he family of a WWI soldier shot for cowardice are taking their 13-year battle for a pardon to the High Court.
Private Harry Farr's family cannot seek a full pardon that would clear his name but do have leave to seek a conditional pardon meaning he should not have died.
Lawyers say Pte Farr, 25, from 1st Battalion West Yorkshire Regiment had shell shock when he refused to fight. Janet Booth, of Farnham, Surrey, said her grandfather's body was probably dumped in a field without a grave. "They said they weren't fit to have a grave," she said. "It is very sad, especially for my mother."
She said the pension was stopped and her mother and grandmother were forced out of their house, suffering financial hardship, stigma and shame. Mrs Booth, 63, said her grandfather refused to go to the trenches but was told at a dressing station that he did not have a wound and was ordered to go to the front. He had already been hospitalised twice for shell shock.
Pte Farr was charged, court-martialled and executed - he refused to wear a blindfold. "The trial only lasted 20 minutes and it did not take into account his medical condition," Mrs Booth said. "He couldn't have been a coward if he stood there open-eyed."
Last year, the Defence Secretary at the time, Geoff Hoon, refused to grant a pardon of any kind, but a judge ruled the family had room to argue that Pte Farr had been wrongly refused a conditional pardon.
Mrs Booth, 63, from Farnham, and her husband, Jim, 69, are taking legal action on behalf of Mrs Booth's mother, Gertrude Harris, from Harrow, Middlesex, who was Pte Farr's daughter.
Bron:
http://www.forumeerstewereldoorlog.nl/viewtopic.php?t=2090