Stephen Henry Horrocks died of wounds on this day in 1916
Stephen Horrocks, known as Harry, was born 13 September 1888 at Wigan, Lancashire. He was the son of Henry Horrocks and Mary Ann.
The family emigrated from Lancashire to Australia and lived at Palmyra, Forrest Street, Freemantle in Western Australia where Harry was a mill hand before the war.
He enlisted in Perth on 2 March 1915 and attended a medical in Bunbury on the same day. His service record states that he was 5ft 5in tall with fair hair and blue eyes and that he had a scar on his lip.
He joined B Company, 28th Battalion, AIF. On 4 Sept 1915 he embarked with the Battalion for Gallipoli.
On 16 Sept 1915 he was promoted to Corporal. Harry suffered severely from dysentery, reporting ill on 24 October 1915. On 2 November 1915 he was admitted to St.Andrew's Hospital, Malta. He finally rejoined his unit from hospital on 5 March 1916.
On 29 May 1916 he arrived in France. During fighting that July it was initially reported that on 29 July 1916 he was killed in action. This was later amended once it was understood that he had been taken prisoner. However he died of his wounds while a German prisoner of war on 2 August 1916.
He was buried at Villiers au Flos ‘by German hands’. His grave was later exhumed and re-buried at Achiet le Grand Communal Cemetery Extension. 4 miles north west of Baupaume.
292 L/Cpl Stephen Henry Horrocks, 28th Bn. Australian Infantry