Friends of the Somme - Mid Ulster Branch  
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Date Information
01/05/2020 02304
28/12/2018 TOHILL – Second anniversary. In loving memory of John P Tohill, killed in action at Albert, France on 26th January 1916. R.I.P.
28/12/2018
28/12/2018 From the Mid Ulster Mail dated 26th January 1918:
09/12/2018
26/06/2018 From the Mid Ulster Mail dated 12th December 1914:
26/06/2018 Mr Louis McNally, youngest son of Mr John McNally, J.P., Cookstown, has volunteered as a driver in the Army Service Corps. His brother-in-law, Mr John Tohill, volunteered some weeks ago and is seeing life amongst military motors.
26/06/2018
31/05/2018 Mr John Tohill, son-in-law of Mr John McNally, J.P., Cookstown, has volunteered for service with the Army Service Corps and is on his way to France
31/05/2018 In November 1914 John Tohill volunteered for motor transport work with the Royal Army Service Corps.
31/05/2018 John Tohill was in business with his brother-in-law Louis McNally in the motor and cycle trade.
31/05/2018 John’s brother also served. He was invalided in action in early 1915.
31/05/2018 Almost immediately he was in the thick of things in the British front lines, supplying all the Camps in the Loos sector of the Western Front.
31/05/2018
31/05/2018 John Patrick Tohill was the eldest son of George and Jane Tohill. George Tohill and Jane Dias were married on 30th August 1870 in Belfast.
31/05/2018 John Tohill was born on 1st June 1875 in Belfast. He was the eldest of at least six children.
31/05/2018 Known family: George Tohill, Jane Tohill, John Patrick Tohill (born 1st June 1875, Belfast), Joseph Tohill (born 8th February 1878, Belfast), George Tohill (born 11th March 1880, Belfast), Henry Tohill (born 7th December 1881, Cookstown), James Tohill (born 25th October 1883, Cookstown), Elizabeth Tohill (born 30th January 1886, Cookstown).
31/05/2018 By 1881, the family had moved to Cookstown where John grew up.
31/05/2018 Private Tohill was serving with the Army Service Corps and was attached to the 179th Tunneling Company of the Royal Engineers in France when he was killed by shell fire on Wednesday 26th January 1916.
31/05/2018 Louis is listed as living with the Tohill family at Molesworth Road/Street in the 1911 census. John is not living with his wife and son.
31/05/2018 From the Mid Ulster Mail dated 14th November 1914:
31/05/2018 Family: John Tohill, Henrietta Mary Tohill, Charles John George Tohill (born 22nd November 1906, Belfast), Sheila Tohill (born 24th August 1913, Cookstown).
24/11/2016 John P Tohill, of the Mechanical Transport Section, Army Service Corps, was killed in France on 26th January. He was the eldest son of the late Mr George Tohill, Cookstown.
24/11/2016 From the Belfast Newsletter dated 10th February 1916:
24/11/2016
30/12/2015
30/12/2015 John Tohill was a keen sportsman, a skilled motorist and motorcycle rider. At the outbreak of war he offered his services as a dispatch rider but wasn’t accepted.
30/12/2015 Private John Tohill was subsequently offered a commission for his work in that sector but turned it down to stay with transport duties. He was then attached to the Royal Engineers for transport work and was at home in Dublin shortly after Christmas 1915 until the New Year 1916.
30/12/2015
30/12/2015 John Tohill left a widow and two children. They were aged nine and two and a half.
30/12/2015 From the Mid Ulster Mail dated Saturday 12th February 1916
30/12/2015
30/12/2015 TOHILL: January 26, killed in action by shell fire, in France, John P Tohill, A.S.C., M.T., eldest son of the late George Tohill, of Cookstown, and dearly loved husband of Henrietta M Tohill, 67 Hollybank Road, Drumcondra, Dublin. R.I.P.
30/12/2015 John Tohill married Henrietta Mary McNally, the daughter of Mr. John McNally J.P., in Cookstown on 3rd January 1906.
30/12/2015 Private John P Tohill is buried Plot 1, Row B, Grave 9 at Albert Communal Cemetery Extension, France.
30/12/2015 The CWGC Record Private Tohill as the son of the late George Tohill and the husband of Henrietta M. Tohill, of 67, Hollybank Rd., Drumcondra, Dublin. Born at Cookstown, Ireland.
30/12/2015 From the Mid Ulster Mail dated Saturday 12th February 1916
30/12/2015
30/12/2015 Widespread regret was felt in Cookstown on Saturday on the receipt of the news that Mr John Tohill had been killed by shell fire at the Front. He was the eldest son of the late Mr George Tohill of Cookstown, and was married to the youngest daughter of Mr John McNally J.P., Cookstown. Before the war he was in partnership with Mr Louis McNally in the motor and cycle business. Mr Tohill was a keen sportsman of the type which does things, and is not content to merely look on, and cheer or criticise. Hence when war was declared against Germany for outraging Belgium, being a skilful motorist, he offered his services as a despatch rider. But he was unable to get on, and in November 1915, he volunteered for motor transport work on the Army Service Corps, and was almost immediately in the heart of things in the British lines, supplying all the camps in the Loos district. He was offered a commission for his work there, but preferred to remain in the ranks. Subsequently he was attached to the Royal Engineers, for transport work, and it was while so engaged that he was killed by shell fire. He was home for a week’s furlough in the first week of January, and exactly a fortnight later was killed. He leaves a young widow and two children, a boy of nine and a girl of 2 ½ years, to mourn his loss, and in time, be proud of the fact that their father was no shirker. Mr Tohill’s youngest brother was also doing his bit in the trenches, and a year ago was disabled by a shot in the arm. Another brother volunteered but was unable to pass the medical examination. He has three cousins in the fighting line in France, one in the motor transport, another in the Flying Corps, and a third in the navy, while his late partner, Mr Louis McNally, is on motor transport, but has not been sent abroad.
30/12/2015
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