David Philip Hirsch Explained

David Philip Hirsch
Birth Date:28 December 1896
Death Date:23 April 1917 (aged 20)
Birth Place:Leeds, West Yorkshire
Death Place:Wancourt, France
Placeofburial:Arras Memorial
Rank:Captain
Branch: British Army
Unit:Green Howards
Battles:World War I
Awards:Victoria Cross

David Philip Hirsch VC (28 December 1896  - 23 April 1917) was a British Army officer during World War I and recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces.

Details

Hirsch was born 28 December 1896 to Harry and Edith Hirsch of Weetwood Grove, Leeds.[1]

He was 20 years old, and an Acting Captain in the 4th Battalion, The Yorkshire Regiment (Alexandra, Princess of Wales's Own),[2] British Army during the First World War. On 23 April 1917 near Wancourt, France, he performed a deed for which he was awarded the Victoria Cross. He died in action that day.

Citation

The medal

His Victoria Cross is displayed at the Green Howards Regimental Museum, Richmond, North Yorkshire, England.

Hirsch came from a Jewish family - his father and grandparents were Jews but father converted; nevertheless, ethnically he was at least half Jewish and I attach the following anecdote. I gave a lecture to the Army Museum Friends in Chelsea in 2008 and a very elderly 96 year old lady was sitting alone at the front. I engaged her in conversation asking what her interest was in my talk which was on Jewish Commandos the SIG in WW2 - and she said she was the first cousin of Hirsch VC and knew him when she was a little girl and saw him on his last leave before he was killed. She said he always attended the family Passover services and meals and identified as Jewish. It would be appropriate to place a Star of David British Legion peg by his memorial, rather than pretend he had no Jewish close links. Signed Martin Sugarman (AJEX Archivist and Author - 8/8/2024). In a book by Dr Harold Pollins of Ruskin College Oxford, the Hirsch family history is detailed in one chapter and is kept at the Imperial War Museum in London

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. http://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/783625 Hirsch, David Philip
  2. Web site: Remembrance - The Yorkshire Regiment . 14 January 2013.