon found out that while the British were interested in troops as ‘cannon fodder’, a system of discrimination already existed to prevent them from becoming officers, contrary to what they were told when they signed up.  He discussed this in a continuation of his December 9 letter:  “I have bad news in one respect.  An order has been passed by which no more Canadian soldiers are given commissions in the Imperial Army except when a Colonel applies to have a certain man as an officer in his command.  There is consequently a good deal of dissatisfaction in our company, as many of us were practically promised commissions when we enlisted.”  Wells began working his contacts to get a commission.

In a December 29, 1915 letter, Wells wrote that “…It is reported that a carload of Christmas mail for soldiers was accidentally burned….”  He wondered if this could be why he had not received mail.  On January 7, 1916, he wrote that he’d heard that “two carloads of mail from Canada were accidentally burned.”  One can imagine the disappointment that he and his fellow Canadians felt when no letters or parcels arrived for Christmas!

Still trying to figure out how to get a commission, in the same letter, Wells explained that if he wasn’t successful in his quest while in England “…. I may go to the front as a Corporal or even a private, as I understand that NCOs like myself, who have never seen active service, lose one or more of their stripes when they first go to the trenches.  I should expect, of course, to regain them in a short time, but I do not like the idea of making any retrogressive steps...

In January 1916, Wells did become a Lieutenant, and on January 16, wrote to his mother that “I have been wonderfully lucky in being commissioned with the Canadian and not the Imperial Army.  This is how it happened.  A sudden shortage of officers occurred in the division, and the various battalions were asked to recommend for promotion NCOs not below the rank of Sergeant. The 11th Reserve Battalion was asked to recommend four.  I was one of the four.”  Like so many other Canadian soldiers, Wood never got promoted beyond Private.

While Wells stayed healthy and went to the Canadian Military School for a Bombing Course, Wood ended up in hospital as of January 21, 1916 with appendicitis, then gastritis, and measles. In a March 4, 1916 letter, Wells mentioned the measles outbreak.  “There are a number of cases of measles in the camp, and as soon as one hut is released from quarantine, one or two more have to be quarantined.

Wood was discharged on April 15, 1916 to the 39th Battalion, where he was sent for training as a Signaller.  In August 1916, Wells was transferred to the 8th Battalion of the 1st Canadian Division and sent to France.  Wood arrived in France on December 22, 1916, as part of the Second Infantry Battalion.

Both men survived the Battle of Vimy Ridge, with Wells describing the day in an April 20, 1917 letter to his mother: “The Huns were completely surprised, and made little resistance.  Our artillery barrage was wonderful beyond description, lifting forward from objective to objective with clocklike precision, and practically obliterating the German trenches as it passed them.  The men followed the barrage steadily and fearlessly, and prisoners were streaming back five minutes after we went ‘over the top’.  Most of the prisoners were entirely cowed, and thankful to be prisoners….  I came through it without a scratch.”  Unfortunately, before his mother received the letter, she was officially notified of his death on April 28, 1917, at the age of 25.

Wood’s luck ran out on May 3, 1917, when he was killed in action during the Battle of Fresnoy, part of the Third Battle of the Scarpe during the Arras Offensive near Fresnoy, at the age of 19.  This battle, fought from May 3 to 4, 1917, was final part of the larger Battle of Arras, fought from April 9 to May 16, 1917. In “Hell Upon Earth: A Personal Account of Prince Edward Island Soldiers in the Great War, 1914-1918”, published in 1995, author J. Clinton Morrison, Jr. explained that Wood, a Signaller, “was killed in the Fresnoy darkness while repairing telephone communications during the pre-dawn attack.”  His body was never recovered and his name is engraved on the Vimy Memorial in France.

While it’s not known if Wells and Wood ever met each other, their military lives had many parallels and they died within 5 days of each other in France.  If anyone has more information, please contact Pieter at memorialtrail@gmail.com or comment on the blog.   Please note that we are still looking for photos of 10 names listed on the Cenotaph from WWI.  See Appeal For Relatives Of These WW1 Casualties! for more information.

 © Daria Valkenburg

….Want to follow our research?…

If you are reading this posting, but aren’t following our research, you are welcome to do so.  Our blog address: https://onthewarmemorialtrail.com/

4 countries, 6 weeks, 7,000 km – an unforgettable war memorial journey in Europe…. Daria’s book ‘No Soldier Buried Overseas Should Ever Be Forgotten‘ is available in print and e-book formats.  Net proceeds of book sales help support research costs and the cost of maintaining this blog. For more information see https://nosoldierforgotten.com/

Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: On The War Memorial Trail With Pieter Valkenburg: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJ591TyjSheOR-Cb_Gs_5Kw

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