Skirth was born in
Chelmsford and grew up in
Bexhill-on-Sea. In the
First World War, having volunteered for the
British Army under the
Derby Scheme, and having requested that the process be expedited, he was called up in October 1916, two months before his 19th birthday. He became a Battery Commander's Assistant in the
Royal Garrison Artillery, responsible for making the calculations necessary to target the large guns of a field battery. When he argued with a superior officer over whether to use a French church for target practice he was demoted in rank from
Corporal to
Bombardier. Skirth saw action in the
Battle of Messines, in which two of his closest friends, Bill and Geordie, were killed. On the same day he had an "epiphany" when he stumbled across the body of a dead German of about his own age, and realised that one of the shells he had targeted might well have killed him. This was to mark a turning point in his thinking about the war as he determined that he was morally responsible for his actions and for their consequences, despite the chain of command. During the
Battle of Passchendaele, Skirth and another friend, Jock Shiels, left their post when they discovered that their commanding officer had ignored an order to withdraw from the front line. Skirth was knocked out by a shell which killed Shiels, and subsequently suffered from
shell-shock and
amnesia. Following a period of convalescence in hospital in France, he was sent to the
Italian Front in December 1917, where his battery was being reorganised. There, following a relapse of shell-shock, he was treated in hospital in
Schio and at the mud spa at
Montegrotto. In Italy, Skirth made a resolution that he would do everything within his power to avoid further loss of human life. He felt that the "just war" he had signed up for was anything but just, and was disillusioned with the army and the conduct of the war. In a church in the Italian village of
San Martino, near
Vicenza, he made a private pact with God that he would never again help to take a human life. He wrote to his future wife, Ella Christian, claiming that he had become a
pacifist and a
conscientious objector. He also began a campaign of small acts of
sabotage, introducing minor errors into his trajectory calculations so as to mistarget the guns, such that they "never once hit an inhabited target" on the first attempt, giving the enemy a chance to evacuate. His actions were never discovered by his superiors. Apparently he carried out this sabotage while still in Italy where he remained until February 1919, aside from a fortnight of leave back in England in November and December 1918. He received the
British War Medal and
Victory Medal for his war service but declined the
Military Medal, which he felt was offered as part of an attempt to whitewash a fatal accident he had tried to prevent. ==Later life==