Henry Hadley (died 1914)
Henry Hadley | |
---|---|
Born |
June 1863 Cheltenham, England |
Died |
5 August 1914 Gelsenkirchen, Germany | (aged 51)
Cause of death | Gunshot wound |
Nationality | English |
Education | Cheltenham College |
Occupation | Language teacher |
Known for | Circumstances of death |
Relatives | Erasmus Darwin (great-grandfather) |
Henry Hadley (June 1863 – 5 August 1914) was an English civilian who was fatally shot in Germany, allegedly while resisting arrest, on 3 August 1914, the day before the United Kingdom's entry into World War I.[1] He is sometimes described as the "first British casualty" of the Great War.[1][2] He was a great-grandson of Erasmus Darwin.
Early life and family
Hadley was born in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire.[3] His father, also Henry Hadley (1812-1874), had been a senior doctor in the British Army, serving as a surgeon with the 40th Foot and the Rifle Brigade, in Australia with the 11th Foot and 99th Foot,[4] at the Castle Hospital at Balaklava in the Crimean War, before retiring in 1861 with the honorary rank of Deputy Inspector-General of Hospitals.[5] His mother, Alpha Clementia Dunn, was from Hobart, Tasmania.[6] His paternal grandfather, also Henry Hadley (1762-1830), was the physician of Erasmus Darwin and married Darwin's illegitimate daughter Susannah Parker (1772-1856) in 1809.[7]
He was educated at Cheltenham College,[8] attended the Royal Military Academy Woolwich,[9] and served as a lieutenant in the 1st West India Regiment from 1887 to 1890.[1][10][11] He later became a teacher of languages.
Death
Hadley had been teaching in Berlin for three or four years,[8] but decided to move to Paris following Germany's declarations of war against Russia on 1 August 1914 and then France on 3 August, and its ultimatum to Belgium, in the preceding days.[1] At 1.25 pm local time on 3 August, Hadley and his English housekeeper, Elizabeth Pratley, caught a train to Cologne from Berlin's Friedrichstraße station, intending to change trains there.[1]
A conductor on the train became suspicious of his behaviour, and Hadley became involved in an altercation while the train was stopped at Gelsenkirchen station.[12][13] It was later claimed that Hadley had spoken in several foreign languages, did not appear to know where he was travelling to, argued with a waiter in the dining car, and made gestures at German officers.[13] After briefly returning to his seat, he was shot in the stomach while in the train's corridor by a Prussian military officer, Oberleutnant Nicolay.[1][12]
Hadley was taken by ambulance to the Evangelische Krankenhaus in Gelsenkirchen, and died there at 3.15 am local time on 5 August – just three hours after the UK declared war on Germany.[13] He was buried in a pauper's grave in zone 11, division 9[1] of the Protestant cemetery at Gelsenkirchen,[2] but the exact site of the burial is no longer known.[14]
Elizabeth Pratley was interrogated as a potential spy, at a military prison in Münster, but was eventually released, without charge,[1] to the Clemenshospital in Münster, and finally allowed to return home in November 1914.[1] She then informed the British government of Hadley's death, on 26 November 1914.[1]
Legacy
The British government received a communiqué from the German government, via the then-neutral American embassy in Berlin,[12] declaring that Lieutenant Nicolay insisted that he had acted in self-defence, saying that Hadley had appeared to be reaching for a weapon,[1] and did not respond to the warning "hands up or I will shoot".[12] A court martial cleared him of all blame[12] and he was promoted to Captain[1] within a few months of the incident.[12] Nonetheless, the British government continued to regard the case as one of murder.[1][12] They issued a statement, published in The Times on 17 April 1915, which quoted the German communiqué, and protested at the acquittal of Nicolay.[13] A statement by Hadley's cousin S. Eardley Wilmot was published on 20 April 1915, also doubting the German official account, and cited the case as an example of "Prussian brutality".[15] Other English periodicals made comparisons to the Saverne Affair, in which an unarmed Alsatian shoemaker was severely wounded by a Prussian officer wielding a sabre, but the officer was ultimately acquitted of any offence at court martial.[16]
In 1917, the German authorities revealed that some of Hadley's possessions had been sold by a court-appointed administrator and the proceeds used to pay the costs of his hospital treatment.[1] Subsequently, more of his belongings were returned to his family, via the neutral authorities in The Hague.[1]
He was largely forgotten until British author Richard van Emden published a book in 2013 that provided details of his death.
See also
- HMS Amphion, a British scout cruiser, sunk by a German mine on 6 August 1914, with around 170 killed
- Private John Parr, reputedly the first British soldier killed in the First World War, on 21 August 1914
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Van Emden, Richard (2013-08-15). Meeting the Enemy: The Human Face of the Great War. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 9781408821640.
- 1 2 "12/08/2013". The One Show. 2013-08-12. BBC One. Retrieved 2013-08-12.
- ↑ Henry Hadley in household of Henry Hadley, "England and Wales Census, 1871"
- ↑ Photograph of Surgeon Henry Hadley
- ↑ The London Gazette, 4 June 1861, p.2353
- ↑ Family Notices, The Courier, Hobart, Tasmania, 3 December 1851
- ↑ The Life of Erasmus Darwin, Charles Darwin, p.143
- 1 2 Blundell, Nigel (2013-08-13). "Henry Hadley: The tragic tale of languages teacher who became Britain's first WW1 victim". Mail Online. Retrieved 20 August 2013.
- ↑ Henry Hadley, "England and Wales Census, 1881"
- ↑ The London Gazette, 29 April 1887, p.2383
- ↑ The London Gazette, 7 January 1890, p.95
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "A Murdered Englishman". Grey River Argus. 1915-06-12. p. 7. Retrieved 2013-08-12.
- 1 2 3 4 "Murder Of British Subject. Shot By Prussian Officer., Foreign Office Statement", The Times, Saturday, Apr 17, 1915; pg. 8; Issue 40831; col F
- ↑ "Erstes Weltkriegsopfer starb in Gelsenkirchen", Westdeutsche Allgemeine Zeitung, 12 August 2013
- ↑ "The Murder Of Mr. Hadley. A Cousin's Version", The Times, Tuesday, Apr 20, 1915; pg. 9; Issue 40833; col C
- ↑ "Denounce Germany for Hadley murder", New York Times, 18 April 1915