Granville Bradshaw bitterly claimed that his friend Basil Hallam, who was famous for his song "Gilbert the Filbert the Colonel of the Knuts", was de facto killed by
White Feather Campaign women. According to Bradshaw, the two men were walking down
Shaftesbury Avenue after Hallam's show when "we were both surrounded by young, stupid, and screaming girls who stuck white feathers into the lapels of our coats. When we extricated our selves Basil said, 'I shall go and join-up immediately'—he did. I heard a few weeks later that my friend Basil Hallam had joined the para troops (balloon observer) and in his first descent with a parachute it failed to open. He was killed and he died during the afternoon." Hallam died on 20 August 1916, aged 28, while serving as a Captain with a
Kite Balloon Section of the
Royal Flying Corps in France at the
Battle of the Somme. In the afternoon of 20 August 1916 on the Northern part of the Somme battlefield he was crewing a tethered un-powered
observation balloon watching the German line near the village of
Gommecourt, when its steel cable tether snapped, and the balloon, caught in an Easterly wind, began to drift towards enemy lines out of control. To avoid capture, Hallam bailed out of the balloon's basket but he was obstructed from jumping clear, and fell several hundred feet to his death after his emergency parachute failed to deploy. His body was buried at a
British military cemetery at the nearby village of
Couin. ==References==