Wynn Bagnall
{{Short description|Canadian soldier (1890–1931)}}
{{Infobox person
| honorific_prefix = Captain
| honorific_suffix = MC
| image = First World War Memorial statue in front of Bank of Montreal.JPG
| caption = Statue of Wynn Bagnall by James Earle Fraser
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1890|02|10|df=y}}
| birth_place = Sunderland, England
| death_date = {{Death date and age|1931|03|07|1890|02|10|df=y}}
| death_place = New York City, US
| other_names =
| known_for =
| occupation =
}}
Captain Wynn Bagnall MC (10 February 1890 – 7 March 1931), was a Canadian soldier who distinguished himself in World War I.Obituary in The New York Times, CAPTAIN WYNN BAGNALL, Canadian War Hero Buried Here With Military Honors, MARCH 12, 1931, p. 8Obituary in THE GAZETTE, MONTREAL, CAPT. BAGNALL BURIED, Military Honors Given to C.E.F. Veteran, FRIDAY, MARCH 13, 1931, p. 3Obituary in THE OTTAWA EVENING JOURNAL, Posed for War Memorial – Veteran is Buried in N.Y., THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 1931, p. 2Obituary in THE EDMONTON JOURNAL, U.S. Veterans Honor Former C.E.F. Member, EDMONTON, ALBERTA, THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 1931, p.1Obituary in The Brooklyn Times, CANADIAN HERO BURIED, Capt. Wynn Bagnall Accorded Military Honors at Cypress Hills, THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 1931, p. 42 A recipient of the Military Cross, Bagnall's war record was the inspiration behind a statue in Winnipeg, Canada, by James Earle Fraser, designed to honour the heroism of Canadians who had fought and often died.{{cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7cKpDAAAQBAJ&pg=PT113 | isbn=9781772031539 | title=Remembered in Bronze and Stone: Canada's Great War Memorial Statuary | date=30 November 2016 | publisher=Heritage House Publishing Co }}{{cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lGfqDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA283 | isbn=9780774864107 | title=Canada 1919: A Nation Shaped by War | date=15 June 2020 | publisher=UBC Press }} Bagnall was the model for the statue which was dedicated in December 1923 and 'inspired memory and reverence for lost Canadian soldiers in all the years it has stood'. The statue was also described as 'one of the finest memorials yet produced' and won a gold medal for sculpture in New York City in 1925.Free Press Evening Bulletin, WAR MEMORIAL RISES ON SITE OF CENOTAPH, WINNIPEG, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1923, p. 1THE WINNIPEG EVENING TRIBUNE, WINNIPEG STATUE FIRST WORTHY OF HONOR IN YEARS, MONDAY, MAY 18, 1925, p. 8
On 11 March 1931, Bagnall was buried with full military honours at Cypress Hills Cemetery, Long Island.
Life
Wynn Bagnall was born in Sunderland, England on 10 February 1890, the son of George Rhydero Bagnall, a British banker who died when Wynn Bagnall was seven, and Anne (née Hughes).{{Cite web|url=http://www.durhamatwar.org.uk/story/12197|title=Wynn Bagnall (1890-1931)|website=www.durhamatwar.org.uk}}The Eagle, The Magazine of Bedford Modern School, Vol. XII, No. 9, December 1915, p. 338 He was educated as a boarder at Bedford Modern School.{{Cite web|url=https://livesofthefirstworldwar.iwm.org.uk/lifestory/5553520|title=Life story: Wynn Bagnall | Lives of the First World War|website=livesofthefirstworldwar.iwm.org.uk}} After school, in 1906 Bagnall emigrated to Canada to become a rancher in Calgary,1906 Census, Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba returning to England in 1909 and then back to Canada to join the Bank of Montreal as a clerk in July 1910.
At the outbreak of World War I, Bagnall enlisted as a Gunner in the 6th Battery of the Canadian Field Artillery, going to France in 1915.{{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/911761771|title=Memorial of the Great War: a record of service.|date=July 14, 1921|publisher=Bank of Montreal|oclc=911761771 |via=Open WorldCat}} Shortly after arriving in France, he wrote a letter to his old school to express his initial experience of trench warfare:
{{blockquote|We are seeing almost continual rain, and the firing line is literally a sea of mud. The trenches in many parts are running streams in spite of the splendid efforts of the engineers, and at times, when duty calls, we have to set our jaws a little firmer, and remember the Great Cause for which we are enduring discomforts and hardships, to refrain from uttering epithets of discontent}}
In 1916, Bagnall was appointed Lieutenant in the 23rd Battery of the Canadian Field Artillery before being attached to the 5th Battery. In 1917 he was Orderly Officer and then Adjutant in the 2nd Brigade of the Canadian Field Artillery. In March 2018 he was promoted to captain and joined the 58th Battery of the Canadian Field Artillery where for three months he was Acting Major.
