Bemand, GEK
(1892 - 1916)
Key Facts
DATE OF BIRTH:
19th March 1892
YEARS ATTENDED THE COLLEGE:
1909 - 1911
HOME ADDRESS WHEN AT THE COLLEGE:
26 Woodville Road, Ealing
REGIMENT
Royal Field Artillery
FINAL RANK:
2nd Lieutenant
DATE OF DEATH:
26th December 1916
AGE AT DEATH:
24
WHERE HE DIED (or was wounded)
Bethune
LOCATION OF GRAVE OR MEMORIAL:
Le Touret Military Cemetery, Richebourg-L'Avoue . IV C 2
2nd Lieutenant George Edward Kingsley Bemand
George was born in Jamaica on March 19th 1892, the eldest of four children born to a white father, George, and a black mother, Minnie. He spent the early years of his life in Jamaica before, in 1908 Minnie and the children came, via New York, to England, where George Sr. was already working. During his time at Dulwich he was a boarder in Ivyholme, and in his final year he was a member of the 2nd XI cricket team. From the College he went on to University College London, where he studied engineering.
Shortly after War began he joined the London University O.T.C., and in May 1915 he was granted a commission in the Royal Field Artillery – making him very possibly the first person of colour, outside of India, ever to be granted such a position in the modern British Army. After finishing his training, he went out to France in November of 1915, and spent a year serving with the Ammunition Column, 148 Brigade. In October 1916 he was transferred to the Trench Mortar Battery, 5th Division, and was still serving with them when he was killed by a shell hitting his dugout on Boxing Day 1916. His younger brother Harold, not only a fellow OA but also a fellow member of the R.F.A., also fell.