Hello John,
Sorry for the late reply, I was going through the door yesterday to a wedding, moreover, in my initial reply to you, I went off half cocked and just said what I saw, I was running rather late and did not bother to check.
Okay then, back to Packham, the available folio in WO97 are incomplete and have clearly not been filled in properly.
He has not "padded" anything and you should take his CEF papers as correct.
I normally go with WO97, but, upon looking at them they are indeed incomplete, WO100/166 shows his service in South Africa with a Volunteer Service Company of his regiment, so the medal with Cape Colony, Orange Free State, Transvaaal and interestingly Laings Nek too.
In addition, he did receive the gratuity of £10 for the war, he had served in the 1st Volunteer Battalion of the Queens before joining the Army in Croydon on the date as stated.
His rank would have merely reflected that already held in the Militia, there is no available WO96 folio to confirm this so you would have to do a manual search at Kew to make sure.
Again, I'd just go with his Canadian Expeditionary Force papers given the evidence available here.
Both WO100 and WO97 are available to you on line or at Kew.
I need to go and detox now, an all night bender in a night club into the small hours does not aid matters related to the Anglo Boer War, so perhaps I'll talk to you later about Packham.
Kind regards Frank Kelley
John S wrote: Frank:
Many thanks for your prompt reply.
Well, it looks like he may have "padded" his CEF attestation papers afterall!
Definately no service in the ABW in South Africa, so no ABW medal, (actually, his CEF papers state "South Africa 16 months- no claim it was IN South Africa)but is it possible that he saw previous service elsewhere before the ABW? Does your reference indicate the dates he served in the militia in the volunteer battalion, before enlisting in the short service engagement of 1900? Any idea as to why/how he might have been promoted so quickly from Pte to Sgt? Might he have retained a military connection after 25 May 1901? He certainly must have felt the patriotic pull enough to have enlisted into the CEF in Canada in 1915!
Might it be possible to obtain photocopies of your references?? It would aid me greatly in understanding this rather interesting/unusual service record.
Cheers,
John S