Captain Clive Alan Whittingham

Biography of Captain Clive Alan Whittingham

Clive Alan Whittingham, born on the 28th January 1893 in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada was the younger brother of Air Marshal Sir Harold Whittingham and the son of Engineer Rear-Admiral William Whittingham, CE, and Mrs Whittingham, of Ingleholme, Crookston.

He was educated at Greenock Academy and Glasgow High School, where he was a keen lover of outdoor games and sports and an enthusiastic member of the Cadet Corps.

In 1909, he began studying Medicine at the University of Glasgow. He was a distinguished scholar, receiving class prizes in Systematic and Practical Zoology, Physiology and Practical Pharmacy. He was also awarded the class medal for Systematic Zoology in 1910.

In 1914, while still a student, he obtained a commission as a Lieutenant in the Royal Army Medical Corps (Special Reserve) and underwent a course of training at Aldershot. He returned to his studies and passed his finals with commendation in 1916, graduating MB ChB. After a short period of training in England, he was sent straight to France in May 1916, where he served with a brigade of Royal Field Artillery. On completion of six months' service he obtained his Captaincy.

Subsequently he was posted to the 12th Royal Fusiliers, City of London Regiment. On the evening of 9th June 1917 the battalion had just relieved the 1st Bn. Royal Fusiliers in trenches near Amstrasse. At 9.45pm, Captain Whittingham was one of four officers, including the CO Lieutenant Colonel Compton and the Adjutant, Captain Gerard Montague Gordon - also a Glasgow graduate, wounded by a shell which landed on Battalion headquarters. Whittingham, aged 24, and Gordon both died of wounds around midnight and were buried with full military honours at a funeral service in Reninghelst Military Cemetery, 10 kilometers south west of Ypres, two days later. Lieutenant Colonel Compton Compton also later died of his wounds on the 7th July at Etaples hospital.

Friends foretold a distinguished place in medicine, although, going as he did direct from University to the trenches, he had no opportunity of taking it. He was described by the officer in command of his regiment as 'one of the bravest men he had met, who, after being himself mortally wounded, continued to direct what should be done for others about him'.

Summary

Captain Clive Alan Whittingham
Rank: Captain
Regiment: Royal Army Medical Corps attd. 12th Bn. Royal Fusiliers
Degree: MB ChB
Awards: N/A
Comments: Killed in action, 9 June 1917.
Note/Press Clipping: Ch 4/4/2/3/1255, 1280, 1281
Photo ID: Ch 4/4/2/2/303

Sources

Portrait photograph: University of Glasgow Archive Services (GUAS Ref: CH 4/4/2/2/303)

Grave photograph: Courtesy of Barry Fleming

Indexes to prize list (GUAS Ref: R 7/3) and calendars (GUAS Ref: SEN 10).

Illustration: University of Glasgow Archive Services (GUAS Ref: DC 412/1/18)
Clive Whittingham's class notes and colour drawings for Practical General Physiology, taught by Professor Neil Paton

Obituary: The Lancet, Vol 2, 1917, p216.

Obituary: British Medical Journal, Vol 1, 1917, p889

Obituary: Glasgow Medical Journal, Vol 88, 1917, p36.

Obituary: Glasgow High School Book of Service and Remembrance, pp243-244

General: Written communication from Shirley Stone, Barry Fleming and Sarah Higgins

Burial Place: Commonwealth War Graves Commission - Find War Dead

There is 1 comment available.

Posted by Des Kearley at 20:58:06 on 14 April 2011

Captain Whittingham was killed by the same shell as Captain G M Gordon also of the University.