Peebleshire Advertiser – Alien Prisoners of War in Redford Barracks to move to England and to Stobs Camp 7 November 1914
Read moreHawick News – James Amass 13 November 1914 Mrs. Amass of 10 Allars Crescent, Hawick received a letter advising her husband James Amass of the Cameron Highlanders has been killed in action. Sergeant Amass, a native of Suffolk had been previously stationed at Stobs Camp in 1912-1913. He leaves a wife and young son. (A photograph of Sergeant Amass can be found in ‘Hawick & District and the Great War 1914-1918’ by Derek Robertson)
Read moreHawick News – Affairs of a War Prisoner at Stobs 4 December 1914 At Edinburgh Sheriff Court on Tuesday 30 November 1914 an examination into the bankruptcy of August Blume, a German Boarding House Keeper of 59 Melville Street, Edinburgh. On the first call to court Mr. Blume failed to appear as he was interred at Redford Internment Camp. He again failed to appear as he has been transferred to Stobs Camp. The Sheriff has again adjourned the case for one week with a request to the War Department that Mr. Blume be brought to court.
Read moreChurch Service, Stobs, 1915 “Can you see me here I’m on the choir note the x that’s me. Its not very good for it was raining. – Dick” Ian Lowes Collection.
Read moreThe S.M.S. Blücher was commissioned on 1 October 1909 and named after Gebhard Blücher’s ancestor who commanded the Prussian forces in the Battle of Waterloo of 1815. It was used as a training ship from 1911 to 1914 when she was transferred to the Scouting Group. The vessel saw several battles before she was lost in the battle of Doggerbank on 24 January 1915. Only 6 Officers and 275 men survived out of a crew of 1026. Gebhard’s Memoirs recalled the sinking of the Blucher “….. no invented co-incidences could be more startling than those of real life. When my wife so proudly christened the Blucher six short years before the outbreak of war no one could have foreseen its dramatic fate…” For more information: http://www.naval-encyclopedia.com/ww1/germany/sms-blucher-1908 http://www.historyofwar.org/articles/weapons_SMS_Blucher.html https://wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?13494http://www.militaer-wissen.de/big-cruiser-sms-bluecher/?lang=en https://www.rainhillremembers.uk/sms-blucher.html
Read moreDaily Record – Echo of the Blücher: survivors removed to Stobs Camp 11 March 1915
Read moreHawick News – Survivors of German Ship ‘Blucher’ at Stobs Camp 12 March 1915 211 survivors of the Blucher arrive at Stobs Camp by special train from Manchester and will be accommodated in huts near Barnes.
Read moreThe Southern Reporter – How Strikers were Dished! 8 April 1915
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