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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of How Jerusalem Was Won, by W.T. Massey
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: How Jerusalem Was Won
+ Being the Record of Allenby's Campaign in Palestine
+
+Author: W.T. Massey
+
+Release Date: November 16, 2003 [EBook #10098]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HOW JERUSALEM WAS WON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Lazar Liveanu and PG Distributed
+Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+HOW JERUSALEM WAS WON
+
+BEING THE RECORD OF ALLENBY'S CAMPAIGN IN PALESTINE
+
+by
+
+W.T. MASSEY
+
+OFFICIAL CORRESPONDENT OF THE LONDON NEWSPAPERS WITH THE EGYPTIAN
+EXPEDITIONARY FORCE
+
+
+
+
+WITH ILLUSTRATIONS AND MAPS
+
+
+
+
+LONDON 1919
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+This narrative of the work accomplished for civilisation by General
+Allenby's Army is carried only as far as the occupation of Jericho.
+The capture of that ancient town, with the possession of a line of
+rugged hills a dozen miles north of Jerusalem, secured the Holy City
+from any Turkish attempt to retake it. The book, in fact, tells
+the story of the twenty-third fall of Jerusalem, one of the most
+beneficent happenings of all wars, and marking an epoch in the
+wonderful history of the Holy Place which will rank second only to
+that era which saw the birth of Christianity. All that occurred in the
+fighting on the Gaza-Beersheba line was part and parcel of the taking
+of Jerusalem, the freeing of which from four centuries of Turkish
+domination was the object of the first part of the campaign. The Holy
+City was the goal sought by every officer and man in the Army; and
+though from the moment that goal had been attained all energies were
+concentrated upon driving the Turk out of the war, there was not a
+member of the Force, from the highest on the Staff to the humblest
+private in the ranks, who did not feel that Jerusalem was the greatest
+prize of the campaign.
+
+In a second volume I shall tell of that tremendous feat of arms which
+overwhelmed the Turkish Armies, drove them through 400 miles of
+country in six weeks, and gave cavalry an opportunity of proving that,
+despite all the arts and devices of modern warfare, with fighters
+and observers in the air and an entirely new mechanism of war, they
+continued as indispensable a part of an army as when the legions
+of old took the field. This is too long a story to be told in this
+volume, though the details of that magnificent triumph are so firmly
+impressed on the mind that one is loth to leave the narration of them
+to a future date. For the moment Jerusalem must be sufficient, and if
+in the telling of the British work up to that point I can succeed in
+giving an idea of the immense value of General Allenby's Army to the
+Empire, of the soldier's courage and fortitude, of his indomitable
+will and self-sacrifice and patriotism, it will indeed prove the most
+grateful task I have ever set myself.
+
+_April 1919._
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+Chap.
+
+ I. PALESTINE'S INFLUENCE ON THE WAR
+
+ II. OLD BATTLEGROUNDS
+
+ III. DIFFICULTIES OF THE ATTACK
+
+ IV. TRAINING THE ARMY
+
+ V. RAILWAYS, ROADS, AND THE BASE
+
+ VI. PREPARING FOR 'ZERO DAY'
+
+ VII. THE BEERSHEBA VICTORY
+
+ VIII. GAZA DEFENCES
+
+ IX. CRUSHING THE TURKISH LEFT
+
+ X. THROUGH GAZA INTO THE OPEN
+
+ XI. TWO YEOMANRY CHARGES
+
+ XII. LOOKING TOWARDS JERUSALEM
+
+ XIII. INTO THE JUDEAN HILLS
+
+ XIV. THE DELIVERANCE OF THE HOLY CITY
+
+ XV. GENERAL ALLENBY'S OFFICIAL ENTRY
+
+ XVI. MAKING JERUSALEM SECURE
+
+ XVII. A GREAT FEAT OF WAR
+
+ XVIII. BY THE BANKS OF THE JORDAN
+
+ XIX. THE TOUCH OF THE CIVILISING HAND
+
+ XX. OUR CONQUERING AIRMEN
+
+ APPENDICES
+
+ INDEX
+
+
+LIST OF MAPS
+
+
+PLAN OF SOUTHERN PALESTINE
+
+PLAN OF GAZA-BEERSHEBA LINE
+
+PLAN OF THE BETH-HORON COUNTRY
+
+PLAN OF THE BATTLE OF JERUSALEM
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+OFFICIAL ENTRY INTO THE HOLY CITY. GENERAL ALLENBY RECEIVED BY THE
+MILITARY GOVERNOR OP JERUSALEM, DECEMBER 11, 1917
+
+KANTARA TERMINUS OF THE DESERT MILITARY RAILWAY
+
+EAST FORCE H.Q. DUG-OUTS NEAR GAZA
+
+WADI GHUZZE NEAR SHELLAL
+
+OUR WATERWORKS AT SHELLAL
+
+ON THE MOVE IN THE DESERT
+
+THE GREAT MOSQUE AT GAZA
+
+TURKISH HEADQUARTERS AT GAZA. Note the Crusader Lion in Wall.
+
+A DESERT MOTOR ROAD NEAR SHELLAL
+
+TURKISH DUG-OUTS AT GAZA
+
+BEERSHEBA RAILWAY STATION WITH MINED ROLLING STOCK
+
+LIEUT.-GEN. SIR HARRY CHAUVEL OUTSIDE BEERSHEBA MOSQUE, NOVEMBER 1,
+1917
+
+EL MUGHAR. THE SCENE OF A YEOMANRY CHARGE
+
+BURIAL-PLACE OF ST. GEORGE, PATRON SAINT OF ENGLAND (AT LUDD)
+
+YEOMANRY GRAVES AT BETH-HORON THE UPPER, WHERE JOSHUA COMMANDED
+THE SUN TO REMAIN STILL TO ENABLE THE ISRAELITES TO OVERTHROW THE
+PHILISTINES
+
+IN THE JUDEAN HILLS
+
+A ROMAN CENTURION'S TOMB, KURYET EL ENAB
+
+ONE OF KING SOLOMON'S POOLS
+
+A TYPICAL NEW ZEALANDER
+
+WADI SURAR, CROSSED BY LONDON TERRITORIALS ON THE MORNING OF THEIR
+ASSAULT ON THE JERUSALEM DEFENCES
+
+THE DEIR YESIN POSITION WEST OF JERUSALEM
+
+EASTERN FACE OF NEBI SAMWIL MOSQUE, SHOWING DESTRUCTION BY TURKISH
+SHELL-FIRE
+
+OFFICIAL ENTRY INTO THE HOLY CITY. GENERAL ALLENBY ARRIVING OUTSIDE
+THE JAFFA GATE
+
+OFFICIAL ENTRY. GENERAL ALLENBY RECEIVING THE MAYOR OF JERUSALEM (A
+DESCENDANT OF MAHOMET)
+
+JERUSALEM FROM MOUNT OF OLIVES
+
+JERUSALEM FROM GARDEN OF GETHSEMANE
+
+PANEL IN THE CHAPEL OF THE KAISERIN AUGUSTA VICTORIA HOSPICE ON THE
+MOUNT OF OLIVES
+
+BETHLEHEM
+
+CHURCH OF THE NATIVITY, BETHLEHEM
+
+AIN KARIM, PART OF THE JERUSALEM DEFENCES
+
+RIVER AUJA, CROSSED AT NIGHT BY LOWLAND TERRITORIALS
+
+JERISHEH MILL, RIVER AUJA, ONE OF THE LOWLANDERS' CROSSINGS
+
+BARREL BRIDGE OVER THE RIVER AUJA
+
+DESTROYED BRIDGE ON THE JERICHO ROAD
+
+THE WILDERNESS, WITH A GLIMPSE OF THE DEAD SEA
+
+LONDONERS' BRIDGE OVER THE JORDAN. THE RIVER IS IN FLOOD
+
+GERMAN PRISONERS CROSSING THE JORDAN
+
+NEW ZEALAND MOUNTED RIFLES AT BETHLEHEM
+
+A HAIRPIN BEND ON THE JERUSALEM ROAD
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+PALESTINE'S INFLUENCE ON THE WAR
+
+
+In a war which involved the peoples of the four quarters of the globe
+it was to be expected that on the world's oldest battleground would
+be renewed the scenes of conflict of bygone ages. There was perhaps a
+desire of some elements of both sides, certainly it was the unanimous
+wish of the Allies, to avoid the clash of arms in Palestine, and to
+leave untouched by armies a land held in reverence by three of the
+great religions of the world. But this ancient cockpit of warring
+races could not escape. The will of those who broke the peace
+prevailed. Germany's dream of Eastern Empires and world domination,
+the lust of conquest of the Kaiser party, required that the tide of
+war should once more surge across the land, and if the conquering
+hosts left fewer traces of war wreckage than were to be expected in
+their victorious march, it was due not to any anxiety of our foes
+to avoid conflict about, and damage to, places with hallowed
+associations, but to the masterly strategy of the British
+Commander-in-Chief who manoeuvred the Turkish Armies out of positions
+defending the sacred sites.
+
+The people of to-day who have lived through the war, who have had
+their view bewildered by ever-recurring anxieties, by hopes shattered
+and fears realised, by a succession of victories and defeats on a
+colossal scale, and by a sudden collapse of the enemy, may fail to see
+the Palestine campaign in true perspective. But in a future generation
+the calm judgment of the historian in reviewing the greatest of all
+wars will, if I mistake not, pay a great tribute to General Allenby's
+strategy, not only as marking the commencement of the enemy's
+downfall, but as preserving from the scourge of war those holy places
+which symbolise the example by which most people rule their lives.
+Britons who value the good name of their country will appreciate what
+this means to those who shall come after us--that the record of a
+great campaign carried out exclusively by British Imperial troops was
+unsullied by a single act to disturb the sacred monuments, and left
+the land in the full possession of those rich treasures which stand
+for the principles that guided our actions and which, if posterity
+observes them, will make a better and happier world.
+
+A few months after the Turks entered the war it was obvious that
+unaided they could never realise the Kaiser's hope of cutting the Suez
+Canal communications of the British Empire. The German commitments in
+Europe were too overwhelming to permit of their rendering the Turks
+adequate support for a renewed effort against Egypt after the failure
+of the attack on the Canal in February 1915. There was an attempt
+by the Turks in August 1916, but it was crushed by Anzac horse and
+British infantry at Romani,[1] a score of miles from Port Said, and
+thereafter the Turks in this theatre were on the defensive. Some
+declare the Dardanelles enterprise to have been a mistake; others
+believe that had we not threatened the Turks there Egypt would
+have had to share with us the anxieties that war brings alike upon
+attackers and defenders. Gallipoli and Mesopotamia, however we regard
+those expeditions in the first years of the struggle, undoubtedly
+prevented the Turks employing a large army against Egypt, and the
+possibilities resulting from a defeat there were so full of danger to
+us, not merely in that half-way house of the Empire but in India and
+the East generally, that if Gallipoli served to avert the disaster
+that ill-starred expedition was worth undertaking. We had to drive
+the Turks out of the Sinai Peninsula--Egyptian territory--and, that
+accomplished, an attack on the Turks through Palestine was imperative
+since the Russian collapse released a large body of Turkish troops
+from the Caucasus who would otherwise be employed in Mesopotamia.
+
+[Footnote 1: _The Desert Campaigns_: London, Constable and Co., Ltd.]
+
+When General Allenby took over the command of the Egyptian
+Expeditionary Force the British public as a whole did not fully
+realise the importance of the Palestine campaign. Most of them
+regarded it as a 'side show,' and looked upon it as one of those minor
+fields of operations which dissipated our strength at a time when it
+was imperative we should concentrate to resist the German effort on
+the Western Front. They did not know the facts. In our far-flung
+Empire it was essential that we should maintain our prestige among
+the races we governed, some of them martial peoples who might remain
+faithful to the British flag only so long as we could impress them
+with our power to win the war. They were more influenced by a triumph
+in Mesopotamia, which was nearer their doors, than by a victory in
+France, and the occupation of Bagdad was a victory of greater import
+to the King's Indian subjects than the German retirement from the
+Hindenburg line. If there ever was a fear of serious trouble in India
+the advance of General Maude in Mesopotamia dispelled it, and made it
+easier not only to release a portion of our white garrison in India
+for active service elsewhere, but to recruit a large force of Indians
+for the Empire's work in other climes. Bagdad was a tremendous blow to
+German ambitions. The loss of it spelt ruin to those hopes of Eastern
+conquest which had prompted the German intrigues in Turkey, and it was
+certain that the Kaiser, so long as he believed in ultimate victory,
+would refuse to accept the loss of Bagdad as final. Russia's
+withdrawal as a belligerent released a large body of Turkish troops
+in the Caucasus, and set free many Germans, particularly 'technical
+troops' of which the Turks stood in need, for other fronts. It was
+then that the German High Command conceived a scheme for retaking
+Bagdad, and the redoubtable von Falkenhayn was sent to Constantinople
+charged with the preparations for the undertaking. Certain it is that
+it would have been put into execution but for the situation created by
+the presence of a large British Army in the Sinai Peninsula. A large
+force was collected about Aleppo for a march down the Euphrates
+valley, and the winter of 1917-18 would have witnessed a stern
+struggle for supremacy in Mesopotamia if the War Cabinet had not
+decided to force the Turks to accept battle where they least wanted
+it.
+
+The views of the British War Cabinet on the war in the East, at any
+rate, were sound and solid. They concentrated on one big campaign,
+and, profiting from past mistakes which led to a wastage of strength,
+allowed all the weight they could spare to be thrown into the Egyptian
+Expeditionary Force under a General who had proved his high military
+capacity in France, and in whom all ranks had complete confidence, and
+they permitted the Mesopotamian and Salonika Armies to contain the
+enemies on their fronts while the Army in Palestine set out to crush
+the Turks at what proved to be their most vital point. As to whether
+the force available on our Mesopotamia front was capable of defeating
+the German scheme I cannot offer an opinion, but it is beyond all
+question that the conduct of operations in Palestine on a plan at once
+bold, resolute, and worthy of a high place in military history saved
+the Empire much anxiety over our position in the Tigris and Euphrates
+valleys, and probably prevented unrest on the frontiers of India and
+in India itself, where mischief makers were actively working in the
+German cause. Nor can there be any doubt that the brilliant campaign
+in Palestine prevented British and French influence declining among
+the Mahomedan populations of those countries' respective spheres of
+control in Africa. Indeed I regard it as incontrovertible that the
+Palestine strategy of General Allenby, even apart from his stupendous
+rush through Syria in the autumn of the last year of war, did as much
+to end the war in 1918 as the great battles on the Western Front,
+for if there had been failure or check in Palestine some British and
+French troops in France might have had to be detached to other fronts,
+and the Germans' effort in the Spring might have pushed their line
+farther towards the Channel and Paris. If Bagdad was not actually
+saved in Palestine, an expedition against it was certainly stopped by
+our Army operating on the old battlegrounds in Palestine. We lost many
+lives, and it cost us a vast amount of money, but the sacrifices
+of brave men contributed to the saving of the world from German
+domination; and high as the British name stood in the East as the
+upholder of the freedom of peoples, the fame of Britain for justice,
+fair dealing, and honesty is wider and more firmly established to-day
+because the people have seen it emerge triumphantly from a supreme
+test.
+
+In the strategy of the world war we made, no doubt, many mistakes, but
+in Palestine the strategy was of the best, and in the working out of a
+far-seeing scheme, victories so influenced events that on this front
+began the final phase of the war--once Turkey was beaten, Bulgaria and
+Austria-Hungary submitted and Germany acknowledged the inevitable.
+Falkenhayn saw that the Bagdad undertaking was impossible so long as
+we were dangerous on the Palestine front, and General Allenby's attack
+on the Gaza line wiped the Bagdad enterprise out of the list of German
+ambitions. The plan of battle on the Gaza-Beersheba line resembled
+in miniature the ending of the war. If we take Beersheba for Turkey,
+Sheria and Hareira for Bulgaria and Austria, and Gaza for Germany,
+we get the exact progress of events in the final stage, except that
+Bulgaria's submission was an intelligent anticipation of the laying
+down of their arms by the Turks. Gaza-Beersheba was a rolling up from
+our right to left; so was the ending of the Hun alliance.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+OLD BATTLEGROUNDS
+
+
+It was in accordance with the fitness of things that the British Army
+should fight and conquer on the very spots consecrated by the memories
+of the most famous battles of old. From Gaza onwards we made our
+progress by the most ancient road on earth, for this way moved
+commerce between the Euphrates and the Nile many centuries before the
+East knew West. We fought on fields which had been the battlegrounds
+of Egyptian and Assyrian armies, where Hittites, Ethiopians, Persians,
+Parthians, and Mongols poured out their blood in times when kingdoms
+were strong by the sword alone. The Ptolemies invaded Syria by this
+way, and here the Greeks put their colonising hands on the country.
+Alexander the Great made this his route to Egypt. Pompey marched over
+the Maritime Plain and inaugurated that Roman rule which lasted for
+centuries; till Islam made its wide irresistible sweep in the seventh
+century. Then the Crusaders fought and won and lost, and Napoleon's
+ambitions in the East were wrecked just beyond the plains.
+
+Up the Maritime Plain we battled at Gaza, every yard of which had
+been contested by the armies of mighty kings in the past thirty-five
+centuries, at Akir, Gezer, Lydda, and around Joppa. All down the ages
+armies have moved in victory or flight over this plain, and General
+Allenby in his advance was but repeating history. And when the
+Turks had been driven beyond the Plain of Philistia, and the
+Commander-in-Chief had to decide how to take Jerusalem, we saw the
+British force move along precisely the same route that has been taken
+by armies since the time when Joshua overcame the Amorites and the day
+was lengthened by the sun and moon standing still till the battle
+was won. Geography had its influence on the strategy of to-day as
+completely as it did when armies were not cumbered with guns and
+mechanical transport. Of the few passes from the Maritime Plain over
+the Shephelah into the Judean range only that emerging from the green
+Vale of Ajalon was possible, if we were to take Jerusalem, as the
+great captains of old took it, from the north. The Syrians sometimes
+chose this road in preference to advancing through Samaria, the Romans
+suffered retreat on it, Richard Coeur de Lion made it the path for his
+approach towards the Holy City, and, precisely as in Joshua's day and
+as when in the first century the Romans fell victims to a tremendous
+Jewish onslaught, the fighting was hardest about the Beth-horons, but
+with a different result--the invaders were victorious. The corps which
+actually took Jerusalem advanced up the new road from Latron through
+Kuryet el Enab, identified by some as Kirjath-jearim where the
+Philistines returned the Ark, but that road would have been denied to
+us if we had not made good the ancient path from the Vale of Ajalon to
+Gibeon. Jerusalem was won by the fighting at the Beth-horons as
+surely as it was on the line of hills above the wadi Surar which
+the Londoners carried. There was fighting at Gibeon, at Michmas, at
+Beeroth, at Ai, and numerous other places made familiar to us by the
+Old Testament, and assuredly no army went forth to battle on more
+hallowed soil.
+
+Of all the armies which earned a place in history in Palestine,
+General Allenby's was the greatest--the greatest in size, in
+equipment, in quality, in fighting power, and not even the invading
+armies in the romantic days of the Crusades could equal it in
+chivalry. It fought the strong fight with clean hands throughout, and
+finished without a blemish on its conduct. It was the best of all the
+conquering armies seen in the Holy Land as well as the greatest.
+Will not the influence of this Army endure? I think so. There is an
+awakening in Palestine, not merely of Christians and Jews, but of
+Moslems, too, in a less degree. During the last thirty years there
+have grown more signs of the deep faiths of peoples and of their
+veneration of this land of sacred history. If their institutions and
+missions could develop and shed light over Palestine even while the
+slothful and corrupt Turk ruled the land, how much faster and more in
+keeping with the sanctity of the country will the improvement be under
+British protection? The graves of our soldiers dotted over desert
+wastes and cornfields, on barren hills and in fertile valleys, ay, and
+on the Mount of Olives where the Saviour trod, will mark an era more
+truly grand and inspiring, and offer a far greater lesson to future
+generations than the Crusades or any other invasion down the track of
+time. The Army of General Allenby responded to the happy thought of
+the Commander-in-Chief and contributed one day's pay for the erection
+of a memorial near Jerusalem in honour of its heroic dead. Apart from
+the holy sites, no other memorial will be revered so much, and future
+pilgrims, to whatever faith they belong, will look upon it as a
+monument to men who went to battle to bring lasting peace to a land
+from which the Word of Peace and Goodwill went forth to mankind.
+
+In selecting General Sir Edmund Allenby as the Palestine Army's chief
+the War Cabinet made a happy choice. General Sir Archibald Murray
+was recalled to take up an important command at home after the two
+unsuccessful attempts to drive the Turks from the Gaza defences. The
+troops at General Murray's disposal were not strong enough to take
+the offensive again, and it was clear there must be a long period of
+preparation for an attack on a large scale. General Allenby brought to
+the East a lengthy experience of fighting on the Western Front, where
+his deliberate methods of attack, notably at Arras, had given the
+Allies victories over the cleverest and bravest of our enemies.
+Palestine was likely to be a cavalry, as well as an infantry,
+campaign, or at any rate the theatre of war in which the mounted arm
+could be employed with the most fruitful of results. General Allenby's
+achievements as a cavalry leader in the early days of the war marked
+him as the one officer of high rank suited for the Palestine command,
+and his proved capacity as a General both in open and in trench
+warfare gave the Army that high degree of confidence in its
+Commander-in-Chief which it is so necessary that a big fighting force
+should possess. A tremendously hard worker himself, General Allenby
+expected all under him to concentrate the whole of their energies
+on their work. He had the faculty for getting the best out of his
+officers, and on his Staff were some of the most enthusiastic soldiers
+in the service. There was no room for an inefficient leader in any
+branch of the force, and the knowledge that the Commander-in-Chief
+valued the lives and the health of his men so highly that he would not
+risk a failure, kept all the staffs tuned up to concert pitch. We
+saw many changes, and the best men came to the top. His own vigour
+infected the whole command, and within a short while of arriving at
+the front the efficiency of the Army was considerably increased.
+
+The Palestine G.H.Q. was probably nearer the battle front than any
+G.H.Q. in other theatres of operations, and when the Army had broken
+through and chased the enemy beyond the Jaffa-Jerusalem line, G.H.Q.
+was opened at Bir Salem, near Ramleh, and for several months was
+actually within reach of the long-range guns which the Turks
+possessed. The rank and file were not slow to appreciate this. They
+knew their Commander-in-Chief was on the spot, keeping his eye and
+hand on everything, organising with his organisers, planning with
+his operation staff, familiar with every detail of the complicated
+transport system, watching his supply services with the keenness of a
+quartermaster-general, and taking that lively interest in the medical
+branch which betrayed an anxious desire for the welfare and health of
+the men. The rank and file knew something more than this. They saw the
+Commander-in-Chief at the front every day. General Allenby did not
+rely solely on reports from his corps. He went to each section of the
+line himself, and before practically every major operation he saw the
+ground and examined the scheme for attack. There was not a part of the
+line he did not know, and no one will contradict me when I say that
+the military roads in Palestine were known by no one better than the
+driver of the Commander-in-Chief's car. A man of few words, General
+Allenby always said what he meant with soldierly directness, which
+made the thanks he gave a rich reward. A good piece of work brought a
+written or oral message of thanks, and the men were satisfied they
+had done well to deserve congratulations. They were proud to have the
+confidence of such a Chief and to deserve it, and they in their turn
+had such unbounded faith in the military judgment of the General and
+in the care he took to prevent unnecessary risk of life, that there
+was nothing which he sanctioned that they would not attempt. Such
+mutual confidence breeds strength, and it was the Commander-in-Chief's
+example, his tact, energy, and military genius which made his Army a
+potent power for Britain and a strong pillar of the Allies' cause.
+
+Let it not be imagined that General Allenby in his victorious campaign
+shone only as a great soldier. He was also a great administrator. In
+England little was known about this part of the General's work, and
+owing to the difficulties of the task and to the consideration which
+had, and still has, to be shown to the susceptibilities of a number of
+friendly nations and peoples, it may be long before the full story of
+the administration of the occupied territory in Palestine is unfolded
+for general appreciation. It is a good story, worthy of Britain's
+record as a protector of peoples, and though from the nature of his
+conquest over the Turks in the Bible country the name of General
+Allenby will adorn the pages of history principally as a victor, it
+will also stand before the governments of states as setting a model
+for a wise, prudent, considerate, even benevolent, administration of
+occupied enemy territory. In days when Powers driven mad by military
+ambition tear up treaties as scraps of paper, General Allenby observed
+the spirit as well as the letter of the Hague Convention, and found
+it possible to apply to occupied territory the principles of
+administration as laid down in the Manual of Military Law.
+
+The natives marvelled at the change. In place of insecurity,
+extortion, bribery and corruption, levies on labour and property and
+all the evils of Turkish government, General Allenby gave the country
+behind the front line peace, justice, fair treatment of every race and
+creed, and a firm and equitable administration of the law. Every man's
+house became his castle. Taxes were readily paid, the tax gatherers
+were honest servants, and, none of the revenue going to keep fat
+pashas in luxury in Constantinople, there came a prospect of
+expenditure and revenue balancing after much money had been usefully
+spent on local government. Until the signing of peace international
+law provided that Turkish laws should apply. These, properly
+administered, as they never were by the Turks, gave a basis of good
+government, and, with the old abuses connected with the collection
+of revenue removed, and certain increased taxation and customs dues
+imposed by the Turks during the war discontinued, the people resumed
+the arts of peace and enjoyed a degree of prosperity none of them had
+ever anticipated. What the future government of Palestine may be is
+uncertain at the time of writing. There is talk of international
+control--we seem ever ready to lose at the conference table what a
+valiant sword has gained for us--but the careful and perfectly correct
+administration of General Allenby will save us from the criticism of
+many jealous foreigners. Certainly it will bear examination by any
+impartial investigator, but the best of all tributes that could be
+paid to it is that it satisfied religious communities which did not
+live in perfect harmony with one another and the inhabitants of a
+country which shelters the people of many different races.
+
+The Yilderim undertaking, as the Bagdad scheme was described, did not
+meet with the full acceptance of the Turks. The 'mighty Jemal', as the
+Germans sneeringly called the Commander of the Syrian Army, opposed it
+as weakening his prospects, and even Enver, the ambitious creature and
+tool of Germany, postponed his approval. It would seem the taking over
+of the command of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force by General Allenby
+set the Turks thinking, and made the German Military Mission in
+Constantinople reconsider their plans, not with a view to a complete
+abandonment of the proposal to advance on Bagdad, as would have been
+wise, but in order to see how few of the Yilderim troops they could
+allot to Jemal's army to make safe the Sinai front. There was an
+all-important meeting of Turkish Generals in the latter half of
+August, and Jemal stood to his guns. Von Falkenhayn could not get
+him to abate one item of his demands, and there can be no doubt that
+Falkenhayn, obsessed though he was with the importance of getting
+Bagdad, could see that Jemal was right. He admitted that the Yilderim
+operation was only practicable if it had freedom for retirement
+through the removal of the danger on the Palestine front. With that
+end in view he advocated that the British should be attacked, and
+suggested that two divisions and the 'Asia Corps' should be sent from
+Aleppo to move round our right. Jemal was in favour of defensive
+action; Enver procrastinated and proposed sending one division to
+strengthen the IVth Army on the Gaza front and to proceed with the
+Bagdad preparations. The wait-and-see policy prevailed, but long
+before we exerted our full strength Bagdad was out of the danger zone.
+General Allenby's force was so disposed that any suggestion of
+the Yilderim operation being put into execution was ruled out of
+consideration.
+
+Several documents captured at Yilderim headquarters at Nazareth in
+September 1918, when General Allenby made his big drive through Syria,
+show very clearly how our Palestine operations changed the whole of
+the German plans, and reading between the lines one can realise how
+the impatience of the Germans was increasing Turkish stubbornness
+and creating friction and ill-feeling. The German military character
+brooks no opposition; the Turks like to postpone till to-morrow what
+should be done to-day. The latter were cocksure after their two
+successes at Gaza they could hold us up; the Germans believed that
+with an offensive against us they would hold us in check till the wet
+season arrived.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: See Appendices I., II., and III.]
+
+Down to the south the Turks had to bring their divisions. Their line
+of communications was very bad. There was a railway from Aleppo
+through Rayak to Damascus, and onwards through Deraa (on the Hedjaz
+line) to Afule, Messudieh, Tul Keram, Ramleh, Junction Station to Beit
+Hanun, on the Gaza sector, and through Et Tineh to Beersheba. Rolling
+stock was short and fuel was scarce, and the enemy had short rations.
+When we advanced through Syria in the autumn of 1918 our transport was
+nobly served by motor-lorry columns which performed marvels in getting
+up supplies over the worst of roads. But as we went ahead we, having
+command of the sea, landed stores all the way up the coast, and unless
+the Navy had lent its helping hand we should never have got to Aleppo
+before the Turk cried 'Enough.' Every ounce of the Turks' supplies had
+to be hauled over land. They managed to put ten infantry divisions and
+one cavalry division against us in the first three weeks, but they
+were not comparable in strength to our seven infantry divisions and
+three cavalry divisions. In rifle strength we outnumbered them by two
+to one, but if the enemy had been well led and properly rationed he,
+being on the defensive and having strong prepared positions, should
+have had the power to resist us more strongly. The Turkish divisions
+we attacked were: 3rd, 7th, 16th, 19th, 20th, 24th, 26th, 27th, 53rd,
+and 54th, and the 3rd Cavalry Division. The latter avoided battle, but
+all the infantry divisions had heavy casualties. That the moral of the
+Turkish Army was not high may be gathered from a very illuminating
+letter written by General Kress von Kressenstein, the G.O.C. of the
+Sinai front, to Yilderim headquarters on September 29, 1917.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: See Appendix IV.]
+
+The troops who won Palestine and made it happier than it had been for
+four centuries were exclusively soldiers of the British Empire.
+There was a French detachment and an Italian detachment with General
+Allenby's Army. The Italians for a short period held a small portion
+of the line in the Gaza sector, but did not advance with our force;
+the French detachment were solely employed as garrison troops. The
+French battleship _Requin_ and two French destroyers cooperated with
+the ships of the Royal Navy in the bombardment of the coast. Our Army
+was truly representative of the Empire, and the units composing it
+gave an abiding example that in unity rested our strength. From over
+the Seven Seas the Empire's sons came to illustrate the unanimity
+of all the King's subjects in the prosecution of the war. English,
+Scottish, Irish, and Welsh divisions of good men and true fought side
+by side with soldiers of varying Indian races and castes. Australia's
+valiant sons constituted many brigades of horse and, with New Zealand
+mounted regiments, became the most hardened campaigners in the
+Egyptian and Palestine theatre of operations. Their powerful support
+in the day of anxiety and trial, as well as in the time of triumph,
+will be remembered with gratitude. South Africa contributed good
+gunners; our dark-skinned brethren in the West Indies furnished
+infantry who, when the fierce summer heat made the air in the Jordan
+Valley like a draught from a furnace, had a bayonet charge which
+aroused an Anzac brigade to enthusiasm (and Colonial free men can
+estimate bravery at its true value). From far-away Hong Kong and
+Singapore came mountain gunners equal to any in the world, Kroomen
+sent from their homes in West Africa surf boatmen to land stores,
+Raratongas from the Southern Pacific vied with them in boat craft and
+beat them in physique, while Egypt contributed a labour corps and
+transport corps running a long way into six figures. The communion of
+the representatives of the Mother and Daughter nations on the stern
+field of war brought together people with the same ideals, and if
+there are any minor jealousies between them the brotherhood of arms
+will make the soldiers returning to their homes in all quarters of the
+globe the best of missionaries to spread the Imperial idea. Instead of
+wrecking the British Empire the German-made war should rebuild it
+on the soundest of foundations, affection, mutual trust, and common
+interest.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+DIFFICULTIES OF THE ATTACK
+
+
+General Allenby's first problem was of vital consequence. He had to
+pierce the Gaza line. Before his arrival there had been, as already
+stated, two attempts which failed. A third failure, or even a
+check, might have spelt disaster for us in the East. The Turks held
+commanding positions, which they strengthened and fortified under the
+direction of German engineers until their country, between the sea and
+Beersheba, became a chain of land works of high military value, well
+adapted for defence, and covering almost every line of approach.
+The Turk at the Dardanelles had shown no loss of that quality of
+doggedness in defence which characterised him in Plevna, and though we
+know his commanders still cherished the hope of successfully attacking
+us before we could attempt to crush his line, it was on his system of
+defence that the enemy mainly relied to break the power of the British
+force. On arriving in Egypt General Allenby was given an appreciation
+of the situation written by Lieut.-General Sir Philip Chetwode, who
+had commanded the Desert Column in various stages across the sands of
+Sinai, was responsible for forcing the Turks to evacuate El Arish,
+arranged the dash on Magdaba by General Sir Harry Chauvel's mounted
+troops, and fought the brilliant little battle of Rafa. This
+appreciation of the position was the work of a master military mind,
+taking a broad comprehensive view of the whole military situation in
+the East, Palestine's position in the world war, the strategical and
+tactical problems to be faced, and, without making any exorbitant
+demands for troops which would lessen the Allies' powers in other
+theatres, set out the minimum necessities for the Palestine force.
+General Allenby gave the fullest consideration to this document, and
+after he had made as complete an examination of the front as any
+Commander-in-Chief ever undertook--the General was in one or other
+sector with his troops almost every day for four months--General
+Chetwode's plan was adopted, and full credit was given to his
+prescience in General Allenby's despatch covering the operations up to
+the fall of Jerusalem.
+
+It was General Chetwode's view at the time of writing his
+appreciation, that both the British and Turkish Armies were
+strategically on the defensive. The forces were nearly equal in
+numbers, though we were slightly superior in artillery, but we had no
+advantage sufficient to enable us to attack a well-entrenched enemy
+who only offered us a flank on which we could not operate owing to
+lack of water and the extreme difficulty of supply. General Chetwode
+thought it was possible the enemy might make an offensive against
+us--we have since learned he had such designs--but he gave weighty
+reasons against the Turk embarking upon a campaign conducted with
+a view to throwing us beyond the Egyptian frontier into the desert
+again. If the enemy contemplated even minor operations in the Sinai
+Desert he had not the means of undertaking them. We should be retiring
+on positions we had prepared, for, during his advance across the
+desert, General Chetwode had always taken the precaution of having his
+force dug in against the unlikely event of a Turkish attack. Every
+step we went back would make our supply easier, and there was no water
+difficulty, the pipe line, then 130 miles long, which carried the
+purified waters of the Nile to the amount of hundreds of thousands
+of gallons daily, being always available for our troops. It would be
+necessary for the Turks to repair the Beersheba-Auja railway. They
+had lifted some of the rails for use north of Gaza, and a raid we had
+carried out showed that we could stop this railway being put into a
+state of preparedness for military traffic. An attack which aimed at
+again threatening the Suez Canal was therefore ruled as outside the
+range of possibilities.
+
+On the other hand, now that the Russian collapse had relieved the Turk
+of his anxieties in the Caucasus and permitted him to concentrate his
+attention on the Mesopotamian and Palestine fronts, what hope had he
+of resisting our attack when we should be in a position to launch it?
+The enemy had a single narrow-gauge railway line connecting with the
+Jaffa-Jerusalem railway at Junction Station about six miles south-east
+of Ramleh. This line ran to Beersheba, and there was a spur line
+running past Deir Sineid to Beit Hanun from which the Gaza position
+was supplied. There was a shortage of rolling stock and, there being
+no coal for the engines, whole olive orchards had been hacked down to
+provide fuel. The Hebron road, which could keep Beersheba supplied if
+the railway was cut, was in good order, but in other parts there were
+no roads at all, except several miles of badly metalled track from
+Junction Station to Julis. We could not keep many troops with such
+ill-conditioned communications, but Turkish soldiers require far less
+supplies than European troops, and the enemy had done such remarkable
+things in surmounting supply difficulties that he was given credit for
+being able to support between sixty and seventy battalions in the line
+and reserve, with an artillery somewhat weaker than our own.
+
+If we made another frontal attack at Gaza we should find ourselves up
+against a desperately strong defensive system, but even supposing we
+got through it we should come to another halt in a few miles, as
+the enemy had selected, and in most cases had prepared, a number of
+positions right up to the Jaffa-Jerusalem road, where he would be in
+a land of comparative plenty, with his supply and transport troubles
+very considerably reduced. No one could doubt that the Turks intended
+to defend Jerusalem to the last, not only because of the moral effect
+its capture would have on the peoples of the world, but because its
+possession by us would threaten their enterprise in the Hedjaz, and
+the enormous amount of work we afterwards found they had done on the
+Judean hills proved that they were determined to do all in their
+power to prevent our driving them from the Holy City. The enemy, too,
+imagined that our progress could not exceed the rate at which our
+standard gauge railway could be built. Water-borne supplies were
+limited as to quantity, and during the winter the landing of supplies
+on an open beach was hazardous. In the coastal belt there were no
+roads, and the wide fringe of sand which has accumulated for centuries
+and still encroaches on the Maritime Plain can only be crossed by
+camels. Wells are few and yield but small volumes of water. With the
+transport allotted to the force in the middle of 1917 it was not
+possible to maintain more than one infantry division at a distance of
+twenty to twenty-five miles beyond railhead, and this could only be
+done by allotting to them all the camels and wheels of other divisions
+and rendering these immobile. This was insufficient to keep the enemy
+on the move after a tactical success, and he would have ample time to
+reorganise.
+
+General Chetwode held that careful preliminary arrangements, suitable
+and elastic organisation of transport, the collection of material at
+railhead, the training of platelaying gangs provided by the troops,
+the utilisation of the earthwork of the enemy's line for our own
+railway, luck as regards the weather and the fullest use of sea
+transport, should enable us to give the enemy less breathing time than
+appeared possible on paper. It was beyond hope, however, whatever
+preparations were made, that we should be able to pursue at a speed
+approaching that which the river made possible in Mesopotamia. General
+Chetwode considered it would be fatal to attempt an offensive with
+forces which might permit us to attack and occupy the enemy's Gaza
+line but which would be insufficient to inflict upon him a really
+severe blow, and to follow up that blow with sufficient troops. No
+less than seven infantry divisions at full strength and three cavalry
+divisions would be adequate for the purpose, and they would be
+none too many. Further, if the Turks began to press severely in
+Mesopotamia, or even to revive their campaign in the Hedjaz, a
+premature offensive might be necessitated on our part in Palestine.
+
+The suggestion made by General Chetwode for General Allenby's
+consideration was that the enemy should be led to believe we intended
+to attack him in front of Gaza, and that we should pin him down to
+his defences in the centre, while the real attack should begin on
+Beersheba and continue at Hareira and Sheria, and so force the enemy
+by manoeuvre to abandon Gaza. That plan General Allenby adopted after
+seeing all the ground, and the events of the last day of October and
+the first week of November supported General Chetwode's predictions to
+the letter. Indeed it would be hard to find a parallel in history for
+such another complete and absolute justification of a plan drawn up
+several months previously, and it is doubtful if, supposing the Turks
+had succeeded in doing what their German advisers advocated, namely
+forestalling our blow by a vigorous attack on our positions, there
+would have been any material alteration in the working out of the
+scheme. The staff work of General Headquarters and of the staffs of
+the three corps proved wholly sound. Each department gave of its best,
+and from the moment when Beersheba was taken in a day and we secured
+its water supply, there was never a doubt that the enemy could be kept
+on the move until we got into the rough rocky hills about Jerusalem.
+And by that time, as events proved, his moral had had such a
+tremendous shaking that he never again made the most of his many
+opportunities.
+
+The soundness of the plan can quite easily be made apparent to the
+unmilitary eye. Yet the Turk was absolutely deceived as to General
+Allenby's intentions. If it be conceded that to deceive the enemy is
+one of the greatest accomplishments in the soldier's art, it must be
+admitted that the battle of Gaza showed General Allenby's consummate
+generalship, just as it was proved again, and perhaps to an even
+greater extent, in the wonderful days of September 1918, in Northern
+Palestine and Syria. A glance at the map of the Gaza-Beersheba line
+and the country immediately behind it will show that if a successful
+attack were delivered against Gaza the enemy could withdraw his whole
+line to a second and supporting position where we should have to begin
+afresh upon an almost similar operation. The Turk would still have his
+water and would be slightly nearer his supplies.
+
+Since the two unsuccessful attacks in March and April, Gaza had been
+put into a powerful state of defence. The houses of the town are
+mostly on a ridge, and enclosing the place is a mass of gardens fully
+a mile deep, each surrounded by high cactus hedges affording complete
+cover and quite impossible for infantry to penetrate. To reduce
+Gaza would require a prolonged artillery bombardment with far more
+batteries than General Allenby could ever expect to have at his
+command, and it is certain that not only would the line in front of
+the town have had to be taken, but also the whole of the western end
+of the Turks' trench system for a length of at least 12,000 yards.
+And, as has been said, with Gaza secured we should still have had to
+face the enemy in a new line of positions about the wadi Hesi. Gaza
+was the Turks' strongest point. To attack here would have meant a
+long-drawn-out artillery duel, infantry would have had to advance over
+open ground under complete observation, and, while making a frontal
+attack, would have been exposed to enfilade fire from the 'Tank'
+system of works to the south-east. It would have proved a costly
+operation, its success could only have been partial in that it did not
+follow that we should break the enemy's line, and it would not have
+enabled us to contain the remainder of the Turkish force.
+
+Nor would an attack on the centre have promised more favourably. Here
+the enemy had all the best of the ground. At Atawineh, Sausage Ridge,
+Hareira, and Teiaha there were defences supporting each other on high
+ground overlooking an almost flat plain through which the wadi Ghuzze
+runs. All the observation was in enemy possession, and to attack over
+this ground would have been inviting disaster. There was little fear
+that the Turks would attack us across this wide range of No Man's
+Land, for we held secure control of the curiously shaped heaps of
+broken earth about Shellal, and the conical hill at Fara gave an
+uninterrupted view for several miles northward and eastward. The
+position was very different about Beersheba. If we secured that place
+with its water supply, and in this dry country the battle really
+amounted to a fight for water, we should be attacking from high ground
+and against positions which had not been prepared on so formidable
+a scale as elsewhere, with the prospect of compelling the enemy to
+abandon the remainder of the line for fear of being enveloped by
+mounted troops moving behind his weakened left. That, in brief
+outline, was the gist of General Chetwode's report, and with its full
+acceptance began the preparations for the advance. These preparations
+took several months to complete, and they were as thorough as the
+energy of a capable staff could make them.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+TRAINING THE ARMY
+
+
+Those of us who were fortunate enough to witness the nature of the
+preparations for the first of General Allenby's great and triumphant
+moves in Palestine can speak of the debt Britain and her Allies owe
+not merely to the Commander-in-Chief and his Headquarters Staff,
+but to the three Corps Commanders, the Divisional Commanders, the
+Brigadiers, and the officers responsible for transport, artillery,
+engineer, and the other services. The Army had to be put on an
+altogether different footing from that which had twice failed to drive
+the Turks from Gaza. It serves nothing to ignore the fact that the
+moral of the troops was not high in the weeks following the second
+failure. They had to be tuned up and trained for a big task. They knew
+the Turk was turning his natural advantages of ground about Gaza into
+a veritable fortress, and that if their next effort was to meet with
+more success than their last, they had to learn all that experience on
+the Western Front had taught as to systems of trench warfare.
+
+And, more than that, they had to prepare to apply the art of open
+warfare to the full extent of their powers.
+
+A couple of months before General Allenby took over command, General
+Chetwode had taken in hand the question of training, and in employing
+the knowledge gained during the strenuous days he had spent in France
+and Flanders, he not only won the confidence of the troops but
+improved their tone, and by degrees brought them up to something
+approaching the level of the best fighting divisions of our Army in
+France.
+
+This was hard work during hot weather when our trench systems on a
+wide front had to be prepared against an active enemy, and men could
+ill be spared for the all-important task of training behind the front
+line. It was not long, however, before troops who had got into that
+state of lassitude which is engendered by a belief that they were
+settling down to trench warfare for the duration of the war--that,
+in fact, there was a stalemate on this front--became inspired by the
+energy of General Chetwode. They saw him in the front line almost
+every day, facing the risks they ran themselves, complimenting them
+on any good piece of work, suggesting improvements in their defences,
+always anxious to provide anything possible for their comfort, and
+generally looking after the rank and file with a detailed attention
+which no good battalion commander could exceed.
+
+The men knew that the long visits General Chetwode paid them formed
+but a small part of his daily task. It has been said that a G.O.C. of
+a force has to think one hour a day about operations and five hours
+about beef. In East Force, as this part of the Egyptian Expeditionary
+Force was then called, General Chetwode, having to look months ahead,
+had also six worrying hours a day to think about water. For any one
+who did not love his profession, or who had not an ardent soldierly
+spirit within him, such a daily task would have been impossible. I had
+the privilege of living in General Chetwode's camp for some time, and
+I have seen him working at four o'clock in the morning and at nine
+o'clock at night, and the notes on a writing tablet by the side of his
+rough camp-bed showed that in the hours when sleep forsook him he was
+planning the next day's work.
+
+His staff was entirely composed of hard workers, and perhaps no
+command in this war ever had so small a staff, but there was no
+officer in East Force who laboured so long or with such concentration
+and energy and determination as its Chief. This enthusiasm was
+infectious and spread through all ranks. The sick rate declined,
+septic sores, from which many men suffered through rough life in the
+desert on Army rations, got better, and the men showed more interest
+in their work and were keener on their sport. The full effects had not
+been wholly realised when the War Cabinet selected General Allenby
+for the control of the big operations, but the improvement in the
+condition of the troops was already most marked, and when General
+Allenby arrived and at once directed that General Headquarters should
+be moved from Cairo, which was pleasant but very far away from the
+front, to Kelab, near Khan Yunus, there was not a man who did not see
+in the new order of things a sign that he was to be given a chance of
+testing the Briton's supremacy over the Turk.
+
+The improvement in the moral of the troops, the foundations of which
+were thus begun and cemented by General Chetwode, was rapidly carried
+on under the new Chief. Divisions like the 52nd, 53rd, and 54th, which
+had worked right across the desert from the Suez Canal, toiling in a
+torrid temperature, when parched throats, sun-blistered limbs, and
+septic sores were a heavy trial, weakened by casualties in action and
+sickness, were brought up to something like strength. Reinforcing
+drafts joined a lot of cheery veterans. They were taught in the
+stern field of experience what was expected of them, and they worked
+themselves up to the degree of efficiency of the older men.
+
+The 74th Division, made up of yeomanry regiments which had been doing
+excellent service in the Libyan Desert, watching for and harassing the
+elements of the Senussi Army, had to be trained as infantry. These
+yeomen did not take long to make themselves first-rate infantry, and
+when, after the German attack on the Somme in March 1918, they went
+away from us to strengthen the Western Front, a distinguished General
+told me he believed that man for man the 74th would prove the finest
+division in France. They certainly proved themselves in Palestine,
+and many an old yeomanry regiment won for itself the right to bear
+'Jerusalem, 1917' on its standard.
+
+The 75th Division had brought some of the Wessex Territorials from
+India with two battalions of Gurkhas and two of Rifles. The 1/4th Duke
+of Cornwall's Light Infantry joined it from Aden, but for some months
+the battalion was not itself. It had spent a long time at that dreary
+sunburnt outpost of the Empire, and the men did not regain their
+physical fitness till close upon the time it was required for the Gaza
+operations.
+
+The 60th Division came over from Salonika and we were delighted to
+have them, for they not only gave us General Bulfin as the XXIst Corps
+Commander, but set an example of efficiency and a combination of dash
+and doggedness which earned for them a record worthy of the best
+in the history of the great war. These London Territorials were
+second-line men, men recruited from volunteers in the early days of
+the war, when the County of London Territorial battalions went across
+to France to take a part on a front hard pressed by German legions.
+The 60th Division men had rushed forward to do their duty before
+the Derby scheme or conscription sought out the cream of Britain's
+manhood, and no one had any misgivings about that fine cheery crowd.
+
+The 10th Division likewise came from Salonika. Unfortunately it had
+been doing duty in a fever-stricken area and malaria had weakened its
+ranks. A little while before the autumn operations began, as many as
+3000 of its men were down at one time with malaria, but care and tonic
+of the battle pulled the ranks together, and the Irish Division, a
+purely Irish division, campaigned up to the glorious traditions of
+their race. They worked like gluttons with rifle and spade, and their
+pioneer work on roads in the Judean hills will always be remembered
+with gratitude.
+
+The cavalry of the Desert Mounted Corps were old campaigners in
+the East. The Anzac Mounted Division, composed of six regiments of
+Australian Light Horse and three regiments of New Zealand Mounted
+Rifles, had been operating in the Sinai Desert when they were not
+winning fame on Gallipoli, since the early days of the war. They had
+proved sterling soldiers in the desert war, hard, full of courage,
+capable of making light of the longest trek in waterless stretches of
+country, and mobile to a degree the Turks never dreamed of. There were
+six other regiments of Australian Light Horse and three first-line
+regiments of yeomanry in the Australian Mounted Division, and nine
+yeomanry regiments in the Yeomanry Mounted Division. The 7th Mounted
+Brigade was attached to Desert Corps, as was also the Imperial Camel
+Corps Brigade, formed of yeomen and Australians who had volunteered
+from their regiments for work as camelry. They, too, were veterans.
+
+All these divisions had to be trained hard. Not only had the four
+infantry divisions of XXth Corps to be brought to a pitch of physical
+fitness to enable them to endure a considerable period of open
+fighting, but they had to be trained in water abstinence, as, in the
+event of success, they would unquestionably have long marches in a
+country yielding a quite inadequate supply of drinking water, and this
+problem in itself was such that fully 6000 camels were required to
+carry drinking water to infantry alone. Water-abstinence training
+lasted three weeks, and the maximum of half a gallon a man for all
+purposes was not exceeded, simply because the men had been made
+accustomed to deny themselves drink except when absolutely necessary.
+But for a systematic training they would have suffered a great deal.
+The disposition of the force is given in the Appendix.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: See Appendix v].
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+RAILWAYS, ROADS, AND THE BASE
+
+
+To ease the supply problem a spur line was laid from Rafa to Shellal,
+on the wadi Ghuzze. In that way supplies, stores, and ammunition were
+taken up to our right flank. Shellal was a position of great strategic
+importance. At one time it appeared as if we should have to fight hard
+to gain it. The Turks had cut an elaborate series of trenches on
+Wali Sheikh Nuran, a hill covering Shellal, but they evacuated
+this position before we made the first attack on Gaza, and left an
+invaluable water supply in our hands.
+
+At Shellal the stony bed of the wadi Ghuzze rests between high mud
+banks which have been cut into fantastic shapes by the rushing waters
+descending from the southern extremities of the Judean range of hills
+during the winter rains. In the summer months, when the remainder
+of the wadi bed is dry, there are bubbling springs of good water at
+Shellal, and these have probably been continuously flowing for many
+centuries, for close above the spot where the water issues Anzac
+cavalry discovered a beautiful remnant of the mosaic flooring of an
+ancient Christian church, which, raised on a hundred-feet mound, was
+doubtless the centre of a colony of Christians, hundreds of years
+before Crusaders were attracted to the Holy Land. Our engineers
+harnessed that precious flow. A dam was put across the wadi bed and at
+least a million gallons of crystal water were held up by it,
+whilst the overflow went into shallow pools fringed with grass (a
+delightfully refreshing sight in that arid country) from which horses
+were watered. Pumping sets were installed at the reservoir and pipes
+were laid towards Karm, and from these the Camel Transport Corps were
+to fill fanatis--eight to twelve gallon tanks--for carriage of water
+to troops on the move.
+
+The railway staff, the department which arranged the making up and
+running of trains, as well as the construction staff, had heavy
+responsibilities. It was recognised early in 1917 that if we were to
+crush the Turk out of the war, provision would have to be made for a
+larger army than a single line from the Suez Canal could feed. It
+was decided to double the track. The difficulties of the Director of
+Railway Transport were enormous. There was great shortage of railway
+material all over the world. Some very valuable cargoes were lost
+through enemy action at sea, and we had to call for more from
+different centres, and England deprived herself of rolling stock she
+badly needed, to enable her flag of freedom to be carried (though it
+was not to be hoisted) through the Holy Land. And incidentally I may
+remark that, with the solitary exception of a dirty little piece of
+Red Ensign I saw flying in the native quarter in Jerusalem, the only
+British flag the people saw in Palestine and Syria was a miniature
+Union Jack carried on the Commander-in-Chief's motor car and by his
+standard-bearer when riding. Thus did the British Army play the game,
+for some of the Allied susceptibilities might have been wounded if the
+people had been told (though indeed they knew it) that they were under
+the protection of the British flag. They had the most convincing
+evidence, however, that they were under the staunch protection of the
+British Army. The doubling of the railway track went on apace. To save
+pressure at the Alexandria docks and on the Egyptian State railway,
+which, giving some of its rolling stock and, I think, the whole of
+its reserve of material for the use of the military line east of the
+Canal, was worked to its utmost capacity, and also to economise
+money by saving railway freights, wharves were built on the Canal at
+Kantara, and as many as six ocean-going steamers could be unloaded
+there at one time. By and by a railway bridge was thrown over the
+Canal, and when the war was over through trains could be run from
+Cairo to Jerusalem and Haifa. Kantara grew into a wonderful town with
+several miles of Canal frontage, huge railway sidings and workshops,
+enormous stores of rations for man and horse, medical supplies,
+ordnance and ammunition dumps, etc. Probably the enemy knew all about
+this vast base. Any one on any ship passing through the Canal could
+see the place, and it is surprising, and it certainly points to a lack
+of enterprise on the part of the Germans, that no attempt was made to
+bomb Kantara by the super-Zeppelin which in November 1917 left its
+Balkan base and got as far south as the region of Khartoum on its way
+to East Africa, before being recalled by wireless. This same Zeppelin
+was seen about forty miles from Port Said and a visit by it was
+anticipated. Aeroplanes with experienced pilots and armed with the
+latest anti-Zeppelin devices were stationed at Port Said and Aboukir
+ready to ascend on any moonlight night when the hum of aerial motor
+machinery could be heard. The super-Zeppelin never came and Kantara's
+progress was unchecked.
+
+The doubled railway track was laid as far as El Arish by the time
+operations commenced, and this was a great aid to the railway staff.
+Every engine and truck was used to its fullest capacity, and an
+enormous amount of time was saved by the abolition of passing stations
+for some ninety miles of the line's length. Railhead was at Deir el
+Belah, about eight miles short of Gaza, and here troops and an army
+of Egyptian labourers were working night and day, week in week out,
+off-loading trucks with a speed that enabled the maximum amount of
+service to be got out of rolling stock. There were large depôts down
+the line too. At Rafa there was a big store of ammunition, and at
+Shellal large quantities not only of supplies but of railway material
+were piled up in readiness for pushing out railhead immediately the
+advance began. A Decauville, or light, line ran out towards Gamli from
+Shellal to make the supply system easier, and I remember seeing
+some Indian pioneers lay about three miles of light railway with
+astonishing rapidity the day after we took Beersheba. Every mile the
+line advanced meant time saved in getting up supplies, and the radius
+of action of lorries, horse, and camel transport was considerably
+increased.
+
+To supply the Gaza front we called in aid a small system of light
+railways. From the railhead at Deir el Belah to the mouth of the wadi
+Ghuzze, and from that point along the line of the wadi to various
+places behind the line held by us, we had a total length of 21
+kilometres of light railway. Before this railway got into full
+operation horses had begun to lose condition, and during the summer
+ammunition-column officers became very anxious about their horses. The
+light railway was almost everywhere within range of the enemy's guns,
+and in some places it was unavoidably exposed, particularly where it
+ran on the banks of the wadi due south of Gaza. I recollect while the
+track was being laid speaking to an Australian in charge of a gang of
+natives preparing an earthwork, and asked why it was that a trench was
+dug before earth was piled up. He pointed to the hill of Ali Muntar,
+the most prominent feature in the enemy's system, and said that from
+the Turks' observation post on that eminence every movement of the
+labourers could be seen, and the men were often forced by gunfire to
+the refuge of the trenches.
+
+When the railway was in running order trains had to run the gauntlet
+of shell-fire on this section on bright moonlight nights, and no
+camouflage could hide them. But they worked through in a marvellously
+orderly and efficient fashion, and on one day when our guns were
+hungry this little line carried 850 tons of ammunition to the
+batteries. The horses became fit and strong and were ready for the war
+to be carried into open country. In christening their tiny puffing
+locomotives the Tommy drivers showed their strong appreciation of
+their comrades on the sea, and the 'Iron Duke' and 'Lion' were always
+tuned up to haul a maximum load. But the pride of the engine yard was
+the 'Jerusalem Cuckoo'--some prophetic eye must have seen its future
+employment on the light line between Jerusalem and Ramallah--though in
+popularity it was run close by the 'Bulfin-ch,' a play upon the
+name of the Commander of the XXIst Corps, for which it did sterling
+service.
+
+The Navy formed part of the picture as well. Some small steamers of
+1000 to 1500 tons burden came up from Port Said to a little cove north
+of Belah to lighten the railway's task. They anchored about 150 yards
+off shore and a crowd of boats passed backwards and forwards with
+stores. These were carried up the beach to trucks on a line connected
+with the supply depôts, and if you wished to see a busy scene where
+slackers had no place the Belah beach gave it you. The Army tried all
+sorts of boatmen and labourers. There were Kroo boys who found the
+Mediterranean waters a comparative calm after the turbulent surf on
+their own West African shore. The Maltese were not a success. The
+Egyptians were, both here and almost everywhere else where their
+services were called for. The best of all the fellows on this beach,
+however, were the Raratongas from the Cook Islands, the islands from
+which the Maoris originally came. They were first employed at El
+Arish, where they made it a point of honour to get a job done well and
+quickly, and, on a given day, it was found that thirty of them had
+done as much labourers' work as 170 British soldiers. They were men of
+fine physical strength and endurance, and some one who knew they had
+the instincts of sportsmen, devised a simple plan to get the best out
+of them. He presented a small flag to be won each day by the crew
+accomplishing the best work with the boats. The result was amazing.
+Every minute the boats were afloat the Raratongas strained their
+muscles to win the day's competition, and when the day's task was
+ended the victorious crew marched with their flag to their camp,
+singing a weird song and as proud as champions. Some Raratongas worked
+at ammunition dumps, and it was the boast of most of them that they
+could carry four 60-pounder shells at a time. A few of these stalwart
+men from Southern Seas received a promotion which made them the
+most envied men of their race--they became loading numbers in heavy
+howitzer batteries, fighting side by side with the Motherland gunners.
+
+However well the Navy and all associated with it worked, only a very
+small proportion of the Army's supplies was water borne. The great
+bulk had to be carried by rail. Enormously long trains, most of them
+hauled by London and South-Western locomotives, bore munitions, food
+for men and animals, water, equipment, medical comforts, guns, wagons,
+caterpillar tractors, motor cars, and other paraphernalia required for
+the largest army which had ever operated about the town of Gaza in the
+thousands of years of its history. The main line had thrown out from
+it great tentacles embracing in their iron clasp vital centres for the
+supply of our front, and over these spur lines the trains ran with
+the regularity of British main-line expresses. Besides 96,000 actual
+fighting men, there was a vast army of men behind the line, and there
+were over 100,000 animals to be fed. There were 46,000 horses, 40,000
+camels, 15,000 mules, and 3500 donkeys on Army work east of the
+Canal, and not a man or beast went short of rations. We used to
+think Kitchener's advance on Khartoum the perfection of military
+organisation. Beside the Palestine expedition that Soudan campaign
+fades into insignificance. In fighting men and labour corps, in
+animals and the machinery of war, this Army was vastly larger and more
+important, and the method by which it was brought to Palestine and was
+supplied, and the low sick rate, constitute a tribute to the master
+minds of the organisers. The Army had fresh meat, bread, and
+vegetables in a country which under the lash of war yielded nothing,
+but which under our rule in peace will furnish three times the produce
+of the best of past years of plenty.
+
+A not inconsiderable portion of the front line was supplied with Nile
+water taken from a canal nearly two hundred miles away. But the Army
+once at the front depended less upon the waters of that Father of
+Rivers than it had to do in the long trek across the desert. Then all
+drinking water came from the Nile. It flowed down the sweet-water
+canal (if one may be pardoned for calling 'sweet' a volume of water
+so charged with vegetable matter and bacteria that it was harmful for
+white men even to wash in it), was filtered and siphoned under the
+Suez Canal at Kantara, where it was chlorinated, and passed through
+a big pipe line and pumped through in stages into Palestine. The
+engineers set about improving all local resources over a wide stretch
+of country which used to be regarded as waterless in summer. Many
+water levels were tapped, and there was a fair yield. The engineers'
+greatest task in moving with the Army during the advance was always
+the provision of a water supply, and in developing it they conferred
+on the natives a boon which should make them be remembered with
+gratitude for many generations.
+
+In the months preceding our attack Royal Engineers were also concerned
+in improving the means of communication between railway depôts and the
+front line. Before our arrival in this part of Southern Palestine,
+wheeled traffic was almost unknown among the natives. There was not
+one metalled roadway, and only comparatively light loads could be
+transported in wheeled vehicles. The soil between Khan Yunus and Deir
+el Belah, especially on the west of our railway line, was very sandy,
+and after the winter rains had knitted it together it began to crumble
+under the sun's heat, and it soon cut up badly when two or three
+limbers had passed over it. The sandy earth was also a great nuisance
+in the region between Khan Yunus and Shellal, but between Deir el
+Belah and our Gaza front, excepting on the belt near the sea which was
+composed of hillocks of sand precisely similar to the Sinai Desert,
+the earth was firmer and yielded less to the grinding action of
+wheels. For ordinary heavy military traffic the engineers made good
+going by taking off about one foot of the top soil and banking it
+on either side of the road. These tracks lasted very well, but they
+required constant attention. Ambulances and light motor cars had
+special arrangements made for them. Hundreds of miles of wire netting
+were laid on sand in all directions, and these wire roads, which,
+stretching across bright golden sand, appeared like black bands to
+observers in aircraft, at first aroused much curiosity among enemy
+airmen, and it was not until they had made out an ambulance convoy on
+the move that they realised the purpose of the tracks.
+
+The rabbit wire roads were a remarkable success. Motor wheels held
+firmly to the surface, and when the roads were in good condition cars
+could travel at high speed. Three or four widths of wire netting were
+laced together, laid on the sand and pegged down. After a time loose
+pockets of sand could not resist the weight of wheels and there became
+many holes beneath the wire, and the jolting was a sore trial alike to
+springs and to a passenger's temper. But here again constant attention
+kept the roads in order, and if one could not describe travelling over
+them as easy and comfortable they were at least sure, and one could
+be certain of getting to a destination at an average speed of twelve
+miles an hour. In sand the Ford cars have performed wonderful feats,
+but remarkable as was the record of that cheap American car with
+us--it helped us very considerably to win the war--you could never
+tell within hours how long a journey would take off the wire roads.
+Once leave the netting and you might with good luck and a skilful
+driver get across the sand without much trouble, but it often meant
+much bottom-gear work and a hot engine, and not infrequently the
+digging out of wheels. The drivers used to try to keep to the tracks
+made by other cars. These were never straight, and the swing from side
+to side reminded you of your first ride on a camel's back. The wire
+roads were a great help to us, and the officer who first thought out
+the idea received our daily blessings. I do not know who he was, but I
+was told the wire road scheme was the outcome of a device suggested
+by a medical officer at Romani in 1916, when infantry could not march
+much more than six miles a day through the sand. This officer made a
+sort of wire moccasin which he attached to the boot and doubled the
+marching powers of the soldier. A sample of those moccasins should
+find a place in our War Museum.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+PREPARING FOR 'ZERO DAY'
+
+
+About the middle of August it was the intention that the attack on the
+Turks' front line in Southern Palestine should be launched some time
+in September. General Allenby knew his force would not be then at
+full strength, but what was happening at other points in the Turkish
+theatres of operations might make it necessary to strike an early blow
+at Gaza to spoil enemy plans elsewhere. However, it was soon seen that
+a September advance was not absolutely necessary. General Allenby
+decided that instead of making an early attack it would be far more
+profitable to wait until his Army had been improved by a longer period
+of training, and until he had got his artillery, particularly some of
+his heavy batteries, into a high state of efficiency. He would risk
+having to take Jerusalem after bad weather had set in rather than be
+unable, owing to the condition of his troops, to exploit an initial
+success to the fullest extent. How wholly justified was this decision
+the subsequent fighting proved, and it is doubtful if there was ever a
+more complete illustration of the wisdom of those directing war policy
+at home submitting to the cool, balanced calculations of the man on
+the spot. The extra six weeks spent in training and preparation were
+of incalculable service to the Allies. I have heard it said that
+a September victory in Palestine would have had its reflex on the
+Italian front, and that the Caporetto disaster would not have assumed
+the gigantic proportions which necessitated the withdrawal to Italy
+of British and French divisions from the Western Front and prevented
+Cambrai being a big victory. That is very doubtful. On the contrary, a
+September battle in Palestine before we were fully ready to follow
+the Turks after breaking and rolling up their line, even if we had
+succeeded in doing this completely, might have deprived us of the
+moral effect of the capture of Jerusalem and of the wonderful
+influence which that victory had on the whole civilised world by
+reason of the sacrifices the Commander-in-Chief made to prevent any
+fighting at all in the precincts of the Holy City. Of this I shall
+speak later, giving the fullest details at my command, for there is no
+page in the story of British arms which better upholds the honour and
+chivalry of the soldier than the preservation of the Holy Place from
+the clash of battle.
+
+That last six weeks of preparation were unforgettable. The London
+newspapers I had the honour to represent as War Correspondent knew
+operations were about to begin, but I did not cable or mail them one
+word which would give an indication that big things were afoot. They
+never asked for news, but were content to wait till they could tell
+the public that victory was ours. In accordance with their practice
+throughout the war the London Press set an example to the world by
+refraining from publishing anything which would give information of
+the slightest value to the enemy. It was a privilege to see that
+victory in the making. Some divisions which had allotted to them the
+hardest part of the attack on Beersheba were drawn out of the line,
+and forming up in big camps between Belah and Shellal set about a
+course of training such as athletes undergo. They had long marches
+in the sand carrying packs and equipment. They were put on a short
+allowance of water, except for washing purposes. They dug, they had
+bombing practice, and with all this extra exercise while the days were
+still very hot they needed no encouragement to continue their games.
+Football was their favourite sport, and the British Tommy is such a
+remarkable fellow that it was usual to see him trudge home to camp
+looking 'fed up' with exercise, and then, after throwing off his pack
+and tunic, run out to kick a ball. The Italian and French detachments
+used to look at him in astonishment, and doubtless they thought his
+enthusiasm for sport was a sore trial. He got thoroughly fit for
+marches over sand, over stony ground, over shifting shingle. During
+the period of concentration he had to cross a district desperately bad
+for marching, and it is more than probable the enemy never believed
+him capable of such endurance. He was often tired, no doubt, but he
+always got to his destination, was rarely footsore, and laughed at the
+worst parts of his journey. The sand was choking, the flies were an
+irritating pest, equipment became painfully heavy; but a big, brave
+heart carried Tommy through his training to a state of perfect
+condition for the heavy test.
+
+To enable about two-thirds of the force to carry on a moving battle
+while the remainder kept half the enemy pinned down to his trench
+system on his right-centre and right, it was necessary to reinforce
+strongly the transport service for our mobile columns. The XXIst Corps
+gave up most of its lorries, tractors, and camels to XXth Corps. These
+had to be moved across from the Gaza sector to our right as secretly
+as possible, and they were not brought up to load at the supply depôts
+at Shellal and about Karm until the moment they were required to carry
+supplies for the corps moving to attack.
+
+It is not easy to convey to any one who has not seen an army on the
+move what a vast amount of transport is required to provision two
+corps. In France, where roads are numerous and in comparatively good
+condition, the supply problem could be worked out to a nicety, but in
+a roadless country where there was not a sound half-mile of track, and
+where water had to be developed and every gallon was precious, the
+question of supply needed most anxious consideration, and a big margin
+had to be allowed for contingencies. It will give some idea of the
+requirements when I state that for the supply of water alone the XXth
+Corps had allotted to it 6000 camels and 73 lorries. To feed these
+water camels alone needed a big convoy.
+
+We got an impression of the might and majesty of an army in the field
+as we saw it preparing to take the offensive. The camp of General
+Headquarters where I was located was situated north of Rafa. The
+railway ran on two sides of the camping ground, one line going to
+Belah and the other stretching out to Shellal, where everything was in
+readiness to extend the iron road to the north-east of Karm, on the
+plain which, because the Turks enjoyed complete observation over it,
+had hitherto been No Man's Land. We saw and heard the traffic on this
+section of the line. It was enormous. Heavily laden trains ran night
+and day with a mass of stores and supplies, with motor lorries, cars,
+and tractors; and the ever-increasing volume of traffic told those of
+us who knew nothing of the date of 'Zero day' that it was not far off.
