The First World War was only a matter of days old when Barking placed
itself firmly on the map, after Driver Job Henry Charles Drain of the
37th Battery, Royal Field Artillery, was awarded the Victoria Cross. He
was born in Barking on 18 October 1895, and on 26 August 1914, the
18-year-old Drain was at Le Cateau, France, when Captain Douglas
Reynolds of the same battery was trying to recapture two guns. Driver
Drain and another driver, Frederick Luke, volunteered to help and gave
great assistance in the eventual saving of one of the guns. He survived
the war and died on 26 July 1975 aged 79, and is buried at the
Rippleside Cemetery at Barking. A second man, Laurence Calvert, who
although not born in the area, died in Dagenham in 1964 aged 72, was
also awarded the Victoria Cross for his actions on 12 September 1918 at
Havrincourt, France at the Battle of Havrincourt.
Barking War Memorial is slightly unusual in that it is different from
most, because it includes all those from the town who served (1812) in
the First World War, those who returned home (1212) and the 600 men who
didn't. It carries the names of 802 men from the town who gave their
lives for their King and country, so that peace could prevail and the
world could become a better place.