Personal Details

Attribute Details
Nationality British
Date of Birth 28 June 1879
Place of Birth Camberwell, London, England
Veterinary College and Date of Graduation London - 14 July 1905

Military Service

Attribute Details
Last Rank Captain
Regiment/Service Army Veterinary Corps
Secondary Regiment 1st Division Royal Field Artillery
Secondary Unit 27th Division
First Theatre of War France 1914

Casualty Details

Attribute Details
Date of Death 20 April 1915
Age at Death 35
Place of Death Ypres, France
Cause of Death Wounds in action caused by shell fire

Cemetery

Attribute Details
Cemetery Ypres Reservoir Cemetery
Location Ypres, Belgium
Grave Reference The exact location of his grave site is unknown. A special memorial erected
Commonwealth War Grave Yes - CWGC Headstone
Emblem or Badge on Headstone Army Veterinary Corps Logo

Honours and Memorials

Attribute Details
Name on RCVS Honour Board Yes
Name In Officers who died in Great War Yes
Medals and Awards
  • 1914/15 Star
  • British War Medal 1914-1918
  • Victory Medal

Biography

Captain Alexander Campbell Anderson MRCVS was born in Camberwell, London, England, on June 28, 1879. He was the son of Mrs. M Anderson of Carden Road, Peckham Rye, London.

After completing his schooling at Alleyn’s School in London, he qualified from the Royal Veterinary College, London, in July 1905.

Alexander Anderson joined the Army Veterinary Corps in August 1905 and was promoted to Captain in 1910. In 1911, he served in India and was awarded the Delhi Durbar Medal for participating in the coronation of King George V as Emperor of India.

In May 1913, he was seconded for service with the Egyptian Army and stayed there until the outbreak of the Great War in August 1914.

In April 1915, Captain Anderson served as the Assistant Director of Veterinary Services of the 27th Division with his headquarters in the remnants of the Hotel Chatelaine in Ypres, which had been almost destroyed by shellfire.

On the morning of April 20, 1915, as he was leaving his office, he heard a shell coming in his direction and ran between two horses for cover. When the shell burst, a fragment struck him in the face, killing him instantly.

Captain Anderson was 35 years old when he was killed, and while his exact grave site is unknown, a special memorial had been erected for him in Ypres Reservoir Cemetery.

Captain Anderson’s death is recorded in The Veterinary Record dated May 1, 1915.

Media and Documents

Copy of Telegram informing of Captain Anderson’s death
Copy of Telegram informing of Captain Anderson's death
 

The Newcastle Daily Journal April 26 1915
The Newcastle Daily Journal April 26 1915