+The heaviest trains seemed to run at night, and the returning empty
+trains were hurried forward at a speed suggesting the urgency of
+clearing the line for a fully loaded train awaiting at Rafa the signal
+to proceed with its valuable load to railhead. Perfect control not
+only on the railway system but in the forward supply yards prevented
+congestion, and when a train arrived at its destination and was split
+up into several parts, well-drilled gangs of troops and Egyptian
+labourers were allotted to each truck, and whether a lorry or a
+tractor had to be unshipped and moved down a ramp, or a truck had to
+be relieved of its ten tons of tibbin, boxes of biscuit and bully, or
+of engineers' stores, the goods were cleared away from the vicinity of
+the line with a celerity which a goods-yard foreman at home would have
+applauded as the smartest work he had ever seen. There was no room for
+slackers in the Army, and the value of each truck was so high that
+it could not be left standing idle for an hour. The organisation was
+equally good at Kantara, where the loading and making up of trains had
+to be arranged precisely as the needs at the front demanded. Those
+remarkable haulers, the caterpillar tractors, cut many a passage
+through the sand, tugging heavy guns and ammunition, stores for the
+air and signal services, machinery for engineers and mobile workshops,
+and sometimes towing a weighty load of petrol to satisfy their
+voracious appetites for that fuel. The tractors did well. Sand was no
+trouble to them, and when mud marooned lorries during the advance in
+November the rattling, rumbling old tractor made fair weather of it.
+The mechanical transport trains will not forget the service of the
+tractors on the morning after Beersheba was taken. From railhead to
+the spot where Father Abraham and his people fed their flocks the
+country was bare and the earth's crust had yielded all its strength
+under the influence of the summer sun. Loaded lorries under their own
+power could not move more than a few yards before they were several
+inches deep in the sandy soil, but a Motor Transport officer devised
+a plan for beating down a track which all lorries could use. He got a
+tractor to haul six unladen lorries, and with all the vehicles using
+their own power the tractor managed to pull them through to Beersheba,
+leaving behind some wheel tracks with a hard foundation. A hundred
+lorries followed, the drivers steering them in the ruts, and they made
+such good progress that by the afternoon they had deposited between
+200 and 300 tons of supplies in Beersheba. The path the tractor cut
+did not last very long, but it was sound enough for the immediate and
+pressing requirements of the Army.
+
+Within a month of his arrival in Egypt, General Allenby had visited
+the whole of his front line and had decided the form his offensive
+should take. As soon as his force had been made up to seven infantry
+divisions and the Desert Mounted Corps, and they had been brought up
+to strength and trained, he would attack, making his main offensive
+against the enemy's left flank while conducting operations vigorously
+and on an extensive scale against the Turkish right-centre and right.
+The principal operation against the left was to be conducted by
+General Chetwode's XXth Corps, consisting of four infantry divisions
+and the Imperial Camel Brigade, and by General Chauvel's Desert
+Mounted Corps. General Bulfin's XXIst Corps was to operate against
+Gaza and the Turkish right-centre south-east of that ancient town.
+If the situation became such as to make it necessary to take the
+offensive before the force had been brought up to strength, the XXIst
+Corps would have had to undertake its task with only two divisions,
+but in those circumstances its operations were to be limited to
+demonstrations and raids. By throwing forward his right, the XXIst
+Corps Commander was to pin the enemy down in the Atawineh district,
+and on the left he would move against the south-western defences of
+Gaza so as to lead the Turks to suppose an attack was to come in this
+sector. That movement being made, the XXth Corps and Desert Mounted
+Corps were to advance against Beersheba, and, having taken it, to
+secure the valuable water supply which was known to have existed there
+since Abraham dug the well of the oath which gave its name to the
+town. Because of water difficulties it was considered vital that
+Beersheba should be captured in one day, a formidable undertaking
+owing to the situation of the town, the high entrenched hills around
+it and the long marches for cavalry and infantry before the attack;
+and in drawing up the scheme based on the Commander-in-Chief's plan,
+the commanders of XXth Corps and Desert Mounted Corps had always to
+work on the assumption that Beersheba would be in their hands by
+nightfall of the first day of the attack. General Barrow's Yeomanry
+Mounted Division was to remain at Shellal in the gap between XXth
+Corps and XXIst Corps in case the enemy should attempt to attack the
+XXth Corps' left flank. Having dealt with the enemy in Beersheba,
+General Chetwode with mounted troops protecting his right was to move
+north and north-west against the enemy's left flank, to drive him from
+his strong positions at Sheria and Hareira, enveloping his left flank
+and striking it obliquely.
+
+While the XXth Corps was moving against this section of the enemy
+line, Desert Mounted Corps was to bring up the mounted division left
+at Shellal, and passing behind the XXth Corps to march on Nejile,
+where there was an excellent water supply, and the wadi Hesi, so as to
+threaten the left rear and the line of retreat of the Turkish Army.
+
+It was always doubtful whether XXth Corps would be able to close up
+the gap between it and the XXIst Corps owing to the length of its
+marches and the distance it was from railhead, and the scheme
+therefore provided that the XXIst Corps should confirm successes
+gained on our right by forcing its way through the tremendously strong
+Gaza position to the line of the wadi Hesi and joining up with Desert
+Mounted Corps. A considerable number of XXth Corps troops would then
+return to the neighbourhood of railhead and release the greater
+part of its transport for the infantry of XXIst Corps moving up the
+Maritime Plain.
+
+This, in summary form, was the scheme General Allenby planned before
+the middle of August, and though the details were not, and could not
+be, worked out until a couple of months had passed, it is noteworthy
+as showing that, notwithstanding the moves an enterprising enemy had
+at his command in a country where positions were entirely favourable
+to him, where he had water near at hand, where the transport of
+supplies was never so serious a problem for him as for us when we got
+on the move, and where he could make us fight almost every step of
+the way, the Commander-in-Chief foresaw and provided for every
+eventuality, and his scheme worked out absolutely and entirely
+'according to plan,' to use the favourite phrase of the German High
+Command.
+
+When the Corps Commanders began working out the details two of the
+greatest problems were transport and water. Only patience and skilful
+development of known sources of supply would surmount the water
+difficulty, and we had to wait till the period of concentration before
+commencing its solution. But to lighten the transport load which must
+have weighed heavily on Corps Staffs, the Commander-in-Chief agreed to
+allow the extension of the railway east of Shellal to be begun sooner
+than he had provided for. It was imperative that railway construction
+should not give the enemy an indication of our intentions. If he had
+realised the nature and scope of our preparations he would have done
+something to counteract them and to deny us that element of surprise
+which exerted so great an influence on the course of the battle.
+General Allenby, however, was willing to take some risks to simplify
+supply difficulties, and he ordered that the extension to a railway
+station north-east of Karm should be completed by the evening of the
+third day before the attack, that a Decauville line from Gamli, not to
+be begun before the sixth day prior to the attack, was to be completed
+to Karm by the day preceding the opening of the fighting at Beersheba,
+and that a new Decauville line should be started at Karm when fighting
+had begun, and should be carried nearly three miles in the Beersheba
+direction early on the following morning. These new lines, though of
+short length, were an inestimable boon to the conductors of supply
+trains. The new railheads both of the standard gauge and light lines
+were well placed, and they not only saved time and shortened the
+journeys of camel convoys and lorry transport columns, but prevented
+congestion at depôts in one central spot.
+
+A big effort was made to escape detection by enemy aircraft. For the
+first time since the Egyptian Expeditionary Force took the field we
+had obtained mastery in the air. On the 8th and 15th October two enemy
+planes were shot down behind our lines, and the keenness of our airmen
+for combat made the German aviators extremely careful. They had been
+bold and resolute, taking their observations several thousand feet
+higher than our pilots, it is true, but neither anti-aircraft fire nor
+the presence of our machines in the air had up to this time deterred
+them. However, just at the moment when airwork was of extreme
+importance to the Turks, the German flying men, recognising that our
+pilots had new battle planes and were full of resource and daring,
+showed an unusual lack of enterprise, and we profited from their
+inactivity. The concentration of the force in the positions from which
+it was to attack Beersheba was to have taken seven days, but owing
+to the difficulties attending the development of water at Asluj and
+Khalasa the time was extended to ten days. During this period the
+uppermost thought of commanders was to conceal their movements. All
+marching was done at night and no move of any kind was permitted till
+nearly six o'clock in the evening, when enemy aircraft were usually at
+rest and the light was sufficiently dull to prevent the Fritzes seeing
+much if they had made an exceptionally late excursion. All the tents
+and temporary shelters which had been occupied for weeks were left
+standing. Cookhouses, horse lines, canteens, and so on were untouched,
+and one had an eerie feeling in passing at night through these
+untenanted camping grounds, deserted and lifeless, and a prey to the
+jackal and pariah dog. A vast area of many square miles which had held
+tens of thousands of troops and animals almost became a wilderness
+again, and the few natives hereabouts who had made large profits
+from the sale of eggs, fruit, and vegetables looked disconsolate and
+bewildered at the change, hoping and believing that the empty tents
+merely denoted a temporary absence. But the great majority of the Army
+never came that way again.
+
+When the infantry started on the march, divisions and brigades had
+allotted to them particular areas for their march routes, and all over
+that country, where scarcely a tree or native hut existed to make
+a landmark, there were dotted small arrow-pointed boards with the
+direction 'A road,' 'B road,' 'Z road,' as the case might be. Marching
+in the dark hours when a refreshing air succeeded the heat of the day,
+the troops halted as soon as a purple flush threw into high relief the
+southern end of the Judean hills, and they hid themselves in the wadis
+and broken ground; and on one unit vacating a bivouac area it was
+occupied by another, thus making the areas in which the troops rested
+as few as possible.
+
+The concentration was worked to a time-table. Not only were brigades
+allotted certain marches each night, but they were given specified
+times to cover certain distances, and these were arranged according to
+the condition of the ground. In parts it was very broken and covered
+with loose stones, and the pace of infantry by night was very slightly
+more than one mile per hour. The routes for guns were not chosen
+until the whole country had been reconnoitred, and it was a highly
+creditable performance for artillery to get their field guns and
+heavy howitzer batteries through to the time-table. But the clockwork
+precision of the movements reflected even more highly on the staff
+working out the details than on the infantry and artillery, and it may
+be said with perfect truth that the staff made no miscalculation
+or mistake. The XXth Corps staff maps and plans, and the details
+accompanying them, were masterpieces of clearness and completeness.
+The men who fought out the plans to a triumphant finish were glad to
+recognise this perfection of staff work.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: See Appendix VI.]
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE BEERSHEBA VICTORY
+
+
+The XXth Corps began its movement on the night of 20-21st October.
+The whole Corps was not on the march, but a sufficient force was sent
+forward to form supply dumps and to store water at Esani for troops
+covering Desert Mounted Corps engineers engaged on the development of
+water at Khalasa and Asluj. Some of the Australian and New Zealand
+troops engaged on this work had previously been at these places.
+
+In the early summer it was thought desirable to destroy the Turkish
+railway which ran from Beersheba to Asluj and on to Kossaima, in order
+to prevent an enemy raid on our communications between El Arish and
+Rafa, and the mounted troops with the Imperial Camel Corps had had
+a most successful day in destroying many miles of line and several
+bridges. The Turks were badly in need of rails for the line they were
+then constructing down to Deir Sineid, and they had lifted some of the
+rails between Asluj and Kossaima, but during our raid we broke every
+rail over some fifteen miles of track. Khalasa and Asluj being water
+centres became the points of concentration for two mounted divisions,
+and the splendid Colonials in the engineer sections worked at the
+wells as if the success of the whole enterprise depended upon their
+efforts, as, indeed, to a very large extent it did. Theirs was not an
+eight hours day. They worked under many difficulties, often thigh deep
+in water and mud, cleaning out and deepening wells and installing
+power pumps, putting up large canvas tanks for storage, and
+making water troughs. The results exceeded anticipations, and the
+Commander-in-Chief, on a day when the calls on his time were many and
+urgent, made a long journey to thank the officers and men for the work
+they had done and to express his high appreciation of their skill and
+energy.
+
+The principal work carried out by the XXth Corps during the period of
+concentration consisted in laying the standard gauge line to Imara
+and opening the station at that place on October 28; prolonging the
+railway line to a point three-quarters of a mile north-north-east
+of Karm, where the station was opened on November 3; completing by
+October 30 the light railway from the east bank of the wadi Ghuzze at
+Gamli _via_ Karm to Khasif; and developing water at Esani, Malaga, and
+Abu Ghalyun for the use first by cavalry detachments and then by the
+60th Division. Cisterns in the Khasif and Imsiri area were stocked
+with 60,000 gallons of water to be used by the 53rd and 74th
+Divisions, and this supply was to be supplemented by camel convoys.
+Apparently the enemy knew very little about the concentration until
+about October 26, and even then he could have had only slight
+knowledge of the extent of our movements, and probably knew nothing at
+all of where the first blow was to fall. In the early hours of October
+27 he did make an attempt to interfere with our concentration, and
+there was a spirited little action on our outpost line which had been
+pushed out beyond the plain to a line of low hills near the wadi
+Hanafish. The Turks in overwhelming force met a most stubborn defence
+by the Middlesex Yeomanry, and if the enemy took these London yeomen
+as an average sample of General Allenby's troops, this engagement must
+have given them a foretaste of what was in store for them.
+
+The Middlesex Yeomanry (the 1st County of London Yeomanry, to give
+the regiment the name by which it is officially known, though the men
+almost invariably use the much older Territorial title) and the 21st
+Machine Gun Squadron, held the long ridge from El Buggar to hill 630.
+There was a squadron dismounted on hill 630, three troops on hill 720,
+the next and highest point on the ridge, and a post at El Buggar. At
+four o'clock in the morning the latter post was fired on by a Turkish
+cavalry patrol, and an hour later it was evident that the enemy
+intended to try to drive us off the ridge, his occupation of which
+would have given him the power to harass railway construction parties
+by shell-fire, even if it did not entirely stop the work. Some 3000
+Turkish infantry, 1200 cavalry, and twelve guns had advanced from the
+Kauwukah system of defences to attack our outpost line on the ridge.
+They heavily engaged hill 630, working round both flanks, and brought
+heavy machine-gun and artillery fire to bear on the squadron holding
+it. The Royal Flying Corps estimated that a force of 2000 men attacked
+the garrison, which was completely cut off.
+
+A squadron of the City of London Yeomanry sent to reinforce was held
+up by a machine-gun barrage and had to withdraw. The garrison held
+out magnificently all day in a support trench close behind the crest
+against odds of twenty to one, and repeatedly beat off rushes,
+although the bodies of dead Turks showed that they got as close as
+forty yards from the defenders. Two officers were wounded, and four
+other ranks killed and twelve wounded.
+
+The attack on hill 720 was made by 1200 cavalry supported by a heavy
+volume of shell and machine-gun fire. During the early morning two
+desperate charges were beaten off, but in a third charge the enemy
+gained possession of the hill after the detachment had held out for
+six hours. All our officers were killed or wounded and all the men
+were casualties except three. At six o'clock in the evening the Turks
+were holding this position in strength against the 3rd Australian
+Light Horse, but two infantry brigades of the 53rd Division were
+moving towards the ridge, and during the evening the enemy retired and
+we held the ridge from this time on quite securely. The strong defence
+of the Middlesex Yeomanry undoubtedly prevented the Turks establishing
+themselves on the ridge, and saved the infantry from having to make a
+night attack which might have been costly. Thereafter the enemy made
+no attempt to interfere with the concentration. The yeomanry losses in
+this encounter were 1 officer and 23 other ranks killed, 5 officers
+and 48 other ranks wounded, 2 officers and 8 other ranks missing.
+
+On the night of October 30-31 a brilliant moon lit up the whole
+country. The day had been very hot, and at sunset an entire absence of
+wind promised that the night march of nearly 40,000 troops of all
+arms would be attended by all the discomforts of dust and heat. The
+thermometer fell, but there was not a breath of wind to shift the pall
+of dust which hung above the long columns of horse, foot, and guns.
+Where the tracks were sandy some brigades often appeared to be
+advancing through one of London's own particular fogs. Men's faces
+became caked with yellow dust, their nostrils were hot and burning,
+and parched throats could not be relieved because of the necessity
+of conserving the water allowance. A hot day was in prospect on the
+morrow, and the fear of having to fight on an empty water-bottle
+prevented many a gallant fellow broaching his supply before daybreak.
+Most of the men had had a long acquaintance with heat in the Middle
+East, and the high temperature would have caused them scarcely any
+trouble if there had been wind to carry away the dust clouds. The
+cavalry marched over harder and more stony ground than the infantry.
+They advanced from Khalasa and Asluj a long way south of Beersheba to
+the east of the town. It was a big night march of some thirty miles,
+but it was well within the powers of the veterans of the Anzac Mounted
+Division and Australian Mounted Division, whose men and horses were in
+admirable condition.
+
+The infantry were ordered to be on their line of deployment by four
+o'clock on the morning of October 31, and in every case they were
+before time. There had been many reconnaissances by officers who were
+to act as guides to columns, and they were quite familiar with the
+ground; and the guns and ammunition columns were taken by routes which
+had been carefully selected and marked. In places the banks of
+wadis had been cut into and ramps made to enable the rough stony
+watercourses to be practicable for wheels, and, broken as the country
+was, and though all previous preparations had to be made without
+arousing the suspicions of Turks and wandering Bedouins, there was no
+incident to check the progress of infantry or guns. Occasional rifle
+fire and some shelling occurred during the early hours, but at a
+little after three A.M. the XXth Corps advanced headquarters had the
+news that all columns had reached their allotted positions.
+
+The XXth Corps plan was to attack the enemy's works between the
+Khalasa road and the wadi Saba with the 60th and 74th Divisions, while
+the defences north of the wadi Saba were to be masked by the Imperial
+Camel Corps Brigade and two battalions of the 53rd Division, the
+remainder of the latter division protecting the left flank of the
+Corps from any attack by enemy troops who might move south from the
+Sheria area. The first objective was a hill marked on the map as
+'1070,' about 6000 yards south-west of Beersheba. It was a prominent
+feature, 500 yards or perhaps a little more from a portion of the
+enemy's main line, and the Turks held it strongly and were supported
+by a section of German machine-gunners. We had to win this height in
+order to get good observation of the enemy's main line of works, and
+to allow of the advance of field artillery within wire-cutting range
+of an elaborate system of works protecting Beersheba from an advance
+from the west. At six the guns began to bombard 1070, and the volume
+of fire concentrated on that spot must have given the Turks a big
+surprise. On a front of 4500 yards we had in action seventy-six
+18-pounders, twenty 4.5-inch howitzers, and four 3.7-inch howitzers,
+while eight 60-pounders, eight 6-inch howitzers, and four 4.5-inch
+howitzers were employed in counter battery work. The absence of wind
+placed us at a heavy disadvantage. The high explosive shells bursting
+about the crest of 1070 raised enormous clouds of dust which obscured
+everything, and after a short while even the flames of exploding
+shells were entirely hidden from view. The gunners had to stop firing
+for three-quarters of an hour to allow the dust to settle. They then
+reopened, and by half-past eight, the wire-cutting being reported
+completed, an intense bombardment was ordered, under cover of which,
+and with the assistance of machine-gun fire from aeroplanes, the 181st
+Infantry Brigade of the 60th Division went forward to the assault.
+They captured the hill in ten minutes, only sustaining about one
+hundred casualties, and taking nearly as many prisoners. A German
+machine-gunner who fell into our hands bemoaned the fact that he had
+not a weapon left--every one of the machine guns had been knocked out
+by the artillery, and a number were buried by our fire.
+
+The first phase of the operations having thus ended successfully quite
+early in the day, the second stage was entered upon. Field guns were
+rushed forward at the gallop over ground broken by shallow wadis and
+up and down a very uneven stony surface. The gun teams were generally
+exposed during the advance and were treated to heavy shrapnel fire,
+but they swung into action at prearranged points and set about
+wire-cutting with excellent effect. The first part of the second phase
+consisted in reducing the enemy's main line from the Khalasa road to
+the wadi Saba, though the artillery bombarded the whole line. The 60th
+Division on the right had two brigades attacking and one in divisional
+reserve, and the 74th Division attacking on the left of the 60th
+likewise had a brigade in reserve. The 74th, while waiting to advance,
+came under considerable shell-fire from batteries on the north of the
+wadi, and it was some time before their fire could be silenced. As
+a rule the enemy works were cut into rocky, rising ground and the
+trenches were well enclosed in wire fixed to iron stanchions.
+They were strongly made and there were possibilities of prolonged
+opposition, but by the time the big assault was launched the Turks
+knew they were being attacked on both sides of Beersheba and they must
+have become anxious about a line of retreat. General Shea reported
+that the wire in front of him was cut before noon, but General
+Girdwood was not certain that the wire was sufficiently broken on the
+74th Division's front, though he intimated to the Corps Commander
+that he was ready to attack at the same time as the 60th. It
+still continued a windless day, and the dust clouds prevented any
+observation of the wire entanglements. General Girdwood turned this
+disadvantage to account, and ordering his artillery to raise their
+fire slightly so that it should fall just in front of and about the
+trenches, put up what was in effect a dust barrage, and under cover
+of it selected detachments of his infantry advanced almost into the
+bursting shell to cut passages through the wire with wire-cutters. The
+dismounted yeomanry of the 231st and 230th Infantry Brigades rushed
+through, and by half-past one the 74th Division had secured their
+objectives. The 179th and 181st Brigades of the 60th Division had won
+their trenches almost an hour earlier, and about 5000 yards of works
+were in our hands south of the wadi Saba. The enemy had 3000 yards of
+trenches north of the wadi, and though these were threatened from the
+south and west, it was not until five o'clock that the 230th Brigade
+occupied them, the Turks clearing out during the bombardment. During
+the day, on the left of the 74th Division, the Imperial Camel Corps
+Brigade and two battalions of the 53rd Division held the ground to
+the north of the wadi Saba to a point where the remainder of the 53rd
+Division watched for the approach of any enemy force from the
+north, while the 10th Division about Shellal protected the line of
+communications east of the wadi Ghuzze, and the Yeomanry Mounted
+Division was on the west side of the wadi Ghuzze in G.H.Q. reserve.
+The XXth Corps' losses were 7 officers killed and 42 wounded,
+129 other ranks killed, 988 wounded and 5 missing, a light total
+considering the nature of the works carried during the day. It was
+obvious that the enemy was taken completely by surprise by the
+direction of the attack, and the rapidity with which we carried his
+strongest points was overwhelming. The Turk did not attempt anything
+in the nature of a counter-attack by the Beersheba garrison, nor did
+he make any move from Hareira against the 53rd Division. Had he done
+so the 10th Division and the Yeomanry Mounted Division would have
+seized the opportunity of falling on him from Shellal, and the Turk
+chose the safer course of allowing the Beersheba garrison to stand
+unaided in its own defences. The XXth Corps' captures included 25
+officers, 394 other ranks, 6 guns, and numerous machine guns.
+
+The Desert Mounted Corps met with stubborn opposition in their
+operations south-east and east of Beersheba, but they were carried
+through no less successfully than those of the XXth Corps. The mounted
+men had had a busy time. General Ryrie's 2nd Australian Light Horse
+Brigade and the Imperial Camel Corps Brigade had moved southwards
+on October 2, and on them and on the 1st and 2nd Field Squadrons
+Australian Engineers the bulk of the work fell of developing water and
+making and marking tracks which, in the sandy soil, became badly cut
+up. On the evening of October 30 the Anzac Mounted Division was at
+Asluj, the Australian Mounted Division at Khalasa, the 7th Mounted
+Brigade at Esani, Imperial Camel Brigade at Hiseia, and the Yeomanry
+Mounted Division in reserve at Shellal. The Anzac Division commanded
+by General Chaytor left Asluj during the night, and in a march of
+twenty-four miles round the south of Beersheba met with only slight
+opposition on the way to Bir el Hamam and Bir Salim abu Irgeig,
+between five and seven miles east of the town. The 2nd Australian
+Light Horse Brigade during the morning advanced north to take the high
+hill Tel el Sakaty, a little east of the Beersheba-Hebron road, which
+was captured at one o'clock, and the brigade then swept across
+the metalled road which was in quite fair condition, and which
+subsequently was of great service to us during the advance of one
+infantry division on Bethlehem and Jerusalem. The 1st Australian Light
+Horse Brigade commanded by General Cox, and the New Zealand Mounted
+Rifles Brigade under General Meldrum, moved against Tel el Saba, a
+1000-feet hill which rises very precipitously on the northern bank
+of the wadi Saba, 4000 yards due east of Beersheba. Tel el Saba is
+believed to be the original site of Beersheba. It had been made into a
+strong redoubt and was well held by a substantial garrison adequately
+dug in and supported by nests of machine-gunners. The right bank of
+the wadi Khalil was also strongly held, and between the Hebron road
+and Tel el Saba some German machine-gunners in three houses offered
+determined opposition. The New Zealanders and a number of General
+Cox's men crept up the wadi Saba, taking full advantage of the cover
+offered by the high banks, and formed up under the hill of Saba. They
+then dashed up the steep sides while the horse artillery lashed the
+crest with their fire, and driving the Turks from their trenches had
+captured the hill by three o'clock. At about the same time the 1st
+Light Horse Brigade suitably dealt with the machine-gunners in the
+houses. Much ground east of Beersheba had thus been made good, and
+the Hebron road was denied to the garrison of the town as a line of
+retreat. The Anzac Mounted Division was then reinforced by General
+Wilson's 3rd Australian Light Horse Brigade, and by six P.M. the
+Division held a long crescent of hills from Point 970, a mile north
+of Beersheba, through Tel el Sakaty, round south-eastwards to Bir el
+Hamam.
+
+General Hodgson's Australian Mounted Division had a night march of
+thirty-four miles from Khalasa to Iswawin, south-east of Beersheba,
+and after the 3rd Light Horse Brigade had been detached to assist the
+Anzac Division, orders were given to General Grant's 4th Australian
+Light Horse Brigade to attack and take the town of Beersheba from the
+east. The orders were received at four o'clock, and until we had
+got an absolute hold on Tel el Saba an attack on the town from this
+direction would have been suicidal, as an attacking force would have
+been between two fires. The shelling of the cavalry during the day had
+been rather hot, and enemy airmen had occasionally bombed them. It was
+getting late, and as it was of the greatest importance that the town's
+available water should be secured that night, General Grant was
+directed to attack with the utmost vigour. His brigade worthily
+carried out its orders. The ground was very uneven and was covered
+with a mass of large stones and shingle. The trenches were well manned
+and strongly held, but General Grant ordered them to be taken at the
+gallop. The Australians carried them with an irresistible charge;
+dismounted, cleared the first line of all the enemy in it, ran on and
+captured the second and third system of trenches, and then, their
+horses having been brought up, galloped into the town to prevent any
+destruction of the wells. The first-line eastern trenches of Beersheba
+were eight feet deep and four feet wide, and as there were many of the
+enemy in them they were a serious obstacle to be taken in one rush.
+This charge was a sterling feat, and unless the town had been occupied
+that night most, if not all, of the cavalry would have had to withdraw
+many miles to water, and subsequent operations might have been
+imperilled. Until we had got Beersheba there appeared small prospect
+of watering more than two brigades in this area.
+
+Luckily there had been two thunderstorms a few days before the attack,
+and we found a few pools of sweet water which enabled the whole of the
+Corps' horses to be watered during the night. These pools soon dried
+up and the water problem again became serious. The Commander-in-Chief
+rewarded General Grant with the D.S.O. as an appreciation of his work,
+and the brigade was gratified at a well-earned honour. The 7th Mounted
+Brigade was held up for some time in the afternoon by a flanking fire
+from Ras Ghannam, south of Beersheba, but this was silenced in time
+to enable the brigade to assist in the occupation of Beersheba at
+nightfall. The 4th Light Horse Brigade's captures in the charge were
+58 officers, 1090 other ranks, and 10 field guns, and the total 'bag'
+of the Desert Mounted Corps was 70 officers and 1458 other ranks.
+
+The loss of Beersheba was a heavy blow to the Turk. Yet he did not
+even then realise to the full the significance of our capture of the
+town. He certainly failed to appreciate that we were to use it as
+a jumping-off place to attack his main line from Gaza to Sheria by
+rolling it up from left to right. In this plan there is no doubt that
+General Allenby entirely deceived his enemy, for in the next few
+days there was the best of evidence to show that General Kress von
+Kressenstein believed we were going to advance from Beersheba to
+Jerusalem up the Hebron road, and he made his dispositions to oppose
+us here. It was not merely the moral effect of the loss of Beersheba
+that disturbed the Turks; they had been driven out of a not
+unimportant stronghold.
+
+All through the many centuries since Abraham and his people led a
+pastoral life near the wells, Beersheba had been a meanly appointed
+place. There were no signs as far as I could see of any elaborate
+ruins to indicate anything larger than a native settlement. Elsewhere
+we saw crumbling walls of ancient castles and fortresses to tell of
+conquerors and glories long since faded away, of relics of an age when
+great captains led martial men into new worlds to conquer, of the
+time when the Crusading spirit was abroad and the flower of Western
+chivalry came East to hold the land for Christians. Here the native
+quarter suggested that trade in Beersheba was purely local and not
+ambitious, that it provided nothing for the world's commerce save a
+few skins and hides, and that the inhabitants were content to live the
+rude, simple lives of their forefathers. But the enterprising German
+arrived, and you could tell by his work how he intended to compel a
+change in the unchanging character of the people. He built a handsome
+Mosque--but before he was driven out he wired and mined it for
+destruction. He built a seat of government, a hospital, and a
+barracks, all of them pretentious buildings for such a town, well
+designed, constructed of stone with red-tiled roofs, and the gardens
+were nicely laid out. There were a railway station and storehouses on
+a scale which would not yield a return on capital expenditure for many
+years, and the water tower and engine sheds were built to last longer
+than merely military necessities demanded. They were fashioned by
+European craftsmen, and the solidity of the structures offered strange
+contrast to the rough-and-ready native houses. The primary object of
+the Hun scheme was, doubtless, to make Beersheba a suitable base for
+an attack on the Suez Canal, and the manner of improving the Hebron
+road, of setting road engineers to construct zigzags up hills so that
+lorries could move over the road, was part of the plan of men whose
+vision was centred on cutting the Suez Canal artery of the British
+Empire's body. The best laid schemes....
+
+When I entered Beersheba our troops held a line of outposts
+sufficiently far north of the town to prevent the Turks shelling it,
+and the place was secure except from aircraft bombs, of which a number
+fell into the town without damaging anything of much consequence. Some
+of the troops fell victims to booby traps. Apparently harmless whisky
+bottles exploded when attempts were made to draw the corks, and
+several small mines went up. Besides the mines in the Mosque there
+was a good deal of wiring about the railway station, and some rolling
+stock was made ready for destruction the instant a door was opened.
+The ruse was expected; some Australian engineers drew the charges,
+and the coaches were afterwards of considerable service to the supply
+branch.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+GAZA DEFENCES
+
+
+Meanwhile there were important happenings at the other end of the
+line. Gaza was about to submit to the biggest of all her ordeals. She
+had been a bone of contention for thousands of years. The Pharaohs
+coveted her and more than 3500 years ago made bloody strife within the
+environs of the town. Alexander the Great besieged her, and Persians
+and Arabians opposed that mighty general. The Ptolemies and the
+Antiochi for centuries fought for Gaza, whose inhabitants had a
+greater taste for the mart than for the sword, and when the Maccabees
+were carrying a victorious war through Philistia, the people of Gaza
+bought off Jonathan, but the Jews occupied the city itself about a
+century before the Christian era. Later on the place was captured
+after a year's siege and destroyed, and for long it remained a mass
+of mouldering ruins. Pompey revived it, making it a free city, and
+Gabinius extended it close to the harbour, whilst under Caesar and
+Herod its prosperity and fame increased. In succeeding centuries
+Gaza's commerce flourished under the Greeks, who founded schools
+famous for rhetoric and philosophy, till the Mahomedan wave swept
+over the land in the first half of the seventh century, when the town
+became a shadow of its former self, though it continued to exist as a
+centre for trade. The Crusaders made their influence felt, and many
+are the traces of their period in this ancient city, but Askalon
+always had more Crusader support. Napoleon's attack on Gaza found
+Abdallah's army in a very different state of preparedness from von
+Kress's Turkish army. Nearly all Abdallah's artillery was left behind
+in a gun park at Jaffa owing to lack of transport, and though he had
+a numerically superior force he did not like Napoleon's dispositions,
+and retreated when Kleber moved up the plain to pass between Gaza and
+the sea, and the cavalry advanced east of the Mound of Hebron, or Ali
+Muntar, as we know the hill up which Samson is reputed to have carried
+the gates and bar of Gaza. For nearly a century and a quarter since
+Napoleon passed forwards and backwards through the town, Gaza pursued
+the arts of peace in the lethargic spirit which suits the native
+temperament, but in eight months of 1917 it was the cockpit of strife
+in the Middle East, and there was often crammed into one day as
+much fighting energy as was shown in all the battles of the past
+thirty-five centuries, Napoleon's campaign included.
+
+Fortunately after the battles of March and April nearly all the
+civilian population left the town for quieter quarters. Some of them
+on returning must have had difficulty in identifying their homes. In
+the centre of the town, where bazaars radiated from the quarter of
+which the Great Mosque was the hub, the houses were a mass of stones
+and rubble, and the narrow streets and tortuous byways were filled
+with fallen walls and roofs. The Great Mosque had entirely lost its
+beauty. We had shelled it because its minaret, one of those delicately
+fashioned spires which, seen from a distance, lead a traveller to
+imagine a native town in the East to be arranged on an artistic and
+orderly plan, was used as a Turkish observation post, and the Mosque
+itself as an ammunition store. I am told our guns were never laid on
+to this objective until there was an accident within it which exploded
+the ammunition. Be that as it may, there was ample justification for
+shelling the Mosque. I went in to examine the structure a few hours
+after the Turks had been compelled to evacuate the town, and whilst
+they were then shelling it with unpleasant severity. Amid the wrecked
+marble columns, the broken pulpit, the torn and twisted lamps and
+crumbling walls were hundreds of thousands of rounds of small-arms
+ammunition, most of it destroyed by explosion. A great shell had cut
+the minaret in half and had left exposed telephone wires leading
+direct to army headquarters and to the Turkish gunners' fire control
+station. Most of the Mosque furniture and all the carpets had
+been removed, but a few torn copies of the Koran, some of them in
+manuscript with marginal notes, lay mixed up with German newspapers
+and some typical Turkish war propaganda literature. That Mosque, which
+Saladin seized from the Crusaders and turned from a Christian into
+a Mahomedan place of worship, was unquestionably used for military
+purposes, and the Turks cared as little for its religious character or
+its venerable age as they did for the mosque on Nebi Samwil, where the
+remains of the Prophet Samuel are supposed to rest. Their stories of
+the trouble taken to avoid military contact with holy places and sites
+were all bunkum and eyewash. They would have fought from the walls of
+the Holy City and placed machine-gun nests in the Church of the Holy
+Sepulchre and the Mosque of Omar if they had thought it would spare
+them the loss of Jerusalem.
+
+Gaza had, as I have said, been turned into a fortress with a mass of
+field works, in places of considerable natural strength. If our force
+had been on the defensive at Gaza the Germans would not have attacked
+without an army of at least three times our strength. It is doubtful
+if the Turks put as much material in use on Gallipoli as they did
+here. Their trenches were deeply cut and were protected by an immense
+amount of wire. In the sand-dune area they used a vast quantity of
+sandbags, and they met the shortage of jute stuffs by making small
+sacks of bedstead hangings and curtains which, in the dry heat of the
+summer, wore very well. Looking across No Man's Land one could easily
+pick out a line of trenches by a red, a vivid blue, or a saffron
+sandbag. The Turkish dug-outs were most elaborate places of security.
+The excavators had gone down into the hard earth well beneath the
+deep strata of sand, and they roofed these holes with six, eight, and
+sometimes ten layers of palm logs. We had seen these beautiful
+trees disappearing and had guessed the reason. But an even greater
+protection than the devices of military engineers had been provided
+for the Turks by Dame Nature. Along the southern outskirts of the town
+all the fields were enclosed by giant cactus hedges, sometimes with
+stems as thick as a man's body and not infrequently rearing their
+strong limbs and prickly leaves twenty feet above the ground. The
+hedges were deep as well as high. They were at once a screen for
+defending troops and a barrier as impenetrable as the walls of a
+fortress. If one line of cactus hedges had been cut through, infantry
+would have found another and yet another to a depth of nearly two
+miles, and as the whole of these thorny enclosures were commanded by
+a few machine guns the possibility of getting through was almost
+hopeless. There were similar hedges on the eastern and western sides
+of Gaza, but they were not quite so deep as on the south. On the
+western side, and extending south as far as the desert which the Army
+had crossed with such steady, methodical, and one may also say painful
+progression, was a wide belt of yellow sand, sometimes settled down
+hard under the weight of heavy winds, and in other places yielding to
+the pressure of feet. The Turks had laboured hard in this mile and
+a half width of sand, right down to the sea, to protect their right
+flank. There was a point about 4000 yards due west from the edge of
+the West Town of Gaza which we called Sea Post. It was the western
+extremity of the enemy's exceedingly intricate system of defences. The
+beach was below the level of the Post. From Sea Post for about 1500
+yards the Turkish front line ran to Rafa Redoubt. There were wired-in
+entrenchments with strong points here and there, and a series of
+communication trenches and redoubts behind them for 3000 yards to
+Sheikh Hasan, which was the port of Gaza, if you can so describe an
+open roadstead with no landing facilities. From Rafa Redoubt the
+contour of the sand dunes permitted the enemy to construct an
+exceedingly strong line running due south for 2000 yards, the
+strongest points being named by us Zowaid trench, El Burj trench,
+Triangle trench, Peach Orchard, and El Arish Redoubt, the nomenclature
+being reminiscent of the trials of the troops in the desert march.
+Behind this line there was many a sunken passageway and shelter from
+gunfire, while backing the whole system, and, for reasons I have
+given, an element of defence as strong as the prepared positions, were
+cactus hedges enclosing the West Town's gardens.
+
+From El Arish Redoubt the line ran east again to Mazar trench with
+a prodigal expenditure of wire in front of it, and then south for
+several hundred yards, when it was thrown out to the south-west to
+embrace a position of high importance known as Umbrella Hill, a dune
+of blazing yellow sand facing, about 500 yards away, Samson's Ridge,
+which we held strongly and on which the enemy often concentrated his
+fire. This ended the Turks' right-half section of the Gaza defences.
+Close by passed what from time immemorial has been called the Cairo
+Road, a track worn down by caravans of camels moving towards Kantara
+on their way with goods for Egyptian bazaars. But there was no break
+in the trench system which ran across the plain, a beautiful green
+tinted with the blooms of myriads of wild flowers when we first
+advanced over it in March, now browned and dried up by absolutely
+cloudless summer days. In the gardens on the western slopes of the
+hills running south from Ali Muntar the Turk had achieved much
+spadework, but he had done far more work on the hills themselves, and
+these were a frame of fortifications for Ali Muntar, on which we once
+sat for a few hours, and the possession of which meant the reduction
+of Gaza. By the end of summer the hill of Muntar had lost its shape.
+When we saw it during the first battle of Gaza it was a bold feature
+surmounted by a few trees and the whitened walls and grey dome of a
+sheikh's tomb. In the earlier battles of 1917 much was done to ruffle
+Muntar's crest. We saw trees uprooted, others lose their limbs, and
+naval gunfire threatened the foundations of the old chief's burying
+place. But Ali Muntar stoutly resisted the heavy shells' attack. As
+if Samson's feat had endowed it with some of the strong man's powers,
+Muntar for a long time received its daily thumps stoically; but by
+degrees the resistance of the old hill declined, and when agents
+reported that the sheikh's tomb was used as an observation post,
+8-inch howitzers got on to it and made it untenable. There was a bit
+of it left at the end, but not more than would offer protection from a
+rifle bullet, and the one tree left standing was a limbless trunk. The
+crest of the hill lost its roundness, and the soil which had worked
+out through the shell craters had changed the colour of the summit.
+Old Ali Muntar had had the worst of the bombardment, and if some
+future sheikh should choose the site for a summer residence he will
+come across a wealth of metal in digging his foundations.
+
+To capture Gaza the Formidable it was proposed first to take the
+western defences from Umbrella Hill to Sea Post, to press on to Sheikh
+Hasan and thus turn the right flank of the whole position. That would
+compel the enemy to reinforce his right flank when he was being
+heavily attacked elsewhere, and if he had been transferring his
+reserves to meet the threat against the left of his main line after
+Beersheba had been won for the Empire he would be in sore trouble.
+Gaza had already tasted a full sample of the war food we intended it
+should consume. Before the attack on Beersheba had developed, ships of
+war and the heavy guns of XXIst Corps had rattled its defences. The
+warships' fire was chiefly directed on targets our land guns could
+not reach. Observers in aircraft controlled the fire and notified the
+destruction of ammunition dumps at Deir Sineid and other places. The
+work of the heavy batteries was watched with much interest. Some were
+entirely new batteries which had never been in action against any
+enemy, and they only arrived on the Gaza front five weeks before the
+battle. These were not allowed to register until shortly before the
+battle began, and they borrowed guns from other batteries in order to
+train the gun crews. So desirous was General Bulfin to conceal the
+concentration of heavies that the wireless code calls were only those
+used by batteries which were in position before his Corps was formed,
+and the volume of fire came as an absolute surprise to the enemy. It
+came as a surprise also to some of us in camp at G.H.Q. one night at
+the end of October. Suddenly there was a terrific burst of fire on
+about four miles of front. Vivid fan-shaped flashes stabbed the sky,
+the bright moonlight of the East did not dim the guns' lightning, and
+their thunderous voices were a challenge the enemy was powerless to
+refuse. He took it up slowly as if half ashamed of his weakness. Then
+his fire increased in volume and in strength, but it ebbed again and
+we knew the reason. We held some big 'stuff' for counter battery work,
+and our fire was effective.
+
+The preliminary bombardment began on October 27 and it grew in
+intensity day by day. The Navy co-operated on October 29 and
+subsequent days. The whole line from Middlesex Hill (close to Outpost
+Hill) to the sea was subjected to heavy fire, all the routes to the
+front line were shelled during the night by 60-pounder and field-gun
+batteries. Gas shells dosed the centres of communication and bivouac
+areas, and every quarter of the defences was made uncomfortable. The
+sound-ranging sections told us the enemy had between sixteen and
+twenty-four guns south of Gaza, and from forty to forty-eight north of
+the town, and over 100 guns were disclosed, including more than thirty
+firing from the Tank Redoubt well away to the eastward. On October 29
+some of the guns south of Gaza had been forced back by the severity of
+our counter battery work, and of the ten guns remaining between us and
+the town on that date all except four had been removed by November
+2. For several nights the bombardment continued without a move by
+infantry. Then just at the moment von Kress was discussing the loss of
+Beersheba and his plans to meet our further advance in that direction,
+some infantry of the 75th Division raided Outpost Hill, the southern
+extremity of the entrenched hill system south of Ali Muntar, and
+killed far more Turks than they took prisoners. There was an
+intense bombardment of the enemy's works at the same time. The next
+night--November 1-2--was the opening of XXIst Corps' great attack on
+Gaza, and though the enemy did not leave the town or the remainder of
+the trenches we had not assaulted till nearly a week afterwards, the
+vigour of the attack and the bravery with which it was thrust home,
+and the subsequent total failure of counter-attacks, must have made
+the enemy commanders realise on the afternoon of November 2 that Gaza
+was doomed and that their boasts that Gaza was impregnable were thin
+air. Their reserves were on the way to their left where they were
+urgently wanted, there was nothing strong enough to replace such heavy
+wastage caused to them by the attack of the night of November 1 and
+the morning of the 2nd, and our big gains of ground were an enormous
+advantage to us for the second phase in the Gaza sector, for we had
+bitten deeply into the Turks' right flank.
+
+Like the concentration of the XXth Corps and the Desert Mounted Corps
+for the jump off on to Beersheba, the preparations against the Turks'
+extreme right had to be very secretly made. The XXIst Corps Commander
+had to look a long way ahead. He had to consider the possibility of
+the enemy abandoning Gaza when Beersheba was captured, and falling
+back to the line of the wadi Hesi. His troops had been confined to
+trench warfare for months, digging and sitting in trenches, putting
+out wire, going out on listening patrols, sniping and doing all the
+drudgery in the lines of earthworks. They were hard and strong, their
+health having considerably improved since the early summer, but at the
+end of September the infantry were by no means march fit. Realising
+that, if General Allenby's operations were successful, and no one
+doubted that, we should have a period of open warfare when troops
+would be called upon to make long marches and undergo the privations
+entailed by transport difficulties, General Bulfin brought as many
+men as he could spare from the trenches back to Deir el Belah and the
+coast, where they had route marches over the sand for the restoration
+of their marching powers. Gradually he accumulated supplies in
+sheltered positions just behind the front. In three dumps were
+collected seven days' mobile rations, ammunition, water, and
+engineers' material. Tracks were constructed, cables buried, concealed
+gun positions and brigade and battalion headquarters made, and from
+the 25th October troops were ready to move off with two days' rations
+on the man. Should the enemy retire, General Hill's 52nd (Lowland)
+Division was to march up the shore beneath the sand cliffs, get across
+the wadi Hesi at the mouth, detach a force to proceed towards Askalon,
+and then move eastward down to the ridge opposite Deir Sineid, and, by
+securing the bridge and crossings of the wadi Hesi, prevent the enemy
+establishing himself on the north bank of the wadi. The operations
+on the night of November 1-2 were conducted by Major-General Hare,
+commanding the 54th Division, to which General Leggatt's 156th
+Infantry Brigade was temporarily attached. The latter brigade was
+given the important task of capturing Umbrella Hill and El Arish
+Redoubt. Umbrella Hill was to be taken first, and as it was
+anticipated the enemy would keep up a strong artillery fire for a
+considerable time after the position had been taken, and that his fire
+would interfere with the assembly and advance of troops detailed
+for the second phase, the first phase was timed to start four hours
+earlier than the second. For several days the guns had opened intense
+fire at midnight and again at 3 A.M. so that the enemy should not
+attach particular importance to our artillery activity on the night of
+action, and a creeping barrage nightly swept across No Man's Land to
+clear off the chain of listening posts established 300 yards in front
+of the enemy's trenches. Some heavy banks of cloud moved across the
+sky when the Scottish Rifle Brigade assembled for the assault, but the
+moon shed sufficient light at intervals to enable the Scots to file
+through the gaps made in our wire and to form up on the tapes laid
+outside. At 11 P.M. the 7th Scottish Rifles stormed Umbrella Hill with
+the greatest gallantry. The first wave of some sixty-five officers and
+men was blown up by four large contact mines and entirely destroyed.
+The second wave passed over the bodies of their comrades without a
+moment's check and, moving through the wire smashed by our artillery,
+entered Umbrella Hill trenches and set about the Turks with their
+bayonets. They had to clear a maze of trenches and dug-outs, but they
+bombed out of existence the machine-gunners opposing them and had
+settled the possession of Umbrella Hill in half an hour.
+
+The 4th Royal Scots led the attack on El Arish Redoubt. It was a
+bigger and noisier 'show' than the Royal Scots had had some months
+before, when in a 'silent' raid they killed with hatchets only, for
+the Scots had seen the condition of some of their dead left in Turkish
+hands and were taking retribution. Not many Turks in El Arish Redoubt
+lived to relate that night's story. The Scots were rapidly in the
+redoubt and were rapidly through it, cleared up a nasty corner known
+as the 'Little Devil,' and were just about to shelter from the shells
+which were to answer their attack when they caught a brisk fire from a
+Bedouin hut. A platoon leader disposed his men cleverly and rushed
+the hut, killing everybody in it and capturing two machine guns. The
+vigorous resistance of the Turks on Umbrella Hill and El Arish Redoubt
+resulted in our having to bury over 350 enemy dead in these positions.
+
+The second phase was to attack the enemy's front-line system from El
+Arish Redoubt to the sea at Sea Post. At 3 A.M., after the enemy
+guns had plentifully sprinkled Umbrella Hill and had given it up as
+irretrievably lost, we opened a ten-minutes' intense bombardment of
+the front line, exactly as had been done on preceding mornings, but
+this time the 161st and 162nd Infantry Brigades followed up our shells
+and carried 3000 yards of trenches at once. Three-quarters of an
+hour afterwards the 163rd Infantry Brigade tried to get the support
+trenches several hundred yards in rear, but the difficulties were too
+many and the effort failed. Having secured Sea Post and Beach Post the
+162nd Brigade completed the programme by advancing up the coast and
+capturing the 'port' of Gaza, Sheikh Hasan, with a considerable body
+of prisoners.
+
+The enemy's guns remained active until seven o'clock, when they
+reserved their fire till the afternoon. Then a heavy counter-attack
+was seen to be developing by an aerial observer, whose timely
+warning enabled the big guns and warships to smash it up. Another
+counter-attack against Sheikh Hasan was repulsed later in the day, and
+a third starting from Crested Rock which aimed at getting back El
+Burj trench was a complete failure. After the second phase our troops
+buried 739 enemy dead. Without doubt there were many others killed and
+wounded in the unsuccessful counter-attacks, particularly the first
+against Sheikh Hasan, when many heavy shells were seen to fall in the
+enemy's ranks. We took prisoners 26 officers, including two battalion
+commanders, and 418 other ranks. Our casualties were 30 officers and
+331 other ranks killed, 94 officers and 1869 other ranks wounded, and
+10 officers and 362 other ranks missing. Considering the enormous
+strength of the positions attacked, the numbers engaged, and the fact
+that we secured enemy front 5000 yards long and 3000 yards deep, the
+losses were not more severe than might have been expected.
+
+The Turks clung to their trenches with a tenacity equal to that which
+characterised their defences on Gallipoli, and officer prisoners told
+us they had been ordered to hold Gaza at all costs. That was good
+news, though even if they had got back to the wadi Hesi line it is
+doubtful if, when Sheria was taken, they could have done more than
+temporarily hold us up there. During the next few days the work
+against the enemy's right consisted of heavy bombardments on the line
+of hills running from the north-east to the south of Gaza, and on the
+prominent position of Sheikh Redwan, east of the port. The enemy made
+some spirited replies, notably on the 4th, but his force in Gaza was
+getting shaken, and prisoners reluctantly admitted that the heavy
+naval shells taking them in flank and rear were affecting the moral
+of the troops. The gunfire of Rear-Admiral Jackson's fleet of H.M.S.
+_Grafton_, _Raglan_, Monitors 15, 29, 31, and 32, river-gunboats
+_Ladybird_ and _Amphis_, and the destroyers _Staunch_ and _Comet_, was
+worthy of the King's Navy. They were assisted by the French battleship
+_Requin_. We lost a monitor and destroyer torpedoed by a submarine,
+but the marks of the Navy's hard hitting were on and about Gaza, and
+we heard, if we could not see, the best the ships were doing. On one
+day there was a number of explosions about Deir Sineid indicating the
+destruction of some of the enemy's reserve of ammunition, and while
+the Turks were still in Gaza they received a shock resembling
+nothing more than an earthquake. One of the ships--the _Raglan_, I
+believe--taking a signal from a seaplane, got a direct hit on an
+ammunition train at Beit Hanun, the railway terminus north of Gaza.
+The whole train went up and its load was scattered in fragments over
+an area of several hundred square yards, an extraordinary scene of
+wreckage of torn and twisted railway material and destroyed ammunition
+presenting itself to us when we got on the spot on November 7. There
+was another very fine example of the Navy's indirect fire a short
+distance northward of this railway station. A stone road bridge had
+been built over the wadi Hesi and it had to carry all heavy traffic,
+the banks of the wadi being too steep and broken to permit wheels
+passing down them as they stood. During our advance the engineers had
+to build ramps here. A warship, taking its line from an aeroplane,
+fired at the bridge from a range of 14,000 yards, got two direct hits
+on it and holed it in the centre, and there must have been thirty or
+forty shell craters within a radius of fifty yards. The confounding of
+the Turks was ably assisted by the Navy.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+CRUSHING THE TURKISH LEFT
+
+
+Now we return to the operations of XXth Corps and Desert Mounted Corps
+on our right. After the capture of Beersheba this force was preparing
+to attack the left of the Turkish main line about Hareira and Sheria,
+the capture of which would enable the fine force of cavalry to get
+to Nejile and gain an excellent water supply, to advance to the
+neighbourhood of Huj and so reach the plain and threaten the enemy's
+line in rear, and to fall on his line of retreat. It was proposed
+to make the attack on the Kauwukah and Rushdi systems at Hareira on
+November 4, but the water available at Beersheba had not been equal
+to the demands made upon it and was petering out, and mounted troops
+protecting the right flank of XXth Corps had to be relieved every
+twenty-four hours. The men also suffered a good deal from thirst. The
+weather was unusually hot for this period of the year, and the dust
+churned up by traffic was as irritating as when the khamseen wind
+blew. The two days' delay meant much in favour of the enemy, who was
+enabled to move his troops as he desired, but it also permitted our
+infantry to get some rest after their long marches, and supplies were
+brought nearer the front. 'Rest' was only a comparative term. Brigades
+were on the move each day in country which was one continual rise and
+fall, with stony beds of wadis to check progress, without a tree to
+lend a few moments' grateful relief from a burning sun, and nothing
+but the rare sight of a squalid native hut to relieve the monotony of
+a sun-dried desolate land.
+
+The troops were remarkably cheerful. They were on their toes, as the
+cavalry told them. They had drawn first blood profusely from the Turk
+after many weary months of waiting and getting fit, and they knew that
+those gaunt mountain ridges away on their right front held behind them
+Bethlehem and Jerusalem, goals they desired to reach more than any
+other prizes of war. They had seen the Turk, and had soundly thrashed
+him out of trenches which the British could have held against a much
+stronger force. Their confidence was based on the proof that they were
+better men, and they were convinced that once they got the enemy into
+the open their superiority would be still more marked. The events of
+the next six weeks showed their estimate of the Turkish soldier was
+justified.
+
+The 53rd Division with the Imperial Camel Corps on its right moved to
+Towal Abu Jerwal on November 1 to protect the flank guard of the XXth
+Corps during the pending attack on the Kauwukah system. The infantry
+had some fighting on that day, but it was mild compared with the
+strenuous days before them. The 10th Division attacked Irgeig railway
+station north-west of Beersheba and secured it, and waited there with
+the 74th Division on its right while the Welsh Division went forward
+to fight for Khuweilfeh on November 3. The Welshmen could not obtain
+the whole of the position on that day, and it was not until the 6th
+that it became theirs. Khuweilfeh is about ten miles due east of
+Sheria, the same distance north of Beersheba, and some five miles west
+of the Hebron road. It is in the hill country, difficult to approach,
+with nothing in the nature of a road or track leading to it, and there
+was no element in the position to suggest the prospect of an easy
+capture. When General Mott advanced to these forbidding heights the
+strength of the enemy in these parts was not realised. Prisoners
+taken during the day proved that there were portions of three or four
+Turkish divisions in the neighbourhood, and the strong efforts made to
+prevent the Welsh troops gaining the position and the furious attempts
+to drive them out of it suggested that most of the Turkish reserves
+had been brought over to their left flank to guard against a wide
+movement intended to envelop it. It afterwards turned out that von
+Kressenstein believed General Allenby intended to march on Jerusalem
+up the Hebron road, and he threw over to his left all his reserves to
+stop us. That was a supreme mistake, for when we had broken through at
+Hareira and Sheria the two wings of his Army were never in contact,
+and their only means of communication was by aeroplane.
+
+The magnificent fight the 53rd Division put up at Khuweilfeh against
+vastly superior forces and in the face of heavy casualties played a
+very important part in the overwhelming defeat of the Turks. For four
+days and nights the Welsh Division fought without respite and with the
+knowledge that they could not be substantially reinforced, since the
+plan for the attack on Hareira and Sheria entailed the employment of
+all the available infantry of XXth Corps. Attack after attack was
+launched against them with extreme violence and great gallantry, their
+positions were raked by gunfire, whilst water and supplies were not
+over plentiful. But the staunch Division held on grimly to what it had
+gained, and its tenacity was well rewarded by what was won on other
+portions of the field.
+
+During the night of November 5-6 and the day of the 6th, the 74th,
+60th, and 10th Divisions concentrated for the attack on the Kauwukah
+system. The enemy's positions ran from his Jerusalem-Beersheba railway
+about five miles south-east of Hareira, across the Gaza-Beersheba road
+to the wadi Sheria, on the northern bank of which was an exceedingly
+strong redoubt covering Hareira. The eastern portion of this line
+was known as the Kauwukah system, and between it and Hareira was
+the Rushdi system, all being connected up by long communication and
+support trenches, while a light railway ran from the Rushdi line to
+dumps south of Sheria. At the moment of assembly for attack our line
+from right to left was made up as follows: the 158th Infantry Brigade
+was on the right, south of Tel Khuweilfeh. Then came the 160th Brigade
+and 159th Brigade. The Yeomanry Mounted Division held a long line
+of country and was the connecting link between the 53rd and 74th
+Divisions. The latter division disposed from right to left the 231st
+Brigade, the 229th Brigade, and 230th Brigade, who were to march from
+the south-east to the north-west to attack the right of the Kauwukah
+system of entrenchments on the railway. The 181st Brigade, 180th
+Brigade, and 179th Brigade of the 60th Division were to march in the
+same direction to attack the next portion of the system on the left of
+the 74th Division's objectives, then swinging to the north to march
+on Sheria. The 31st Brigade, 30th Brigade, and 29th Brigade were to
+operate on the 60th Division's left, with the Australian Mounted
+Division watching the left flank of XXth Corps. The Turkish VIIth
+Army and 3rd Cavalry Division were opposing the XXth Corps, another
+Division was opposite the 53rd Division and the Imperial Camel Corps
+with the 12th Depôt Regiment at Dharahiyeh on the Hebron road, the
+16th Division opposite our 74th, the 24th and 26th Divisions opposite
+our 69th, and the 54th against the 10th Division. The 3rd, 53rd, and
+7th Turkish Divisions were in the Gaza area.
+
+At daybreak the troops advanced to the attack. The first part of the
+line in front of the 231st Brigade was a serious obstacle. Two or
+three small outlying rifle pits had to be taken before the Division
+could proceed with its effort to drive the enemy out of Sheria and
+protect the flank of the 60th Division, which had to cross the railway
+where a double line of trenches was to be tackled, the rear line above
+the other with the flank well thrown back and protected by small
+advanced pits to hold a few men and machine guns. The Turks held on
+very obstinately to their ground east of the railway, and kept the
+74th Division at bay till one o'clock in the afternoon, but the
+artillery of that Division had for some time been assisting in the
+wire-cutting in front of the trenches to be assaulted by the 60th
+Division, and the latter went ahead soon after noon, and with the
+assistance of one brigade of the 10th Division, had won about 4000
+yards of the complicated trench system and most of the Rushdi system
+by half-past two. The Londoners then swung to the north and occupied
+the station at Sheria, while the dismounted yeomanry worked round
+farther east, taking a series of isolated trenches on the way, the
+Irish troops relieving the 60th in the captured trenches at Kauwukah.
+The 60th Division, having possession of the larger part of Sheria,
+intended to attack the hill there at nightfall, and the attack was in
+preparation when an enemy dump exploded and a huge fire lighted up the
+whole district, so that all troops would have been exposed to the
+fire of the garrison on the hill. General Shea therefore stopped the
+attack, but the hill was stormed at 4.30 next morning and carried at
+the point of the bayonet. A bridgehead was then formed at Sheria, and
+the Londoners fought all day and stopped one counter-attack when it
+was within 200 yards of our line. On that same morning the Irish
+troops had extended their gains westwards from the Rushdi system till
+they got to Hareira Tepe Redoubt, a high mound 500 yards across the
+top, which had been criss-crossed with trenches with wire hanging
+about some broken ground at the bottom. Here there was a hot tussle,
+but the Irishmen valiantly pushed through and not only gave XXth Corps
+the whole of its objectives and completed the turn of the enemy's left
+flank, but joined up with the XXIst Corps. The working of XXth Corps'
+scheme had again been admirable, and once more the staff work had
+enabled the movements to be timed perfectly.
+
+The Desert Mounted Corps was thus able to draw up to Sheria in
+readiness to take up the pursuit and to get the water supply at
+Nejile. This ended the XXth Corps' task for a few days, though the
+60th Division became temporarily attached to Desert Mounted Corps.
+XXth Corps had nobly done its part. The consummate ability, energy,
+and foresight of the corps commander had been supported throughout by
+the skill of divisional and brigade commanders. For the men no praise
+could be too high. The attention given to their training was well
+repaid. They bore the strain of long marches on hard food and a small
+allowance of water in a way that proved their physique to be only
+matched by their courage, and that was of a high order. Their
+discipline was admirable, their determination alike in attack and
+defence strong and well sustained. To say they were equal to the
+finest troops in the world might lay one open to a charge of
+exaggeration when it was impossible to get a fair ground of
+comparison, seeing the conditions of fighting on different fronts
+was so varied, but the trials through which the troops of XXth
+Corps passed up to the end of the first week of November, and their
+magnificent accomplishments by the end of the year, make me doubt
+whether any other corps possessed finer soldierly qualities. The men
+were indeed splendid. The casualties sustained by the XXth Corps from
+October 31 to November 16 were: killed, officers 63, other ranks 869;
+wounded, officers 198, other ranks 4246; missing, no officers, 108
+other ranks--a total of 261 officers and 5223 other ranks.
+
+During the period after Beersheba when the XXth Corps troops were
+concentrating to break up the Turks' defensive position on the left,
+the Desert Mounted Corps was busily engaged holding a line eight or
+ten miles north and north-east of Beersheba, and watching for any
+movement of troops down the Hebron road. The 2nd Australian Light
+Horse Brigade and 7th Mounted Brigade tried to occupy a line from
+Khuweilfeh to Dharahiyeh, but it was not possible to reach it--a fact
+by no means surprising, as in the light of subsequent knowledge it was
+clear that the Turks had put much of their strength there. A patrol
+of Light Horsemen managed to work round to the north of Dharahiyeh,
+a curious group of mud houses on a hill-top inhabited by natives who
+have yet to appreciate the evils of grossly overcrowded quarters as
+well as some of the elementary principles of sanitation, and they saw
+a number of motor lorries come up the admirably constructed hill road
+designed by German engineers. The lorries were hurrying from the
+Jerusalem area with reinforcements. Prisoners--several hundreds of
+them in all--were brought in daily, but no attempt was made to force
+the enemy back until November 6, when the 53rd Division, which for the
+time being was attached to the Desert Mounted Corps, drove the Turks
+off the whole of Khuweilfeh, behaving as I have already said with
+fine gallantry and inflicting severe losses. There were also
+counter-attacks launched against the 5th Mounted Brigade, the New
+Zealand Mounted Rifles Brigade, and the Imperial Camel Corps Brigade,
+but these were likewise beaten off with considerable casualties to
+the enemy. When the XXth Corps had captured the Khauwukah system, a
+detachment for the defence of the right flank of the Army was formed
+under the command of Major-General G. de S. Barrow, the G.O.C.
+Yeomanry Mounted Division, consisting of the Imperial Camel Corps
+Brigade, 53rd Division, Yeomanry Mounted Division, New Zealand Mounted
+Rifles Brigade, and two squadrons and eight machine guns of the 2nd
+Australian Light Horse Brigade. The Australian Mounted Division
+marched from Karm, whither it had been sent on account of water
+difficulties, to rejoin Desert Mounted Corps to whom the 60th Division
+was temporarily attached. The Desert Corps had orders on November 7 to
+push through as rapidly as possible to the line wadi Jemmameh-Huj, and
+from that day the Corps commenced its long march to Jaffa, a march
+which, though strongly opposed by considerable bodies of troops, was
+more often interfered with by lack of water than by difficulty in
+defeating the enemy.
+
+The scarcity of water was a sore trouble. There was an occasional pool
+here and there, but generally the only water procurable was in deep
+wells giving a poor yield. The cavalry will not forget that long
+trek. No brigade could march straight ahead. Those operating in the
+foothills on our right had to fight all the way, and they were often
+called upon to resist counter-attacks by strong rearguards issuing
+from the hills to threaten the flank and so delay the advance in
+order to permit the Turks to carry off some of their material. It was
+necessary almost every day to withdraw certain formations from the
+front and send them back a considerable distance to water, replacing
+them by other troops coming from a well centre. In this way brigades
+were not infrequently attached to divisions other than their own, and
+the administrative services were heavily handicapped. Several times
+whole brigades were without water for forty-eight hours, and though
+supplies reached them on all but one or two occasions they were often
+late, and an exceedingly severe strain was put on the transport.
+During that diagonal march across the Maritime Plain I heard infantry
+officers remark that the Australians always seemed to have their
+supplies up with them. I do not think the supplies were always there,
+but they generally were not far behind, and if resource and energy
+could work miracles the Australian supply officers deserve the credit
+for them. The divisional trains worked hard in those strenuous days,
+and the 'Q' staff of the Desert Mounted Corps had many a sleepless
+night devising plans to get that last ounce out of their transport men
+and to get that little extra amount of supplies to the front which
+meant the difference between want and a sufficiency for man and horse.
+
+On the 7th November the 60th Division after its spirited attack on
+Tel el Sheria crossed the wadi and advanced north about two miles,
+fighting obstinate rearguards all the way. The 1st Australian Light
+Horse took 300 prisoners and a considerable quantity of ammunition
+and stores at Ameidat, and with the remainder of the Anzac Division
+reached Tel Abu Dilakh by the evening, and the Australian Mounted
+Division filled the gap between the Anzacs and the Londoners, but
+having been unable to water could not advance further. The 8th
+November was a busy and brilliantly successful day. The Corps' effort
+was to make a wide sweeping movement in order first to obtain the
+valuable and urgently required water at Nejile, and then to push
+across the hills and rolling downs to the country behind Gaza to
+harass the enemy retreating from that town. The Turks had a big
+rearguard south-west of Nejile and made a strong effort to delay the
+capture of that place, the importance of which to us they realised
+to the full, and they were prepared to sacrifice the whole of the
+rearguard if they could hold us off the water for another twenty-four
+hours. The pressure of the Anzac Division and the 7th Mounted Brigade
+assisting it was too much for the enemy, who though holding on to the
+hills very stoutly till the last moment had to give way and leave the
+water in our undisputed possession. The Sherwood Rangers and South
+Notts Hussars were vigorously counter-attacked at Mudweiweh, but they
+severely handled the enemy, who retired a much weakened body.
+
+By the evening the Anzacs held the country from Nejile to the north
+bank of the wadi Jemmameh, having captured 300 prisoners and two guns.
+The Australian Mounted Division made an excellent advance round
+the north side of Huj, which had been the Turkish VIIIth Army
+Headquarters, and the 4th Australian Light Horse Brigade was in touch
+with the corps cavalry of XXIst Corps at Beit Hanun, while the 3rd
+Australian Light Horse Brigade had taken prisoners and two of the
+troublesome Austrian 5.9 howitzers.
+
+It was the work of the 60th Division in the centre, however, which
+was the outstanding feature of the day, though the Londoners readily
+admitted that without the glorious charge of the Worcester and
+Warwickshire Yeomanry in the afternoon they would not have been in the
+neighbourhood of Huj when darkness fell. The 60th were in the centre,
+sandwiched between the Anzacs and Australian Mounted Division, and
+their allotted task was to clear the country between Sheria and Huj, a
+distance of ten miles. The country was a series of billowy downs with
+valleys seldom more than 1000 yards wide, and every yard of the way
+was opposed by infantry and artillery. Considering the opposition the
+progress was good. The Londoners drove in the Turks' strong flank
+three times, first from the hill of Zuheilika, then from the
+cultivated area behind it, and thirdly from the wadi-torn district
+of Muntaret el Baghl, from which the infantry proceeded to the high
+ground to the north. It was then between two and three o'clock in the
+afternoon, and maps showed that between the Division and Huj there was
+nearly four miles of most difficult country, a mass of wadi beds and
+hills giving an enterprising enemy the best possible means for holding
+up an advance. General Shea went ahead in a light armoured car to
+reconnoitre, and saw a strong body of Turks with guns marching across
+his front. It was impossible for his infantry to catch them and,
+seeing ten troops of Warwick and Worcester Yeomanry on his right about
+a mile away, he went over to them and ordered Lieut.-Colonel H. Cheape
+to charge the enemy. It was a case for instant action. The enemy were
+a mile and a half from our cavalry. The gunners had come into action
+and were shelling the London Territorials, but they soon had to
+switch off and fire at a more terrifying target. Led by their gallant
+Colonel, a Master of Foxhounds who was afterwards drowned in the
+Mediterranean, the yeomen swept over a ridge in successive lines and
+raced down the northern slope on to the flat, at first making direct
+for the guns, then swerving to the left under the direction of Colonel
+Cheape, whose eye for country led him to take advantage of a mound on
+the opposite side of the valley. Over this rise the Midland yeomen
+spurred their chargers and, giving full-throated cheers, dashed
+through the Turks' left flank guard and went straight for the guns.
+Their ranks were somewhat thinned, for they had been exposed to a
+heavy machine-gun fire as well as to the fire of eight field guns and
+three 5.9 howitzers worked at the highest pressure. The gunners were
+nearly all Germans and Austrians and they fought well. They splashed
+the valley with shrapnel, and during the few moments' lull when the
+yeomanry were lost to view behind the mound they set their shell fuses
+at zero to make them burst at the mouth of the guns and act as case
+shot. They tore some gaps in the yeomen's ranks, but nothing could
+stop that charge. The Midlanders rode straight at the guns and sabred
+every artilleryman at his piece. The Londoners say they heard all the
+guns stop dead at the same moment and they knew they had been silenced
+in true Balaclava style. Having wiped out the batteries the yeomen
+again answered the call of their leader and swept up a ridge to deal
+effectively with three machine guns, and having used the white arm
+against their crews the guns were turned on to the retreating Turks
+and decimated their ranks. This charge was witnessed by General Shea,
+and I know it is his opinion that it was executed with the greatest
+gallantry and élan, and was worthy of the best traditions of British
+cavalry. The yeomanry lost about twenty-five per cent. of their
+number in casualties, but their action was worth the price, for they
+completely broke up the enemy resistance and enabled the London
+Division to push straight through to Huj. The Warwick and
+Worcester Yeomanry received the personal congratulations of the
+Commander-in-Chief, and General Shea was also thanked by General
+Allenby.
