Private James Farndale aged 24 of the
West Yorkshire Regiment died of wounds on 16th March 1941 in Eritrea |
James
Farndale 1916 to 16 March 1941
FAR00833
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Headlines of James Farndale’s life are
in brown.
Dates are in red.
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References and citations are in turquoise.
Context and local history are in purple.
Geographical
context is in green.
Stockton
1916
James Farndale, son of James and Margaret (nee
Murray) Farndale (FAR00521), was
born in Stockton in
1916. His birth was registered in Stockton in the fourth quarter of 1916.
1921
James Farndale, 48, a
general labourer in foundry at Blairs & Co Engineering Works, Norton Road,
Stockton, but out of work
Margaret Farndale, 43, home
duties
Annie Farndale, daughter,
16, single, a printer’s assistant at Harrison Printing Works on Norton Road
Albert Farndale, son, 13, an
errand boy with Brown Joiner
James Farndale, son, 4
Eritrea
1941
4460826 Private James Farndale aged 24 of the West Yorkshire
Regiment (Prince of Wales Own) Second Battalion died of wounds on 16 March 1941
in Eritrea.
He was buried at Keren War Cemetery, Grave Reference 3.A.3.
(Inscribed Beloved Son of James and the Late Margaret Farndale, God Grant
him eternal rest).
Operation Appearance was a British
landing in British Somaliland on 16 March 1941 against
troops of the Italian Army. In August 1940, seven months previous, the British
had withdrawn from British Somaliland, after it had been invaded by the Italian
army. The British and Empire forces from the United Kingdom, British India, Australia and South Africa conducting
Appearance made the first successful Allied beach landing of the war and retook
the colony.
On 9 May 1936 Africa Orientale Italiana (AOI) was formed from Ethiopia, Italian Eritrea and Italian Somaliland. On 10 June 1940, Italy
declared war on Britain and France, with Italian forces in the AOI threatening
the British and French colonies in East Africa. Italian forces endangered
British supply lines along the coast of East Africa, the Gulf of Aden, the Red Sea and the Suez Canal. Egypt, the Suez Canal, French
Somaliland and British Somaliland were vulnerable to attack
The Invasion of British Somaliland
On 3 August 1940, the Italians invaded with
two colonial brigades, four cavalry squadrons, armoured, artillery and air
support. Kassala was bombed and attacked and the
British garrison was overmatched. The Somaliland Camel Corps skirmished with
the advancing Italians as the main British force slowly retired. On 5 August
British Somaliland was cut off from French Somaliland. Surrounded and close to
being cut off Major-General Alfred Reade Godwin-Austen was instructed by the
General Officer Commanding-in-Chief Henry Maitland Wilson to withdraw from the
colony. The 2nd battalion Black Watch, supported by two companies of the 2nd
King's African Rifles and parties of the 1st/2nd Punjab Regiment covered the
retreat to Berbera. By 2:00 p.m. 18 August most of the contingent had been
evacuated to Aden with the HQ sailing with HMAS Hobart the morning of 19
August. Italian forces entered Berbera that evening. British casualties were 38
killed and 222 wounded; and the Italians had 2,052 casualties.
Landing at Berbera
The operation to recapture
British Somaliland began on 16 March 1941 from Aden, in the first successful
Allied landing on an enemy-held beach of the war. The 1/2nd Punjab Regiment and
3/15th Punjab Regiment Indian Army (which had been evacuated from the port in
August 1940) and a Somali commando detachment, landed at Berbera from Force D
(the cruisers HMS Glasgow and HMS Caledon, the destroyers HMS Kandahar and HMS
Kipling, auxiliary cruisers Chakdina and Chantala, Indian trawlers Netavati
and Parvati, two transports and ML 109). When the Sikhs landed, the 70th
Colonial Brigade "melted away". Repairs began on the port and
supplies for the 11th African Division began to pass through within a week,
saving 500 miles (800 km) of transport by road. On 20 March, Hargeisa was
captured. The British moved on to re-capture the whole of British Somaliland
and on 8 April, Brigadier Arthur Reginald Chater was appointed Military
Governor. British forces were now able to advance into eastern Ethiopia,
supplied through Berbera. The Somaliland Camel Corps was reformed by mid-April
and supported British forces over the next few months mopping up Italian led
guerrilla forces.
Keren War Cemetery, Eritrea
The small town of Keren is about 90 kilometres
west of Asmara. Keren War Cemetery is 2 kilometres west of the town. The site,
on top of the famous Keren pass and overshadowed by Cameron's Ridge on the
opposite side of the road, was presented by the Chief and the Community of Ad Hadembas, and an inscription recording this has been built
into the cemetery wall.
Keren was the last Italian stronghold in Eritrea
and the scene of the most decisive battle of the war in East Africa in February
and March 1941. Guarding the entrance from the western plains to the Eritrean
plateau, the only road passing through a deep gorge with precipitous and well fortified mountains on either side, Keren formed a
perfect defensive position. On these heights the Italians concentrated some
23,000 riflemen, together with a large number of well
sited guns and mortars. A preliminary assault by United Kingdom and Indian
troops was repulsed after a week of bitter fighting, although they gained and
held a valuable position on Cameron's Ridge, on the left of the road. The final
battle began a month later. After ten days of gruelling combat the Commonwealth
troops succeeded in forcing their way through the seemingly impregnable
defences on the ridge and finally through the 200 metre
long road block which the Italians had blasted at the narrowest point in the
pass. Keren was taken on 27 March. The defeated Italian force retreated in some
disarray to Asmara, which fell to Commonwealth forces on 1 April, and the
Italian surrender was taken at the port of Massawa on 8 April. KEREN WAR
CEMETERY contains 440 Commonwealth burials of the Second World War, 35 of them
unidentified. The KEREN CREMATION MEMORIAL stands within the cemetery and
commemorates 285 Sikh and Hindu soldiers from India and Pakistan killed on the
Keren battlefield during the Second World War, whose remains were cremated in
accordance with their faith. Three East African soldiers are also commemorated
on the memorial.
No. of Identified Casualties: 405