Born in Lincoln on 12
th August 1893, Leonard James Keyworth first
attempted to join The Lincolnshire Regiment at the outbreak of war
in 1914. Rejected, but undismayed, he joined the 24
th London Regiment
on 16
th September 1914 and was soon destined to bring them credit
and glory.
On the night of 25
th/26
th May 1915 the battalion had made a successful
assault on a German position and were endeavouring to follow it
up with a bomb attack against fierce opposition.
He was decorated with his Victoria Cross by HM King George V at
Buckingham Palace on 12
th July 1915. Later, with two VCs from other
regiments, he received a hero’s welcome in Lincoln. At his
old school in the City he addressed the assembled staff and pupils
and his decoration was passed round among them. He died of wounds
in France on 19
th October 1915 and was buried in Abbeville Communal
Cemetery. His name is on the City of Lincoln War Memorial and on
the Great War Memorial in Silver Street Methodist Church, Lincoln,
and in his memory Dantzic Street, Southwark, London, was renamed
Keyworth Street.
His Victoria Cross was later purchased by his old Regiment for £460.
His Citation reads:-
“For most conspicuous bravery at Givenchy on the night
of 25-26th May, 1915. After the successful assault on the German
position by the 24th Battalion, London Regiment, efforts were made
by that unit to follow up their success by a bomb attack, during
the progress of which fifty-eight men out of a total of seventy-five
became casualties. During this very fierce encounter L/Cpl Keyworth
stood fully exposed for two hours on the top of the enemy’s
parapet, and threw about 150 bombs amongst the Germans, who were
only a few yards away”.