+
+During this day General Shea accomplished what probably no other
+Divisional Commander did in this war. When out scouting in a light
+armoured car he was within 500 yards of a big ammunition dump which
+was blown up. He saw the three men who had destroyed it running away,
+and he chased them into a wadi and machine-gunned them. They held up
+their hands and were astonished to find they had surrendered to a
+General. These men were captured in the nick of time. But for the
+appearance of General Shea they would have destroyed another dump,
+which we captured intact.
+
+I was with the Division the night after they had taken Huj. It was
+their first day of rest for some time, but the men showed few signs
+of fatigue. No one could move among them without being proud of the
+Londoners. They were strong, self-reliant, well-disciplined, brave
+fellows. I well remember what Colonel Temperley, the G.S.O. of the
+Division, told me when sitting out on a hill in the twilight that
+night. Colonel Temperley had been brigade major of the first New
+Zealand Infantry Brigade which came to Egypt and took a full share in
+the work on Gallipoli on its way to France. He had over two years of
+active service on the Western Front before coming out to Palestine for
+duty with the 60th Division, and his views on men in action were based
+on the sound experience of the professional soldier. Of the London
+County Territorials he said: 'I cannot speak of these warriors without
+a lump rising in my throat. These Cockneys are the best men in the
+world. Their spirits are simply wonderful, and I do not think any
+division ever went into a big show with higher moral. After three
+years of war it is refreshing to hear the men's earnestly expressed
+desire to go into action again. These grand fellows went forward
+with the full bloom on them, there never was any hesitation, their
+discipline was absolutely perfect, their physique and courage were
+alike magnificent, and their valour beyond words. The Cockney makes
+the perfect soldier.' I wrote at the time that 'whether the men came
+from Bermondsey, Camberwell or Kennington, or belonged to what were
+known as class corps, such as the Civil Service or Kensingtons, before
+the war, all battalions were equally good. They were trained for
+months for the big battle till their bodies were brought to such a
+state of fitness that Spartan fare during the ten days of ceaseless
+action caused neither grumble nor fatigue. The men may well be
+rewarded with the title "London's Pride," and London is honoured by
+having such stalwarts to represent the heart of the British Empire. In
+eight days the Londoners marched sixty-six miles and fought a number
+of hot actions. The march may not seem long, but Palestine is not
+Salisbury Plain. A leg-weary man was asked by an officer if his feet
+were blistered, and replied: "They're rotten sore, but my heart's
+gay." That is typical of the spirit of these unconquerable Cockneys. I
+have just left them. They still have the bloom of freshness and I do
+not think it will ever fade. Scorching winds which parched the throat
+and made everything one wore hot to the touch were enough to oppress
+the staunchest soldier, but these sterling Territorials, costers
+and labourers, artisans and tradesmen, professional men and men of
+independent means, true brothers in arms and good Britons, left their
+bivouacs and trudged across heavy country, fearless, strong, proud,
+and with the cheerfulness of good men who fight for right.' What I
+said in those early days of the great advance was more than borne out
+later, and in the capture of Jerusalem, in taking Jericho, and in
+forcing the passage of the Jordan this glorious Division of Londoners
+was always the same, a pride to its commander, a bulwark of the XXth
+Corps, and a great asset of the Empire.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THROUGH GAZA INTO THE OPEN
+
+
+On the Gaza section of the front the XXIst Corps had been busily
+occupied with preparations for a powerful thrust through the remainder
+of the defences on the enemy's right when the XXth Corps should have
+succeeded in turning the main positions on the left. The 52nd Division
+on the coast was ready to go ahead immediately there was any sign that
+the enemy, seeing that the worst was about to happen, intended to
+order a general retirement, and then it would be a race and a fight to
+prevent his establishing himself on the high ground north of the wadi
+Hesi. Should he fail to do that there was scarcely a possibility of
+the Turks holding us up till we got to the Jaffa-Jerusalem road,
+though between Gaza and that metalled highway there were many points
+of strength from which they could fight delaying actions. It is very
+doubtful whether the Turkish General Staff gave the cavalry credit for
+being able to move across the Plain in the middle of November when the
+wadis are absolutely dry and the water-level in the wells is lower
+than at any other period of the year. Nor did they imagine that the
+transport difficulties for infantry divisions fed as ours were could
+be surmounted. They may have thought that if they could secure the
+wadi Hesi line before we got into position to threaten it in flank
+they would immobilise our Army till the rains began, and there was a
+possibility of sitting facing each other in wet uncomfortable trench
+quarters till the flowers showed themselves in the spring, by which
+time, the Bagdad venture of the German Higher Command proving hopeless
+before it was started, a great volume of reinforcements might be
+diverted to Southern Palestine with Turkish divisions from the
+Salonika front and a stiffening of German battalions spared from
+Europe in consequence of the Russian collapse.
+
+Whatever they may have been, the Turkish calculations were completely
+upset. The cavalry's water troubles remained and no human foresight
+could have smoothed them over, but the transport problem was solved in
+this way. During the attack on Beersheba XXIst Corps came to the aid
+of XXth Corps by handing over to it the greater part of its camel
+convoys and lorries, so much transport, indeed, that a vast amount of
+work in the Gaza sector fell to be done by a greatly depleted supply
+staff. When Beersheba had been won and the enemy's left flank had been
+smashed and thrown back, the XXth Corps repaid the XXIst Corps, not
+only by returning what it had borrowed, but by marching back into the
+region of railhead at Karm, where it could live with a minimum of
+transport and send all its surplus to work in the coastal sector. The
+switching over of this transport was a fine piece of organisation. On
+the allotted day many thousands of camels were seen drawn out in huge
+lines all over the country intersected by the wadi Ghuzze, slowly
+converging on the spots at which they could be barracked and rested
+before loading for the advance. The lorries took other paths. There
+was no repose for their drivers. They worked till the last moment on
+the east, and then, caked with the accumulated dust of a week's weary
+labour in sand and powdered earth, turned westward to arrive just in
+time to load up and be off again in pursuit of infantry, some making
+the mistake of travelling between the West and East Towns of Gaza,
+while others took the longer and sounder but still treacherous route
+east of Ali Muntar and through the old positions of the Turks. These
+lorry drivers were wonderful fellows who laughed at their trials, but
+in the days and nights when they bumped over the uneven tracks and
+negotiated earth rents that threatened to swallow their vehicles, they
+put their faith in the promise of the railway constructors to open the
+station at Gaza at an early date. Even Gaza, though it saved them so
+many toilsome miles, did not help them greatly because of a terrible
+piece of road north-east of the station, but Beit Hanun was
+comfortable and for the relief brought by the railway's arrival at
+Deir Sineid they were profoundly grateful.
+
+But this is anticipating the story of Gaza's capture. The XXIst Corps
+had not received its additional transport when it gained the ancient
+city of the Philistines, though it knew some of it was on the way and
+most of it about to start on its westward trek. On the day of November
+4 and during the succeeding night the Navy co-operated with the Corps'
+artillery in destroying enemy trenches and gun positions, and the
+Ali Muntar Ridge was a glad sight for tired gunners' eyes. The enemy
+showed a disposition to retaliate, and on the afternoon of the 4th he
+put up a fierce bombardment of our front-line positions from Outpost
+Hill to the sea, including in his fire area the whole of the trenches
+we had taken from him from Umbrella Hill to Sheikh Hasan. Many
+observers of this bombardment by all the Turks' guns of heavy, medium,
+and small calibre declared it was the prelude not of an attack but
+of a retirement, and that the Turks were loosing off a lot of the
+ammunition they knew they could not carry away. They were probably
+right, though the enemy made no sign of going away for a couple of
+days, but if he thought his demonstration by artillery was going to
+hasten back to Gaza some of the troops assembling against the left of
+his main line he was grievously in error. The XXIst Corps was strong
+enough to deal with any attack the Turks could launch, and they would
+have been pleased if an attempt to reach our lines had been made.
+
+Next day the Turks were much quieter. They had to sit under a terrific
+fire both on the 5th and 6th November, when in order to assist
+XXth Corps' operations the Corps' heavy artillery, the divisional
+artillery, and the warships' guns carried out an intense bombardment.
+The land guns searched the Turks' front line and reserve systems,
+while the Navy fired on Fryer's Hill to the north of Ali Muntar,
+Sheikh Redwan, a sandhill with a native chief's tomb on the crest,
+north of Gaza, and on trenches not easily reached by the Corps' guns.
+
+During the night of November 6-7 General Palin's 75th Division, as
+a preliminary to a major operation timed for the following morning,
+attacked and gained the enemy's trenches on Outpost Hill and the
+whole of Middlesex Hill to the north of it, the opposition being less
+serious than was anticipated. At daylight the 75th Division pushed on
+over the other hills towards Ali Muntar and gained that dominating
+position before eight o'clock. The fighting had not been severe,
+and it was soon realised that the enemy had left Gaza, abandoning a
+stronghold which had been prepared for defence with all the ingenuity
+German masters of war could suggest and into which had been worked an
+enormous amount of material. It was obvious from the complete success
+of XXth Corps' operations against the Turkish left, which had been
+worked out absolutely 'according to plan,' that General Allenby had so
+thoroughly mystified von Kressenstein that the latter had put all
+his reserves into the wrong spot, and that the 53rd Division's stout
+resistance against superior numbers had pinned them down to the wrong
+end of the line. There was nothing, therefore, for the Turk to do but
+to try to hold another position, and he was straining every nerve to
+reach it. The East Anglian Division went up west of Gaza and held from
+Sheikh Redwan to the sea by seven o'clock, two squadrons of the Corps'
+cavalry rode along the seashore and had patrols on the wadi Hesi a
+little earlier than that, and the Imperial Service Cavalry Brigade,
+composed of troops raised and maintained by patriotic Indian princes,
+passed through Gaza at nine o'clock and went out towards Beit Hanun.
+To the Lowland Division was given the important task of getting to the
+right or northern bank of the wadi Hesi. These imperturbable Scots
+left their trenches in the morning delighted at the prospect of once
+more engaging in open warfare. They marched along the beach under
+cover of the low sand cliffs, and by dusk had crossed the mouth of
+the wadi and held some of the high ground to the north in face of
+determined opposition. The 157th Brigade, after a march through very
+heavy going, got to the wadi at five in the afternoon and saw the
+enemy posted on the opposite bank. The place was reconnoitred and the
+brigade made a fine bayonet charge in the dark, securing the position
+between ten and eleven o'clock. On this and succeeding days the
+division had to fight very hard indeed, and they often met the enemy
+with the bayonet. One of their officers told me the Scot was twice
+as good as the Turk in ordinary fighting, but with the bayonet his
+advantage was as five to one. The record of the Division throughout
+the campaign showed this was no too generous an estimate of their
+powers. After securing Ali Muntar the 75th Division advanced over
+Fryer's Hill to Australia Hill, so that they held the whole ridge
+running north and south to the eastward of Gaza. The enemy still held
+to his positions to the right of his centre, and from the Atawineh
+Redoubt, Tank Redoubt, and Beer trenches there was considerable
+shelling of Gaza and the Ali Muntar ridge throughout the day. A large
+number of shells fell in the plantations on the western side of the
+ridge; our mastery of the air prevented enemy aviators observing for
+their artillery, or they would have seen no traffic was passing along
+that way. We were using the old Cairo 'road,' and as far as I could
+see not an enemy shell reached it, though when our troops were in the
+town of Gaza there were many crumps and woolly bears to disturb the
+new occupation. But all went swimmingly. It was true we had only
+captured the well-cracked shell of a town, but the taking of it was
+full of promise of greater things, and those of us who looked on the
+mutilated remnants of one of the world's oldest cities felt we were
+indeed witnesses of the beginning of the downfall of the Turkish
+Empire. Next morning the 75th Division captured Beer trenches and Tank
+and Atawineh Redoubts and linked up with the Irish Division of XXth
+Corps on its right. They were shelled heavily, but it was the shelling
+of rearguards and not attackers, and soon after twelve o'clock we
+had the best of evidence that the Turks were saying good-bye to a
+neighbourhood they had long inhabited. I was standing on Raspberry
+Hill, the battle headquarters of XXIst Corps, when I heard a terrific
+report. Staff officers who were used to the visitations of aerial
+marauders came out of their shelters and searched the pearly vault of
+the heavens for Fritz. No machine could be found. Some one looking
+across the country towards Atawineh saw a huge mushroom-shaped cloud,
+and then we knew that one enormous dump at least contained no more
+projectiles to hold up an advance. This ammunition store must have
+been eight miles away as the crow flies, but the noise of the
+explosion was so violent that it was a considerable time before some
+officers could be brought to believe an enemy plane had not laid an
+egg near us. The blowing up of that dump was a signal that the Turk
+was off.
+
+The Lowlanders had another very strenuous day in the sand-dune belt.
+First of all they repulsed a strong counter-attack from the direction
+of Askalon. Then the 155th Infantry Brigade went forward and, swinging
+to the right, drove the Turks off the rising ground north-west of Deir
+Sineid, the possession of which would determine the question whether
+the Turk could hold on in this quarter sufficiently long to enable him
+to get any of his material away by his railway and road. The enemy put
+in a counter-attack of great violence and forced the Scots back.
+
+The 157th Brigade in the early evening attacked the ridge and gained
+the whole of their objectives by eight o'clock. There ensued some
+sanguinary struggles on this sandy ground during the night. The Turks
+were determined to have possession of it and the Scots were willing to
+fight it out to a finish. The first counter-attack in the dark hours
+drove the Lowlanders off, but they were shortly afterwards back on the
+hills again. The Turks returned and pushed the Highland Light Infantry
+and Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders off a second time. A third
+attack was delivered with splendid vigour and the enemy left many
+dead, but they renewed their efforts to get the commanding ground and
+succeeded once more. The dogged Scots, however, were not to be denied.
+They re-formed and swept up the heavy shifting sand, met the Turk on
+the top with a clash and knocked him down the reverse slope. Soon
+afterwards there was another ding-dong struggle. The Turks, putting in
+all their available strength, for a fourth time got the upper hand,
+and the Lowlanders had to yield the ground, doing it slowly and
+reluctantly and with the determination to try again. They were Robert
+Bruces, all of them. It's the best that stays the longest. After a
+brief rest these heroic Scots once more swarmed up the ridge. Their
+cheers had the note of victory in them, they drove their bayonets
+home with the haymakers' lift, and what was left of the Turks fled
+helter-skelter down the hill towards Deir Sineid, broken, dismayed,
+beaten, and totally unable to make another effort. The H.L.I.
+Brigade's victory was bought at a price. The cost of that hill was
+heavy, but the Turks' tale of dead was far heavier than ours, and
+we had won and held the hills and consolidated them. The Turks then
+turned their faces to the north and the Scots hurried them on. The
+Imperial Service Cavalry Brigade had also met with considerable
+resistance, but they worked up to and on the ridge overlooking Beit
+Hanun from the east and captured a 5.9. By evening these Indian
+horsemen were linked up with the 4th Australian Light Horse Brigade on
+their right and the 52nd Division on their left, and pursued the enemy
+as far as Tumrah and Deir Sineid.
+
+General Headquarters directed that two infantry divisions should
+advance to the line Julis-Hamameh in support of mounted troops, and
+the 75th Division was accordingly ordered from its position east of
+Gaza up to Beit Hanun. On the 9th November the 52nd Division was again
+advancing. The 156th Brigade had moved forward from the Gaza trenches.
+One officer, five grooms, and two signallers mounted on second horses
+formed a little party to reconnoitre Askalon, and riding boldly into
+the ancient landing place of the Crusader armies captured the ruined
+town unaided. There are visible remains of its old strength, but the
+power of Askalon has departed. It still stands looking over the blue
+Mediterranean as a sort of watch tower, a silent, deserted outpost of
+the land the Crusaders set their hearts on gaining and preserving for
+Christianity, but behind it is many centuries' accumulation of sand
+encroaching upon the fertile plain, and no effort has been made to
+stop the inroad. The gallant half-dozen having reported to the 156th
+Brigade that Askalon was open to them--the Brigade occupied the place
+at noon--rode across the sand-dunes to the important native town of
+Mejdel, where there was a substantial bazaar doing a good trade in the
+essentials for native existence, beans and cereals in plenty, fruit,
+and tobacco of execrable quality. At Mejdel the six accepted the
+surrender of a body of Turks guarding a substantial ammunition dump
+and rejoined their units, satisfied with the day's adventure. The
+Turks had retired a considerable distance during the day. The
+principal body was moving up what is called the main road from Deir
+Sineid, through Beit Jerjal to Julis, to get to Suafir esh Sherkiyeh,
+Kustineh, and Junction Station, from which they could reach Latron by
+a metalled road, or Ramleh by a hard mud track by the side of their
+railway. They were clearly going to oppose us all the way or they
+would lose the whole of their material, and their forces east and west
+of the road were well handled in previously selected and partially
+prepared positions.
+
+They left behind them the unpleasant trail of a defeated army. Turks
+had fallen by the way and the natives would not bury them. Our
+aircraft had bombed the road, and the dead men, cattle and horses,
+and smashed transport were ghastly sights and made the air offensive.
+There they lay, one long line of dead men and animals, and if a London
+fog had descended to blind the eyes of our Army the sense of smell
+would still have carried a scout on the direct line of the Turkish
+retreat.
+
+I will break off the narrative of fighting at this point to describe a
+scene which expressed more eloquently than anything else I witnessed
+in Palestine how deeply engraved in the native mind was the conviction
+that Britain stood for fair dealing and freedom. The inhabitants, like
+the Arabs of the desert, do not allow their faces to betray their
+feelings. They preserve a stolid exterior, and it is difficult to tell
+from their demeanour whether they are friendly or indifferent to
+you. But their actions speak aloud. Early on the morning after the
+Lowlanders had entered Mejdel I was in the neighbourhood. Our guns
+banging away to the north were a reminder that there was to be no
+promenade over the Plain, and that we had yet to make good the
+formidable obstacle of the wadi Sukereir, when I passed a curious
+procession. People whom the Turks had turned out of Gaza and the
+surrounding country were trekking back to the spots where they and
+their forefathers had lived for countless generations. All their
+worldly goods and chattels were packed on overloaded camels and
+donkeys. The women bore astonishingly heavy loads on their heads, the
+men rode or walked carrying nothing, while patriarchs of families
+were either held in donkey saddles or were borne on the shoulders of
+younger men. Agriculturists began to turn out to plough and till the
+fields which had lain fallow while the Turkish scourge of war was on
+the land, and the people showed that, now they had the security of
+British protection, they intended at once to resume their industry.
+The troops had the liveliest welcome in passing through villages,
+though the people are not as a rule demonstrative; and one could point
+to no better evidence of the exemplary behaviour of our soldiers than
+the groups of women sitting and gossiping round the wells during the
+process of drawing water, just as they did in Biblical days, heedless
+of the passing troops whom they regarded as their protectors. The man
+behind a rude plough may have stopped his ill-matched team of pony
+and donkey to look at a column of troops moving as he had never seen
+troops march before, a head of a family might collect the animals
+carrying his household goods and hurry them off the line of route
+taken by military transport, but neither one nor the other had any
+fear of interference with his work, and the life of the whole country,
+one of the most unchanging regions of the world, had suddenly again
+become normal, although only yesterday two armies had disputed
+possession of the very soil on which they stood. The moment we were
+victorious old occupations were resumed by the people in the way that
+was a tradition from their forefathers. Our victory meant peace
+and safety, according to the native idea, and an end to extortion,
+oppression, and pillage under the name of requisitions. It also meant
+prosperity. The native likes to drive a bargain. He will not sell
+under a fair price, and he asks much more in the hope of showing a
+buyer who has beaten him down how cheaply he is getting goods. The
+Army chiefly sought eggs, which are light to carry and easy to cook,
+and give variety to the daily round of bully, biscuit, and jam. The
+soldier is a generous fellow, and if a child asked a piastre (2-1/2d.)
+for an egg he got it. The price soon became four to five for a
+shilling in cash, though the Turks wanted five times that number for
+an equivalent sum in depreciated paper currency. The law of supply
+and demand obtained in this old world just as at home, and it became
+sufficient for a soldier to ask for an article to show he wanted it
+and would pay almost anything that was demanded. It was curious to see
+how the news spread not merely among traders but also among villagers.
+The men who first occupied a place found oranges, vegetables, fresh
+bread, and eggs cheap. In Ramleh, for example, a market was opened for
+our troops immediately they got to the town, and the goods were sound
+and sold at fair rates. The next day prices were up, and the standards
+fixed behind the front soon ruled at the line itself. There was no
+real control attempted, and while the extortionate prices charged by
+Jews in their excellent agricultural colonies and by the natives made
+a poor people prosperous, it gave them an exaggerated idea of the size
+of the British purse, and they may be disappointed at the limitation
+of our spending powers in the future. Also it was hard on the bravest
+and most chivalrous of fighting men. But it opened the eyes of the
+native, whose happiness and contentment were obvious directly we
+reached his doors.
+
+Our movements on November 9 were limited by the extent to which
+General Chauvel was able to use his cavalry of the Desert Mounted
+Corps. Water was the sole, but absolute handicap. The Yeomanry Mounted
+Division rejoined the Corps on that day and got south of Huj,
+but could not proceed further through lack of water and supply
+difficulties. The Australian Mounted Division also had to halt for
+water, and it was left to Anzac Mounted Division, plus the 7th Mounted
+Brigade, to march eighteen miles north-westwards to occupy the line
+Et Tineh-Beit Duras-Jemameh-Esdud (the Ashdod of the Bible). The 52nd
+Division occupied the area Esdud-Mejdel-Herbieh by the evening of the
+10th, and on the way, Australian cavalry being held up on a ridge
+north of Beit Duras, the 157th Brigade made another of its fine
+bayonet charges at night and captured the ground, enabling the cavalry
+to get at some precious water. The brigade made the attack just after
+completing a fourteen miles' march in heavy going, achieving the
+remarkable record of having had three bayonet battles on three
+nights out of four. On this occasion the Turks again suffered heavy
+casualties in men and lost many machine guns. The 75th Division
+prolonged the infantry line through Gharbiyeh to Berberah. The 54th
+Division was in the Gaza defences with all its transport allotted to
+the divisions taking part in the forward move, but as the 54th had
+five days' rations in dumps close at hand it was able to maintain
+itself, and the railway was being pushed on from the wadi Ghuzze with
+the utmost speed. The iron road in war is an army's jugular vein,
+and each mile added to its length was of enormous value during the
+advance.
+
+General Allenby, looking well ahead and realising the possibilities
+opened out by his complete success in every phase of the operations on
+the Turks' main defensive line, on the 10th November ordered the 52nd
+and 75th Divisions to concentrate on their advanced guards so as
+to support the cavalry on their front and to prevent the Turk
+consolidating on the line of the wadi Sukereir. The enemy was
+developing a more organised resistance on a crescent-shaped line from
+Et Tineh through Yasur to Beshshit, and it was necessary to adopt
+deliberate methods of attack to move him. The advance on the 11th was
+the preliminary to three days of stirring fighting. The Turks put up
+a very strong defence by their rearguards, and when one says that
+at this time they were fighting with courage and magnificent
+determination one is not only paying a just tribute to the enemy but
+doing justice to the gallantry and skill of the troops who defeated
+him. The Scots can claim a large share of the success of the next two
+days, but British yeomanry took a great part in it, and their charge
+at Mughar, and perhaps their charge at Abu Shushe as well, will find a
+place in military text-books, for it has confounded those critics who
+declared that the development of the machine gun in modern warfare has
+brought the uses of cavalry down to very narrow limits.
+
+The 156th Brigade was directed to take Burkah on the 12th so as to
+give the infantry liberty of manoeuvre on the following day. Burkah
+was a nasty place to tackle. The enemy had two lines of beautifully
+sited trenches prepared before he fell back from Gaza. The Scots had
+to attack up a slope to the first line, and having taken this to pass
+down another slope for 1000 yards before reaching the glacis in front
+of the second line. The Scottish Rifles assaulted this position by day
+without much artillery support, but they took it in magnificent style.
+It looked as if the Turks had accepted the verdict, but at night they
+returned to a brown hill on the right and drove the 4th Royal Scots
+from it. This battalion came back soon afterwards and retook the
+hill with the assistance of some Gurkhas of General Colston's 233rd
+Infantry Brigade, and the Turk retired to another spot, hoping that
+his luck would change. While this fighting was going on about Burkah
+the 155th Brigade went ahead up a road which the cavalry said was
+strongly held. They got eight miles north of Esdud, and were in
+advance of the cavalry, intending to try to secure the two heights
+and villages of Katrah and Mughar on the following day. Katrah was a
+village on a long mound south of Mughar, native mud huts constituting
+its southern part, whilst separated from it on the northern side by
+some gardens was a pretty little Jewish settlement whose red-tiled
+houses and orderly well-cared-for orchards spoke of the industry of
+these settlers in Zion. All over the hill right up to the houses the
+cactus flourished, and the hedges were a replica of the terrible
+obstacles at Gaza. From Katrah the ground sloped down to the flat on
+all four sides, so that the village seemed to stand on an island in
+the plain. A mile due west of it was Beshshit, while one mile to the
+north across more than one wadi stood El Mughar at the southern end of
+an irregular line of hills which separated Yebnah and Akir, which will
+be more readily recognised, the former as the Jamnia of the Jews and
+the latter as Ekron, one of the famous Philistine cities. While the
+75th Division was forcing back the line Turmus-Kustineh-Yasur and
+Mesmiyeh athwart the road to Junction Station the 155th Brigade
+attacked Katrah. The whole of the artillery of two divisions opened a
+bombardment of the line at eight o'clock, but the Turks showed more
+willingness to concede ground on the east than at Katrah, where the
+machine-gun fire was exceptionally heavy. General Pollak M'Call
+decided to assault the village with the bulk of his brigade, and
+seizing a rifle and bayonet from a wounded man, led the charge
+himself, took the village, and gradually cleared the enemy out of the
+cactus-enclosed gardens. The enemy losses at Katrah were very heavy.
+In crossing a rectangular field many Turks were caught in a cross fire
+from our machine guns, and over 400 dead were counted in this one
+field.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+TWO YEOMANRY CHARGES
+
+
+In front of the mud huts of Mughar, so closely packed together on the
+southern slope of the hill that the dwellings at the bottom seemed to
+keep the upper houses from falling into the plain, there was a long
+oval garden with a clump of cypresses in the centre, the whole
+surrounded by cactus hedges of great age and strength. In the
+cypresses was a nest of machine guns whose crews had a perfect view
+of an advance from Katrah. The infantry had to advance over flat open
+ground to the edge of the garden. The Turkish machine-gunners and
+riflemen in the garden and village were supported by artillery firing
+from behind the ridge at the back of the village, and although the
+brigade made repeated efforts to get on, its advance was held up in
+the early afternoon, and it seemed impossible to take the place by
+infantry from the south in the clear light of a November afternoon.
+The 6th Mounted Brigade commanded by Brigadier-General C.A.C. Godwin,
+D.S.O., composed of the 1/1st Bucks Hussars, 1/1st Berkshire Yeomanry,
+and 1/1st Dorset Yeomanry, the Berkshire battery Royal Horse
+Artillery, and the 17th Machine Gun Squadron--old campaigners with
+the Egyptian Expeditionary Force--had worked round to the left of
+the Lowlanders and had reached a point about two miles south-west of
+Yebnah, that place having been occupied by the 8th Mounted Brigade,
+composed of the 1/1st City of London Yeomanry, 1/1st County of London
+Yeomanry, and the 1/3rd County of London Yeomanry. At half-past twelve
+the Bucks Hussars less one squadron and the Berks battery, which were
+in the rear of the brigade, advanced _via_ Beshshit to the wadi Janus,
+a deep watercourse with precipitous banks running across the plain
+east of Yebnah and joining the wadi Rubin. One squadron of the Bucks
+Hussars had entered Yebnah from the east, co-operating with the 8th
+Brigade. General Godwin was told over the telephone that the infantry
+attack was held up and that his brigade would advance to take Mughar.
+This order was confirmed by telegram a quarter of an hour later as
+the brigadier was about to reconnoitre a line of approach. The Berks
+battery began shelling Mughar and the ridge behind the village from a
+position half a mile north of Beshshit screened by some trees. Brigade
+headquarters joined the Bucks Hussars headquarters in the wadi Janus
+half a mile south-east of Yebnah, where Lieut.-Colonel the Hon. F.
+Cripps commanding the Bucks Hussars had, with splendid judgment,
+already commenced a valuable reconnaissance, the Dorset and Berks
+Yeomanry being halted in a depression out of sight a few hundred yards
+behind. The Turks had the best possible observation, and, knowing they
+were holding up the infantry, concentrated their attention upon the
+cavalry. Therein they showed good judgment, for it was from the
+mounted troops the heavy blow was to fall. Lieut. Perkins, Bucks
+Hussars, was sent forward to reconnoitre the wadi Shellal el Ghor,
+which runs parallel to and east of the wadi Janus. He became the
+target of every kind of fire, guns, machine guns, and rifles opening
+on him from the ridge whenever he exposed himself. Captain Patron, of
+the 17th Machine Gun Squadron, was similarly treated while examining
+a position from which to cover the advance of the brigade with
+concentrated machine-gun fire. It was not an easy thing to get cavalry
+into position for a mounted attack. Except in the wadis the plain
+between Yebnah and Mughar offered no cover and was within easy range
+of the enemy's guns. The wadi Janus was a deep slit in the ground with
+sides of clay falling almost sheer to the stony bottom. It was hard to
+get horses into the wadi and equally troublesome to get them to bank
+again, and the wadi in most places was so narrow that horses could
+only move in single file. The Dorsets were brought up in small parties
+to join the Bucks in the wadi, and they had to run the gauntlet of
+shell and rifle fire. The Berks were to enter the wadi immediately the
+Bucks had left it. Behind Mughar village and its gardens the ground
+falls sharply, then rises again and forms a rocky hill some 300 yards
+long. There is another decline, and north of it a conical shaped hill,
+also stony and barren, though before the crest is reached there is
+some undulating ground which would have afforded a little cover if the
+cunning Turks had not posted machine guns on it. The Dorset Yeomanry
+were ordered to attack this latter hill and the Bucks Hussars the
+ridge between it and Mughar village, the Berks Yeomanry to be kept in
+support. There seems to be no reason for doubting that Mughar would
+not have been captured that day but for the extremely brilliant charge
+of these home counties yeomen. The 155th Brigade was still held fast
+in that part of the wadi Janus which gave cover south-west and south
+of Mughar, and after the charge had been completely successful and the
+yeomanry were working forward to clear up the village a message was
+received--timed 2.45 P.M., but received at 4 P.M.--which shows the
+difficulties facing that very gallant infantry brigade: '52nd Division
+unable to make progress. Co-operate and turn Mughar from the north.'
+
+It was a hot bright afternoon. The dispositions having been made, the
+Bucks Hussars and Dorset Yeomanry got out of the wadi and commenced
+their mounted attack, the Berks battery in the meantime having
+registered on certain points. The Bucks Hussars, in column of
+squadrons extended to four yards interval, advanced at a trot from
+the wadi, which was 3000 yards distant from the ridge which was their
+objective. Two machine guns were attached to the Bucks and two to the
+Dorsets, and the other guns under Captain Patron were mounted in a
+position which that officer had chosen in the wadi El Ghor from which
+they could bring to bear a heavy fire almost up to the moment the
+Bucks should be on the ridge. This machine-gun fire was of the highest
+value, and it unquestionably kept many Turkish riflemen inactive. 'B'
+squadron under Captain Bulteel, M.C., was leading, and when 1000 yards
+from the objective the order was given to gallop, and horses swept
+over the last portion of the plain and up the hill at a terrific pace,
+the thundering hoofs raising clouds of dust. The tap-tap of machine
+guns firing at the highest pressure, intense rifle fire from all parts
+of the enemy position, the fierce storm of shells rained on the hill
+by the Berks battery, which during the charge fired with splendid
+accuracy no fewer than 200 rounds of shrapnel at a range of 3200 to
+3500 yards, and the rapid fire of Turkish field guns, completely
+drowned the cheers of the charging yeomen. 'C' squadron, commanded by
+Lord Bosebery's son, Captain the Hon. Neil Primrose, M.C., who was
+killed on the following day, made an equally dashing charge and came
+up on the right of 'B' squadron. Once the cavalry had reached the
+crest of the hill many of the Turks surrendered and threw down their
+arms, but some retired and then, having discovered the weakness of the
+cavalry, returned to some rocks on the flanks and continued the fight
+at close range. Captain Primrose's squadron was vigorously attacked on
+his left flank, but Captain Bulteel was able to get over the ridge and
+across the rough, steep eastern side of it, and from this point he
+utilised captured Turkish machine guns to put down a heavy barrage on
+to the northern end of the village. 'A' squadron under Captain Lawson
+then came up from Yebnah at the gallop, and with his support the whole
+of the Bucks' objectives were secured and consolidated.
+
+The Dorset Yeomanry on the left of the Bucks had 1000 yards farther
+to go, and the country they traversed was just as cracked and broken.
+Their horses at the finish were quite exhausted. At the base of the
+hills Captain Dammers dismounted 'A' squadron, which charged on the
+left, and the squadron fought their way to the top of the ridge on
+foot. The held horses were caught in a cone of machine-gun fire, and
+in a space of about fifty square yards many gallant chargers perished.
+'B' squadron (Major Wingfield-Digby) in the centre and 'C' squadron
+(Major Gordon, M.C.) on the right, led by Colonel Sir Randolf Baker,
+M.P., formed line and galloped the hill, and their horse losses were
+considerably less than those of the dismounted squadron. The Berks
+Yeomanry moved to the wadi El Ghor under heavy machine-gun and rifle
+fire from the village and gardens on the west side, and two squadrons
+were dismounted and sent into the village to clear it, the remaining
+squadron riding into the plain on the eastern side of the ridge, where
+they collected a number of stragglers. Dotted over this plain were
+many dead Turks who fell under the fire of the Machine-Gun Squadron
+while attempting to get to Ramleh. The Turkish dead were numerous and
+their condition showed how thoroughly the sword had done its work. I
+saw many heads cleft in twain, and Mughar was not a sweet place to
+look upon and wanted a good deal of clearing up. The yeomanry took 18
+officers and 1078 other ranks prisoners, whilst fourteen machine guns
+and two field guns were captured. But for the tired state of the
+horses many more prisoners would have been taken, large numbers being
+seen making their way along the red sand tracks to Ramleh, and
+an inspection of the route on the morrow told of the pace of the
+retirement brought about by the shock of contact with cavalry. Machine
+guns, belts and boxes of ammunition, equipment of all kinds were
+strewn about the paths, and not a few wounded Turks had given up the
+effort to escape and had lain down to die.
+
+The casualties in the 6th Mounted Brigade were 1 officer killed and
+6 wounded, 15 other ranks killed and 107 wounded and 1 missing, a
+remarkably small total. Among the mortally wounded was Major de
+Rothschild, who fell within sight of some of the Jewish colonies which
+his family had founded. Two hundred and sixty-five horses and two
+mules were killed and wounded in the action.
+
+Mughar was a great cavalry triumph, and the regiments which took part
+in it confirmed the good opinions formed of them in this theatre
+of war. The Dorsets had already made a spirited charge against the
+Senussi in the Western Desert in 1916,[1] and having suffered from the
+white arm once those misguided Arabs never gave the cavalry another
+chance of getting near them. The Bucks and Berks, too, had taken part
+in that swift and satisfactory campaign. All three regiments on the
+following day were to make another charge, this time on one of the
+most famous sites in the battle history of Palestine. The 6th Mounted
+Brigade moved no farther on the day of Mughar because the 22nd Mounted
+Brigade, when commencing an attack on Akir, the old Philistine city of
+Ekron, were counter-attacked on their left. During the night, however,
+the Turks in Akir probably heard the full story of Mughar, and did not
+wait long for a similar action against them. The 22nd Mounted Brigade
+drove them out early next morning, and they went rapidly away across
+the railway at Naaneh, leaving in our hands the railway guard of
+seventy men, and seeking the bold crest of Abu Shushe. They moved, as
+I shall presently tell, out of the frying-pan into the fire.
+
+[Footnote 1: _The Desert Campaigns_: Constable.]
+
+The 155th Infantry which helped to finish up the Mughar business took
+a gun and fourteen machine guns. Then with the remainder of the 52nd
+Division it had a few hours of hard-earned rest. The Division had had
+a severe time, but the men bore their trials with the fortitude of
+their race and with a spirit which could not be beaten. For several
+days, when water was holding up the cavalry, the Lowlanders kept ahead
+of the mounted troops, and one battalion fought and marched sixty-nine
+miles in seven days. Their training was as complete as any infantry,
+even the regimental stretcher-bearers being taught the use of Lewis
+guns, and on more than one occasion the bearers went for the enemy
+with Mills bombs till a position was captured and they were required
+to tend the wounded. A Stokes-gun crew found their weapon very useful
+in open warfare, and at one place where machine guns had got on to a
+large party of Turks and enclosed them in a box barrage, the Stokes
+gun searched every corner of the area and finished the whole party.
+The losses inflicted by the Scots were exceptionally severe. Farther
+eastwards on the 13th, the 75th Division had also been giving of
+its best. The objective of this Division was the important Junction
+Station on the Turks' Jaffa-Jerusalem railway, and a big step forward
+was made in the early afternoon by the overcoming of a stubborn
+resistance at Mesmiyeh, troops rushing the village from the south and
+capturing 292 prisoners and 7 machine guns. The 234th Brigade began
+an advance on Junction Station during the night, but were strongly
+counter-attacked and had to halt till the morning, when at dawn they
+secured the best positions on the rolling downs west of the station,
+and by 7.30 the station itself was occupied. Two engines and 45
+vehicles were found intact; two large guns on trucks and over 100
+prisoners were also taken. The enemy shelled the station during the
+morning, trying in vain to damage his lost rolling stock. This booty
+was of immense value to us, and to a large extent it solved the
+transport problem which at this moment was a very anxious one indeed.
+The line was metre gauge and we had no stock to fit it, though later
+the Egyptian State Railways brought down some engines and trucks from
+the Luxor-Assouan section, but this welcome aid was not available
+till after the rains had begun and had made lorry traffic temporarily
+impossible between our standard gauge railhead and our fighting front.
+Junction Station was no sooner occupied than a light-railway staff
+under Colonel O'Brien was brought up from Beit Hanun. The whole of the
+line to Deir Sineid was not in running order, but broken culverts were
+given minor repairs, attention was bestowed on trucks, and the engines
+were closely examined while the Turks were shelling the station. The
+water tanks had been destroyed, as a result of which two men spent
+hours in filling up the engines by means of a water jug and basin
+found in the station buildings, and the Turks had the mortification of
+seeing these engines steam out of the station during the morning to
+a cutting which was effective cover from their field-gun fire. The
+light-railway staff were highly delighted at their success, and the
+trains which they soon had running over their little system were
+indeed a boon and a blessing to the fighting men and horses.
+
+On this morning of November 14 the infantry were operating with Desert
+Mounted Corps' troops on both their wings. The Australian Mounted
+Division was on the right, fighting vigorous actions with the enemy
+rearguards secreted in the irregular, rocky foothills of the Shephelah
+which stand as ramparts to the Judean Mountains. It was a difficult
+task to drive the Turks out of these fastnesses, and while they held
+on to them it was almost impossible to outflank some of the places
+like Et Tineh, a railway station and camp of some importance on the
+line to Beersheba. They had already had some stiff fighting at Tel el
+Safi, the limestone hill which was the White Guard of the Crusaders.
+The Division suffered severely from want of water, particularly the
+5th Mounted Brigade, and it was necessary to transfer to it the 7th
+Mounted Brigade and the 2nd Australian Light Horse Brigade. On the
+left of the infantry the Yeomanry Mounted Division was moving forward
+from Akir and Mansura, and after the 22nd Mounted Brigade had taken
+Naaneh they detailed a demolition party to blow up one mile of
+railway, so that, even if the 75th Division had not taken Junction
+Station, Jerusalem would have been entirely cut off from railway
+communication with the Turkish base at Tul Keram, and Haifa and
+Damascus.
+
+Between Naaneh and Mansura the 6th Mounted Brigade was preparing for
+another dashing charge. The enemy who had been opposing us for two
+days consisted of remnants of two divisions of both the Turkish VIIth
+and VIIIth Armies brought together and hurriedly reorganised. The
+victory at Mughar had almost, if not quite, split the force in two,
+that is to say that portion of the line which had been given the duty
+of holding Mughar had been so weakened by heavy casualties, and the
+loss of moral consequent upon the shock of the cavalry charge, that
+it had fallen back to Ramleh and Ludd and was incapable of further
+serious resistance. There was still a strong and virile force on the
+seaside, though that was adequately dealt with, but the centre was
+very weak, and the enemy's only chance of preventing the mounted
+troops from working through and round his right centre was to fall
+back on Abu Shushe and Tel Jezar to cover Latron, with its good water
+supply and the main metalled road where it enters the hills on the way
+to Jerusalem. The loss of Tel Jezar meant that we could get to Latron
+and the Vale of Ajalon, and the action of the 6th Mounted Brigade on
+the morning of the 14th gave it to us.
+
+The Berks Yeomanry had had outposts on the railway south-east of
+Naaneh since before dawn. They had seen the position the previous day,
+and at dawn sent forward a squadron dismounted to engage the machine
+guns posted in the walled-in house at the north of the village. From
+the railway to the Abu Shushe ridge is about three miles of up and
+down country with two or three rises of sufficient height to afford
+some cover to advancing cavalry. General Godwin arranged that six
+machine guns should go forward to give covering fire, and, supported
+by the Berks battery R.H.A. from a good position half a mile west
+of the railway, the Bucks Hussars were to deliver a mounted attack
+against the hill, with the assistance on their left of two squadrons
+of Berks Yeomanry. The Dorset Yeomanry were moved up to the red hill
+of Melat into support.
+
+At seven o'clock the attack started, the 22nd Mounted Brigade
+operating on foot on the left. The Bucks Hussars, taking advantage of
+all the dead ground, galloped about a mile and a half until they came
+to a dip behind a gently rising mound, when, it being clear that the
+enemy held the whole ridge in strength, Colonel Cripps signalled to
+Brigade Headquarters at Melat for support. The Dorset Yeomanry moved
+out to the right of the Bucks, and the latter then charged the hill a
+little south of the village and captured it. It was a fine effort. The
+sides of the hill were steep with shelves of rock, and the crest was a
+mass of stones and boulders, while from some caves, one or two of them
+quite big places, the Turks had machine guns in action. When the Bucks
+were charging there was a good deal of machine-gun fire from the
+right, but the Dorsets dealt with this very speedily, assisted by the
+Berks battery which had also moved forward to a near position from
+which they could command the ridge in flank. A hostile counter-attack
+developed against the Dorsets, but this was crushed by the Berks
+battery and some of the 52nd Division's guns. Two squadrons of the
+Berks Yeomanry in the meantime had charged on the left of the Bucks
+and secured the hill immediately to the south-east of Abu Shushe
+village, and at nine o'clock the whole of this strong position was
+in our hands, the brigade having sustained the extremely slight
+casualties of three officers and thirty-four other ranks killed and
+wounded. So small a cost of life was a wonderful tribute to good and
+dashing leading, and furnished another example of cavalry's power when
+moving rapidly in extended formation. To the infinite regret of the
+brigade, indeed of the whole of General Allenby's Army, one of the
+officers killed that day was the Hon. Neil Primrose, an intrepid
+leader who, leaving the comfort and safety of a Ministerial
+appointment, answered the call of duty to be with his squadron of the
+Bucks Hussars. He was a fine soldier and a favourite among his men,
+and he died as a good cavalryman would wish, shot through the head
+when leading his squadron in a glorious charge. His body rests in the
+garden of the French convent at Ramleh not far from the spot where
+humbler soldiers take their long repose, and these graves within
+visual range of the tomb of St. George, our patron saint, will stand
+as memorials of those Britons who forsook ease to obey the stern call
+of duty to their race and country.
+
+The overwhelming nature of this victory is illustrated by a comparison
+of the losses on the two sides. Whereas ours were 37 all told, we
+counted between 400 and 500 dead Turks on the field, and the enemy
+left with us 360 prisoners and some material. The extraordinary
+disparity between the losses can only be accounted for first by the
+care taken to lead the cavalry along every depression in the ground,
+and secondly by rapidity of movement. The cavalry were confronted by
+considerable shell fire, and the volume of machine-gun fire was heavy,
+though it was kept down a good deal by the covering fire of the 17th
+Machine Gun Squadron.
+
+I have referred to the importance of Jezar as dominating the
+approaches to Latron on the north-east and Ramleh on the north-west.
+Jezar, as we call it on our maps, has been a stronghold since men of
+all races and creeds, coloured and white, Pagan, Mahomedan, Jew, and
+Christian, fought in Palestine. It is a spot which many a great leader
+of legions has coveted, and to its military history our home county
+yeomen have added another brilliant page. Let me quote the description
+of Jezar from George Adam Smith's _Historical Geography of the Holy
+Land_, a book of fascinating interest to all students of the Sacred
+History which many of the soldiers in General Allenby's Army read with
+great profit to themselves:
+
+'One point in the Northern Shephelah round which these tides of war
+have swept deserves special notice--Gezer, or Gazar. It is one of the
+few remarkable bastions which the Shephelah flings out to the west--on
+a ridge running towards Ramleh, the most prominent object in view of
+the traveller from Jaffa towards Jerusalem. It is high and isolated,
+but fertile and well watered--a very strong post and striking
+landmark. Its name occurs in the Egyptian correspondence of the
+fourteenth century, where it is described as being taken from the
+Egyptian vassals by the tribes whose invasion so agitates that
+correspondence. A city of the Canaanites, under a king of its
+own--Horam--Gezer is not given as one of Joshua's conquests, though
+the king is; but the Israelites drave not out the Canaanites who dwelt
+at Gezer, and in the hands of these it remained till its conquest by
+Egypt when Pharaoh gave it, with his daughter, to Solomon and Solomon
+rebuilt it. Judas Maccabeus was strategist enough to gird himself
+early to the capture of Gezer, and Simon fortified it to cover the way
+to the harbour of Joppa and caused John his son, the captain of the
+host, to dwell there. It was virtually, therefore, the key of Judea at
+a time when Judea's foes came down the coast from the north; and, with
+Joppa, it formed part of the Syrian demands upon the Jews. But this is
+by no means the last of it. M. Clermont Ganneau, who a number of years
+ago discovered the site, has lately identified Gezer with the Mont
+Gisart of the Crusades. Mont Gisart was a castle and feif in the
+county of Joppa, with an abbey of St. Katharine of Mont Gisart, "whose
+prior was one of the five suffragans of the Bishop of Lydda." It was
+the scene, on the 24th November 1174, seventeen years before the Third
+Crusade, of a victory won by a small army from Jerusalem under the
+boy-king, the leper Baldwin IV., against a very much larger army under
+Saladin himself, and, in 1192, Saladin encamped upon it during his
+negotiations for a truce with Richard.
+
+'Shade of King Horam, what hosts of men have fallen round that citadel
+of yours. On what camps and columns has it looked down through the
+centuries, since first you saw the strange Hebrews burst with the
+sunrise across the hills, and chase your countrymen down Ajalon--that
+day when the victors felt the very sun conspiring with them to achieve
+the unexampled length of battle. Within sight of every Egyptian and
+every Assyrian invasion of the land, Gezer has also seen Alexander
+pass by, and the legions of Rome in unusual flight, and the armies of
+the Cross struggle, waver and give way, and Napoleon come and go. If
+all could rise who have fallen around its base--Ethiopians, Hebrews,
+Assyrians, Arabs, Turcomans, Greeks, Romans, Celts, Saxons,
+Mongols--what a rehearsal of the Judgment Day it would be. Few of
+the travellers who now rush across the plain realise that the first
+conspicuous hill they pass in Palestine is also one of the most
+thickly haunted--even in that narrow land into which history has so
+crowded itself. But upon the ridge of Gezer no sign of all this now
+remains, except in the Tel Jezer, and in a sweet hollow to the north,
+beside a fountain, where lie the scattered Christian stone of Deir
+Warda, the Convent of the Rose.
+
+'Up none of the other valleys of the Shephelah has history surged as
+up and down Ajalon and past Gezer, for none are so open to the north,
+nor present so easy a passage to Jerusalem.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+LOOKING TOWARDS JERUSALEM
+
+
+The Anzac Mounted Division had only the 1st Australian Light Horse and
+the New Zealand Mounted Rifles Brigade operating with it on the 14th.
+The Australians, by the evening, were in the thick olive groves on the
+south of Ramleh, and on the ridges about Surafend. On their left the
+Turks were violently opposing the New Zealanders who were working
+along the sand-dunes with the port and town of Jaffa as their ultimate
+objective. There was one very fierce struggle in the course of the
+day. A force attacked a New Zealand regiment in great strength and for
+the moment secured the advantage, but the regiment got to grips with
+the enemy with hand-grenades and bayonets, and so completely repulsed
+them that they fled in hopeless disorder leaving many dead and wounded
+behind them. It was unfortunate that there was no mobile reserve
+available for pursuit, as the Turks were in such a plight that a large
+number would have been rounded up. General Cox's brigade seized Ramleh
+on the morning of the 15th, taking ninety prisoners, and then advanced
+and captured Ludd, being careful that no harm should come to the
+building which holds the grave of St. George. In Ludd 360 prisoners
+were taken, and the brigade carried out a good deal of demolition work
+on the railway running north. The New Zealanders made Jaffa by noon
+on the 16th, the Turks evacuating the town during the morning without
+making any attempt to destroy it, though there was one gross piece of
+vandalism in a Christian cemetery where monuments and tombstones had
+been thrown down and broken. In the meantime, in order to protect the
+rear of the infantry, five battalions of the 52nd Division with three
+batteries were stationed at Yebnah, Mughar, and Akir until they could
+be relieved by units of the 54th Division advancing from Gaza. To
+enable the 54th to move, the transport lent to the 52nd and 75th
+Divisions had to be returned, which did not make the supply of those
+divisions any easier. The main line of railway was still a long way in
+the rear, and the landing of stores by the Navy at the mouth of the
+wadi Sukereir had not yet begun. A little later, and before Jaffa had
+been made secure enough for the use of ships, many thousands of tons
+of supplies and ammunition were put ashore at the wadi's mouth, and at
+a time when heavy rains damaged the newly constructed railway tracks
+the Sukereir base of supply was an inestimable boon. Yet there were
+times when the infantry had a bare day's supply with them, though
+they had their iron rations to fall back upon. It speaks well for
+the supply branch that in the long forward move of XXIst Corps the
+infantry were never once put on short rations.
+
+While the 54th were coming up to take over from the 52nd, plans were
+prepared for the further advance on Jerusalem. The Commander-in-Chief
+was deeply anxious that there should be no fighting of any description
+near the Holy Places, and he gave the Turks a chance of being
+chivalrous and of accepting the inevitable. We had got so far that the
+ancient routes taken by armies which had captured Jerusalem were just
+before us. The Turkish forces were disorganised by heavy and repeated
+defeats, the men demoralised and not in good condition, and there was
+no hope for them that they could receive sufficient reinforcements
+to enable them to stave off the ultimate capture of Bethlehem and
+Jerusalem, though as events proved they could still put up a stout
+defence. We know from papers taken from the enemy that the Turks
+believed General Allenby intended to go right up the plain to get
+to the defile leading to Messudieh and Nablus and thus threaten the
+Hedjaz railway, in which case the position of the enemy in the Holy
+City would be hopeless, and the Turks formed an assault group of three
+infantry divisions in the neighbourhood of Tul Keram to prevent this,
+and continued to hold on to Jerusalem. General Allenby proposed to
+strike through the hills to the north-east to try to get across the
+Jerusalem-Nablus road about Bireh (the ancient Beeroth), and in this
+operation success would have enabled him to cut off the enemy forces
+in and about the Holy City, when their only line of retreat would have
+been through Jericho and the east of the Jordan. The Turks decided
+to oppose this plan and to make us fight for Jerusalem. That was
+disappointing, but in the end it could not have suited us better, for
+it showed to our own people and to the world how after the Turks had
+declined an opportunity of showing a desire to preserve the Holy
+Places from attack--an opportunity prompted by our strength, not by
+any fear that victory could not be won--General Allenby was still able
+to achieve his great objective without a drop of blood being spilled
+near any of the Holy Sites, and without so much as a stray rifle
+bullet searing any of their walls. That indeed was the triumph of
+military practice, and when Jerusalem fell for the twenty-third time,
+and thus for the first time passed into the hands of British soldiers,
+the whole force felt that the sacrifices which had been made on the
+gaunt forbidding hills to the north-west were worth the price, and
+that the graves of Englishman, Scot and Colonial, of Gurkha, Punjabi,
+and Sikh, were monuments to the honour of British arms. The scheme was
+that the 75th Division would advance along the main Jerusalem road,
+which cuts into the hills about three miles east of Latron, and occupy
+Kuryet el Enab, and that the Lowland Division should go through Ludd,
+strike eastwards and advance to Beit Likia to turn from the north the
+hills through which the road passes, the Yeomanry Mounted Division
+on the left flank of the 52nd Division to press on to Bireh, on the
+Nablus road about a dozen miles north of Jerusalem. A brief survey
+of the country to be attacked would convince even a civilian of the
+extreme difficulties of the undertaking. North and east of Latron
+(which was not yet ours) frown the hills which constitute this
+important section of the Judean range, the backbone of Palestine.
+The hills are steep and high, separated one from another by narrow
+valleys, clothed here and there with fir and olive trees, but
+elsewhere a mass of rocks and boulders, bare and inhospitable.
+Practically every hill commands another. There is only one road--the
+main one--and this about three miles east of Latron passes up a narrow
+defile with rugged mountains on either side. There is an old Roman
+road to the north, but, unused for centuries, it is now a road only in
+name, the very trace of it being lost in many places. In this strong
+country men fought of old, and the defenders not infrequently held
+their own against odds. It is pre-eminently suitable for defence, and
+if the warriors of the past found that flint-tipped shafts of wood
+would keep the invader at bay, how much more easily could a modern
+army equipped with rifles of precision and machine guns adapt Nature
+to its advantage? It will always be a marvel to me how in a country
+where one machine gun in defence could hold up a battalion, we made
+such rapid progress, and how having got so deep into the range it was
+possible for us to feed our front. We had no luck with the weather.
+In advancing over the plain the troops had suffered from the abnormal
+heat, and many of the wells had been destroyed or damaged by the
+retreating enemy. In the hills the troops had to endure heavy rains
+and piercingly cold winds, with mud a foot deep on the roads and
+the earth so slippery on the hills that only donkey transport was
+serviceable. Yet despite all adverse circumstances the infantry and
+yeomanry pressed on, and if they did not secure all objectives, their
+dash, resource, and magnificent determination at least paved the way
+for ultimate triumph.
+
+To the trials of hard fighting and marching on field rations the wet
+added a severe test of physical endurance. The troops were in enemy
+country where they scrupulously avoided every native village, and no
+wall or roof stood to shelter them from wind or water. The heat of
+the first two weeks of November changed with a most undesirable
+suddenness, and though the days continued agreeably warm on the plain
+into December, the nights became chilly and then desperately cold. The
+single blanket carried in the pack--most of the infantry on the march
+had no blanket at all--did not give sufficient warmth to men whose
+blood had been thinned by long months of work under a pitiless Eastern
+sun, and lucky was the soldier who secured even broken sleep in the
+early morning hours of that fighting march across the northern part of
+the Maritime Plain. The Generals, with one eye on the enemy and the
+other on the weather, must have been dismayed in the third week of
+November at the gathering storm clouds which in bursting flooded the
+plain with rains unusually heavy for this period of the year. The
+surface is a very light cotton soil several feet deep. When baked by
+summer sun it has a cracked hard crust giving a firm foothold for man
+and horse, and yielding only slightly to the wheels of light cars;
+even laden lorries made easy tracks over the country. The lorries
+generally kept off the ill-made unrolled Turkish road which had been
+constructed for winter use and, except for slight deviations to avoid
+wadis and gullies cut by Nature to carry off surplus water, the supply
+columns could move in almost as direct a course as the flying men.
+When the heavens opened all this was altered. The first storm turned
+the top into a slippery, greasy mass. In an hour or two the rain
+soaked down into the light earth, and any lorry driver pulling out of
+the line to avoid a skidding vehicle ahead, had the almost certainty
+of finding his car and load come to a full stop with the wheels held
+fast axle deep in the soft soil. An hour's hard digging, the fixing
+of planks beneath the wheels, and a towing cable from another lorry
+sometimes got the machine on to the pressed-down track again and
+enabled it to move ahead for a few miles, but many were the supply
+vehicles that had to wait for a couple of sunny days to dry a path for
+them.
+
+My own experience of the first of the winter rains was so like that of
+others in the force who moved on wheels that I may give some idea of
+the conditions by recounting it. We had taken Ludd and Ramleh, and
+guided by the ruined tower of the Church of the Forty Martyrs I had
+followed in the cavalry's wake. I dallied on the way back to see if
+Akir presented to the latter-day Crusader any signs of its former
+strength when it stood as the Philistine stronghold of Ekron. Near
+where the old city had been the ghastly sight of Turks cut down by
+yeomanry during a hot pursuit offended the senses of sight and smell,
+and when you saw natives moving towards their village at a rate
+somewhat in excess of their customary shuffling gait you were almost
+led to think that their superstitious fears were driving them home
+before sundown lest darkness should raise the ghosts of the Turkish
+dead. A few of the Jewish settlers, whose industry has improved the
+landscape, were leaving the fields and orchards they tended so well,
+though there was still more than an hour of daylight and their tasks
+were not yet done. They were weatherwise. They could have been deaf to
+the rumblings in the south and still have noticed the coming of the
+storm. I was some forty miles from the spot at which my despatch could
+be censored and passed over land wire and cable to London, when a
+vivid lightning flash warned me that the elements were in forbidding
+mood and that I had misread the obvious signal of the natives'
+homeward movement.
+
+The map showed a path from Akir through Mansura towards Junction
+Station, from which the so-called Turkish road ran south. In the
+gathering gloom my driver picked up wheel tracks through an olive
+orchard and, crossing a nullah, found the marks of a Ford car's wheels
+on the other side. The rain fell heavily and soon obliterated all
+signs of a car's progress, and with darkness coming on there was
+a prospect of a shivering night with a wet skin in the open. An
+Australian doctor going up to his regiment at grips with the Turk told
+me that he had no doubt we were on the right road, for he had been
+given a line through Mansura, which must be the farmhouse ahead of us.
+These Australians have a keen nose for country and you have a sense
+of security in following them. The doctor's horse was slipping in the
+mud, but my car made even worse going. It skidded to right and left,
+and only by the skill and coolness of my driver was I saved a ducking
+in a narrow wadi now full of storm water. After much low-gear work we
+pulled up a slight rise and saw ahead of us one or two little fires.
+Under the lee of a dilapidated wall some Scottish infantry were
+brewing tea and making the most of a slight shelter. It was Mansura,
+and if we bore to the right and kept the track beaten down by lorries
+across a field we might, by the favour of fortune, reach Junction
+Station during the night. The Scots had arranged a bivouac in that
+field before it became sodden. They knew how bad it had got, and a
+native instinct to be hospitable prompted an invitation to share the
+fire for the night. However, London was waiting for news and I decided
+to press on. The road could not be worse than the sea of mud in which
+I was floundering, and it might be better. We turned right-handed
+and after a struggle came up against three lorry drivers hopelessly
+marooned. They had turned in. Up a greasy bank we came to a stop and
+slid back. We tried again and failed. I relieved the car of my weight
+and made an effort to push it from behind, but my feet held fast in
+the mud and the car cannoned into me when it skidded downhill. 'Better
+give it up till the morning,' said an M.T. driver whose sleep was
+disturbed by the running of our engine. 'Can't? Who've you got there?
+Eh? Oh, very well. Here, Jim, give them a hand or we'll have no sleep
+to-night'--or words to that effect. Three of the lorry men and the
+engine got us on the move, and before they took mud back with them to
+the dry interiors of the lorries they hoped, they said, that we would
+reach G.H.Q., but declared that it was hopeless to try.
+
+Before getting much farther a light, waved ahead of us, told of some
+one held up. I walked on and found General Butler, the chief of the
+Army Veterinary Service with the Force, unable to move an inch. The
+efforts of two drivers failed to locate the trouble, and everything
+removable was taken off the General's car and put into ours, and with
+the heavier load we started off again for Junction Station. This was
+not difficult to pick up, for there were many flares burning to enable
+working parties to repair engines, rolling stock, and permanent way.
+We got on to the road ultimately, carrying more mud on our feet than I
+imagined human legs could lift. Leaving a driver and all spare gear at
+the station, we thrashed our way along a road metalled with a soft,
+friable limestone which had been cut into by the iron-shod wheels of
+German lorries until the ruts were fully a foot deep, and the soft
+earth foundation was oozing through to the surface. It was desperately
+hard to steer a course on this treacherous highway, and a number of
+lorries we passed had gone temporarily out of action in ditches. The
+Germans with the Turks had blown up most of the culverts, and the road
+bridges which had been destroyed had only been lightly repaired with
+planks and trestles, no safety rails being in position. To negotiate
+these dangerous paths in the dark the driver had to put on all
+possible speed and make a dash for it, and he usually got to the other
+side before a skid became serious. Most of the lorry drivers put out
+no light because they thought no car would be able to move on such a
+night, and we had several narrow escapes of finishing our career on a
+half-sunken supply motor vehicle.
+
+Reinforcements for infantry battalions moved up the road as we came
+down it. They were going to the front to take the place of casualties,
+for weather and mud are not considered when bayonets are wanted in the
+line. So the stolid British infantryman splashed and slipped his way
+towards the enemy, and he would probably have been sleeping that night
+if there had not been a risk of his drowning in the mud. The Camel
+Transport Corps fought the elements with a courage which deserved
+better luck. The camel dislikes many things and is afraid of some. But
+if he is capable of thinking at all he regards mud as his greatest
+enemy. He cannot stand up in it, and if he slips he has not an
+understanding capable of realising that if all his feet do not go
+the same way he must spread-eagle and split up. This is what often
+happens, but if by good luck a camel should go down sideways he seems
+quite content to stay there, and he is so refractory that he prefers
+to die rather than help himself to his feet again. On this wild night
+I had a good opportunity of seeing white officers encourage the
+Egyptian boys in the Camel Transport Corps. At Julis the roadway
+passes through the village. There was an ambulance column in
+difficulties in the village, and while some cars were being extricated
+a camel supply column came up in the opposite direction. The camels
+liked neither the headlights nor the running engines, and these had to
+be made dark and silent before they would pass. The water was running
+over the roadway several inches deep, carrying with it a mass of
+garbage and filth which only Arab villagers would tolerate. Officers
+and Gyppies coaxed and wheedled the stubborn beasts through Julis,
+but outside the place the animals raised a chorus of protest and went
+down. They held me up for an hour or more, and though officers and
+boys did their utmost to get them going again it was a fruitless
+effort, and the poor beasts were off-loaded where they lay. That night
+of rain and thunder, wind and cold, was bad alike for man and beast,
+but beyond a flippant remark of some soldier doing his best and the
+curious chant of the Gyppies' chorus you heard nothing. Tommy could
+not trust himself to talk about the weather. It was too bad for words,
+for even the strongest.
+
+It took our car ten hours to run forty miles, and as the last ten
+miles was over wet sand and on rabbit wire stretched across the
+sand where the car could do fifteen miles an hour, we had averaged
+something under three miles an hour through the mud. Wet through,
+cold, with a face rendered painful to the touch by driven rain, I
+reached my tent with a feeling of thankfulness for myself and deep
+sympathy for the tens of thousands of brave boys enduring intense
+discomfort and fatigue, coupled with the fear of short rations for the
+next day or two. The men in the hills which they were just entering
+had a worse time than those in the waterlogged plain, but no storms
+could damp their enthusiasm. They were beating your enemies and mine,
+and they were facing a goal which Britain had never yet won. Jerusalem
+the Golden was before them, and the honour and glory of winning it
+from the Turk was a prize to attain which no sacrifice was too great.
+Those who did not say so behaved in a way to show that they felt it.
+They were very gallant, perfect knights, these soldiers of the King.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+INTO THE JUDEAN HILLS
+
+
+When the 52nd Division were moving out of Ludd on the 19th November
+the 75th Division were fighting hard about Latron, where the Turks
+held the monastery and its beautiful gardens and the hill about Amwas
+until late in the morning. Having driven them out, the 75th pushed
+on to gain the pass into the hills and to begin two days of fighting
+which earned the unstinted praise of General Bulfin who witnessed it.
+For nearly three miles from Latron the road passes through a flat
+valley flanked by hills till it reaches a guardhouse and khan at the
+foot of the pass which then rises rapidly to Saris, the difference
+in elevation in less than four miles being 1400 feet. Close to the
+guardhouse begin the hills which tower above the road. The Turks had
+constructed defences on these hills and held them with riflemen and
+machine guns, so that these positions dominated all approaches. Our
+guns had few positions from which to assist the infantry, but they did
+sterling service wherever possible. In General Palin the Division
+had a commander with wide experience of hill fighting on the Indian
+frontier, and he brought that experience to bear in a way which must
+have dumb-founded the enemy. Frontal attacks were impossible and
+suicidal, and each position had to be turned by a wide movement
+started a long way in rear. All units in the Division did well, the
+Gurkhas particularly well, and by a continual encircling of their
+flanks the Turks were compelled to leave their fastnesses and fall
+back to new hill crests. Thus outwitted and outmatched the enemy
+retreated to Saris, a high hill with a commanding view of the pass for
+half a mile. The hill is covered with olive trees and has a village on
+its eastern slope, and as the road winds at its foot and then takes
+a left-handed turn to Kuryet el Enab its value for defence was
+considerable.
+
+The Turks had taken advantage of the cover to place a large body of
+defenders with machine guns on the hill, but with every condition
+unfavourable to us the 75th Division had routed out the enemy before
+three o'clock and were ready to move forward as soon as the guns
+could get up the pass. Rain was falling heavily, the road surface was
+clinging and treacherous, and, worse still, the road had been blown up
+in several places. The guns could not advance to be of service that
+day, and the infantry had, therefore, to remain where they were for
+the night. There was a good deal of sniping, but Nature was more
+unkind than the enemy, who received more than he gave. The troops were
+wearing light summer clothing, drill shorts and tunics, and the sudden
+change from the heat and dryness of the plain to bitter cold and wet
+was a desperate trial, especially to the Indian units, who had little
+sleep that night. They needed rest to prepare them for the rigour of
+the succeeding day. A drenching rain turned the whole face of the
+mountains, where earth covered rock, into a sea of mud. On the
+positions about Saris being searched a number of prisoners were taken,
+among them a battalion commander. Men captured in the morning told us
+there were six Turkish battalions holding Enab, which is something
+under two miles from Saris.
+
+The road proceeds up a rise from Saris, then falling slightly it
+passes below the crest of a ridge and again climbs to the foot of a
+hill on which a red-roofed convent church and buildings stand as a
+landmark that can be seen from Jaffa. On the opposite side of the road
+is a substantial house, the summer retreat of the German Consul in
+Jerusalem, whose staff traded in Jordan Holy Water; and this house,
+now empty, sheltered a divisional general from the bad weather while
+the operations for the capture of the Holy City were in preparation. I
+have a grateful recollection of this building, for in it the military
+attachés and I stayed before the Official Entry into Jerusalem, and
+its roof saved us from one inclement night on the bleak hills. On the
+20th November the Turks did their best to keep the place under German
+ownership. The hill on which it stands was well occupied by men under
+cover of thick stone walls, the convent gardens on the opposite side
+of the highway was packed with Turkish infantry, and across the deep
+valley to the west were guns and riflemen on another hill, all of them
+holding the road under the best possible observation. The enemy's
+howitzers put down a heavy barrage on all approaches, and on the
+reverse of the hill covering the village lying in the hollow
+there were machine guns and many men. Reconnaissances showed the
+difficulties attending an attack, and it was not until the afternoon
+that a plan was ready to be put into execution. No weak points in the
+defences could be discovered, and just as it seemed possible that a
+daylight attack would be held up, a thick mist rolled up the valley
+and settled down over Enab. The 2/3rd Gurkhas seized a welcomed
+opportunity, and as the light was failing the shrill, sharp notes
+of these gallant hillmen and the deep-throated roar of the 1/5th
+Somersets told that a weighty bayonet charge had got home, and that
+the keys of the enemy position had been won. The men of the bold 75th
+went beyond Enab in the dark, and also out along the old Roman road
+towards Biddu to deny the Turks a point from which they could see the
+road as it fell away from the Enab ridge towards the wadi Ikbala. That
+night many men sought the doubtful shelter of olive groves, and built
+stone sangars to break the force of a biting wind. A few, as many as
+could be accommodated, were welcomed by the monks in a monastery in
+a fold in the hills, whilst some rested and were thankful in a crypt
+beneath the monks' church, the oldest part of the building, believed
+to be the work of sixth-century masons. The monks had a tale of woe to
+tell. They had been proud to have as their guest the Latin Patriarch
+in Jerusalem, who was a French protégé, and this high ecclesiastic
+remained at the monastery till November 17, when Turkish gendarmerie
+carried him away. The Spanish Consul in Jerusalem lodged a vigorous
+protest, and, so the monks were told, he was supported by the German
+Commandant. But to no purpose, for when General Allenby entered
+Jerusalem he learned that the Latin Patriarch had been removed to
+Damascus. For quite a long time the monks did many kindly things for
+our troops. They gave up the greater part of the monastery and church
+for use as a hospital, and many a sick man was brought back to health
+by rest within those ancient walls. Some, alas, there were whose
+wounds were mortal, and a number lie in the monks' secluded garden.
