2179 Pte. H. Penson, Lincolnshire Regiment.
Henry Penson, the fourth child of agricultural labourer Cornelius Penson and his wife Ann, was born in the hamlet of Mavis Enderby near Spilsby in Lincolnshire in 1868. The couple had married at the Register Office in Spilsby, on 26th September 1864 and already had three daughters. According to the 1871 Census, Cornelius and Ann (both aged 29) were living in Mavis Enderby and now had five children: Mary (8), Eliza (6), Milly (4), Henry (2) and Francis or Fanny (11 months). By the time of the 1881 Census, the family had moved to nearby Raithby, the older girls were working as domestic servants in different households and five children were still living at home: Henry (12), Frances (11), Emma (9), Betsy (6) and William (3). Charles, the couple's 9th child, would be born in 1883.
Some time later, Henry Penson found employment as a groom with Charles Faulkner of Burgh. At Louth on 18th December 1884, he attested for service in the Militia with the 3rd Lincolns. His Attestation Papers describe him as 17 years old, just over 5' 4" tall, with a fresh complexion, light blue eyes and brown hair. His religion is stated as Church of England.
Henry must have found service in the Militia to his liking as four years later, on 23rd May 1888 at Louth, he attested for regular service with the Lincolnshire Regiment, agreeing to serve for at least seven years in the army followed by five years in the 1st Class Army Reserve. Two days later, he joined the Regiment at the Depot in Lincoln. According to his Attestation Papers, he was now 20 years 9 months old, just over 5' 8" tall, weighed 112lbs and had a cicatrix of a wound on the inner part of his left ankle. Henry spent 40 days at the Depot and then joined the 1st Battalion, Lincolnshire Regiment, from 2nd July to 19th November 1888. On 20th November, he joined the 2nd Battalion and embarked on the troopship Euphrates for the voyage to India.
Henry would serve in India for the next four years. On 23rd May 1890, he received his first Good Conduct Pay. In 1892, the 2nd Battalion was stationed in Shahjahanpur, Uttar Pradesh, and the results of the annual musketry course held on 2nd August named B Company as "the best shooting company in the battalion." 17 members of the Company were categorized as marksmen, including Henry Penson.
At the end of October 1892, the 2nd Battalion moved to the Straits Settlements. Henry Penson was granted his second Good Conduct Pay on 23rd May 1894 and in March 1895, he was on his way back to England. On 23rd May 1895, having completed seven years of service, Henry was transferred to the Army Reserve. He was now 27 years 9 months old and his papers describe him as "steady, sober & thoroughly trustworthy", his conduct had been "exemplary" and he had been employed as a "mess waiter in officers' mess for 18 months".
On 9th April 1898, Henry married Elizabeth Lees, a woman from the parish of Stand, Whitefield, on the outskirts of Manchester. The birth of their first daughter Doris was registered in the first quarter of 1899. Following the outbreak of the South African War, Henry Penson was recalled for army service under Special Army Order of 16th December 1899. He rejoined the 2nd Battalion of the Lincolnshire Regiment and on 4th January 1900 sailed on the troopship Goorkha arriving at Cape Colony on 25th January. Henry's second daughter Beatrice Alice was born on 16th August 1900 while he was still in South Africa. Being abroad on active service, Henry does not appear on the 1901 Census but his wife and two children are recorded as living in Whitefield. For his service in the Boer War, Henry was awarded the medal and clasps pictured here. He was finally discharged from the army on 22nd May 1901.
By the time of the 1911 Census, Henry and Elizabeth had been married for 12 years and were residing at 9 Higher Lane, Besses o' the Barn, a suburb of Bury. Henry was working as an asylum attendant at the Prestwich County Asylum while Elizabeth was employed as a cotton weaver. Interestingly, Henry's younger brother Charles was an attendant at the same asylum. In addition to their two children, Elizabeth's widowed mother Ann and younger sister Isabella were also listed on the family's Census entry.
Henry Penson does not appear to have served in the First World War but his brother Charles served in France and Flanders with the 1st Battalion Lincolnshire Regiment from 13th August 1914. He was reported as wounded and missing on 19th September 1914, possibly as a prisoner of war, and regarded as having died on 1st November 1914. He was 31 years old and is commemorated on the Menin Gate.
Henry Penson appears on the 1921 Census together with his wife and younger daughter Beatrice Alice. Now aged 52 years 10 months, he was still living at the same address and still employed at the Prestwich County Asylum. He died at the age of 54, his death being registered at Bury in the third quarter of 1923. His widow and younger daughter are recorded on the 1939 Register as residing at 9 Norfolk Avenue, Whitefield.
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