Squadron Sergeant Major William John Parkes was one the first men of the Irish Guards to die in the Operation Market Garden advance into the Netherlands in September 1944.
Squadron Sergeant Major William John Parkes was one the first men of the Irish Guards to die in the Operation Market Garden advance into the Netherlands in September 1944.
Squadron Sergeant Major William John Parkes (2717391) served in No. 3 Squadron, 2nd Battalion Irish Guards during the Second World War. Born in 1911, he was the son of Joseph Parkes and Esther W. Parkes of Belfast.
He died on 17th September 1944 aged 33 years old during 2nd Battalion’ push on to Valkenswaard, Netherlands as part of Operation Market Garden. His M4A4 Sherman Mark V came under fire on the main road, which became known as “Hell’s Highway”.
Parkes died trying to escape the turret of his stricken tank. Sergeant Carpenter of No. 5 Army Film and Photographic Unit photographed the Squadron Sergeant Major’s body slumped in the turret. Later in the day, William’s brother passed down the same road with 3rd Battalion Irish Guards past his brother’s body.
William John Parkes’ grave is in Section II, Row B, Grave 8 of Valkenswaard War Cemetery, Noord-Brabant, Netherlands. His name in on a family memorial in Belfast City Cemetery, Belfast. His headstone in the Netherlands bears the inscription:
WartimeNI Photo: Family memorial to commemorate Squadron Sergeant Major William John Parkes who died on 17th September 1944 during the initial advance of the Irish Guards in Operation Market Garden. Photo taken on tour of Belfast City Cemetery with Peter McCabe in Spring 2017. Copyright Scott Edgar - WartimeNI.
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