Lieutenant George Edward Nurse, VC
                          Royal Field Artillery
                        
                           
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                               Victoria 
                                Cross  
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                               1914-15 
                                Star  
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                         (14 April 1873  25 November 1945) was born in 
                          Enniskillen, County Fermanagh, Ireland. He was educated 
                          in Guernsey in the Channel Islands where both his parents 
                          had been born. He was an Irish recipient of the Victoria 
                          Cross, the highest award for gallantry in the face of 
                          the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth 
                          forces. Husband of Kathleen Meagher. He died at Liverpool
                        Served in Royal Guernsey Militia. Commissioned from 
                          99713 BSM 18/06/1915. Took part in Relief of Mafeking. 
                          Educated at the Intermediate School, Guernsey.
                        Nurse was 26 years old, and a corporal in the 66th 
                          Battery, Royal Field Artillery, British Army during 
                          the Second Boer War when the following deed took place 
                          during the Battle of Colenso for which he was awarded 
                          the VC:
                        At Colenso on the 15th December, 1899, 
                          the detachments serving the guns of the 14th and 66th 
                          Batteries, Royal Field Artillery, had all been either 
                          killed, wounded, or driven from their guns by Infantry 
                          fire at close range, and the guns were deserted. About 
                          500 yards behind the guns was a donga in which some 
                          of the few horses and drivers left alive were sheltered. 
                          The intervening space was swept with shell and rifle 
                          fire. Captain Congreve, Rifle Brigade, who was in the 
                          donga, assisted to hook a team into a limber, went out; 
                          and assisted to limber up a gun. Being wounded, he took 
                          shelter; but, seeing Lieutenant Roberts fall, badly 
                          wounded, he went out again and brought him in. Captain 
                          Congreve was shot through the leg, through the toe of 
                          his boot, grazed on the elbow and the shoulder, and 
                          his horse shot in three places...
                        Lieutenant Roberts assisted Captain Congreve. He was 
                          wounded in three places...
                        Corporal Nurse also assisted. 
                        His Victoria Cross is displayed at the Royal Artillery 
                          Museum**, Woolwich. London 
                          Gazette entry
                        ** The museum at Woolwich has closed 
                          and is in the process of being relocated to Salisbury 
                          Plain