RIDLEY, Hector [of Newark]
In the photograph is the Mayor, Hector is the officer on the Left and the soldier on the right is Corporal Upton VC. My understanding is that Corporal Upton and Hector had returned from the front and were involved in a recruitment drive in the Nottingham area.
From the Newark Advertiser, 12th May, 1915
Lieut. 2nd. Bn. Sherwood Foresters
If you can provide any more information about this First World War serviceman, please leave a ‘Comment’ via the link below. Thank you.
Andy Swearman has been in contact with OurNottinghamshire (see Comments at foot of page) and has provided the photo (right) and the additional information below
Hector died on August 9th 2015 aged 23 at the Ypres Salient. The story in the family was that they were advancing to take back trenches occupied by the Germans. He has no known grave and is commemorated on the Menin gate.
In the photograph (right) is the Mayor of Nottingham. Hector is the officer on the Left and the soldier on the right is Corporal Upton VC. My understanding is that Corporal Upton and Hector had returned from the front and were involved in a recruitment drive in the Nottingham area.
Transcript from local newspaper:
Hero Hector
WILLIAM HECTOR MATHERS RIDLEY’S rapid rise from the ranks of the Sherwoods reads more like a chapter from a fictional adventure than a chronicle of facts. The son of Mrs Elizabeth Charlotte Wilson Ridley of Mill-gate, Newark, he was a champion swimmer while working at his uncle’s company, Mather and Company; and his mechanical training stood him in good stead when he enlisted.
He was at the Battle of the Aisne but his chance came in the fighting round Lille, where the Sherwood Foresters were surrounded by some 80,000 Bavarian troops who had arrived with awesome rapidity from Antwerp during the night.
The Sherwoods’ commanding officer asked for a volunteer to take a message to the general officer commanding, acquainting him with the seriousness of the situation. Young Ridley volunteered and successfully carried the message through enemy lines.
The reply was that the Sherwoods – vastly out-numbered though they were – must hang on at all costs. On the return journey Hector had a very narrow escape. The back wheel of the bicycle he was riding was shattered by a shell but in the meantime he had dived into a ditch nearby and was not hurt.
Hector’s heroism did not go unnoticed by his superiors. He was promoted from Lance Corporal to Company Sergeant Major and on 8 April was raised to commissioned rank.
His Uncle John Mather has received several interesting souvenirs from Hector the Hero. One is a German rifle grenade which pitched near the trench he was in but failed to explode and was later secured during the hours of darkness.
Another is a small book belonging to a German musketeer who – Hector reports somewhat diplomatically – “has finished his part in this or any other war.”
Further transcript from Newark Newspaper dated 16 August 1915.
Lieutenant Hector Wilson Ridley, 23, was killed only a few days after returning to the trenches.
He was one of the wounded heroes who joined with Corporal Upton VC a few evenings ago to urge more Newark men to volunteer. And now his widowed mother Elizabeth and grandparents William and Sarah Mather are distraught that the boy reared to take over the family motor company will not be coming home.
The War Office telegram is terse as ever:
“Deeply regret to inform you that Lt Hector Ridley,2nd Sherwoods, Notts & Derbys
Regt, is reported killed. Lord Kitchener deeply sympathises with you.”
What set this loss apart, though, was that there was also a letter from
Buckingham Palace:
“The King and Queen deeply regret the loss you and the Army have sustained by the death of your son in the service of his country. Their Majesties truly sympathise with you in your sorrow.”