Bob Lillington learned Russian in Omsk and married a local girl named Ludmilla Martinova on 31 August 1919. Bob’s young bride travelled back to Scotland while he was a prisoner of the Bolsheviks and so he did not attend the dinner at the Café Royal because he took a train directly to join his wife in Edinburgh. Eventually, they moved south to Portsmouth where Bob’s father and uncle ran a plumbing business and Bob started work as an accountant at the Royal Dockyard.
I was delighted when his grandson contacted me and described what happened to the family after they settled in Portsmouth. Bob continued to serve in the Hampshire Regiment and was awarded the Territorial Efficiency Medal before the Second World War. Ludmilla was allowed to travel to Lviv in Ukraine to see her mother in 1955. By then, the Lillingtons were living with their sons in Southwood Road, Hayling Island.
Bob was not the only soldier to gain a wife from his time in Siberia as my next post will explain.

The Lillington Plumbing Business in Portsmouth
