CHALLICE, Reginald



844329, Lance Bombardier, Reginald CHALLICE
Aged 27


54th (The Queen's Own Royal Glasgow Yeomanry) Anti-Tank Regiment, Royal Artillery
Killed in Action on Monday 2nd October 1944

He is not named on the Newmarket War Memorial


Born in Q2-1916 [Newmarket 3b:858] and lived in Newmarket. Reginald 'Chubb' was the son of Albert and Rosetta May CHALLICE (née RUTTER) of Lord Derby Villas, Norwich Road, Newmarket. Brother of Terence Roy CHALLICE.

In the 1939 register, at 1 Derby Villas, Norwich Road,Newmarket were his parents, Father Albert [9-12-1882] heath man, mother Rosetta [4-7-1884] and brother Ronald [19-1-1910] an invalid. There are 2 closed records


For some unknown reason his cousin Raymond Challice was entered on the Newmarket War Memorial but not him. Reginald is however on the roll of honour in Snailwell Church. Maybe this was due to the Reginald's family home perhaps being classed as in Snailwell parish



Between the wars The Queen's Own Royal Glasgow Yeomanry, like many Yeomanry regiments, became a regiment of the Royal Artillery. In this case they formed the 54th and 64th Anti Tank Regiments.
They returned to the Continent as part of the 1st Canadian Army, attached to 52nd (Lowland) Infantry Division, tasked with securing Antwerp and opening up the Scheldt estuary. Beween 2–23 October, they cleared the eastern approaches to the River Scheldt as it ran north-east from Antwerp as far as Woensdrecht. This advance isolated the German forces on South Beveland from their colleagues deployed on the Dutch mainland. South Beveland was a long thin peninsula that stretched west for 30 km (19 miles) to form the northern bank of the Scheldt Estuary.
It would seem that Reginald was killed on the opening day of this offensive, one of five from his regiment. Initially he was buried at Groesbeek (just inside the Netherlands-Germany border), but re-interred in Junkerbos on 29th April 1947.

The two medal ribbons on the right of his bar are the Territorial Efficiency Medal (12 years in TA - war service years counted double) and the French issued Dunkirk Medal. The latter, being a commemorative medal is not worn when in uniform and when worn can not be in line with offical medals, usually worn on the left breast pocket.



Reginald's temporary grave marker and his permanent headstone






© Commonwealth War Graves Commission


Reginald is buried in Jonkerbos War Cemetery, Nijmegen, Netherlands grave 14.B.5
and commemorated on the roll of honour in St Peter's Church, Snailwell.

click here to go to the Commonwealth War Graves Commission website for full cemetery/memorial details



BACK