Grave of 14 year-old Irish private John Condon, the youngest Allied soldier killed during the First World War at Poelcapelle British Cemetery

Grave of 14 year-old Irish private John Condon, the youngest Allied soldier killed during the First World War at Poelcapelle British Cemetery Stock Photo
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Image details

Contributor:

DE ROCKER / Alamy Stock Photo

Image ID:

2C1GY6H

File size:

63.3 MB (3.1 MB Compressed download)

Releases:

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Dimensions:

3840 x 5760 px | 32.5 x 48.8 cm | 12.8 x 19.2 inches | 300dpi

Date taken:

13 June 2020

Location:

Poelcapelle British Cemetery, Brugseweg, 8920 Langemark-Poelkapelle, West Flanders, Belgium, Europe

More information:

John Condon (5 October 1900 - 24 May 1915) was an Irish soldier born in Waterford, long believed to have been the youngest Allied soldier killed during the First World War, at the age of 14 years, as shown on his gravestone. It is now believed from a birth certificate, census, war diaries and other records that John Condon was 18 years old at the recorded date of his death and that the wrong individual is named on the grave. The headstone in Poelkapelle Cemetery and the CWGC record continue to assert the challenged data. It is asserted and documented that : The body in the unmarked grave was misidentified as Condon based on an ambiguous boot stamping 6322 4/R.I.R. found at exhumation. The stamp was interpreted by the Imperial War Graves Commission as being Regimental Number 6322 of the 4th Battalion Royal Irish Regiment. Condon was not in the 4th but the 3rd battalion The same stamping could denote 6322 Rifleman Patrick Fitzsimmons, 2nd Bn. Royal Irish Rifles, KIA 16 June 1915, who had been in the 4th battalion Royal Irish Rifles. While the 2nd R.I. Rifles fought at the location of the exhumation, the 3rd R.I. Regiment did not. No body was ever identified as 6322 Rifleman Patrick Fitzsimmons. He is listed on the Menin Gate memorial.