+They have set up wooden crosses over them, and we may be certain that
+in that quiet sequestered spot their remains will rest in peace and
+will have the protection of the monks as surely as it has been given
+to the grave of the Roman centurion which faces those of our brave
+boys who fell on the same soil fighting the same good fight.
+
+While the 75th Division were making their magnificent effort at Enab
+the Lowlanders had breasted other and equally difficult hills to the
+north. General Hill had posted a strong force at Beit Likia, and then
+moved south-east along the route prepared by Cestius Gallus nearly
+1900 years ago to the height of Beit Anan, and thence east again
+to Beit Dukku. On the 21st the road and ground near it were in
+exceedingly bad condition, and the difficulty of moving anything on
+wheels along it could hardly have been greater. Already the 52nd
+Division had realised it was hopeless to get all their divisional
+artillery into action, and only three sections of artillery were
+brought up, the horses of the guns sent back to Ramleh being used to
+double the teams in the three advanced sections. It was heavy work,
+too, for infantry who not only had to carry the weight of mud-caked
+boots, but were handicapped by continual slipping upon the rocky
+ground. The 75th advancing along the road from Enab to Kustul got an
+idea of the Turkish lack of attention to the highway, the main road
+being deep in mud and full of dangerous ruts. They won Kustul about
+midday, and officers who climbed to the top got their first glimpse
+of the outskirts of Jerusalem from the ruined walls of a Roman castle
+that gives its name to the little village perched on the height. They
+did not, however, see much beyond the Syrian colony behind the main
+Turkish defences, and the first view of Jerusalem by the troops of
+the British Army was obtained by General Maclean's brigade when they
+advanced from Biddu to Nebi Samwil, that crowning height on which many
+centuries before Richard the Lion Heart buried his face in his casque
+and exclaimed: 'Lord God, I pray that I may never see Thy Holy City,
+if so be that I may not rescue it from the hands of Thine enemies.'
+
+What a fight it was for Nebi Samwil! The Turk had made it his advanced
+work for his main line running from El Jib through Bir Nabala, Beit
+Iksa to Lifta, as strong a chain of entrenched mountains as any
+commander could desire. General Maclean's brigade advanced from Biddu
+along the side of a ridge and up the exposed steep slope of Nebi
+Samwil, not all of which, in the only direction he could select for an
+advance, was terraced, as it was on the Turks' side. He was all
+the time confronted by heavy artillery and rifle fire, and, though
+supported by guns firing at long range from the neighbourhood of Enab,
+he could not make Nebi Samwil in daylight. Round the top of the hill
+the Turk had dug deeply into the stony earth. He knew the value
+of that hill. From its crest good observation was obtained in all
+directions, and if, when we had to attack the main Jerusalem defences
+on December 8, the summit of Nebi Samwil had still been in Turkish
+hands, not a movement of troops as they issued from the bed of the
+wadi Surar and climbed the rough face of the western buttresses of
+Jerusalem would have escaped notice. The brigade won the hill and held
+it just before midnight, but the battle for the crest ebbed and flowed
+for days with terrific violence, we never giving up possession of it,
+though it was stormed again and again by an enemy who, it is fair to
+admit, displayed fine courage and not a little skill. That hill-top at
+this period had to submit to a thunderous bombardment, and the Mosque
+of Nebi Samwil became a battered shell. Here are supposed to lie the
+remains of the Prophet Samuel. The tradition may or may not be well
+founded, but at any rate Mahomedans and Christians alike have held
+the place in veneration for centuries. The Turk paid no regard to the
+sanctity of the Mosque, and, as it was of military importance to him
+that we should not hold it, he shelled it daily with all his available
+guns, utterly destroying it. There may be cases where the Turks will
+deny that they damaged a Holy Place. They could not hide their guilt
+on Nebi Samwil. I was at pains to examine the Mosque and the immediate
+surroundings, and the photographs I took are proof that the wreckage
+of this church came from artillery fired from the east and north, the
+direction of the Turkish gun-pits. It is possible we are apt to be
+a little too sentimental about the destruction in war of a place of
+worship. If a general has reason to think that a tower or minaret
+is being used as an observation post, or that a church or mosque is
+sheltering a body of troops, there are those who hold that he is
+justified in deliberately planning its destruction, but here was a
+sacred building with associations held in reverence by all classes and
+creeds in a land where these things are counted high, and to have set
+about wrecking it was a crime. The German influence over the Turk
+asserted itself, as it did in the heavy fighting after we had taken
+Jerusalem. We had batteries on the Mount of Olives and the Turk
+searched for them, but they never fired one round at the Kaiserin
+Augusta Victoria Hospice near by. That had been used as Falkenhayn's
+headquarters. General Chetwode occupied it as his Corps Headquarters
+soon after he entered Jerusalem. There was a wireless installation and
+the Turks could see the coming and going of the Corps' motor cars. I
+have watched operations from a summer-house in the gardens, and no
+enemy plane could pass over the building without discovering the
+purpose to which it was put. And there were spies. But not one shell
+fell within the precincts of the hospice because it was a German
+building, containing the statues of the Kaiser and Kaiserin, and (oh,
+the taste of the Hun!) with effigies of the Kaiser and his consort
+painted in the roof of the chapel not far from a picture of the
+Saviour. Britain is rebuilding what the Turks destroyed, and there
+will soon arise on Nebi Samwil a new mosque to show Mahomedans that
+tolerance and freedom abide under our flag.
+
+When the 75th Division were making the attack on Nebi Samwil the 52nd
+Division put all the men they could spare on to the task of making
+roads. To be out of the firing line did not mean rest. In fact, as
+far as physical exertion went, it was easier to be fighting than in
+reserve. From sunrise till dark and often later the roadmakers were at
+work with pick, shovel, and crowbar, and the tools were not too many
+for the job. The gunners joined in the work and managed to take their
+batteries over the roads long before they were considered suitable
+for other wheels. The battery commanders sometimes selected firing
+positions which appeared quite inaccessible to any one save a mountain
+climber, but the guns got there and earned much credit for their
+teams.
+
+On the 22nd Nebi Samwil was thrice attacked. British and Indian troops
+were holding the hill, but the Turks were on the northern slopes. They
+were, in fact, on strong positions on three sides, and from El Burj,
+a prominent hill 1200 yards to the south-east, and from the wooded
+valley of the wadi Hannina, they could advance with plenty of cover.
+There was much dead ground, stone walls enclosed small patches of
+cultivation, and when troops halted under the terraces on the slopes
+no gun or rifle fire could reach them. The enemy could thus get quite
+close to our positions before we could deal with them, and their
+attacks were also favoured by an intense volume of artillery fire from
+5.9's placed about the Jerusalem-Nablus road and, as some people in
+Jerusalem afterwards told me, from the Mount of Olives. The attackers
+possessed the advantage that our guns could not concentrate on them
+while the attack was preparing, and could only put in a torrent of
+fire when the enemy infantry were getting near their goal. These three
+attacks were delivered with the utmost ferocity, and were pressed home
+each time with determination. But the 75th Division held on with a
+stubbornness which was beyond praise, and the harder the Turk tried
+to reach the summit the tighter became the defence. Each attack was
+repulsed with very heavy losses, and after his third failure the enemy
+did not put in his infantry again that day.
+
+The 75th Division endeavoured to reach El Jib, a village on the hill a
+mile and a half to the north of Nebi Samwil. The possession of El Jib
+by us would have attracted some of the enemy opposing the advance
+of the Yeomanry Mounted Division on the left, but not only was the
+position strongly defended in the village and on the high ground on
+the north and north-west, but our infantry could not break down the
+opposition behind the sangars and boulders on the northern side of
+Nebi Samwil. The attack had to be given up, but we made some progress
+in this mountainous sector, as the 52nd Division had pushed out from
+Dukku to Beit Izza, between 3000 and 4000 yards from El Jib, and
+by driving the enemy from this strong village they made it more
+comfortable for the troops in Biddu and protected the Nebi Samwil
+flank, the securing of which in those days of bitter fighting was
+an important factor. It was evident from what was happening on this
+front, not only where two divisions of infantry had to strain every
+nerve to hold on to what they had got but where the Yeomanry Mounted
+Division were battling against enormous odds in the worse country to
+the north-west, that the Turks were not going to allow us to get
+to the Nablus road without making a direct attack on the Jerusalem
+defences. They outnumbered us, had a large preponderance in guns, were
+near their base, and enjoyed the advantage of prepared positions and a
+comparatively easy access to supplies and ammunition. Everything was
+in their favour down to the very state of the weather. But our army
+struggled on against all the big obstacles. On the 23rd the 75th
+Division renewed their attack on El Jib, but although the men showed
+the dash which throughout characterised the Division, it had to be
+stopped. The garrison of El Jib had been reinforced, and the enemy
+held the woods, wadi banks, and sangars in greater strength than
+before, while the artillery fire was extremely heavy. Not only was the
+75th Division tired with ceaseless fighting, but the losses they had
+sustained since they left the Plain of Ajalon had been substantial,
+and the 52nd Division took over from them that night to prepare
+for another effort on the following day. The Scots were no more
+successful. They made simultaneous attacks on the northern and
+southern ends of Nebi Samwil, and a brigade worked up from Beit Izza
+to a ridge north-west of El Jib. Two magnificent attempts were made
+to get into the enemy's positions, but they failed. The officer
+casualties were heavy; some companies had no officers, and the troops
+were worn out by great exertions and privations in the bleak hills.
+The two divisions had been fighting hard for over three weeks, they
+had marched long distances on hard food, which at the finish was not
+too plentiful, and the sudden violent change in the weather conditions
+made it desirable that the men should get to an issue of warmer
+clothing. General Bulfin realised it would be risking heavy losses to
+ask his troops to make another immediate effort against a numerically
+stronger enemy in positions of his own choice, and he therefore
+applied to General Allenby that the XXth Corps--the 60th Division was
+already at Latron attached to the XXIst Corps--might take over the
+line. The Commander-in-Chief that evening ordered the attack on the
+enemy's positions to be discontinued until the arrival of fresh
+troops. During the next day or two the enemy's artillery was as active
+as hitherto, but the punishment he had received in his attacks made
+him pause, and there were only small half-hearted attempts to reach
+our line. They were all beaten off by infantry fire, and the reliefs
+of the various brigades of the XXIst Corps were complete by November
+28. It had not been given to the XXIst Corps to obtain the distinction
+of driving the Turks for ever from Jerusalem, but the work of
+the Corps in the third and fourth weeks of November had laid the
+foundation on which victory finally rested. The grand efforts of the
+52nd and 75th Divisions in rushing over the foothills of the Shephelah
+on to the Judean heights, in getting a footing on some of the most
+prominent hills within three days of leaving the plain, and in
+holding on with grim tenacity to what they had gained, enabled the
+Commander-in-Chief to start on a new plan by which to take the Holy
+City in one stride, so to speak. The 52nd and 75th Divisions and, as
+will be seen, the Yeomanry Mounted Division as well, share the glory
+of the capture of Jerusalem with the 53rd, 60th, and 74th Divisions
+who were in at the finish.
+
+The fighting of the Yeomanry Mounted Division on the left of the 52nd
+was part and parcel of the XXIst Corps' effort to get to the Nablus
+road. It was epic fighting, and I have not described it when narrating
+the infantry's daily work because it is best told in a connected
+story. If the foot sloggers had a bad time, the conditions were
+infinitely worse for mounted troops. The ground was as steep, but the
+hillsides were rougher, the wadis narrower, the patches of open flat
+fewer than in the districts where infantry operated. So bad indeed was
+the country that horses were an encumbrance, and most of them were
+returned to the plain. After a time horse artillery could proceed no
+farther, and the only guns the yeomanry had with them were those of
+a section of the Hong Kong and Singapore mountain battery, manned by
+Sikhs, superb fellows whose service in the Egyptian deserts and in
+Palestine was worthy of a martial race. But their little guns were
+outranged by the Turkish artillery, and though they were often right
+up with the mounted men they could not get near the enemy batteries.
+The supply of the division in the nooks and crannies where there was
+not so much as a goat-path was a desperate problem, and could not have
+been solved without the aid of many hundreds of pack-donkeys which
+dumped their loads of supplies and ammunition on the hillsides,
+leaving it to be carried forward by hand. The division were fighting
+almost continually for a fortnight. They got farther forward than
+the infantry and met the full force of an opposition which, if not
+stronger than that about Nebi Samwil, was extremely violent, and they
+came back to a line which could be supplied with less difficulty
+when it was apparent that the Turks were not going to accept the
+opportunity General Allenby gave them to withdraw their army from
+Jerusalem. The Division's most bitter struggle was about the
+Beth-horons, on the very scene where Joshua, on a lengthened day,
+threw the Canaanites off the Shephelah.
+
+The Yeomanry Mounted Division received orders on the afternoon of
+November 17 to move across Ajalon into the foothills and to press
+forward straight on Bireh as rapidly as possible. Their trials they
+began immediately. One regiment of the 8th Brigade occupied Annabeh,
+and a regiment of the 22nd Brigade got within a couple of miles of
+Nalin, where a well-concealed body of the enemy held it up. Soon the
+report came in that the country was impassable for wheels. By
+the afternoon of the next day the 8th Brigade were at Beit ur el
+Foka--Beth-horon the Upper--a height where fig trees and pomegranates
+flourish. Eastwards the country falls away and there are several
+ragged narrow valleys between some tree-topped ridges till the eye
+meets a sheikh's tomb on the Zeitun ridge, standing midway between
+Foka and Beitunia, which rears a proud and picturesque head to bar the
+way to Bireh. The wadis cross the valleys wherever torrent water can
+tear up rock, but the yeomanry found their beds smoother going, filled
+though they were with boulders, than the hill slopes, which generally
+rose in steep gradients from the sides of watercourses. During every
+step of the way across this saw-toothed country one appreciated to
+the full the defenders' advantage. If dead ground hid you from one
+hill-top enemy marks-men could get you from another, and it was
+impossible for the division to proceed unless it got the enemy out of
+all the hills on its line of advance. The infantry on the right were
+very helpful, but the brigade on the left flank had many difficulties,
+which were not lessened when, on the second day of the movement, all
+Royal Horse Artillery guns and all wheels had to be sent back owing to
+the bad country. Up to this point the fight against Nature was more
+arduous than against the enemy. Thenceforward the enemy became more
+vigilant and active, and the hills and stony hollows more trying. All
+available men were set to work to make a road for the Hong Kong and
+Singapore gunners, a battery which would always get as far into the
+mountains as any in the King's Army. The road parties laboured night
+and day, but it was only by the greatest exertions that the battery
+could be got through. The heavy rain of the 19th added to the
+troubles. The 8th Brigade, having occupied Beit ur et Tahta
+(Beth-horon the Lower) early on the morning of the 19th, proceeded
+along the wadi Sunt until a force on the heights held them up, and
+they had to remain in the wadi while the 6th Mounted Brigade turned
+the enemy's flank at Foka. The 22nd Mounted Brigade on the north met
+with the same trouble--every hill had to be won and picqueted--and
+they could not make Ain Arik that day. As soon as it was light on the
+following morning the 6th Mounted Brigade brushed away opposition in
+Foka and entered the village, pushing on thence towards Beitunia. The
+advance was slow and hazardous; every hill had to be searched, a task
+difficult of accomplishment by reason of the innumerable caves and
+boulders capable of sheltering snipers. The Turk had become an adept
+at sniping, and left parties in the hills to carry on by themselves.
+When the 6th Brigade got within two miles of the south-west of
+Beitunia they were opposed by 5000 Turks well screened by woods on the
+slopes and the wadi. Both sides strove all day without gaining ground.
+Divisional headquarters were only a short distance behind the 6th, and
+the 8th Brigade was moved up into the same area to be ready to assist.
+By two o'clock in the afternoon the 22nd Brigade got into Ain Arik and
+found a strong force of the enemy holding Beitunia and the hill of
+Muntar, a few hundred yards to the north of it, thus barring the way
+to Ramallah and Bireh. Rain fell copiously and the wind was chilly.
+After a miserable night in bivouac, the 6th Brigade was astir before
+daylight on the 21st. They were fighting at dawn, and in the half
+light compelled the enemy to retire to within half a mile of Beitunia.
+A few prisoners were rounded up, and these told the brigadier that
+3000 Turks were holding Beitunia with four batteries of field guns and
+four heavy camel guns. That estimate was found to be approximately
+accurate. A regiment of the 8th Brigade sent to reinforce the 6th
+Brigade on their left got within 800 yards of the hill, when the guns
+about Bireh and Ramallah opened on them and they were compelled to
+withdraw, and a Turkish counter-attack forced our forward line back
+slightly in the afternoon. The enemy had a plentiful supply of
+ammunition and made a prodigal use of it. While continuing to shell
+fiercely he put more infantry into his fighting line, and as we had
+only 1200 rifles and four mountain guns, which the enemy's artillery
+outranged, it was clear we could not dislodge him from the Beitunia
+crest. The 22nd Mounted Brigade had made an attempt to get to Ramallah
+from Ain Arik, but the opposition from Muntar and the high ground
+to the east was much too severe. Our casualties had not been
+inconsiderable, and in face of the enemy's superiority in numbers and
+guns and the strength of his position it would have been dangerous and
+useless to make a further attack. General Barrow therefore decided to
+withdraw to Foka during the night. All horses had been sent back in
+the course of the afternoon, and when the light failed the retirement
+began. The wounded were first evacuated, and they, poor fellows, had
+a bad time of it getting back to Foka in the dark over four miles of
+rock-strewn country. It was not till two o'clock on the following
+morning that all the convoys of wounded passed through Foka, but by
+that time the track to Tahta had been made into passable order, and
+some of these helpless men were out of the hills soon after daylight,
+journeying in comparative ease in light motor ambulances over the
+Plain of Ajalon.
+
+The arrangements for the withdrawal worked admirably. The 8th Mounted
+Brigade, covering the retirement so successfully that the enemy knew
+nothing about it, held on in front of Beitunia till three o'clock,
+reaching Foka before dawn, while the 22nd Brigade remained covering
+the northern flank till almost midnight, when it fell back to Tahta.
+The Division's casualties during the day were 300 killed and wounded.
+We still held the Zeitun ridge, observation was kept on Ain Arik from
+El Hafy by one regiment, and troops were out on many parts north and
+east of Tahta and Foka.
+
+On the next two days there was nothing beyond enemy shelling and
+patrol encounters. On the 24th demonstrations were made against
+Beitunia to support the left of the 52nd Division's attack on El Jib,
+but the enemy was too strong to permit of the yeomanry proceeding
+more than two miles east of Foka. The roadmakers had done an enormous
+amount of navvy work on the track between Foka and Tahta. They had
+laboured without cessation, breaking up rock, levering out boulders
+with crowbars, and doing a sort of rough-and-ready levelling, and by
+the night of the 24th the track was reported passable for guns.
+The Leicester battery R.H.A. came along it next morning without
+difficulty. I did not see the road till some time later and its
+surface had then been considerably improved, but even then one felt
+the drivers of those gun teams had achieved the almost impossible. The
+Leicester battery arrived at Foka just in time to unlimber and get
+into action behind a fig orchard in order to disperse a couple of
+companies of enemy infantry which were working round the left flank of
+the Staffordshire Yeomanry at Khurbet Meita, below the Zeitun height.
+The enemy brought up reinforcements and made an attack in the late
+afternoon, but this was also broken up. The Berkshire battery reached
+Tahta the following day and, with the Leicester gunners, answered the
+Turks' long-range shelling throughout the day and night. On the 27th
+the enemy made a determined attempt to compel us to withdraw from the
+Zeitun ridge, which is an isolated hill commanding the valleys on both
+sides. The 6th Mounted Brigade furnished the garrison of 3 officers
+and 60 men, who occupied a stone building on the summit. Against them
+the enemy put 600 infantry with machine guns, and they also brought a
+heavy artillery fire to bear on the building from Beitunia, 4000 yards
+away. The garrison put up a most gallant defence. They were compelled
+to leave the building because the enemy practically destroyed it by
+gunfire and the infantry almost surrounded the hill, but they
+obtained cover on the boulder-strewn sides of the hill and held their
+assailants at bay. At dusk, although the garrison was reduced to 2
+officers and 26 men, they refused to give ground. They were instructed
+to hold on as long as possible, and a reinforcement of 50 men was sent
+up after dark--all that could be spared, as the division was holding a
+series of hills ten miles long and every rifle was in the line. This
+front was being threatened at several points, and the activity of
+patrols at Deir Ibzia and north of it suggested that the enemy was
+trying to get into the gap of five miles between the yeomanry and the
+right of the 54th Division which was now at Shilta. It was an anxious
+night, and No. 2 Light Armoured Car battery was kept west of Tahta
+to enfilade the enemy with machine guns should he appear in the
+neighbourhood of Suffa. The 7th Mounted Brigade was ordered up to
+reinforce. The fresh troops arrived at dawn on the 28th, and had no
+sooner got into position at Hellabi, half a mile north-west of Tahta,
+than their left flank was attacked by 1000 Turks with machine guns.
+The 155th Brigade of the 52nd Division was on its way through Beit
+Likia to rest after its hard work in the neighbourhood of Nebi Samwil
+and El Jib, and it was ordered up to assist. At midday the brigade
+attacked Suffa but could not take it. The Scots, however, prevented
+the Turks breaking round the left flank of the yeomanry. The post
+which had held Zeitun so bravely was brought into Foka under cover of
+the Leicester and Berkshire batteries' fire, and very heavy fighting
+continued all day long on the Foka-Tahta-Suffa line, but though the
+enemy employed 3000 infantry in his attack, and had four batteries
+of 77's and four heavy camel guns, he was unsuccessful. At dusk the
+attack on Tahta, which had been under shell-fire all day, was beaten
+off and the enemy was compelled to withdraw one mile. Suffa was still
+his, but his advanced troops on the cairn south of that place had
+suffered heavily during the day at the hands of the 7th Mounted
+Brigade, who several times drove them off. Some howitzers of the 52nd
+Division were hauled over the hills in the afternoon and shelled
+the cairn so heavily that the post sought shelter in Suffa. To the
+south-east of the line of attack the Turks were doing their utmost to
+secure Foka. They came again and again, and their attacks were always
+met and broken with the bayonet by yeomen who were becoming fatigued
+by continuous fighting, and advancing and retiring in this terrible
+country. They could have held the place that night, but there was no
+possibility of sending them reinforcements, and as the enemy had been
+seen working round to the south of the village with machine guns it
+might have been impossible to get them out in the morning. General
+Barrow accordingly withdrew the Foka garrison to a new position on a
+wooded ridge half-way between that place and Tahta, and the enemy made
+no attempt to get beyond Foka. Late at night he got so close to Tahta
+from the north that he threw bombs at our sangars, but he was driven
+off.
+
+During the evening the Yeomanry Mounted Division received welcome
+reinforcements. The 4th Australian Light Horse Brigade were placed
+in support of the 6th Mounted Brigade and a battalion of the 156th
+Infantry Brigade assisted the 7th Mounted Brigade.
+
+On the 29th the Turks made their biggest effort to break through the
+important line we held, and all day they persisted with the greatest
+determination in an attack on our left. At midnight they had again
+occupied the cairn south of Suffa, and remained there till 8 A.M.,
+when the 268th Brigade Royal Field Artillery crowned the hill with a
+tremendous burst of fire and drove them off. The machine-gunners
+of the 7th Mounted Brigade caught the force as it was retiring and
+inflicted many casualties. The Turks came back again and again, and
+the cairn repeatedly changed hands, until at last it was unoccupied by
+either side. Towards dusk the Turks' attacks petered out, though the
+guns and snipers continued busy, and the Yeomanry Mounted Division was
+relieved by the 231st Infantry Brigade of the 74th Division and the
+157th Infantry Brigade of the 52nd Division, the Australian Mounted
+Division ultimately taking over the left of the line which XXth Corps
+troops occupied.
+
+The Yeomanry Mounted Division had made a grand fight against a vastly
+superior force of the enemy in a country absolutely unfavourable to
+the movement of mounted troops. They never had more than 1200 rifles
+holding a far-flung barren and bleak line, and the fine qualities
+of vigorous and swift attack, unfaltering discipline and heroic
+stubbornness in defence under all conditions, get their proof in
+the 499 casualties incurred by the Division in the hill fighting,
+exclusive of those sustained by the 7th Mounted Brigade which
+reinforced them. The Division was made up entirely of first-line
+yeomanry regiments whose members had become efficient soldiers in
+their spare time, when politicians were prattling about peace and
+deluding parties into the belief that there was little necessity to
+prepare for war. Their patriotism and example gave a tone to the
+drafts sent out to replace casualties and the wastage of war, and were
+a credit to the stock from which they sprang.
+
+While the Yeomanry Mounted Division had been fighting a great battle
+alongside the infantry of the XXIst Corps in the hills, the remainder
+of the troops of the Desert Mounted Corps were employed on the plain
+and in the coastal sector, hammering the enemy hard and establishing
+a line from the mouth of the river Auja through some rising ground
+across the plain. They were busily engaged clearing the enemy out of
+some of the well-ordered villages east of the sandy belt, several of
+them German colonies showing signs of prosperity and more regard
+for cleanliness and sanitation than other of the small centres of
+population hereabouts. The village of Sarona, north of Jaffa, an
+almost exclusively German settlement, was better arranged than any
+others, but Wilhelma was a good second.
+
+The most important move was on November 24, when, with a view to
+making the enemy believe an attack was intended against his right
+flank, the New Zealand Mounted Rifles Brigade was sent across the
+river Auja to seize the villages of Sheikh Muannis near the sea, and
+Hadrah farther inland, two companies of infantry holding each of the
+two crossings. The enemy became alarmed and attacked the cavalry in
+force early next morning, 1000 infantry marching on Muannis. The
+Hadrah force was driven back across the Auja and the two companies of
+infantry covering the crossing suffered heavily, having no support
+from artillery, which had been sent into bivouac. Some of the men had
+to swim the river. A bridge of boats had been built at Jerisheh mill
+during the night, and by this means men crossed until Muannis was
+occupied by the enemy later in the morning. The cavalry crossed the
+ford at the mouth of the Auja at the gallop. The 1/4th Essex held on
+to Hadrah until five out of six officers and about fifty per cent. of
+the men became casualties. There was a good deal of minor fighting on
+this section of the front, and in a number of patrol encounters the
+resource of the Australian Light Horse added to their bag of prisoners
+and to the Army's store of information. Nothing further of importance
+occurred in this neighbourhood until we seized the crossings of the
+Auja and the high ground north of the river a week before the end of
+the year.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE DELIVERANCE OF THE HOLY CITY
+
+
+The impossibility of getting across the road north of Jerusalem by
+making a wide sweep over the Judean hills caused a new plan to be put
+into execution. This necessitated a direct attack on the well-prepared
+system of defences on the hills protecting Jerusalem from the west,
+but it did not entail any weakening of General Allenby's determination
+that there should be no fighting by British troops in and about the
+precincts of the Holy City. That resolve was unshaken and unshakable.
+When a new scheme was prepared by the XXth Corps, the question was put
+whether the Turks could be attacked at Lifta, which was part of their
+system. Now Lifta is a native village on one of the hill-faces to the
+west of Jerusalem, about a mile from the Holy City's walls, and, as
+it is not even connected by a road with any of the various colonies
+forming the suburbs of Jerusalem, could not by any stretch of
+imagination be described by a Hun propaganda merchant as part
+of Jerusalem. I happen to know that on the 26th November the
+Commander-in-Chief sent this communication to General Chetwode: 'I
+place no restriction upon you in respect of any operation which you
+may consider necessary against Lifta or the enemy's lines to the south
+of it, except that on no account is any risk to be run of bringing
+the City of Jerusalem or its immediate environs within the area of
+operations.' The spirit as well as the letter of that order was
+carried out, and in the very full orders and notes on the operations
+issued before the victorious attack was made, there is the most
+elaborate detail regarding the different objectives of divisions and
+brigades, and scrupulous care was taken that no advance should be made
+against any resisting enemy within the boundaries not only of the
+Holy City but of the suburbs. We shall see how thoroughly these
+instructions were followed.
+
+When it became obvious that Jerusalem could not be secured without the
+adoption of a deliberate method of attack, there were many matters
+requiring the anxious consideration of the XXth Corps staff. They took
+over from XXIst Corps at a time when the enemy was still very active
+against the line which they had gained under very hard conditions. The
+XXth Corps, beginning with the advantage of positions which the XXIst
+Corps had won, had to prepare to meet the enemy with equal gun power
+and more than equality in rifle strength. We had the men and the
+guns in the country, but to get them into the line and to keep
+them supplied was a problem of considerable magnitude. Time was an
+important factor. The rains had begun. The spells of fine weather were
+getting shorter, and after each period of rain the sodden state of the
+country affected all movement. To bring up supplies we could only rely
+on road traffic from Gaza and Deir Sineid, and the light soil had
+become hopelessly cut up during the rains. The main line of railway
+was not to be opened to Mejdel till December 8, and the captured
+Turkish line between Deir Sineid and Junction Station had a maximum
+capacity of one hundred tons of ordnance stores a day, and these had
+to be moved forward again by road. An advance must slow down while
+communications were improved. The XXth Corps inherited from the XXIst
+Corps the track between Beit Likia and Biddu which had been prepared
+with an infinity of trouble and exertion, but this and the main
+Latron-Jerusalem road were the only highways available.
+
+General Chetwode's Corps relieved General Bulfin's Corps during
+the day of November 28, and viewed in the most favourable light it
+appeared that there must be at least one week's work on the roads
+before it would be possible for heavy and field batteries, in
+sufficient strength to support an attack, to be got into the
+mountains. A new road was begun between Latron and Beit Likia, and
+another from Enab to Kubeibeh, and these, even in a rough state of
+completion, eased the situation very considerably. An enormous amount
+of labour was devoted to the main road. The surface was in bad order
+and was getting worse every hour with the passage of lorry traffic. It
+became full of holes, and the available metal in the neighbourhood
+was a friable limestone which, under heavy pressure during rains, was
+ground into the consistency of a thick cream. Pioneer battalions were
+reinforced by large parties of Egyptian labour corps, and these worked
+ceaselessly, clearing off top layers of mud, carrying stones down from
+the hills and breaking them, putting on a new surface and repairing
+the decayed walls which held up the road in many places. The
+roadmakers proved splendid fellows. They put a vast amount of energy
+into their work, but when the roads were improved rain gravely
+interfered with traffic, and camels were found to be most
+unsatisfactory. They slipped and fell and no reliance could be placed
+on a camel convoy getting to its destination in the hills. Two
+thousand donkeys were pressed into service, and with them the troops
+in the distant positions were kept supplied. It would not be possible
+to exaggerate the value of this donkey transport. In anticipation of
+the advance the Quartermaster-General's department, with the foresight
+which characterised that department and all its branches throughout
+the campaign, searched Egypt for the proper stamp of asses for pack
+transport in the hills. The Egyptian donkey is a big fellow with
+a light-grey coat, capable of carrying a substantial load, hardy,
+generally docile, and less stubborn than most of the species. He is
+much taller and heavier than the Palestine donkey, and our Army never
+submitted him to the atrociously heavy loads which crush and break the
+spirit of the local Arabs' animals. It is, perhaps, too much to hope
+that the natives will learn something from the British soldier's
+treatment of animals. It was one of the sights of the campaign to see
+the donkey trains at work. They carried supplies which, having been
+brought by the military railway from the Suez Canal to railhead, were
+conveyed by motor lorries as far as the state of the road permitted
+self-propelled vehicles to run, were next transhipped into limbers,
+and, when horse transport could proceed no farther, were stowed on to
+the backs of camels. The condition of the road presently held up the
+camels, and then donkey trains took over the loads. Under a white
+officer you would see a chain of some two hundred donkeys, each roped
+in file of four, led by an Egyptian who knew all that was worth
+knowing about the ways of the ass, winding their way up and down
+hills, getting a foothold on rocks where no other animal but a goat
+could stand, and surmounting all obstacles with a patient endurance
+which every soldier admired. They did not like the cold, and the
+rain made them look deplorably wretched, but they got rations
+and drinking-water right up to the crags where our infantry were
+practising mountaineering. Shell-fire did not disturb them much,
+and they would nibble at any rank stuff growing on the hillsides to
+supplement the rations which did not always reach their lines at
+regular intervals. The Gyppy boys were excellent leaders, and to them
+and the donkeys the front-line fighting men in the hill country owe
+much. They were saved a good deal of exhausting labour in manhandling
+stores from the point where camels had to stop, and they could
+therefore concentrate their attention on the Turk.
+
+By December 2 the fine exertions of the troops on the line of
+communications had enabled the XXth Corps Commander to make his plans
+for the capture of Jerusalem, and at a conference at Enab on the
+following day General Chetwode outlined his scheme, which, put in
+a nutshell, was to attack with the 60th and 74th Divisions in an
+easterly direction on the front Ain Karim-Beit Surik and, skirting the
+western suburbs of Jerusalem, to place these two divisions astride the
+Jerusalem-Nablus road, while the 53rd Division advanced from Hebron to
+threaten the enemy from the south and protect the right of the 60th
+Division. I will not apologise for dealing as fully as possible with
+the fighting about Jerusalem, because Jerusalem was one of the great
+victories of the war, and the care taken to observe the sanctity of
+the place will for all time stand out as one of the brightest examples
+of the honour of British arms. But before entering upon those details
+I will put in chronological sequence the course of the fighting on
+this front from the moment when the XXth Corps took over the
+command, and show how, despite enemy vigilance and many attacks, the
+preparations for the outstanding event of the campaign were carried
+through. It is remarkable that in the short period of ten days
+the plans could be worked out in detail and carried through to a
+triumphant issue, notwithstanding the bad weather and the almost
+overwhelming difficulties of supply. Only the whole-hearted
+co-operation of all ranks made it possible. On the day after the
+XXth Corps became responsible for this front General Chetwode had a
+conference with Generals Barrow, Hill, and Girdwood, and after a full
+discussion of the situation in the hills decided to abandon the plan
+of getting on to the Jerusalem-Nablus road from the north in favour
+of attempting to take Jerusalem from the west and south-west. The
+commanders of the Yeomanry Mounted Division and the 52nd Division were
+asked to suggest, from their experience of the fighting of the past
+ten days, what improvement in the line was necessary to make it
+certain that the new plan would not be interfered with by an enemy
+counter-attack. They were in favour of taking the western portion
+of the Beitunia-Zeitun ridge. Preparations were made immediately
+to relieve the Yeomanry Mounted Division by the Australian Mounted
+Division, and when the 10th Division arrived--it was marching up from
+Gaza--the 52nd Division was to be returned to the XXIst Corps. The
+hard fighting and the determined attacks of the Turks had made it
+unavoidable that some portions of the divisions should be mixed, and
+the reliefs were not completed till the 2nd of December.
+
+The Yeomanry Mounted Division troops gave over the Tahta defences to
+the 157th Infantry Brigade on the night of November 29-30, and the
+enemy made an attack on the new defenders at dawn, but were swiftly
+beaten off. A local effort against Nebi Samwil was easily repulsed,
+but the 60th Division reported that the enemy had in the past few days
+continued his shelling of the Mosque, and had added to his destruction
+of that sacred place by demolishing the minaret by gunfire. The 231st
+Infantry Brigade with one battalion in the front line took over from
+the 8th Mounted Brigade from Beit Dukku to Jufna, and while the
+reliefs were in progress there was continual fighting in the Et
+Tireh-Foka area. The former place was won and lost several times, and
+finally the infantry consolidated on the high ground west of those
+villages. Early on the 30th a detachment of the 231st Brigade took
+Foka, capturing eight officers and 298 men, but as it was not possible
+to hold the village the infantry retired to our original line. On
+December 1 the 10th Division relieved the 52nd in the sector wadi
+Zait-Tahta-Kh. Faaush, but on that day the 155th Brigade had had
+another hard brush with the Turks. A regiment of the 3rd Australian
+Light Horse on a hill north of El Burj in front of them was heavily
+attacked at half-past one in the morning by a specially prepared
+sturmtruppen battalion of the Turkish 19th Division, and a footing
+was gained in our position, but with the aid of a detachment of the
+Gloucester Yeomanry and the 1/4th Royal Scots Fusiliers the enemy
+was driven out at daybreak and six officers and 106 unwounded and 60
+wounded Turks, wearing steel hats and equipped like German storming
+troops, were taken prisoners. The attack was pressed with the greatest
+determination, and the enemy, using hand grenades, got within thirty
+yards of our line. During the latter part of their advance the Turks
+were exposed to a heavy cross fire from machine guns and rifles of
+the 9th Light Horse Regiment, and this fire and the guns of the 268th
+Brigade Royal Field Artillery and the Hong Kong and Singapore battery
+prevented the retirement of the enemy. The capture of the prisoners
+was effected by an encircling movement round both flanks. Our
+casualties were 9 killed and 47 wounded. That storming battalion left
+over 100 dead about our trenches. At the same time a violent attack
+was made on the Tahta defences held by the 157th Brigade; the enemy,
+rushing forward in considerable strength and with great impetus,
+captured a ridge overlooking Tahta--a success which, if they had
+succeeded in holding the position till daylight, would have rendered
+that village untenable, and would have forced our line back some
+distance at an important point. It proved to be a last desperate
+effort of the enemy at this vital centre. No sooner were the Scots
+driven off the ridge than they re-formed and prepared to retake it.
+Reinforced, they attacked with magnificent courage in face of heavy
+machine-gun fire, but it was not until after a rather prolonged period
+of bayonet work that the Lowland troops got the upper hand, the Turks
+trying again and again to force them out. At half-past four they gave
+up the attempt, and from that hour Tahta and the rocks about it were
+objects of terror to them.
+
+Nor did the Turks permit Nebi Samwil to remain in our possession
+undisputed. The Londoners holding it were thrice attacked with extreme
+violence, but the defenders never flinched, and the heavy losses of
+the enemy may be measured by the fact that when we took Jerusalem
+and an unwonted silence hung over Nebi Samwil, our burying parties
+interred more than 500 Turkish dead about the summit of that lofty
+hill. Their graves are mostly on the eastern, northern, and southern
+slopes. Ours lie on the west, where Scot, Londoner, West Countryman,
+and Indian, all equally heroic sons of the Empire, sleep, as they
+fought, side by side.
+
+The last heavy piece of fighting on the XXth Corps' front before the
+attack on Jerusalem was on December 3, when a regiment of yeomanry,
+which like a number of other yeomanry regiments had been dismounted
+to form the 74th Division, covered itself with glory. The 16th (Royal
+Devon Yeomanry) battalion of the Devon Regiment belonging to the 229th
+Brigade was ordered to make an attack on Beit ur el Foka in the dark
+hours of the morning. All the officers had made reconnaissances and
+had learned the extreme difficulties of the ground. At 1 A.M. these
+yeomen worked their way up the wadi Zeit to the head of that narrow
+watercourse at the base of the south-western edge of the hill on which
+the village stands. The attack was launched from this position, the
+company on the right having the steepest face to climb. Here the
+villagers, to get the most out of the soil and to prevent the winter
+rains washing it off the rocks into the wadi, had built a series of
+terraces, and the retaining walls, often crumbling to the touch,
+offered some cover from the Turkish defenders' fire. With the
+advantage of this shelter the troops on the right reached the southern
+end of the village soon after 2 o'clock, but the company on the left
+met with much opposition on the easier slope, and had to call in aid
+the support of a machine-gun section posted in the woods on a ridge
+north-west of the village. By 3 o'clock the whole battalion was in
+the village, using rifle and bayonet in the road scarcely more than
+a couple of yards wide, and bombing the enemy out of native mud and
+stone houses and caves. Two officers and fifteen unwounded men were
+taken prisoners with three machine guns, but before any consolidation
+could be done the Turks began a series of counter-attacks which lasted
+all day. As we had previously found, Foka was very hard to defend.
+It is overlooked on the north, north-east, and east by ridges a few
+hundred yards away, and by a high hill north of Ain Jeruit, 1200 yards
+to the north, by another hill 1000 yards to the east, and by the
+famous Zeitun ridge about 1500 yards beyond it, and attacks from these
+directions could be covered very effectively by overhead machine-gun
+fire. To enlarge the perimeter of defence would be to increase the
+difficulties and require a much larger force than was available, and
+there was no intention of going beyond Foka before the main operation
+against Jerusalem was started. To hold Foka securely a force must be
+in possession of the heights on the north and east, and to keep these
+Beitunia itself must be gained. Before daylight arrived some work on
+defences was begun, but it was interfered with by snipers and not much
+could be done. Immediately the sun rose from behind the Judean hills
+there was a violent outburst of fire from machine guns and rifles on
+three sides, increasing in volume as the light improved. The enemy
+counter-attacked with a determination fully equal to that which he had
+displayed during the past fortnight's battle in the hills. He had the
+advantage of cover and was supported by artillery and a hurricane of
+machine-gun fire, but although he climbed the hill and got into the
+small gardens outside the very houses, he was repulsed with bomb and
+bayonet. At one moment there was little rifle fire, and the two sides
+fought it out with bombs. The Turks retired with heavy losses, but
+they soon came back again and fought with the same determination,
+though equally unsuccessfully. The Devons called for artillery, and
+three batteries supported them splendidly, though the gunners were
+under a great disadvantage in that the ground did not permit the
+effect of gunfire to be observed and it was difficult to follow the
+attackers. The supplies of bombs and small-arms ammunition were
+getting low, and to replenish them men had to expose themselves to a
+torrent of fire, so fierce indeed that in bringing up two boxes of
+rifle ammunition which four men could carry twelve casualties were
+incurred. A head shown in the village instantly drew a hail of bullets
+from three sides. Reinforcements were on the way up, and the Fife and
+Forfar Yeomanry battalion of the Royal Highlanders were prepared to
+make a flank attack from their outpost line three-quarters of a
+mile south-east of Foka to relieve the Devons, but this would have
+endangered the safety of the outpost line without reducing the fire
+from the heights, and as the Fife and Forfar men would have had to
+cross two deep wadis under enfilade fire on their way to Foka their
+adventure would have been a perilous one. By this time three out of
+four of the Devons' company commanders were wounded and the casualties
+were increasing. The officer commanding the battalion therefore
+decided, after seven hours of terrific fighting, that the village of
+Foka was no longer tenable, and authority was given him to withdraw.
+In their last attack the enemy put 1000 men against the village,
+and it was not until the O.C. Devons had seen this strength that he
+proposed the place should be evacuated. His men had put up a great
+fight. The battalion went into action 762 strong; it came out 488.
+Three officers were killed and nine wounded, and 49 other ranks killed
+and 132 wounded. Thirteen were wounded and missing and 78 missing. In
+Foka to-day you will see most of the battered houses repaired, but
+progress through the streets is partially barred by the graves of
+Devon yeomen who were buried where they fell. It was not possible to
+hew a grave in rock, therefore earth and stone were piled up round the
+bodies, so that in at least two spots you find several graves serving
+as buttresses to rude dwellings. On one of these graves, beside the
+identification tablet of two strong sons of Devon, you will find, on
+a piece of paper inserted in a slit cut into wood torn from an
+ammunition box, the words 'Grave of unknown Turk.' Friend and foe
+share a common resting-place. The natives of this village are more
+than usually friendly, and those graves seem safe in their keeping.
+
+Between the 4th and 7th December there was a reshuffling of the troops
+holding the line to enable a concentration of the divisions entrusted
+with the attack on the defences covering Jerusalem. The 10th Division
+relieved the 229th and 230th Brigades of the 74th Division and
+extended its line to cover Beit Dukku, a point near and west of Et
+Tireh, to Tahta, and when the enemy retired from the immediate front
+of the 10th Division's left, Hellabi and Suffa were occupied. The
+Australian Mounted Division also slightly advanced its line. On the
+night of December 5 the 231st Brigade relieved the 60th Division in
+the Beit Izza and Nebi Samwil positions, and on December 6 the line
+held by the 74th was extended to a point about a mile and a half north
+of Kulonieh. The 53rd Division had passed through Hebron, and its
+advance was timed to reach the Bethlehem-Beit Jala district on
+December 7. The information gained by the XXth Corps led the staff to
+estimate the strength of the enemy opposite them to be 13,300 rifles
+and 2700 sabres, disposed as follows: east of Jerusalem the 7th
+cavalry regiment, 500 sabres; the 27th Division covering Jerusalem and
+extending to the Junction Station-Jerusalem railway at Bitter Station,
+1200 rifles; thence to the Latron-Jerusalem road with strong points at
+Ain Karim and Deir Yesin, the 53rd Turkish Division, 2000 rifles; from
+the road to Nebi Samwil (Beit Iksa being very strongly held) the 26th
+Turkish Division, 1800 rifles; Nebi Samwil to Beit ur el Foka, 19th
+Turkish Division with the 2/61st regiment and the 158th regiment
+attached, 4000 rifles; Beit ur el Foka to about Suffa, the 24th
+Division, 1600 rifles; thence to the extreme left of the XXth Corps
+the 3rd Cavalry Division, 1500 sabres. The 54th Turkish Division was
+in reserve at Bireh with 2700 rifles. The enemy held a line covering
+Bethlehem across the Hebron road to Balua, then to the hill Kibryan
+south-west of Beit Jala, whence the line proceeded due north to Ain
+Karim and Deir Yesin, both of which were strongly entrenched, on to
+the hill overlooking the Jerusalem road above Lifta. From this
+point the line crossed the road to the high ground west of Beit
+Iksa--entrenchments were cut deep into the face of this hill to cover
+the road from Kulonieh--thence northward again to the east of Nebi
+Samwil, west of El Jib, Dreihemeh (one mile north-east of Beit Dukku)
+to Foka, Kh. Aberjan, and beyond Suffa.
+
+During the attack the Australian Mounted Division was to protect the
+left flank of the 10th Division, which with one brigade of the 74th
+Division was to hold the whole of the line in the hills from Tahta
+through Foka, Dukku, Beit Izza to Nebi Samwil, leaving the attack to
+be conducted by two brigade groups of the 74th Division, the whole of
+the 60th Division, and two brigade groups of the 53rd Division, with
+the 10th regiment of Australian Light Horse watching the right flank
+of the 60th Division until the left of the 53rd could join up with
+it. One brigade of the 53rd Division was to advance from the
+Bethlehem-Beit Jala area with its left on the line drawn from Sherafat
+through Malhah to protect the 60th Division's flank, the other brigade
+marching direct on Jerusalem, and to move by roads south of the
+town to a position covering Jerusalem from the east and north-east,
+but--and these were instructions specially impressed on this
+brigade--'the City of Jerusalem will not be entered, and all movements
+by troops and vehicles will be restricted to roads passing outside the
+City.' The objective of the 60th and 74th Divisions was a general line
+from Ras et Tawil, a hill east of the Nablus road about four miles
+north of Jerusalem, to Nebi Samwil, one brigade of the 74th Division
+holding Nebi Samwil and Beit Izza defences and to form the pivot of
+the attack. The dividing line between the 60th and 74th Divisions was
+the Enab-Jerusalem road as far as Lifta and from that place to the
+wadi Beit Hannina. The form of the attack was uncertain until it was
+known how the enemy would meet the advance of the 53rd Division,
+which, on the 3rd December, was in a position north of Hebron within
+two ten-mile marches of the point at which it would co-operate on
+the right of the 60th. If the enemy increased his strength south of
+Jerusalem to oppose the advance of the 53rd Division, General Chetwode
+proposed that the 60th and 74th Divisions should force straight
+through to the Jerusalem-Nablus road, the 60th throwing out a flank
+to the south-east, so as to cut off the Turks opposing the 53rd from
+either the Nablus or the Jericho road. It was not considered probable
+that the enemy would risk the capture of a large body of troops south
+of Jerusalem. On the other hand, should the Turks withdraw from in
+front of the Welsh Division, the alternative plan provided that the
+latter attack should take the form of making a direct advance on
+Jerusalem and a wheel by the 60th and 74th Divisions, pivoting on
+the Beit Izza and Nebi Sainwil defences, so as to drive the enemy
+northwards. The operations were to be divided into four phases. The
+first phase fell to the 60th and 74th Divisions, and consisted in the
+capture of the whole of the south-western and western defences of
+Jerusalem.
+
+These ran from a point near the railway south-west of Malhah round to
+the west of Ain Karim, then on to the hill of Khurbet Subr, down a
+cleft in the hills and up on to the high Deir Yesin ridge, thence
+round the top of two other hills dominating the old and new roads to
+Jerusalem from Jaffa as they pass by the village of Kulonieh. North of
+the new road the enemy's line ran round the southern face of a bold
+hill overlooking the village of Beit Iksa and along the tortuous
+course of the wadi El Abbeideh. In the second phase the 60th Division
+was to move over the Jaffa-Jerusalem road with its right almost up
+to the scattered houses on the north-western fringe of Jerusalem's
+suburbs, and its left was to pass the village of Lifta on the slope of
+the hill rising from the wadi Beit Hannina. The objective of the 60th
+Division in the third phase was the capture of a line of a track
+leaving the Jerusalem-Nablus road well forward of the northern suburb
+and running down to the wadi Hannina, the 74th Division advancing down
+the spur running south-east from Nebi Samwil to a point about 1000
+yards south-west of Beit Hannina, the latter a prominent height with a
+slope amply clothed with olive trees. The fourth phase was an advance
+astride the road to Ras et Tawil. As will be seen hereafter all these
+objectives were not obtained, but the first, and chief of them, was,
+and the inevitable followed--Jerusalem became ours.
+
+Let us now picture some of the country the troops had to cross and the
+defences they had to capture before the Turks could be forced out
+of Jerusalem. We will first look at it from Enab, the ancient
+Kir-jath-jearim, which the Somersets, Wilts, and Gurkhas had taken at
+the point of the bayonet. From the top of Enab the Jaffa-Jerusalem
+road winds down a deep valley, plentifully planted with olive and fig
+trees and watered by the wadi Ikbala. A splendid supply of water
+had been developed by Royal Engineers near the ruins of a Crusader
+fortress which, if native tradition may be relied on, housed Richard
+of the Lion Heart. From the wadi rises a hill on which is Kustul,
+a village covering the site of an old Roman castle from which,
+doubtless, its name is derived. Kustul stands out the next boldest
+feature to Nebi Samwil, and from it, when the atmosphere is clear,
+the red-tiled roofs of houses in the suburbs of Jerusalem are plainly
+visible. A dozen villages clinging like limpets to steep hillsides are
+before you, and away on your right front the tall spires of Christian
+churches at Ain Karim tell you you are approaching the Holy Sites.
+Looking east the road falls, with many short zigzags in its length, to
+Kulonieh, crosses the wadi Surar by a substantial bridge (which the
+Turks blew up), and then creeps up the hills in heavy gradients till
+it is lost to view about Lifta. The wadi Surar winds round the foot of
+the hill which Kustul crowns, and on the other side of the watercourse
+there rises the series of hills on which the Turks intended to hold
+our hands off Jerusalem. The descent from Kustul is very rapid and the
+rise on the other side is almost as precipitous. On both sides of the
+wadi olive trees are thickly planted, and on the terraced slopes vines
+yield a plentiful harvest. Big spurs run down to the wadi, the sides
+are rough even in dry weather, but when the winter rains are falling
+it is difficult to keep a foothold. South-west of Kustul is Soba, a
+village on another high hill, and below it and west of Ain Karim, on
+lower ground, is Setaf, both having orchards and vineyards in which
+the inhabitants practise the arts of husbandry by the same methods
+as their remote forefathers. An aerial reconnaissance nearly a year
+before we took Jerusalem showed the Turks busily making trenches on
+the hills east of the wadi Surar. An inspection of the defences proved
+the work to have been long and arduous, though like many things
+the Turk began he did not finish them. What he did do was done
+elaborately. He employed masons to chisel the stone used for
+revetting, and in places the stones fit well and truly one upon the
+other, while an enormous amount of rock must have been blasted to
+excavate the trenches. The system adopted was to have three fire
+trenches near the top of the hills, one above the other, so that were
+the first two lines taken the third would still offer a difficult
+obstacle, and, if the defenders were armed with bombs, it would be
+hard for attackers to retain the trenches in front of them. There was
+much dead ground below the entrenchments, but the defences were so
+arranged that cross fire from one system swept the dead ground on the
+next spur, and, if the hills were properly held, an advance up them
+would have been a stupendous task. The Turk had put all his eggs into
+one basket. Perhaps he considered his positions impregnable--they
+would have been practically impregnable in British hands--and he made
+no attempt to cut support trenches behind the crest. There was one
+system only, and his failure to provide defences in depth cost him
+dear.
+
+Looking eastwards from Kustul, the Turkish positions south of the
+Jaffa-Jerusalem road, each of them on a hill, were called by us the
+'Liver Redoubt' (near Lifta), the 'Heart Redoubt,' 'Deir Yesin,' and
+'Khurbet Subr,' with the village of Ain Karim in a fold of the hills
+and a line of trenches south-west of it running down to the railway.
+Against the 74th Division's front the nature of the country was
+equally difficult. From Beit Surik down to the Kulonieh road the hills
+fell sharply with the ground strewn with boulders. Our men had to
+advance across ravines and beds of watercourses covered with
+large stones, and up the wooded slopes of hills where stone walls
+constituted ready-made sangars easily capable of defence. The hardest
+position they had to tackle was the hill covering Beit Iksa, due
+north of the road as it issued from Kulonieh, where long semicircular
+trenches had been cut to command at least half a mile of the main
+road. In front of the 53rd Division was an ideal rearguard country
+where enterprising cavalry could have delayed an advance by infantry
+for a lengthened period. To the south of Bethlehem, around Beit Jala
+and near Urtas, covering the Pools of Solomon, an invaluable water
+supply, there were prepared defences, but though the Division was
+much delayed by heavy rain and dense mist, the fog was used to their
+advantage, for the whole of the Division's horses were watered at
+Solomon's Pools one afternoon without opposition from the Urtas
+garrison.
+
+December 8 was the date fixed for the attack. On December 7 rain
+fell unceasingly. The roads, which had been drying, became a mass of
+slippery mud to the west of Jerusalem, and on the Hebron side the
+Welsh troops had to trudge ankle deep through a soft limy surface. It
+was soon a most difficult task to move transport on the roads. Lorries
+skidded, and double teams of horses could only make slow progress with
+limbers. Off the road it became almost impossible to move. The ground
+was a quagmire. On the sodden hills the troops bivouacked without a
+stick to shelter them. The wind was strong and drove walls of water
+before it, and there was not a man in the attacking force with a dry
+skin. Sleep on those perishing heights was quite out of the question,
+and on the day when it was hoped the men would get rest to prepare
+them for the morrow's fatigue the whole Army was shivering and awake.
+So bad were the conditions that the question was considered as to
+whether it would not be advisable to postpone the attack, but General
+Chetwode, than whom no general had a greater sympathy for his men,
+decided that as the 53rd Division were within striking distance by the
+enemy the attack must go forward on the date fixed. That night was
+calculated to make the stoutest hearts faint. Men whose blood had been
+thinned by summer heat in the desert were now called upon to endure
+long hours of piercing cold, with their clothes wet through and water
+oozing out of their boots as they stood, with equipment made doubly
+heavy by rain, caked with mud from steel helmet to heel, and the
+toughened skin of old campaigners rendered sore by rain driven against
+it with the force of a gale. Groups of men huddled together in the
+effort to keep warm: a vain hope. And all welcomed the order to fall
+in preparatory to moving off in the darkness and mist to a battle
+which, perhaps more than any other in this war, stirred the emotions
+of countless millions in the Old and New Worlds. Yet their spirits
+remained the same. Nearly frozen, very tired, 'fed up' with the
+weather, as all of them were, they were always cheerful, and the man
+who missed his footing and floundered in the mud regarded the incident
+as light-heartedly as his fellows. An Army which could face the trials
+of such a night with cheerfulness was unbeatable. One section of the
+force did regard the prospects with rueful countenances. This was the
+Divisional artillery. Tractors, those wonderfully ugly but efficient
+engines which triumphed over most obstacles, had got the heavies into
+position. The 96th Heavy Group, consisting of three 6-inch howitzer
+batteries, one complete 60-pounder battery, and a section of another
+60-pounder battery, and the Hong Kong and Singapore Mountain Battery,
+were attached to and up with the 74th Division. The 10 and B 9
+Mountain Batteries were with the 60th Division waiting to try their
+luck down the hills, and the 91st Heavy Battery (60-pounders)
+was being hauled forward with the 53rd. The heavies could get
+in long-range fire from Kustul, but what thought the 18-pounder
+batteries? With the country in such a deplorable state it looked
+hopeless for them to expect to be in the show, and the prospect of
+remaining out of the big thing had more effect upon the gunners than
+the weather. As a matter of fact but few field batteries managed to
+get into action. Those which succeeded in opening fire during the
+afternoon of December 8 did most gallant work for hours, with enemy
+riflemen shooting at them from close range, and their work formed a
+worthy part in the victory. The other field gunners could console
+themselves with the fact that the difficulties which were too great
+for them--and really field-gun fire on the steep slopes could not be
+very effective--prevented even the mountain batteries, which can go
+almost anywhere, from fully co-operating with the infantry.
+
+The preliminary moves for the attack were made during the night. The
+179th Infantry Brigade group consisting of 2/13th London, 2/14th
+London, 2/15th London, and 2/16th London with the 2/23rd London
+attached, the 10th Mountain Battery and B 9 Mountain Battery, a
+section of the 521st Field Coy. R.E., C company of Loyal North
+Lancashire Pioneers, and the 2/4th Field Ambulance specially equipped
+on an all-mule scale, moved to the wadi Surar in two columns. The
+right column was preceded by an advance guard of the Kensington
+battalion, the Loyal North Lancashire Pioneers, and the section of
+R.E., which left the brigade bivouacs behind Soba at five o'clock
+on the afternoon of the 7th to enable the pioneers and engineers to
+improve a track marked on the map. For the greater part of the way the
+track had evidently been unused for many years, and all traces of it
+had disappeared, but in three hours' time a way had been made down the
+hill to the wadi, and the brigade got over the watercourse just north
+of Setaf a little after midnight. As a preliminary to the attack on
+the first objective it was necessary to secure the high ground south
+of Ain Karim and the trenches covering that bright and picturesque
+little town. At two o'clock, when rain and mist made it so dark it was
+not possible to see a wall a couple of yards ahead, the Kensingtons
+advanced to gain the heights south of Ain Karim in order to enable
+the 179th Brigade to be deployed. A scrambling climb brought the
+Kensingtons to the top of the hill, and, after a weird fight of
+an hour and a half in such blackness of night that it was hard to
+distinguish between friend and foe, they captured it and beat off
+several persistent counter-attacks. The 179th Brigade thus had the
+ground secured for preparing to attack their section of the main
+defences. The 180th Infantry Brigade, whose brigadier, Brig.-General
+Watson, had the honour of being the first general in Jerusalem, the
+first across the Jordan, and the first to get through the Turkish line
+in September 1918 when General Allenby sprang forward through the
+Turks and made the mighty march to Aleppo, was composed of the 2/17th
+London, 2/18th London, 2/19th London, and 2/20th London, 519th Coy.
+R.E., two platoons of pioneers, and the 2/5th Field Ambulance. It
+reached its position of assembly without serious opposition, though a
+detachment which went through the village of Kulonieh met some enemy
+posts. These, to use the brigadier's phrase, were 'silently dealt
+with.'
+
+It was a fine feat to get the two brigades of Londoners into their
+positions of deployment well up to time. The infantry had to get from
+Kustul down a precipitous slope of nearly a thousand feet into a wadi,
+now a rushing torrent, and up a rocky and almost as steep hill on the
+other side. Nobody could see where he was going, but direction was
+kept perfectly and silence was well maintained, the loosened stones
+falling into mud. The assault was launched at a quarter-past five, and
+in ten minutes under two hours the two brigades (the 181st Brigade
+being in reserve just south of Kustul) had penetrated the whole of the
+front line of the defences. The Queen's Westminsters on the left
+of the Kensingtons had cleared the Turks out of Ain Karim and then
+climbed up a steep spur to attack the formidable Khurbet Subr
+defences. They took the garrison completely by surprise, and those
+who did not flee were either killed or taken prisoners. The Queen's
+Westminsters were exposed to a heavy flanking fire at a range of about
+a thousand yards from a tumulus south-east of Ain Karim, above the
+road from the village to the western suburbs of Jerusalem. Turkish
+riflemen were firmly dug in on this spot, and their two machine
+guns poured in an annoying fire on the 179th Brigade troops which
+threatened to hold up the attack. Indeed preparations were being made
+to send a company to take the tumulus hill in flank, but two gallant
+London Scots settled the activity of the enemy and captured the
+position by themselves. Corporal C.W. Train and Corporal F.S.
+Thornhill stalked the garrison. Corporal Train fired a rifle grenade
+at one machine gun, which he hit and put out of action, and then shot
+the whole of the gun team. Thornhill was attacking the other gun, and
+he, with the assistance of Train, accounted for that crew as well. The
+two guns were captured and Tumulus Hill gave no more trouble. Both
+these Scots were rewarded, and Train has the unique honour of wearing
+the only V.C. awarded during the capture of Jerusalem.
+
+At about the same time there was another very gallant piece of work
+being done by two men of the Queen's Westminsters above the Khurbet
+Subr ridge. When the battalion got to the first objective an enemy
+battery of 77's was found in action on the reverse slope of the hill.
+The guns were firing from a hollow near the Ain Karim-Jerusalem track,
+some 600 yards behind the forward trenches on Subr, and were showing
+an uncomfortable activity. A company was pushed forward to engage the
+battery. The movement was exposed to a good deal of sniping fire, and
+it was not a simple matter for riflemen to work ahead on to a knoll on
+the east of the Subr position to deal with the guns. To two men may be
+given the credit for capturing the battery. Lance-Corporal W.H. Whines
+of the Westminsters got along quickly and brought his Lewis gun to
+bear on the battery and, with an admirably directed fire, caused many
+casualties. Two gun teams were wiped out, either killed or wounded, by
+the corporal. At the same time Rifleman C.D. Smith, who had followed
+his comrade, rushed in on another team and bombed it. Smith's rifle
+had been smashed and was useless, but with his bombs he laid low all
+except one man. His supply was then exhausted, but before the Turk
+could use his weapons Smith got to grips and a rare wrestling
+bout followed. The Turk would not surrender, and Smith gave him a
+stranglehold and broke his neck. The enemy managed to get one of the
+four guns away. The battery horses were near at hand, but while this
+one gun was escaping at the gallop the Westminsters' fire brought
+down one horse and two drivers, and I saw their bodies on the road as
+evidence of how the Westminsters had developed the art of shooting at
+a rapidly moving target. The two incidents I have described in detail
+merely as examples of the fighting prowess, not only of one but of all
+three divisions alike in the capture of Jerusalem. Perhaps it would
+be fairer to say that they were examples of the spirit of General
+Allenby's whole force, for English, Scottish, Irish, Welsh,
+Australians, New Zealanders, Indians, cavalry, infantry, and
+artillery, had all, during the six weeks of the campaign, shown the
+same high qualities in irresistible attack and stubborn defence.
+
+The position of the 179th Brigade at this time was about one mile east
+of Ain Karim, where it was exposed to heavy enfilade fire from its
+right and, as it was obvious that the advance of the 53rd Division had
+been delayed owing to the fog and rain, the brigadier decided not to
+go further during the early part of the day but to wait till he could
+be supported by the mountain batteries, which the appalling state of
+the ground had prevented from keeping up with him.
+
+Now as to the advance of the 180th Infantry Brigade. Their principal
+objective was the Deir Yesin position, the hill next on the northern
+side of Subr, from which it was separated by a deep though narrow
+valley. The trenches cut on both sides of this gorge supported Subr
+as well as Deir Yesin, and the Subr defences were also arranged to be
+helpful to the Deir Yesin garrison by taking attackers in flank. The
+180th Brigade's advance was a direct frontal attack on the hill, the
+jumping-off place being a narrow width of flat ground thickly planted
+with olive trees on the banks of the wadi Surar. The 2/19th Londons,
+the right battalion of the 180th Brigade, had not got far when it
+became the target of concentrated machine-gun fire and was unable to
+move, with the result that a considerable gap existed between it and
+the 179th Brigade. The stoppage was only temporary, for, with the
+advance of the centre and right, the 19th battalion pushed forward in
+series of rushes and, with the other battalions, carried the crest of
+Deir Yesin at the point of the bayonet, so that the whole system of
+entrenchments was in their hands by seven o'clock. The brigade at once
+set about reorganising for the attack on the second objective, which,
+as will be remembered, was a wheel to the left and, passing well on
+the outside of the western suburbs of Jerusalem, an advance to the
+rocky ground to the north-west of the city down to the wadi Beit
+Hannina. The commander of the 2/18th Londons in his preparations
+had pushed out a platoon in advance of his left, and these men at
+half-past nine saw 200 of the enemy with pack mules retiring down a
+wadi north-east of Kulonieh. The platoon held its fire until the Turks
+were within close range, and then engaged them with rifles and machine
+guns, completely surprising them and taking prisoners the whole of the
+survivors, 5 officers and 50 men. The Turks now began to develop a
+serious opposition to the 180th Brigade from a quarry behind Deir
+Yesin and from a group of houses forming part of what is known as the
+Syrian colony, nearly a mile from the Deir Yesin system. There were
+some Germans and a number of machine guns in these houses, and by noon
+they held up the advance.
+
+The brigade was seriously handicapped by the difficulty in moving
+guns. The road during the morning had got into a desperate state. It
+was next to impossible to haul field guns anywhere off the road, and
+as the Turks had paid no attention to the highway for some time--or
+where they had done something it was merely to dump down large stones
+to fill a particularly bad hole--it had become deeply rutted and
+covered with a mass of adhesive mud. The guns had to pass down from
+Kustul by a series of zigzags with hairpin bends in full view of enemy
+observers, and it was only by the greatest exertion and devotion to
+duty that the gunners got their teams into the neighbourhood of
+the wadi. The bridge over the Surar at Kulonieh having been wholly
+destroyed, they had to negotiate the wadi, which was now in torrent
+and carrying away the waters which had washed the face of the hills
+over a wide area. The artillery made a track through a garden on the
+right of the village just before the road reached the broken bridge,
+and two batteries, the 301st and 302nd, got their guns and limbers
+across. They went up the old track leading from Kulonieh to Jerusalem,
+when first one section and then another came into action at a spot
+between Deir Yesin and Heart Redoubt, where both batteries were
+subjected to a close-range rifle fire.
+
+For several hours the artillery fought their guns with superb courage,
+and remained in action until the fire from the houses was silenced by
+a brilliant infantry attack. At half-past one General Watson decided
+he would attack the enemy on a ridge in front of the houses of the
+Syrian colony with the 18th and 19th battalions. With them were units
+of other battalions of the Brigade. Soon after three o'clock they
+advanced under heavy fire from guns, machine guns, and rifles, and at
+a quarter to four a glorious bayonet charge, during which the London
+boys went through Germans and Turks in one overwhelming stride, sealed
+the fate of the Turk in Jerusalem. That bayonet charge was within
+sight of the Corps Commander, who was with General Shea at his
+look-out on Kustul, and when he saw the flash of steel driven home
+with unerring certainty by his magnificent men, General Chetwode may
+well have felt thankful that he had been given such troops with which
+to deliver Jerusalem from the Turks. The 74th Division, having taken
+the whole of its first objectives early in the morning and having
+throughout the day supported the left of the London Division, was
+ready to commence operations against the second objective. The
+dismounted yeomanry, whose condition through the wet and mud was
+precisely similar to that of the 60th Division troops, for they, too,
+had found the hills barren of shelter and equally cold, did extremely
+well in forcing the enemy from his stronghold on the hill covering
+Beit Iksa and the Kulonieh-Jerusalem road, from which, had he not been
+ejected, he could have harassed the Londoners' left. The Beit Iksa
+defences were carried by a most determined rush. A gallant attempt was
+also made to get the El Burj ridge which runs south-east from Nebi
+Samwil, but owing to strong enfilade fire from the right they could
+not get on.
+
+There was no doubt in any minds that Jerusalem would be ours, but the
+difficulties the 53rd Division were contending with had slowed down
+their advance. Thus the right flank of the 60th Division was exposed
+and a considerable body of Turks was known to be south of Jerusalem.
+Late in the afternoon the advance was ordered to be stopped, and the
+positions gained to be held. With a view to continuing the advance
+next day the 181st Brigade (2/21st London, 2/22nd London, 2/23rd
+London, and 2/24th London) was ordered to get into a position of
+readiness to pass through the 179th Brigade and resume the attack
+on the right of the 180th Brigade. On the evening of December 8 the
+position of the attacking force was this. The 53rd Division (I will
+deal presently with the advance of this Division) was across the
+Bethlehem-Hebron road from El Keiseraniyeh, two miles south of
+Bethlehem, to Ras el Balua in an east and west direction, then
+north-west to the hill of Haud Kibriyan with its flank thrown south to
+cover Kh. el Kuseir. The 10th Australian Light Horse were at Malhah.
