Ivor GURNEY 1890 1937 Gloucester Poet (General)
Ivor Gurney, the son of a tailor, was born in Gloucester on 28th August, 1890. Gurney was educated at King's School, Gloucester as a chorister and he won an open scholarship to the Royal College of Music in 1911.
Gurney showed considerable talent as a composer and poet but in May 1913 he was diagnosed as suffering from dyspepsia and was sent home to Gloucester to recuperate. However, it is now accepted that he had a nervous breakdown and was the first sign of bipolar illness.
On the outbreak of the First World War, Gurney volunteered for the Gloucester regiment. He was initially turned down because of his defective eyesight, but as the British Army was short of men, was allowed to join in 1915.
After training at Salisbury he was sent to Riez Bailleul on the Western Front in May 1916. Three months later he was transferred to Albert during the Somme offensive.
On 7th April 1917, Gurney was shot in the army and sent to the army hospital at Rouen. The following month he rejoined his regiment at Arras.
In July 1917 Gurney was transferred to the 184 Machine Gun Company and was moved to Buysscheure and joined the forces preparing for the offensive at Passchendaele.
Gurney was gassed at St. Julien on 10th September 1917. He was sent to Edinburgh War Hospital and while recovering a collection of his war poems, Severn and Somme, appeared in November 1917.
After the war Gurney spent time in the Newcastle General Hospital, Lord Derby's War Hospital in Warrington and the Middlesex War Hospital in St. Albans. Gurney was finally discharged from hospital and the army on 4th October 1918.
Gurney's second book of poems, War's Embers was published in May 1919. However he was unable to make a living from his writing and over the next three years worked as a farm labourer, as a pianist in a cinema and as a clerk in the Gloucester Tax Office.
Gurney suffered from a severe manic depressive illness and after several failed attempts at suicide was sent to a mental asylum in Gloucester. On 28th September 1922, Gurney was certified insane and was transferred to the City of London Mental Hospital at Dartford. He continued to write poetry and his work was published in the London Mercury.
Ivor Gurney died of bilateral pulmonary tuberculosis at the City of London Mental Hospital on 26th December, 1937. Five days later he was buried at Twigworth, Gloucestershire.
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Ἀριστοτέλης A Gloster Boy in the Forest of Dean ><((((*>
Complete thread:
- Gurney's of Dymock -
johnG,
2007-10-17, 21:13
- GURNEY of Dymock -
slowhands,
2007-10-17, 23:20
- GURNEY of Dymock - johnG, 2007-10-18, 00:49
- Ivor GURNEY 1890 1937 Gloucester Poet -
slowhands,
2007-10-19, 04:09
- Ivor GURNEY 1890 1937 Gloucester Poet - slowhands, 2009-11-08, 08:48
- John GURNEY 1826 Dymock -
slowhands,
2007-10-19, 05:40
- John GURNEY 1827 Dymock -
johnG,
2007-10-19, 06:05
- GURNEY of Dymock -
slowhands,
2007-10-19, 06:39
- GURNEY of Dymock - davefskinner, 2008-08-08, 06:34
- GURNEY of Dymock -
slowhands,
2007-10-19, 06:39
- John GURNEY 1827 Dymock -
johnG,
2007-10-19, 06:05
- Joseph GURNEY 1828 Dymock -
slowhands,
2007-10-19, 07:26
- Gurneys of Dymock, Kemply and Upton Bishop circa 1800 - Dwfeathers, 2013-06-20, 18:00
- George GURNEY 1843 Kemply - slowhands, 2007-10-19, 07:39
- GURNEY of Dymock -
slowhands,
2007-10-17, 23:20