Cronsen | Abraham | | | Source: WO100/283 | Mossel Bay TG |
Cronshaw | A | 381 | Private | 5th Battalion
Source: QSA roll | Lancashire Fusiliers |
Cronshaw | A E | | | 3rd Volunteer Service Company
Source: QSA and KSA medal rolls | Manchester Regiment |
Cronshaw | G | 523 | Private | 5th Battalion
Source: QSA roll | Lancashire Fusiliers |
Cronshaw | J | | | 1st Battalion
Source: QSA and KSA medal rolls | East Lancashire Regiment |
Cronshaw | J | 2250 | Private | Missing in action. Near Schweizer, 21 September 1900
Rejoined
Source: South African Field Force Casualty Roll | East Lancashire Regiment |
Cronshaw | J | | | 2nd Battalion
Source: QSA and KSA medal rolls | (King's Own) Royal Lancaster Regiment |
Cronshaw | J | 11/2029 | Private | Frontier Wars. SAGS (1) 1879 | (King's Own) Royal Lancaster Regiment |
Cronshaw | R | | | 2nd Battalion, 2nd Volunteer Service Company
Source: QSA and KSA medal rolls | East Lancashire Regiment |
Cronshey | F H | | | 2nd Battalion
Source: QSA and KSA medal rolls | Royal Scots Fusiliers |
Cronson | Abraham | 26 | | Occupation: Shopkeeper. Next of kin: Sister. Address: Buffalo USA .
Source: Attestation paper in WO126 | Town Guard and District Mounted Troops |
Cronson | Samuel Israel | 36 | | Occupation: Feather Buyer. Next of kin: Mother. Address: Buffalo USA .
Source: Attestation paper in WO126 | Town Guard and District Mounted Troops |
Cronwright | Alfred | | Lieutenant | Source: Nominal roll in WO127 | SAMIF |
Cronwright | Northland Cottrill | | Lieutenant | Source: Nominal roll in WO127 | SAMIF |
Cronwright-Schreiner | Samuel Cron | | | He was the eldest son of S C Cronwright, who for many years represented Grahamstown in the Cape Legislature, three of his grandparents having been Scotch, Irish, and English. Mr Cronwright-Schreiner was educated at St Andrew's College, Grahamstown, and after taking his BA started farming, principally with Angora goats, ostriches, and cattle, in 1884, in the Karoo, and then till 1894 at Cradock, afterwards spending four years at Kimberley and one at Johannesburg, until on the outbreak of war he came over to England to lecture and represent the views of the pro-Boers. His tour was a complete failure, however, as no British audience would give him a hearing. He returned to the Cape Colony in 1900, and was detained by the military at Hanover (Cape Colony), where he made a study of Aracbnidae, discovering locally over 100 species new to science, a description of which was published in the Popular Science Monthly (New York). He published in 1895, The Political Situation, jointly with his wife, Olive Schreiner whose surname he added to his own on the occasion of his marriage in 1894, and he is also the author of The Angora Goat, The Ostrich, and (in the Zoologist), The Trekbokken, or migratory springbucks. | Unknown |
|