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Sergeant Peter McInnes

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PERSONAL INFORMATION

Name: McInnes, Peter
Date of birth: 1886-08-12
Place of birth: Glasgow Lanarkshire Scotland
Next of kin: Mrs A McInnes, mother, 308 Barassay Street, Glasgow, Scotland
Marital status: single
Occupation (attested): Accountant/Stenographer
Religion: Presbyterian
Date of death: 1917-12-30
Cause of death: Died of illness

MILITARY INFORMATION

Regimental number: 72099
Highest Rank: Sergeant (27th Battalion)
Rank detail

Sergeant, 27th Battalion, Infantry (Army).

Degree of service: Europe
Survived war: no
Commemoration location: Keewatin Cenotaph, Keewatin, Ontario

Images

Kenora Men Off to the Front, Kenora Miner and News, 15 May 1915
Next of Kin Monument, Winnipeg, Manitoba
Many Young Men Rush to Enlist, part 2, Kenora Miner and News, 24 October 1914
Volunteers Leave Sunday Morning, Kenora Miner and News, 31 October 1914
Next of Kin Monument: McInnes, P. SGT
Keewatin Cenotaph: Lest We Forget
Many Young Men Rush to Enlist, part 1, Kenora Miner and News, 24 October 1914
Base Company, 27th Battalion
27th Battalion Ready to Move, Kenora Miner and News, 14 April 1915
Lake of the Woods Milling Company Roll of Honour plaque
Sergeant Peter McInnes
27th Battalion Entrain Tomorrow, Kenora Miner and News, 12 May 1915
27th Battalion Now in France, Kenora Miner and News, 18 September 1915
Keewatin Cenotaph, Beatty Park, Keewatin, Ontario

RESEARCH INFORMATION

CVWM ID: No CVWM ID in our database, but try this.
CWGC ID: 121738
LAC ID: 154756
Attestation record(s): image 1, image 2
Service file: B6888-S042
Uploader's Notes:

Peter McInnes was born on 12 August 1886 in Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland. Both from Glasgow, his parents James and Ann (née Morrison) had married on 27 February 1874. For a while after their marriage, the couple had lived in nearby Kirkintilloch, Dunbartonshire as their son John was born there in 1877. Back in Glasgow by 1879, their next child James was born. In the 1891 Scotland census, the family was found living on Bardowie Street in Glasgow: James age 45, Ann age 43, John age 13, James age 11, Angus age 9, Peter age 4, and Isabella, age 2 months. James' occupation was given as Iron Moulder Work. By the 1901 Scotland census, the family was living at 16 Balmore Street in Glasgow, household members being parents James and Ann, and children John, James, Peter, and Isabella; Angus was not listed with the family. James' continued to work as an iron moulder, John was working as a grocer salesman, James Jr as a cartwright, and Peter as a "clerk cooperatue store".

Peter was next found on a Canadian passenger list for the Athenia, arriving in St John, New Brunswick on 14 March 1911, destination, Winnipeg, brother James had already arrived in 1910. His occupation given for the country from which he came was clerk, and his intended occupation once in Canada was stenographer. Peter's brother John arrived in Winnipeg in 1912 as did James' fiance, Margaret McHowat. The couple married on 21 June 1912 in Winnipeg.

By the time he enlisted on 22 October 1914, Peter was in the Kenora/Keewatin Ontario area working as an accountant stenographer. Blue-eyed and fair haired, he was 28 years of age. With the 27th Battalion, Peter left Kenora for training in Winnipeg on 1 November 1914 according to an article in the Kenora Miner and News dated 4 November.

The 27th (City of Winnipeg) Battalion was the first independent battalion to be raised in Manitoba in the First World War, raised as part of a response to the demand for reinforcements early in 1915 as Canada struggled overseas. Another article in the paper dated 15 May 1915 told of the Battalion passing through Kenora from Winnipeg on May 12th 1915, heading east on the first leg of the journey overseas. On 17 May 1915, the 27th Battalion left Quebec aboard the Carpathian. By 18 September 1915, a cable had been received that the 27th Battalion had left England for France.

Once in England Peter was confirmed as Corporal at Otterpool and then was appointed as Orderly Room Sergeant on 9 September 1915, embarking for France on the 17th. In late May he had been granted a seven day leave, and then a six day leave to England in mid June. In early October Peter was admitted to the No 8 General Hospital in Rouen for a synovitis knee, discharged on the 16th.

The first major offensive of the 27th Battalion was the battle of St Eloi, 5 kilometres from Ypres. Begun on 27 March 1916 by the British, the Canadians joined in on 4 April with the 27th Battalion taking over the front line, fully exposed to artillery fire. Casualties were high. One of the most notable battles of Somme the 27th Battalion participated in was the Battle of Courcelette, begun on the morning of 15 September 1916. This battle marked the first time in history that tanks were used in warfare although all 6 tanks were knocked out that day. Lasting until 22nd of September, the Canadian Corps lost about 7,200 soldiers.

Peter had been granted a 14 day leave to England on 19 November 1917. On 16 December 1917 he was admitted to the No 8 General Hospital in Rouen as seriously ill, suffering from a bout of pneumonia. His condition was upgraded to dangerously ill on the 26th. Sergeant Peter McInnes died on 30 December 1917 of Lobar Pneumonia at No. 8 General Hospital, Rouen. He is interred in the Bois Guillaume Communal Cemetery Extension, Seine-et-Marne, France, Boisguillaume being a district about 5 kilometres north-east of Rouen on the main road to Neufchatel.

Peter's brother James also served during the war, enlisting in Winnipeg on 12 May 1915 and returning to Canada on 28 June 1919. Occupation given as carpenter, he too had light hair and blue eyes. On the 1916 Canada census of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, his wife Margaret and children Jane and Ann were living on Ross Street in Winnipeg, along with Peter's sister Isabel who and immigrated in 1913. Over the years, Isabel made a couple of trips back to Glasgow, each time returning to Winnipeg. Peter's brother John remained in Winnipeg, working for Western Canada Flour Mills Company. As both of his parents were deceased, Peter's medals and decorations, plaque and scroll were sent to him after the war. John too returned to Glasgow for a visit. He died on 29 September 1937 in Winnipeg.

Peter is commemorated on Page 283 of the First World War Book of Remembrance in Ottawa, on the Next of Kin Monument in Winnipeg, on the Keewatin Cenotaph located in Beatty Park in Keewatin, Ontario, on the Lake of the Woods Milling Company Roll of Honour plaque, the Municipality of Keewatin For King and Country plaque, on the Town of Keewatin Roll of Honour plaque, and on the memorial plaque at the Keewatin Lodge No. 417 AFAM.

By Kenora Great War Project

Uploader's Research notes: [Sergeant Army Canadian Infantry 27th Battalion ]

ARCHIVAL INFORMATION

Date added: 2004-09-04
Last modified: 2018-04-18