Hello and greetings from Australia. I'm trying to find out information about two individuals that served in the Anglo Boer War. I'm NOT related to them.
Below is an extract from a local newspaper that describes two of the three brothers. Mr Redmond Harry Jones and Fredrick William Catton-Jones.
If anyone has any additional information on these two individuals then I would be grateful.Redmond died in 1955 and Fredrick died in 1944 .Particularly interested in Redmond's time SA.
THE REGISTER
Adelaide, 5th February 1925
Mr. Redmond Jones, eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Jones, has been farming at Metung, Gippsland, for many years. He left Clifton College. Eng land, at 17, ,and returned to Australia, where lie spent some time gaining stock and station experience. Forty years ago Mr. (now Sir) John Grice commissioned him to take a big lot of horses from Albury to Manfred Downs, his station in Queensland; they were nearly a year on the road, such were the difficulties of travelling stock in a terrible drought year.For four years Mr. Redmond Jones was on the Western Australian goldfields. At the outbreak of the Boer war he went to Durban, and enlisted in the South African Light Horse, commanded by Col. the Hon. Julian Byrjg, now Lord Byng, of Vimy, Governor General of Canada. The Australian served as trooper for three months, and was on the staff with six others as scouts. He was twice wounded in the war. In 1908 he returned to his native land, and bought a farm on the Gippsland Lakes, which he left in 1914, and remained in England doing 'his bit' for his country until 1921.
The second son. Col. Catton Jones, C.B., served with distinction in the Egyptian and Boer Wars, was shot in Ladysmith during the siege, later was P.M.O. with Walter Kitchener, commanding the 24th British Field Hospital in India. In the late war Col. Jones was in the retreat from Mons; he was invalided for a short time, then served as AJDJM.S. at Havre, until again invalided towards the close of hostilities, and on retirement from the active list was rewarded with a C.B. It is recorded of him that during a fight in the Boer war he was attending to the wounded in the shelter of a large rock, and noticing a comrade badly wounded, he' left his shelter and carried him to safety amidst a storm of bullets— valour, indeed, worthy of the Victoria Cross!
Thanks Tom.