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The Charminster Heroes The Victoria Cross is the highest military honour that can be awarded to service personnel. In the course of the two World Wars only a few men from Bournemouth were honoured with the VC. Three came from Charminster - and two of them came from Capstone Road! Sgt Frederick Charles Riggs VC
On October 1 1918 his platoon commander was killed and he found himself leading his men in an assault on a machine gun nest near Epinoy. Many of his platoon died as they pushed on through barbed wire under heavy fire. He captured the machine gun position and seizing two German machine guns went on single-handed to capture fifty enemy soldiers! An enemy counterattack followed a short time later in which Sgt Riggs was killed while exhorting his men to stand fast to the last bullet. He was thirty years old. His posthumous Victoria Cross was awarded for "conspicuous bravery and self-sacrifice". He is commemorated by the Riggs Gardens in Wallisdown and by a bronze plaque in the school hall at Malmesbury Park School. Cpl Cecil Reginald Noble VC
The 12th March 1915 found his battalion trapped under heavy fire at Neuve Chapelle and unable to advance through dense barbed wire entanglements which were supposed to have been destroyed by artillery fire. The only way to break the impasse was for the wires to be cut. Recently promoted to Acting Corporal, Noble and another man ran up to the entanglements through a hail of bullets and managed to carve a way through for the battalion to charge and capture the enemy trenches. Both were badly wounded in the course of the deed and Noble died the following day as he was being ferried to hospital. Both were awarded the Victoria Cross for conspicuous bravery. Bournemouth Town Council passed a resolution expressing its "high appreciation" of his conduct, and expressed its sympathy with his parents on the "loss of their gallant son through his heroic self-sacrifice" . A road and a block of flats for ex-servicemen were named after him. Lt-Col Derek Anthony Seagrim VC Derek Segrim was born in 1903 at 14 Charminster Road, the son of a clergyman. He won a commission to the Green Howards in 1923 after failing his Sandhurst entrance exam!
On March 20 1943 he was to lead a night time attack on a heavily fortified section of the German Mareth Line in Tunisia. The element of surprise was lost as German flares lit up the sky. Enemy fire concentrated on a defensive ditch that was 3 metres deep by 3 metres wide and the advance was temporarily halted. Seagrim got it underway again by personally deploying a scaling ladder and becoming first to cross the ditch. Immediately ahead was a machine gun post which Seagrim destroyed with the aid of his revolver and grenades. He then tackled a second machine gun post, personally killing of capturing around 20 enemy soldiers. His orders were to hold the new position at all costs and he got his men to do so despite determined and repeated counterattacks through the night and following day. Seagrim was awarded the Victoria Cross for his deeds through those 24 hours. He never got to read the citation though. He died two weeks later from wounds suffered in a subsequent battle. Born after the family moved from Bournemouth, Seagrim's younger brother Hugh also received a posthumous high military honour. During 1943 and 44, as a member of the Special Operations Executive, he led native resistance to the Japanese occupation of Burma. As a reprisal the Japanese army captured, tortured and killed large numbers of local tribesmen. In order to try and prevent further suffering he surrendered and was subsequently executed. Already a recipient of the DSO, he was awarded a posthumous George Cross for bravery |