A Soldier of the Border Regiment | |
Remembered with Honour | |
Name | Thomas Skinner |
Born | Carlisle, Cumberland |
Rank | Private |
Service No. | 10932 |
Battalion | 6th Battalion |
Regiment | Border Regiment |
Enlisted | Carlisle, Cumberland |
Theatre(s) of War | France and Flanders |
Military Tactics | {{{tactics}}} |
Died | 14 August 1915 Gallipoli (Lemnos, Greece) |
Cause of Death | Died of wounds |
Burial Type | {{{burial_type}}} |
Reference No. | {{{reference_number}}} |
Resting Place | East Mudros Military Cemetery |
Location Map | {{{location_map}}} |
Additional Memorial(s) | {{{additional_memorials}}} |
Casualty Type | Commonwealth War Dead |
Nationality | British (English) |
Additional family | {{{additional_family}}} |
Newspapers | {{{newspapers}}} |
Periodicals | {{{periodicals}}} |
Books | {{{books}}} |
Websites | {{{websites}}} |
Links | {{{links}}} |
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The administrator is in the process of updating all the Lonsdale (11th Battalion) Roll of Honour entries to the new style as seen here in this example. This is a lengthy process and when completed updates to the other Border Regiment Rolls of Honour will follow.
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This is a dedicated remembrance page for Thomas Skinner (10932), a soldier of The Border Regiment during The Great War.
Some areas are lacking in useful information, which includes any images. Please consider helping the Lonsdale Roll of Honour and Border Regiment Rolls of Honour projects by contacting us with any useful information you may have. Alternatively, see how to donate digital images and add the images yourself. Thank you.
Some areas are lacking in useful information, which includes any images. Please consider helping the Lonsdale Roll of Honour and Border Regiment Rolls of Honour projects by contacting us with any useful information you may have. Alternatively, see how to donate digital images and add the images yourself. Thank you.
Thomas Skinner was wounded and transported back to the beach at Suvla, then by boat to Lemnos. Over the next five days Thomas would have undergone surgery, but his wounds were beyond repair. Only 46 days after leaving the friendly shores of England, Thomas Skinner died on the Island of Lemnos in Greece.