Lieutenant (Lt) James Grant Allan, ninth Battalion, Gordon Highlanders and Lance Corporal (LCpl) Gordon McPherson, seventh Battalion, Cameron Highlanders, had been laid to relaxation alongside their comrades precisely 110 years after they had been killed in motion. The service was supported by serving troopers from 4th Battalion The Royal Regiment of Scotland.

Troopers from 4th Bn The Royal Regiment of Scotland stand comfy while Padre Thomas Wilde CF leads the service for Lt Allan, LCpl McPherson, and their unknown comrades (Crown Copyright)
Lt Allan left Edinburgh College to hitch the Gordon Highlanders in 1914, when struggle was declared. He joined similtaneously his brother Nimmo, and so they each went to struggle in France.
He was killed on 25 September 1915, the primary day of the Battle of Loos. A pal and fellow officer wrote “Jim’s males thought the world of him” and continued “I’ve gained from his friendship…He could have left this world however solely to go to a freer one…I’ve been strengthened by the considered him, or his presence”.
He was recognized after artefacts discovered with the casualties urged one was an officer, which narrowed their search. The households of the battalion’s 14 lacking officers had been traced and examined, with Lt Allan’s household proving a optimistic match.
LCpl McPherson was working as a tobacconist when he joined the Cameron Highlanders in November 1914 alongside his two brothers and their father. He too was killed on 25 September 1915, a fellow soldier of his machine-gun part, described him as “the life and soul of the part. His imitations of Charles Chaplin had been loved very a lot by his comrades. His favorite music, ‘Trumpeter, what are you sounding now!’, grew to be the preferred music within the part…It was Gordon’s music. We are able to’t sing it now.”
LCpl McPherson was recognized by a small set of buttons from the Newcastle Company Tramway that he had in his pocket on the time of his demise. After learning the 1911 census, the Struggle Detectives found that LCpl McPherson’s father labored for the Tramway so a DNA check was despatched to the following of kin, which got here again optimistic.
All of the troopers buried at this time had been found throughout development work for a brand new hospital on the outskirts of Lens.
The service was organised by the MOD’s Joint Casualty and Compassionate Centre (JCCC), also called the ‘MOD Struggle Detectives’.
Nicola Nash, MOD Struggle Detective stated:
Lt Allan and LCpl McPherson have each been buried at this time 110 years after they had been killed. With half 1,000,000 British servicemen nonetheless lacking from the First World Struggle, each id we make is a big achievement. It has been an actual privilege to provide closure to their households and lay these heros to relaxation with honour.
Nicholas Allan, great-nephew Lt James Allan, stated:
I really feel very moved and honoured by the work of the MOD that it’s honouring this great-uncle of mine who I barely knew existed. I really feel a profound sense that one thing has been accomplished. It speaks to me of all these whose our bodies had been by no means discovered, I really feel we’re finishing one thing for them too.
Alistair McPherson, great-nephew of LCpl Gordan McPherson, stated:
It’s been emotional in a great way, We have now identified Gordon all our lives due to the letters we now have acquired, and it’s simply fantastic to have discovered him. He’s not misplaced.

Lt Laura Donovan presents the flag from LCpl McPherson’s coffin to his great-nephew Alistair (Crown Copyright)
Jeremy Prince, CWGC France Space Director, stated:
We’re deeply honoured by the reburial of eight Scottish troopers, six of whom stay unknown, on the CWGC Loos British Cemetery Extension.
This cemetery, inaugurated only one 12 months in the past by Her Royal Highness The Princess Royal, was established to obtain the stays of troopers lately found (and those that could also be discovered sooner or later) throughout ongoing work and analysis within the area.
The ceremony additionally coincides with the one hundred and tenth anniversary of the Battle of Loos – a poignant reminder of the sacrifices made in the course of the First World Struggle. We’re proud to supply these troopers a last resting place worthy of their braveness and repair. We are going to bear in mind them.