Walter Tull Memorial Ward


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Reference WMO/291373

Address:

Nye Bevan Building

Northampton General Hospital

Cliftonville

Northampton

NN1 5BD

England

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Status: On original site
Type: Freestanding
Location: Internal
Setting: Inside a building - public/private
Description: Hospital
Materials:
  • Unknown Unknown
Lettering: Unknown
Conflicts:
  • First World War (1914-1918)
About the memorial: Hospital Ward, which is an acute general ward. He was the first black officer in the British Army who had played football for Clapton 1908, Tottenham Hotspur 1908-1911, Northampton Town 1911-1914 and Rangers(Glasgow) 1917-1918. He was born in Folkestone, his grandfather was enslaved in Barbados. There are other memorials to him in Northampton- WMO/138566 and WMO/290402, also at Folkestone and a peripatetic football trophy, held alternately by Tottenham Hotspur and Rangers Football Clubs. He was killed in action at the first Battle of Bapaume on 25 March 1918. This war memorial includes, or is solely dedicated to, Walter Daniel John Tull. Walter was born on 28th April 1888 in Folkestone to a father from Barbados and a mother from Kent. He started playing professional football in 1908 and was the second person of African-Caribbean mixed heritage to play in the English Football League’s top division and the first of African descent to play for Rangers when stationed in Scotland. He joined the 17th (1st Football) Batt of the Middlesex Regt as a Lance-Corporal at the start of World War I. He suffered shell shock after service in France but was back in action in 1916 and participated in the Battle of the Somme. Following officer training he served in the 23rd (2nd Footballers) Batt of the Middlesex Regt as a 2nd Lieutenant. Tull is believed to be the first African-Caribbean mixed heritage man to lead white troops into battle for the British Army. When promoted in 1917, army rules technically forbade a ‘person of colour’ being commissioned as an Officer. He died on 25 March 1918, aged 29, during the Second Battle of the Somme and is commemorated at the Arras Memorial to the Missing.
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