Hope I've placed this in the right category:
I see L F Orwin appears in this website's name index. Whilst searching newspapers for my own Boer war database I have uncovered Leonard's story.
In the Rotherham Advertiser of 9th June 1900 an article appeared concerning a young private in the Imperial Light Infantry. Leonard Frederick Orwin had been employed in the gold mines of Johannesburg when the war broke out and with other refugees he left the Transvaal for Natal where he joined the Imperial Light Infantry. Aged barely 17 he lost his right foot at Spion Kop, blown off by a “pom-pom” shell. After treatment in hospitals at Pietermaritzburg and then in England he returned to his parents home. He was described as very cheerful in spite of his serious injury and he talked enthusiastically of the gallant deeds of his comrades.
A further article in the 16th June edition contained a long interview with Orwin in which he described how he lost his foot. “The bullets were whistling about and shells flying, but I never got a scratch until about nine in the evening. The Boers had practically ceased firing and were just annoying us. I was struck on the instep of the right foot by a pom-pom shell and my toes were blown right off......It was just a kind of numbness. I was right at the top of the hill and had to wait half an hour for the stretcher-bearers, and then I had to hop a bit. The doctors at the field hospital dressed my foot, and I slept all right that night. Next morning they took me into the operating theatre and amputated the fore part of my foot just above the ankle.”
The reporter said “We are proud – sincerely proud – of this gallant young fellow and cannot sufficiently admire his pluck and hardihood, for we hear it is likely he will again go and ‘try his luck’ in Johannesburg.”
Further research shows that this brave young man did indeed go back to South Africa, returning in August 1902 accompanied by his father. A year later his mother and six other children joined them.
The end of the interview mentioned that Orwin had an amusing memorial card in his possession, which contained the following lines:
Though taken away from a world of strife,
He leaves a “Steyn” behind him
In Remembrance of
Cronje
Who succumbed to an attack of “Bobs”
On Majuba Day 27th February 1900
Not lost, but gone before – to St Helena