Background
Dartnell was born in Melbourne, Australia. William Dartnell was born on 6 April 1885 at Collingwood, Melbourne, to Henry Dartnell, an English-born fruiterer, and his Australian wife Rose Ann, née Hanley.
Dartnell was born in Melbourne, Australia. William Dartnell was born on 6 April 1885 at Collingwood, Melbourne, to Henry Dartnell, an English-born fruiterer, and his Australian wife Rose Ann, née Hanley.
After marrying Elizabeth Smyth, he moved to South Africa, where he was living at the outbreak of the He enlisted in the Royal Fusiliers and was shipped to British East Africa. On 3 September 1915, whilst his company were being evacuated, he stayed behind in an attempt to save the lives of the wounded. He was brought up in Melbourne and after leaving school, he became an actor.
At the age of 16 he served in the Second Boer War.
Soon after, they settled at Fitzroy. At the age of 27, Dartnell settled in South Africa.
When the started, he volunteered for service and sailed for England. On 12 February 1915, using the name Wilbur Taylor Dartnell, he joined the 25th (Frontiersmen) Battalion, Royal Fusiliers.
He was promoted to temporary Lieutenant on 25 July 1915.
The regimental history notes of this battalion states that it "included men of various ages and with strange experience from all quarters of the globe". Raised especially for use against German troops in British East Africa, it was the only British unit sent on active service during the war without preliminary training. The Fusiliers reached Mombasa on 4 May and went at once to their military post on the Uganda railway.
Their main task was to protect the railway from enemy raiding parties.
In June, Dartnell retrieved the Imperial Ensign from the local headquarters at Bukoba, the German base for attacks on the Uganda frontier. The regiment were subsequently awarded battle honours for "Bukoba".
Victoria Cross
Shortly after the victory at Bukoba, the battalion moved to Voi in preparation for an allied advance towards German East Africa. Two companies were dispatched by rail to Maktau, a small village in the lee of the Taita Hills.
Thirty-five miles from Voi, it was the railhead of the military railway then under construction towards Taveta.
On 3 September 1915, his mounted infantry patrol was ambushed. On 3 September 1915, near Maktau, Kenya, during a mounted infantry engagement, the enemy were so close that it was impossible to get the more severely wounded away. Lieutenant Dartnell, who was himself being carried away wounded in the leg, seeing the situation, and knowing that the enemy"s black troops murdered the wounded, insisted on being left behind, in the hope of being able to save the lives of other wounded mentor
He gave his own life in a gallant attempt to save others"
Dartnell and eight other European troops were originally buried at Maktau.
After the war they were reburied in the Commonwealth War Grave Cemetery at Voi, 100 miles inland from the port of Mombasa on the East African coast. His headstone with the Venture capital emblem lies to the right of the entrance to the Cemetery.