+The 179th and 180th Brigades of the 60th Division occupied positions
+extending from Malhah through a line more than a mile east of the
+captured defences west of Jerusalem to Lifta, with the 181st Brigade
+in divisional reserve near Kustul. The 229th and 230th Brigades of the
+74th Division held a due north and south line from the Jaffa-Jerusalem
+road about midway between Kulonieh and Lifta through Beit Iksa to Nebi
+Samwil. The 53rd Division had not reached their line without enormous
+trouble. But for the two days' rain and fog it is quite possible that
+the whole of the four objectives planned by the XXth Corps would have
+been gained, and whether any substantial body of Turks could have left
+the vicinity of Jerusalem by either the Nablus or Jericho roads is
+doubtful. The weather proved to be the Turks' ally. The 53rd Division
+battled against it. Until fog came down to prevent reconnaissance
+in an extremely bad bit of country they were well up to their march
+table, and in the few clear moments of the afternoon of the 7th,
+General Mott, from the top of Ras esh Sherifeh, a hill 3237 feet high,
+the most prominent feature south of Jerusalem, caught a glimpse of
+Bethlehem and the Holy City. It was only a temporary break in the
+weather, and the fog came down again so thick that neither the
+positions of the Bethlehem defences nor those of Beit Jala could be
+reconnoitred.
+
+The Division, after withstanding the repeated shocks of enemy attacks
+at Khuweilfeh immediately following the taking of Beersheba, had had a
+comparatively light time watching the Hebron road. They constructed
+a track over the mountains to get the Division to Dharahiyeh when
+it should be ordered to take part in the attack on the Jerusalem
+defences, and while they were waiting at Dilbeih they did much to
+improve the main road. The famous zigzag on the steep ridge between
+Dharahiyeh and Dilbeih was in good condition, and you saw German
+thoroughness in the gradients, in the well-banked bends, and in the
+masonry walls which held up the road where it had been cut in the side
+of a hill. It was the most difficult part of the road, and the
+Germans had taken as much care of it as they would of a road in the
+Fatherland--because it was the way by which they hoped to get to the
+Suez Canal. Other portions of the road required renewing, and the
+labour which the Welshmen devoted to the work helped the feeding of
+the Division not only during the march to Jerusalem but for several
+weeks after it had passed through it to the hills on the east and
+north-east. The rations and stores for this Division were carried by
+the main railway through Shellal to Karm, were thence transported by
+limber to a point on the Turks' line to Beersheba, which had been
+repaired but was without engines, were next hauled in trucks by mules
+on the railway track, and finally placed in lorries at Beersheba
+for carriage up the Hebron road. At this time the capacity of the
+Latron-Jerusalem road was taxed to the utmost, and every bit of the
+Welshmen's spadework was repaid a hundredfold. The 159th Brigade got
+into Hebron on the night of the 5th of December, but instead of going
+north of it--if they had done so an enemy cavalry patrol would have
+seen them--they set to work to repair the road through the old
+Biblical town, for the enemy had blown holes in the highway. Next day
+the infantry had a ten-miles' march and made the wadi Arab, a brigade
+being left in Hebron to watch that area, the natives of which were
+reported as not being wholly favourable to us. There were many rifles
+in the place, and a number of unarmed Turks were believed to be in the
+rough country between the town and the Dead Sea ready to return to
+take up arms. Armoured cars also remained in Hebron. The infantry and
+field artillery occupied the roads during the day, and the heavy guns
+came along at night and joined the infantry as the latter were about
+to set off again.
+
+On the night of the 6th the Division got to a strong line unopposed
+and saw enemy cavalry on the southern end of Sherifeh, on which the
+Turks had constructed a powerful system of defences, the traverses and
+breastworks of which were excellently made. In front of the hill the
+road took a bend to the west, and the whole of the highway from this
+point was exposed to the ground in enemy hands south of Bethlehem, and
+it was necessary to make good the hills to the east before we could
+control this road. Next morning the 7th Cheshires, supported by the
+4th Welsh, deployed and advanced direct on Sherifeh and gained the
+summit soon after dawn in time to see small parties of enemy cavalry
+moving off; then the fog and rain enveloped everything. The 4th Welsh
+held the hill during the night in pouring rain with no rations--pack
+mules could not get up the height--and the men having no greatcoats
+were perished with the cold. Colonel Pemberton, their C.O., came down
+to report the men all right, and asked for no relief till the morning
+when they could be brought back to their transport. The General went
+beyond Solomon's Pools and was within rifle fire from the Turkish
+trenches in his efforts to reconnoitre, but it was impossible to see
+ahead, and instead of being able to begin his attack in the Beit
+Jala-Bethlehem area on the morning of the 8th, that morning arrived
+before any reconnaissance could be made. He decided to attack on the
+high ground of Beit Jala (two miles north-west of Bethlehem) from the
+south, to send his divisional cavalry, the Westminster Dragoons, on
+the infantry's left to threaten Beit Jala from the west and to refuse
+Bethlehem.
+
+Before developing this attack it was essential to drive the enemy off
+the observation post looking down upon the main road along which the
+guns and troops had to pass. The fog enabled the guns to pass up the
+road, although the Turks had seven mountain guns in the gardens of a
+big house south of Bethlehem and had registered the road to a yard.
+They also had a heavy gun outside the town. The weather cleared at
+intervals about noon, but about two o'clock a dense fog came down
+again and once more the advance was held up. Late in the afternoon the
+Welsh Division troops reached the high ground west and south-west of
+Beit Jala, but the defences of Bethlehem on the south had still to be
+taken. Advance guards were sent into Bethlehem and Beit Jala during
+the night, and by early morning of the 9th it was found that the enemy
+had left, and the leading brigade pressed on, reaching Mar Elias,
+midway between Bethlehem and Jerusalem, by eleven o'clock, and the
+southern outskirts of Jerusalem an hour later.
+
+Meanwhile the 60th and 74th Divisions had actively patrolled their
+fronts during the night, and the Turks having tasted the quality of
+British bayonets made no attempt to recover any of the lost positions.
+We had outposts well up the road above Lifta, and at half-past eight
+they saw a white flag approaching. The nearest officer was a commander
+of the 302nd Brigade Royal Field Artillery, to whom the Mayor, the
+head of the Husseiny family, descendants of the Prophet and hereditary
+mayors of Jerusalem, signified his desire to surrender the City.
+The Mayor was accompanied by the Chief of Police and two of the
+gendarmerie, and while communications were passing between General
+Shea, General Chetwode and General Headquarters, General Watson rode
+as far as the Jaffa Gate of the Holy City to learn what was happening
+in the town. I believe Major Montagu Cooke, one of the officers of the
+302nd Artillery Brigade, was the first officer actually in the town,
+and I understand that whilst he and his orderly were in the Post
+Office a substantial body of Turks turned the corner outside the
+building and passed down the Jericho road quite unconscious of the
+near presence of a British officer. General Shea was deputed by the
+Commander-in-Chief to enter Jerusalem in order to accept the surrender
+of the City. It was a simple little ceremony, lasting but a minute
+or two, free from any display of strength, and a fitting prelude to
+General Allenby's official entry. At half-past twelve General Shea,
+with his aide-de-camp and a guard of honour furnished by the 2/17th
+Londons, met the Mayor, who formally surrendered the City. To the
+Chief of Police General Shea gave instructions for the maintenance
+of order, and guards were placed over the public buildings. Then the
+commander of the 60th Division left to continue the direction of his
+troops who were making the Holy City secure from Turkish attacks. I
+believe the official report ran: 'Thus at 12.30 the Holy City was
+surrendered for the twenty-third time, and for the first time to
+British arms, and on this occasion without bloodshed among the
+inhabitants or damage to the buildings in the City itself.'
+
+Simple as was the surrender of Jerusalem, there were scenes in the
+streets during the short half-hour of General Shea's visit which
+reflected the feeling of half the civilised world on receiving the
+news. It was a world event. This deliverance of Jerusalem from Turkish
+misgovernment was bound to stir the emotions of Christian, Jewish, and
+Moslem communities in the two hemispheres. In a war in which the
+moral effect of victories was only slightly less important than a
+big strategical triumph, Jerusalem was one of the strongest possible
+positions for the Allies to win, and it is not making too great a
+claim to say that the capture of the Holy City by British arms gave
+more satisfaction to countless millions of people than did the winning
+back for France of any big town on the Western Front. The latter might
+be more important from a military standpoint, but among the people,
+especially neutrals, it would be regarded merely as a passing incident
+in the ebb and flow of the tide of war. Bagdad had an important
+influence on the Eastern mind; Jerusalem affected Christian, Jew, and
+Moslem alike the world over. The War Cabinet regarded the taking of
+Jerusalem by British Imperial troops in so important a light that
+orders were given to hold up correspondents' messages and any
+telegrams the military attachés might write until the announcement of
+the victory had been made to the world by a Minister in the House of
+Commons. This instruction was officially communicated to me before we
+took Jerusalem, and I believe it was the case that the world received
+the first news when the mouthpiece of the Government gave it to
+the chosen representatives of the British people in the Mother of
+Parliaments.
+
+The end of Ottoman dominion over the cradle of Christianity, a place
+held in reverence by the vast majority of the peoples of the Old and
+New World, made a deep and abiding impression, and as long as people
+hold dearly to their faiths, sentiment will make General Allenby's
+victory one of the greatest triumphs of the war. The relief of the
+people of Jerusalem, as well as their confidence that we were there
+to stay, manifested itself when General Shea drove into the City. The
+news had gone abroad that the General was to arrive about noon, and
+all Jerusalem came into the streets to welcome him. They clapped their
+hands and raised shrill cries of delight in a babel of tongues.
+Women threw flowers into the car and spread palm leaves on the road.
+Scarcely had the Turks left, probably before they had all gone and
+while the guns were still banging outside the entrances to Jerusalem,
+stray pieces of bunting which had done duty on many another day were
+hung out to signify the popular pleasure at the end of an old, hard,
+extortionate regime and the beginning of an era of happiness and
+freedom.
+
+After leaving Jerusalem the enemy took up a strong position on the
+hills north and north-east of the City from which he had to be driven
+before Jerusalem was secure from counter-attack. During the morning
+General Chetwode gave orders for a general advance to the line laid
+down in his original plan of attack, which may be described as the
+preliminary line for the defence of Jerusalem. The 180th and 181st
+Brigades were already on the move, and some of the 53rd Division had
+marched by the main road outside the Holy City's walls to positions
+from which they were to attempt to drive the enemy off the Mount of
+Olives. The 180th Brigade, fresh and strong but still wet and muddy,
+went forward rapidly over the boulders on the hills east of the wadi
+Beit Hannina and occupied the rugged height of Shafat at half-past
+one. Shafat is about two miles north of Jerusalem. In another
+half-hour they had driven the Turks from the conical top of Tel el
+Ful, that sugar-loaf hill which dominates the Nablus road, and which
+before the end of the year was to be the scene of an epic struggle
+between Londoner and Turk. The 181st Brigade, on debouching from
+the suburbs of Jerusalem north-east of Lifta, was faced with heavy
+machine-gun and rifle fire on the ridge running from the western edge
+of the Mount of Olives across the Nablus road through Kh. es Salah.
+On the left the 180th Brigade lent support, and at four o'clock the
+2/21st and 2/24th Londons rushed the ridge with the bayonet and drove
+off the Turks, who left seventy dead behind them. The London Division
+that night established itself on the line from a point a thousand
+yards north of Jerusalem and east of the Nablus road through Ras
+Meshari to Tel el Ful, thence westwards to the wadi behind the
+olive orchards south of Beit Hannina. The 74th Division reached its
+objective without violent opposition, and its line ran from north of
+Nebi Samwil to the height of Beit Hannina and out towards Tel el
+Ful. The 53rd Division was strongly opposed when it got round the
+south-east of Jerusalem on to the Jericho road in the direction of
+Aziriyeh (Bethany), and it was necessary to clear the Turks from the
+Mount of Olives. Troops of the Welsh Division moved round the Holy
+City and drove the enemy off the Mount, following them down the
+eastern spurs, and thus denied them any direct observation over
+Jerusalem. The next day they pushed the enemy still farther eastwards,
+and by the night of the 10th held the line from the well at Azad, 4000
+yards south-east of Jerusalem, the hill 1500 yards south of Aziriyeh,
+Aziriyeh itself, to the Mount of Olives, whence our positions
+continued to Ras et Tawil, north of Tel el Ful across the Nablus road
+to Nebi Samwil. This was our first line of positions for the defence
+of Jerusalem, and we continued to hold these strong points for some
+time. They were gradually extended on the east and north-east by the
+Welsh Division in order to prevent an attack from the direction of
+Jericho, where we knew the Turks had received reinforcements. Indeed,
+during our attack on the Jerusalem position the Turks had withdrawn a
+portion of their force on the Hedjaz railway. A regiment had passed
+through Jericho from the Hedjaz line at Amman and was marching up
+the road to assist in Jerusalem's defence, but was 'Too late.'
+The regiment was turned back when we had captured Jerusalem. Our
+casualties from November 28 to December 10--these figures include the
+heavy fighting about Tahta, Foka, and Nebi Samwil prior to the XXth
+Corps' attack on the Jerusalem defences--were: officers, 21 killed,
+64 wounded, 3 missing; other ranks, 247 killed, 1163 wounded, 169
+missing, a total of 1667. The casualties of the 60th Division during
+the attack on and advance north of Jerusalem on December 8-9 are
+interesting, because they were so extremely light considering the
+strength of the defences captured and the difficulties of the ground,
+namely: 8 officers killed and 24 wounded, 98 other ranks killed, 420
+wounded and 3 missing, a total of 553. The total for the whole of the
+XXth Corps on these days was 12 officers killed, 35 wounded, and 137
+other ranks killed, 636 wounded and 7 missing--in all 47 officers and
+780 other ranks. The prisoners taken from November 28 to December 10
+were: 76 officers, 1717 other ranks--total, 1793. On December 8 and 9,
+68 officers and 918 other ranks--986 in all--were captured. The
+booty included two 4-2 Krupp howitzers, three 77-mm. field guns and
+carriages, nine heavy and three light machine guns, 137 boxes of
+small-arms ammunition, and 103,000 loose rounds.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+GENERAL ALLENBY'S OFFICIAL ENTRY
+
+
+Jerusalem became supremely happy.
+
+It had passed through the trials, if not the perils, of war. It had
+been the headquarters and base of a Turkish Army. Great bodies
+of troops were never quartered there, but staffs and depôts were
+established in the City, and being in complete control, the military
+paid little regard to the needs of the population. Unfortunately a not
+inconsiderable section of Jerusalem's inhabitants is content to live,
+not by its own handiwork, but on the gifts of charitable religious
+people of all creeds. When war virtually shut off Jerusalem from the
+outer world the lot of the poor became precarious. The food of the
+country, just about sufficient for self-support, was to a large extent
+commandeered for the troops, and while prices rose the poor could not
+buy, and either their appeals did not reach the benevolent or funds
+were intercepted. Deaths from starvation were numbered by the
+thousand, Jews, Christians, and Moslems alike suffering, and there
+were few civilians in the Holy City who were not hungry for months at
+a time.
+
+When I reached Jerusalem the people were at the height of their
+excitement over the coming of the British and they put the best face
+on their condition, but the freely expressed feeling of relief that
+the days of hunger torture were nearly past did not remove the signs
+of want and misery, of infinite suffering by father, mother, and
+child, brought about by a long period of starvation. That a people,
+pale, thin, bent, whose movements had become listless under the lash
+of hunger, could have been stirred into enthusiasm by the appearance
+of a khaki coat, that they could throw off the lethargy which comes
+of acute want, was only to be accounted for by the existence of a
+profound belief that we had been sent to deliver them. Some hours
+before the Official Entry I was walking in David Street when a Jewish
+woman, seeing that I was English, stopped me and said: 'We have prayed
+for this day. To-day I shall sing "God Save our Gracious King, Long
+Live our Noble King." We have been starving, but what does that
+matter? Now we are liberated and free.' She clasped her hands across
+her breasts and exclaimed several times, 'Oh how thankful we are.' An
+elderly man in a black robe, whose pinched pale face told of a long
+period of want, caught me by the hand and said: 'God has delivered us.
+Oh how happy we are.' An American worker in a Red Crescent hospital,
+who had lived in Jerusalem for upwards of ten years and knew the
+people well, assured me there was not one person in the Holy City who
+in his heart was not devoutly thankful for our victory. He told me
+that on the day we captured Nebi Samwil three wounded Arab officers
+were brought to the hospital. One of them spoke English--it was
+astonishing how many people could speak our mother tongue--and
+while he was having his wounds dressed he exclaimed: 'I can shout
+Hip-hip-hurrah for England now.' The officer was advised to be
+careful, as there were many Turkish wounded in the hospital, but he
+replied he did not care, and in unrestrained joy cried out, 'Hurrah
+for England.'
+
+The deplorable lot of the people had been made harder by profiteering
+officers. Those who had money had to part with it for Turkish paper.
+The Turkish note was depreciated to about one-fifth of its face value.
+German officers traded in the notes for gold, sent the notes
+to Germany where, by a financial arrangement concluded between
+Constantinople and Berlin, they were accepted at face value. The
+German officer and soldier got richer the more they forced Turkish
+paper down. Turkish officers bought considerable supplies of wheat and
+flour from military depôts, the cost being debited against their pay
+which was paid in paper. They then sold the goods for gold. That
+accounted for the high prices of foodstuffs, the price in gold being
+taken for the market valuation.
+
+In the middle of November when there was a prospect of the Turks
+evacuating Jerusalem, the officers sold out their stocks of provisions
+and prices became less prohibitive, but they rose again quickly when
+it was decided to defend the City, and the cost of food mounted to
+almost famine prices. The Turks by selling for gold that which was
+bought for paper, rechanging gold for paper at their own prices,
+made huge profits and caused a heavy depreciation of the note at the
+expense of the population. Grain was brought from the district east of
+the Dead Sea, but none of it found its way to civilian mouths except
+through the extortionate channel provided by officers. Yet when we got
+into Jerusalem there were people with small stocks of flour who were
+willing to make flat loaves of unleavened bread for sale to our
+troops. The soldiers had been living for weeks on hard biscuit and
+bully beef, and many were willing to pay a shilling for a small cake
+of bread. They did not know that the stock of flour in the town was
+desperately low and that by buying this bread they were almost taking
+it out of the mouths of the poor. Some traders were so keen on getting
+good money, not paper, that they tried to do business on this footing,
+looking to the British Army to come to the aid of the people. The Army
+soon put a stop to this trade and the troops were prohibited
+from buying bread in Jerusalem and Bethlehem. As it was, the
+Quarter-master-General's branch had to send a large quantity of
+foodstuffs into the towns, and this was done at a time when it was a
+most anxious task to provision the troops. Those were very trying days
+for the supply and transport departments, and one wonders whether
+the civilian population ever realised the extent of the humanitarian
+efforts of our Army staff.
+
+During the period when no attempt was made to alleviate the lot of the
+people the Turks gave them a number of lessons in frightfulness. There
+were public executions to show the severity of military law. Gallows
+were erected outside the Jaffa Gate and the victims were left hanging
+for hours as a warning to the population. I have seen a photograph of
+six natives who suffered the penalty, with their executioners standing
+at the swinging feet of their victims. Before the first battle of Gaza
+the Turks brought the rich Mufti of Gaza and his son to Jerusalem,
+and the Mufti was hanged in the presence of a throng compulsorily
+assembled to witness the execution. The son was shot. Their only crime
+was that they were believed to have expressed approval of Britain's
+policy in dealing with Moslem races. Thus were the people terrorised.
+They knew the Turkish ideas of justice, and dared not talk of events
+happening in the town even in the seclusion of their homes. The evils
+of war, as war is practised by the Turk, left a mark on Jerusalem's
+population which will be indelible for this generation, despite the
+wondrous change our Army has wrought in the people.
+
+When General Allenby had broken through the Gaza line the Turks in
+Jerusalem despaired of saving the City. That all the army papers were
+brought from Hebron on November 10, shows that even at that date von
+Kress still imagined we would come up the Hebron road, though he had
+learnt to his cost that a mighty column was moving through the coastal
+sector and that our cavalry were cutting across the country to join
+it. The notorious Enver reached Jerusalem from the north on November
+12 and went down to Hebron. On his return it was reported that the
+Turks would leave Jerusalem, the immediate sale of officers' stocks of
+foodstuffs giving colour to the rumour. Undoubtedly some preparations
+were made to evacuate the place, but the temptation to hold on was too
+great. One can see the influence of the German mind in the Turkish
+councils of war. At a moment when they were flashing the wireless news
+throughout the world that their Caporetto victory meant the driving of
+Italy out of the war they did not want the icy blast of Jerusalem's
+fall to tell of disaster to their hopes in the East. Accordingly on
+the 16th November a new decision was taken and Jerusalem was to be
+defended to the last. German officers came hurrying south, lorries
+were rushed down with stores until there were six hundred German lorry
+drivers and mechanics in Jerusalem. Reinforcements arrived and the
+houses of the German Colony were turned into nests of machine guns.
+The pains the Germans were at to see their plans carried out
+were reflected in the fighting when we tried to get across the
+Jerusalem-Nablus road and to avoid fighting in the neighbourhood
+of the Holy City. But all this effort availed them nought. Our
+dispositions compelled the enemy to distribute his forces, and when
+the attack was launched the Turk lacked sufficient men to man his
+defences adequately. And German pretensions in the Holy Land, founded
+upon years of scheming and the formation of settlements for German
+colonists approved and supported by the Kaiser himself, were shattered
+beyond hope of recovery, as similar pretensions had been shattered at
+Bagdad by General Maude. The Turks had made their headquarters at the
+Hospice of Notre Dame in Jerusalem, and, taking their cue from the
+Hun, carried away all the furniture belonging to that French religious
+institution. They had also deported some of the heads of religious
+bodies. Falkenhayn wished that all Americans should be removed from
+Jerusalem, issuing an order to that effect a fortnight before we
+entered. Some members of the American colony had been running the Red
+Crescent hospital, and Turkish doctors who appreciated their good work
+insisted that the Americans should remain. Their protest prevailed in
+most cases, but just as we arrived several Americans were carried off.
+
+I have asked many men who were engaged in the fight for Jerusalem what
+their feelings were on getting their first glimpse of the central spot
+of Christendom. Some people imagine that the hard brutalities of war
+erase the softer elements of men's natures; that killing and the rough
+life of campaigning, where one is familiarised with the tragedies of
+life every hour of every day, where ease and comfort are forgotten
+things, remove from the mind those earlier lessons of peace on earth
+and goodwill toward men. That is a fallacy. Every man or officer I
+spoke to declared that he was seized with emotion when, looking from
+the shell-torn summit of Nebi Samwil, he saw the spires on the Mount
+of Olives; or when reconnoitring from Kustul he got a peep of the red
+roofs of the newer houses which surround the old City. Possibly only a
+small percentage of the Army believed they were taking part in a great
+mission, not a great proportion would claim to be really devout men,
+but they all behaved like Christian gentlemen. One Londoner told me
+he had thought the scenes of war had made him callous and that the
+ruthless destruction of those things fashioned by men's hands in
+prosecuting the arts of peace had prompted the feeling that there was
+little in civilisation after all, if civilisation could result in so
+bitter a thing as this awful fighting. Man seemed as barbaric as in
+the days before the Saviour came to redeem the world, and whether
+we won or lost the war all hopes of a happier state of things were
+futile. So this Cockney imagined that his condition showed no
+improvement on that of the savage warrior of two thousand years ago,
+except in that civilisation had developed finer weapons to kill with
+and be killed by. The finer instincts had been blunted by the naked
+and unashamed horrors of war. But the lessons taught him before war
+scourged the world came back to him on getting his first view of the
+Holy City. He felt that sense of emotion which makes one wish to be
+alone and think alone. He was on the ground where Sacred History was
+made, perhaps stood on the rock the Saviour's foot had trod. In the
+deep stirring of his emotions the rougher edges of his nature became
+rounded by feelings of sympathy and a belief that good would come out
+of the evil of this strife. That view of Jerusalem, and the knowledge
+of what the Holy Sites stand for, made him a better man and a better
+fighting man, and he had no doubt the first distant glimpse of the
+Holy City had similarly affected the bulk of the Army. That bad
+language is used by almost all troops in the field is notorious,
+but in Jerusalem one seldom heard an oath or an indecent word. When
+Jerusalem was won and small parties of our soldiers were allowed to
+see the Holy City, their politeness to the inhabitants, patriarch or
+priest, trader or beggar, man or woman, rebuked the thought that the
+age of chivalry was past, while the reverent attitude involuntarily
+adopted by every man when seeing the Sacred Places suggested that no
+Crusader Army or band of pilgrims ever came to the Holy Land under a
+more pious influence. Many times have I watched the troops of General
+Allenby in the streets of Jerusalem. They bore themselves as soldiers
+and gentlemen, and if they had been selected to go there simply to
+impress the people they could not have more worthily upheld the good
+fame of their nation. These soldier missionaries of the Empire left
+behind them a record which will be remembered for generations.
+
+If it had been possible to consult the British people as to the
+details to be observed at the ceremony of the Official Entry into
+Jerusalem, the vast majority would surely have approved General
+Allenby's programme. Americans tell us the British as a nation do
+not know how to advertise. Our part in the war generally proves the
+accuracy of that statement, but the Official Entry into Jerusalem will
+stand out as one great exception. By omitting to make a great
+parade of his victory--one may count elaborate ceremonial as
+advertisement--General Allenby gave Britain her best advertisement.
+The simple, dignified, and, one may also justly say, humble order of
+ceremony was the creation of a truly British mind. To impress the
+inhabitant of the East things must be done on a lavish ostentatious
+scale, for gold and glitter and tinsel go a long way to form a
+native's estimate of power. But there are times when the native is
+shrewd enough to realise that pomp and circumstance do not always
+indicate strength, and that dignity is more powerful than display.
+Contrast the German Emperor's visit to Jerusalem with General
+Allenby's Official Entry. The Kaiser brought a retinue clothed in
+white and red, and blue and gold, with richly caparisoned horses, and,
+like a true showman, he himself affected some articles of Arab dress.
+He rode into the Holy City--where One before had walked--and a wide
+breach was even made in those ancient walls for a German progress. All
+this to advertise the might and power of Germany.
+
+In parenthesis I may state we are going to restore those walls to the
+condition they were in before German hands defiled them. The General
+who by capturing Jerusalem helped us so powerfully to bring Germany
+to her knees and humble her before the world, entered on foot by an
+ancient way, the Jaffa Gate, called by the native 'Bab-el-Khalil,'
+or the Friend. In this hallowed spot there was no great pageantry of
+arms, no pomp and panoply, no display of the mighty strength of a
+victorious army, no thunderous salutes to acclaim a world-resounding
+victory destined to take its place in the chronicles of all time.
+There was no enemy flag to haul down and no flags were hoisted. There
+were no soldier shouts of triumph over a defeated foe, no bells in
+ancient belfrys rang, no Te Deums were sung, and no preacher mounted
+the rostrum to eulogise the victors or to point the moral to the
+multitude. A small, almost meagre procession, consisting of the
+Commander-in-Chief and his Staff, with a guard of honour, less than
+150 all told, passed through the gate unheralded by a single trumpet
+note; a purely military act with a minimum of military display told
+the people that the old order had changed, yielding place to new. The
+native mind, keen, discerning, receptive, understood the meaning and
+depth of this simplicity, and from the moment of high noon on December
+11, 1917, when General Allenby went into the Mount Zion quarter of the
+Holy City, the British name rested on a foundation as certain and sure
+as the rock on which the Holy City stands. Right down in the hearts of
+a people who cling to Jerusalem with the deepest reverence and piety
+there was unfeigned delight. They realised that four centuries of
+Ottoman dominion over the Holy City of Christians and Jews, and 'the
+sanctuary' of Mahomedans, had ended, and that Jerusalem the Golden,
+the central Site of Sacred History, was liberated for all creeds from
+the blighting influence of the Turk. And while war had wrought this
+beneficent change the population saw in this epoch-marking victory a
+merciful guiding Hand, for it had been achieved without so much as a
+stone of the City being scratched or a particle of its ancient dust
+disturbed. The Sacred Monuments and everything connected with the
+Great Life and its teaching were passed on untouched by our Army.
+Rightly did the people rejoice.
+
+When General Allenby went into Jerusalem all fears had passed away.
+The Official Entry was made while there was considerable fighting on
+the north and east of the City, where our lines were nowhere more than
+7000 yards off. The guns were firing, the sounds of bursts of musketry
+were carried down on the wind, whilst droning aeroplane engines in the
+deep-blue vault overhead told of our flying men denying a passage to
+enemy machines. The stern voices of war were there in all their harsh
+discordancy, but the people knew they were safe in the keeping of
+British soldiers and came out to make holiday. General Allenby motored
+into the suburbs of Jerusalem by the road from Latron which the
+pioneers had got into some sort of order. The business of war was
+going on, and the General's car took its place on the highway on even
+terms with the lorry, which at that time when supplying the front was
+the most urgent task and had priority on the roads. The people had put
+on gala raiment. From the outer fringe of Jerusalem the Jaffa road was
+blocked not merely with the inhabitants of the City but with people
+who had followed in the Army's wake from Bethlehem. It was a
+picturesque throng. There were sombre-clad Jews of all nationalities,
+Armenians, Greeks, Russians, and all the peoples who make Jerusalem
+the most cosmopolitan of cities. To the many styles of European dress
+the brighter robes of the East gave vivid colour, and it was obvious
+from the remarkably free and spontaneous expression of joy of these
+people, who at the end of three years of war had such strong faith in
+our fight for freedom, that they recognised freedom was permanently
+won to all races and creeds by the victory at Jerusalem. The most
+significant of all the signs was the attitude of Moslems. The Turks
+had preached the Holy War, but they knew the hollowness of the cry,
+and the natives, abandoning their natural reserve, joined in loud
+expression of welcome. From flat-topped roofs, balconies, and streets
+there were cries of 'Bravo!' and 'Hurrah!' uttered by men and women
+who probably never spoke the words before, and quite close to the
+Jaffa Gate I saw three old Mahomedans clap their hands while tears of
+joy coursed down their cheeks. Their hearts were too full to utter a
+word. There could be no doubt of the sincerity of this enthusiasm. The
+crowd was more demonstrative than is usual with popular assemblies in
+the East, but the note struck was not one of jubilation so much as
+of thankfulness at the relief from an insufferable bondage of bad
+government. Outside the Jaffa Gate was an Imperial guard of honour
+drawn from men who had fought stoutly for the victory. In the British
+Guard of fifty of all ranks were English, Scottish, Irish, and Welsh
+troops, steel-helmeted and carrying the kit they had an hour or two
+earlier brought with them from the front line. Opposite them were
+fifty dismounted men of the Australian Light Horse and New Zealand
+Mounted Rifles, the Australians, under the command of Captain
+Throssel, V.C., being drawn from the 10th Light Horse regiment, which
+had been employed in the capture of Jerusalem on the right of the
+London Division. These Colonial troops had earned their place, for
+they had done the work of the vanguard in the Sinai Desert, and their
+victories over the Turks on many a hard-won field in the torrid heat
+of summer had paved the way for this greater triumph. A French and an
+Italian guard of honour was posted inside the Jaffa Gate. As I have
+previously said, the Italians had held a portion of the line in front
+of Gaza with a composite brigade, but the French troops had not yet
+been in action in Palestine, though their Navy had assisted with a
+battleship in the Gaza bombardment. We welcomed the participation of
+the representatives of our Allies in the Official Entry, as it showed
+to those of their nationality in Jerusalem that we were fighting
+the battle of freedom for them all. Outside the Jaffa Gate the
+Commander-in-Chief was received by Major-General Borton, who had
+been appointed Military Governor of the City, and a procession being
+formed, General Allenby passed between the iron gates to within the
+City walls. Preceded by two aides-de-camp the Commander-in-Chief
+advanced with the commander of the French Palestine detachment on his
+right and the commander of the Italian Palestine detachment on his
+left. Four Staff officers followed. Then came Brigadier-General
+Clayton, Political Officer; M. Picot, head of the French Mission; and
+the French, Italian, and United States Military Attachés. The Chief
+of the General Staff (Major-General Sir L.J. Bols) and the
+Brigadier-General General Staff (Brigadier-General G. Dawnay) marched
+slightly ahead of Lieutenant-General Sir Philip W. Chetwode, the XXth
+Corps Commander, and Brigadier-General Bartholomew, who was General
+Chetwode's B.G.G.S. The guard closed in behind. That was all.
+
+The procession came to a halt at the steps of El Kala, the Citadel,
+which visitors to Jerusalem will better remember as the entrance to
+David's Tower. Here the Commander-in-Chief and his Staff formed up on
+the steps with the notables of the City behind them, to listen to the
+reading of the Proclamation in several languages. That Proclamation,
+telling the people they could pursue their lawful business without
+interruption and promising that every sacred building, monument, holy
+spot, shrine, traditional site, endowment, pious bequest, or customary
+place of prayer of whatsoever form of three of the great religions
+of mankind would be maintained and protected according to existing
+customs and beliefs to those to whose faiths they are sacred, made
+a deep impression on the populace. So you could judge from the
+expressions on faces and the frequent murmurs of approval, and it was
+interesting to note how, when the procession was being re-formed, many
+Christians, Jews, and Moslems broke away from the crowd to run and
+spread the good news in their respective quarters. How faithfully and
+with what scrupulous care our promises have been kept the religious
+communities of Jerusalem can tell.
+
+The procession next moved into the old Turkish barrack square less
+than a hundred yards away, where General Allenby received the notables
+of the City and the heads of religious communities. The Mayor of
+Jerusalem, who unfortunately died of pneumonia a fortnight later, and
+the Mufti, who, like the Mayor, was a member of a Mahomedan family
+which traces its descent back through many centuries, were presented,
+as were also the sheikhs in charge of the Mosque of Omar, 'the Tomb
+of the Rock,' and the Mosque of El Aksa, and Moslems belonging to the
+Khaldieh and Alamieh families. The Patriarchs of the Latin, Greek
+Orthodox, and Armenian Churches and the Coptic bishop had been removed
+from the Holy City by the Turks, but their representatives were
+introduced to the Commander-in-Chief, and so too were the heads of
+Jewish communities, the Syriac Church, the Greek Catholic Church, the
+Abyssinian bishop, and the representative of the Anglican Church. A
+notable presentation was the Spanish Consul, who had been in charge of
+the interests of almost all countries at war, and whom General Allenby
+congratulated upon being so busy a man. The presentations over, the
+Commander-in-Chief returned to the Jaffa Gate and left for advanced
+General Headquarters, having been in the Holy City not more than a
+quarter of an hour.
+
+For succinctness it would be difficult to improve upon the
+Commander-in-Chief's own description of his Official Entry into
+Jerusalem. Cabling to London within two hours of that event, General
+Allenby thus narrated the events of the day:
+
+(1) At noon to-day I officially entered this City with a few of my
+Staff, the commanders of the French and Italian detachments, the heads
+of the Picot Mission, and the Military Attachés of France, Italy, and
+the United States of America.
+
+The procession was all on foot.
+
+I was received by Guards representing England, Scotland, Ireland,
+Wales, Australia, India, New Zealand, France, and Italy at the Jaffa
+Gate.
+
+(2) I was well received by the population.
+
+(3) The Holy Places have had Guards placed over them.
+
+(4) My Military Governor is in touch with the Acting Custos of Latins,
+and the Greek representative has been detailed to supervise Christian
+Holy Places.
+
+(5) The Mosque of Omar and the area round it has been placed under
+Moslem control and a military cordon composed of Indian Mahomedan
+officers and soldiers has been established round the Mosque. Orders
+have been issued that without permission of the Military Governor
+and the Moslem in charge of the Mosque no non-Moslem is to pass this
+cordon.
+
+(6) The Proclamation has been posted on the walls, and from the steps
+of the Citadel was read in my presence to the population in Arabic,
+Hebrew, English, French, Italian, Greek, and Russian.
+
+(7) Guardians have been established at Bethlehem and on Rachel's Tomb.
+The Tomb of Hebron has been placed under exclusive Moslem control.
+
+(8) The hereditary custodians of the Wakfs at the Gates of the Holy
+Sepulchre have been requested to take up their accustomed duties in
+remembrance of the magnanimous act of the Caliph Omar who protected
+that Church.
+
+As a matter of historical interest I give in the Appendix the orders
+issued on the occasion of the Official Entry into Jerusalem, the order
+of General Allenby's procession into the Holy City for the reading of
+the Proclamation, together with the text of that historic document,
+and the special orders of the day issued by the Commander-in-Chief to
+his troops after the capture of Jerusalem.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: See Appendix VII.]
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+MAKING JERUSALEM SECURE
+
+
+General Allenby within two days of capturing Jerusalem had secured a
+line of high ground which formed an excellent defensive system, but
+his XXth Corps Staff was busy with plans to extend the defences to
+give the Holy City safety from attack. Nothing could have had so
+damaging an influence on our prestige in the East, which was growing
+stronger every day as the direct result of the immense success of the
+operations in Palestine, as the recapture of Jerusalem by the Turks.
+We thought the wire-pulling of the German High Command would have its
+effect in the war councils of Turkey, and seeing that the regaining of
+the prize would have such far-reaching effect on public opinion no one
+was surprised that the Germans prevailed upon their ally to make the
+attempt. It was a hopeless failure. The attack came at a moment when
+we were ready to launch a scheme to secure a second and a third line
+of defences for Jerusalem, and gallantly as the Turks fought--they
+delivered thirteen powerful attacks against our line on the morning
+of December 27--the venture had a disastrous ending, and instead of
+reaching Jerusalem the enemy had to yield to British arms seven miles
+of most valuable country and gave us, in place of one line, four
+strong lines for the defence of the Holy City. By supreme judgment,
+when the Turks had committed themselves to the attack on Tel el Ful,
+without which they could not move a yard on the Nablus road, General
+Chetwode started his operations on the left of his line with the 10th
+and 74th Divisions, using his plan as it had been prepared for some
+days to seize successive lines of hills, and compelled the enemy,
+in order to meet this attack, to divert the fresh division held in
+waiting at Bireh to throw forward into Jerusalem the moment the
+storming troops should pierce our line. With the precision of
+clockwork the Irish and dismounted yeomanry divisions secured their
+objectives, and on the second day of the fighting we regained the
+initiative and compelled the Turks to conform to our dispositions.
+On the fourth day we were on the Ramallah-Bireh line and secured for
+Jerusalem an impregnable defence. Prisoners told us that they had been
+promised, as a reward for their hoped-for success, a day in Jerusalem
+to do as they liked. We can imagine what the situation in the Holy
+City would have been had our line been less true. The Londoners who
+had won the City saved it. Probably only a few of the inhabitants had
+any knowledge of the danger the City was in on December 27. Their
+confidence in the British troops had grown and could scarcely be
+stronger, but some of them were alarmed, and throughout the early
+morning and day they knelt on housetops earnestly praying that our
+soldiers would have strength to withstand the Turkish onslaughts. From
+that day onward the sound of the guns was less violent, and as our
+artillery advanced northwards the people's misgivings vanished and
+they reproached themselves for their fears.
+
+It will be remembered how the troops of the XXth Corps were disposed.
+The 53rd Division held the line south-east and east of Jerusalem from
+Bir Asad through Abu Dis, Bethany, to north of the Mount of Olives,
+whence the 60th Division took it up from Meshari, east of Shafat to
+Tel el Ful and to Beit Hannina across the Jerusalem-Nablus road. The
+74th Division carried on to Nebi Samwil, Beit Izza to Beit Dukku, with
+the 10th Division on their left through Foka, Tahta to Suffa, the gap
+between the XXth Corps to the right of the XXIst Corps being held
+by the 3rd Australian Light Horse Brigade of the Australian Mounted
+Division. Against us were the 27th Turkish Division and the 7th and
+27th cavalry regiments south of the Jericho road, with the 26th, 53rd,
+19th, and 24th Divisions on the north of that road and to the west of
+the Jerusalem-Nablus road, one division being in reserve at Bireh, the
+latter a new division fresh from the Caucasus. The 6th and 8th Turkish
+cavalry regiments were facing our extreme left, the estimated strength
+of the enemy in the line being 14,700 rifles and 2300 sabres. Just as
+it was getting dark on December 11 a party of the enemy attacked the
+179th Brigade at Tel el Ful but were repulsed. There was not much
+activity the following day, but the 53rd Division began a series of
+minor operations by which they secured some features of tactical
+importance. On the 13th the 181st Brigade made a dashing attack on Ras
+el Kharrabeh and secured it, taking 43 prisoners and two machine guns,
+with 31 casualties to themselves.
+
+It was about this time the Corps Commander framed plans for the
+advance of our front north of Jerusalem. There had been a few days of
+fine weather, and a great deal had been done to improve the condition
+of the roads and communications. An army of Egyptian labourers had
+set to work on the Enab-Jerusalem road and from the villages had come
+strong reinforcements of natives, women as well as men (and the women
+did quite as much work as the men), attracted by the unusual wage
+payable in cash. In Jerusalem, too, the natives were sent to labour on
+the roads and to clean up some of the filth that the Turks had allowed
+to accumulate for years, if not for generations, inside the Holy City.
+The Army not merely provided work for idle hands but enabled starving
+bodies to be vitalised. Food was brought into Jerusalem, and with the
+cash wages old and young labourers could get more than a sufficiency.
+The native in the hills proved to be a good road repairer, and the
+boys and women showed an eagerness to earn their daily rates of pay;
+the men generally looked on and gave directions. It was some time
+before steam rollers crushed in the surface, but even rammed-in stones
+were better than mud, and the lorry drivers' tasks became lighter.
+
+General Chetwode's plan was to secure a line from Obeid, 9000 yards
+east of Bethlehem, the hill of Zamby covering the Jericho road three
+miles from Jerusalem, Anata, Hismeh, Jeba, Burkah, Beitun, El Balua,
+Kh. el Burj, Deir Ibzia to Shilta. The scheme was to strike with the
+53rd and 60th Divisions astride the Jerusalem-Nablus road, and at the
+same time to push the 10th Division and a part of the 74th Division
+eastwards from the neighbourhood of Tahta and Foka. The weather again
+became bad on December 14 and the troops suffered great discomfort
+from heavy rains and violent, cold winds, so that only light
+operations were undertaken. On the 17th the West Kent and Sussex
+battalions of the 160th Brigade stalked the high ground east of Abu
+Dis at dawn, and at the cost of only 26 casualties took the ridge with
+5 officers and 121 other ranks prisoners, and buried 46 enemy dead.
+One battalion went up the hill on one side, while the Sussex crept up
+the opposite side, the Turks being caught between two fires. The 53rd
+Division also improved their position on the 21st December. As one
+leaves Bethany and proceeds down the Jericho road one passes along a
+steep zigzag with several hairpin bends until one reaches a guardhouse
+near a well about a mile east of Bethany. The road still falls
+smartly, following a straighter line close to a wadi bed, but hills
+rise very steeply from the highway, and for its whole length until
+it reaches the Jordan valley the road is always covered by high bare
+mountains. Soon after leaving the zigzag there is a series of three
+hills to the north of the road. It was important to obtain possession
+of two of these hills, the first called Zamby and the second named by
+the Welsh troops 'Whitehill,' from the bright limestone outcrop at the
+crest. The 159th Brigade attacked and gained Zamby and then turned
+nearer the Jericho road to capture Whitehill. The Turks resisted very
+stoutly, and there was heavy fighting about the trenches just below
+the top of the hill. By noon the brigade had driven the enemy off, but
+three determined counter-attacks were delivered that day and the
+next and the brigade lost 180 killed and wounded. The Turks suffered
+heavily in the counter-attacks and left over 50 dead behind them; also
+a few prisoners. At a later date there was further strong fighting
+around this hill, and at one period it became impossible for either
+side to hold it.
+
+By the 21st there was a readjustment of the line on the assumption
+that the XXth Corps would attack the Turks on Christmas Day, the 53rd
+Division taking over the line as far north as the wadi Anata, the 60th
+Division extending its left to include Nebi Samwil, and the 74th going
+as far west as Tahta. As a preliminary to the big movement the 180th
+Brigade was directed to move on Kh. Adaseh, a hill between Tel el Ful
+and Tawil, in the early hours of December 23, and the 181st Brigade
+was to seize a height about half a mile north of Beit Hannina. The
+latter attack succeeded, but despite the most gallant and repeated
+efforts the 180th Brigade was unable to gain the summit of Adaseh,
+though they got well up the hill. The weather became bad once more,
+and meteorological reports indicated no improvement in the conditions
+for at least twenty-four hours, and as the moving forward of artillery
+and supplies was impossible in the rain, General Chetwode with the
+concurrence of G.H.Q. decided that the attack should not be made on
+Christmas Day. The 60th Division thereupon did not further prosecute
+their attack on Adaseh. On the 24th December, while General Chetwode
+was conferring with his divisional commanders, information was brought
+in that the Turks were making preparations to recapture Jerusalem by
+an attack on the 60th Division, and the Corps Commander decided that
+the moment the enemy was found to be fully committed to this attack
+the 10th Division and one brigade of the 74th Division would fall on
+the enemy's right and advance over the Zeitun, Kereina, and Ibzia
+ridges. How well this plan worked out was shown before the beginning
+of the New Year, by which time we had secured a great depth of ground
+at a cost infinitely smaller than could have been expected if the
+Turks had remained on the defensive, while the Turkish losses, at a
+moment when they required to preserve every fighting man, were much
+greater than we could have hoped to inflict if they had not come into
+the open. There was never a fear that the enemy would break through.
+We had commanding positions everywhere, and the more one studied our
+line on the chain of far-flung hills the more clearly one realised the
+prevision and military skill of General Chetwode and the staff of the
+XXth Corps in preparing the plans for its capture before the advance
+on Jerusalem was started. The 'fourth objective' of December 8-9 well
+and truly laid the foundations for Jerusalem's security, and relieved
+the inhabitants from the accumulated burdens of more than three years
+of war. We had nibbled at pieces of ground to flatten out the line
+here and there, but in the main the line the Turks assaulted was that
+fourth objective. The Turks put all their hopes on their last card. It
+was trumped; and when we had won the trick there was not a soldier in
+General Allenby's Army nor a civilian in the Holy City who had not a
+profound belief in the coming downfall of the Turkish Empire.
+
+Troops in the line and in bivouac spent the most cheerless Christmas
+Day within their memories. Not only in the storm-swept hills but on
+the Plain the day was bitterly cold, and the gale carried with it
+heavy rain clouds which passed over the tops of mountains and rolled
+up the valleys in ceaseless succession, discharging hail and rain in
+copious quantities. The wadis became roaring, tearing torrents fed by
+hundreds of tributaries, and men who had sought shelter on the lee
+side of rocks often found water pouring over them in cascades. The
+whole country became a sea of mud, and the trials of many months of
+desert sand were grateful and comforting memories. Transport columns
+had an unhappy time: the Hebron road was showing many signs of
+wear, and it was a long journey for lorries from Beersheba when the
+retaining walls were giving way and a foot-deep layer of mud invited a
+skid every yard. The Latron-Jerusalem road was better going, but the
+soft metal laid down seemed to melt under the unceasing traffic in the
+wet, and in peace time this highway would have been voted unfit
+for traffic. The worst piece of road, however, was also the most
+important. The Nablus road where it leaves Jerusalem was wanted to
+supply a vital point on our front. It could not be used during the day
+because it was under observation, and anything moving along it was
+liberally dosed with shells. Nor could its deplorable condition be
+improved by working parties. The ground was so soft on either side of
+it that no gun, ammunition, or supply limber could leave the track,
+and whatever was required for man, or beast, or artillery had to be
+carried across the road in the pitch-black hours of night. Supplies
+were only got up to the troops after infinite labour, yet no one went
+hungry. Boxing Day was brighter, and there were hopes of a period of
+better weather. During the morning there were indications that an
+enemy offensive was not far off, and these were confirmed about noon
+by information that the front north of Jerusalem would be attacked in
+the night. General Chetwode thereupon ordered General Longley to start
+his offensive on the left of the XXth Corps line at dawn next morning.
+Shortly before midnight the Turks began their operations against the
+line held by the 60th Division across the Nablus road precisely where
+it had been expected. They attacked in considerable strength at Ras et
+Tawil and about the quarries held by our outposts north of that hill,
+and the outposts were driven in. About the same time the 24th Welsh
+Regiment--dismounted yeomanry--made the enemy realise that we were on
+the alert, for they assaulted and captured a hill quite close to Et
+Tireh, just forestalling an attack by a Turkish storming battalion,
+and beat off several determined counter-attacks, as a result of which
+the enemy left seventy killed with the bayonet and also some machine
+guns on the hill slopes.
+
+The night was dark and misty, and by half-past one the Turks had
+developed a big attack against the whole of the 60th Division's front,
+the strongest effort being delivered on the line in front of Tel el
+Ful, though there was also very violent fighting on the west of the
+wadi Ed Dunn, north of Beit Hannina. The Turks fought with desperate
+bravery. They had had no food for two days, and the commander of one
+regiment told his men: 'There are no English in front of you. I have
+been watching the enemy lines for a long time; they are held by
+Egyptians, and I tell you there are no English there. You have only to
+capture two hills and you can go straight into Jerusalem and get food.
+It is our last chance of getting Jerusalem, and if we fail we shall
+have to go back.' This officer gave emphatic orders that British
+wounded were not to be mutilated. Between half-past one and eight A.M.
+the Turks attacked in front of Tel el Ful eight times, each attack
+being stronger than the last. Tel el Ful is a conical hill covered
+with huge boulders, and on the top is a mass of rough stones and
+ruined masonry. The Turks had registered well and severely shelled our
+position before making an assault, and they covered the advance
+with machine guns. In one attack made just after daybreak the enemy
+succeeded in getting into a short length of line, but men of the
+2/15th Londons promptly organised a counter-attack and, advancing
+with fine gallantry, though their ranks were thinned by a tremendous
+enfilade fire from artillery and machine guns, they regained the
+sangars. For several hours after eight o'clock this portion of the
+line was quieter, but the Turk was reorganising for a last effort. A
+very brilliant defence had been made during the night of Beit Hannina
+by the 2/24th Londons, which battalion was commanded by a captain, the
+colonel and the majors being on the sick list. The two companies
+in the line were attacked four times by superior numbers, the last
+assault being delivered by more than five hundred men, but the
+defenders stood like rocks, and though they had fifty per cent,
+of their number killed or wounded, and the Turks got close to the
+trenches, the enemy were crushingly defeated.
+
+The morning lull was welcome. Our troops got some rest though their
+vigilance was unrelaxed, and few imagined that the Turks had yet given
+up the attempt to reach Jerusalem. We were ready to meet a fresh
+effort, but the strength with which it was delivered surprised
+everybody. The Turk, it seemed, was prepared to stake everything on
+his last throw. He knew quite early on that morning that his Caucasus
+Division could not carry out the role assigned to it. General Chetwode
+had countered him by smashing in with his left with a beautiful
+weighty stroke precisely at the moment when the Turk had compromised
+himself elsewhere, and instead of being able to put in his reserves to
+support his main attack the enemy had to divert them to stave off an
+advance which, if unhindered, would threaten the vital communications
+of the attackers north of Jerusalem.
+
+It was a remarkable situation, but all the finesse in the art of war
+was on one side. Every message the Turkish Commander received from his
+right must have reported progress against him. Each signal from the
+Jerusalem front must have been equally bitter, summing up want of
+progress and heavy losses. With us, Time was a secondary factor; with
+the Turk, Time was the whole essence of the business, so he pledged
+his all on one tremendous final effort. It was almost one o'clock when
+it started, and it was made against the whole front of our XXth Corps.
+It was certainly made in unexpected strength and with a courage
+beyond praise. The Turk threw himself forward to the assault with the
+violence of despair, and his impetuous onrush enabled him to get into
+some small elements of our front line; but counter-attacks immediately
+organised drove him out. Over the greater portion of the front the
+advance was stopped dead, but in some places the enemy tried a
+whirlwind rush and used bomb against bomb. He had met his match.
+
+The 60th Division which bore the brunt of the onslaught, as it was
+bound to do from its position astride the main road, was absolutely
+unbreakable, and at Tel el Ful there lay a dead Turk for every yard
+of its front. The enemy drew off, but to save the remnants of his
+storming troops kept our positions from near Ras et Tawil, Tel el Ful
+to the wadi Beit Hannina under heavy gunfire for the rest of the day.
+The Turk was hopelessly beaten, his defeat irretrievable. He had
+delivered thirteen costly attacks, and his sole gains were the exposed
+outpost positions at the Tawil and the quarries. All his reserves had
+been vigorously engaged, while at two o'clock in the afternoon General
+Chetwode had in reserve nineteen battalions less one company still
+unused, and the care exercised in keeping this large body of troops
+fresh for following up the Turkish defeat undoubtedly contributed
+to the great success of the advances on the next three days.
+Simultaneously with their attack on the 60th Division positions the
+Turks put in a weighty effort to oust the 53rd Division from the
+positions they held north and south of the Jericho road. Whether in
+their wildest dreams they imagined they could enter Jerusalem by this
+route is doubtful, but if they had succeeded in driving in our line on
+the north they would have put the 53rd Division in a perilous position
+on the east with only one avenue of escape. The Turks concentrated
+their efforts on Whitehill and Zamby. A great fight raged round the
+former height and we were driven off it, but the divisional artillery
+so sprinkled the crest with shell that the Turk could not occupy it,
+and it became No Man's Land until the early evening when the 7th Royal
+Welsh Fusiliers recaptured and held it. The contest for Zamby lasted
+all day, and for a long time it was a battle of bombs and machine
+guns, so closely together were the fighting men, but the Turks never
+got up to our sangars and were finally driven off with heavy loss,
+over 100 dead being left on the hill. The Turkish ambulances were seen
+hard at work on the Jericho road throughout the day. There was a stout
+defence of a detached post at Ibn Obeid. A company of the 2/10th
+Middlesex Regiment had been sent on to Obeid, about five miles east
+of Bethlehem, to watch for the enemy moving about the rough tracks
+in that bare and broken country which falls away in jagged hills and
+sinuous valleys to the Dead Sea. The little garrison, whose sole
+shelter was a ruined monastic building on the hill, were attacked at
+dawn by 700 Turkish cavalry supported by mountain guns. The garrison
+stood fast all day though practically surrounded, and every attack was
+beaten off. The Turks tried again and again to secure the hill, which
+commands a track to Bethlehem, but, although they fired 400 shells
+at the position, they could not enter it, and a battalion sent up to
+relieve the Middlesex men next morning found that the company had
+driven the enemy off, its casualties having amounted to only 2 killed
+and 17 wounded. Thus did the 'Die Hards' live up to the traditions of
+the regiment.
+
+Having dealt with the failure of the Turkish attacks against the 60th
+and 53rd Divisions in front of Jerusalem, let us change our view point
+and focus attention on the left sector of XXth Corps, where the enemy
+was feeling the full power of the Corps at a time when he most wished
+to avoid it. General Longley had organised his attacking columns in
+three groups. On the right the 229th Brigade of the 74th Division was
+set the task of moving from the wadi Imeish to secure the high ground
+of Bir esh Shafa overlooking Beitunia; the 31st Brigade, starting from
+near Tahta, attacked north of the wadi Sunt, to drive the enemy from a
+line from Jeriut through Hafy to the west of the olive orchards
+near Ain Arik; while the left group, composed of the 29th and 30th
+Brigades, aimed at getting Shabuny across the wadi Sad, and Sheikh
+Abdallah where they would have the Australian Mounted Division on
+their left. The advance started from the left of the line. The
+29th Brigade leading, with the 30th Brigade in support, left their
+positions of deployment at six o'clock, by which time the Turk had had
+more than he had bargained for north and east of Jerusalem. The 1st
+Leinsters and 5th Connaught Rangers found the enemy in a stubborn mood
+west of Deir Ibzia, but they broke down the opposition in the proper
+Irish style and rapidly reached their objectives. The centre group
+started one hour after the left and got their line without much
+difficulty. The right group was hotly opposed. Beginning their advance
+at eight o'clock the 229th Brigade had reached the western edge of the
+famous Zeitun ridge in an hour, but from this time onwards they were
+exposed to incessant artillery and machine-gun fire, and the forward
+movement became very slow. In five hours small parties had worked
+along the ridge for about half its length, fighting every yard, and it
+was not until the approach of dusk that we once more got control of
+the whole ridge. It was appropriate that dismounted yeomen should gain
+this important tactical point which several weeks previously had been
+won and lost by their comrades of the Yeomanry Mounted Division.
+Descending from the ridge the brigade gave the Turk little chance to
+stand, and with a bayonet charge they reached the day's objective
+in the dark. At two o'clock, when the Turks' final effort against
+Jerusalem had just failed, the 60th and 74th Divisions both sent
+in the good news that the Turkish commander was moving his reserve
+division from Bireh westwards to meet the attack from our left. Airmen
+confirmed this immediately, and it was now obvious that General
+Chetwode's tactics had compelled the enemy to conform to his movements
+and that we had regained the initiative. At about ten o'clock the 24th
+Royal Welsh Fusiliers of the 231st Brigade captured Kh. ed Dreihemeh
+on the old Roman road a mile east of Tireh, and at eleven o'clock
+advanced to the assault of hill 2450, a little farther eastward. They
+gained the crest, but the enemy had a big force in the neighbourhood
+and counter-attacked, forcing the Welshmen to withdraw some distance
+down the western slope. They held this ground till 4.30 when our guns
+heavily bombarded the summit, under cover of which fire the infantry
+made another attack. This was also unsuccessful owing to the intense
+volume of fire from machine guns. The hill was won, however, next
+morning.
+
+The night of December 27-28 was without incident. The Turk had staked
+and lost, and he spent the night in making new dispositions to meet
+what he must have realised was being prepared for him on the following
+day.
+
+It is doubtful whether there was a more successful day for our Army in
+the Palestine campaign than December 27. The portion of our line which
+was on the defensive had stood an absolutely unmovable wall, against
+which the enemy had battered himself to pieces. Our left, or attacking
+sector, had gained all their objectives against strong opposition in
+a most difficult country, and had drawn against them the very troops
+held in reserve for the main attack on Jerusalem. The physical powers
+of some of our attacking troops were tried highly. One position
+captured by the 229th Brigade was a particularly bad hill. The
+slope up which the infantry had to advance was a series of almost
+perpendicular terraces, and the riflemen could only make the ascent by
+climbing up each others' backs. When dismounted yeomen secured another
+hill some men carrying up supplies took two hours to walk from the
+base of the hill to the summit. The trials of the infantry were shared
+by the artillery. What surprises every one who has been over the route
+taken by the 10th and 74th Divisions is that any guns except those
+with the mountain batteries were able to get into action. The road
+work of engineers and the 5th Royal Irish Regiment (Pioneers) was
+magnificent, and they made a way where none seemed possible; but
+though these roadmakers put their backs into their tasks, it was only
+by the untiring energies of the gunners and drivers that artillery was
+got up to support the infantry. The guns were brought into action well
+ahead of the roads, and were man-hauled for considerable distances.
+Two howitzers and one field gun were kept up with the infantry on the
+first day of the advance where no horses could get a foothold, and the
+manner in which the gunners hauled the guns through deep ravines
+and up seemingly unclimbable hills constituted a wonderful physical
+achievement. The artillery were called upon to continue their arduous
+work on the 28th and 29th under conditions of ground which were even
+more appalling than those met with on the 27th. The whole country was
+devoid of any road better than a goat track, and the ravines became
+deeper and the hills more precipitous. In some places, particularly
+on the 10th Division front, the infantry went forward at a remarkable
+pace; but guns moved up with them, and by keeping down the fire of
+machine guns dotted about on every hill, performed services which
+earned the riflemen's warm praise. The 9th and 10th Mountain Batteries
+were attached to the 10th Division, but field and howitzer batteries
+were also well up. On the 28th the 53rd Division bit farther into the
+enemy's line in order to cover the right of the 60th Division, which
+was to continue its advance up the Nablus road towards Bireh. The
+158th Brigade captured Anata, and after fighting all day the 1/7th
+Royal Welsh Fusiliers secured Ras Urkub es Suffa, a forbidding-looking
+height towering above the storm-rent sides of the wadi Ruabeh. The
+1/1st Herefords after dark took Kh. Almit.
+
+In front of the 60th Division the Turks were still holding some strong
+positions from which they should have been able seriously to delay
+the Londoners' advance had it not been for the threat to their
+communications by the pressure by the 10th and 74th Divisions. The
+Londoners had previously tested the strength of Adaseh, and had found
+it an extremely troublesome hill. They went for it again--the 179th
+Brigade this time--and after a several hours' struggle took it at
+dusk. Meanwhile the 181st Brigade had taken the lofty villages of Bir
+Nebala and El Jib, and after Adaseh became ours the Division went
+ahead in the dark and got to the line across the Nablus road from Er
+Ram to Rafat, capturing some prisoners. The 74th Division also made
+splendid progress. In the early hours the Division, with the 24th
+Royal Welsh Fusiliers and the 24th Welsh Regiment attached, secured
+Jufeir and resumed their main advance in the afternoon, the 230th and
+231st Brigades cooperating with the 229th Brigade which was under the
+orders of the 10th Division. Before dark they had advanced their line
+from the left of the 60th Division in Rafat past the east of Beitunia
+to the hill east of Abu el Ainein, and this strong line of hills
+once secured, everybody was satisfied that the Turks' possession of
+Ramallah and Bireh was only a question of hours. Part of this line had
+been won by the 10th Division, which began its advance before noon in
+the same battle formation as on the 27th. Soon after the three groups
+started the heavy artillery put down a fierce fire on the final
+objectives, and before three o'clock the Turks were seen to be
+evacuating Kefr Skyan, Ainein, and Rubin. The enemy put up a stout
+fight at Beitunia and on a hill several hundred yards north-west of
+the village, but the 229th Brigade had good artillery and machine-gun
+assistance, and got both places before four o'clock, capturing seventy
+prisoners, including the commander of the garrison, and a number of
+machine guns. The left group was hotly opposed from a hill a mile west
+of Rubin and from a high position south-west of Ainein. The nature of
+the ground was entirely favourable to defence and for a time the Turk
+took full advantage of it, but our artillery soon made him lose his
+stomach for fighting, and doubtless the sound of many shell-bursts
+beyond Ramallah made him think that his rock sangars and the deep
+ravines in front of him were not protection against a foe who fought
+Nature with as much determination as he fought the Turkish soldier.
+Six-inch howitzers of the 378th Siege Battery had been brought up to
+Foka in the early hours, and all the afternoon and evening they
+were plastering the road from Ramallah along which the enemy were
+retreating. The left group defied the nests of machine guns hidden
+among the rocks and broke down the defence. The centre group had been
+delayed by the opposition encountered by the left, but they took Skyan
+at six o'clock and all of the objectives for one day were in our hands
+by the early evening. An advance along the whole front was ordered to
+begin at six o'clock on December 29. On his right flank the enemy was
+willing to concede ground, and the 159th Brigade occupied Hismeh,
+Jeba, and the ridges to the north-west to protect the flank of the
+60th Division. The 53rd Division buried 271 enemy dead on their front
+as the result of three days' fighting. The 181st Brigade made a rapid
+advance up the Nablus road until they were close to Bireh and Tahunah,
+a high rocky hill just to the north-west of the village. The Turks had
+many machine guns and a strong force of riflemen in these places, and
+it was impossible for infantry to advance against them over exposed
+ground without artillery support. The 303rd Field Artillery Brigade
+was supporting the brigade, and they were to move up a track from
+Kullundia while the foot-sloggers used the high road, but the track
+was found impassable for wheels and the guns had to be brought to the
+road. The attack was postponed till the guns were in position. The
+gunners came into action at half-past two, and infantry moved to the
+left to get on to the Ramallah-Bireh metalled road which runs at right
+angles to the trunk road between Nablus and Jerusalem. The 2/22nd
+and the 2/23rd Londons, working across the road, reached the Tahunah
+ridge, and after a heavy bombardment dashed into the Turkish
+positions, which were defended most stubbornly to the end, and thus
+won the last remaining hill which commanded our advance up the Nablus
+road as far as Bireh. On the eastern side of the main highway the
+180th Brigade had once more done sterling service. There is a bold
+eminence called Shab Saleh, a mile due south of Bireh. It rises almost
+sheer from a piece of comparatively flat ground, and the enemy held it
+in strength. The 2/19th and the 2/20th Londons attacked this feature,
+and displaying great gallantry in face of much machine-gun fire seized
+it at half-past three. Once again the gunners supported the infantry
+admirably. The 2/17th and 2/18th Londons pushed past Saleh in a
+north-easterly direction and, leaving Bireh on their left, got into
+extremely bad country and took the Turks by surprise on a wooded ridge
+at Sheikh Sheiban. The two brigades rested and refreshed for a couple
+of hours and then advanced once more, and by midnight they had routed
+the Turks out of another series of hills and were in firm possession
+of the line from Beitin, across the Nablus road north of the Balua
+Lake, to the ridge of El Burj, having carried through everything which
+had been planned for the Division.
+
+Ramallah had been taken at nine o'clock in the morning without
+opposition by the 230th and 229th Brigades, and at night the 74th
+Division held a strong line north of the picturesque village as far as
+Et Tireh. The 10th Division also occupied the Tireh ridge quite
+early in the day, and one of their field batteries and both mountain
+batteries got within long range of the Nablus road, and not only
+assisted in shelling the enemy in Bireh but harassed with a hot fire
+any bodies of men or transport seen retreating northwards. The Flying
+Corps, too, caused the Turks many losses on the road. The airmen
+bombed the enemy from a low altitude and also machine-gunned them, and
+moreover by their timely information gave great assistance during
+the operations. By the 30th December all organised resistance to our
+advance had ceased and the XXth Corps consolidated its line, the 60th
+Division going forward slightly to improve its position and the other
+divisions rearranging their own. The consolidation of the line was not
+an easy matter. It had to be very thoroughly and rapidly done. The
+supply difficulty compelled the holding of the line with as few troops
+as possible, and when it had been won it was necessary to put it in a
+proper order in a minimum of time, and to bring back a considerable
+number of the troops who had been engaged in the fighting to hold
+the grand defensive chain which made Jerusalem absolutely safe. The
+standard gauge railway was still a long way from Ramleh, and the
+railway construction parties had to fight against bad weather and
+washouts. The Turkish line from Ramleh to Jerusalem was in bad order;
+a number of bridges were down, so that it was not likely the railway
+could be working for several weeks. Lorries could supply the troops in
+the neighbourhood of the Nablus road, though the highway was
+getting into bad condition, but in the right centre of the line the
+difficulties of terrain were appalling. The enemy had had a painful
+experience of it and was not likely to wish to fight in that country
+again; consequently it was decided to hold this part of the line with
+light forces.
+
+In this description of the operations I have made little mention of
+the work of the Australian Mounted Division which covered the gap
+between XXth and XXIst Corps. These Australian horsemen and yeomanry
+guarded an extended front in inaccessible country, and every man in
+the Division will long remember the troubles of supply in the hills.
+They had some stiff fighting against a wily enemy, and not for a
+minute could they relax their vigilance. When, with the Turks' fatal
+effort to retake Jerusalem, the 10th Division changed their front
+and attacked in a north-easterly direction, the Australian Mounted
+Division moved with it, and they found the country as they progressed
+become more rugged and bleak and extremely difficult for mounted
+troops. The Division was in the fighting line for the whole month of
+December, and when they handed over the new positions they had reached
+to the infantry on the last day of the year, their horses fully needed
+the lengthened period of rest allotted to them.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+A GREAT FEAT OF WAR
+
+
+From the story of how Jerusalem was made secure (for we may hope the
+clamour of war has echoed for the last time about her Holy Shrines and
+venerable walls) we may turn back to the coastal sector and see how
+the XXIst Corps improved a rather dangerous situation and laid the
+foundations for the biggest break-through of the world struggle. For
+it was the preparations in this area which made possible General
+Allenby's tremendous gallop through Northern Palestine and Syria,
+and gave the Allies Haifa, Beyrout, and Tripoli on the seaboard, and
+Nazareth, Damascus, and Aleppo in the interior. The foundations were
+soundly laid when the XXIst Corps crossed the Auja before Christmas
+1917, and the superstructure of the victory which put Turkey as
+well as Bulgaria and Austria out of the war was built up with many
+difficulties from the sure base provided by the XXIst Corps line. The
+crossing of the Auja was a great feat of war, and this is the first
+time I am able to mention the names of those to whom the credit of the
+operation is due. It was one of the strange regulations of the Army
+Council in connection with the censorship that no names of the
+commanders of army corps, divisions, brigades, or battalions should be
+mentioned by correspondents. Nor indeed was I permitted to identify
+in my despatches any particular division, yet the divisions
+concerned--the 52nd, 53rd, 54th, 60th, and so on--had often been
+mentioned in official despatches; the enemy not only knew they were in
+Palestine but were fully aware of their positions in the line; their
+commanders and brigadiers were known by name to the Turks. On the
+other hand, in describing a certain battle I was allowed to speak of
+divisions of Lowland troops, Welshmen and Londoners, allusions which
+would convey (if there were anything to give away) precisely as much
+information to the dull old Turk and his sharper Hun companion in
+arms as though the 52nd, 53rd, and 60th Divisions had been explicitly
+designated. This practice seemed in effect to be designed more with
+the object of keeping our people at home in the dark, of forbidding
+them glory in the deeds of their children and brothers, than of
+preventing information reaching the enemy. Some gentleman enthroned in
+the authority of an official armchair said 'No,' and there was an
+end of it. You could not get beyond him. His decision was final,
+complete--and silly--and the correspondent was bound hand and foot by
+it. Doubtless he would have liked one to plead on the knee for some
+little relaxation of his decision. Then he would have answered 'No'
+in a louder tone. Let me give one example from a number entered in
+my notebooks of how officers at home exercised their authority.
