Profile

TINCLER, Charles Knox Kirkwood
(Service number 6/4365)

Aliases
First Rank Private Last Rank Private

Birth

Date 05/10/1880 Place of Birth Dublin, Ireland

Enlistment Information

Date Age 35
Address at Enlistment Beautiful Valley, South Canterbury
Occupation Shepherd, for R T Newton
Previous Military Experience
Marital Status
Next of Kin Mrs Arthur Temple (sister), Waipiro Bay, Gisborne. LAter changed to Mrs. John Holmes, of Highfield House, Bowness of Solway, Carlisle, Cumberland, England
Religion Anglican
Medical Information 5ft 9 ½ inches tall, of fair complexion, with dark hair. His left hearing in his left ear was noted as ‘fair’, though his right was ‘good’.

Military Service

Served with New Zealand Armed Forces (?) Served in
Military District

Embarkation Information

Body on Embarkation New Zealand Expeditionary Force
Unit, Squadron, or Ship 11th Reinforcements, Canterbury Infantry Battalion, C Company
Date 1 April 1916
Transport HMNZT 49 Tahiti or HMNZT 50 Maunganui
Embarked From Wellington Destination Suez, Egypt
Other Units Served With
Last Unit Served With Canterbury Infantry Regiment, 1st Battalion

Military Awards

Campaigns Western European 1916-1917
Service Medals British War Medal, Victory Medal
Military Awards

Award Circumstances and Date

No information

Prisoner of War Information

Date of Capture
Where Captured and by Whom
Actions Prior to Capture
PoW Serial Number
PoW Camps
Days Interned
Liberation Date

Discharge

Date Reason

Hospitals, Wounds, Diseases and Illnesses

20 June 1916 - accidentally wounded; 22 June - admitted to No.14 Stationary Hospital at Boulogne; 23 June - embarked for England; 24 June admitted to the New Zealand General Hospital, Graylingwell, Chichester; 19 July - transferred to No.1 NZ General Hospital, Brockenhurst; 18 August - Attached to strength at the NZ Convalescent Hospital, Hornchurch. 9 October - rejoined unit in foield. 7 June 1917 - wounded in action & admitted to No.77 Field Ambulance; 8 June - transferred to No.83 General Hospital, Boulogne; 11 June 1917 - at No.83 General Hospital, died of his wounds.

Post-war Occupations

Death

Date 11 June 1917 Age
Place of Death Messines, Belgium
Cause Died of wounds
Notices
Memorial or Cemetery Boulogne Eastern Cemetery, Boulogne, France
Memorial Reference IV. B. 56.
New Zealand Memorials On Memorial wall, Timaru; Geraldine Church Memorial; Geraldine War Memorial; Geraldine Hockey Club Memorial Pavilion plaque; Gapes and Beautiful Valley First World War Memorial (as TINDEER); Mackenzie War Memorial, Fairlie, 2016 additions

Biographical Notes

Charles Tincler was the son of Mrs. John Holmes, of Highfield House, Bowness of Solway, Carlisle, Cumberland, England.

By the time he was called up for service, Charles was a shepherd working for R T Newton who farmed in Beautiful Valley, South Canterbury.He listed his sister, Mrs Arthur Temple of Waipiro Bay in Gisborne, as his next of kin. He was described as being 5ft 9 ½ inches tall, of fair complexion, with dark hair and an Anglican. His medical board otherwise found him of acceptable fitness, noting his hearing in his left ear was ‘fair’ - though his right was listed as ‘good’. On 15 December 1915 at Trentham he was posted to C company, 11th Reinforcements.

On 1 April 1916 Tincler left New Zealand with the 11th Reinforcements, Canterbury Infantry Battalion, C Company on HMNZT 49 Tahiti or HMNZT 50 Maunganui, headed for Suez, Egypt. After disembarking at Suez on 3 May 1916, he continued on Alexandria where, a week later, he embarked for Marseilles in France, headed for the Western Front. After another week’s travel he joined the 1st Battalion, Canterbury Infantry Regiment, at Armentières on 16 June 1916. The newly-formed NZ Division weas posted there at gaining experience of the ‘new’ trench conditions while guarding a ‘quiet’ sector of the line.

On 20 June, only a few days later Tincler was accidentally wounded while doing his duty. It seems he received a severe gunshot wound to his back on 18 May. He was admitted to No.14 Stationary Hospital at Boulogne two days later. The next day he was sent to England where he was admitted to the New Zealand General Hospital, Graylingwell, Chichester. Almost a month later he was transferred to No.1 NZ General Hospital at Brockenhurst then, after another month, he was transferred to the NZ Convalescent Hospital at Hornchurch (or Grey Towers) on 18 August 1916. Three days later he was transferred to the New Zealand command depot at Codford, where he remained until passing to Sling Camp on 6 October. Three days later Tincler left Sling for France, being attached to the strength of the New Zealand Rifle Brigade (NZRB) at Etaples two days later. After a brief sting at Etaples, he rejoined the 1st Battallion, Canterbury Infantry Regiment in the field on 29 October.

Back at the front Tincler and the New Zealkand Division prepared for an assault on Messines Ridge, which preceeded the third battles of Ypres (Passchendaele). Over the previous two years tunnelers had dug shafts at Messines under the German lines and exploded huge mines underneath them in the early hours of 7 June. The assault was a striking success. But the success didn’t come without cost. On 7 June Tincler was wounded in action for the second time and was admitted to No.77 Field Ambulance the same day. The following day he was transferred to No.83 General Hospital in Boulogne, but died there of his wounds three days later on 11 June 1917. He was buried at Boulogne Eastern Cemetery, France.

His will left his possessions to his sister Evelyn Mayhew of Pigeon Bay, New Zealand and his nephew Richard Temple son of my sister Ida Temple of Waipira Bay, Gisborne. His executors were his brother in law Arthur Leofric Temple and friend Edward William Inman of Cattle Valley.

His commanding officer, L O’Callaghan wrote to his sister “expressing his sincere sympathy in the loss of your brave brother. He fell during the Messines operations, and I feel sure it will be some consolation to you to hear how well he was liked and respected by his comrades, who all deplore the loss of so good a soldier.”

After the war Tincler’s medals (a British War Medal and Victory Medal), plaque and scroll were sent to his parents in Cumberland.

Sources

Auckland War Memorial Museum Cenotaph Database [26 September 2023]; NZ Defence Force Personnel Records (Archives NZ R22013735 [26 September 2023]; SCRoll submission by Karyn Close, 25 Septembr 2023

External Links

Related Documents

No documents available.

Researched and Written by

Tony Rippin, South Canterbruy Museum

Currently Assigned to

Not assigned.

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