How did I find your post? Pure coincidence in that I was searching for something else and stumbled across your page and was amazed to see it was hot off the press. There’s always been much confusion between the two monks named Dom Ambrose Agius – first one ended up as Archbishop Agius in Manila, and his nephew, the 2nd Ambrose, was a chaplain on the front line, as you have shown. So being the (London) Agius family archivist and mindful of how the family is being presented on the internet, I googled ‘Ambrose Agius’ to see what pops up and decided to go down several pages to see if there was anything new. On page 6 of the search results I found the reference to Thickets which I immediately recognised as the home of cousin Peter and family, which I had visited many times starting with when I was at Oxford early 70s and would pop out to see the cousins at Hinksey.
Of course, I immediately recognised that your bios of the uncles, text and photos, was pretty much lifted from my family website, which I haven’t got a problem with since I’ve put it all in the public domain, but perhaps you will allow me to direct your readers to the original pages on
About – AGIUS WORLD WAR ONE and then go to ‘brothers and others’ to find more detail. In particular, WW1 enthusiasts will be interested in the almost daily letters home from Arthur to Dollie 1914-1916 that we blogged daily 100 years to the day during the WW1 centenary (mainly for the benefit of a huge number of cousins in England and Malta). Arthur left an amazing archive of letters, documents and maps some of which has been passed to me but the rest makes up a significant resource held by the IWM. He is also referenced widely in Lyn MacDonald’s WW1 books (‘Somme’, ‘Death of Innocence’ etc) . The icing on the cake was that he was mentioned by name at the Somme Centenary Memorial Service at Thiepval 1st July 2016. You say ‘not much is known about Arthur’ after WW1 but in actual fact he was a successful solicitor and favourite uncle to a huge number of nephews and nieces in 3 generations.
I started our family website in 2013 primarily to tell the WW1 story of the 5 brothers and after 3+ years of daily blogs we had a grand family gathering October 2017 to mark the centenary of Uncle Richard being killed at Poelcapelle . 100+ DNA related cousins in 4 generations aged 1 to 82 meeting in Somerset!
Centenary Celebration – AGIUS WORLD WAR ONE To finish off the Edgar WW1 story I met with Martin in 2016 and he passed a significant archive of maps, notebooks etc to me to and that helped me to round off Edgar’s story in suitable fashion. So finally, we come to your page and you will now understand my feelings in discovering this earlier today. Sad to see the state of the house but all such things finally have their day. More distressing to see the bits of WW1 archive that got left behind (but thankful that the major part is safely with me). If the things that you show in your photos have now been lost then I’m thankful that you managed to record them for posterity. Especially the St Denis ID card, the Ed T Agius headed letter sent to J C Agius, my grandfather, the Royal Sussex Regiment document. Particulary sad about the Army Book with the reference to Dick on the front. I have Edgar’s other Army Books and can’t think how this one got separated.
Enough said. I just wanted to make it clear to your readers these men were dearly loved and are still honoured in the family, which may not have been clear from just seeing these sad remains at Thickets.
Just some minor corrections to your added text, if I may. Alfred was Malta Trade Commissioner from 1934 but was in an office in London (that was blitzed in WW2) . All the boys stayed in London for the rest of their lives (apart from Dom Ambrose) and it was just the sisters who married Maltese and emigrated back to Malta. Marcus is one of 6 children of Alfred …. 5 still living. And of the children of Peter …Clare is the owner of Potterton Books in Yorkshire
Potterton Books - International specialists in rare and unusual out of print books and not one of ‘Malta's most famous top TV presenters’ . (Not sure who you’re thinking of there!)