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Messages - Skoyen89

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1
Hi Imber

Thanks for clarifying.  I wasn't very clear.

Regards
Skoyen89

2
The Death Certs are back and both died of a form of Tuberculosis. 

Frederick Callaway is given as an 'Army Pensioner' and he died at home (73 Paynes Road) of Phthisis Pulmonalis.  This is a wasting away caused by tuberculosis affecting the lungs leading to their destruction.

Charles Albert Callaway died of Miliary Tuberculosis.  This is where the tuberculosis bacteria spread to  organs other than the lungs and is normally fatal.  Charles Albert was given as a Motor Car Driver and he died at ‘1a Chilworth Road’ which was used to denote the Shirley Warren Infirmary and the workhouse that preceeded it.  His address at the time was given as his parent's house at 73 Payne's Road. 

The person registering Charles Albert’s death was his brother C Callaway (Claude) of 6 Onslow Road, Southampton. 

3
According to the Death Certs both died of a form of Tuberculosis.  After a period of slow decline pre-war Tuberculosis increased during the War and shortly afterwards.  As they were accorded a CWGC Headstone it suggests the disease was linked to their military service. 

Frederick Callaway is given as an 'Army Pensioner' and he died at home (73 Paynes Road) of Phthisis Pulmonalis.  This is a wasting away caused by tuberculosis affecting the lungs leading to their destruction.

Charles Albert Callaway died of Miliary Tuberculosis.  This is where the tuberculosis bacteria spread to other organs than the lungs and is normally fatal.  Charles Albert was given as a Motor Car Driver and he died at ‘1a Chilworth Road’ which was used to denote the Shirley Warren Infirmary and the workhouse that preceeded it.
 
Interesting, given where I started out above, that the person registering Charles Albert’s death was his brother C Callaway (Claude) of 6 Onslow Road, Southampton. 

4
I have ordered the Death Certificates for the Callaway Brothers which may add some more info on them after they left the Army and RAF. 

It looks like Frederick joined the Army 'B' Reserve in 1919 and Charles Albert was discharged to the RAF Reserve on 30 April 1920.  We know that Frederick died of 'disease' in 1920 (source: Fold 3 Pension info) and Claude died two years later whilst a civilian so their cause of death may be related to their service hence the CWGC headstone for Frederick and the addition of Charles Albert in the unusual headstone.  There are hints of this in the attached headstone forms and as IMBER suggests above.

Charles Albert appears in the 1921 Census living in the house of his parents at 73 Paynes Road on 19 June 1921 when the census was taken.  He is shown as a Motor Driver and Married although his wife and children are not shown.  He married Violet Spreadbury in 1912 and had at least two children. 

Again thanks to all who have added to sorting this out.

5
Many thanks to all of you for your help in this and in straightening me out.  Sometimes it just helps to have another set of eyes looking at the same stuff and sometimes it just helps to have extra information!

So it looks like Frederick Callaway died of disease and had two army numbers 23589 and 1843640.

Cecil Callaway, although he was Frederick Callaway's brother, is not in the grave and survived into later life.  In that respect he and Winifred is a bit of a red herring, although interesting in building the whole family tree.

It is Charles A Callaway who is in the grave and we have his Army/RFC/RAF records from FindMyPast (even if there is a typo and it gives his name as Galloway).  Interestingly it says he was discharged to the RAF Reserve on 30 April 1920 which two years before he died. 

6
Hi Hanes Teulu

No, but it didn't come up in my newspaper search for Callaway in 1920s in FindMyPast!!!  I will look into that some more. 

Charles Albert comes up a lot in the Callaway family - each family and each generation seems to have one so untangling them is sometimes challenging. 

Very, very grateful!!!   Spent about five or six hours on this last night of which much was chasing Cecil Callaway.


7
I am trying to find out about the military service and death of two relatives who are buried in Hollybrook Cemetery in Southampton and share a grave and CWGC headstone.  They died in the few years after WWI ended and were brothers. 
Frederick Callaway was a Lance Corporal in the Royal Engineers (no.  1843640).  He died on 16 Sept 1920 and appears from the CWGC Concentration Document that he was buried in Shirley Warren Infirmary cemetery first, suggesting he died there.  His parents are given – Henry Noah Callaway and Rosabell Callaway (nee Ross) of 73 Payne’s Road, Freemantle, Southampton.  His birth seems to have been in 1894 as he was aged 26 at death.
Frederick went to Sholing School in 1905 and was living in Spring Road and in 1901 was living in 73 Paynes’s Road and was an Aluminium Grainer.  He was single and aged 16 in 1911.
There is a Fold 3 entry for Frederick Callaway but I don’t have the level of subscription to access it.
The other person buried there is ‘C Callaway’.  He is given as a A/C 2 (Aircraftsman 2nd Class – the first rank on joining the RAF) in the RAF with a number of 125941 on the gravestone.  He died on 31 July 1922 but although he is on a CWGC headstone he is not on the CWGC database.
Frederick had a brother Claude who was born in Q3 1900 (source: Birth Index and 1901 Census).  He shows in the 1911 Census as a schoolboy and in the 1921 Census where he was living with his parents at 73 Payne’s Road, aged 20 years 10 months and a motor Driver for the GPO.  He was single. 
There is then a marriage to Winifred G Abraham in Q4 1921 (Southampton 2c 174).  They may have had a son – Claude C Callaway (mother: Abrahams) born March 1923 in Southampton and died in Surrey aged 54.
There are two Winifred G Abraham – I think ours was born 4 Dec 1898 in Hedge End, lived in Bournemouth in 1939 and died Oct 1987 in Reading/Wokingham.   There is another born 1902 in the New Forest, name Winfred Gwendoline Abraham. 
I have looked for Newspaper reports of their deaths on FindMyPast but nothing showing. 
The one thing that threw me a bit is that when I searched for RAF records online I  found a record for the number given for ‘C Callaway’ on the headstone – 125941.  That showed it was given to Charles A Galloway who was an AC2 in the RAF.  He was a Motor Driver and lived in Freemantle, Southampton.  However he was born in 1890 and joined the Army in Jan 1918 and transferred to the RFC on 29 Jan 1918 and the RAF on 1 April 1918.  He married Violet Galloway on 26 May 1912.  Although there are lots of similarities to Cecil Calloway I think they are different persons.
As I said I would like to understand more about their military service and death of Frederick and Cecil Callaway.  Any help or things to follow up on would help.  If someone has Fold3 subscription and could do a lookup that would be welcome.  I plan to order death certs and Cecil’s marriage cert but they will take a week or two. 

8
Dunbartonshire / Re: John JENNINGS killed at Kohima 1944
« on: Sunday 23 October 22 21:15 BST (UK)  »
Thanks!

9
Dunbartonshire / Re: John JENNINGS killed at Kohima 1944
« on: Sunday 23 October 22 20:33 BST (UK)  »
Thanks Bruce.  Are these references to documents on Scotland's People?  Apologies, I don't use it very much at all.

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