Commemorated:

1. Memorial:Basra Memorial Basra
2. Book:The (1921) Masonic Roll of Honour 1914-1918Pg.130
3. Memorial:The (1940) Scroll - WW1 Roll of Honour5C GQS
    

Awards & Titles:

 

Family :

Born 1883 at Boreland of Dryfe, Hutton Parish Dumfriesshire. Son of John and Mary (Campbell) Mitchell of Auchanbony, Dundrennan and later of Arden House, Allesley, Coventry. Late of Mercantile Bank of India, Ltd., Calcutta.

Service Life:

Campaigns:

Unit / Ship / Est.: 56th Punjabi Rifles (Frontier Force) 

Action : Mesopotamia 

At the outbreak of war the British, together with Indian troops, resolved to protect oil supply in the region by occupying the area around Basra at Abadan. This evolved into a series of campaigns towards Baghdad against the Turkish forces as Mesopotamia (modern Iraq) was part of the Ottoman Empire. Meetings in late 1914 and into 1915 led the Viceroy and Indian government at Simla to reconsider the limited involvement of troops and they decided to order further advances with a view to securing the Shatt-al-Hai, a canal connecting the Tigris and Euphrates river and potentially capturing Baghdad. The British government disagreed and wished to conserve forces for the Western front. The Viceroy was given permission to act as it wished, but told in no uncertain terms that no reinforcements should be expected.

The initial success experienced by the British and Indian forces quickly disintegrated in the face of Ottoman opposition. The Siege of Kut-Al-Amara began on 7th December with the besieging of an 8,000 strong British-Indian garrison in the town of Kut, 100 miles south of Baghdad, by the Ottoman Army. These campaigns produced few tactical benefits, indeed the catastrophic defeat at Kut in 1916 was a major setback. Badhdad was eventually taken in March 1917.

The conditions in Mesopotamia were dreadful. The climate, sickness and disease produced large losses in addition to battle casualties. About as many men died of disease as were killed in action. The Mesopotamia front was part of a strategy hoping for success at lower cost than the Western Front but no decisive victory was achieved.

Detail :

In the pre-war period he was a Captain in the Calcutta Vounteer Rifles. He took up a commission in the Punjab Rifles in September 1914, serving in Egypt and Aden before moving to Mesopotamia where the regiment took part in the relief of the British forces in Kut-el-Amara. He was killed while commanding the machine gun section at the Battle of the Wadi at Shiekh Saad. Killed in action on 13 January 1916 and named on the Basra Memorial, Iraq.

Commemorated at the family grave at the Rerrick Parish Churchyard, Dundrennan.

See also: Scottish Military Research Group - Commemorations Project.
See also: Scottish War Graves Project.

Masonic :

TypeLodge Name and No.Province/District :
Mother : Lodge of Humility with Fortitude No. 229 E.C.London
Joined : Prinsep No. 2037 E.C. Bengal

Initiated
Passed
Raised
1st March 1909
5th April 1909
3rd May 1909
 

Past Master.

Contribution Record shows that he was "Killed in action 7.2.16". He further joined Prinsep Lodge No. 2037 on the 5th November 1909, recorded as a Bank Manager on their records.


Source :

The project globally acknowledges the following as sources of information for research across the whole database:

Additional Source:

Last Updated: 2019-09-04 07:41:39