+In January 1917 the military railway from the Suez Canal had been
+constructed across the Sinai Desert and the first train was run into
+El Arish, about ninety miles from the Canal. I was asked by General
+Headquarters to send a cablegram to London announcing the fact that
+railhead was at El Arish, the town having been captured a fortnight
+previously after a fine night march. That message was never published,
+and I knew it was a waste of time to ask the reason. I happened to be
+in London for a few days in the following August and my duties took me
+to the War Office. A Colonel in the Intelligence Branch heard I was
+there and sent for me to tell me I had sent home information of value
+to the enemy. I reminded him there was a G.H.Q. censorship in Egypt
+which dealt with my cablegrams, and asked the nature of the valuable
+information which should have been concealed. 'You sent a telegram
+that the railway had reached El Arish when the Turks did not know it
+was beyond Bir el Abd.' Abd is fifty miles nearer the Suez Canal than
+El Arish. What did this officer care about a request made by G.H.Q. to
+transmit information to the British public? He knew better than G.H.Q.
+what the British public should know, and he was certain the enemy
+thought we were hauling supplies through those fifty miles of sand
+to our troops at El Arish, an absolutely physical impossibility, for
+there were not enough camels in the East to do it. But he did not
+know, and he should have known, being an Intelligence officer, that
+the Turks were so far aware of where our railhead was that they were
+frequently bombing it from the air. I had been in these bombing raids
+and knew how accurately the German airmen dropped their eggs, and had
+this Intelligence officer taken the trouble to inquire he would have
+found that between thirty and forty casualties were inflicted by one
+bomb at El Arish itself when railhead was being constructed. This
+critic imagined that the Turk knew only what the English papers told
+him. If the Turks' knowledge had been confined to what the War Office
+Intelligence Branch gave him credit for he would have been in a
+parlous state. While this ruling of the authorities at home prevailed
+it was impossible for me to give the names of officers or to mention
+divisions or units which were doing exceptionally meritorious work.
+Unfortunately the bureaucratic interdict continued till within a
+few days of the end of the campaign, when I was told that, 'having
+frequently referred to the work of the Australians, which was
+deserved,' the mention of British and Indian units would be welcomed.
+We had to wait until within a month of the end of the world war before
+the War Office would unbend and realise the value of the best kind
+of propaganda. No wonder our American friends consider us the worst
+national advertisers in the world.
+
+The officer who was mainly responsible for the success of the Auja
+crossing was Major-General J. Hill, D.S.O., A.D.C., commanding the
+52nd Division. His plan was agreed to by General Bulfin, although the
+Corps Commander had doubts about the possibility of its success, and
+had his own scheme ready to be put into instant operation if General
+Hill's failed. In the state of the weather General Hill's own
+brigadiers were not sanguine, and they were the most loyal and devoted
+officers a divisional commander ever had. But despite the most
+unfavourable conditions, calling for heroic measures on the part of
+officers and men alike to gain their objectives through mud and water
+and over ground that was as bad as it could be, the movements of the
+troops worked to the clock. One brigade's movements synchronised with
+those of another, and the river was crossed, commanding positions were
+seized, and bridges were built with an astoundingly small loss to
+ourselves. The Lowland Scots worked as if at sport, and they could not
+have worked longer or stronger if the whole honour of Scotland had
+depended upon their efforts. At a later date, when digging at Arsuf,
+these Scots came across some marble columns which had graced a hall
+when Apollonia was in its heyday. The glory of Apollonia has long
+vanished, but if in that age of warriors there had been a belief
+that those marble columns would some day be raised as monuments to
+commemorate a great operation of war the ancients would have had a
+special veneration for them. Three of the columns marked the spots
+where the Scots spanned the river, and it is a pity they cannot tell
+the full story to succeeding generations.
+
+The river Auja is a perennial stream emptying itself into the blue
+Mediterranean waters four miles north of Jaffa. Its average width is
+forty yards and its depth ten feet, with a current running at about
+three miles an hour. Till we crossed it the river was the boundary
+between the British and Turkish armies in this sector, and all the
+advantage of observation was on the northern bank. From it the town of
+Jaffa and its port were in danger, and the main road between Jaffa and
+Ramleh was observed and under fire. The village of Sheikh Muannis,
+about two miles inland, stood on a high mound commanding the ground
+south of the river, and from Hadrah you could keep the river in sight
+in its whole winding course to the sea. All this high ground concealed
+an entrenched enemy; on the southern side of the river the Turks were
+on Bald Hill, and held a line of trenches covering the Jewish colony
+of Mulebbis and Fejja. A bridge and a mill dam having been destroyed
+during winter the only means of crossing was by a ford three feet deep
+at the mouth, an uncertain passage because the sand bar over which one
+could walk shifted after heavy rain when the stream was swollen with
+flood water. Reconnaissances at the river mouth were carried out with
+great daring. As I said, all the southern approaches to the river were
+commanded by the Turks on the northern bank, who were always alert,
+and the movement of one man in the Auja valley was generally the
+signal for artillery activity. So often did the Turkish gunners salute
+the appearance of a single British soldier that the Scots talked of
+the enemy 'sniping' with guns. To reconnoitre the enemy's positions
+by daylight was hazardous work, and the Scots had to obtain their
+first-hand knowledge of the river and the approaches to it in the dark
+hours.
+
+An officers' patrol swam the river one night, saw what the enemy was
+doing, and returned unobserved. A few nights afterwards two officers
+swam out to sea across the river mouth and crept up the right bank of
+the stream within the enemy's lines to ascertain the locality of the
+ford and its exact width and depth. They also learnt that there were
+no obstacles placed across the ford, which was three feet deep in
+normal times and five feet under water after rains. It was obvious
+that bridges would be required, and it was decided to force the
+passage of the river in the dark hours by putting covering troops
+across to the northern bank, and by capturing the enemy's positions to
+form a bridgehead while pontoon bridges were being constructed for the
+use of guns and the remainder of the Division.
+
+Time was all-important. December and January are the wettest months
+of the season at Jaffa, and after heavy rains the Auja valley becomes
+little better than a marsh, so that a small amount of traffic will cut
+up the boggy land into an almost impassable condition.
+
+The XXIst Corps' plan was as follows: At dawn on December 21 a heavy
+bombardment was to open on all the enemy's trenches covering the
+crossings, the fire of heavy guns to be concentrated on enemy
+batteries and strong positions in the rear, while ships of the Royal
+Navy bombarded two strong artillery positions at Tel el Rekket and El
+Jelil, near the coast. When darkness fell covering troops were to be
+ferried across the river, and then light bridges would be constructed
+for the passage of larger units charged with the task of getting the
+Turks out of their line from Hadrah, through El Mukras to Tel el
+Rekket. After these positions had been gained the engineers were to
+build pontoon bridges to carry the remainder of the Division and guns
+on the night of the 22nd-23rd December, in time to advance at daylight
+on the 23rd to secure a defensive line from Tel el Mukhmar through
+Sheikh el Ballatar to Jelil. On the right of the 52nd Division the
+54th Division was to attack Bald Hill on the night of 21st-22nd
+December, and on the following morning assault the trench system
+covering Mulebbis and Fejja; then later in the day to advance to
+Rantieh, while the 75th Division farther east was to attack Bireh and
+Beida. This plan was given to divisional commanders at a conference in
+Jaffa on December 12. Two days later General Hill submitted another
+scheme which provided for a surprise attack by night with no naval
+or land artillery bombardment, such a demonstration being likely to
+attract attention. General Hill submitted his proposals in detail.
+General Bulfin gave the plan most careful consideration, but decided
+that to base so important an operation on the success of a surprise
+attack was too hazardous, and he adhered to his scheme of a deliberate
+operation to be carried through systematically. He, however, gave
+General Hill permission to carry out his surprise attack on the
+night of December 20, but insisted that the bombardment should begin
+according to programme at daylight on the 21st unless the surprise
+scheme was successful.
+
+A brigade of the 54th Division and the 1st Australian Light Horse
+Brigade relieved the Scots in the trenches for three nights before the
+attempt. Every man in the Lowland Division entered upon the work of
+preparation with whole-hearted enthusiasm. There was much to be done
+and materials were none too plentiful. Pontoons were wired for and
+reached Jaffa on the 16th. There was little wood available, and some
+old houses in Jaffa were pulled down to supply the Army's needs. The
+material was collected in the orange groves around the German colony
+at Sarona, a northern suburb of Jaffa, and every man who could use a
+tool was set to work to build a framework of rectangular boats to a
+standard design, and on this framework of wood tarpaulins and canvas
+were stretched. These boats were light in structure, and were so
+designed that working parties would be capable of transferring them
+from their place of manufacture to the river bank. Each boat was to
+carry twenty men fully armed and equipped over the river. They became
+so heavy with rain that they in fact only carried sixteen men. The
+boat builders worked where enemy airmen could not see them, and
+when the craft were completed the troops were practised at night in
+embarking and ferrying across a waterway--for this purpose the craft
+were put on a big pond--and in cutting a path through thick cactus
+hedges in the dark. During these preparations the artillery was also
+active. They took their guns up to forward positions during the night,
+and before the date of the attack there was a bombardment group of
+eight 6-inch howitzers and a counter battery group of ten 60-pounders
+and one 6-inch Mark VII. gun in concealed positions, and the artillery
+dumps had been filled with 400 rounds for each heavy gun and 700
+rounds for each field piece. The weather on the 18th, 19th, and 20th
+December was most unfavourable. Rain was continuous and the valley of
+the Auja became a morass. The luck of the weather was almost always
+against General Allenby's Army, and the troops had become accustomed
+to fighting the elements as well as the Turks, but here was a
+situation where rain might have made all the difference between
+success and failure. General Bulfin saw General Hill and his
+brigadiers on the afternoon of the 20th. The brigadiers were depressed
+owing to the floods and the state of the ground, because it was then
+clear that causeways would have to be made through the mud to the
+river banks. General Hill remained enthusiastic and hopeful and, the
+Corps Commander supporting him, it was decided to proceed with the
+operation. For several nights, with the object of giving the enemy
+the impression of a nightly strafe, there had been artillery and
+machine-gun demonstrations occurring about the same time and lasting
+as long as those planned for the night of the crossing. After dusk on
+December 20 there was a big movement behind our lines. The ferrying
+and bridging parties got on the move, each by their particular road,
+and though the wind was searchingly cold and every officer and man
+became thoroughly drenched, there was not a sick heart in the force.
+The 157th Brigade proceeded to the ford at the mouth of the Auja, the
+156th Brigade advanced towards the river just below Muannis, and the
+155th Brigade moved up to the mill and dam at Jerisheh, where it was
+to secure the crossing and then swing to the right to capture Hadrah.
+The advance was slow, but that the Scots were able to move at all is
+the highest tribute to their determination. The rain-soaked canvas
+of the boats had so greatly added to their weight that the parties
+detailed to carry them from the Sarona orange orchards found the task
+almost beyond their powers. The bridge rafts for one of the crossings
+could not be got up to the river bank because the men were continually
+slipping in the mud under the heavy load, and the attacking battalion
+at this spot was ferried over in coracles. On another route a section
+carrying a raft lost one of its number, who was afterwards found sunk
+in mud up to his outstretched arms. The tracks were almost impassable,
+and a Lancashire pioneer battalion was called up to assist in
+improving them. The men became caked with mud from steel helmet to
+boots, and the field guns which had to be hauled by double teams
+were so bespattered that there was no need for camouflage. In those
+strenuous hours of darkness the weather continued vile, and the storm
+wind flung the frequent heavy showers with cutting force against the
+struggling men. The covering party which was to cross at the ford
+found the bar had shifted under the pressure of flood water and that
+the marks put down to direct the column had been washed away. The
+commanding officer reconnoitred, getting up to his neck in water, and
+found the ford considerably out of position and deeper than he had
+hoped, but he brought his men together in fours and, ordering each
+section to link arms to prevent the swirling waters carrying them out
+to sea, led them across without a casualty. In the other places
+the covering parties of brigades began to be ferried over at eight
+o'clock. The first raft-loads were paddled across with muffled oars.
+A line was towed behind the boats, and this being made fast on either
+side of the river the rafts crossed and recrossed by haulage on the
+rope, in order that no disturbance on the surface by oars on even such
+a wild night should cause an alarm. As soon as the covering parties
+were over, light bridges to carry infantry in file were constructed by
+lashing the rafts together and placing planks on them. One of these
+bridges was burst by the strength of the current, but the delay thus
+caused mattered little as the surprise was complete. When the bridges
+of rafts had been swung and anchored, blankets and carpets were laid
+upon them to deaden the fall of marching feet, and during that silent
+tramp across the rolling bridges many a keen-witted Scot found it
+difficult to restrain a laugh as he trod on carpets richer by far than
+any that had lain in his best parlour at home. He could not see the
+patterns, but rightly guessed that they were picked out in the bright
+colours of the East, and the muddy marks of war-travelled men were
+left on them without regret, for the carpets had come from
+German houses in Sarona. How perfectly the operation was
+conducted--noiselessly, swiftly, absolutely according to
+time-table--may be gathered from the fact that two officers and
+sixteen Turks were awakened in their trench dug-outs at the ford
+by the river mouth two hours after we had taken the trenches. The
+officers resisted and had to be killed. Two miles behind the river the
+Lowlanders captured the whole garrison of a post near the sea, none
+of whom had the slightest idea that the river had been crossed. An
+officer commanding a battalion at Muannis was taken in his bed, whilst
+another commanding officer had the surprise of his life on being
+invited to put his hands up in his own house. He looked as if he had
+just awakened from a nightmare. In one place some Turks on being
+attacked with the bayonet shouted an alarm and one of the crossings
+was shelled, but its position was immediately changed and the passage
+of the river continued without interruption. The whole of the Turkish
+system covering the river, trenches well concealed in the river
+banks and in patches of cultivated land, were rushed in silence and
+captured. Muannis was taken at the point of the bayonet, the strong
+position at Hadrah was also carried in absolute silence, and at
+daylight the whole line the Scots had set out to gain was won and the
+assailants were digging themselves in. And the price of their victory?
+The Scots had 8 officers and 93 other ranks casualties. They buried
+over 100 Turkish dead and took 11 officers and 296 other ranks
+prisoners, besides capturing ten machine guns.
+
+The forcing of the passage of the Auja was a magnificent achievement,
+planned with great ability by General Hill and carried out with that
+skill and energy which the brigadiers, staff, and all ranks of the
+Division showed throughout the campaign. One significant fact serves
+to illustrate the Scots' discipline. Orders were that not a shot was
+to be fired except by the guns and machine guns making their nightly
+strafe. Death was to be dealt out with the bayonet, and though the
+Lowlanders were engaged in a life and death struggle with the Turks,
+not a single round of rifle ammunition was used by them till daylight
+came, when, as a keen marksman said, they had some grand running-man
+practice. During the day some batteries got to the north bank by way
+of the ford, and two heavy pontoon bridges were constructed and a
+barrel bridge, which had been put together in a wadi flowing into the
+Auja, was floated down and placed in position. There was a good deal
+of shelling by the Turks, but they fired at our new positions and
+interfered but little with the bridge construction.
+
+On the night of the 21st-22nd December the 54th Division assaulted
+Bald Hill, a prominent mound south of the Auja from which a
+magnificent view of the country was gained. Stiff fighting resulted,
+but the enemy was driven off with a loss of 4 officers and 48 other
+ranks killed, and 3 officers and 41 men taken prisoners. At dawn the
+Division reported that the enemy was retiring from Mulebbis and Fejja,
+and those places were soon in our hands. H.M.S. _Grafton_, with
+Admiral T. Jackson, the monitors M29, M31, and M32, and the destroyers
+_Lapwing_ and _Lizard_, arrived off the coast and shelled Jelil and
+Arsuf, and the 52nd Division, advancing on a broad front, occupied the
+whole of their objectives by five o'clock in the afternoon. The 157th
+Brigade got all the high ground about Arsuf, and thus prevented the
+enemy from obtaining a long-range view of Jaffa. A few rounds of shell
+fired by a naval gun at a range of nearly twenty miles fell in Jaffa
+some months afterwards, but with this exception Jaffa was quite free
+from the enemy's attentions. The brilliant operation on the Auja had
+saved the town and its people many anxious days. By the end of the
+year there were three strong bridges across the river, and three
+others substantial enough to bear the weight of tractors and their
+loads were under construction. The troops received their winter
+clothing; bivouac shelters and tents were beginning to arrive. Baths
+and laundries were in operation, and the rigours of the campaign began
+to be eased. But the XXIst Corps could congratulate itself that,
+notwithstanding two months of open warfare, often fifty to sixty miles
+from railhead, men's rations had never been reduced. Horses and mules
+had had short allowances, but they could pick up a little in the
+country. The men were in good health, despite the hardships in the
+hills and rapid change from summer to winter, and their spirit could
+not be surpassed.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+BY THE BANKS OF THE JORDAN
+
+
+We have seen how impregnable the defences of Jerusalem had become as
+the result of the big advance northwards at the end of December.
+As far as any military forecast could be made we were now in an
+impenetrable position whatever force the Turk, with his poor
+communications, could employ against us either from the direction of
+Nablus or from the east of the Jordan. There seemed to be no risk
+whatever, so long as we chose to hold the line XXth Corps had won,
+of the Turks again approaching Jerusalem, but the Commander-in-Chief
+determined to make the situation absolutely safe by advancing
+eastwards to capture Jericho and the crossings of the Jordan. This was
+not solely a measure of precaution. It certainly did provide a means
+for preventing the foe from operating in the stern, forbidding,
+desolate, and awe-inspiring region which has been known as the
+Wilderness since Biblical days, and doubtless before. In that rough
+country it would be extremely difficult to stop small bands of
+enterprising troops getting through a line and creating diversions
+which, while of small military consequence, would have been
+troublesome, and might have had the effect of unsettling the natives.
+A foothold in the Jordan valley would have the great advantage of
+enabling us to threaten the Hedjaz railway, the Turks' sole means
+of communication with Medina, where their garrison was holding out
+staunchly against the troops of the King of the Hedjaz, and any
+assistance we could give the King's army would have a far-reaching
+effect on neutral Arabs. It would also stop the grain trade on the
+Dead Sea, on which the enemy set store, and would divert traffic in
+foodstuffs to natives in Lower Palestine, who at this time were to a
+considerable extent dependent on supplies furnished by our Army. The
+Quartermaster-General carried many responsibilities on his shoulders.
+Time was not the important factor, and as General Allenby was anxious
+to avoid an operation which might involve heavy losses, it was at
+first proposed that the enemy should be forced to leave Jericho by the
+gradually closing in on the town from north and south. The Turks had
+got an immensely strong position about Talat ed Dumm, the 'Mound of
+Blood,' where stands a ruined castle of the Crusaders, the Chastel
+Rouge. One can see it with the naked eye from the Mount of Olives,
+and weeks before the operation started I stood in the garden of the
+Kaiserin Augusta Victoria hospice and, looking over one of the most
+inhospitable regions of the world, could easily make out the Turks
+walking on the road near the Khan, which has been called the Good
+Samaritan Inn. The country has indeed been rightly named. Gaunt, bare
+mountains of limestone with scarcely a patch of green to relieve the
+nakedness of the land make a wilderness indeed, and one sees a drop
+of some four thousand feet in a distance of about fifteen miles. The
+hills rise in continuous succession, great ramparts of the Judean
+range, and instead of valleys between them there are huge clefts in
+the rock, hundreds of feet deep, which carry away the winter torrents
+to the Jordan and Dead Sea. Over beyond the edge of hills are the
+green wooded banks of the Sacred River, then a patch or two of stunted
+trees, and finally the dark walls of the mountains of Moab shutting
+out the view of the land which still holds fascinating remains of
+Greek civilisation.
+
+But there was no promise of an early peep at such historic sights, and
+the problem of getting at the nearer land was hard enough for present
+deliberation. It was at first proposed that the whole of the
+XXth Corps and a force of cavalry should carry out operations
+simultaneously on the north and east of the Corps front which should
+give us possession of the roads from Mar Saba and Muntar, and also
+from Taiyibeh and the old Roman road to Jericho, thus allowing two
+cavalry forces supported by infantry columns to converge on Jericho
+from the north and south. However, by the second week of February
+there had been bad weather, and the difficulties of supplying a line
+forty miles from the railway on roads which, notwithstanding a
+vast amount of labour, were still far from good, were practically
+insuperable, and it was apparent that a northerly and easterly advance
+at the same time would involve a delay of three weeks.
+
+New circumstances came to light after the advance was first arranged,
+and these demanded that the enemy should be driven across the Jordan
+as soon as possible. General Allenby decided that the operations
+should be carried out in two phases. The first was an easterly advance
+to thrust the enemy from his position covering Jericho, to force him
+across the Jordan, and to obtain control of the country west of the
+river. The northerly advance to secure the line of the wadi Aujah was
+to follow. This river Aujah which flows into the Jordan must not be
+confused with the Auja on the coast already described.
+
+The period of wet weather was prolonged, and the accumulation of
+supplies of rations and ammunition did not permit of operations
+commencing before February 19. That they started so early is an
+eloquent tribute to the hard work of the Army, for the weather by the
+date of the attack had improved but little, and the task of getting
+up stores could only be completed by extraordinary exertions. General
+Chetwode ordered a brigade of the 60th Division to capture Mukhmas
+as a preliminary to a concentration at that place. On the 19th the
+Division occupied a front of about fourteen miles from near Muntar,
+close to which the ancient road from Bethlehem to Jericho passes,
+through Ras Umm Deisis, across the Jerusalem-Jericho road to Arak
+Ibrahim, over the great chasm of the wadi Farah which has cliff-like
+sides hundreds of feet deep, to the brown knob of Ras et Tawil. The
+line was not gained without fighting. The Turks did not oppose us at
+Muntar--the spot where the Jews released the Scapegoat--but there
+was a short contest for Ibrahim, and a longer fight lasting till the
+afternoon for an entrenched position a mile north of it; Ras et Tawil
+was ours by nine in the morning. Tawil overlooks a track which has
+been trodden from time immemorial. It leads from the Jordan valley
+north-west of Jericho, and passes beneath the frowning height of Jebel
+Kuruntul with its bare face relieved by a monastery built into the
+rock about half-way up, and a walled garden on top to mark the Mount
+of Temptation, as the pious monks believe it to be. The track then
+proceeds westwards, winding in and out of the tremendous slits in
+rock, to Mukhmas, and it was probably along this rough line that
+the Israelites marched from their camp at Gilgal to overthrow the
+Philistines. On the right of the Londoners were two brigades of the
+Anzac Mounted Division, working through the most desolate hills and
+wadis down to the Dead Sea with a view to pushing up by Nebi Musa,
+which tradition has ascribed as the burial place of Moses, and thence
+into the Jordan valley. Northward of the 60th Division the 53rd was
+extending its flank eastwards to command the Taiyibeh-Jericho road,
+and the Welsh troops occupied Rummon, a huge mount of chalk giving a
+good view of the Wilderness. This was the position on the night of
+19th February.
+
+At dawn on the 20th the Londoners were to attack the Turks in three
+columns. The right column was to march from El Muntar to Ekteif, the
+centre column to proceed along the Jerusalem-Jericho road between the
+highway and the wadi Farah, and the left column was to go forward by
+the Tawil-Jebel Kuruntul track. The 1st Australian Light Horse Brigade
+and the New Zealand Mounted Rifles Brigade were, if possible, to make
+Nebi Musa.
+
+The infantry attack was as fine as anything done in the campaign. I
+had the advantage of witnessing the centre column carry out the whole
+of its task and of seeing the right column complete as gallant an
+effort as any troops could make, and as one saw them scale frowning
+heights and clamber up and down the roughest of torrent beds, one
+realised that more than three months' fighting had not removed the
+'bloom' from these Cockney warriors, and that their physique and
+courage were proof against long and heavy trials of campaigning. The
+chief objective of the centre column was Talat ed Dumm which, lying on
+the Jericho road just before the junction of the old and the new road
+to the Jordan valley, was the key to Jericho. It is hard to imagine a
+better defensive position. To the north of the road is the wadi Farah,
+a great crack in the rocks which can only be crossed in a few places,
+and which a few riflemen could cover. Likewise a platoon distributed
+behind rocks on the many hills could command the approaches from all
+directions, while the hill of Talat ed Dumm, by the Good Samaritan
+Inn, and the height whereon the Crusader ruins stand, dominated a
+broad flat across which our troops must move. This position the 180th
+Brigade attacked at dawn. The guns opened before the sun appeared
+above the black crest line of the mountains of Moab, and well before
+long shadows were cast across the Jordan valley the batteries were
+tearing to pieces the stone walls and rocky eyries sheltering
+machine-gunners and infantry. This preliminary bombardment, if short,
+was wonderfully effective. From where I stood I saw the heavies
+pouring an unerring fire on to the Crusader Castle, huge spurts of
+black smoke, and the dislocation of big stones which had withstood
+the disintegrating effect of many centuries of sun power, telling the
+Forward Observing Officer that his gunners were well on the target and
+that to live in that havoc the Turks must seek the shelter of vaults
+cut deep down in the rock by masons of old. No enemy could delay
+our progress from that shell-torn spot. Lighter guns searched other
+positions and whiffs of shrapnel kept Turks from their business. There
+are green patches on the western side of Talat ed Dumm in the early
+months of the year before the sun has burned up the country. Over
+these the infantry advanced as laid down in the book. The whirring
+rap-rap of machine guns at present unlocated did not stop them, and
+as our machine-gun sections, ever on the alert to keep down rival
+automatic guns, found out and sprayed the nests, the enemy was seen
+to be anxious about his line of retreat. One large party, harried by
+shrapnel and machine-gun fire, left its positions and rushed towards
+a defile, but rallied and came back, though when it reoccupied its
+former line the Londoners had reached a point to enfilade it, and it
+suffered heavily. We soon got this position, and then our troops,
+ascending some spurs, poured a destructive fire into the defile and so
+harassed the Turks re-forming for a counterattack as to render feeble
+their efforts to regain what they had lost.
+
+By eight o'clock we had taken the whole of the Talat ed Dumm position,
+and long-range sniping throughout the day did not disturb our secure
+possession of it. Immediately the heights were occupied the guns went
+ahead to new points, and armoured cars left the road to try to find a
+way to the south-east to protect the flank of the right column. They
+had a troublesome journey. Some of the crews walked well ahead of the
+cars to reconnoitre the tracks, and it speaks well for the efficiency
+of the cars as well as for the pluck and cleverness of the drivers
+that in crossing a mile or two of that terribly broken mountainous
+country no car was overturned and all got back to the road without
+mishap.
+
+Throughout the night and during the greater part of the day of
+February 20 the right column were fighting under many difficulties. In
+their march from the hill of Muntar they had to travel over ground so
+cracked and strewn with boulders that in many parts the brigade could
+only proceed in single file. In some places the track chosen had a
+huge cleft in the mountain on one side and a cliff face on the other.
+It was a continual succession of watercourses and mountains, of uphill
+and downhill travel over the most uneven surface in the blackness of
+night, and it took nearly eight hours to march three miles. The nature
+of the country was a very serious obstacle and the column was late in
+deploying for attack. But bad as was the route the men had followed
+during the night, it was easy as compared with the position they had
+set out to carry. This was Jebel Ekteif, the southern end of the range
+of hills of which Talat ed Dumm was the northern. Ekteif presented to
+this column a face as precipitous as Gibraltar and perhaps half as
+high. There was a ledge running round it about three-quarters of the
+way from the top, and for hours one could see the Turks lying flat on
+this rude path trying to pick off the intrepid climbers attempting a
+precarious ascent. Some mountain guns suddenly ranged on the enemy on
+this ledge, and, picking up the range with remarkable rapidity, forced
+the Turks into more comfortable positions. The enemy, too, had some
+well-served guns, and they plastered the spurs leading to the crest
+from the west, but our infantry's audacity never faltered, and
+after we had got into the first lines on the hill our men proceeded
+methodically to rout out the machine guns from their nooks and
+crannies. This was a somewhat lengthy process, but small parties
+working in support of each other gradually crushed opposition, and
+the huge rocky rampart was ours by three o'clock in the afternoon.
+Meanwhile two brigades of the Anzac Mounted Division were moving
+eastwards from Muntar over the hills and wadis down to the Dead Sea,
+whence turning northwards they marched towards Nebi Musa to try to
+get on to the Jordan valley flats to threaten the Turks in rear. The
+terrain was appallingly bad and horses had to be led, the troops
+frequently proceeding in Indian file. No guns could be got over the
+hills to support the Anzacs, and when they tried to pass through a
+narrow defile south of Nebi Musa it was found that the enemy covered
+the approach with machine guns, and progress was stopped dead
+until, during the early hours of the following morning, some of the
+Londoners' artillery managed by a superhuman effort to get a few guns
+over the mountains to support the cavalry. By this time the Turks
+had had enough of it, and while it was dark they were busy trekking
+through Jericho towards the Ghoraniyeh bridge over the river, covered
+by a force on the Jebel Kuruntul track which prevented the left column
+from reaching the cliffs overlooking the Jordan valley. By dawn on the
+21st Nebi Musa was made good, the 1st Australian Light Horse Brigade
+and the New Zealand Brigade were in Jericho by eight o'clock and
+had cleared the Jordan valley as far north as the river Aujah, the
+Londoners holding the line of cliffs which absolutely prevented any
+possibility of the enemy ever again threatening Jerusalem or Bethlehem
+from the east. This successful operation also put an end to the Turks'
+Dead Sea grain traffic. They had given up hope of keeping their
+landing place on the northern shores of the Dead Sea when we took
+Talat ed Dumm, and one hour after our infantry had planted themselves
+on the Hill of Blood we saw the enemy burning his boats, wharves, and
+storehouses at Rujm el Bahr, where he had expended a good deal of
+labour to put up buildings to store grain wanted for his army.
+Subsequently we had some naval men operating motor boats from this
+point, and these sailors achieved a record on that melancholy waterway
+at a level far below that at which any submarine, British or German,
+ever rested.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+THE TOUCH OF THE CIVILISING HAND
+
+
+It is doubtful whether the population of any city within the zones of
+war profited so much at the hands of the conqueror as Jerusalem. In
+a little more than half a year a wondrous change was effected in the
+condition of the people, and if it had been possible to search the
+Oriental mind and to get a free and frank expression of opinion,
+one would probably have found a universal thankfulness for General
+Allenby's deliverance of the Holy City from the hands of the Turks.
+And with good reason. The scourge of war so far as the British Army
+was concerned left Jerusalem the Golden untouched. For the 50,000
+people in the City the skilfully applied military pressure which
+put an end to Turkish misgovernment was the beginning of an era
+of happiness and contentment of which they had hitherto had no
+conception. Justice was administered in accordance with British
+ideals, every man enjoyed the profits of his industry, traders no
+longer ran the gauntlet of extortionate officials, the old time
+corruption was a thing of the past, public health was organised as far
+as it could be on Western lines, and though in matters of sanitation
+and personal cleanliness the inhabitants still had much to learn, the
+appearance of the Holy City and its population vastly improved under
+the touch of a civilising hand. Sights that offended more than one of
+the senses on the day when General Allenby made his official entry had
+disappeared, and peace and order reigned where previously had been but
+misery, poverty, disease, and squalor.
+
+One of the biggest blots upon the Turkish government of the City was
+the total failure to provide an adequate water supply. What they
+could not, or would not, do in their rule of four hundred years His
+Majesty's Royal Engineers accomplished in a little more than two
+months, and now for the first time in history every civilian in
+Jerusalem can obtain as much pure mountain spring water as he wishes,
+and for this water, as fresh and bright as any bubbling out of Welsh
+hills, not a penny is charged. The picturesque, though usually
+unclean, water carrier is passing into the limbo of forgotten things,
+and his energies are being diverted into other channels. The germs
+that swarmed in his leathern water bags will no longer endanger the
+lives of the citizens, and the deadly perils of stagnant cistern water
+have been to a large extent removed.
+
+For its water Jerusalem used to rely mainly upon the winter rainfall
+to fill its cisterns. Practically every house has its underground
+reservoir, and it is estimated that if all were full they would
+contain about 360,000,000 gallons. But many had fallen into disrepair
+and most, if not the whole of them, required thorough cleansing. One
+which was inspected by our sanitary department had not been emptied
+for nineteen years. To supplement the cistern supply the Mosque of
+Omar reservoir halved with Bethlehem the water which flowed from near
+Solomon's Pools down an aqueduct constructed by Roman engineers under
+Herod before the Saviour was born. This was not nearly sufficient, nor
+was it so constant a supply as that provided by our Army engineers.
+They went farther afield. They found a group of spring-heads in an
+absolutely clean gathering ground on the hills yielding some 14,000
+gallons an hour, and this water which was running to waste is lifted
+to the top of a hill from which it flows by gravity through a long
+pipe-line to Jerusalem, where a reservoir has been built on a high
+point on the outskirts of the city. Supplies of this beautiful water
+run direct to the hospitals, and at standpipes all over the city the
+inhabitants take as much as they desire. The water consumption of the
+people became ten times what it was in the previous year, and this
+fact alone told how the boon was appreciated.
+
+The scheme did not stop at putting up standpipes for those who fetched
+the water. A portion of the contents of the cisterns was taken for
+watering troop horses in the spring--troops were not allowed to drink
+it. The water level of these cisterns became very low, and as they
+got emptied the authorities arranged for refilling them on the one
+condition that they were first thoroughly cleansed and put in order.
+The British administration would not be parties to the perpetuation
+of a system which permitted the fouling of good crystal water. A
+householder had merely to apply to the Military Governor for water,
+and a sanitary officer inspected the cistern, ordered it to be
+cleansed, and saw that this was done; then the Department of Public
+Health gave its certificate, and the engineers ran a pipe to the
+cistern and filled it, no matter what its capacity. Two cisterns were
+replenished with between 60,000 and 70,000 gallons of sparkling water
+from the hills in place of water heavily charged with the accumulation
+of summer dust on roofs, and the dust of Jerusalem roads, as we had
+sampled it, is not as clean as desert sand.
+
+The installation of the supply was a triumph for the Royal Engineers.
+In peace times the work would have taken from one to two years to
+complete. A preliminary investigation and survey of the ground was
+made on February 14, and a scheme was submitted four days later. Owing
+to the shortage of transport and abnormally bad weather work could not
+be commenced till April 12. Many miles of pipe line had to be laid and
+a powerful pumping plant erected, but water was being delivered to the
+people of Jerusalem on the 18th of June. Other military works have
+done much for the common good in Palestine, but none of them were of
+greater utility than this. Mahomedans seeing bright water flow into
+Jerusalem regarded it as one of the wonders of all time. It is
+interesting to note that the American Red Cross Society, which sent a
+large and capable staff to the Holy Land after America came into the
+war, knew of the lack of an adequate water supply for Jerusalem, and
+with that foresight which Americans show, forwarded to Egypt for
+transportation to Jerusalem some thousand tons of water mains to
+provide a water service. When the American Red Cross workers reached
+the Holy City they found the Army's plans almost completed, and
+they were the first to pay a tribute to what they described as the
+'civilising march of the British Army.'
+
+Those who watched the ceaseless activities of the Public Health
+Administration were not surprised at the remarkable improvement in the
+sick and death rates, not only of Jerusalem but of all the towns and
+districts. The new water supply will unquestionably help to lower the
+figures still further. A medical authority recently told me that
+the health of the community was wonderfully good and there was no
+suspicion of cholera, outbreaks of which were frequent under the
+Turkish regime. Government hospitals were established in all large
+centres. In this country where small-pox takes a heavy toll the
+'conscientious objector' was unknown, and many thousands of natives
+in a few months came forward of their own free will to be vaccinated.
+Typhus and relapsing fever, both lice-borne diseases, used to claim
+many victims, but the figures fell very rapidly, due largely, no
+doubt, to the full use to which disinfecting plants were put in all
+areas of the occupied territory. The virtues of bodily cleanliness
+were taught, and the people were given that personal attention which
+was entirely lacking under Turkish rule. It is not easy to overcome
+the prejudices and cure the habits of thousands of years, but progress
+is being made surely if slowly, and already there is a gratifying
+improvement in the condition of the people which is patent to any
+observer.
+
+In Jerusalem an infants' welfare bureau was instituted, where
+mothers were seen before and after childbirth, infants' clinics were
+established, a body of health was formed, and a kitchen was opened to
+provide food for babies and the poor. The nurses were mainly local
+subjects who had to undergo an adequate training, and there was no one
+who did not confidently predict a rapid fall in the infant mortality
+rate which, to the shame of the Turkish administration, was fully a
+dozen times that of the highest of English towns. The spadework
+was all done by the medical staff of the Occupied Enemy Territory
+Administration. The call was urgent, and though labouring under
+war-time difficulties they got things going quickly and smoothly. Some
+voluntary societies were assisting, and the enthusiasm of the American
+Red Cross units enabled all to carry on a great and beneficent work.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+OUR CONQUERING AIRMEN
+
+
+The airmen who were the eyes of the Army in Sinai and Palestine
+can look back on their record as a great achievement. Enormous
+difficulties were faced with stout hearts, and the Royal Flying Corps
+spirit surmounted them. It was one long test of courage, endurance,
+and efficiency, and so triumphantly did the airmen come through the
+ordeal that General Allenby's Army may truthfully be said to have
+secured as complete a mastery of the air as it did of the plains
+and hills of Southern Palestine. Those of us who watched the airmen
+'carrying on,' from the time when their aeroplanes were inferior to
+those of the Germans in speed, climbing capacity, and other qualities
+which go to make up first-class fighting machines, till the position
+during the great advance when few enemy aviators dared cross our
+lines, can well testify to the wonderful work our airmen performed.
+
+With comparatively few opportunities for combat because the enemy knew
+his inferiority and declined to fight unless forced, the pilots and
+observers from the moment our attack was about to start were always
+aggressive, and though the number of their victims may seem small
+compared with aerial victories on the Western Front they were
+substantial and important. In the month of January 1917 the flying men
+accounted for eleven aeroplanes, five of these falling victims to
+one pilot. The last of these victories I myself witnessed. In a
+single-seater the pilot engaged two two-seater aeroplanes of a late
+type, driving down one machine within our line, the pilot killed by
+eleven bullets and the observer wounded. He then chased the other
+plane, whose pilot soon lost his taste for fighting, dropped into a
+heavy cloud bank, and got away. No odds were too great for our airmen.
+I have seen one aeroplane swoop down out of the blue to attack a
+formation of six enemy machines, sending one crashing to earth and
+dispersing the remainder. In one brief fight another pilot drove down
+three German planes. The airman does not talk of his work, and we knew
+that what we saw and heard of were but fragments in the silent records
+of great things done. Much that was accomplished was far behind our
+visual range, high up over the bleak hills of Judea, above even the
+rain clouds driven across the heights by the fury of a winter gale, or
+skimming over the dull surface of the Dead Sea, flying some hundreds
+of feet below sea level to interrupt the passage of foodstuffs of
+which the Turk stood in need.
+
+All through the Army's rapid march northwards from the crushed
+Gaza-Beersheba line the airmen's untiring work was of infinite value.
+When the Turkish retreat began the enemy was bombed and machine-gunned
+for a full week, the railway, aerodromes, troops on the march,
+artillery, and transport being hit time and again, and five smashed
+aeroplanes and a large quantity of aircraft stores of every
+description were found at Menshiye alone. The raid on that aerodrome
+was so successful that at night the Germans burnt the whole of the
+equipment not destroyed by bombs. Three machines were also destroyed
+by us at Et Tineh, five at Ramleh and one at Ludd, and the country
+was covered with the debris of a well-bombed and beaten army. After
+Jerusalem came under the safe protection of our arms airmen harassed
+the retiring enemy with bombs and machine guns. The wind was strong,
+but defying treacherous eddies, the pilots came through the valleys
+between steep-sloped hills and caught the Turks on the Nablus road,
+emptying their bomb racks at a height of a few hundred feet, and
+giving the scattered troops machine-gun fire on the return journey.
+
+A glance at the list of honours bestowed on officers and other ranks
+of the R.F.C. serving with the Egyptian Expeditionary Force in 1917
+is sufficient to give an idea of the efficiency of the service of our
+airmen. It must be remembered that the Palestine Wing was small, if
+thoroughly representative of the Flying Corps; its numbers were few
+but the quality was there. Indeed I heard the Australian squadron of
+flying men which formed part of the Wing described by the highest
+possible authority as probably the finest squadron in the whole of the
+British service. This following list of honours is, perhaps, the most
+eloquent testimony to the airmen's work in Palestine:
+
+ Victoria Cross . . . . . 1
+ Distinguished Service Order . . . 4
+ Military Cross . . . . . 34
+ Croix de Guerre . . . . 2
+ Military Medal . . . . . 1
+ Meritorious Service Medal . . . 14
+ Order of the Nile . . . . 2
+
+The sum total of the R.F.C. work was not to be calculated merely from
+death and damage caused to the enemy from the air. Strategical and
+tactical reconnaissances formed a large part of the daily round,
+and the reports brought in always added to our Army's store of
+information. In Palestine, possibly to a greater extent than in any
+other theatre of war, our map-makers had to rely on aerial photographs
+to supply them with the details required for military maps. The best
+maps we had of Palestine were those prepared by Lieutenant H.H.
+Kitchener, R.E., and Lieutenant Conder in 1881 for the Palestine
+Exploration Fund. They were still remarkably accurate so far as they
+went, but 'roads,' to give the tracks a description to which they were
+not entitled, had altered, and villages had disappeared, and newer and
+additional information had to be supplied. The Royal Flying Corps--it
+had not yet become the Royal Air Force--furnished it, and all
+important details of hundreds of square miles of country which survey
+parties could not reach were registered with wonderful accuracy by
+aerial photographers.
+
+The work began for the battle of Rafa, and the enemy positions on the
+Magruntein hill were all set out before General Chetwode when the
+Desert Column attacked and scored an important victory. Then when
+12,000 Turks were fortifying the Weli Sheikh Nuran country covering
+the wadi Ghuzze and the Shellal springs, not a redoubt or trench but
+was recorded with absolute fidelity on photographic prints, and long
+before the Turks abandoned the place and gave us a fine supply of
+water we had excellent maps of the position. In time the whole
+Gaza-Beersheba line was completely photographed and maps were
+continually revised, and if any portion of the Turkish system of
+defences was changed or added to the commander in the district
+concerned was notified at once. To such perfection did the R.F.C.
+photographic branch attain, that maps showing full details of new or
+altered trenches were in the hands of generals within four hours
+of the taking of the photographs. Later on the work of the branch
+increased enormously, and the results fully repaid the infinite care
+and labour bestowed upon it.
+
+The R.F.C. made long flights in this theatre of war, and some of them
+were exceptionally difficult and dangerous. A French battleship when
+bombarding a Turkish port of military importance had two of our
+machines to spot the effect of her gunfire. To be with the ship when
+the action opened the airmen had to fly in darkness for an hour and a
+half from a distant aerodrome, and they both reached the rendezvous
+within five minutes of the appointed time. The Turks on their lines of
+communication with the Hedjaz have an unpleasant recollection of being
+bombed at Maan. That was a noteworthy expedition. Three machines set
+out from an aerodrome over 150 miles away in a straight line, the
+pilots having to steer a course above country with no prominent
+landmarks. They went over a waterless desert so rough that it would
+have been impossible to come down without seriously damaging a plane,
+and if a pilot had been forced to land his chance of getting back to
+our country would have been almost nil. Water bottles and rations
+were carried in the machines, but they were not needed, for the three
+pilots came home together after hitting the station buildings at Maan
+and destroying considerable material and supplies.
+
+The aeroplane has been put to many uses in war and, it may be, there
+are instances on other fronts of it being used, in emergencies, as an
+ambulance. When a little mobile force rounded up the Turkish post at
+Hassana, on the eastern side of the Sinai Peninsula, one of our men
+received so severe a wound that an immediate operation was necessary.
+An airman at once volunteered to carry the wounded man to the nearest
+hospital, forty-four miles away across the desert, and by his action a
+life was saved.
+
+
+
+APPENDICES
+
+
+I
+
+
+The following telegram was sent by Enver Pasha to Field-Marshal von
+Hindenburg, at Supreme Army Command Headquarters, from Constantinople
+on August 23, 1917:
+
+ The news of the despatch of strong enemy forces to Egypt,
+ together with the nomination of General Allenby as Commander-in-Chief
+ on our Syrian Front, indicates that the
+ British contemplate an offensive on the Syrian Front, and
+ very probably before the middle of November.
+
+ The preservation of the Sinai Front is a primary condition
+ to the success of the Yilderim undertaking.
+
+ After a further conversation with the Commander of
+ the IVth Army (Jemal Pasha) I consider it necessary to
+ strengthen this front by one of the infantry divisions intended
+ for Yilderim, and to despatch this division immediately
+ from Aleppo.
+
+ With this reinforcement the defence of the Sinai Front
+ by the IVth Army is assured.
+
+ General von Falkenhayn takes up the position that he
+ does not consider the defence assured, and that the further
+ reduction of Yilderim forces is to be deprecated under any
+ circumstances.
+
+ He consequently recommends that we on our side should
+ attack the British, and as far as possible surprise them,
+ before they are strengthened. He wishes to carry out this
+ attack with four infantry divisions, and the 'Asia' Corps.
+ Two of the four infantry divisions have still to be despatched
+ to the front.
+
+ I cannot yet decide to support the proposal, nor need
+ I do so, as the transport of an infantry division from Aleppo
+ to Bayak requires twenty days. During this period the
+ situation as regards the enemy will become clear, and one
+ will become better able to estimate the chance of success
+ of an attack.
+
+ I must, however, in any case be able to dispose of more
+ forces than at present, either for the completion of Yilderim,
+ or for the replacement of the very heavy losses which will
+ certainly occur in the Syrian attack.
+
+ I must consequently reiterate, to my deep regret, my
+ request for the return of the VIth Army Corps (which was
+ operating at that time in the Dobrudja) and for the despatch
+ of this Corps, together with the 20th Infantry Division,
+ commencing with the 15th Infantry Division.
+
+ In my opinion the Army Corps could be replaced by
+ Bulgarians, whose task is unquestionably being lightened
+ through the despatch of troops (British) to Egypt.
+
+ Should this not be the case, I would be ready to exchange
+ two divisions from the Vth Army for the two infantry divisions
+ of the VIth Army Corps, as the former are only suited
+ for a war of position, and would have to be made mobile
+ by the allotment of transport and equipment.
+
+ If these two infantry divisions were given up, the Vth
+ Army would have only five infantry divisions of no great
+ fighting value, a condition of things which is perhaps not
+ very desirable.
+
+ For the moment my decision is: Defence of Syria by
+ strengthening that front by one infantry division, and
+ prosecution of the Yilderim scheme.
+
+ Should good prospects offer of beating the British decisively
+ in Syria before they have been reinforced I will take
+ up General von Falkenhayn's proposal again, as far as it
+ appears possible to carry it out, having in view the question
+ of transport and rationing, which still has to be settled in
+ some respects.--Turkish Main Headquarters, ENVER.
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+Von Falkenhayn despatched the following telegram from Constantinople
+on August 25, 1917, to German General Headquarters:
+
+ The possibility of a British attack in Syria has had to
+ be taken into consideration from the beginning. Its repercussion
+ on the Irak undertaking was obvious. On that
+ account I had already settled in my conversations in Constantinople
+ during May that, if the centre of gravity of
+ operations were transferred to the Sinai Front, command
+ should be given me there too. The news now to hand--reinforcement
+ of the British troops in Egypt, taking over
+ of command by Allenby, the demands of the British Press
+ daily becoming louder--makes the preparation of a British
+ attack in Syria probable.
+
+ Jemal Pasha wishes to meet it with a defensive. To
+ that end he demands the divisions and war material which
+ were being collected about Aleppo for Yilderim. The
+ natural result of granting this request will be that true
+ safety will never be attained on the Sinai Front by a pure
+ defensive, and that the Irak undertaking will certainly
+ fritter away owing to want of driving power or to delays.
+
+ I had consequently proposed to the Turkish Higher
+ Command to send two divisions and the 'Asia' Corps as
+ quickly as possible to Southern Syria, so as to carry out
+ a surprise attack on the British by means of an encircling
+ movement before the arrival of their reinforcements. Railways
+ allow of the assembly of these forces (inclusive of heavy
+ artillery, material and technical stores) in the neighbourhood
+ of Beersheba by the end of October. The disposable parts
+ of the IVth Army (two to three divisions) would be added
+ to it.
+
+ In a discussion between Enver, Jemal, and myself, Enver
+ decided first of all to strengthen the IVth Army by the
+ inclusion of one division from the Army Group. This
+ division would suffice to ward off attack. The Irak undertaking
+ could be carried through at the same time. Judging
+ from all former experiences I am firmly convinced as soon
+ as it comes to a question of the expected attack on the
+ Sinai Front, or even if the IVth Army only feels itself seriously
+ threatened, further troops, munitions, and material will be
+ withdrawn from the Army Group, and Turkey's forces will
+ be shattered.
+
+ Then nothing decisive can be undertaken in either theatre
+ of war. The sacrifice of men, money, and material which
+ Germany is offering at the present moment will be in vain.
+
+ The treatment of the question is rendered all the more
+ difficult because I cannot rid myself of the impression that
+ the decision of the Turkish Higher Command is based far
+ less on military exigencies than on personal motives. It
+ is dictated with one eye on the mighty Jemal, who deprecates
+ a definite decision, but yet on the other hand opposes the
+ slightest diminution of the area of his command.
+
+ Consequently as the position now stands, I consider the
+ Irak undertaking practicable only if it is given the necessary
+ freedom for retirement through the removal of the danger
+ on the Syrian Front. The removal of this danger I regard
+ as only possible through attack. V. FALKENHAYN.
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+Here is another German estimate of the position created by our
+War Cabinet's decision to take the offensive in Palestine, and in
+considering the view of the German Staff and the prospect of success
+any Turkish attack would have, it must be borne in mind that under
+the most favourable circumstances the enemy could not have been in
+position for taking an offensive before the end of October. Von
+Falkenhayn wished to attack the British 'before the arrival of their
+reinforcements.' Not only had our reinforcements arrived before the
+end of October, but they were all in position and the battle had
+commenced. Beersheba was taken on October 31. This appreciation was
+written by Major von Papen of Yilderim headquarters on August 28,
+1917:
+
+ Enver's objections, the improbability of attaining a
+ decisive result on the Sinai Front with two divisions plus
+ the 'Asia Corps' and the difficulty of the Aleppo-Rayak
+ transport question, hold good.
+
+ The execution of the offensive with stronger forces is
+ desirable, but is not practicable, as, in consequence of the
+ beginning of the rainy weather in the middle of November,
+ the British offensive may be expected at the latest during
+ the latter half of October; ours therefore should take place
+ during the first part of that month.
+
+ The transport question precludes the assembly of stronger
+ forces by that date.
+
+ Should the idea of an offensive be abandoned altogether
+ on that account?
+
+ On the assumption that General Allenby--after the two
+ unsuccessful British attacks--will attack only with a marked
+ superiority of men and munitions, a passive defence on a
+ thirty-five kilometre front with an exposed flank does not
+ appear to offer any great chance of success.
+
+ The conditions on the Western Front (defensive zone,
+ attack divisions) are only partially applicable here, since
+ the mobility of the artillery and the correct tactical handling
+ of the attack division are not assured. The intended passive
+ defensive will not be improved by the theatrical attack with
+ one division suggested by General von Kress.
+
+ On the contrary this attack would be without result, as
+ it would be carried out too obliquely to the front, and would
+ only mean a sacrifice of men and material.
+
+ The attack proposed by His Excellency for the envelopment
+ of the enemy's flank--if carried out during the first
+ half of October with four divisions plus the 'Asia Corps'--will
+ perhaps have no definite result, but will at all events
+ result in this: that the Gaza Front flanked by the sea
+ will tie down considerable forces and defer the continuation
+ of British operations in the wet season, during which, in
+ the opinion of General von Kress, they cannot be carried
+ on with any prospect of success.
+
+ The situation on the Sinai Front will then be clear. Naturally
+ it is possible that the position here may demand the
+ inclusion of further effectives and the Yilderim operation
+ consequently become impracticable. This, however, will
+ only prove that the determining factor of the decisive operation
+ for Turkey during the winter of 1917-1918 lies in Palestine
+ and not in Mesopotamia. An offensive on the Sinai
+ Front is therefore--even with reduced forces and a limited
+ objective--the correct solution.
+
+ PAPEN.
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+_Letter from General Kress von Kressenstein to Yilderim headquarters,
+dated September_ 29, 1917, _on moral of Turkish troops_.
+
+A question which urgently needs regulating is that of deserters.
+According to my experience their number will increase still more with
+the setting in of the bad weather and the deterioration of rations.
+
+Civil administration and the gendarmerie fail entirely; they often
+have a secret understanding with the population and are open to
+bribery.
+
+The cordon drawn by me is too weak to prevent desertion. I am also
+too short of troops to have the necessary raids undertaken in the
+hinterland. It is necessary that the hunt for deserters in the area
+between the front and the line Jerusalem-Ramleh-Jaffa be formally
+organised under energetic management, that one or two squadrons
+exclusively for this service be detailed, and that a definite reward
+be paid for bringing in each deserter. But above all it is necessary
+that punishment should follow in consequence, and that the
+unfortunately very frequent amnesties of His Majesty the Sultan be
+discontinued, at least for some time.
+
+The question of rationing has not been settled. We are living
+continually from hand to mouth. Despite the binding promises of
+the Headquarters IVth Army, the Vali of Damascus, the Lines of
+Communication, Major Bathmann and others, that from now on 150 tons of
+rations should arrive regularly each day, from the 24th to the 27th of
+this month, for example a total of 229 tons or only 75 tons per diem
+have arrived.
+
+I cannot fix the blame for these irregularities. The Headquarters IVth
+Army has received the highly gratifying order that, at least up to the
+imminent decisive battle, the bread ration is raised to 100 grammes.
+This urgently necessary improvement of the men's rations remains
+illusory, if a correspondingly larger quantity of flour (about one
+wagon per day) is not supplied to us. So far the improvement exists
+only on paper. The condition of the animals particularly gives
+cause for anxiety. Not only are we about 6000 animals short of
+establishment, but as a result of exhaustion a considerable number of
+animals are ruined daily. The majority of divisions are incapable
+of operating on account of this shortage of animals. The ammunition
+supply too is gradually coming into question on account of the
+deficiency in animals. The menacing danger can only be met by a
+regular supply of sufficient fodder. The stock of straw in the area of
+operations is exhausted. With gold some barley can still be bought in
+the country.
+
+Every year during the rainy season the railway is interrupted again
+and again for periods of from eight to fourteen days. There are also
+days and weeks in which the motor-lorry traffic has to be suspended.
+Finally we must calculate on the possibility of an interruption of our
+rear communications by the enemy. I therefore consider it absolutely
+necessary that at least a fourteen days' reserve of rations be
+deposited in the depôts at the front as early as possible.
+
+The increase of troops on the Sinai Front necessitates a very
+considerable increase on the supply of meat from the Line of
+Communication area, Damascus district.
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+The troops of General Allenby's Army before the attack on Beersheba
+were distributed as follows:
+
+ XXTH CORPS.
+
+ 10th Division.
+
+ _29th Brigade. 30th Brigade. 31st Brigade_.
+
+6th R. Irish Rifles. 1st R. Irish Regt. 5th R. Inniskillings.
+5th Con. Rangers. 6th R. Munst. Fus. 6th R. Inniskillings.
+6th Leinsters. 6th R. Dublin Fus. 2nd R. Irish Fus.
+1st Leinsters 7th R. Dublin Fus. 5th R. Irish Rifles.
+
+
+ 53rd Division.
+
+ _158th Brigade. 159th Brigade. 160th Brigade._
+
+1/5th R. Welsh Fus. 1/4th Cheshires. 1/4th R. Sussex.
+1/6th " 1/7th " 2/4th R. West Surrey.
+1/7th " 1/4th Welsh 2/4th R. West Kent.
+1/1st Hereford. 1/5th " 2/10th Middlesex.
+
+
+ 60th Division.
+
+ _179th Brigade. 180th Brigade. 181st Brigade_.
+
+2/13th London. 2/17th London. 2/21st London.
+2/14th " 2/18th " 2/22nd "
+2/15th " 2/19th " 2/23rd "
+2/16th " 2/20th " 2/24th "
+
+
+ 74th Division.
+
+ _229th Brigade. 230th Brigade. 231st Brigade_.
+
+16th Devons (1st 10th E. Kent (R.E. 10th Shrop. (Shrop.
+ Devon & R.N. Kent & W. Kent & Cheshire Yeo.).
+ Devon Yeo.). Yeo.).
+12th Somerset L.I. 16th R. Sussex 24th R. Welsh Fus.
+ (Yeo.). (Yeo.). (Denbigh Yeo.).
+14th R. Highrs.(Fife 15th Suffolk (Yeo.) 25th R. Welsh Fus.
+ & Forfar Yeo.). (Montgomery Yeo.
+ & Welsh Horse).
+12th R. Scots Fus. 12th Norfolk (Yeo.) 24th Welsh Regt.
+ (Ayr & Lanark (Pembroke & Glanmorgan
+ Yeo.). Yeo.).
+
+
+ XXIst CORPS.
+
+ 52nd (Lowland) Division.
+
+ _155th Brigade. 156th Brigade. 157th Brigade._
+
+l/4th R. Scots Fus. 1/4th Royal Scots. 1/5th H.L.I.
+l/5th R. Scots Fus. 1/7th Royal Scots. 1/6th H.L.I.
+l/4th K.O.S.B. 1/7th Scot. Rifles. 1/7th H.L.I.
+l/5th K.O.S.B. 1/8th Scot. Rifles. 1/5th A. & S. Highrs.
+
+
+ 54th (East Anglian) Division.
+
+ _161th Brigade. 162th Brigade. 163th Brigade._
+
+l/4th Essex. 1/5th Bedfords. 1/4th Norfolk.
+l/5th Essex. 1/4th Northants. 1/5th Norfolk.
+l/6th Essex. 1/10th London. 1/5th Suffolk.
+l/7th Essex. 1/11th London. 1/8th Hampshire.
+
+
+ 75th Division.
+
+ _232th Brigade. 233th Brigade. 234th Brigade._
+
+1/5th Devon. 1/5th Somersets. 1/4th D.C.L.I.
+2/5th Hampshire. 1/4th Wilts. 2/4th Dorsets.
+2/4th Somersets. 2/4th Hampshire. 123rd Rifles.
+2/3rd Gurkhas. 3/3rd Gurkhas. 58th Rifles.
+
+
+ DESERT MOUNTED CORPS.
+
+ Anzac Mounted Division.
+
+ _1st A.L.H. Bde. 2nd A.L.H. Bde. N.Z. Mtd. Rifles Bde._
+
+1st A.L.H. Regt. 5th A.L.H. Regt. Auckland M. Rifles.
+2nd A.L.H. Regt. 6th A.L.H. Regt. Canterbury M. Rifles.
+3rd A.L.H. Regt. 7th A.L.H. Regt. Wellington M. Rifles.
+
+
+ Australian Mounted Division.
+
+ _3rd L.H. Brigade. 4th L.H. Brigade. 5th Mtd. Brigade._.
+8th A.L.H. Regt. 4th A.L.H. Regt. 1/1st Warwick Yeo.
+9th " 11th " 1/1st Gloucester Yeo.
+10th " 12th " 1/1st Worcester Yeo.
+
+
+ Yoemanry Mounted Division
+
+ _6th Mtd. Brigade. 8th Mtd. Brigade. 22nd Mtd. Brigade_.
+1/1st Bucks Hussars. 1/1st City of London 1/1st Lincolnshire
+Yeo. Yeo.
+1/1st Berkshire Yeo. 1/1st Co. of London 1/1st Staffordshire
+Yeo. Yeo.
+1/1st Dorset Yeo. l/3rd Co. of London 1/1st E. Riding
+Yeo. Yeo.
+
+
+ 7th Mounted Brigade (attached Desert Corps).
+
+ 1/1st Sherwood Rangers. 1/1st South Notts Hussars.
+
+
+ Imperial Camel Brigade.
+
+
+
+VI
+
+
+There can be no better illustration of how one battle worked out
+'according to plan' than the quotation of the following Force Order:
+
+
+ FORCE ORDER
+
+
+ GENERAL HEADQUARTERS,
+ _22nd October_ 1917.
+
+ It is the intention of the Commander-in-Chief to take the
+ offensive against the enemy at Gaza and at Beersheba, and
+ when Beersheba is in our hands to make an enveloping
+ attack on the enemy's left flank in the direction of Sheria
+ and Hareira.
+
+ On Zero day XXth Corps with the 10th Division and
+ Imperial Camel Brigade attached and the Desert Mounted
+ Corps less one Mounted Division and the Imperial Camel
+ Brigade will attack the enemy at Beersheba with the object
+ of gaining possession of that place by nightfall.
+
+ As soon as Beersheba is in our hands and the necessary
+ arrangements have been made for the restoration of the
+ Beersheba water supply, XXth Corps and Desert Mounted
+ Corps complete will move rapidly forward to attack the
+ left of the enemy's main position with the object of driving
+ him out of Sheria and Hareira and enveloping the left flank
+ of his army. XXth Corps will move against the enemy's
+ defences south of Sheria, first of all against the Kauwukah
+ line and then against Sheria and the Hareira defences.
+ Desert Mounted Corps calling up the Mounted Division left
+ in general reserve during the Beersheba operation will move
+ north of the XXth Corps to gain possession of Nejile and of
+ any water supplies between that place and the right of
+ XXth Corps and will be prepared to operate vigorously
+ against and round the enemy's left flank if he should throw
+ it back to oppose the advance of the XXth Corps.
+
+ On a date to be subsequently determined and which will
+ probably be after the occupation of Beersheba and 24 to
+ 48 hours before the attack of XXth Corps on the Kauwukah
+ line, the XXIst Corps will attack the south-west defences
+ of Gaza with the object of capturing the enemy's front-line
+ system from Umbrella Hill to Sheikh Hasan, both inclusive.
+
+ The Royal Navy will co-operate with the XXIst Corps
+ in the attack on Gaza and in any subsequent operations
+ that may be undertaken by XXIst Corps.
+
+ On Z--4 day the G.O.C. XXIst Corps will open a systematic
+ bombardment of the Gaza defences, increasing in volume
+ from Z--1 day to Zx2 day and to be continued until Zx4
+ day at the least.
+
+ The Royal Navy will co-operate as follows: On Z--1 and
+ Zero days two 6-inch monitors will be available for bombardment
+ from the sea, special objective Sheikh Hasan.
+ On Zero day a third 6-inch monitor will be available so that
+ two of these ships may be constantly in action while one
+ replenishes ammunition. On Zxl day 6-inch monitors will
+ discontinue their bombardment which they will reopen
+ on Zx2 day. From Zxl day the French battleship _Requin_
+ and H.M.S. _Raglan_ will bombard Deir Sineid station and
+ junction for Huj, the roads and railway bridges and camps
+ on the wadi Hesi and the neighbourhood. The _Requin_ and
+ _Raglan_ will be assisted by a seaplane carrier.
+
+ From Zero day one 92 monitor will be available from
+ dawn, special objective Sheikh Redwan.
+
+ From Z--1 day inclusive demands for naval co-operation
+ will be conveyed direct from G.O.C. XXIst Corps to the
+ Senior Naval Officer, Marine View, who will arrange for
+ the transmission of the demands so made.
+
+ XXth Corps will move into position during the night of
+ Z-l=Zero day so as to attack the enemy at Beersheba on
+ Zero day south of the wadi Saba with two divisions while
+ covering his flank and the construction of the railway
+ east of Shellal with one division on the high ground overlooking
+ the wadis El Sufi and Hanafish. The objective of XXth Corps
+ will be the enemy's works west and south-west
+ of Beersheba as far as the Khalasa-Beersheba road
+ inclusive.
+
+ Desert Mounted Corps will move on the night of Z-1=Zero
+ day from the area of concentration about Khalasa and
+ Asluj so as to co-operate with XXth Corps by attacking
+ Beersheba with two divisions and one mounted brigade.
+ The objective of Desert Mounted Corps will be the enemy's
+ defences from south-east to the north-east of Beersheba
+ and the town of Beersheba itself.
+
+ The G.O.C. Desert Mounted Corps will endeavour to turn
+ the enemy's left with a view to breaking down his
+ resistance at Beersheba as quickly as possible. With this
+ in view the main weight of his force will be directed against
+ Beersheba from the east and north-east. As soon as the
+ enemy's resistance shows signs of weakening the G.O.C.
+ Desert Mounted Corps will be prepared to act with the utmost
+ vigour against his retreating troops so as to prevent their
+ escape, or at least to drive them well beyond the high ground
+ immediately overlooking the town from the north. He
+ will also be prepared to push troops rapidly into Beersheba
+ in order to protect from danger any wells and plant connected
+ with the water supply not damaged by the enemy before
+ Beersheba is entered.
+
+ The Yeomanry Mounted Division will pass from the
+ command of the G.O.C. XXth Corps at five on Zero day
+ and will come directly under General Headquarters as part
+ of the general reserve in the hands of the Commander-in-Chief.
+
+ When Beersheba has been taken the G.O.C. XXth Corps
+ will push forward covering troops to the high ground north
+ of the town to protect it from any counter movement on
+ the part of the enemy. He will also put in hand the restoration
+ of the water supply in Beersheba. The G.O.C. Desert
+ Mounted Corps will be responsible for the protection of
+ the town from the north-east and east.
+
+ As soon as possible after the taking of Beersheba the
+ G.O.C. Desert Mounted Corps will report to G.H.Q. on the
+ water supplies in the wells and wadis east of Beersheba and
+ especially along the wadi Saba and the Beersheba-Tel-el-Nulah
+ road. If insufficient water is found to exist in this
+ area G.O.C. Desert Mounted Corps will send back such of
+ his troops as may be necessary to watering places from which
+ he started or which may be found in the country east of
+ the Khalasa-Beersheba road during the operations.
+
+ A preliminary survey having been made, the G.O.C. XXth
+ Corps will report by wire to G.H.Q. on the condition of the
+ wells and water supply generally in Beersheba and on any
+ water supplies found west and north-west of that place.
+ He will telegraph an estimate as soon as it can be made
+ of the time required to place the Beersheba water supply
+ in working order.
+
+ When the situation as regards water at Beersheba has
+ become clear so that the movement of XXth Corps and
+ Desert Mounted Corps against the left flank of the enemy's
+ main position can be arranged, the G.O.C. XXIst Corps
+ will be ordered to attack the enemy's defences south-west
+ of Gaza in time for this operation to be carried out prior
+ to the attack of XXth Corps on the Kauwukah line of works.
+ The objective of XXIst Corps will be the defences of Gaza
+ from Umbrella Hill inclusive to the sea about Sheikh Hasan.
+
+ Instructions in regard to the following have been issued
+ separate to all corps:
+
+ Amount of corps artillery allotted.
+
+ Amount of ammunition put on corps charge prior to operations.
+
+ Amount of ammunition per gun that will be delivered daily
+ at respective railheads and the day of commencement.
+
+ Amount of transport allotted for forward supply from
+ railheads.
+
+ The general average for one day's firing has been calculated
+ on the following basis:
+
+ Field and mountain guns and
+ mountain howitzers ...150 rounds per gun.
+ 4.5-inch howitzers....120 rounds per gun.
+ 60-pounders and 6-inch howitzers. 90 rounds per gun.
+ 8-inch howitzers and 6-inch Mark VII. 60 rounds per gun.
+
+ This average expenditure will only be possible in the
+ XXIst Corps up to Zx16 day and for the Desert Mounted
+ Corps and XXth Corps to Zx13. After these dates if the
+ average has been expended the daily average will have to
+ drop to the basis of 100 rounds per 18-pounder per day and
+ other natures in proportion.
+
+ AIRCRAFT, ARMY WING.--Strategical reconnaissance including
+ the reconnaissance of areas beyond the tactical zone
+ and in which the enemy's main reserves are located, also
+ distant photography and aerial offensive, will be carried out
+ by an Army squadron under instructions issued direct from
+ G.H.Q. Protection from hostile aircraft will be the main
+ duty of the Army fighting squadron. A bombing squadron
+ will be held in readiness for any aerial offensive which the
+ situation may render desirable.
+
+ CORPS SQUADRONS.--Two Corps squadrons will undertake
+ artillery co-operation, contact patrols, and tactical reconnaissance
+ for the Corps to which they are attached. In the
+ case of the Desert Mounted Corps one flight from the Corps
+ squadron attached to XXth Corps will be responsible for
+ the above work. Photography of trench areas will normally
+ be carried out daily by the Army Wing.
+
+
+VII
+
+
+ORDERS FOR THE OFFICIAL ENTRY INTO JERUSALEM
+
+1. The Commander-in-Chief will enter Jerusalem by the Bab-el-Khalil
+(Jaffa Gate) at 12 noon, 11th December 1917. The order of procession
+is shown below:
+
+ Two Aides-de-camp.
