The Indian Contingent
Search the Ranks
If you find something that you think is wrong, please let us know. If you find something that relates to your family, please let us know. And if you have more information, please let us know.
My thanks are due to my daughters Alex and Hannah for helping me type in long lists, and to Omer Tarin in Abbotabad, who went through the whole list with me one evening, pointing out the likely origin of each soldier from their name.
Notes on the data
The information listed in the database is, in most cases, first name and ‘surname’, ser vice number, rank and unit. In some cases such basic information is missing or unclear. In many cases there is additional information in the ‘notes’ field.
Wherever possible I have given the source of the information.
I have generally assumed that any given soldier only had one service number, given to him at time of enrolment. There are a few examples when it is recorded that a sepoy changed his service number, for example Blacksmith Abdullah of 42nd Company changed his number from 740028 to 798984 (DGIMS 1942/3/4/F/5/42). Sometimes service numbers were mis-typed by the unit clerks (who must have been extremely busy) so you will find two numbers for some sepoys. In one case I found two separate men in the Reinforcement Unit (RU) with the same service number: 176838 – Tailor Abdul Ghani and Bootmaker Abdul Razaq.
My assumption is that numbers which are close together means that those men enlisted at the same time and place. There are long sequences of consecutive numbers on the list, for example 180624 -29 and 780951 – 57.
Search the Ranks
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Forename(s) AbdulSurname JabarRank DriverUnit 25 CompanyNotes 23/7/41 joined 25 coy from RU DGIMS 8/9/5/41 23/8/41 PT refresher course 'good' DGIMS 8/9/5/41
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Forename(s) AbdulSurname JabbarService Number 171348 or 171318Rank Lance NaikUnit 25 CompanyNotes 2/11/42 on a course WO 179/5908 13/2/43 171318 L/Nk Abdul Jabbarre joined 25 coy WO 179/5909 July 1943 – attended instructors course at RU WO 179/5886
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Forename(s) Mohd AminSurname JafferyRank Hav ClerkUnit 32 CompanyNotes 29/6/ gave evidence at Darby's GCM WO 179/5917
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Forename(s) Syed Amir-ud-DinSurname JafferyRank LieutUnit 32 CompanyNotes 18/11/42 joined RU, 23/11 to 32 coy WO 179/5885 20/2/43 on leave from 32 coy WO 179/5917 1943 to Buckingham Palace USI RIASC WWII 15/5/44 Captain SA Jaffery CO 32 coy in Jullundur Misc 1729/H 10/11/44 Major Misc 1729/H
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Forename(s) MohdSurname JalalService Number 175917Rank Bellows boyUnit 25 CompanyNotes 5/12/40 witness at court of inquiry on death by tree falling in Duporth WO 179/5879 2/2/42 joined 7 coy as bootmaker 27/2/42 to 25 coy as Morrison's orderly
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Forename(s) WSurname JamesonRank LieutUnit Reinforcement UnitNotes dob etc L/MIL/14/4661-0182 17/5/41 joined RU from India WO 179/5884
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Forename(s) KhakiSurname JanRank GroomUnit Advanced Remount DepotNotes 3/11/41 placed on 'SI 'list' at IGH WO 179/5888
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Forename(s) MohdSurname JanService Number 174247Rank DriverUnit 22 Company A TroopNotes Pushtu speaker WO 106/5881
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Forename(s) MohdSurname JawanService Number 171475Rank DriverUnit 32 CompanyNotes Feb 41 repat to India 'Bronchiectasis' WO 179/5880
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Forename(s) MohdSurname JawanService Number 172946Rank DriverUnit 3 Company
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Forename(s) MohdSurname JawanService Number 174378Rank CookUnit 25 CompanyNotes 3/8/41 on leave DGIMS 8/9/5/41
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Forename(s) AllahSurname JawayaService Number 173620Rank NaikUnit Reinforcement UnitNotes 27/10/41 commenced English course for drivers and L/Nks WO 179/5880 17-19 Dec 41, One of 8 naiks in RU examined to be promoted daff WO 179/5884 9/9/42 Attended 4 week “1st English Instructors Refresher Course’ at Aviemore WO 179/5881 12/6/43 to RU Maryculter prior to repatriation WO 179/5886
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Forename(s) MohdSurname JeeService Number 175269Rank DriverUnit 29 CompanyNotes Feb 41 repat to India 'Sacro-iliac arthritis' WO 179/5880
