Headstone of Second Lieutenant JF Cronin, Vevey St Martin's cemetery, taken by Victoria Oxberry, August 2013 |
The DLI at Large will be a sporadic series of posts of
interesting references and stories of the Durham Light Infantry seen beyond the
county. The first post concerns my
investigations into a soldier who piqued my interest.
I have friends in Switzerland
that I visit each year and I discovered that the nearby town of Vevey has the only Commonwealth War
Grave Cemetery
in the country. I also discovered that
it is the resting place of Second Lieutenant JF Cronin, 14th
Battalion, Durham Light Infantry.
Despite being a neutral country, Switzerland played a large role
during the First World War. The
headquarters of the International Committee of the Red Cross were (and still
are) in Geneva. On 21 August 1914 set up the International Prisoners of War
Agency dealing with the lists of men taken prisoner, on both sides, as well as
being the agency dealing with all the post to and from prisoners. Switzerland also had a number of
locations (hospitals and hotels) where, from 1916, wounded and sick prisoners of
war in other countries could be transferred to for treatment. I assumed that this is what had happened to
Second Lieutenant Cronin.
D/DLI 7/579/5 Postcard of the English Hotel at Leysin, Switzerland, from the collection Private Kenneth Robertson, [1916-1917] |
While visiting The National Archives earlier this year, I
had a look at a file that exists for Second Lieutenant Cronin (TNA ref: WO
339/28146). John Francis Cronin was born
in Battersea around 1888 and joined the 15th (Territorial Forces)
Battalion, London Regiment, in 1911, and was commissioned to the 14th
Battalion, Durham Light Infantry in April 1914.
His working life seems to have been with the Admiralty in a civilian
capacity, but at the outbreak of war, he requested to stay with the
Admiralty. The request was turned down
and he joined his battalion.
Letters of late 1916 indicate that Cronin had developed
tuberculosis caused by active service, having enjoyed good health until
spending three months in France . The implication of one letter is that men had
gone out with the illness and due to the way it was passed on, exacerbated by
the living conditions, that they were infecting other soldiers.
Second Lieutenant Cronin spent time in Pinewood Sanatorium,
Wokingham, where ‘he did not make good progress’ and doctors strongly
recommended ‘a change in climate’. I was
surprised to learn that men were able to be sent to Switzerland for treatment from
their home countries. In December 1916
Cronin arrived at Arosa ,
Switzerland ,
first staying at a hotel. He was later moved to the newly opened Sanatorium
Altein in arrangement with the British Red Cross. It was expected that he would make a full
recovery. An extension of his stay was
granted but on 10 March 1917, Joseph Francis Cronin died in hospital at nearby
Chur.
The records now available on the Commonwealth War Graves
Commission website show that Second Lieutenant Cronin was initially buried in a
British plot at Chur Catholic Cemetery . The CWGC concentrated the Swiss graves to Vevey
St Martin's church and Cronin was moved to his final resting place in November
1923.
The view from the Commonwealth War Graves cemetery at Vevey St Martin's church, Switzerland, taken by Victoria Oxberry, August 2013 |
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