His brother Frederick Cyril Curran also enlisted on 22nd September 1914 when he was 19 yrs of age. He served with the 7th battalion Sherwood Foresters later transferring to the Machine Gun Corps; he had landed in France on 28th February 1915. He survived the war and was discharged from the Royal Engineers on 22nd December 1918.
An article published on 14th June 1915 in the Nottingham Evening Post :-
“BULLET'S TWO VICTIMS.
“MILITARY FUNERAL OF A ROBIN HOOD IN NOTTINGHAM.
“The first of the 1/7th Sherwood Foresters (Robin Hoods) to be interred in Nottingham was buried with full military honours at the Nottingham General Cemetery this afternoon [14th June 1915].
“He was Private Charles Henry Curran, aged 21, whose home was at 44, Coppice-road, Nottingham, and whose death took place in Reading Hospital on Wednesday [9th June 1915].
“Among the mourners at the graveside was a comrade who was wounded, singularly enough, by the bullet which inflicted the fatal injury on Curran. This was Private E. A. Ryall, who on a date in the early part of May, while in France with his battalion, received a bullet in the mouth, which knocked out several of his teeth and passed out through his cheek, to find a resting place in Curran’s head. The latter was admitted to the hospital at Le Touquet on May 14th, and was received at Reading Royal Hospital on the 1st of this month, dying, however, from the effects of his wound just over a week after his transference.
“Large crowds were present at the graveside, while close on 600 men of the 3/7th Battalion of the Robin Hoods, under Capt. W. H. R. Iles, lined the path to the graveside, and about 100 yards of the Alfreton-road outside the top gate of the burial ground.
“Borne on an ordinary hearse, the coffin was covered with the Union Jack and surmounted by the deceased’s cap and belt. Men of the depot battalion acted as bearers, while the bugle band, Bugle-Major Machin, sounded the “Last Post” at the graveside. A firing party of the same battalion, under Company Sgt.-Major W. T. Earl fired three volleys over the grave.
“The service at the graveside was conducted by the Rev. P. D. Maddock. of St. Jude’s Church, Mapperley.”
Above article is courtesy of Jim Grundy Small Town Great War Hucknall 1914-1918
Ernest Alan Ryall returned to the Western Front, serving with 1st Battalion of the Sherwood Foresters.
Nottingham Evening Post, ‘In Memoriam’, 10 June 1916: ‘Curran. In loving memory of my dearly loved eldest son, Private CH Curran, 2551, 1/7th Robin Hoods, died of wounds June 9th, 1915. He died, but not in vain. Silently mourned. Mother, brothers, sisters, friends Horace and Harold.’ (www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk)
Nottingham Evening Post, ‘In Memoriam’, 10 June 1916: ‘Curran. In loving memory of Private CH Curran, 1/7th Sherwood Foresters, died of wounds. Loved too well to be forgotten. Fiancee Violet.’ (www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk)