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DEATH OF "SHY V.C."

TWENTY YEARS IN OBSCURITY Known as the " Shy V.C.," since for nearly 20 years he lived in obscurity and allowed the world to think he was dead, Sergeant Arthur Herbert Lindsey Richardson has died in a Liverpool hospital. As a youth Richardson went to Canada, and served for 15 years in the NorthWest Mounted Police. When the South African War broke out he joined Lord Strathcona'a Horse. In an action at Wolverspruit on July 5, 1900, a party of his unit, only 38 in number, *was engaged with a force of 80 of the enemy. When the order to retire had been given Sergeant Richardson rode back under a very heavy cross-fire and rescued a trooper. When he returned home he was too modest to tell anyone of his honour, and worked for 16 years in • Liverpool as a tramway ganger, a cinema attendant, and at other humble employments. On account of his poverty he allowed his relatives and friends to believe him dead. In 1913 his mother received a message from a nurse in Montreal that he was dead. He did not contradict this.. In 1924 so many stories were in circulation about him that Richardson decided to reveal himself. Since then he had continued to iive in obscurity.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19330211.2.192.34

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume LXX, Issue 21414, 11 February 1933, Page 3 (Supplement)

Word Count
214

DEATH OF "SHY V.C." New Zealand Herald, Volume LXX, Issue 21414, 11 February 1933, Page 3 (Supplement)

DEATH OF "SHY V.C." New Zealand Herald, Volume LXX, Issue 21414, 11 February 1933, Page 3 (Supplement)

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