World War 1

World War 1

Henry John Moon

Henry John Moon was born in Hambledon in 1889, the son of John and Harriet Louisa Moon of Green Lane. He grew up in the village within a long established local family and spent his childhood in the rural surroundings that shaped much of Hambledon life. Baptised in January 1889, he remained at home into adulthood and worked as a farm labourer with horses, part of the agricultural workforce on which the parish depended.

World War 1

George Moon

George Moon was born in Hambledon about 1889, the son of George and Emily Moon of East Street. He spent his entire life in the village and grew up within the rural community that would later remember him on its war memorial. Baptised in Hambledon in March 1889, he was raised among a large family and attended school locally before entering working life.

World War 1

Richard Lacey

Robert Lacey was born at Fareham on 8th April 1883 and moved to Hambledon as a young man. By the beginning of the twentieth century he was living and working in the parish and soon became part of village life. In 1910 he married Nora Smith of Hambledon and the couple settled at Green Lane, where they began raising a family. He first worked as a threshing machine labourer and later became a traction engine driver, a skilled occupation that took him from farm to farm across the district and made him well known throughout the local farming community.

World War 1

Thomas Kimber

The Hambledon War Memorial records a man simply as “T. Kimber”, without rank, battalion, or date of death.
No obvious civilian record has yet been found linking a man of that name directly to the parish, and two soldiers of the Hampshire Regiment killed during the war match the initials.

World War 1

Ephraim Hughes

Ephraim Hughes was born in Hambledon in 1884, the son of Charles Frederick Hughes and Harriet Louisa Clay. His childhood was unsettled from an early age. The family left Hampshire while he was still young and by 1891 he was living in Leeds. Two years later, in 1893, his mother died, and his upbringing thereafter took place largely among extended family away from his birthplace.

World War 1

Harry Robert George Hooker

Harry Robert George Hooker was born in Hambledon about 1884–1885, the son of a village family whose lives were closely tied to the parish. Unlike many men commemorated on the memorial, his military career began long before the outbreak of the First World War. He enlisted in the regular army around the turn of the century and made soldiering his profession, serving with the Hampshire Regiment across the overseas garrisons of the British Empire.

World War 1

Harry Furber Hooker

Harry Furber Hooker was born in Hambledon on 21 June 1895, the son of Mrs Emma Hooker of Lytheys Close. Like many rural Hampshire boys at the beginning of the twentieth century, his future did not lie entirely in England. At the age of fourteen, in October 1909, he left home and sailed from Britain to Canada, arriving at Quebec aboard the Empress of Ireland. He was sent west to Manitoba, part of the large movement of young British farm workers who emigrated to the Dominions in search of opportunity and agricultural employment. There he grew up working as a farmer on the Canadian prairies.

World War 1

Charles Richard Hooker

Charles Richard Hooker was born in Hambledon in 1879, the son of Richard and Ellen Hooker of West Street. He grew up in the village in a working family and, like many local men, found employment as a general labourer. In 1907 he married Annie Louisa Biggs and they made their home in West Street where they raised two young children, Winifred and Harold.

World War 1

Edward Thomas Hill

Edward Thomas Hill was born in Hambledon and grew up in the rural surroundings of the village before choosing a very different life at sea. In February 1913, still a young man, he enlisted in the Royal Navy as a Stoker Second Class and travelled to Portsmouth to begin his naval training.
His first months were spent at the shore establishment known as HMS Victory II, the naval barracks where recruits were issued kit, taught discipline and instructed in the demanding technical duties of boiler-room work.

World War 1

Albert John Hamilton

Albert Hamilton was born in Milford Haven, Pembrokeshire, about 1895, but grew up in Hambledon where his widowed mother Jane Hamilton raised her family in West Street. By 1911 he was working locally as a farm horseman, typical of many young men in the village whose lives were rooted in agricultural labour before the war.

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