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John Kipling

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Allegiance
  
United Kingdom

Years of service
  
1914-1915

Name
  
John Kipling

Uncles
  
Wolcott Balestier

Service/branch
  
Rank
  
Lieutenant

Role
  
John Kipling Rudyard Kipling and the centuryold WWI mystery Toronto Star
Born
  
17 August 1897Rottingdean, Sussex (
1897-08-17
)

Buried at
  
St Mary's ADS Cemetery, Haisnes

Unit
  
2nd Battalion, Irish Guards

Died
  
September 27, 1915, Loos-en-Gohelle, France

Siblings
  
Elsie Bambridge, Josephine Kipling

Parents
  
Rudyard Kipling, Caroline Balestier

Grandparents
  
John Lockwood Kipling, Alice Kipling

Similar People
  

The grave of john kipling and the battle of loos


John Kipling (17 August 1897 – 27 September 1915) was the only son of the British author Rudyard Kipling. He was killed in September 1915 at the Battle of Loos while serving with the British Army during the First World War, nearly six weeks after his eighteenth birthday.

Contents

He is a central character in the 1997 play My Boy Jack and its 2007 film adaptation.

If By Rudyard Kipling 1910


World War I

John Kipling Victorian Swords nantucketsleighride John Kipling

Kipling was 16 when the First World War broke out in August 1914. His father, a keen imperialist and patriot, was soon writing propaganda on behalf of the British government. Rudyard sought to get his son a commission, but John was rejected by the Royal Navy due to severe short-sightedness. He was also initially rejected by the army for similar reasons.

John Kipling httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

However, Rudyard Kipling was friends with Frederick Roberts, 1st Earl Roberts, commander of the British Army, and Colonel of the Irish Guards, and through this influence, John Kipling was commissioned as a second lieutenant into the 2nd Battalion, Irish Guards on 15 August 1914, having just turned 17. After reports of the Rape of Belgium and the sinking of the RMS Lusitania in 1915, Rudyard Kipling came to see the war as a crusade for civilization against barbarism. and was even more keen that his son should see active service.

John Kipling Novelist39s Kipling grief over tragic son made into 15

After completing his training, John Kipling was promoted to lieutenant on 7 June 1915, and was sent to France in August along with the rest of the battalion, which was part of the 2nd Guards Brigade of the Guards Division. His father was already there on a visit, serving as a war correspondent.

The casualty rate amongst junior officers (or subalterns) in the trenches was extremely high, much higher than NCO's or other ranks. On average, a junior officer leading from the front survived six weeks before becoming a casualty - either killed or injured.

Death

Kipling was reported injured and missing in action in September 1915 during the Battle of Loos. A shell blast had apparently ripped off his face. With fighting continuing, his body was not identified.

His parents searched vainly for him in field hospitals and interviewed comrades to try to identify what had happened. A notice was published in The Times on 7 October 1915 confirming the known facts that he was "wounded and missing".

The death of John inspired Rudyard Kipling to become involved with the Commonwealth War Graves Commission and write a wartime history of the Irish Guards. The poem My Boy Jack also alludes to the wartime loss of a son, although its themes are rather nautical.

Grave

The grave of Kipling was reportedly identified in 1992, and he is officially listed as buried in St Mary's ADS Cemetery in Haisnes. In 2002, research by military historians Tonie and Valmai Holt suggested that this grave may be that of another officer, Arthur Jacob of the London Irish Rifles.

In January 2016, however, further research, by Graham Parker and Joanna Legg, demonstrated that the original identification of the grave was in fact correct. In a statement, a spokesman for the Commonwealth War Graves Commission stated that it "welcomed the latest research which supports the identification of the grave of John Kipling".

My Boy Jack

The play My Boy Jack was written in 1997 by David Haig. In 2007, it was adapted into a film of the same name, with Daniel Radcliffe as John Kipling.

References

John Kipling Wikipedia