Personal Details

Attribute Details
Nationality British
Date of Birth 10 November 1888
Place of Birth Clondalkin, Dublin, Ireland
Veterinary College and Date of Graduation Dublin - December 1913

Military Service

Attribute Details
Last Rank Lieutenant
Regiment/Service Army Veterinary Corps
Secondary Regiment 2nd Battalion Royal Irish Rifles
Secondary Unit 25th Brigade
First Theatre of War France 1914

Casualty Details

Attribute Details
Date of Death 27 October 1914
Age at Death 28
Place of Death France
Cause of Death Wounds received in action

Cemetery

Attribute Details
Cemetery Le Touret Memorial Cemetery France
Location Pas de Calais, France
Grave Reference Memorial Panel 42 and 43
Commonwealth War Grave Yes - GWGC Headstone
Emblem or Badge on Headstone Army Veterinary Corps

Honours and Memorials

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

Biography

Captain Edward Spread Mulcahy-Morgan MRCVS was the son of Mr. E.S. Mulcahy-Morgan of County Wicklow, Ireland. Edward had joined the Royal Irish Rifles on 5 April 1909 and was commissioned as a second lieutenant.

Captain Mulcahy-Morgan went to France in August 1914 with the Royal Irish Rifles. The 2nd Battalion Royal Irish Rifles was based at Tidworth with the 7th Brigade,3rd Division, when war broke out in August 1914. They proceeded to France with the British Expeditionary Force, landing at Rouen on 14 August.

Captain Mulcahy-Morgan was reported wounded and missing on 27th October 1914.

The War Diary of the Brigade on the day records

“the corps suffered very severe losses from Shrapnel, Howitzer and Rifle fire and Captain Dixon was obliged to retire …. only two officers and about 46 NCOs and men succeeded in getting back out of a total of 5 officers and 250 NCOs and men. Captain Davis being killed, Lieutenant Mulcahy–Morgan wounded and missing, and Captain Jonsson missing.”

Captain Mulcahy-Morgan is commemorated on a wall panel in the Le Touret Memorial Pas de Calais, France. This suggests that his body was lost in battle and not recovered, or that it could not be identified. The Register of Soldiers Effects 1901-1929 has the entry “death accepted,” further reinforcing that his body may not have been found or could not be identified.

A memorial plague remembers Edward Spread Mulcahy.

Media and Documents