Do you have family that served in the British Army during World War II? Discover if they died while in service by searching through the Army Roll of Honour 1939-1945. You may be able to learn their service number, rank and regiment, and date of death, as well as their place of birth and residence.
Do you have family that served in the British Army during World War II? Discover if they died while in service by searching through the Army Roll of Honour 1939-1945. You may be able to learn their service number, rank and regiment, and date of death, as well as their place of birth and residence.
Each record includes a transcript of the original record. The information contained in the records varies however you may be able to find out a combination of the following:
First name(s)
Last name
Service number
Rank
Regiment
Birth place
Residence
Death year
Death day
Death month
Theatre of war
The source is The Army Roll of Honour 1939-1945, an original document held under shelf reference WO304 at The National Archives, now decoded and put into a searchable database. It contains the details of British Army casualties during World War 2.
The original 41-part document is in two main sections, firstly by regiment and secondly by surname.
The document also includes a key to the codes used in the main sections. The key is necessary as much of the information in the original text is coded. The coded text includes the army rank, the corps in which the serviceman or woman served, and their places of birth, residence and death.
This dataset covers deaths within the period from 1st September 1939 to 31st December 1946.
All credits: infantry, the artillery and all supporting corps.
All ranks: officers, non-commissioned officers (NCOs) and other ranks are all included. You do not need to know the rank of the soldier you are looking for. The rank shown is that held at death.
All areas: soldiers from all parts of the UK are included.
Only serving soldiers are included. If a soldier died after having been discharged from the army, even if their death occurred due to wounds incurred during their army service, they will not be included here. Usually their death will be included in the relevant civil death registers for England and Wales, Scotland or other jurisdiction of death.
The records include those who were killed in action, died of wounds, and died of disease or other (including natural or accidental) causes. Soldiers who were recorded as missing presumed dead are also included.
Please note that the records exclude most of the soldiers who were court-martialled and upon whom death sentences were executed. This is because such personnel were regarded as having died dishonourable deaths and therefore it was not thought appropriate to include them in a roll of honour alongside personnel who had died honourably for their country.
Begin your search broadly with just a first and last name.
You can narrow your results if needed by adding a year, birth place, or additional keyword.