Peter McShane likeness

Peter McShane cap badgePrivate Peter McShane

1st Battalion Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers
Service No: 20480

Peter McShane grave

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Personal details

Family Information

Boarder with Pat and Rose Ann O'Hear before marrying Margaret Welsh McShane (13/10/1881 - ) of 8f Jackson St, Coatbridge. Father of 4 children, Rose McShane born 28/02/1906, Patrick McShane born 06/03/1908, Matthew McShane born 16/05/1910 and Peter McShane born 11/09/1912. From the 1901 Census - Address - 20c2 Whittington St, Coatbridge - Patrick O'Hear aged 33, Rose Ann O'Hear aged 29, Edward O'Hear aged 6, Sarah O'Hear aged 5, Charles O'Hear aged 1 month, boarders Patrick McShane aged 21, Peter McShane aged 23 and John Prunty aged 20. Peter's Pension was awarded to his wife on the 31/01/1917. Margaret remarried and became Margaret McKeown.

Born / Resided

Ireland / 8f Jackson St, Coatbridge

Died

Killed in Action on the 01/07/1916 at Beaumont Hamel during the Battle of Albert (opening phase of the Battles of the Somme)

Enlisted

Coatbridge 1915

Employed

Labourer in the North British Iron Works

Age

38

Buried / Remembered

"Y" Ravine Cemetery (B. 42), Beaumont Hamel, Somme, France

Cemetery / Memorial Information

"Y" Ravine runs East and West about 800 metres South of the village, from "Station Road" to the front line of July 1916. It was a deep ravine with steep sides, lined with dug-outs, with extending two short arms at the West end. The village of Beaumont-Hamel was attacked and reached on 1 July, 1916, by units of the 29th Division (which included the Royal Newfoundland Regiment), but it could not be held. It was attacked again and captured, with the Ravine, by the 51st (Highland) Division on 13 November 1916. The Newfoundland Memorial Park, and the 29th and 51st Divisional Memorials within it, commemorate these engagements, and "Y" Ravine Cemetery is within the Park. The village was later "adopted", with three others in the Somme, by the City of Winchester. The cemetery was made by the V Corps in the spring of 1917, when these battlefields were cleared. It was called originally "Y" Ravine Cemetery No.1. No.2 cemetery was concentrated after the Armistice into Ancre British Cemetery, Beaumont-Hamel. There are now over 400, 1914-18 war casualties commemorated in this site. Of these, over a third are unidentified and special memorials are erected to 53 soldiers (or sailors or Marines) from the United Kingdom and eight from Newfoundland, known or believed to be buried among them.

Additional Information

The Battalion March 1915 : sailed, going via Egypt in March 1915 and landed at Cape Helles, Gallipoli on the 25/04/1915. In January 1916 they evacuated from Gallipoli to Egypt. On the 18/03/1916 they landed at Marseilles for service in France. They were part of the 87th Brigade, 29th Division. Peter arrived in Gallipoli on the 25/08/1915. Peter was reported as Killed in the Coatbridge Leader in their 08/07/1916 issue only for this to be retracted the following week with an apology as news was that Peter was alive and well. However over a month later on the 19/08/1916 the Leader reported that Peter HAD indeed been Killed on the opening day of the Battle of Albert on the 01/07/1916 (part of the Battles of the Somme) at Beaumont Hamel (see Newspaper clippings). 14 other men from the Coatbridge Memorial also fell on this day. The Inniskillings suffered huge casualties as they attempted to capture "Y" Ravine at Beaumont Hamel (a place where the Newfoundland Regiment had suffered almost total annihilation). Before they had gone 100 yards their Commanding Officer and 11 other Officers had been Killed. The Battalion fought on and reached the enemy lines only to find their barbed wire still intact. As they struggled to withdraw they suffered heavily and when they reached their own lines they had suffered 559 men Killed, Wounded or Missing. Peter shares a grave with Private G. Hilton of the Border Regiment (see main grave photo). The Battle of Albert, 1st - 13th July 1916 : In this opening phase of the Battles of the Somme, the French and British assault broke into and gradually moved beyond the first of the German defensive systems. For the British, the attack on the 1st July proved to be the worst day in the nation's military history in terms of casualties sustained. It is the aspect of the battle that is most remembered and most written about, and for good reason, but to concentrate on the failures is to entirely miss the point of the Somme and why the battle developed into an epic period of the Great War. On the first day, British forces at the southern end of the British line made an impressive advance alongside the French Sixth Army, capturing the villages of Montauban and Mametz and breaking through the enemy's defensive system. North of Mametz the attack was an almost unmitigated failure. The situation led to a redirection of effort, with the offensive north of the River Ancre effectively being closed down and all future focus being on the line south of Thiepval. There was a stiff fight for Trones Wood and costly, hastily planned and piecemeal attacks that eventually took La Boisselle, Contalmaison and Mametz Wood during the rest of the period up to the 13th July. This was part of the Battles of the Somme, 1st July - 18th November 1916 : A Franco-British offensive that was undertaken after Allied strategic conferences in late 1915, but which changed its nature due to the German attack against the French in the epic Battle of Verdun, which lasted from late February to November. Huge British losses on the first day and a series of fiercely-contested steps that became attritional in nature. For all armies on the Western Front it was becoming what the Germans would call "materialschlacht" : a war not of morale, will or even manpower, but of sheer industrial material might. The 15th September 1916 saw the first-ever use of tanks in the step known as the Battle of Flers-Courcelette. The British army in France is now approaching its maximum strength in numbers but is still developing in terms of tactics, technology, command and control. SEE PHOTOS x 13 FOR THE BATTALION WAR DIARY JUNE - JULY 1916. The War Diary on the 1st July 1916 states : Strength of Battalion on entering the action - Officers 36, Other Ranks 916. Casualties - Officers Killed 4, Missing 4, Wounded 11. Other Ranks 50, Missing 225, Wounded 265. Peter was involved with the Coatbridge Branch of the United Irish League. Peter is also remembered on the St. Patrick's Church Roll of Honour. See photos for Peter's Medal Index Card, his CWGC Grave Registration x 2, his Headstone Report, his listing in the Ireland Casualties WW1, his Army Register of Soldiers Effects, his Service Medal and Award Rolls, myself at "Y" Ravine Cemetery at the end of a fundraising walk in 2010, another 2 photos of Peter's Grave (1st one from the British War Graves), Peter's Pension Records x 2 and the Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers Cap Badge. Finally, SEE PHOTOS x 13 FOR THE 29th DIVISION BOOK JANUARY - JULY 1916 and the 29th Division Order of Battle x 13 (the Division Peter was with when he died), Newspaper clippings x 4 (Coatbridge Leader x 3 and Airdrie and Coatbridge Advertiser x 1), "Y" Ravine Cemetery taken by myself in July 2023, 2 Poppy Cross placed by myself in July 2023 (Peter and Corporal Edward McComish) x 2 and 5 Poppy Crosses placed at "Y" Ravine Cemetery by myself before I left for France July 2023 (Peter's bottom right).

Photos
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War Diaries

The battalion War Diary is available on the National Archives website.

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