The Pals:
History
When War broke out in early August
1914 Captain James Milton from Chorley
took steps to form a ‘Pals’ battalion
in Chorley and district. By the
3rd September, thirty men had signed
up and they were eventually formed
into a Company to join a newly raised
battalion at Accrington. By the
end of September the Chorley Pals
Company as they became known was
up to full strength, with some 212
men and 3 Officers. They became
C Company of the 7th Battalion of
the East Lancashire Regiment, although
this was changed to the 11th Battalion
on the 10th December 1914, known
thereafter as the ‘Accrington Pals’
(although men from Chorley, Blackburn
and Burnley were in the ranks).
On the 7th October the recruits
were kitted out in Melton Blue uniforms
made locally. Basic training for
the Chorley contingent was carried
out in the Drill Hall on Devonshire
Road, with rifle practice at Common
Bank. By the end of the year the
Company consisted entirely of men
from Chorley, as well as the villages
of Rufford, Croston, Eccleston,
Euxton, Coppull, Charnock Richard,
Brinscall, Withnell, Adlington,
Heath Charnock, Whittle-le-Woods,
Heapey and Wheelton.

An early official sighting of
the Chorley Pals in their blue uniforms
came on the 19th December outside
the Technical College, which now
houses Chorley Library. A month
later, on the 26th January 1915,
they were inspected on the Flat
Iron by Brigadier-General G.M. McKenzie.
By the middle of February, preparations
were well under way for the Chorley
Company to join the rest of the
11th Battalion of the East Lancashire
Regiment. There destination was
Caernarvon in North Wales, and on
the 16th February 1915 a farewell
dinner was given to the Company
in Chorley Town Hall by Mr. James
Sumner, a local mill owner.

A week later on Tuesday, 23rd
February the Chorley Pals assembled
in Devonshire Road where they were
presented with a small English Sheepdog,
as a mascot, by local businessman
Mr. R.E. Stanton. The Company left
the barracks at 11.20 a.m. with
2nd Lt. Rigby and ‘Ned’ (as the
dog had been named) at the head
of the column. Snow was falling
as the men marched via Hamilton
Road to Pall Mall and into Market
Street, where they turned up Chapel
Street to the railway station. At
this point a farewell salute was
taken by the Mayor and the rest
of the Corporation. The Company
embarked on the train which had
come from Burnley with 205 ‘Burnley
Pals’, then known as D Company.
At 11.55 a.m. the train left the
station, heading for North Wales.
Whilst in Caernarvon a new Commanding
Officer, Lt. Colonel Rickman took
charge of the 11th Battalion on
the 1st March, and the men were
finally kitted out with khaki uniforms.
Lt. Colonel Rickman’s first act
was to change the letters designating
each company and the Chorley Pals
became Y Company. Further training
took place at Grantham in Lincolnshire
and Rugeley in Staffordhsire.
On there way from Rugeley for
further training in Ripon in North
Yorkshire, each Pals Company took
part in a recruitment visit to their
respective town. The Chorley Pals
visited the Borough on Friday, 30th
June and paraded on Coronation Recreation
Ground. The Mayor of Chorley, Alderman
R. Hindle took the salute as the
men marched past. The following
day the Pals left Chorley Cattle
Market heading for the Royal Lancashire
Show in Blackburn where they gave
a display of rifle drill and bayonet
fighting.
September saw the Battalion move,
en masse, to Salisbury Plain in
anticipation of a move to France.
However, on the 19th December the
Battalion left by train for Plymouth
were they embarked on the SS Ionic,
bound for Port Said in Egypt. On
route the ship was narrowly missed
by a torpedo fired by a German submarine,
and on New Year’s Day 1916 they
finally arrived in Alexandria (after
short stops in Gibraltar and Malta).
After nearly two months on the east
bank of the Suez Canal, orders were
received in the last week of February
to embark for France. Marseille
was reached on the 8th March and
after a 52 hour train journey, the
Battalion eventually arrived in
northern France near Abbeville.
The Chorley Pals were held in reserve
and would not see the front line
trenches for a while yet. However,
as early as the 29th March the Pals
were told they were to attack the
small village of Serre, in the French
Department of the Somme (well to
the north of the river that it was
named after).
At 4.00 p.m. on the 29th April
1916, the Pals took over the front
line trenches opposite the village.
The following day they came under
enemy shell fire, and they remained
in the trenches for eight days.
Training then took place ten miles
to the rear, in Warnimont Wood.
The Pals were back in the front
line on the afternoon of the 20th
May, close to Matthew Copse opposite
Serre - a routine of one week at
the front and one week at the rear.
During their time in the trenches,
the Chorley Pals were fortunate
that none of the men who had joined
up in Chorley in September 1914
were killed.
The planned attack on Serre by
the Pals Battalion of the 11th East
Lancs. (amongst others) was part
of the Big Push to take place on
the Somme. It was originally scheduled
to start on the 28th June but was
postponed for two days due to bad
weather. The British guns started
to pound the German positions at
Serre from the 24th June, as part
of a plan to destroy the barb wire
around the enemy trench system.
Fortunately the Chorley Pals did
not witness this bombardment as
they were back in the reserve trenches
again.
On the 30th June the whole Battalion
of the East Lancashire Regiment
left Warnincourt Wood at 6.15 p.m.
and marched via Courcelles to their
positions in the assembly trenches.
The Chorley Pals (Y Company) were
the third in line as they move into
the trenches opposite Serre, and
were in position by 4.00 a.m. Progress
had been slow, with the men carrying
between 60 and 70 lbs of equipment,
sometimes knee deep in sticky mud.
At 4.30 p.m. the Germans, anticipating
an attack, started to bombard the
British lines. The British artillery
began shelling the German trenches
at 6.39 a.m. until 7.30 a.m. In
the 11th Battalion of the East Lancashire
Regiment, the first Company to go
over the top at 7.20 a.m. was W
Company (mainly from Accrington)
who then laid down 50 yards in No
Man’s Land. They were followed at
7.25 a.m. by X Company (from Accrington
and District). Next came the Chorley
Pals, with Z Company from Burnley
in reserve.

At 7.30 a.m. Officers blew their
whistles and the first two waves
stood up and started walking towards
the German positions at Serre. The
Chorley Pals climbed out of their
trenches, led by Lt. G.C. Williams.
Waiting for them were the German
machine gunners who cut down most
of the men in W and X Companies.
By 8.00 a.m. the attack had ground
to a halt, having failed to reach
the German positions in strength.
Whilst some men from the 11th Battalion
of the East Lancs. reached the outskirts
of Serre, their bodies were not
found until February 1917 when the
Germans retired to new positions
on the Hindenburgh Line.
In less than 20 minutes, 235
of the 720 men from the 11th East
Lancs. were killed. Another 350
were wounded, of which 17 would
eventually succumb to their wounds.
Many of the Battalion died where
they fell, in No Man’s Land.
As a result of the attack on
the morning of the 1st July, the
Chorley Pals (Y Company) had 31
men killed and three died within
a month of their wounds received
on that day. 21 have no known graves
and their names are transcribed
on the Thiepval memorial to the
Missing on the Somme battlefield.
A further 59 were wounded, making
a total of 93 casualties out of
approximately 175 men from Chorley
who went over the top that morning.
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