PUGH
Lt Cyril Henry Wallace Pugh b 1889 Oswestry Qualified Law Cambridge Univ To France as Pte with R Fusiliers 11.1915 Comm 3rd Bn Shrops LI WIA 1917 Awd MC Cambrai Awd OBE Home Guard WWII

£2,250.00

£2,700.00 inc VAT

SKU: C1002775

The Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, Military Division, (M.B.E.); Military Cross, G.V.R., the reverse privately engraved, '2 Lt. C. H. W. Pugh, 3rd Aug. 6th K.S.L.I.'; 1914-15 Star (PS-3118 PTE. C.H.W. PUGH, R. FUS.); British War Medal (LIEUT. C.H.W. PUGH); Victory Medal (LIEUT. C.H.W. PUGH); Defence Medal 1939-45; Jubilee 1935; Coronation 1937; Coronation 1953

Cyril Henry Wallace Pugh was born in Oswestry, Shropshire on 11 November 1889 and was educated at Oswestry Grammar School, where he represented the school in all the major sports and became head boy; his tough sporting demeanour gained him the nickname 'Old Iron'. But he also excelled in the classroom, gaining a place at St. John's College, Oxford, where he became an exhibitioner and took a 1st in Law. He then settled down to life as a solicitor in the family firm Minshalls, Parry-Jones and Pugh.

In September 1914, following the outbreak of war, he enlisted as a private soldier in the 21st (Public Schools) Battalion of the Royal Fusiliers, in which capacity he was embarked for France in November 1915. In common with many of his comrades, however - and owing to heavy officer casualties - he was among those commissioned when the battalion was disbanded in April 1916, in his case in the 3rd Battalion, King's Shropshire Light Infantry.

Subsequently attached to the 6th Battalion, he likely joined it on the Somme before the end of the year. Certainly, he is known to have been wounded on 11 February 1917, although the exact nature of those wounds remains unknown.

Back in action in time for the battle of Cambrai, he was awarded his M.C. for the battalion's costly actions on 20-21 November 1917, when company command devolved to a Captain and three 2nd Lieutenants. Pugh appears to have emerged unscathed from these actions, but his luck ran out on the 25th, when he received his second wound; the date engraved on the reverse of his M.C. relates to his subsequent investiture.

M.C. London Gazette 18 July 1918, the original citation states:

'For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty when in command of a platoon in an attack. When the advance was checked he reinforced the leading wave on his own initiative and enabled the advance to continue. He led his men to the final objective with great vigour and twice assisted another platoon by covering the advance with Lewis gun fire when they were held up. He showed splendid leadership and initiative.'

Returning to Oswestry at the war's end, Pugh became a partner in the family firm after his father's death in 1921. But he was also an active member of the 4th Battalion, K.S.L.I. (Territorials), and only stood down on reaching the age limit in the early 1930s. And with the renewal of hostilities, he was a natural candidate to command the local Home Guard in the rank of Major, in which role he was awarded his O.B.E.

The 1939 Register has him living at Derwent Dene. He was a Solicitor, Magistrate's Clerk and Clerk to the Rural District Council.

The 1953 Coronation Medal was awarded in his capacity as Clerk in the Oswestry Rural District Council. He died in Oswestry on 8 March 1973.

Pugh was otherwise a stalwart of the scouting movement, gaining appointment as District Commissioner for north-west Shropshire. And he was one of the leading entomologists in the country, his collection being donated to the Manchester Museum on his death in March 1973; sold with a file of copied research including many scout related letters and a copy photo of recipient.

Medals are in good condition unless indicated otherwise.


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