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Forename(s) KeppelSurname JermynRank MajorUnit Reinforcement Unit
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Forename(s) MohdSurname JiService Number 783739Rank DriverUnit 3 Company
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Forename(s) SherSurname JungService Number 29063Rank A/U/L/NkUnit 29 CompanyNotes 11/3/42 reverted to driver DGIMS 8/9/6/41
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Forename(s) K CSurname KapilaRank AccountantUnit HQNotes 31/10/40 to IGH from Exeter hospital WO 177/2262 Feb 41 Repat to India - Acute appendicitis WO 179/5880
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Forename(s) GianSurname KapurRank CaptainUnit HQAddress Seth MN Kapur & Co, Nila Gumbad, LahoreNotes 3/6/40 appreciated by Hills L/WS/1/355 31/03/1941 - new acct joined K6, so this is likely dept date L/WS/1/355
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Forename(s) AbdulSurname KarimService Number 58107Rank JemadarUnit 42 CompanyNotes 4/6/41 to RU from 29 coy (and service number) DGIMS 8/9/6/41 20/10/41 to Woking WO 179/5918 Dec 43 on list for repat to India WO 179/5881
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Forename(s) AbdulSurname KarimService Number 178829Rank DriverUnit 29 CompanyNotes 19/6/41 promoted lance naik DGIMS 8/9/6/41
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Forename(s) AbdulSurname KarimService Number TB 27113Rank SaddlerUnit 22 Company
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Forename(s) FazalSurname KarimService Number 52074Rank DriverUnit 25 CompanyNotes 21/6/41 to IGH from 25 coy DGIMS 8/9/5/41 14/7/42 recommended for Long service and good conduct medal with gratuity (42 coy) WO 179/5881
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Forename(s) FazalSurname KarimService Number 173874Rank DriverUnit 32 CompanyNotes 16/6/42 AWOL 11 hours - 7 days FP no 2 DGIMS 8/9/7/41 2/7/42 on elave DGIMS 8/9/7/41
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Forename(s) FazalSurname KarimService Number 173916Rank DriverUnit 25 CompanyNotes 3/11/41 on leave DGIMS 8/9/5/41
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Forename(s) FazalSurname KarimService Number 175930Rank Lance NaikUnit 22 Company B Troop
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Forename(s) FazalSurname KarimService Number 177392Rank DriverUnit 3 Company
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Forename(s) FazalSurname KarimService Number 177397Rank Lance NaikUnit 32 CompanyAddress Son of Muhammed Husain and Gurah Bi of Mari Danish Rawalpindi Pakistan; husband of Chanan Bibi of Mari Danish.Notes 6/8/41 to IGH DGIMS 8/9/7/41 7/2/42 died and buried in Durban Stellawood CWGC 22/1/42 Broadcast on BBC, esp news of soldiers from Poonch, Jullundur, Sialkot on 22/1/42 WO 179/5881
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Forename(s) FazalSurname KarimService Number 780264Rank FarrierUnit Reinforcement UnitNotes 28/7/41 joined 7 coy from RU DGIMS 8/9/3/1941 12/8/42 re-enrolled as farrier with combatant status DGIMS 8/9/3/1941
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Forename(s) FazalSurname KarimService Number 781938Rank DriverUnit 3 Company
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Forename(s) MohammadSurname KarimRank Bellows boyUnit 3 Company
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Forename(s) MohdSurname KarimService Number 22658Rank CarpenterUnit 22 Company
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Forename(s) John LlewellynSurname KeayRank S/ConductorUnit 7 CompanyNotes with 7 coy from Dehra Dun WO 179/5903 7/4/41 promoted Conductor DGIMS 8/9/3/1941 24/5/41 2 weeks leave on arrival in UK DGIMS 8/9/3/1941 2/8/41 Anti- gas course 'Q1' result DGIMS 8/9/3/1941 28/1/43 disciplinary case against him WO 179/5896
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Forename(s) Edward GeorgeSurname KedgeRank LieutUnit Reinforcement UnitNotes 17/1/41 2/lt with 3 coy misc 3133/H 22/11/41 joined RU from 29 coy WO 179/5884 21/2/42 posted to 42 coy WO 179/5885 10/12/43 Lt with depot Jullundur Misc 4460
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Forename(s) Gordon Ephraim BattySurname KellettRank 2/LtUnit Reinforcement UnitNotes 14/11/41 joined RU from 3 coy WO 179/5884
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Forename(s) WSSurname KellyRank MajorUnit 42 CompanyNotes 1941 CO 42 coy WO 179/5918 24/2/42 to India from 42 coy WO 179/5919s later Lt Col Moharir p179
