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Reginald Earnshaw

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Rank
  
Galley Boy

Awards
  
War Medal 1939–1945


Battles/wars
  
World War II

Battles and wars
  
World War II

Name
  
Reginald Earnshaw

Allegiance
  
United Kingdom

Reginald Earnshaw staticguimcouksysimagesGuardianAboutGenera

Born
  
5 February 1927 Dewsbury, West Yorkshire, England (
1927-02-05
)

Buried at
  
Comely Bank Cemetery, Edinburgh, Scotland

Died
  
July 6, 1941, Ipswich, United Kingdom

Service/branch
  
British Merchant Navy

Place of burial
  
Edinburgh, United Kingdom

Reginald Hamilton Earnshaw (5 February 1927 – 6 July 1941), known as Reggie Earnshaw, is believed to have been the youngest person in the British services to die in World War II. He was just 14 years, 151 days old when he died under enemy fire on the SS North Devon off the coast of Norfolk on 6 July 1941.

Earnshaw was born in Dewsbury, West Yorkshire, to Dorothy Earnshaw. She then married Eric Shires, and the couple had two daughters. Aged 12, he moved with the family to the Granton area of Edinburgh, attending Bellevue School. He left aged 14, and joined the Merchant Navy in February 1941, giving his birth year as 1926 rather than 1927 in order to appear 15, which was the minimum age for recruitment. Earnshaw's body was recovered after the attack and his death certificate, based partly on the false information he had supplied on recruitment, gave his age only as "about 15 years". Buried originally in an unmarked grave (section P, grave 440) at Comely Bank Cemetery, Edinburgh, his story and his true age came to light after a shipmate, Alfred Tubb started a search for his burial place. In 2009, the grave was marked by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission with a granite headstone.

References

Reginald Earnshaw Wikipedia