Who are you looking for?
In this collection
- 1st Sportsman's Battalion, Royal Fusiliers 1914-1918
- Birmingham City Battalions 1914-1918
- Birmingham Employers Roll of Honour 1914-1918
- Bradford Pals 1914-1918
- De Ruvigny's Roll of Honour 1914-1918
- Distinguished Conduct Medal Citations 1914-1920
- Edinburgh Pals 1914-1918
- Kempston Servicemen 1914-1920
- Leicestershire and Rutland, Soldiers Died 1914-1920
- Liverpool Pals 1914-1918
- London County Council Record Of War Service 1914-1918
- Plymouth Rolls Of Honour 1914-1919
- Royal Fusiliers, Stockbrokers' Battalion 1914-1918
- Royal Naval Division Casualties 1914-1919
- Royal Sussex Regiment Southdown Battalions 1914-1918
- Salford Pals 1914-1918
- Silver War Badge roll 1914-1920
Liverpool Pals 1914-1918
What can these records tell me?
Each record is an original transcript. The majority of the information here has been compiled from service records, the Soldiers Died in the Great War database and medal records. All records will have at least one image (the average is four per record)
The amount of information listed varies, but the Liverpool Pals records usually include a combination of the following information about your ancestor:
- Name
- Soldier number
- Rank
- Company
- Platoon
- Awards
Discover More about the Liverpool Pals
These records will allow you to discover, perhaps for the first time, which battalion your relative served in (information not given on medal records).
The Liverpool Pals were officially the 17th, 18th, 19th and 20th (Service) Battalions of The Kings (Liverpool Regiment). The Pals Regiments were the brainchild of Lord Derby, allowing young men to serve with their friends, neighbours, work colleagues or even team mates. These records list nearly 7,000 men who made up the original members in 1914.