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Forename(s) AbdulSurname KhaliqService Number 52173Rank Lance NaikUnit 22 Company A TroopNotes 6/2/40 deprived of L/N rank in RU WO 167/1435 25/2/42 3rd class English cert as L/N with 32 coy! DGIMS 8/9/7/41
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Forename(s) AbdulSurname KhaliqService Number 177006Rank DriverUnit 32 CompanyNotes 5/1/42 on 7 week English course at Llangattack WO 179/5880 & DGIMS 8/9/7/41 19/2/42 3rd class English cert DGIMS 8/9/7/41
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Forename(s) AbdulSurname KhaliqService Number 180236Rank DriverUnit Reinforcement UnitNotes 31/1/43 asked question re submarines WO 179/5886 12/6/43 to RU Maryculter prior to repatriation WO 179/5886
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Forename(s) AbdulSurname KhaliqService Number V 252Rank IWOUnit 42 CompanyNotes 5/9/41 nose op WO 179/5918 17/7/42 repat unfit WO 179/5881, also DGIMS 1942/3/4/F/5
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Forename(s) AbdulSurname Khaliq aka Khilu KhanService Number 171731Rank NaikUnit 3 CompanyNotes 6/11/41 serious injury DGIMS 8/9/2/1941 13/4/42 on 4 weeks NCOs English course at Llangattack WO 179/5881 10/5/42 rejoined from RU after English course DGIMS 8/9/2/1941 Changed name from Khilu Khan DGIMS 8/9/2/1941 6/2/43 joined 4-weeks English course for Naiks, at Grantown, now 25 coy WO 179/5881
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Forename(s) ?MeharSurname KhanService Number 780786Rank DriverUnit 42 CompanyNotes 25/4/43 asked question at 42 coy Durbar WO 179/5920
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Forename(s) AbbasSurname KhanService Number 180821Rank DriverUnit 22 Company
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Forename(s) AbbasSurname KhanService Number 171448Rank DriverUnit 22 Company A Troop
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Forename(s) AbdulSurname KhanService Number 26873Rank DriverUnit 25 CompanyNotes July 41 to IGH DGIMS 8/9/5/41
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Forename(s) AbdulSurname KhanService Number 171004Rank DriverUnit 25 CompanyNotes 8/8/41 to IGH DGIMS 8/9/5/41 21/8/41 discharged from IGH DGIMS 8/9/5/41 25/9/41 to IGH DGIMS 8/9/5/41
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Forename(s) AbdulSurname KhanService Number 174458Rank DriverUnit 3 Company
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Forename(s) AbdulSurname KhanService Number 180668Rank DriverUnit 32 CompanyNotes 7/5/42 to hosp DGIMS 8/9/7/41 31/1/42 to IGH DGIMS 8/9/7/41
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Forename(s) AbdulSurname KhanService Number 780223Rank DriverUnit 42 CompanyAddress Sangar, Palan Dari. Poonchh state, Sihala rly stationNotes summer 42 to IGH DGIMS 1942/3/4/F/5 Sept 42 nominated mother Baggo as heir, dob April 1892 DGIMS 1942/3/4/F/42 28/5/43 changed name to Abdur Rahman Wilayeti Akhbar Haftewar pic 8269
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Forename(s) Abdul MajidSurname KhanService Number 174766Rank A/U/L/NkUnit 3 CompanyNotes 23/3/42 to RU from 29 coy 31/7/42 joined 3 coy from 42 coy DGIMS 8/9/2/1941
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Forename(s) Abdul MajidSurname KhanService Number 178416Rank DriverUnit 3 Company
An incredible and important story, finally being told.
- Mishal Husain
The author
Ghee Bowman
Ghee Bowman was born in England in 1961. After careers in the theatre, education and the voluntary sector, he returned to university in 2014. He is married with two grown-up daughters, and lives in Exeter.
‘The Indian Contingent’ is his first book. His father WE Bowman wrote the noted spoof climbing book ‘The Ascent of Rum Doodle’.
Ghee is a story-teller, Quaker and a leader in the Woodcraft Folk, a voluntary youth movement for children and young people.
Acknowledgements
reproduced from the book ‘The Indian Contingent’
This book grew from my PhD at Exeter University, so I should first thank the South, West and Wales Doctoral Training Partnership who funded me. My supervisors Gajendra Singh and Padma Anagol gave first-class guidance and advice. Nicola Thomas has been a great encourager. My fellow PhD students have been wonderful: especial mention to Sonia Wigh, Cristina Corti for the maps and Sophy Antrobus for reading my drafts and being a chum. The University Pakistani Society were great for networking and the Digital Humanities Lab helped with digitisation of photos. This book was written on the top floor of the University Library, and all the library staff deserve medals.