+ (Twenty paces.)
+O.C. Italian Palestine Commander-in-Chief. O.C. French Palestine
+Contingent(Col. Contingent
+Dagostino). (Col. Piepape).
+Staff Officer. Two Staff Officers. Staff Officer.
+ (Ten paces.)
+ M. Picot (Head of French Mission).
+French Mil. Brig.-Gen. Italian Mil. Att. American
+Att. (Capt. Clayton. (Major Caccia). Mil. Att.
+St. Quentin). (Col. Davis).
+ (Five paces.)
+ Chief of General Staff (Maj.-Gen. Sir L.J. Bols).
+ Brig.-General General Staff (Brig.-Gen. G. Dawnay).
+ (Five paces.)
+ G.O.C. XXth Corps, Lieut.-Gen. Sir Philip W. Chetwode,
+ Bart., D.S.O.
+ Staff Officer. Brig.-Gen. Bartholomew.
+ (Ten paces.)
+ British Guard.
+ Australian and New Zealand Guard.
+ French Guard.
+ Italian Guard.
+
+2. GUARDS.--The following guards will be found by XXth Corps:
+
+ Outside the Gate--
+
+ British Guard: Fifty of all ranks, including English, Scottish,
+ Irish, and Welsh troops.
+
+ Australian and New Zealand Guard: Fifty of all ranks, including
+ twenty New Zealand troops.
+
+ These guards will be drawn up facing each other, the right
+ flank of the British guard and the left flank Australian guard
+ resting on the City Wall. The O.C. British guard will be in
+ command of both guards and will give the words of command.
+
+ Inside the Gate--
+
+ French Guard: Twenty of all ranks.
+ Italian Guard: Twenty of all ranks.
+
+ These guards will be drawn up facing each other, the left flank
+ of the French guard and the right flank of the Italian guard
+ resting on the City Wall.
+
+3. SALUTE.--On the approach of the Commander-in-Chief, guards will
+come to the Salute and present arms.
+
+4. The Military Governor of the City will meet the Commander-in-Chief
+at the Gate at 12 noon.
+
+5. ROUTE.--The procession will proceed _via_ Sueikat Allah and El
+Maukaf Streets to the steps of El Kala (Citadel), where the notables
+of the City under the guidance of a Staff Officer of the Governor will
+meet the Commander-in-Chief and the Proclamation will be read to the
+citizens. The British, Australian and New Zealand, French and Italian
+guards will, when the procession has passed them, take their place in
+column of fours in the rear of the procession in that order.
+
+On arrival at El Kala the guards will form up facing steps on the
+opposite (_i.e._ east) side of El Maukaf Street, the British guard
+being thus on the left, Italian guard on the right of the line, and
+remain at the slope. The British and Italian guards will bring up
+their left and right flanks respectively across the street south and
+north of El Kala.
+
+On leaving the Citadel the procession will proceed in the same order
+as before to the Barrack Square, where the Commander-in-Chief will
+confer with the notables of the City. On entering the Barrack Square
+the guards will wheel to the left and, keeping the left-hand man of
+each section of fours next the side of the Barrack Square, march round
+until the rear of the Italian guard has entered the Square, when the
+guards will halt, right turn (so as to face the centre of the Square),
+and remain at the slope.
+
+The procession will leave the City by the same route as it entered and
+in the same order.
+
+As the Commander-in-Chief and procession move off to leave the Barrack
+Square the guards will present arms, and then move off and resume
+their places in the procession, the British guard leading.
+
+On arrival at the Jaffa Gate the guards will take up their original
+positions, and on the Commander-in-Chief's departure will be marched
+away under the orders of the G.O.C. XXth Corps.
+
+6. POLICE, etc.--The Military Governor of the City will arrange for
+policing the route of the procession and for the searching of houses
+on either side of the route. He will also arrange for civil officials
+to read the Proclamation at El Kala.
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+
+The Proclamation read from the steps of David's Tower on the occasion
+of the Commander-in-Chief's Official Entry into Jerusalem was in these
+terms:
+
+ To the inhabitants of Jerusalem the Blessed and the people dwelling
+ in its vicinity:
+
+ The defeat inflicted upon the Turks by the troops under
+ my command has resulted in the occupation of your City
+ by my forces. I therefore here and now proclaim it to be
+ under martial law, under which form of administration it
+ will remain as long as military considerations make it
+ necessary.
+
+ However, lest any of you should be alarmed by reason of
+ your experiences at the hands of the enemy who has retired,
+ I hereby inform you that it is my desire that every person
+ should pursue his lawful business without fear of interruption.
+ Furthermore, since your City is regarded with affection by
+ the adherents of three of the great religions of mankind, and
+ its soil has been consecrated by the prayers and pilgrimages
+ of multitudes of devout people of those three religions for
+ many centuries, therefore do I make it known to you that
+ every sacred building, monument, holy spot, shrine, traditional
+ site, endowment, pious bequest, or customary place
+ of prayer, of whatsoever form of the three religions, will be
+ maintained and protected according to the existing customs
+ and beliefs of those to whose faiths they are sacred.
+
+
+
+IX
+
+
+No story of the capture of Jerusalem would be complete without the
+tribute paid by General Allenby to his gallant troops of all arms. The
+Commander-in-Chief's thanks, which were conveyed to the troops in a
+Special Order of the Day, were highly appreciated by all ranks. The
+document ran as follows:
+
+ SPECIAL ORDER OF THE DAY
+
+ G.H.Q., E.E.P.,
+
+ _15th December_ 1917.
+
+ With the capture of Jerusalem another phase of the
+ operations of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force has been
+ victoriously concluded.
+
+ The Commander-in-Chief desires to thank all ranks of all
+ the units and services in the Force for the magnificent work
+ which has been accomplished.
+
+ In forty days many strong Turkish positions have been
+ captured and the Force has advanced some sixty miles on a
+ front of thirty miles.
+
+ The skill, gallantry, and determination of all ranks have
+ led to this result.
+
+ 1. The approach marches of the Desert Mounted Corps
+ and the XXth Corps (10th, 53rd, 60th, and 74th Divisions),
+ followed by the dashing attacks of the 60th and 74th Divisions
+ and the rapid turning movement of the Desert Mounted
+ Corps, ending in the fine charge of the 4th Australian Light
+ Horse Brigade, resulted in the capture of Beersheba with
+ many prisoners and guns.
+
+ 2. The stubborn resistance of the 53rd Division, units of
+ the Desert Mounted Corps and Imperial Camel Brigade in
+ the difficult country north-east of Beersheba enabled the
+ preparations of the XXth Corps to be completed without
+ interference, and enabled the Commander-in-Chief to carry
+ out his plan without diverting more than the intended
+ number of troops to protect the right flank, despite the many
+ and strong attacks of the enemy.
+
+ 3. The attack of the XXth Corps (10th, 60th, and 74th
+ Divisions), prepared with great skill by the Corps and Divisional
+ Commanders and carried out with such dash and
+ courage by the troops, resulted in the turning of the Turkish
+ left flank and in an advance to the depth of nine miles through
+ an entrenched position defended by strong forces.
+
+ In this operation the Desert Mounted Corps, covering the
+ right flank and threatening the Turkish rear, forced the
+ Turks to begin a general retreat of their left flank.
+
+ 4. The artillery attack of the XXIst Corps and of the
+ ships of the Royal Navy, skilfully arranged and carried out
+ with great accuracy, caused heavy loss to the enemy in the
+ Gaza sector of his defences. The success of this bombardment
+ was due to the loyal co-operation of the Rear-Admiral
+ S.N.O. Egypt and Red Sea, and the officers of the Royal
+ Navy, the careful preparation of plans by the Rear-Admiral
+ and the G.O.C. XXIst Corps, and the good shooting of the
+ Royal Navy, and of the heavy, siege, and field artillery of
+ the XXIst Corps.
+
+ 5. The two attacks on the strong defences of Gaza, carried
+ out by the 52nd and 54th Divisions, were each completely
+ successful, thanks to the skill with which they were thought
+ out and prepared by the G.O.C. XXIst Corps, the Divisional
+ Commanders and the Brigade Commanders, and the great
+ gallantry displayed by the troops who carried out these
+ attacks.
+
+ 6. The second attack resulted in the evacuation of Gaza
+ by the enemy and the turning of his right flank. The 52nd
+ and 75th Divisions at once began a pursuit which carried
+ them in three weeks from Gaza to within a few miles of
+ Jerusalem.
+
+ 7. This pursuit, carried out by the Desert Mounted Corps
+ and these two Divisions of the XXIst Corps, first over the
+ sandhills of the coast, then over the Plains of Palestine and
+ the foothills, and finally in the rocky mountains of Judea,
+ required from all commanders rapid decisions and powers
+ to adapt their tactics to varying conditions of ground. The
+ troops were called upon to carry out very long marches in
+ great heat without water, to make attacks on stubborn
+ rearguards without time for reconnaissance, and finally to
+ suffer cold and privation in the mountains.
+
+ In these great operations Commanders carried out their
+ plans with boldness and determination, and the troops of all
+ arms and services responded with a devotion and gallantry
+ beyond praise.
+
+ 8. The final operations of the XXth Corps which resulted
+ in the surrender of Jerusalem were a fitting climax to the
+ efforts of all ranks.
+
+ The attack skilfully prepared by the G.O.C. XXth Corps
+ and carried out with precision, endurance, and gallantry
+ by the troops of the 53rd, 60th, and 74th Divisions, over
+ country of extreme difficulty in wet weather, showed skill
+ in leading and gallantry and determination of a very high
+ order.
+
+ 9. Throughout the operations the Royal Flying Corps
+ have rendered valuable assistance to all arms and have
+ obtained complete mastery of the air. The information
+ obtained from contact and reconnaissance patrols has at
+ all times enabled Commanders to keep in close touch with
+ the situation. In the pursuit they have inflicted severe
+ loss on the enemy, and their artillery co-operation has contributed
+ in no small measure to our victory.
+
+ 10. The organisation in rear of the fighting forces enabled
+ these forces to be supplied throughout. All supply and
+ ammunition services and engineer services were called upon
+ for great exertions. The response everywhere showed great
+ devotion and high military spirit.
+
+ 11. The thorough organisation of the lines of communication,
+ and the energy and skill with which all the services
+ adapted themselves to the varying conditions of the operations,
+ ensured the constant mobility of the fighting
+ troops.
+
+ 12. The Commander-in-Chief appreciates the admirable
+ conduct of all the transport services, and particularly the
+ endurance and loyal service of the Camel Transport Corps.
+
+ 13. The skill and energy by which the Signal Service was
+ maintained under all conditions reflects the greatest credit
+ on all concerned.
+
+ 14. The Medical Service was able to adapt itself to all
+ the difficulties of the situation, with the result the evacuation
+ of wounded and sick was carried out with the least possible
+ hardship or discomfort.
+
+ 15. The Veterinary Service worked well throughout; the
+ wastage in animals was consequently small considering the
+ distances traversed.
+
+ 16. The Ordnance Service never failed to meet all demands.
+
+ 17. The work of the Egyptian Labour Corps has been of
+ the greatest value in contributing to the rapid advance of
+ the troops and in overcoming the difficulties of the communications.
+
+ 18. The Commander-in-Chief desires that his thanks and
+ appreciation of their services be conveyed to all officers and
+ men of the force which he has the honour to command.
+
+ G. DAWNAY, B.G.G.S.,
+
+ for Major-General, Chief of the General Staff, E.E.F.
+
+
+
+X
+
+
+The men of units forming the XXth Corps were deeply gratified to
+receive this commendation from their gallant Corps Commander:
+
+
+ SPECIAL ORDER OF THE DAY
+
+ BY
+
+ LIEUTENANT-GENERAL SIR PHILIP W. CHETWODE, BT.,
+ K.C.M.G., C.B., D.S.O., _commanding XXth Corps_
+
+ HEADQUARTERS, XXTH CORPS,
+ _13th December_ 1917.
+
+ Now that the efforts of General Sir E.H.H. Allenby's
+ Army have been crowned by the capture of Jerusalem, I
+ wish to express to all ranks, services, and departments of the
+ XXth Army Corps my personal thanks and my admiration
+ for the soldierly qualities they have displayed.
+
+ I have served as a regimental officer in two campaigns,
+ and no one knows better than I do what the shortness of
+ food, the fatigue of operating among high mountains, and
+ the cold and wet has meant to the fighting troops. But in
+ spite of it all, and at the moment when the weather was
+ at its worst, they responded to my call and drove the
+ enemy in one rush through his last defences and beyond
+ Jerusalem.
+
+ A fine performance, and I am intensely proud of having
+ had the honour of commanding such a body of men.
+
+ I wish to give special praise to the Divisional Ammunition
+ Columns, Divisional Trains A.S.C., Supply Services, Mechanical
+ Transport personnel, Camel Transport personnel, and to
+ the Royal Army Medical Corps and all services whose continuous
+ labour, day and night, almost without rest, alone
+ enabled the fighting troops to do what they did.
+
+
+ SPECIAL ORDER OF THE DAY
+
+ HEADQUARTERS, XXTH CORPS,
+ 31_st December_ 1917.
+
+ I have again to thank the XXth Corps and to express to
+ them my admiration of their bravery and endurance during
+ the three days' fighting on December 27, 28, and 29.
+
+ The enemy made a determined attempt with two corps
+ to retake Jerusalem, and while their finest assault troops
+ melted away before the staunch defence of the 53rd and
+ 60th Divisions, the 10th and 74th were pressing forward
+ over the most precipitous country, brushing aside all opposition
+ in order to relieve the pressure on our right.
+
+ Their efforts were quickly successful, and by the evening
+ of the 27th we had definitely regained the initiative, and
+ I was able to order a general advance.
+
+ The final result of the three days' fighting was a gain to
+ us of many miles and extremely heavy losses to the enemy.
+
+ A fine three days' work.
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+ABU SHUSHE.
+Adaseh.
+Ain Ari.
+--Karim.
+Air Force honours.
+Akir.
+Allenby, General.
+--administration.
+American Red Cross Society.
+Arsuf.
+Askalon.
+Auja, River.
+
+BAKER, Colonel Sir Randolf.
+Bald Hill.
+Barrow, Major-General G. de S.
+Bartholomew, Brigadier-General.
+Bayley, Colonel.
+Beersheba, Anzac march on.
+--battle of
+--German preparations
+Beit Hannina.
+--Iksa.
+--Izza.
+--Jala.
+--ur el Foka.
+--ur et Tahta.
+Beitunia.
+Bethany.
+Beth-horons.
+Bethlehem.
+Biblical battlefields.
+Biddu.
+Bireh.
+Bols, Major-General.
+Borton, Major-General.
+Bulfin, Lieutenant-General.
+Bulteel, Captain.
+Burkah.
+Butler, Brigadier-General.
+
+CHAUVEL, Lieutenant-General.
+Chaytor, Major-General.
+Cheape, Lieutenant-Colonel H.
+Chetwode, Lieutenant-General Sir.
+--thanks to XXth Corps troops.
+Clayton, Brigadier-General
+Colston, Brigadier-General.
+Cox, Brigadier-General
+Cripps, Colonel Hon. F.
+
+DAMMERS, Captain.
+Dawnay, Brigadier-General.
+Deir Sineid.
+--Yesin.
+de Rothschild, Major.
+Desert railways.
+--pipeline.
+Dukku.
+
+EKTEIF.
+El Jib.
+El Kala.
+Enver.
+
+FARAH, wadi.
+Force Order, General Allenby's thanks to troops.
+Ful, Tel el.
+
+GAZA, plan of attack on.
+--Ali Muntar.
+--defences.
+--El Arish redoubt.
+--Great Mosque.
+--naval gunnery.
+--Outpost Hill.
+--Sea Post.
+Gaza, Sheikh Hasan.
+--Umbrella Hill.
+German Hospice.
+Gilgal.
+Girdwood, Major-General.
+Godwin, Brigadier-General.
+Good Samaritan Inn.
+Grant, Brigadier-General.
+
+Hadrah.
+Hanafish, action on wadi.
+Hebron.
+Hill 1070.
+Hill, Major-General J.
+Hodgson, Major-General.
+Hong Kong and Singapore battery.
+Huj.
+
+Ibn Obeid.
+Imperial Service cavalry.
+
+Jackson, Admiral T.
+Jaffa.
+--Gate.
+Jebel Kuruntul.
+Jelil.
+Jericho.
+Jerisheh.
+Jerusalem, battle of.
+--civil administration
+--Memorial to Army
+--Official Entry
+--order of procession
+--Proclamation to people
+--water supply
+Jordan.
+Jezar.
+Junction Station.
+
+Katrah.
+Kantara.
+Kanwukah.
+Khurbet Subr.
+Khuweilfeh.
+Kressenstein, von.
+Kulonieh.
+Kuryet el Enab.
+Kustul.
+
+Latron.
+Lawson, Captain.
+Lifta.
+Longley, Major-General.
+Ludd.
+
+M'Call, Brigadier-General Pollak.
+Maclean, Brigadier-General.
+Mejdel.
+Meldrum, Brigadier-General.
+Mott, Major-General.
+Mount of Olives.
+Mughar.
+Mukhmas.
+Mulebbis.
+
+Nablus Road.
+Nebi Musa.
+Nebi Samwil.
+Nejile.
+
+O'Brien, Colonel.
+
+Palestine Army, composition of.
+Palin, Major-General.
+Patron, Captain.
+Pemberton, Colonel.
+Perkins, Lieutenant.
+Primrose, Captain Hon. Neil.
+
+Ramallah.
+Ramleh.
+Raratongas.
+Ras et Tawil.
+Rushdi trenches.
+Ryrie, Brigadier-General.
+
+Saba, Tel el.
+Sakaty, Tel el.
+Saris.
+Sarona.
+Shea, Major-General H.
+Sheikh Muannis.
+Sheria.
+Sherifeh.
+Shilta.
+Smith, Rifleman.
+Soba.
+Solomon's Pools.
+Strategy in Palestine.
+--the German view.
+Suffa.
+Supplying the front.
+Surar, wadi.
+Sukereir, wadi.
+
+TALAT ED DUMM.
+Temperley.
+Thornhill, Corporal.
+Train, Corporal, V.C.
+Turkish line of communications.
+--moral.
+
+WATSON, Brigadier-General.
+Whines, Corporal.
+Whitehill.
+Wingfield-Digby, Captain.
+Wire roads.
+
+YEBNAH.
+Yilderim undertaking.
+--von Falkenhayn's doubts.
+
+ZAMBY.
+Zeitun ridge.
+
+
+Printed by T. and A. CONSTABLE, Printers to His Majesty at the
+Edinburgh University Press
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of How Jerusalem Was Won, by W.T. Massey
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of How Jerusalem Was Won, by W.T. Massey
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: How Jerusalem Was Won
+ Being the Record of Allenby's Campaign in Palestine
+
+Author: W.T. Massey
+
+Release Date: November 16, 2003 [EBook #10098]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HOW JERUSALEM WAS WON ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Lazar Liveanu and PG Distributed
+Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+HOW JERUSALEM WAS WON
+
+BEING THE RECORD OF ALLENBY'S CAMPAIGN IN PALESTINE
+
+by
+
+W.T. MASSEY
+
+OFFICIAL CORRESPONDENT OF THE LONDON NEWSPAPERS WITH THE EGYPTIAN
+EXPEDITIONARY FORCE
+
+
+
+
+WITH ILLUSTRATIONS AND MAPS
+
+
+
+
+LONDON 1919
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+This narrative of the work accomplished for civilisation by General
+Allenby's Army is carried only as far as the occupation of Jericho.
+The capture of that ancient town, with the possession of a line of
+rugged hills a dozen miles north of Jerusalem, secured the Holy City
+from any Turkish attempt to retake it. The book, in fact, tells
+the story of the twenty-third fall of Jerusalem, one of the most
+beneficent happenings of all wars, and marking an epoch in the
+wonderful history of the Holy Place which will rank second only to
+that era which saw the birth of Christianity. All that occurred in the
+fighting on the Gaza-Beersheba line was part and parcel of the taking
+of Jerusalem, the freeing of which from four centuries of Turkish
+domination was the object of the first part of the campaign. The Holy
+City was the goal sought by every officer and man in the Army; and
+though from the moment that goal had been attained all energies were
+concentrated upon driving the Turk out of the war, there was not a
+member of the Force, from the highest on the Staff to the humblest
+private in the ranks, who did not feel that Jerusalem was the greatest
+prize of the campaign.
+
+In a second volume I shall tell of that tremendous feat of arms which
+overwhelmed the Turkish Armies, drove them through 400 miles of
+country in six weeks, and gave cavalry an opportunity of proving that,
+despite all the arts and devices of modern warfare, with fighters
+and observers in the air and an entirely new mechanism of war, they
+continued as indispensable a part of an army as when the legions
+of old took the field. This is too long a story to be told in this
+volume, though the details of that magnificent triumph are so firmly
+impressed on the mind that one is loth to leave the narration of them
+to a future date. For the moment Jerusalem must be sufficient, and if
+in the telling of the British work up to that point I can succeed in
+giving an idea of the immense value of General Allenby's Army to the
+Empire, of the soldier's courage and fortitude, of his indomitable
+will and self-sacrifice and patriotism, it will indeed prove the most
+grateful task I have ever set myself.
+
+_April 1919._
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+Chap.
+
+ I. PALESTINE'S INFLUENCE ON THE WAR
+
+ II. OLD BATTLEGROUNDS
+
+ III. DIFFICULTIES OF THE ATTACK
+
+ IV. TRAINING THE ARMY
+
+ V. RAILWAYS, ROADS, AND THE BASE
+
+ VI. PREPARING FOR 'ZERO DAY'
+
+ VII. THE BEERSHEBA VICTORY
+
+ VIII. GAZA DEFENCES
+
+ IX. CRUSHING THE TURKISH LEFT
+
+ X. THROUGH GAZA INTO THE OPEN
+
+ XI. TWO YEOMANRY CHARGES
+
+ XII. LOOKING TOWARDS JERUSALEM
+
+ XIII. INTO THE JUDEAN HILLS
+
+ XIV. THE DELIVERANCE OF THE HOLY CITY
+
+ XV. GENERAL ALLENBY'S OFFICIAL ENTRY
+
+ XVI. MAKING JERUSALEM SECURE
+
+ XVII. A GREAT FEAT OF WAR
+
+ XVIII. BY THE BANKS OF THE JORDAN
+
+ XIX. THE TOUCH OF THE CIVILISING HAND
+
+ XX. OUR CONQUERING AIRMEN
+
+ APPENDICES
+
+ INDEX
+
+
+LIST OF MAPS
+
+
+PLAN OF SOUTHERN PALESTINE
+
+PLAN OF GAZA-BEERSHEBA LINE
+
+PLAN OF THE BETH-HORON COUNTRY
+
+PLAN OF THE BATTLE OF JERUSALEM
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+OFFICIAL ENTRY INTO THE HOLY CITY. GENERAL ALLENBY RECEIVED BY THE
+MILITARY GOVERNOR OP JERUSALEM, DECEMBER 11, 1917
+
+KANTARA TERMINUS OF THE DESERT MILITARY RAILWAY
+
+EAST FORCE H.Q. DUG-OUTS NEAR GAZA
+
+WADI GHUZZE NEAR SHELLAL
+
+OUR WATERWORKS AT SHELLAL
+
+ON THE MOVE IN THE DESERT
+
+THE GREAT MOSQUE AT GAZA
+
+TURKISH HEADQUARTERS AT GAZA. Note the Crusader Lion in Wall.
+
+A DESERT MOTOR ROAD NEAR SHELLAL
+
+TURKISH DUG-OUTS AT GAZA
+
+BEERSHEBA RAILWAY STATION WITH MINED ROLLING STOCK
+
+LIEUT.-GEN. SIR HARRY CHAUVEL OUTSIDE BEERSHEBA MOSQUE, NOVEMBER 1,
+1917
+
+EL MUGHAR. THE SCENE OF A YEOMANRY CHARGE
+
+BURIAL-PLACE OF ST. GEORGE, PATRON SAINT OF ENGLAND (AT LUDD)
+
+YEOMANRY GRAVES AT BETH-HORON THE UPPER, WHERE JOSHUA COMMANDED
+THE SUN TO REMAIN STILL TO ENABLE THE ISRAELITES TO OVERTHROW THE
+PHILISTINES
+
+IN THE JUDEAN HILLS
+
+A ROMAN CENTURION'S TOMB, KURYET EL ENAB
+
+ONE OF KING SOLOMON'S POOLS
+
+A TYPICAL NEW ZEALANDER
+
+WADI SURAR, CROSSED BY LONDON TERRITORIALS ON THE MORNING OF THEIR
+ASSAULT ON THE JERUSALEM DEFENCES
+
+THE DEIR YESIN POSITION WEST OF JERUSALEM
+
+EASTERN FACE OF NEBI SAMWIL MOSQUE, SHOWING DESTRUCTION BY TURKISH
+SHELL-FIRE
+
+OFFICIAL ENTRY INTO THE HOLY CITY. GENERAL ALLENBY ARRIVING OUTSIDE
+THE JAFFA GATE
+
+OFFICIAL ENTRY. GENERAL ALLENBY RECEIVING THE MAYOR OF JERUSALEM (A
+DESCENDANT OF MAHOMET)
+
+JERUSALEM FROM MOUNT OF OLIVES
+
+JERUSALEM FROM GARDEN OF GETHSEMANE
+
+PANEL IN THE CHAPEL OF THE KAISERIN AUGUSTA VICTORIA HOSPICE ON THE
+MOUNT OF OLIVES
+
+BETHLEHEM
+
+CHURCH OF THE NATIVITY, BETHLEHEM
+
+AIN KARIM, PART OF THE JERUSALEM DEFENCES
+
+RIVER AUJA, CROSSED AT NIGHT BY LOWLAND TERRITORIALS
+
+JERISHEH MILL, RIVER AUJA, ONE OF THE LOWLANDERS' CROSSINGS
+
+BARREL BRIDGE OVER THE RIVER AUJA
+
+DESTROYED BRIDGE ON THE JERICHO ROAD
+
+THE WILDERNESS, WITH A GLIMPSE OF THE DEAD SEA
+
+LONDONERS' BRIDGE OVER THE JORDAN. THE RIVER IS IN FLOOD
+
+GERMAN PRISONERS CROSSING THE JORDAN
+
+NEW ZEALAND MOUNTED RIFLES AT BETHLEHEM
+
+A HAIRPIN BEND ON THE JERUSALEM ROAD
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+PALESTINE'S INFLUENCE ON THE WAR
+
+
+In a war which involved the peoples of the four quarters of the globe
+it was to be expected that on the world's oldest battleground would
+be renewed the scenes of conflict of bygone ages. There was perhaps a
+desire of some elements of both sides, certainly it was the unanimous
+wish of the Allies, to avoid the clash of arms in Palestine, and to
+leave untouched by armies a land held in reverence by three of the
+great religions of the world. But this ancient cockpit of warring
+races could not escape. The will of those who broke the peace
+prevailed. Germany's dream of Eastern Empires and world domination,
+the lust of conquest of the Kaiser party, required that the tide of
+war should once more surge across the land, and if the conquering
+hosts left fewer traces of war wreckage than were to be expected in
+their victorious march, it was due not to any anxiety of our foes
+to avoid conflict about, and damage to, places with hallowed
+associations, but to the masterly strategy of the British
+Commander-in-Chief who manoeuvred the Turkish Armies out of positions
+defending the sacred sites.
+
+The people of to-day who have lived through the war, who have had
+their view bewildered by ever-recurring anxieties, by hopes shattered
+and fears realised, by a succession of victories and defeats on a
+colossal scale, and by a sudden collapse of the enemy, may fail to see
+the Palestine campaign in true perspective. But in a future generation
+the calm judgment of the historian in reviewing the greatest of all
+wars will, if I mistake not, pay a great tribute to General Allenby's
+strategy, not only as marking the commencement of the enemy's
+downfall, but as preserving from the scourge of war those holy places
+which symbolise the example by which most people rule their lives.
+Britons who value the good name of their country will appreciate what
+this means to those who shall come after us--that the record of a
+great campaign carried out exclusively by British Imperial troops was
+unsullied by a single act to disturb the sacred monuments, and left
+the land in the full possession of those rich treasures which stand
+for the principles that guided our actions and which, if posterity
+observes them, will make a better and happier world.
+
+A few months after the Turks entered the war it was obvious that
+unaided they could never realise the Kaiser's hope of cutting the Suez
+Canal communications of the British Empire. The German commitments in
+Europe were too overwhelming to permit of their rendering the Turks
+adequate support for a renewed effort against Egypt after the failure
+of the attack on the Canal in February 1915. There was an attempt
+by the Turks in August 1916, but it was crushed by Anzac horse and
+British infantry at Romani,[1] a score of miles from Port Said, and
+thereafter the Turks in this theatre were on the defensive. Some
+declare the Dardanelles enterprise to have been a mistake; others
+believe that had we not threatened the Turks there Egypt would
+have had to share with us the anxieties that war brings alike upon
+attackers and defenders. Gallipoli and Mesopotamia, however we regard
+those expeditions in the first years of the struggle, undoubtedly
+prevented the Turks employing a large army against Egypt, and the
+possibilities resulting from a defeat there were so full of danger to
+us, not merely in that half-way house of the Empire but in India and
+the East generally, that if Gallipoli served to avert the disaster
+that ill-starred expedition was worth undertaking. We had to drive
+the Turks out of the Sinai Peninsula--Egyptian territory--and, that
+accomplished, an attack on the Turks through Palestine was imperative
+since the Russian collapse released a large body of Turkish troops
+from the Caucasus who would otherwise be employed in Mesopotamia.
+
+[Footnote 1: _The Desert Campaigns_: London, Constable and Co., Ltd.]
+
+When General Allenby took over the command of the Egyptian
+Expeditionary Force the British public as a whole did not fully
+realise the importance of the Palestine campaign. Most of them
+regarded it as a 'side show,' and looked upon it as one of those minor
+fields of operations which dissipated our strength at a time when it
+was imperative we should concentrate to resist the German effort on
+the Western Front. They did not know the facts. In our far-flung
+Empire it was essential that we should maintain our prestige among
+the races we governed, some of them martial peoples who might remain
+faithful to the British flag only so long as we could impress them
+with our power to win the war. They were more influenced by a triumph
+in Mesopotamia, which was nearer their doors, than by a victory in
+France, and the occupation of Bagdad was a victory of greater import
+to the King's Indian subjects than the German retirement from the
+Hindenburg line. If there ever was a fear of serious trouble in India
+the advance of General Maude in Mesopotamia dispelled it, and made it
+easier not only to release a portion of our white garrison in India
+for active service elsewhere, but to recruit a large force of Indians
+for the Empire's work in other climes. Bagdad was a tremendous blow to
+German ambitions. The loss of it spelt ruin to those hopes of Eastern
+conquest which had prompted the German intrigues in Turkey, and it was
+certain that the Kaiser, so long as he believed in ultimate victory,
+would refuse to accept the loss of Bagdad as final. Russia's
+withdrawal as a belligerent released a large body of Turkish troops
+in the Caucasus, and set free many Germans, particularly 'technical
+troops' of which the Turks stood in need, for other fronts. It was
+then that the German High Command conceived a scheme for retaking
+Bagdad, and the redoubtable von Falkenhayn was sent to Constantinople
+charged with the preparations for the undertaking. Certain it is that
+it would have been put into execution but for the situation created by
+the presence of a large British Army in the Sinai Peninsula. A large
+force was collected about Aleppo for a march down the Euphrates
+valley, and the winter of 1917-18 would have witnessed a stern
+struggle for supremacy in Mesopotamia if the War Cabinet had not
+decided to force the Turks to accept battle where they least wanted
+it.
+
+The views of the British War Cabinet on the war in the East, at any
+rate, were sound and solid. They concentrated on one big campaign,
+and, profiting from past mistakes which led to a wastage of strength,
+allowed all the weight they could spare to be thrown into the Egyptian
+Expeditionary Force under a General who had proved his high military
+capacity in France, and in whom all ranks had complete confidence, and
+they permitted the Mesopotamian and Salonika Armies to contain the
+enemies on their fronts while the Army in Palestine set out to crush
+the Turks at what proved to be their most vital point. As to whether
+the force available on our Mesopotamia front was capable of defeating
+the German scheme I cannot offer an opinion, but it is beyond all
+question that the conduct of operations in Palestine on a plan at once
+bold, resolute, and worthy of a high place in military history saved
+the Empire much anxiety over our position in the Tigris and Euphrates
+valleys, and probably prevented unrest on the frontiers of India and
+in India itself, where mischief makers were actively working in the
+German cause. Nor can there be any doubt that the brilliant campaign
+in Palestine prevented British and French influence declining among
+the Mahomedan populations of those countries' respective spheres of
+control in Africa. Indeed I regard it as incontrovertible that the
+Palestine strategy of General Allenby, even apart from his stupendous
+rush through Syria in the autumn of the last year of war, did as much
+to end the war in 1918 as the great battles on the Western Front,
+for if there had been failure or check in Palestine some British and
+French troops in France might have had to be detached to other fronts,
+and the Germans' effort in the Spring might have pushed their line
+farther towards the Channel and Paris. If Bagdad was not actually
+saved in Palestine, an expedition against it was certainly stopped by
+our Army operating on the old battlegrounds in Palestine. We lost many
+lives, and it cost us a vast amount of money, but the sacrifices
+of brave men contributed to the saving of the world from German
+domination; and high as the British name stood in the East as the
+upholder of the freedom of peoples, the fame of Britain for justice,
+fair dealing, and honesty is wider and more firmly established to-day
+because the people have seen it emerge triumphantly from a supreme
+test.
+
+In the strategy of the world war we made, no doubt, many mistakes, but
+in Palestine the strategy was of the best, and in the working out of a
+far-seeing scheme, victories so influenced events that on this front
+began the final phase of the war--once Turkey was beaten, Bulgaria and
+Austria-Hungary submitted and Germany acknowledged the inevitable.
+Falkenhayn saw that the Bagdad undertaking was impossible so long as
+we were dangerous on the Palestine front, and General Allenby's attack
+on the Gaza line wiped the Bagdad enterprise out of the list of German
+ambitions. The plan of battle on the Gaza-Beersheba line resembled
+in miniature the ending of the war. If we take Beersheba for Turkey,
+Sheria and Hareira for Bulgaria and Austria, and Gaza for Germany,
+we get the exact progress of events in the final stage, except that
+Bulgaria's submission was an intelligent anticipation of the laying
+down of their arms by the Turks. Gaza-Beersheba was a rolling up from
+our right to left; so was the ending of the Hun alliance.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+OLD BATTLEGROUNDS
+
+
+It was in accordance with the fitness of things that the British Army
+should fight and conquer on the very spots consecrated by the memories
+of the most famous battles of old. From Gaza onwards we made our
+progress by the most ancient road on earth, for this way moved
+commerce between the Euphrates and the Nile many centuries before the
+East knew West. We fought on fields which had been the battlegrounds
+of Egyptian and Assyrian armies, where Hittites, Ethiopians, Persians,
+Parthians, and Mongols poured out their blood in times when kingdoms
+were strong by the sword alone. The Ptolemies invaded Syria by this
+way, and here the Greeks put their colonising hands on the country.
+Alexander the Great made this his route to Egypt. Pompey marched over
+the Maritime Plain and inaugurated that Roman rule which lasted for
+centuries; till Islam made its wide irresistible sweep in the seventh
+century. Then the Crusaders fought and won and lost, and Napoleon's
+ambitions in the East were wrecked just beyond the plains.
+
+Up the Maritime Plain we battled at Gaza, every yard of which had
+been contested by the armies of mighty kings in the past thirty-five
+centuries, at Akir, Gezer, Lydda, and around Joppa. All down the ages
+armies have moved in victory or flight over this plain, and General
+Allenby in his advance was but repeating history. And when the
+Turks had been driven beyond the Plain of Philistia, and the
+Commander-in-Chief had to decide how to take Jerusalem, we saw the
+British force move along precisely the same route that has been taken
+by armies since the time when Joshua overcame the Amorites and the day
+was lengthened by the sun and moon standing still till the battle
+was won. Geography had its influence on the strategy of to-day as
+completely as it did when armies were not cumbered with guns and
+mechanical transport. Of the few passes from the Maritime Plain over
+the Shephelah into the Judean range only that emerging from the green
+Vale of Ajalon was possible, if we were to take Jerusalem, as the
+great captains of old took it, from the north. The Syrians sometimes
+chose this road in preference to advancing through Samaria, the Romans
+suffered retreat on it, Richard Coeur de Lion made it the path for his
+approach towards the Holy City, and, precisely as in Joshua's day and
+as when in the first century the Romans fell victims to a tremendous
+Jewish onslaught, the fighting was hardest about the Beth-horons, but
+with a different result--the invaders were victorious. The corps which
+actually took Jerusalem advanced up the new road from Latron through
+Kuryet el Enab, identified by some as Kirjath-jearim where the
+Philistines returned the Ark, but that road would have been denied to
+us if we had not made good the ancient path from the Vale of Ajalon to
+Gibeon. Jerusalem was won by the fighting at the Beth-horons as
+surely as it was on the line of hills above the wadi Surar which
+the Londoners carried. There was fighting at Gibeon, at Michmas, at
+Beeroth, at Ai, and numerous other places made familiar to us by the
+Old Testament, and assuredly no army went forth to battle on more
+hallowed soil.
+
+Of all the armies which earned a place in history in Palestine,
+General Allenby's was the greatest--the greatest in size, in
+equipment, in quality, in fighting power, and not even the invading
+armies in the romantic days of the Crusades could equal it in
+chivalry. It fought the strong fight with clean hands throughout, and
+finished without a blemish on its conduct. It was the best of all the
+conquering armies seen in the Holy Land as well as the greatest.
+Will not the influence of this Army endure? I think so. There is an
+awakening in Palestine, not merely of Christians and Jews, but of
+Moslems, too, in a less degree. During the last thirty years there
+have grown more signs of the deep faiths of peoples and of their
+veneration of this land of sacred history. If their institutions and
+missions could develop and shed light over Palestine even while the
+slothful and corrupt Turk ruled the land, how much faster and more in
+keeping with the sanctity of the country will the improvement be under
+British protection? The graves of our soldiers dotted over desert
+wastes and cornfields, on barren hills and in fertile valleys, ay, and
+on the Mount of Olives where the Saviour trod, will mark an era more
+truly grand and inspiring, and offer a far greater lesson to future
+generations than the Crusades or any other invasion down the track of
+time. The Army of General Allenby responded to the happy thought of
+the Commander-in-Chief and contributed one day's pay for the erection
+of a memorial near Jerusalem in honour of its heroic dead. Apart from
+the holy sites, no other memorial will be revered so much, and future
+pilgrims, to whatever faith they belong, will look upon it as a
+monument to men who went to battle to bring lasting peace to a land
+from which the Word of Peace and Goodwill went forth to mankind.
+
+In selecting General Sir Edmund Allenby as the Palestine Army's chief
+the War Cabinet made a happy choice. General Sir Archibald Murray
+was recalled to take up an important command at home after the two
+unsuccessful attempts to drive the Turks from the Gaza defences. The
+troops at General Murray's disposal were not strong enough to take
+the offensive again, and it was clear there must be a long period of
+preparation for an attack on a large scale. General Allenby brought to
+the East a lengthy experience of fighting on the Western Front, where
+his deliberate methods of attack, notably at Arras, had given the
+Allies victories over the cleverest and bravest of our enemies.
+Palestine was likely to be a cavalry, as well as an infantry,
+campaign, or at any rate the theatre of war in which the mounted arm
+could be employed with the most fruitful of results. General Allenby's
+achievements as a cavalry leader in the early days of the war marked
+him as the one officer of high rank suited for the Palestine command,
+and his proved capacity as a General both in open and in trench
+warfare gave the Army that high degree of confidence in its
+Commander-in-Chief which it is so necessary that a big fighting force
+should possess. A tremendously hard worker himself, General Allenby
+expected all under him to concentrate the whole of their energies
+on their work. He had the faculty for getting the best out of his
+officers, and on his Staff were some of the most enthusiastic soldiers
+in the service. There was no room for an inefficient leader in any
+branch of the force, and the knowledge that the Commander-in-Chief
+valued the lives and the health of his men so highly that he would not
+risk a failure, kept all the staffs tuned up to concert pitch. We
+saw many changes, and the best men came to the top. His own vigour
+infected the whole command, and within a short while of arriving at
+the front the efficiency of the Army was considerably increased.
+
+The Palestine G.H.Q. was probably nearer the battle front than any
+G.H.Q. in other theatres of operations, and when the Army had broken
+through and chased the enemy beyond the Jaffa-Jerusalem line, G.H.Q.
+was opened at Bir Salem, near Ramleh, and for several months was
+actually within reach of the long-range guns which the Turks
+possessed. The rank and file were not slow to appreciate this. They
+knew their Commander-in-Chief was on the spot, keeping his eye and
+hand on everything, organising with his organisers, planning with
+his operation staff, familiar with every detail of the complicated
+transport system, watching his supply services with the keenness of a
+quartermaster-general, and taking that lively interest in the medical
+branch which betrayed an anxious desire for the welfare and health of
+the men. The rank and file knew something more than this. They saw the
+Commander-in-Chief at the front every day. General Allenby did not
+rely solely on reports from his corps. He went to each section of the
+line himself, and before practically every major operation he saw the
+ground and examined the scheme for attack. There was not a part of the
+line he did not know, and no one will contradict me when I say that
+the military roads in Palestine were known by no one better than the
+driver of the Commander-in-Chief's car. A man of few words, General
+Allenby always said what he meant with soldierly directness, which
+made the thanks he gave a rich reward. A good piece of work brought a
+written or oral message of thanks, and the men were satisfied they
+had done well to deserve congratulations. They were proud to have the
+confidence of such a Chief and to deserve it, and they in their turn
+had such unbounded faith in the military judgment of the General and
+in the care he took to prevent unnecessary risk of life, that there
+was nothing which he sanctioned that they would not attempt. Such
+mutual confidence breeds strength, and it was the Commander-in-Chief's
+example, his tact, energy, and military genius which made his Army a
+potent power for Britain and a strong pillar of the Allies' cause.
+
+Let it not be imagined that General Allenby in his victorious campaign
+shone only as a great soldier. He was also a great administrator. In
+England little was known about this part of the General's work, and
+owing to the difficulties of the task and to the consideration which
+had, and still has, to be shown to the susceptibilities of a number of
+friendly nations and peoples, it may be long before the full story of
+the administration of the occupied territory in Palestine is unfolded
+for general appreciation. It is a good story, worthy of Britain's
+record as a protector of peoples, and though from the nature of his
+conquest over the Turks in the Bible country the name of General
+Allenby will adorn the pages of history principally as a victor, it
+will also stand before the governments of states as setting a model
+for a wise, prudent, considerate, even benevolent, administration of
+occupied enemy territory. In days when Powers driven mad by military
+ambition tear up treaties as scraps of paper, General Allenby observed
+the spirit as well as the letter of the Hague Convention, and found
+it possible to apply to occupied territory the principles of
+administration as laid down in the Manual of Military Law.
+
+The natives marvelled at the change. In place of insecurity,
+extortion, bribery and corruption, levies on labour and property and
+all the evils of Turkish government, General Allenby gave the country
+behind the front line peace, justice, fair treatment of every race and
+creed, and a firm and equitable administration of the law. Every man's
+house became his castle. Taxes were readily paid, the tax gatherers
+were honest servants, and, none of the revenue going to keep fat
+pashas in luxury in Constantinople, there came a prospect of
+expenditure and revenue balancing after much money had been usefully
+spent on local government. Until the signing of peace international
+law provided that Turkish laws should apply. These, properly
+administered, as they never were by the Turks, gave a basis of good
+government, and, with the old abuses connected with the collection
+of revenue removed, and certain increased taxation and customs dues
+imposed by the Turks during the war discontinued, the people resumed
+the arts of peace and enjoyed a degree of prosperity none of them had
+ever anticipated. What the future government of Palestine may be is
+uncertain at the time of writing. There is talk of international
+control--we seem ever ready to lose at the conference table what a
+valiant sword has gained for us--but the careful and perfectly correct
+administration of General Allenby will save us from the criticism of
+many jealous foreigners. Certainly it will bear examination by any
+impartial investigator, but the best of all tributes that could be
+paid to it is that it satisfied religious communities which did not
+live in perfect harmony with one another and the inhabitants of a
+country which shelters the people of many different races.
+
+The Yilderim undertaking, as the Bagdad scheme was described, did not
+meet with the full acceptance of the Turks. The 'mighty Jemal', as the
+Germans sneeringly called the Commander of the Syrian Army, opposed it
+as weakening his prospects, and even Enver, the ambitious creature and
+tool of Germany, postponed his approval. It would seem the taking over
+of the command of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force by General Allenby
+set the Turks thinking, and made the German Military Mission in
+Constantinople reconsider their plans, not with a view to a complete
+abandonment of the proposal to advance on Bagdad, as would have been
+wise, but in order to see how few of the Yilderim troops they could
+allot to Jemal's army to make safe the Sinai front. There was an
+all-important meeting of Turkish Generals in the latter half of
+August, and Jemal stood to his guns. Von Falkenhayn could not get
+him to abate one item of his demands, and there can be no doubt that
+Falkenhayn, obsessed though he was with the importance of getting
+Bagdad, could see that Jemal was right. He admitted that the Yilderim
+operation was only practicable if it had freedom for retirement
+through the removal of the danger on the Palestine front. With that
+end in view he advocated that the British should be attacked, and
+suggested that two divisions and the 'Asia Corps' should be sent from
+Aleppo to move round our right. Jemal was in favour of defensive
+action; Enver procrastinated and proposed sending one division to
+strengthen the IVth Army on the Gaza front and to proceed with the
+Bagdad preparations. The wait-and-see policy prevailed, but long
+before we exerted our full strength Bagdad was out of the danger zone.
+General Allenby's force was so disposed that any suggestion of
+the Yilderim operation being put into execution was ruled out of
+consideration.
+
+Several documents captured at Yilderim headquarters at Nazareth in
+September 1918, when General Allenby made his big drive through Syria,
+show very clearly how our Palestine operations changed the whole of
+the German plans, and reading between the lines one can realise how
+the impatience of the Germans was increasing Turkish stubbornness
+and creating friction and ill-feeling. The German military character
+brooks no opposition; the Turks like to postpone till to-morrow what
+should be done to-day. The latter were cocksure after their two
+successes at Gaza they could hold us up; the Germans believed that
+with an offensive against us they would hold us in check till the wet
+season arrived.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: See Appendices I., II., and III.]
+
+Down to the south the Turks had to bring their divisions. Their line
+of communications was very bad. There was a railway from Aleppo
+through Rayak to Damascus, and onwards through Deraa (on the Hedjaz
+line) to Afule, Messudieh, Tul Keram, Ramleh, Junction Station to Beit
+Hanun, on the Gaza sector, and through Et Tineh to Beersheba. Rolling
+stock was short and fuel was scarce, and the enemy had short rations.
+When we advanced through Syria in the autumn of 1918 our transport was
+nobly served by motor-lorry columns which performed marvels in getting
+up supplies over the worst of roads. But as we went ahead we, having
+command of the sea, landed stores all the way up the coast, and unless
+the Navy had lent its helping hand we should never have got to Aleppo
+before the Turk cried 'Enough.' Every ounce of the Turks' supplies had
+to be hauled over land. They managed to put ten infantry divisions and
+one cavalry division against us in the first three weeks, but they
+were not comparable in strength to our seven infantry divisions and
+three cavalry divisions. In rifle strength we outnumbered them by two
+to one, but if the enemy had been well led and properly rationed he,
+being on the defensive and having strong prepared positions, should
+have had the power to resist us more strongly. The Turkish divisions
+we attacked were: 3rd, 7th, 16th, 19th, 20th, 24th, 26th, 27th, 53rd,
+and 54th, and the 3rd Cavalry Division. The latter avoided battle, but
+all the infantry divisions had heavy casualties. That the moral of the
+Turkish Army was not high may be gathered from a very illuminating
+letter written by General Kress von Kressenstein, the G.O.C. of the
+Sinai front, to Yilderim headquarters on September 29, 1917.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: See Appendix IV.]
+
+The troops who won Palestine and made it happier than it had been for
+four centuries were exclusively soldiers of the British Empire.
+There was a French detachment and an Italian detachment with General
+Allenby's Army. The Italians for a short period held a small portion
+of the line in the Gaza sector, but did not advance with our force;
+the French detachment were solely employed as garrison troops. The
+French battleship _Requin_ and two French destroyers cooperated with
+the ships of the Royal Navy in the bombardment of the coast. Our Army
+was truly representative of the Empire, and the units composing it
+gave an abiding example that in unity rested our strength. From over
+the Seven Seas the Empire's sons came to illustrate the unanimity
+of all the King's subjects in the prosecution of the war. English,
+Scottish, Irish, and Welsh divisions of good men and true fought side
+by side with soldiers of varying Indian races and castes. Australia's
+valiant sons constituted many brigades of horse and, with New Zealand
+mounted regiments, became the most hardened campaigners in the
+Egyptian and Palestine theatre of operations. Their powerful support
+in the day of anxiety and trial, as well as in the time of triumph,
+will be remembered with gratitude. South Africa contributed good
+gunners; our dark-skinned brethren in the West Indies furnished
+infantry who, when the fierce summer heat made the air in the Jordan
+Valley like a draught from a furnace, had a bayonet charge which
+aroused an Anzac brigade to enthusiasm (and Colonial free men can
+estimate bravery at its true value). From far-away Hong Kong and
+Singapore came mountain gunners equal to any in the world, Kroomen
+sent from their homes in West Africa surf boatmen to land stores,
+Raratongas from the Southern Pacific vied with them in boat craft and
+beat them in physique, while Egypt contributed a labour corps and
+transport corps running a long way into six figures. The communion of
+the representatives of the Mother and Daughter nations on the stern
+field of war brought together people with the same ideals, and if
+there are any minor jealousies between them the brotherhood of arms
+will make the soldiers returning to their homes in all quarters of the
+globe the best of missionaries to spread the Imperial idea. Instead of
+wrecking the British Empire the German-made war should rebuild it
+on the soundest of foundations, affection, mutual trust, and common
+interest.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+DIFFICULTIES OF THE ATTACK
+
+
+General Allenby's first problem was of vital consequence. He had to
+pierce the Gaza line. Before his arrival there had been, as already
+stated, two attempts which failed. A third failure, or even a
+check, might have spelt disaster for us in the East. The Turks held
+commanding positions, which they strengthened and fortified under the
+direction of German engineers until their country, between the sea and
+Beersheba, became a chain of land works of high military value, well
+adapted for defence, and covering almost every line of approach.
+The Turk at the Dardanelles had shown no loss of that quality of
+doggedness in defence which characterised him in Plevna, and though we
+know his commanders still cherished the hope of successfully attacking
+us before we could attempt to crush his line, it was on his system of
+defence that the enemy mainly relied to break the power of the British
+force. On arriving in Egypt General Allenby was given an appreciation
+of the situation written by Lieut.-General Sir Philip Chetwode, who
+had commanded the Desert Column in various stages across the sands of
+Sinai, was responsible for forcing the Turks to evacuate El Arish,
+arranged the dash on Magdaba by General Sir Harry Chauvel's mounted
+troops, and fought the brilliant little battle of Rafa. This
+appreciation of the position was the work of a master military mind,
+taking a broad comprehensive view of the whole military situation in
+the East, Palestine's position in the world war, the strategical and
+tactical problems to be faced, and, without making any exorbitant
+demands for troops which would lessen the Allies' powers in other
+theatres, set out the minimum necessities for the Palestine force.
+General Allenby gave the fullest consideration to this document, and
+after he had made as complete an examination of the front as any
+Commander-in-Chief ever undertook--the General was in one or other
+sector with his troops almost every day for four months--General
+Chetwode's plan was adopted, and full credit was given to his
+prescience in General Allenby's despatch covering the operations up to
+the fall of Jerusalem.
+
+It was General Chetwode's view at the time of writing his
+appreciation, that both the British and Turkish Armies were
+strategically on the defensive. The forces were nearly equal in
+numbers, though we were slightly superior in artillery, but we had no
+advantage sufficient to enable us to attack a well-entrenched enemy
+who only offered us a flank on which we could not operate owing to
+lack of water and the extreme difficulty of supply. General Chetwode
+thought it was possible the enemy might make an offensive against
+us--we have since learned he had such designs--but he gave weighty
+reasons against the Turk embarking upon a campaign conducted with
+a view to throwing us beyond the Egyptian frontier into the desert
+again. If the enemy contemplated even minor operations in the Sinai
+Desert he had not the means of undertaking them. We should be retiring
+on positions we had prepared, for, during his advance across the
+desert, General Chetwode had always taken the precaution of having his
+force dug in against the unlikely event of a Turkish attack. Every
+step we went back would make our supply easier, and there was no water
+difficulty, the pipe line, then 130 miles long, which carried the
+purified waters of the Nile to the amount of hundreds of thousands
+of gallons daily, being always available for our troops. It would be
+necessary for the Turks to repair the Beersheba-Auja railway. They
+had lifted some of the rails for use north of Gaza, and a raid we had
+carried out showed that we could stop this railway being put into a
+state of preparedness for military traffic. An attack which aimed at
+again threatening the Suez Canal was therefore ruled as outside the
+range of possibilities.
+
+On the other hand, now that the Russian collapse had relieved the Turk
+of his anxieties in the Caucasus and permitted him to concentrate his
+attention on the Mesopotamian and Palestine fronts, what hope had he
+of resisting our attack when we should be in a position to launch it?
+The enemy had a single narrow-gauge railway line connecting with the
+Jaffa-Jerusalem railway at Junction Station about six miles south-east
+of Ramleh. This line ran to Beersheba, and there was a spur line
+running past Deir Sineid to Beit Hanun from which the Gaza position
+was supplied. There was a shortage of rolling stock and, there being
+no coal for the engines, whole olive orchards had been hacked down to
+provide fuel. The Hebron road, which could keep Beersheba supplied if
+the railway was cut, was in good order, but in other parts there were
+no roads at all, except several miles of badly metalled track from
+Junction Station to Julis. We could not keep many troops with such
+ill-conditioned communications, but Turkish soldiers require far less
+supplies than European troops, and the enemy had done such remarkable
+things in surmounting supply difficulties that he was given credit for
+being able to support between sixty and seventy battalions in the line
+and reserve, with an artillery somewhat weaker than our own.
+
+If we made another frontal attack at Gaza we should find ourselves up
+against a desperately strong defensive system, but even supposing we
+got through it we should come to another halt in a few miles, as
+the enemy had selected, and in most cases had prepared, a number of
+positions right up to the Jaffa-Jerusalem road, where he would be in
+a land of comparative plenty, with his supply and transport troubles
+very considerably reduced. No one could doubt that the Turks intended
+to defend Jerusalem to the last, not only because of the moral effect
+its capture would have on the peoples of the world, but because its
+possession by us would threaten their enterprise in the Hedjaz, and
+the enormous amount of work we afterwards found they had done on the
+Judean hills proved that they were determined to do all in their
+power to prevent our driving them from the Holy City. The enemy, too,
+imagined that our progress could not exceed the rate at which our
+standard gauge railway could be built. Water-borne supplies were
+limited as to quantity, and during the winter the landing of supplies
+on an open beach was hazardous. In the coastal belt there were no
+roads, and the wide fringe of sand which has accumulated for centuries
+and still encroaches on the Maritime Plain can only be crossed by
+camels. Wells are few and yield but small volumes of water. With the
+transport allotted to the force in the middle of 1917 it was not
+possible to maintain more than one infantry division at a distance of
+twenty to twenty-five miles beyond railhead, and this could only be
+done by allotting to them all the camels and wheels of other divisions
+and rendering these immobile. This was insufficient to keep the enemy
+on the move after a tactical success, and he would have ample time to
+reorganise.
+
+General Chetwode held that careful preliminary arrangements, suitable
+and elastic organisation of transport, the collection of material at
+railhead, the training of platelaying gangs provided by the troops,
+the utilisation of the earthwork of the enemy's line for our own
+railway, luck as regards the weather and the fullest use of sea
+transport, should enable us to give the enemy less breathing time than
+appeared possible on paper. It was beyond hope, however, whatever
+preparations were made, that we should be able to pursue at a speed
+approaching that which the river made possible in Mesopotamia. General
+Chetwode considered it would be fatal to attempt an offensive with
+forces which might permit us to attack and occupy the enemy's Gaza
+line but which would be insufficient to inflict upon him a really
+severe blow, and to follow up that blow with sufficient troops. No
+less than seven infantry divisions at full strength and three cavalry
+divisions would be adequate for the purpose, and they would be
+none too many. Further, if the Turks began to press severely in
+Mesopotamia, or even to revive their campaign in the Hedjaz, a
+premature offensive might be necessitated on our part in Palestine.
+
+The suggestion made by General Chetwode for General Allenby's
+consideration was that the enemy should be led to believe we intended
+to attack him in front of Gaza, and that we should pin him down to
+his defences in the centre, while the real attack should begin on
+Beersheba and continue at Hareira and Sheria, and so force the enemy
+by manoeuvre to abandon Gaza. That plan General Allenby adopted after
+seeing all the ground, and the events of the last day of October and
+the first week of November supported General Chetwode's predictions to
+the letter. Indeed it would be hard to find a parallel in history for
+such another complete and absolute justification of a plan drawn up
+several months previously, and it is doubtful if, supposing the Turks
+had succeeded in doing what their German advisers advocated, namely
+forestalling our blow by a vigorous attack on our positions, there
+would have been any material alteration in the working out of the
+scheme. The staff work of General Headquarters and of the staffs of
+the three corps proved wholly sound. Each department gave of its best,
+and from the moment when Beersheba was taken in a day and we secured
+its water supply, there was never a doubt that the enemy could be kept
+on the move until we got into the rough rocky hills about Jerusalem.
+And by that time, as events proved, his moral had had such a
+tremendous shaking that he never again made the most of his many
+opportunities.
+
+The soundness of the plan can quite easily be made apparent to the
+unmilitary eye. Yet the Turk was absolutely deceived as to General
+Allenby's intentions. If it be conceded that to deceive the enemy is
+one of the greatest accomplishments in the soldier's art, it must be
+admitted that the battle of Gaza showed General Allenby's consummate
+generalship, just as it was proved again, and perhaps to an even
+greater extent, in the wonderful days of September 1918, in Northern
+Palestine and Syria. A glance at the map of the Gaza-Beersheba line
+and the country immediately behind it will show that if a successful
+attack were delivered against Gaza the enemy could withdraw his whole
+line to a second and supporting position where we should have to begin
+afresh upon an almost similar operation. The Turk would still have his
+water and would be slightly nearer his supplies.
+
+Since the two unsuccessful attacks in March and April, Gaza had been
+put into a powerful state of defence. The houses of the town are
+mostly on a ridge, and enclosing the place is a mass of gardens fully
+a mile deep, each surrounded by high cactus hedges affording complete
+cover and quite impossible for infantry to penetrate. To reduce
+Gaza would require a prolonged artillery bombardment with far more
+batteries than General Allenby could ever expect to have at his
+command, and it is certain that not only would the line in front of
+the town have had to be taken, but also the whole of the western end
+of the Turks' trench system for a length of at least 12,000 yards.
+And, as has been said, with Gaza secured we should still have had to
+face the enemy in a new line of positions about the wadi Hesi. Gaza
+was the Turks' strongest point. To attack here would have meant a
+long-drawn-out artillery duel, infantry would have had to advance over
+open ground under complete observation, and, while making a frontal
+attack, would have been exposed to enfilade fire from the 'Tank'
+system of works to the south-east. It would have proved a costly
+operation, its success could only have been partial in that it did not
+follow that we should break the enemy's line, and it would not have
+enabled us to contain the remainder of the Turkish force.
+
+Nor would an attack on the centre have promised more favourably. Here
+the enemy had all the best of the ground. At Atawineh, Sausage Ridge,
+Hareira, and Teiaha there were defences supporting each other on high
+ground overlooking an almost flat plain through which the wadi Ghuzze
+runs. All the observation was in enemy possession, and to attack over
+this ground would have been inviting disaster. There was little fear
+that the Turks would attack us across this wide range of No Man's
+Land, for we held secure control of the curiously shaped heaps of
+broken earth about Shellal, and the conical hill at Fara gave an
+uninterrupted view for several miles northward and eastward. The
+position was very different about Beersheba. If we secured that place
+with its water supply, and in this dry country the battle really
+amounted to a fight for water, we should be attacking from high ground
+and against positions which had not been prepared on so formidable
+a scale as elsewhere, with the prospect of compelling the enemy to
+abandon the remainder of the line for fear of being enveloped by
+mounted troops moving behind his weakened left. That, in brief
+outline, was the gist of General Chetwode's report, and with its full
+acceptance began the preparations for the advance. These preparations
+took several months to complete, and they were as thorough as the
+energy of a capable staff could make them.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+TRAINING THE ARMY
+
+
+Those of us who were fortunate enough to witness the nature of the
+preparations for the first of General Allenby's great and triumphant
+moves in Palestine can speak of the debt Britain and her Allies owe
+not merely to the Commander-in-Chief and his Headquarters Staff,
+but to the three Corps Commanders, the Divisional Commanders, the
+Brigadiers, and the officers responsible for transport, artillery,
+engineer, and the other services. The Army had to be put on an
+altogether different footing from that which had twice failed to drive
+the Turks from Gaza. It serves nothing to ignore the fact that the
+moral of the troops was not high in the weeks following the second
+failure. They had to be tuned up and trained for a big task. They knew
+the Turk was turning his natural advantages of ground about Gaza into
+a veritable fortress, and that if their next effort was to meet with
+more success than their last, they had to learn all that experience on
+the Western Front had taught as to systems of trench warfare.
+
+And, more than that, they had to prepare to apply the art of open
+warfare to the full extent of their powers.
+
+A couple of months before General Allenby took over command, General
+Chetwode had taken in hand the question of training, and in employing
+the knowledge gained during the strenuous days he had spent in France
+and Flanders, he not only won the confidence of the troops but
+improved their tone, and by degrees brought them up to something
+approaching the level of the best fighting divisions of our Army in
+France.
+
+This was hard work during hot weather when our trench systems on a
+wide front had to be prepared against an active enemy, and men could
+ill be spared for the all-important task of training behind the front
+line. It was not long, however, before troops who had got into that
+state of lassitude which is engendered by a belief that they were
+settling down to trench warfare for the duration of the war--that,
+in fact, there was a stalemate on this front--became inspired by the
+energy of General Chetwode. They saw him in the front line almost
+every day, facing the risks they ran themselves, complimenting them
+on any good piece of work, suggesting improvements in their defences,
+always anxious to provide anything possible for their comfort, and
+generally looking after the rank and file with a detailed attention
+which no good battalion commander could exceed.
+
+The men knew that the long visits General Chetwode paid them formed
+but a small part of his daily task. It has been said that a G.O.C. of
+a force has to think one hour a day about operations and five hours
+about beef. In East Force, as this part of the Egyptian Expeditionary
+Force was then called, General Chetwode, having to look months ahead,
+had also six worrying hours a day to think about water. For any one
+who did not love his profession, or who had not an ardent soldierly
+spirit within him, such a daily task would have been impossible. I had
+the privilege of living in General Chetwode's camp for some time, and
+I have seen him working at four o'clock in the morning and at nine
+o'clock at night, and the notes on a writing tablet by the side of his
+rough camp-bed showed that in the hours when sleep forsook him he was
+planning the next day's work.
+
+His staff was entirely composed of hard workers, and perhaps no
+command in this war ever had so small a staff, but there was no
+officer in East Force who laboured so long or with such concentration
+and energy and determination as its Chief. This enthusiasm was
+infectious and spread through all ranks. The sick rate declined,
+septic sores, from which many men suffered through rough life in the
+desert on Army rations, got better, and the men showed more interest
+in their work and were keener on their sport. The full effects had not
+been wholly realised when the War Cabinet selected General Allenby
+for the control of the big operations, but the improvement in the
+condition of the troops was already most marked, and when General
+Allenby arrived and at once directed that General Headquarters should
+be moved from Cairo, which was pleasant but very far away from the
+front, to Kelab, near Khan Yunus, there was not a man who did not see
+in the new order of things a sign that he was to be given a chance of
+testing the Briton's supremacy over the Turk.
+
+The improvement in the moral of the troops, the foundations of which
+were thus begun and cemented by General Chetwode, was rapidly carried
+on under the new Chief. Divisions like the 52nd, 53rd, and 54th, which
+had worked right across the desert from the Suez Canal, toiling in a
+torrid temperature, when parched throats, sun-blistered limbs, and
+septic sores were a heavy trial, weakened by casualties in action and
+sickness, were brought up to something like strength. Reinforcing
+drafts joined a lot of cheery veterans. They were taught in the
+stern field of experience what was expected of them, and they worked
+themselves up to the degree of efficiency of the older men.
+
+The 74th Division, made up of yeomanry regiments which had been doing
+excellent service in the Libyan Desert, watching for and harassing the
+elements of the Senussi Army, had to be trained as infantry. These
+yeomen did not take long to make themselves first-rate infantry, and
+when, after the German attack on the Somme in March 1918, they went
+away from us to strengthen the Western Front, a distinguished General
+told me he believed that man for man the 74th would prove the finest
+division in France. They certainly proved themselves in Palestine,
+and many an old yeomanry regiment won for itself the right to bear
+'Jerusalem, 1917' on its standard.
+
+The 75th Division had brought some of the Wessex Territorials from
+India with two battalions of Gurkhas and two of Rifles. The 1/4th Duke
+of Cornwall's Light Infantry joined it from Aden, but for some months
+the battalion was not itself. It had spent a long time at that dreary
+sunburnt outpost of the Empire, and the men did not regain their
+physical fitness till close upon the time it was required for the Gaza
+operations.
+
+The 60th Division came over from Salonika and we were delighted to
+have them, for they not only gave us General Bulfin as the XXIst Corps
+Commander, but set an example of efficiency and a combination of dash
+and doggedness which earned for them a record worthy of the best
+in the history of the great war. These London Territorials were
+second-line men, men recruited from volunteers in the early days of
+the war, when the County of London Territorial battalions went across
+to France to take a part on a front hard pressed by German legions.
+The 60th Division men had rushed forward to do their duty before
+the Derby scheme or conscription sought out the cream of Britain's
+manhood, and no one had any misgivings about that fine cheery crowd.
+
+The 10th Division likewise came from Salonika. Unfortunately it had
+been doing duty in a fever-stricken area and malaria had weakened its
+ranks. A little while before the autumn operations began, as many as
+3000 of its men were down at one time with malaria, but care and tonic
+of the battle pulled the ranks together, and the Irish Division, a
+purely Irish division, campaigned up to the glorious traditions of
+their race. They worked like gluttons with rifle and spade, and their
+pioneer work on roads in the Judean hills will always be remembered
+with gratitude.
+
+The cavalry of the Desert Mounted Corps were old campaigners in
+the East. The Anzac Mounted Division, composed of six regiments of
+Australian Light Horse and three regiments of New Zealand Mounted
+Rifles, had been operating in the Sinai Desert when they were not
+winning fame on Gallipoli, since the early days of the war. They had
+proved sterling soldiers in the desert war, hard, full of courage,
+capable of making light of the longest trek in waterless stretches of
+country, and mobile to a degree the Turks never dreamed of. There were
+six other regiments of Australian Light Horse and three first-line
+regiments of yeomanry in the Australian Mounted Division, and nine
+yeomanry regiments in the Yeomanry Mounted Division. The 7th Mounted
+Brigade was attached to Desert Corps, as was also the Imperial Camel
+Corps Brigade, formed of yeomen and Australians who had volunteered
+from their regiments for work as camelry. They, too, were veterans.
+
+All these divisions had to be trained hard. Not only had the four
+infantry divisions of XXth Corps to be brought to a pitch of physical
+fitness to enable them to endure a considerable period of open
+fighting, but they had to be trained in water abstinence, as, in the
+event of success, they would unquestionably have long marches in a
+country yielding a quite inadequate supply of drinking water, and this
+problem in itself was such that fully 6000 camels were required to
+carry drinking water to infantry alone. Water-abstinence training
+lasted three weeks, and the maximum of half a gallon a man for all
+purposes was not exceeded, simply because the men had been made
+accustomed to deny themselves drink except when absolutely necessary.
+But for a systematic training they would have suffered a great deal.
+The disposition of the force is given in the Appendix.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: See Appendix v].
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+RAILWAYS, ROADS, AND THE BASE
+
+
+To ease the supply problem a spur line was laid from Rafa to Shellal,
+on the wadi Ghuzze. In that way supplies, stores, and ammunition were
+taken up to our right flank. Shellal was a position of great strategic
+importance. At one time it appeared as if we should have to fight hard
+to gain it. The Turks had cut an elaborate series of trenches on
+Wali Sheikh Nuran, a hill covering Shellal, but they evacuated
+this position before we made the first attack on Gaza, and left an
+invaluable water supply in our hands.
