excerpt from 'An octogenarian's personal life story' pp. 57-58 (68 words)
excerpt from 'An octogenarian's personal life story' pp. 57-58 (68 words)
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[William George Elliott’s promotion to Sergeant Major in the late 1920s meant that he and his wide Ada and son George would be able to settle together at the Royal Marine Barracks, Plymouth] My duties were various, always on call, not like now [1970s] with telephones everywhere, by a system of bugle calls, each Sergeant Major could be contacted to report to the Orderly Room for Orders. |
appears in search results as | excerpt from 'An octogenarian's personal life story' pp. 57-58 (68 words) |
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