File:Canadian troops on Arras- Cambrai road-1918.jpg to Cambrai Road, 1918]]
File:Bank of Montreal and War Memorial - Winnipeg 2010.jpg Statue]]
File:Front Entrance replication.JPG]]
In total, Bagnall won four medals during World War I including the Military Cross for 'marked gallantry and initiative' during the Second Battle of Cambrai.{{Cite web|url=https://cgwp.uvic.ca/person.php?pid=171102|title=Captain Wynn Bagnall :: CGWP Record Detail|website=cgwp.uvic.ca}}{{Cite web|url=https://history.bmo.com/story-of-a-statue/|title=Story of a statue|first=Kris|last=Sy|date=May 23, 2018|website=BMO History}} The citation to his Military Cross read:Supplement to The London Gazette, Issue 31583, 4 October 1919, p. 12352
{{blockquote|Capt. Wynn Bagnall, Can. Fid. Arty., attd. 60th Bty., 14th Bde. For marked gallantry and initiative. On 1st October, 1918, during fighting in suburbs of Cambrai, our infantry were suffering severe casualties from enemy machine guns situated behind a railway embankment. He took forward one gun of his battery to within 500 yards of our posts, in order to enfilade this embankment. Under heavy fire he got the gun into action and succeeded in silencing the machine guns, enabling our line to be slightly advanced}}
After the war, Bagnall returned to the Bank of Montreal. James Earle Fraser considered Bagnall to be the embodiment of the entire Canadian army during the Great War. As a model and inspiration for his work, Fraser didn't want a private or a general but an officer, and Bagnall had enlisted as a private rising to the rank of Captain through his dedication, determination and courage. In Fraser's own words:
{{blockquote|A Canadian Officer posed for the figure. I wanted the statue to be a tribute to the Canadian army-to show a man who had stood the gaff over there as the Canadian had done. I feel that they bore much of the brunt of the fighting and I tried to have the figure representing a man who had done this-and could do it again. The quality I wanted to bring out in the face, is one of power and ruggedness, typical of Canada and the Canadian army}}
The statue was described as 'one of the finest memorials yet produced' and won a gold medal for sculpture in New York City in 1925. At the granite base of the statue was placed a box containing a signed photograph of Sir Vincent Meredith, President of the Bank of Montreal, a signed photograph of Sir Frederick Williams-Taylor, a signed photograph of Sir James Atkins, Lieutenant-Governor of Manitoba, and the Bank of Montreal Memorial Book. In his biography of James Earle Fraser, A.L. Freundich wrote about the Bagnall statue:{{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/47175596|title=The sculpture of James Earle Fraser|first=A. L|last=Freundlich|date=July 17, 2001|publisher=Universal Publishers|oclc=47175596 |via=Open WorldCat}}
{{blockquote|Here is no giant warrior god on a high pedestal, but a man. He is tough, ready for the fight, his feet apart, arms held loosely at his sides but ready. His helmet is just slightly at an angle and, under its brim, his face reflects strength and determination. The folds in the cloth of his trench coat, his pistol and cartridge belt, add to the feeling of resolute readiness for combat}}
Bagnall moved to New York City in 1920 to continue his career in finance. He lived on Wall Street itself and later on East 55th Street in Manhattan.Military papers, 1920New York City Census, 1925 In the latter years of his life he was associated with S. W. Straus and the Fred F. French Company describing himself as a financial salesman and accountant.
Bagnall married Adelaide A. Clough in 1926 but they divorced in 1930. He died in New York City, on 7 March 1931, aged 41, and was buried on 11 March 1931 with full military honours at Cypress Hills Cemetery, Long Island. He was survived by his mother, Mrs. George Bagnall of Selsey-On-Sea, Sussex, England, together with two sisters and two brothers. His obituary in The New York Times described him as a Canadian War Hero.
References
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Category:Military personnel from Sunderland
Category:Recipients of the Military Cross