Charlie Bull

Charlie Bull
Charles Bull was born in Hambledon in January 1893 and baptised in the parish church on 5th March of that year. He grew up in the same village household as his older brother Arthur, part of a rural family whose life revolved around agricultural work and close parish ties. Childhood in Hambledon followed familiar patterns of school, labour and family responsibility, with little expectation that life would extend far beyond the surrounding countryside.
His circumstances changed during his teenage years. His mother died in 1909 and his father the following year, leaving the family without its traditional structure while he was still only seventeen. By 1911 he was living in Hambledon and working as a baker, a skilled trade requiring discipline and long hours. He had begun to establish an independent working life within the village community, but events in Europe soon altered that path completely.
In November 1914 his older brother Arthur, a regular soldier in the Hampshire Regiment, was killed in Belgium during the opening months of the war. Charles belonged to the next wave of soldiers – the wartime generation drawn from villages and towns as the conflict expanded. He entered the army during these years and served on the Western Front alongside other local men, including Henry John Moon, with whom he would have shared both training and front line experience.
By 1918 the war had become a continuous struggle of movement and heavy fighting. The German spring offensives and the Allied counter-attacks created near constant danger for infantry units, who endured artillery fire, raids and assaults over many months. During this period Charles Bull performed an act of bravery for which he was awarded the Military Medal, a decoration given only for courage under enemy fire. Such awards were typically earned while carrying messages, rescuing wounded comrades or maintaining a position during attack, and it indicates that he was deeply involved in front line fighting rather than support duties.
On 8th June 1918 Charles Bull was killed at the age of twenty-five. His death came in the final year of the war, after long months of intense combat when experienced soldiers faced some of the most dangerous conditions of the conflict. Like many men who fell in 1918, he died not in the early rush of mobilisation nor in the last weeks of victory, but in the prolonged struggle that preceded the Allied advance to the end of the war.
The story of the Bull family reflects the full span of the conflict. Arthur, the professional pre-war soldier, was killed in 1914 when the armies first met in Belgium. Charles, the younger brother, served through the later years of the war alongside fellow villagers such as Henry John Moon, earning recognition for bravery before being killed four years later. Together their names mark both the beginning and the closing phases of the war, illustrating how the conflict touched one family across its entire duration and left a lasting absence within the Hambledon community.
