Buried alive in a shelled house

 

Among the wounded in the fighting for Hill 60 was Pte Albert Kempton, 7886, 1st Battalion Bedfordshire Regiment, whose home is at 1 Chobham Street, Luton. He was buried in a house on which a "Jack Johnson" [large artillery shell] fell, and had a marvellous escape, being brought out later with shrapnel wounds in the leg, while others were killed.

Pte Albert KemptonWriting from the No. 8 General Hospital, Rouen, he said: "I feel very low, but I have a strong constitution and a good heart. Tell my wife Kate I've got shipmark on my beard, and that means coming home. Break the news to her nicely.

Pte J. Kempton"I have been buried alive in a big house, and it took some time to get me out. It was a 'Jack Johnson' that came in and knocked the whole show down. I was underneath with about eight or ten tons of it over me, bricks and wood, and the smoke from shells that strangles people. How I got out God only knows. I never experienced anything like it before in my life."

Writing later to his wife from the Royal Victoria Hospital, Belfast, Pte Kempton (pictured, right) wrote: "I have had a shot in the leg and concussion. I did not know anything until I found myself in hospital."

Albert's brother, Pte J. Kempton (pictured, left), 8710, 1st Battalion King's Royal Rifles, was a prisoner of war in Germany.

[Beds & Herts Saturday Telegraph, May 8th, 1915]