D/CL
27/277/30 Image
of a Northern General Transport Company bus, thought to be carrying First World
War volunteers at Birtley in 1915
|
For the next few posts, you’ll be hearing about what some of
our volunteers have been up to. This
piece has been written by Sue:
I recently retired as a teacher
and having time on my hands I became a volunteer with Durham Record Office WW1
work and my first job was really to use my computer skills. I had to index the
casualties of the DLI in WW1.
I was converting word documents
to excel and was fascinated when I read surnames and recognised the place where
they had lived or enlisted.
I had little knowledge of WW1 or
the DLI and it inspired me to take a visit to the museum. Embarrassing to think
I live in County Durham and had never been to the museum
before.
My present task is to transcribe
a diary written by a soldier and this has created a ‘bonding exercise’ in the
house.
Brian dictates the pages and I do
the typing. We source the place names mentioned in the diary as the battle
front changes. It develops our understanding of the tragic events of the area,
some of the villages he mentioned being totally wiped out.
Thoroughly enjoyed my new found
hobby and would recommend it to anyone.
Sue has been transcribing the diary from a scan that has
been printed out. The diary is one of
several written by Private William Roberts, 18th Battalion, Durham
Light Infantry (D/DLI 7/577/1-5). The
diaries begin in December 1915, and continue to a few days before he died of
wounds in June 1917.
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