I have built this story on the work of archivists and librarians in five countries, who provided access to my bread and butter (original documents) and have been friendly, helpful and supportive. Thanks to all of them, with a special mention to Jo Meacock at the Kelvingrove Museum in Glasgow.
The Indian Military History Society, through its journal Durbar, was a great source of contacts, and Chris Kempton provided useful input. The ‘Indian Armies of WW2’ Facebook group has answered many questions.
Around the UK I have listened to many stories about the boys of K6. Paritosh Shapland’s story is in many ways at the centre of this book, and he has been very generous with his time and his resources. Yaqub Mirza’s family gave me a great lift right at the end. Betty Cresswell told me of her family’s relationship with Uncle Gian, and kindly shared her photo album with me. The late Giovanna Bloor shared everything she knew. I will cherish the memory of a day spent in her cottage under the Cnicht mountain. Paul Watkins, Mark Ashdown, Geoff Sykes and Trilby Shaw helped me along the way. Hamish Johnston drove me around the Highlands and was a great source of information. Colin Hexley was very generous with material about his father, and Shirley Sutherland introduced me to him and others in Golspie. John Barnes and Peter Wilde in Dornoch, Joan Leed, Donny MacDonald and Marlyn Price in Lairg, Marion Smith, Catriona Spence, David & Sheena Macdougall in Kinlochleven, Stewart Mackenzie, George Milne and Donald Matheson in Loch Ewe were all very helpful and welcoming. In Glasgow, Nadeem Bhatti introduced me to the Colourful Heritage project and its staff Saqib Razzaq, Shazia Durrani and Omar Shaikh. In Woking, Mohammad Zubair gave me one of the best interviews ever, Zafar Iqbal aided my networking, the mosque was very welcoming and Rabyah Khan helped get me started. Katherine Douglass introduced me to the lovely people and the extraordinary story of Etobon.
I stand on the shoulders of giants. Rozina Visram is one such – anyone writing on the South Asian presence in Britain is in her debt. I shared beers and laughs with Lloyd Price, and treasure the friendship we developed in India. Many thanks to Yasmin Khan for writing the foreword.
I am a white British man writing a story about South Asians, which throws open many possibilities of cultural misunderstandings and errors. I am grateful to Sandhya Dave, Nazima Khan and colleagues at the Global Centre in Exeter for giving me confidence and helping me learn to step around a thorny area.
My time in Pakistan would have been fruitless without Major General Shahid Ali Hamid. He offered warmth, hospitality and boundless contacts. I am forever in his debt. My friend Omer Salim Khan (Omer Tarin) was supremely hospitable and generous during my visit to Abbottabad, and even more so afterwards, commenting on the draft manuscript. Jawad Sarwana drove me round Karachi and introduced me to the wide and warm family of General Akbar, and Imran and his daughter Mahin were particularly generous with time and photos. Zeenut Ziad gave me two interviews, when her parrot would let her. Khizar Jawad was incredibly helpful in Lahore. Brigadier Asim Iqbal of the Army Service Corps gave a late rush of help. Above all, Jenny, Marcel and Luqman ensured I had a safe secure base in Islamabad, Sabur was a wonderful fixer who seemed to know everyone in the Potohari villages, Waheed drove us round those villages and Waqar Seyal was a fantastic translator and interpreter. In India, Shachi and Naveen made me welcome and helped me with my first steps in Hindi/Urdu and Rana Chhina at the United Services Institute in Delhi was extremely helpful.
For permission to use quotes, thanks to Hackett Publishing Company for the quotation from Philip Ivanhoe’s translation of Daodejing of Laozi, and to HarperCollins India for the two quotations from Raghu Karnad’s Farthest Field.
I appreciate that I haven’t included all the great stories that I heard during my research. If I’ve missed yours out, apologies. If I haven’t heard it yet, please get in touch. All errors in memory or interpretation are entirely mine.
Three people helped and inspired this writing process. My father Bill Bowman showed the way. Clare Grist Taylor believed in me and this story and gave many practical tips. My editor at The History Press, Simon Wright, was always encouraging, constructive but firm.
Three other people made it possible. My daughters Alex and Hannah helped enter hundreds of names in the database, encouraged me and (in Hannah’s case) did translations from French. Above all, my thanks and love go to my wife Rebecca. She has supported me and fed me all the way through. A wiser partner would be impossible to find.
This book needs to be on the national curriculum. The kind of story that brings us together. It would be the perfect tribute to those who fought for our freedom.
- Adil Ray, actor, writer and broadcaster
Force K6
Website credits
Technical consultant
Alex Michel-Bowman
Urdu translation
Waqar Ahmed Seyal
Hindi translation
Sonia Wigh