James Frederick Hall

James Frederick Hall
James Frederick Hall was born in Hambledon around 1877, the son of George and Eliza Hall. He grew up in the village as part of a large rural working family and spent his childhood in Hambledon where he attended school before entering employment locally. By early adulthood he was working as a brewer’s drayman, a physically demanding occupation delivering barrels of beer from brewery to public houses by horse and wagon. In 1909 he married Winifred Kate and the couple settled in the village, living in West Street and later Cams Lane. Their married life was marked by both happiness and hardship. Their daughter Mabel Winifred was born in 1912, but in 1918 another child, Alice Mary, died in infancy. During these same years James also lost both his parents.
Already nearing forty when the war intensified, Hall joined the army in 1915. He first served as Private 20795 in the 16th Battalion, Hampshire Regiment. As the war progressed and the army reorganised manpower, older soldiers and men considered better suited to support duties were transferred from frontline infantry to essential labour units. Hall was therefore transferred to the Labour Corps, serving in the 649th Agricultural Company. These companies were vital to the war effort at home, maintaining food production and carrying out heavy agricultural work while younger farm workers fought overseas.
Serving on the Home Front, he remained in Hampshire. On 16 October 1918 he died at Denmead Farm near Cosham at the age of 42, only weeks before the Armistice ended the war.
James Frederick Hall was buried in the churchyard of St Peter and St Paul, Hambledon, returning finally to the village in which he had lived his entire life. His service represents the often overlooked contribution of older soldiers and agricultural labour units whose work sustained Britain during the final years of the war.
