SERGEANT 407035 FREDERICK ROBINSON,ROYAL ARMY MEDICAL CORPS.
SERGEANT 407035 FREDERICK ROBINSON,ROYAL ARMY MEDICAL
CORPS. DIED OF NATURAL CAUSES 18th APRIL 1917. AGED 34.
It is likely that Fred
Robinson could have easily avoided service in the in the armed forces during
the First World War. A childhood sledging accident had left him with a weakened
left leg and possibly a limp. Nevertheless, on 14th August 1914 he enlisted
into a Territorial unit of the Royal Army Medical Corps in Leeds.
Fred was born in Ilkley in
1882, the second son of Mark and Caroline Robinson.
His father was a cabinet maker who manufactured a famous therapeutic chair at
his workshop at the junction of Cowpasture Road and Springs Lane, Ilkley. The
family home was a large house called 'Rocklands' further up Cowpasture Road
which Caroline Robinson ran as a guest house. Fred was a pupil at Ilkley
Grammar School and upon completion of his education was employed as a cashier
at Garnett and Sons, paper manufacturers in Otley. He was also very much
involved with local clubs and societies and was the secretary of Ilkley Rugby
Club and the towns Rifle Club.
Within a few weeks of enlisting
in the RAMC Fred was posted to France and in November 1914 joined the 7th
Casualty Clearing Station in a clerical role. Located a couple of miles behind
the front line the CCS was more seriously wounded men would be treated before
being moved to larger base hospitals. In a letter home Fred described the
arduous work of dealing with thousands of badly wounded men especially after an
offensive. He also recounted with anger the bombing of the hospital by German
bombers and added his personal frustration at being unable to "..take up a
rifle and have a go at them".
Promoted to the rank of
sergeant in April 1916 he remained with the 7th CCS until mid March 1917 when
he was diagnosed with osteomyelitis of the left femur, an infection of the bone
it seems almost certain that its onset was related to his childhood sledging
accident. For Fred this may have been a recurring and chronic condition which,
in the days before the advent of antibiotics, was difficult to treat.
Transferred to the 7th General Hospital at St Omer his condition deteriorated
and the subsequent onset of gangrene meant that the amputation of his left leg
was the only treatment. Despite this radical surgery Fred failed to respond and
he died on 18th April 1917.
Today Sergeant Frederick
Robinson lies in the British military Cemetery al Longuenesse, St Omer and is
remembered on our war memorial in Ilkley and St Margaret’s Church.
Courtesy James Cooper
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