(0) ITEMS IN BASKET | VIEW BASKET

Ambrose Theodore Wentworth Austin

This story is shared by the Trust with kind permission from Mavis Williams, Researcher. Photo is courtsey of Rachel Hassall, FindaGrave.

Ambrose Theodore Wentworth Austin's story is told in the Shirburnian, the school magazine of Sherborne School, Dorset, of July 1945.

Ambrose Theodore Wentworth Austin was born on 29 February 1924, the son of the Reverend Wentworth Murray Austin and Celia Mary Austin (née Aldred), of Honiton, Devon. Wentworth Austin had served in the First World War and was captured by the Germans on the 10th of April 1918 so was a Prisoner of War for a while. In 1917 he was awarded the Military Cross for distinguished Service. In April 1919 he married Celia Mary Aldred the only daughter of Mrs Aldred and the late I.C. Aldred at All Saints Church, Margaret Street, London.

Ambrose Austin attended Hordle House School and Sherbourne School, and later attended Oxford University. He enlisted into the Army and was commissioned into the King's Royal Rifle Corps on 22 May 1943. In 1944, Lieutenant Austin was transferred to the Anti-Tank Platoon, HQ Company, 12th (Green Howards) Parachute Battalion.

During the Normandy Airborne landings on D-Day, during Operation Overlord, it was the job of the 12th Battalion to capture the village of Ranville. On 6 June 1944, troops landed by glider and parachuted into the area around Ranville, some missing the drop zones and coming up against German patrols.

Lt Austin was reported as missing in the Battalion war diary soon after the drop, along with three other officers, and 100 other ranks. He is recorded as dying on or after 6 June 1944, aged 20, and is now commemorated on the Memorial at Bayeux War Cemetery, Normandy.

An obituary in his school magazine read: 'Ambrose Theodore Wentworth Austin, Lieutenant, Parachute Regiment, ('37-'41) came from Hordle House. He will be remembered most of all perhaps for the gay and happy disposition which made him a host of friends, for the soundness that made one feel he must automatically by-pass what was second rate, and for the perfect form of his tackling on the footer field. He was a keen rider, and on leaving Oxford to serve he quickly went into a Parachute Regiment. He was dropped 'on the bridge' on 'D' Day and has not been seen or heard of since. There can be no real hope of his survival. In his short life he showed a courage and an outlook on life which will be an abiding example to his friends.'

In 1947 probate was granted for Ambrose Austin which went to his father.

FALLEN HEROES

  • AMBROSE THEODORE WENTWORTH AUSTIN

    Army • LIEUTENANT

    Parachute Regiment
    12th (10th Battalion, The Green Howards [Yorkshire Regiment]) Battalion

    DIED | 06 June 1944

    AGE |

    SERVICE NO. | 277469

FALLEN HEROES

  • AMBROSE THEODORE WENTWORTH AUSTIN

    Army • LIEUTENANT

    Parachute Regiment
    12th (10th Battalion, The Green Howards [Yorkshire Regiment]) Battalion

    DIED | 06 June 1944

    AGE |

    SERVICE NO. | 277469

SEARCH STORIES

BRITISH NORMANDY MEMORIAL NEWSLETTER

Sign up for latest news and information about the Memorial straight to your inbox