+
+At Shellal the stony bed of the wadi Ghuzze rests between high mud
+banks which have been cut into fantastic shapes by the rushing waters
+descending from the southern extremities of the Judean range of hills
+during the winter rains. In the summer months, when the remainder
+of the wadi bed is dry, there are bubbling springs of good water at
+Shellal, and these have probably been continuously flowing for many
+centuries, for close above the spot where the water issues Anzac
+cavalry discovered a beautiful remnant of the mosaic flooring of an
+ancient Christian church, which, raised on a hundred-feet mound, was
+doubtless the centre of a colony of Christians, hundreds of years
+before Crusaders were attracted to the Holy Land. Our engineers
+harnessed that precious flow. A dam was put across the wadi bed and at
+least a million gallons of crystal water were held up by it,
+whilst the overflow went into shallow pools fringed with grass (a
+delightfully refreshing sight in that arid country) from which horses
+were watered. Pumping sets were installed at the reservoir and pipes
+were laid towards Karm, and from these the Camel Transport Corps were
+to fill fanatis--eight to twelve gallon tanks--for carriage of water
+to troops on the move.
+
+The railway staff, the department which arranged the making up and
+running of trains, as well as the construction staff, had heavy
+responsibilities. It was recognised early in 1917 that if we were to
+crush the Turk out of the war, provision would have to be made for a
+larger army than a single line from the Suez Canal could feed. It
+was decided to double the track. The difficulties of the Director of
+Railway Transport were enormous. There was great shortage of railway
+material all over the world. Some very valuable cargoes were lost
+through enemy action at sea, and we had to call for more from
+different centres, and England deprived herself of rolling stock she
+badly needed, to enable her flag of freedom to be carried (though it
+was not to be hoisted) through the Holy Land. And incidentally I may
+remark that, with the solitary exception of a dirty little piece of
+Red Ensign I saw flying in the native quarter in Jerusalem, the only
+British flag the people saw in Palestine and Syria was a miniature
+Union Jack carried on the Commander-in-Chief's motor car and by his
+standard-bearer when riding. Thus did the British Army play the game,
+for some of the Allied susceptibilities might have been wounded if the
+people had been told (though indeed they knew it) that they were under
+the protection of the British flag. They had the most convincing
+evidence, however, that they were under the staunch protection of the
+British Army. The doubling of the railway track went on apace. To save
+pressure at the Alexandria docks and on the Egyptian State railway,
+which, giving some of its rolling stock and, I think, the whole of
+its reserve of material for the use of the military line east of the
+Canal, was worked to its utmost capacity, and also to economise
+money by saving railway freights, wharves were built on the Canal at
+Kantara, and as many as six ocean-going steamers could be unloaded
+there at one time. By and by a railway bridge was thrown over the
+Canal, and when the war was over through trains could be run from
+Cairo to Jerusalem and Haifa. Kantara grew into a wonderful town with
+several miles of Canal frontage, huge railway sidings and workshops,
+enormous stores of rations for man and horse, medical supplies,
+ordnance and ammunition dumps, etc. Probably the enemy knew all about
+this vast base. Any one on any ship passing through the Canal could
+see the place, and it is surprising, and it certainly points to a lack
+of enterprise on the part of the Germans, that no attempt was made to
+bomb Kantara by the super-Zeppelin which in November 1917 left its
+Balkan base and got as far south as the region of Khartoum on its way
+to East Africa, before being recalled by wireless. This same Zeppelin
+was seen about forty miles from Port Said and a visit by it was
+anticipated. Aeroplanes with experienced pilots and armed with the
+latest anti-Zeppelin devices were stationed at Port Said and Aboukir
+ready to ascend on any moonlight night when the hum of aerial motor
+machinery could be heard. The super-Zeppelin never came and Kantara's
+progress was unchecked.
+
+The doubled railway track was laid as far as El Arish by the time
+operations commenced, and this was a great aid to the railway staff.
+Every engine and truck was used to its fullest capacity, and an
+enormous amount of time was saved by the abolition of passing stations
+for some ninety miles of the line's length. Railhead was at Deir el
+Belah, about eight miles short of Gaza, and here troops and an army
+of Egyptian labourers were working night and day, week in week out,
+off-loading trucks with a speed that enabled the maximum amount of
+service to be got out of rolling stock. There were large depots down
+the line too. At Rafa there was a big store of ammunition, and at
+Shellal large quantities not only of supplies but of railway material
+were piled up in readiness for pushing out railhead immediately the
+advance began. A Decauville, or light, line ran out towards Gamli from
+Shellal to make the supply system easier, and I remember seeing
+some Indian pioneers lay about three miles of light railway with
+astonishing rapidity the day after we took Beersheba. Every mile the
+line advanced meant time saved in getting up supplies, and the radius
+of action of lorries, horse, and camel transport was considerably
+increased.
+
+To supply the Gaza front we called in aid a small system of light
+railways. From the railhead at Deir el Belah to the mouth of the wadi
+Ghuzze, and from that point along the line of the wadi to various
+places behind the line held by us, we had a total length of 21
+kilometres of light railway. Before this railway got into full
+operation horses had begun to lose condition, and during the summer
+ammunition-column officers became very anxious about their horses. The
+light railway was almost everywhere within range of the enemy's guns,
+and in some places it was unavoidably exposed, particularly where it
+ran on the banks of the wadi due south of Gaza. I recollect while the
+track was being laid speaking to an Australian in charge of a gang of
+natives preparing an earthwork, and asked why it was that a trench was
+dug before earth was piled up. He pointed to the hill of Ali Muntar,
+the most prominent feature in the enemy's system, and said that from
+the Turks' observation post on that eminence every movement of the
+labourers could be seen, and the men were often forced by gunfire to
+the refuge of the trenches.
+
+When the railway was in running order trains had to run the gauntlet
+of shell-fire on this section on bright moonlight nights, and no
+camouflage could hide them. But they worked through in a marvellously
+orderly and efficient fashion, and on one day when our guns were
+hungry this little line carried 850 tons of ammunition to the
+batteries. The horses became fit and strong and were ready for the war
+to be carried into open country. In christening their tiny puffing
+locomotives the Tommy drivers showed their strong appreciation of
+their comrades on the sea, and the 'Iron Duke' and 'Lion' were always
+tuned up to haul a maximum load. But the pride of the engine yard was
+the 'Jerusalem Cuckoo'--some prophetic eye must have seen its future
+employment on the light line between Jerusalem and Ramallah--though in
+popularity it was run close by the 'Bulfin-ch,' a play upon the
+name of the Commander of the XXIst Corps, for which it did sterling
+service.
+
+The Navy formed part of the picture as well. Some small steamers of
+1000 to 1500 tons burden came up from Port Said to a little cove north
+of Belah to lighten the railway's task. They anchored about 150 yards
+off shore and a crowd of boats passed backwards and forwards with
+stores. These were carried up the beach to trucks on a line connected
+with the supply depots, and if you wished to see a busy scene where
+slackers had no place the Belah beach gave it you. The Army tried all
+sorts of boatmen and labourers. There were Kroo boys who found the
+Mediterranean waters a comparative calm after the turbulent surf on
+their own West African shore. The Maltese were not a success. The
+Egyptians were, both here and almost everywhere else where their
+services were called for. The best of all the fellows on this beach,
+however, were the Raratongas from the Cook Islands, the islands from
+which the Maoris originally came. They were first employed at El
+Arish, where they made it a point of honour to get a job done well and
+quickly, and, on a given day, it was found that thirty of them had
+done as much labourers' work as 170 British soldiers. They were men of
+fine physical strength and endurance, and some one who knew they had
+the instincts of sportsmen, devised a simple plan to get the best out
+of them. He presented a small flag to be won each day by the crew
+accomplishing the best work with the boats. The result was amazing.
+Every minute the boats were afloat the Raratongas strained their
+muscles to win the day's competition, and when the day's task was
+ended the victorious crew marched with their flag to their camp,
+singing a weird song and as proud as champions. Some Raratongas worked
+at ammunition dumps, and it was the boast of most of them that they
+could carry four 60-pounder shells at a time. A few of these stalwart
+men from Southern Seas received a promotion which made them the
+most envied men of their race--they became loading numbers in heavy
+howitzer batteries, fighting side by side with the Motherland gunners.
+
+However well the Navy and all associated with it worked, only a very
+small proportion of the Army's supplies was water borne. The great
+bulk had to be carried by rail. Enormously long trains, most of them
+hauled by London and South-Western locomotives, bore munitions, food
+for men and animals, water, equipment, medical comforts, guns, wagons,
+caterpillar tractors, motor cars, and other paraphernalia required for
+the largest army which had ever operated about the town of Gaza in the
+thousands of years of its history. The main line had thrown out from
+it great tentacles embracing in their iron clasp vital centres for the
+supply of our front, and over these spur lines the trains ran with
+the regularity of British main-line expresses. Besides 96,000 actual
+fighting men, there was a vast army of men behind the line, and there
+were over 100,000 animals to be fed. There were 46,000 horses, 40,000
+camels, 15,000 mules, and 3500 donkeys on Army work east of the
+Canal, and not a man or beast went short of rations. We used to
+think Kitchener's advance on Khartoum the perfection of military
+organisation. Beside the Palestine expedition that Soudan campaign
+fades into insignificance. In fighting men and labour corps, in
+animals and the machinery of war, this Army was vastly larger and more
+important, and the method by which it was brought to Palestine and was
+supplied, and the low sick rate, constitute a tribute to the master
+minds of the organisers. The Army had fresh meat, bread, and
+vegetables in a country which under the lash of war yielded nothing,
+but which under our rule in peace will furnish three times the produce
+of the best of past years of plenty.
+
+A not inconsiderable portion of the front line was supplied with Nile
+water taken from a canal nearly two hundred miles away. But the Army
+once at the front depended less upon the waters of that Father of
+Rivers than it had to do in the long trek across the desert. Then all
+drinking water came from the Nile. It flowed down the sweet-water
+canal (if one may be pardoned for calling 'sweet' a volume of water
+so charged with vegetable matter and bacteria that it was harmful for
+white men even to wash in it), was filtered and siphoned under the
+Suez Canal at Kantara, where it was chlorinated, and passed through
+a big pipe line and pumped through in stages into Palestine. The
+engineers set about improving all local resources over a wide stretch
+of country which used to be regarded as waterless in summer. Many
+water levels were tapped, and there was a fair yield. The engineers'
+greatest task in moving with the Army during the advance was always
+the provision of a water supply, and in developing it they conferred
+on the natives a boon which should make them be remembered with
+gratitude for many generations.
+
+In the months preceding our attack Royal Engineers were also concerned
+in improving the means of communication between railway depots and the
+front line. Before our arrival in this part of Southern Palestine,
+wheeled traffic was almost unknown among the natives. There was not
+one metalled roadway, and only comparatively light loads could be
+transported in wheeled vehicles. The soil between Khan Yunus and Deir
+el Belah, especially on the west of our railway line, was very sandy,
+and after the winter rains had knitted it together it began to crumble
+under the sun's heat, and it soon cut up badly when two or three
+limbers had passed over it. The sandy earth was also a great nuisance
+in the region between Khan Yunus and Shellal, but between Deir el
+Belah and our Gaza front, excepting on the belt near the sea which was
+composed of hillocks of sand precisely similar to the Sinai Desert,
+the earth was firmer and yielded less to the grinding action of
+wheels. For ordinary heavy military traffic the engineers made good
+going by taking off about one foot of the top soil and banking it
+on either side of the road. These tracks lasted very well, but they
+required constant attention. Ambulances and light motor cars had
+special arrangements made for them. Hundreds of miles of wire netting
+were laid on sand in all directions, and these wire roads, which,
+stretching across bright golden sand, appeared like black bands to
+observers in aircraft, at first aroused much curiosity among enemy
+airmen, and it was not until they had made out an ambulance convoy on
+the move that they realised the purpose of the tracks.
+
+The rabbit wire roads were a remarkable success. Motor wheels held
+firmly to the surface, and when the roads were in good condition cars
+could travel at high speed. Three or four widths of wire netting were
+laced together, laid on the sand and pegged down. After a time loose
+pockets of sand could not resist the weight of wheels and there became
+many holes beneath the wire, and the jolting was a sore trial alike to
+springs and to a passenger's temper. But here again constant attention
+kept the roads in order, and if one could not describe travelling over
+them as easy and comfortable they were at least sure, and one could
+be certain of getting to a destination at an average speed of twelve
+miles an hour. In sand the Ford cars have performed wonderful feats,
+but remarkable as was the record of that cheap American car with
+us--it helped us very considerably to win the war--you could never
+tell within hours how long a journey would take off the wire roads.
+Once leave the netting and you might with good luck and a skilful
+driver get across the sand without much trouble, but it often meant
+much bottom-gear work and a hot engine, and not infrequently the
+digging out of wheels. The drivers used to try to keep to the tracks
+made by other cars. These were never straight, and the swing from side
+to side reminded you of your first ride on a camel's back. The wire
+roads were a great help to us, and the officer who first thought out
+the idea received our daily blessings. I do not know who he was, but I
+was told the wire road scheme was the outcome of a device suggested
+by a medical officer at Romani in 1916, when infantry could not march
+much more than six miles a day through the sand. This officer made a
+sort of wire moccasin which he attached to the boot and doubled the
+marching powers of the soldier. A sample of those moccasins should
+find a place in our War Museum.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+PREPARING FOR 'ZERO DAY'
+
+
+About the middle of August it was the intention that the attack on the
+Turks' front line in Southern Palestine should be launched some time
+in September. General Allenby knew his force would not be then at
+full strength, but what was happening at other points in the Turkish
+theatres of operations might make it necessary to strike an early blow
+at Gaza to spoil enemy plans elsewhere. However, it was soon seen that
+a September advance was not absolutely necessary. General Allenby
+decided that instead of making an early attack it would be far more
+profitable to wait until his Army had been improved by a longer period
+of training, and until he had got his artillery, particularly some of
+his heavy batteries, into a high state of efficiency. He would risk
+having to take Jerusalem after bad weather had set in rather than be
+unable, owing to the condition of his troops, to exploit an initial
+success to the fullest extent. How wholly justified was this decision
+the subsequent fighting proved, and it is doubtful if there was ever a
+more complete illustration of the wisdom of those directing war policy
+at home submitting to the cool, balanced calculations of the man on
+the spot. The extra six weeks spent in training and preparation were
+of incalculable service to the Allies. I have heard it said that
+a September victory in Palestine would have had its reflex on the
+Italian front, and that the Caporetto disaster would not have assumed
+the gigantic proportions which necessitated the withdrawal to Italy
+of British and French divisions from the Western Front and prevented
+Cambrai being a big victory. That is very doubtful. On the contrary, a
+September battle in Palestine before we were fully ready to follow
+the Turks after breaking and rolling up their line, even if we had
+succeeded in doing this completely, might have deprived us of the
+moral effect of the capture of Jerusalem and of the wonderful
+influence which that victory had on the whole civilised world by
+reason of the sacrifices the Commander-in-Chief made to prevent any
+fighting at all in the precincts of the Holy City. Of this I shall
+speak later, giving the fullest details at my command, for there is no
+page in the story of British arms which better upholds the honour and
+chivalry of the soldier than the preservation of the Holy Place from
+the clash of battle.
+
+That last six weeks of preparation were unforgettable. The London
+newspapers I had the honour to represent as War Correspondent knew
+operations were about to begin, but I did not cable or mail them one
+word which would give an indication that big things were afoot. They
+never asked for news, but were content to wait till they could tell
+the public that victory was ours. In accordance with their practice
+throughout the war the London Press set an example to the world by
+refraining from publishing anything which would give information of
+the slightest value to the enemy. It was a privilege to see that
+victory in the making. Some divisions which had allotted to them the
+hardest part of the attack on Beersheba were drawn out of the line,
+and forming up in big camps between Belah and Shellal set about a
+course of training such as athletes undergo. They had long marches
+in the sand carrying packs and equipment. They were put on a short
+allowance of water, except for washing purposes. They dug, they had
+bombing practice, and with all this extra exercise while the days were
+still very hot they needed no encouragement to continue their games.
+Football was their favourite sport, and the British Tommy is such a
+remarkable fellow that it was usual to see him trudge home to camp
+looking 'fed up' with exercise, and then, after throwing off his pack
+and tunic, run out to kick a ball. The Italian and French detachments
+used to look at him in astonishment, and doubtless they thought his
+enthusiasm for sport was a sore trial. He got thoroughly fit for
+marches over sand, over stony ground, over shifting shingle. During
+the period of concentration he had to cross a district desperately bad
+for marching, and it is more than probable the enemy never believed
+him capable of such endurance. He was often tired, no doubt, but he
+always got to his destination, was rarely footsore, and laughed at the
+worst parts of his journey. The sand was choking, the flies were an
+irritating pest, equipment became painfully heavy; but a big, brave
+heart carried Tommy through his training to a state of perfect
+condition for the heavy test.
+
+To enable about two-thirds of the force to carry on a moving battle
+while the remainder kept half the enemy pinned down to his trench
+system on his right-centre and right, it was necessary to reinforce
+strongly the transport service for our mobile columns. The XXIst Corps
+gave up most of its lorries, tractors, and camels to XXth Corps. These
+had to be moved across from the Gaza sector to our right as secretly
+as possible, and they were not brought up to load at the supply depots
+at Shellal and about Karm until the moment they were required to carry
+supplies for the corps moving to attack.
+
+It is not easy to convey to any one who has not seen an army on the
+move what a vast amount of transport is required to provision two
+corps. In France, where roads are numerous and in comparatively good
+condition, the supply problem could be worked out to a nicety, but in
+a roadless country where there was not a sound half-mile of track, and
+where water had to be developed and every gallon was precious, the
+question of supply needed most anxious consideration, and a big margin
+had to be allowed for contingencies. It will give some idea of the
+requirements when I state that for the supply of water alone the XXth
+Corps had allotted to it 6000 camels and 73 lorries. To feed these
+water camels alone needed a big convoy.
+
+We got an impression of the might and majesty of an army in the field
+as we saw it preparing to take the offensive. The camp of General
+Headquarters where I was located was situated north of Rafa. The
+railway ran on two sides of the camping ground, one line going to
+Belah and the other stretching out to Shellal, where everything was in
+readiness to extend the iron road to the north-east of Karm, on the
+plain which, because the Turks enjoyed complete observation over it,
+had hitherto been No Man's Land. We saw and heard the traffic on this
+section of the line. It was enormous. Heavily laden trains ran night
+and day with a mass of stores and supplies, with motor lorries, cars,
+and tractors; and the ever-increasing volume of traffic told those of
+us who knew nothing of the date of 'Zero day' that it was not far off.
+The heaviest trains seemed to run at night, and the returning empty
+trains were hurried forward at a speed suggesting the urgency of
+clearing the line for a fully loaded train awaiting at Rafa the signal
+to proceed with its valuable load to railhead. Perfect control not
+only on the railway system but in the forward supply yards prevented
+congestion, and when a train arrived at its destination and was split
+up into several parts, well-drilled gangs of troops and Egyptian
+labourers were allotted to each truck, and whether a lorry or a
+tractor had to be unshipped and moved down a ramp, or a truck had to
+be relieved of its ten tons of tibbin, boxes of biscuit and bully, or
+of engineers' stores, the goods were cleared away from the vicinity of
+the line with a celerity which a goods-yard foreman at home would have
+applauded as the smartest work he had ever seen. There was no room for
+slackers in the Army, and the value of each truck was so high that
+it could not be left standing idle for an hour. The organisation was
+equally good at Kantara, where the loading and making up of trains had
+to be arranged precisely as the needs at the front demanded. Those
+remarkable haulers, the caterpillar tractors, cut many a passage
+through the sand, tugging heavy guns and ammunition, stores for the
+air and signal services, machinery for engineers and mobile workshops,
+and sometimes towing a weighty load of petrol to satisfy their
+voracious appetites for that fuel. The tractors did well. Sand was no
+trouble to them, and when mud marooned lorries during the advance in
+November the rattling, rumbling old tractor made fair weather of it.
+The mechanical transport trains will not forget the service of the
+tractors on the morning after Beersheba was taken. From railhead to
+the spot where Father Abraham and his people fed their flocks the
+country was bare and the earth's crust had yielded all its strength
+under the influence of the summer sun. Loaded lorries under their own
+power could not move more than a few yards before they were several
+inches deep in the sandy soil, but a Motor Transport officer devised
+a plan for beating down a track which all lorries could use. He got a
+tractor to haul six unladen lorries, and with all the vehicles using
+their own power the tractor managed to pull them through to Beersheba,
+leaving behind some wheel tracks with a hard foundation. A hundred
+lorries followed, the drivers steering them in the ruts, and they made
+such good progress that by the afternoon they had deposited between
+200 and 300 tons of supplies in Beersheba. The path the tractor cut
+did not last very long, but it was sound enough for the immediate and
+pressing requirements of the Army.
+
+Within a month of his arrival in Egypt, General Allenby had visited
+the whole of his front line and had decided the form his offensive
+should take. As soon as his force had been made up to seven infantry
+divisions and the Desert Mounted Corps, and they had been brought up
+to strength and trained, he would attack, making his main offensive
+against the enemy's left flank while conducting operations vigorously
+and on an extensive scale against the Turkish right-centre and right.
+The principal operation against the left was to be conducted by
+General Chetwode's XXth Corps, consisting of four infantry divisions
+and the Imperial Camel Brigade, and by General Chauvel's Desert
+Mounted Corps. General Bulfin's XXIst Corps was to operate against
+Gaza and the Turkish right-centre south-east of that ancient town.
+If the situation became such as to make it necessary to take the
+offensive before the force had been brought up to strength, the XXIst
+Corps would have had to undertake its task with only two divisions,
+but in those circumstances its operations were to be limited to
+demonstrations and raids. By throwing forward his right, the XXIst
+Corps Commander was to pin the enemy down in the Atawineh district,
+and on the left he would move against the south-western defences of
+Gaza so as to lead the Turks to suppose an attack was to come in this
+sector. That movement being made, the XXth Corps and Desert Mounted
+Corps were to advance against Beersheba, and, having taken it, to
+secure the valuable water supply which was known to have existed there
+since Abraham dug the well of the oath which gave its name to the
+town. Because of water difficulties it was considered vital that
+Beersheba should be captured in one day, a formidable undertaking
+owing to the situation of the town, the high entrenched hills around
+it and the long marches for cavalry and infantry before the attack;
+and in drawing up the scheme based on the Commander-in-Chief's plan,
+the commanders of XXth Corps and Desert Mounted Corps had always to
+work on the assumption that Beersheba would be in their hands by
+nightfall of the first day of the attack. General Barrow's Yeomanry
+Mounted Division was to remain at Shellal in the gap between XXth
+Corps and XXIst Corps in case the enemy should attempt to attack the
+XXth Corps' left flank. Having dealt with the enemy in Beersheba,
+General Chetwode with mounted troops protecting his right was to move
+north and north-west against the enemy's left flank, to drive him from
+his strong positions at Sheria and Hareira, enveloping his left flank
+and striking it obliquely.
+
+While the XXth Corps was moving against this section of the enemy
+line, Desert Mounted Corps was to bring up the mounted division left
+at Shellal, and passing behind the XXth Corps to march on Nejile,
+where there was an excellent water supply, and the wadi Hesi, so as to
+threaten the left rear and the line of retreat of the Turkish Army.
+
+It was always doubtful whether XXth Corps would be able to close up
+the gap between it and the XXIst Corps owing to the length of its
+marches and the distance it was from railhead, and the scheme
+therefore provided that the XXIst Corps should confirm successes
+gained on our right by forcing its way through the tremendously strong
+Gaza position to the line of the wadi Hesi and joining up with Desert
+Mounted Corps. A considerable number of XXth Corps troops would then
+return to the neighbourhood of railhead and release the greater
+part of its transport for the infantry of XXIst Corps moving up the
+Maritime Plain.
+
+This, in summary form, was the scheme General Allenby planned before
+the middle of August, and though the details were not, and could not
+be, worked out until a couple of months had passed, it is noteworthy
+as showing that, notwithstanding the moves an enterprising enemy had
+at his command in a country where positions were entirely favourable
+to him, where he had water near at hand, where the transport of
+supplies was never so serious a problem for him as for us when we got
+on the move, and where he could make us fight almost every step of
+the way, the Commander-in-Chief foresaw and provided for every
+eventuality, and his scheme worked out absolutely and entirely
+'according to plan,' to use the favourite phrase of the German High
+Command.
+
+When the Corps Commanders began working out the details two of the
+greatest problems were transport and water. Only patience and skilful
+development of known sources of supply would surmount the water
+difficulty, and we had to wait till the period of concentration before
+commencing its solution. But to lighten the transport load which must
+have weighed heavily on Corps Staffs, the Commander-in-Chief agreed to
+allow the extension of the railway east of Shellal to be begun sooner
+than he had provided for. It was imperative that railway construction
+should not give the enemy an indication of our intentions. If he had
+realised the nature and scope of our preparations he would have done
+something to counteract them and to deny us that element of surprise
+which exerted so great an influence on the course of the battle.
+General Allenby, however, was willing to take some risks to simplify
+supply difficulties, and he ordered that the extension to a railway
+station north-east of Karm should be completed by the evening of the
+third day before the attack, that a Decauville line from Gamli, not to
+be begun before the sixth day prior to the attack, was to be completed
+to Karm by the day preceding the opening of the fighting at Beersheba,
+and that a new Decauville line should be started at Karm when fighting
+had begun, and should be carried nearly three miles in the Beersheba
+direction early on the following morning. These new lines, though of
+short length, were an inestimable boon to the conductors of supply
+trains. The new railheads both of the standard gauge and light lines
+were well placed, and they not only saved time and shortened the
+journeys of camel convoys and lorry transport columns, but prevented
+congestion at depots in one central spot.
+
+A big effort was made to escape detection by enemy aircraft. For the
+first time since the Egyptian Expeditionary Force took the field we
+had obtained mastery in the air. On the 8th and 15th October two enemy
+planes were shot down behind our lines, and the keenness of our airmen
+for combat made the German aviators extremely careful. They had been
+bold and resolute, taking their observations several thousand feet
+higher than our pilots, it is true, but neither anti-aircraft fire nor
+the presence of our machines in the air had up to this time deterred
+them. However, just at the moment when airwork was of extreme
+importance to the Turks, the German flying men, recognising that our
+pilots had new battle planes and were full of resource and daring,
+showed an unusual lack of enterprise, and we profited from their
+inactivity. The concentration of the force in the positions from which
+it was to attack Beersheba was to have taken seven days, but owing
+to the difficulties attending the development of water at Asluj and
+Khalasa the time was extended to ten days. During this period the
+uppermost thought of commanders was to conceal their movements. All
+marching was done at night and no move of any kind was permitted till
+nearly six o'clock in the evening, when enemy aircraft were usually at
+rest and the light was sufficiently dull to prevent the Fritzes seeing
+much if they had made an exceptionally late excursion. All the tents
+and temporary shelters which had been occupied for weeks were left
+standing. Cookhouses, horse lines, canteens, and so on were untouched,
+and one had an eerie feeling in passing at night through these
+untenanted camping grounds, deserted and lifeless, and a prey to the
+jackal and pariah dog. A vast area of many square miles which had held
+tens of thousands of troops and animals almost became a wilderness
+again, and the few natives hereabouts who had made large profits
+from the sale of eggs, fruit, and vegetables looked disconsolate and
+bewildered at the change, hoping and believing that the empty tents
+merely denoted a temporary absence. But the great majority of the Army
+never came that way again.
+
+When the infantry started on the march, divisions and brigades had
+allotted to them particular areas for their march routes, and all over
+that country, where scarcely a tree or native hut existed to make
+a landmark, there were dotted small arrow-pointed boards with the
+direction 'A road,' 'B road,' 'Z road,' as the case might be. Marching
+in the dark hours when a refreshing air succeeded the heat of the day,
+the troops halted as soon as a purple flush threw into high relief the
+southern end of the Judean hills, and they hid themselves in the wadis
+and broken ground; and on one unit vacating a bivouac area it was
+occupied by another, thus making the areas in which the troops rested
+as few as possible.
+
+The concentration was worked to a time-table. Not only were brigades
+allotted certain marches each night, but they were given specified
+times to cover certain distances, and these were arranged according to
+the condition of the ground. In parts it was very broken and covered
+with loose stones, and the pace of infantry by night was very slightly
+more than one mile per hour. The routes for guns were not chosen
+until the whole country had been reconnoitred, and it was a highly
+creditable performance for artillery to get their field guns and
+heavy howitzer batteries through to the time-table. But the clockwork
+precision of the movements reflected even more highly on the staff
+working out the details than on the infantry and artillery, and it may
+be said with perfect truth that the staff made no miscalculation
+or mistake. The XXth Corps staff maps and plans, and the details
+accompanying them, were masterpieces of clearness and completeness.
+The men who fought out the plans to a triumphant finish were glad to
+recognise this perfection of staff work.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: See Appendix VI.]
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+THE BEERSHEBA VICTORY
+
+
+The XXth Corps began its movement on the night of 20-21st October.
+The whole Corps was not on the march, but a sufficient force was sent
+forward to form supply dumps and to store water at Esani for troops
+covering Desert Mounted Corps engineers engaged on the development of
+water at Khalasa and Asluj. Some of the Australian and New Zealand
+troops engaged on this work had previously been at these places.
+
+In the early summer it was thought desirable to destroy the Turkish
+railway which ran from Beersheba to Asluj and on to Kossaima, in order
+to prevent an enemy raid on our communications between El Arish and
+Rafa, and the mounted troops with the Imperial Camel Corps had had
+a most successful day in destroying many miles of line and several
+bridges. The Turks were badly in need of rails for the line they were
+then constructing down to Deir Sineid, and they had lifted some of the
+rails between Asluj and Kossaima, but during our raid we broke every
+rail over some fifteen miles of track. Khalasa and Asluj being water
+centres became the points of concentration for two mounted divisions,
+and the splendid Colonials in the engineer sections worked at the
+wells as if the success of the whole enterprise depended upon their
+efforts, as, indeed, to a very large extent it did. Theirs was not an
+eight hours day. They worked under many difficulties, often thigh deep
+in water and mud, cleaning out and deepening wells and installing
+power pumps, putting up large canvas tanks for storage, and
+making water troughs. The results exceeded anticipations, and the
+Commander-in-Chief, on a day when the calls on his time were many and
+urgent, made a long journey to thank the officers and men for the work
+they had done and to express his high appreciation of their skill and
+energy.
+
+The principal work carried out by the XXth Corps during the period of
+concentration consisted in laying the standard gauge line to Imara
+and opening the station at that place on October 28; prolonging the
+railway line to a point three-quarters of a mile north-north-east
+of Karm, where the station was opened on November 3; completing by
+October 30 the light railway from the east bank of the wadi Ghuzze at
+Gamli _via_ Karm to Khasif; and developing water at Esani, Malaga, and
+Abu Ghalyun for the use first by cavalry detachments and then by the
+60th Division. Cisterns in the Khasif and Imsiri area were stocked
+with 60,000 gallons of water to be used by the 53rd and 74th
+Divisions, and this supply was to be supplemented by camel convoys.
+Apparently the enemy knew very little about the concentration until
+about October 26, and even then he could have had only slight
+knowledge of the extent of our movements, and probably knew nothing at
+all of where the first blow was to fall. In the early hours of October
+27 he did make an attempt to interfere with our concentration, and
+there was a spirited little action on our outpost line which had been
+pushed out beyond the plain to a line of low hills near the wadi
+Hanafish. The Turks in overwhelming force met a most stubborn defence
+by the Middlesex Yeomanry, and if the enemy took these London yeomen
+as an average sample of General Allenby's troops, this engagement must
+have given them a foretaste of what was in store for them.
+
+The Middlesex Yeomanry (the 1st County of London Yeomanry, to give
+the regiment the name by which it is officially known, though the men
+almost invariably use the much older Territorial title) and the 21st
+Machine Gun Squadron, held the long ridge from El Buggar to hill 630.
+There was a squadron dismounted on hill 630, three troops on hill 720,
+the next and highest point on the ridge, and a post at El Buggar. At
+four o'clock in the morning the latter post was fired on by a Turkish
+cavalry patrol, and an hour later it was evident that the enemy
+intended to try to drive us off the ridge, his occupation of which
+would have given him the power to harass railway construction parties
+by shell-fire, even if it did not entirely stop the work. Some 3000
+Turkish infantry, 1200 cavalry, and twelve guns had advanced from the
+Kauwukah system of defences to attack our outpost line on the ridge.
+They heavily engaged hill 630, working round both flanks, and brought
+heavy machine-gun and artillery fire to bear on the squadron holding
+it. The Royal Flying Corps estimated that a force of 2000 men attacked
+the garrison, which was completely cut off.
+
+A squadron of the City of London Yeomanry sent to reinforce was held
+up by a machine-gun barrage and had to withdraw. The garrison held
+out magnificently all day in a support trench close behind the crest
+against odds of twenty to one, and repeatedly beat off rushes,
+although the bodies of dead Turks showed that they got as close as
+forty yards from the defenders. Two officers were wounded, and four
+other ranks killed and twelve wounded.
+
+The attack on hill 720 was made by 1200 cavalry supported by a heavy
+volume of shell and machine-gun fire. During the early morning two
+desperate charges were beaten off, but in a third charge the enemy
+gained possession of the hill after the detachment had held out for
+six hours. All our officers were killed or wounded and all the men
+were casualties except three. At six o'clock in the evening the Turks
+were holding this position in strength against the 3rd Australian
+Light Horse, but two infantry brigades of the 53rd Division were
+moving towards the ridge, and during the evening the enemy retired and
+we held the ridge from this time on quite securely. The strong defence
+of the Middlesex Yeomanry undoubtedly prevented the Turks establishing
+themselves on the ridge, and saved the infantry from having to make a
+night attack which might have been costly. Thereafter the enemy made
+no attempt to interfere with the concentration. The yeomanry losses in
+this encounter were 1 officer and 23 other ranks killed, 5 officers
+and 48 other ranks wounded, 2 officers and 8 other ranks missing.
+
+On the night of October 30-31 a brilliant moon lit up the whole
+country. The day had been very hot, and at sunset an entire absence of
+wind promised that the night march of nearly 40,000 troops of all
+arms would be attended by all the discomforts of dust and heat. The
+thermometer fell, but there was not a breath of wind to shift the pall
+of dust which hung above the long columns of horse, foot, and guns.
+Where the tracks were sandy some brigades often appeared to be
+advancing through one of London's own particular fogs. Men's faces
+became caked with yellow dust, their nostrils were hot and burning,
+and parched throats could not be relieved because of the necessity
+of conserving the water allowance. A hot day was in prospect on the
+morrow, and the fear of having to fight on an empty water-bottle
+prevented many a gallant fellow broaching his supply before daybreak.
+Most of the men had had a long acquaintance with heat in the Middle
+East, and the high temperature would have caused them scarcely any
+trouble if there had been wind to carry away the dust clouds. The
+cavalry marched over harder and more stony ground than the infantry.
+They advanced from Khalasa and Asluj a long way south of Beersheba to
+the east of the town. It was a big night march of some thirty miles,
+but it was well within the powers of the veterans of the Anzac Mounted
+Division and Australian Mounted Division, whose men and horses were in
+admirable condition.
+
+The infantry were ordered to be on their line of deployment by four
+o'clock on the morning of October 31, and in every case they were
+before time. There had been many reconnaissances by officers who were
+to act as guides to columns, and they were quite familiar with the
+ground; and the guns and ammunition columns were taken by routes which
+had been carefully selected and marked. In places the banks of
+wadis had been cut into and ramps made to enable the rough stony
+watercourses to be practicable for wheels, and, broken as the country
+was, and though all previous preparations had to be made without
+arousing the suspicions of Turks and wandering Bedouins, there was no
+incident to check the progress of infantry or guns. Occasional rifle
+fire and some shelling occurred during the early hours, but at a
+little after three A.M. the XXth Corps advanced headquarters had the
+news that all columns had reached their allotted positions.
+
+The XXth Corps plan was to attack the enemy's works between the
+Khalasa road and the wadi Saba with the 60th and 74th Divisions, while
+the defences north of the wadi Saba were to be masked by the Imperial
+Camel Corps Brigade and two battalions of the 53rd Division, the
+remainder of the latter division protecting the left flank of the
+Corps from any attack by enemy troops who might move south from the
+Sheria area. The first objective was a hill marked on the map as
+'1070,' about 6000 yards south-west of Beersheba. It was a prominent
+feature, 500 yards or perhaps a little more from a portion of the
+enemy's main line, and the Turks held it strongly and were supported
+by a section of German machine-gunners. We had to win this height in
+order to get good observation of the enemy's main line of works, and
+to allow of the advance of field artillery within wire-cutting range
+of an elaborate system of works protecting Beersheba from an advance
+from the west. At six the guns began to bombard 1070, and the volume
+of fire concentrated on that spot must have given the Turks a big
+surprise. On a front of 4500 yards we had in action seventy-six
+18-pounders, twenty 4.5-inch howitzers, and four 3.7-inch howitzers,
+while eight 60-pounders, eight 6-inch howitzers, and four 4.5-inch
+howitzers were employed in counter battery work. The absence of wind
+placed us at a heavy disadvantage. The high explosive shells bursting
+about the crest of 1070 raised enormous clouds of dust which obscured
+everything, and after a short while even the flames of exploding
+shells were entirely hidden from view. The gunners had to stop firing
+for three-quarters of an hour to allow the dust to settle. They then
+reopened, and by half-past eight, the wire-cutting being reported
+completed, an intense bombardment was ordered, under cover of which,
+and with the assistance of machine-gun fire from aeroplanes, the 181st
+Infantry Brigade of the 60th Division went forward to the assault.
+They captured the hill in ten minutes, only sustaining about one
+hundred casualties, and taking nearly as many prisoners. A German
+machine-gunner who fell into our hands bemoaned the fact that he had
+not a weapon left--every one of the machine guns had been knocked out
+by the artillery, and a number were buried by our fire.
+
+The first phase of the operations having thus ended successfully quite
+early in the day, the second stage was entered upon. Field guns were
+rushed forward at the gallop over ground broken by shallow wadis and
+up and down a very uneven stony surface. The gun teams were generally
+exposed during the advance and were treated to heavy shrapnel fire,
+but they swung into action at prearranged points and set about
+wire-cutting with excellent effect. The first part of the second phase
+consisted in reducing the enemy's main line from the Khalasa road to
+the wadi Saba, though the artillery bombarded the whole line. The 60th
+Division on the right had two brigades attacking and one in divisional
+reserve, and the 74th Division attacking on the left of the 60th
+likewise had a brigade in reserve. The 74th, while waiting to advance,
+came under considerable shell-fire from batteries on the north of the
+wadi, and it was some time before their fire could be silenced. As
+a rule the enemy works were cut into rocky, rising ground and the
+trenches were well enclosed in wire fixed to iron stanchions.
+They were strongly made and there were possibilities of prolonged
+opposition, but by the time the big assault was launched the Turks
+knew they were being attacked on both sides of Beersheba and they must
+have become anxious about a line of retreat. General Shea reported
+that the wire in front of him was cut before noon, but General
+Girdwood was not certain that the wire was sufficiently broken on the
+74th Division's front, though he intimated to the Corps Commander
+that he was ready to attack at the same time as the 60th. It
+still continued a windless day, and the dust clouds prevented any
+observation of the wire entanglements. General Girdwood turned this
+disadvantage to account, and ordering his artillery to raise their
+fire slightly so that it should fall just in front of and about the
+trenches, put up what was in effect a dust barrage, and under cover
+of it selected detachments of his infantry advanced almost into the
+bursting shell to cut passages through the wire with wire-cutters. The
+dismounted yeomanry of the 231st and 230th Infantry Brigades rushed
+through, and by half-past one the 74th Division had secured their
+objectives. The 179th and 181st Brigades of the 60th Division had won
+their trenches almost an hour earlier, and about 5000 yards of works
+were in our hands south of the wadi Saba. The enemy had 3000 yards of
+trenches north of the wadi, and though these were threatened from the
+south and west, it was not until five o'clock that the 230th Brigade
+occupied them, the Turks clearing out during the bombardment. During
+the day, on the left of the 74th Division, the Imperial Camel Corps
+Brigade and two battalions of the 53rd Division held the ground to
+the north of the wadi Saba to a point where the remainder of the 53rd
+Division watched for the approach of any enemy force from the
+north, while the 10th Division about Shellal protected the line of
+communications east of the wadi Ghuzze, and the Yeomanry Mounted
+Division was on the west side of the wadi Ghuzze in G.H.Q. reserve.
+The XXth Corps' losses were 7 officers killed and 42 wounded,
+129 other ranks killed, 988 wounded and 5 missing, a light total
+considering the nature of the works carried during the day. It was
+obvious that the enemy was taken completely by surprise by the
+direction of the attack, and the rapidity with which we carried his
+strongest points was overwhelming. The Turk did not attempt anything
+in the nature of a counter-attack by the Beersheba garrison, nor did
+he make any move from Hareira against the 53rd Division. Had he done
+so the 10th Division and the Yeomanry Mounted Division would have
+seized the opportunity of falling on him from Shellal, and the Turk
+chose the safer course of allowing the Beersheba garrison to stand
+unaided in its own defences. The XXth Corps' captures included 25
+officers, 394 other ranks, 6 guns, and numerous machine guns.
+
+The Desert Mounted Corps met with stubborn opposition in their
+operations south-east and east of Beersheba, but they were carried
+through no less successfully than those of the XXth Corps. The mounted
+men had had a busy time. General Ryrie's 2nd Australian Light Horse
+Brigade and the Imperial Camel Corps Brigade had moved southwards
+on October 2, and on them and on the 1st and 2nd Field Squadrons
+Australian Engineers the bulk of the work fell of developing water and
+making and marking tracks which, in the sandy soil, became badly cut
+up. On the evening of October 30 the Anzac Mounted Division was at
+Asluj, the Australian Mounted Division at Khalasa, the 7th Mounted
+Brigade at Esani, Imperial Camel Brigade at Hiseia, and the Yeomanry
+Mounted Division in reserve at Shellal. The Anzac Division commanded
+by General Chaytor left Asluj during the night, and in a march of
+twenty-four miles round the south of Beersheba met with only slight
+opposition on the way to Bir el Hamam and Bir Salim abu Irgeig,
+between five and seven miles east of the town. The 2nd Australian
+Light Horse Brigade during the morning advanced north to take the high
+hill Tel el Sakaty, a little east of the Beersheba-Hebron road, which
+was captured at one o'clock, and the brigade then swept across
+the metalled road which was in quite fair condition, and which
+subsequently was of great service to us during the advance of one
+infantry division on Bethlehem and Jerusalem. The 1st Australian Light
+Horse Brigade commanded by General Cox, and the New Zealand Mounted
+Rifles Brigade under General Meldrum, moved against Tel el Saba, a
+1000-feet hill which rises very precipitously on the northern bank
+of the wadi Saba, 4000 yards due east of Beersheba. Tel el Saba is
+believed to be the original site of Beersheba. It had been made into a
+strong redoubt and was well held by a substantial garrison adequately
+dug in and supported by nests of machine-gunners. The right bank of
+the wadi Khalil was also strongly held, and between the Hebron road
+and Tel el Saba some German machine-gunners in three houses offered
+determined opposition. The New Zealanders and a number of General
+Cox's men crept up the wadi Saba, taking full advantage of the cover
+offered by the high banks, and formed up under the hill of Saba. They
+then dashed up the steep sides while the horse artillery lashed the
+crest with their fire, and driving the Turks from their trenches had
+captured the hill by three o'clock. At about the same time the 1st
+Light Horse Brigade suitably dealt with the machine-gunners in the
+houses. Much ground east of Beersheba had thus been made good, and
+the Hebron road was denied to the garrison of the town as a line of
+retreat. The Anzac Mounted Division was then reinforced by General
+Wilson's 3rd Australian Light Horse Brigade, and by six P.M. the
+Division held a long crescent of hills from Point 970, a mile north
+of Beersheba, through Tel el Sakaty, round south-eastwards to Bir el
+Hamam.
+
+General Hodgson's Australian Mounted Division had a night march of
+thirty-four miles from Khalasa to Iswawin, south-east of Beersheba,
+and after the 3rd Light Horse Brigade had been detached to assist the
+Anzac Division, orders were given to General Grant's 4th Australian
+Light Horse Brigade to attack and take the town of Beersheba from the
+east. The orders were received at four o'clock, and until we had
+got an absolute hold on Tel el Saba an attack on the town from this
+direction would have been suicidal, as an attacking force would have
+been between two fires. The shelling of the cavalry during the day had
+been rather hot, and enemy airmen had occasionally bombed them. It was
+getting late, and as it was of the greatest importance that the town's
+available water should be secured that night, General Grant was
+directed to attack with the utmost vigour. His brigade worthily
+carried out its orders. The ground was very uneven and was covered
+with a mass of large stones and shingle. The trenches were well manned
+and strongly held, but General Grant ordered them to be taken at the
+gallop. The Australians carried them with an irresistible charge;
+dismounted, cleared the first line of all the enemy in it, ran on and
+captured the second and third system of trenches, and then, their
+horses having been brought up, galloped into the town to prevent any
+destruction of the wells. The first-line eastern trenches of Beersheba
+were eight feet deep and four feet wide, and as there were many of the
+enemy in them they were a serious obstacle to be taken in one rush.
+This charge was a sterling feat, and unless the town had been occupied
+that night most, if not all, of the cavalry would have had to withdraw
+many miles to water, and subsequent operations might have been
+imperilled. Until we had got Beersheba there appeared small prospect
+of watering more than two brigades in this area.
+
+Luckily there had been two thunderstorms a few days before the attack,
+and we found a few pools of sweet water which enabled the whole of the
+Corps' horses to be watered during the night. These pools soon dried
+up and the water problem again became serious. The Commander-in-Chief
+rewarded General Grant with the D.S.O. as an appreciation of his work,
+and the brigade was gratified at a well-earned honour. The 7th Mounted
+Brigade was held up for some time in the afternoon by a flanking fire
+from Ras Ghannam, south of Beersheba, but this was silenced in time
+to enable the brigade to assist in the occupation of Beersheba at
+nightfall. The 4th Light Horse Brigade's captures in the charge were
+58 officers, 1090 other ranks, and 10 field guns, and the total 'bag'
+of the Desert Mounted Corps was 70 officers and 1458 other ranks.
+
+The loss of Beersheba was a heavy blow to the Turk. Yet he did not
+even then realise to the full the significance of our capture of the
+town. He certainly failed to appreciate that we were to use it as
+a jumping-off place to attack his main line from Gaza to Sheria by
+rolling it up from left to right. In this plan there is no doubt that
+General Allenby entirely deceived his enemy, for in the next few
+days there was the best of evidence to show that General Kress von
+Kressenstein believed we were going to advance from Beersheba to
+Jerusalem up the Hebron road, and he made his dispositions to oppose
+us here. It was not merely the moral effect of the loss of Beersheba
+that disturbed the Turks; they had been driven out of a not
+unimportant stronghold.
+
+All through the many centuries since Abraham and his people led a
+pastoral life near the wells, Beersheba had been a meanly appointed
+place. There were no signs as far as I could see of any elaborate
+ruins to indicate anything larger than a native settlement. Elsewhere
+we saw crumbling walls of ancient castles and fortresses to tell of
+conquerors and glories long since faded away, of relics of an age when
+great captains led martial men into new worlds to conquer, of the
+time when the Crusading spirit was abroad and the flower of Western
+chivalry came East to hold the land for Christians. Here the native
+quarter suggested that trade in Beersheba was purely local and not
+ambitious, that it provided nothing for the world's commerce save a
+few skins and hides, and that the inhabitants were content to live the
+rude, simple lives of their forefathers. But the enterprising German
+arrived, and you could tell by his work how he intended to compel a
+change in the unchanging character of the people. He built a handsome
+Mosque--but before he was driven out he wired and mined it for
+destruction. He built a seat of government, a hospital, and a
+barracks, all of them pretentious buildings for such a town, well
+designed, constructed of stone with red-tiled roofs, and the gardens
+were nicely laid out. There were a railway station and storehouses on
+a scale which would not yield a return on capital expenditure for many
+years, and the water tower and engine sheds were built to last longer
+than merely military necessities demanded. They were fashioned by
+European craftsmen, and the solidity of the structures offered strange
+contrast to the rough-and-ready native houses. The primary object of
+the Hun scheme was, doubtless, to make Beersheba a suitable base for
+an attack on the Suez Canal, and the manner of improving the Hebron
+road, of setting road engineers to construct zigzags up hills so that
+lorries could move over the road, was part of the plan of men whose
+vision was centred on cutting the Suez Canal artery of the British
+Empire's body. The best laid schemes....
+
+When I entered Beersheba our troops held a line of outposts
+sufficiently far north of the town to prevent the Turks shelling it,
+and the place was secure except from aircraft bombs, of which a number
+fell into the town without damaging anything of much consequence. Some
+of the troops fell victims to booby traps. Apparently harmless whisky
+bottles exploded when attempts were made to draw the corks, and
+several small mines went up. Besides the mines in the Mosque there
+was a good deal of wiring about the railway station, and some rolling
+stock was made ready for destruction the instant a door was opened.
+The ruse was expected; some Australian engineers drew the charges,
+and the coaches were afterwards of considerable service to the supply
+branch.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+GAZA DEFENCES
+
+
+Meanwhile there were important happenings at the other end of the
+line. Gaza was about to submit to the biggest of all her ordeals. She
+had been a bone of contention for thousands of years. The Pharaohs
+coveted her and more than 3500 years ago made bloody strife within the
+environs of the town. Alexander the Great besieged her, and Persians
+and Arabians opposed that mighty general. The Ptolemies and the
+Antiochi for centuries fought for Gaza, whose inhabitants had a
+greater taste for the mart than for the sword, and when the Maccabees
+were carrying a victorious war through Philistia, the people of Gaza
+bought off Jonathan, but the Jews occupied the city itself about a
+century before the Christian era. Later on the place was captured
+after a year's siege and destroyed, and for long it remained a mass
+of mouldering ruins. Pompey revived it, making it a free city, and
+Gabinius extended it close to the harbour, whilst under Caesar and
+Herod its prosperity and fame increased. In succeeding centuries
+Gaza's commerce flourished under the Greeks, who founded schools
+famous for rhetoric and philosophy, till the Mahomedan wave swept
+over the land in the first half of the seventh century, when the town
+became a shadow of its former self, though it continued to exist as a
+centre for trade. The Crusaders made their influence felt, and many
+are the traces of their period in this ancient city, but Askalon
+always had more Crusader support. Napoleon's attack on Gaza found
+Abdallah's army in a very different state of preparedness from von
+Kress's Turkish army. Nearly all Abdallah's artillery was left behind
+in a gun park at Jaffa owing to lack of transport, and though he had
+a numerically superior force he did not like Napoleon's dispositions,
+and retreated when Kleber moved up the plain to pass between Gaza and
+the sea, and the cavalry advanced east of the Mound of Hebron, or Ali
+Muntar, as we know the hill up which Samson is reputed to have carried
+the gates and bar of Gaza. For nearly a century and a quarter since
+Napoleon passed forwards and backwards through the town, Gaza pursued
+the arts of peace in the lethargic spirit which suits the native
+temperament, but in eight months of 1917 it was the cockpit of strife
+in the Middle East, and there was often crammed into one day as
+much fighting energy as was shown in all the battles of the past
+thirty-five centuries, Napoleon's campaign included.
+
+Fortunately after the battles of March and April nearly all the
+civilian population left the town for quieter quarters. Some of them
+on returning must have had difficulty in identifying their homes. In
+the centre of the town, where bazaars radiated from the quarter of
+which the Great Mosque was the hub, the houses were a mass of stones
+and rubble, and the narrow streets and tortuous byways were filled
+with fallen walls and roofs. The Great Mosque had entirely lost its
+beauty. We had shelled it because its minaret, one of those delicately
+fashioned spires which, seen from a distance, lead a traveller to
+imagine a native town in the East to be arranged on an artistic and
+orderly plan, was used as a Turkish observation post, and the Mosque
+itself as an ammunition store. I am told our guns were never laid on
+to this objective until there was an accident within it which exploded
+the ammunition. Be that as it may, there was ample justification for
+shelling the Mosque. I went in to examine the structure a few hours
+after the Turks had been compelled to evacuate the town, and whilst
+they were then shelling it with unpleasant severity. Amid the wrecked
+marble columns, the broken pulpit, the torn and twisted lamps and
+crumbling walls were hundreds of thousands of rounds of small-arms
+ammunition, most of it destroyed by explosion. A great shell had cut
+the minaret in half and had left exposed telephone wires leading
+direct to army headquarters and to the Turkish gunners' fire control
+station. Most of the Mosque furniture and all the carpets had
+been removed, but a few torn copies of the Koran, some of them in
+manuscript with marginal notes, lay mixed up with German newspapers
+and some typical Turkish war propaganda literature. That Mosque, which
+Saladin seized from the Crusaders and turned from a Christian into
+a Mahomedan place of worship, was unquestionably used for military
+purposes, and the Turks cared as little for its religious character or
+its venerable age as they did for the mosque on Nebi Samwil, where the
+remains of the Prophet Samuel are supposed to rest. Their stories of
+the trouble taken to avoid military contact with holy places and sites
+were all bunkum and eyewash. They would have fought from the walls of
+the Holy City and placed machine-gun nests in the Church of the Holy
+Sepulchre and the Mosque of Omar if they had thought it would spare
+them the loss of Jerusalem.
+
+Gaza had, as I have said, been turned into a fortress with a mass of
+field works, in places of considerable natural strength. If our force
+had been on the defensive at Gaza the Germans would not have attacked
+without an army of at least three times our strength. It is doubtful
+if the Turks put as much material in use on Gallipoli as they did
+here. Their trenches were deeply cut and were protected by an immense
+amount of wire. In the sand-dune area they used a vast quantity of
+sandbags, and they met the shortage of jute stuffs by making small
+sacks of bedstead hangings and curtains which, in the dry heat of the
+summer, wore very well. Looking across No Man's Land one could easily
+pick out a line of trenches by a red, a vivid blue, or a saffron
+sandbag. The Turkish dug-outs were most elaborate places of security.
+The excavators had gone down into the hard earth well beneath the
+deep strata of sand, and they roofed these holes with six, eight, and
+sometimes ten layers of palm logs. We had seen these beautiful
+trees disappearing and had guessed the reason. But an even greater
+protection than the devices of military engineers had been provided
+for the Turks by Dame Nature. Along the southern outskirts of the town
+all the fields were enclosed by giant cactus hedges, sometimes with
+stems as thick as a man's body and not infrequently rearing their
+strong limbs and prickly leaves twenty feet above the ground. The
+hedges were deep as well as high. They were at once a screen for
+defending troops and a barrier as impenetrable as the walls of a
+fortress. If one line of cactus hedges had been cut through, infantry
+would have found another and yet another to a depth of nearly two
+miles, and as the whole of these thorny enclosures were commanded by
+a few machine guns the possibility of getting through was almost
+hopeless. There were similar hedges on the eastern and western sides
+of Gaza, but they were not quite so deep as on the south. On the
+western side, and extending south as far as the desert which the Army
+had crossed with such steady, methodical, and one may also say painful
+progression, was a wide belt of yellow sand, sometimes settled down
+hard under the weight of heavy winds, and in other places yielding to
+the pressure of feet. The Turks had laboured hard in this mile and
+a half width of sand, right down to the sea, to protect their right
+flank. There was a point about 4000 yards due west from the edge of
+the West Town of Gaza which we called Sea Post. It was the western
+extremity of the enemy's exceedingly intricate system of defences. The
+beach was below the level of the Post. From Sea Post for about 1500
+yards the Turkish front line ran to Rafa Redoubt. There were wired-in
+entrenchments with strong points here and there, and a series of
+communication trenches and redoubts behind them for 3000 yards to
+Sheikh Hasan, which was the port of Gaza, if you can so describe an
+open roadstead with no landing facilities. From Rafa Redoubt the
+contour of the sand dunes permitted the enemy to construct an
+exceedingly strong line running due south for 2000 yards, the
+strongest points being named by us Zowaid trench, El Burj trench,
+Triangle trench, Peach Orchard, and El Arish Redoubt, the nomenclature
+being reminiscent of the trials of the troops in the desert march.
+Behind this line there was many a sunken passageway and shelter from
+gunfire, while backing the whole system, and, for reasons I have
+given, an element of defence as strong as the prepared positions, were
+cactus hedges enclosing the West Town's gardens.
+
+From El Arish Redoubt the line ran east again to Mazar trench with
+a prodigal expenditure of wire in front of it, and then south for
+several hundred yards, when it was thrown out to the south-west to
+embrace a position of high importance known as Umbrella Hill, a dune
+of blazing yellow sand facing, about 500 yards away, Samson's Ridge,
+which we held strongly and on which the enemy often concentrated his
+fire. This ended the Turks' right-half section of the Gaza defences.
+Close by passed what from time immemorial has been called the Cairo
+Road, a track worn down by caravans of camels moving towards Kantara
+on their way with goods for Egyptian bazaars. But there was no break
+in the trench system which ran across the plain, a beautiful green
+tinted with the blooms of myriads of wild flowers when we first
+advanced over it in March, now browned and dried up by absolutely
+cloudless summer days. In the gardens on the western slopes of the
+hills running south from Ali Muntar the Turk had achieved much
+spadework, but he had done far more work on the hills themselves, and
+these were a frame of fortifications for Ali Muntar, on which we once
+sat for a few hours, and the possession of which meant the reduction
+of Gaza. By the end of summer the hill of Muntar had lost its shape.
+When we saw it during the first battle of Gaza it was a bold feature
+surmounted by a few trees and the whitened walls and grey dome of a
+sheikh's tomb. In the earlier battles of 1917 much was done to ruffle
+Muntar's crest. We saw trees uprooted, others lose their limbs, and
+naval gunfire threatened the foundations of the old chief's burying
+place. But Ali Muntar stoutly resisted the heavy shells' attack. As
+if Samson's feat had endowed it with some of the strong man's powers,
+Muntar for a long time received its daily thumps stoically; but by
+degrees the resistance of the old hill declined, and when agents
+reported that the sheikh's tomb was used as an observation post,
+8-inch howitzers got on to it and made it untenable. There was a bit
+of it left at the end, but not more than would offer protection from a
+rifle bullet, and the one tree left standing was a limbless trunk. The
+crest of the hill lost its roundness, and the soil which had worked
+out through the shell craters had changed the colour of the summit.
+Old Ali Muntar had had the worst of the bombardment, and if some
+future sheikh should choose the site for a summer residence he will
+come across a wealth of metal in digging his foundations.
+
+To capture Gaza the Formidable it was proposed first to take the
+western defences from Umbrella Hill to Sea Post, to press on to Sheikh
+Hasan and thus turn the right flank of the whole position. That would
+compel the enemy to reinforce his right flank when he was being
+heavily attacked elsewhere, and if he had been transferring his
+reserves to meet the threat against the left of his main line after
+Beersheba had been won for the Empire he would be in sore trouble.
+Gaza had already tasted a full sample of the war food we intended it
+should consume. Before the attack on Beersheba had developed, ships of
+war and the heavy guns of XXIst Corps had rattled its defences. The
+warships' fire was chiefly directed on targets our land guns could
+not reach. Observers in aircraft controlled the fire and notified the
+destruction of ammunition dumps at Deir Sineid and other places. The
+work of the heavy batteries was watched with much interest. Some were
+entirely new batteries which had never been in action against any
+enemy, and they only arrived on the Gaza front five weeks before the
+battle. These were not allowed to register until shortly before the
+battle began, and they borrowed guns from other batteries in order to
+train the gun crews. So desirous was General Bulfin to conceal the
+concentration of heavies that the wireless code calls were only those
+used by batteries which were in position before his Corps was formed,
+and the volume of fire came as an absolute surprise to the enemy. It
+came as a surprise also to some of us in camp at G.H.Q. one night at
+the end of October. Suddenly there was a terrific burst of fire on
+about four miles of front. Vivid fan-shaped flashes stabbed the sky,
+the bright moonlight of the East did not dim the guns' lightning, and
+their thunderous voices were a challenge the enemy was powerless to
+refuse. He took it up slowly as if half ashamed of his weakness. Then
+his fire increased in volume and in strength, but it ebbed again and
+we knew the reason. We held some big 'stuff' for counter battery work,
+and our fire was effective.
+
+The preliminary bombardment began on October 27 and it grew in
+intensity day by day. The Navy co-operated on October 29 and
+subsequent days. The whole line from Middlesex Hill (close to Outpost
+Hill) to the sea was subjected to heavy fire, all the routes to the
+front line were shelled during the night by 60-pounder and field-gun
+batteries. Gas shells dosed the centres of communication and bivouac
+areas, and every quarter of the defences was made uncomfortable. The
+sound-ranging sections told us the enemy had between sixteen and
+twenty-four guns south of Gaza, and from forty to forty-eight north of
+the town, and over 100 guns were disclosed, including more than thirty
+firing from the Tank Redoubt well away to the eastward. On October 29
+some of the guns south of Gaza had been forced back by the severity of
+our counter battery work, and of the ten guns remaining between us and
+the town on that date all except four had been removed by November
+2. For several nights the bombardment continued without a move by
+infantry. Then just at the moment von Kress was discussing the loss of
+Beersheba and his plans to meet our further advance in that direction,
+some infantry of the 75th Division raided Outpost Hill, the southern
+extremity of the entrenched hill system south of Ali Muntar, and
+killed far more Turks than they took prisoners. There was an
+intense bombardment of the enemy's works at the same time. The next
+night--November 1-2--was the opening of XXIst Corps' great attack on
+Gaza, and though the enemy did not leave the town or the remainder of
+the trenches we had not assaulted till nearly a week afterwards, the
+vigour of the attack and the bravery with which it was thrust home,
+and the subsequent total failure of counter-attacks, must have made
+the enemy commanders realise on the afternoon of November 2 that Gaza
+was doomed and that their boasts that Gaza was impregnable were thin
+air. Their reserves were on the way to their left where they were
+urgently wanted, there was nothing strong enough to replace such heavy
+wastage caused to them by the attack of the night of November 1 and
+the morning of the 2nd, and our big gains of ground were an enormous
+advantage to us for the second phase in the Gaza sector, for we had
+bitten deeply into the Turks' right flank.
+
+Like the concentration of the XXth Corps and the Desert Mounted Corps
+for the jump off on to Beersheba, the preparations against the Turks'
+extreme right had to be very secretly made. The XXIst Corps Commander
+had to look a long way ahead. He had to consider the possibility of
+the enemy abandoning Gaza when Beersheba was captured, and falling
+back to the line of the wadi Hesi. His troops had been confined to
+trench warfare for months, digging and sitting in trenches, putting
+out wire, going out on listening patrols, sniping and doing all the
+drudgery in the lines of earthworks. They were hard and strong, their
+health having considerably improved since the early summer, but at the
+end of September the infantry were by no means march fit. Realising
+that, if General Allenby's operations were successful, and no one
+doubted that, we should have a period of open warfare when troops
+would be called upon to make long marches and undergo the privations
+entailed by transport difficulties, General Bulfin brought as many
+men as he could spare from the trenches back to Deir el Belah and the
+coast, where they had route marches over the sand for the restoration
+of their marching powers. Gradually he accumulated supplies in
+sheltered positions just behind the front. In three dumps were
+collected seven days' mobile rations, ammunition, water, and
+engineers' material. Tracks were constructed, cables buried, concealed
+gun positions and brigade and battalion headquarters made, and from
+the 25th October troops were ready to move off with two days' rations
+on the man. Should the enemy retire, General Hill's 52nd (Lowland)
+Division was to march up the shore beneath the sand cliffs, get across
+the wadi Hesi at the mouth, detach a force to proceed towards Askalon,
+and then move eastward down to the ridge opposite Deir Sineid, and, by
+securing the bridge and crossings of the wadi Hesi, prevent the enemy
+establishing himself on the north bank of the wadi. The operations
+on the night of November 1-2 were conducted by Major-General Hare,
+commanding the 54th Division, to which General Leggatt's 156th
+Infantry Brigade was temporarily attached. The latter brigade was
+given the important task of capturing Umbrella Hill and El Arish
+Redoubt. Umbrella Hill was to be taken first, and as it was
+anticipated the enemy would keep up a strong artillery fire for a
+considerable time after the position had been taken, and that his fire
+would interfere with the assembly and advance of troops detailed
+for the second phase, the first phase was timed to start four hours
+earlier than the second. For several days the guns had opened intense
+fire at midnight and again at 3 A.M. so that the enemy should not
+attach particular importance to our artillery activity on the night of
+action, and a creeping barrage nightly swept across No Man's Land to
+clear off the chain of listening posts established 300 yards in front
+of the enemy's trenches. Some heavy banks of cloud moved across the
+sky when the Scottish Rifle Brigade assembled for the assault, but the
+moon shed sufficient light at intervals to enable the Scots to file
+through the gaps made in our wire and to form up on the tapes laid
+outside. At 11 P.M. the 7th Scottish Rifles stormed Umbrella Hill with
+the greatest gallantry. The first wave of some sixty-five officers and
+men was blown up by four large contact mines and entirely destroyed.
+The second wave passed over the bodies of their comrades without a
+moment's check and, moving through the wire smashed by our artillery,
+entered Umbrella Hill trenches and set about the Turks with their
+bayonets. They had to clear a maze of trenches and dug-outs, but they
+bombed out of existence the machine-gunners opposing them and had
+settled the possession of Umbrella Hill in half an hour.
+
+The 4th Royal Scots led the attack on El Arish Redoubt. It was a
+bigger and noisier 'show' than the Royal Scots had had some months
+before, when in a 'silent' raid they killed with hatchets only, for
+the Scots had seen the condition of some of their dead left in Turkish
+hands and were taking retribution. Not many Turks in El Arish Redoubt
+lived to relate that night's story. The Scots were rapidly in the
+redoubt and were rapidly through it, cleared up a nasty corner known
+as the 'Little Devil,' and were just about to shelter from the shells
+which were to answer their attack when they caught a brisk fire from a
+Bedouin hut. A platoon leader disposed his men cleverly and rushed
+the hut, killing everybody in it and capturing two machine guns. The
+vigorous resistance of the Turks on Umbrella Hill and El Arish Redoubt
+resulted in our having to bury over 350 enemy dead in these positions.
+
+The second phase was to attack the enemy's front-line system from El
+Arish Redoubt to the sea at Sea Post. At 3 A.M., after the enemy
+guns had plentifully sprinkled Umbrella Hill and had given it up as
+irretrievably lost, we opened a ten-minutes' intense bombardment of
+the front line, exactly as had been done on preceding mornings, but
+this time the 161st and 162nd Infantry Brigades followed up our shells
+and carried 3000 yards of trenches at once. Three-quarters of an
+hour afterwards the 163rd Infantry Brigade tried to get the support
+trenches several hundred yards in rear, but the difficulties were too
+many and the effort failed. Having secured Sea Post and Beach Post the
+162nd Brigade completed the programme by advancing up the coast and
+capturing the 'port' of Gaza, Sheikh Hasan, with a considerable body
+of prisoners.
+
+The enemy's guns remained active until seven o'clock, when they
+reserved their fire till the afternoon. Then a heavy counter-attack
+was seen to be developing by an aerial observer, whose timely
+warning enabled the big guns and warships to smash it up. Another
+counter-attack against Sheikh Hasan was repulsed later in the day, and
+a third starting from Crested Rock which aimed at getting back El
+Burj trench was a complete failure. After the second phase our troops
+buried 739 enemy dead. Without doubt there were many others killed and
+wounded in the unsuccessful counter-attacks, particularly the first
+against Sheikh Hasan, when many heavy shells were seen to fall in the
+enemy's ranks. We took prisoners 26 officers, including two battalion
+commanders, and 418 other ranks. Our casualties were 30 officers and
+331 other ranks killed, 94 officers and 1869 other ranks wounded, and
+10 officers and 362 other ranks missing. Considering the enormous
+strength of the positions attacked, the numbers engaged, and the fact
+that we secured enemy front 5000 yards long and 3000 yards deep, the
+losses were not more severe than might have been expected.
+
+The Turks clung to their trenches with a tenacity equal to that which
+characterised their defences on Gallipoli, and officer prisoners told
+us they had been ordered to hold Gaza at all costs. That was good
+news, though even if they had got back to the wadi Hesi line it is
+doubtful if, when Sheria was taken, they could have done more than
+temporarily hold us up there. During the next few days the work
+against the enemy's right consisted of heavy bombardments on the line
+of hills running from the north-east to the south of Gaza, and on the
+prominent position of Sheikh Redwan, east of the port. The enemy made
+some spirited replies, notably on the 4th, but his force in Gaza was
+getting shaken, and prisoners reluctantly admitted that the heavy
+naval shells taking them in flank and rear were affecting the moral
+of the troops. The gunfire of Rear-Admiral Jackson's fleet of H.M.S.
+_Grafton_, _Raglan_, Monitors 15, 29, 31, and 32, river-gunboats
+_Ladybird_ and _Amphis_, and the destroyers _Staunch_ and _Comet_, was
+worthy of the King's Navy. They were assisted by the French battleship
+_Requin_. We lost a monitor and destroyer torpedoed by a submarine,
+but the marks of the Navy's hard hitting were on and about Gaza, and
+we heard, if we could not see, the best the ships were doing. On one
+day there was a number of explosions about Deir Sineid indicating the
+destruction of some of the enemy's reserve of ammunition, and while
+the Turks were still in Gaza they received a shock resembling
+nothing more than an earthquake. One of the ships--the _Raglan_, I
+believe--taking a signal from a seaplane, got a direct hit on an
+ammunition train at Beit Hanun, the railway terminus north of Gaza.
+The whole train went up and its load was scattered in fragments over
+an area of several hundred square yards, an extraordinary scene of
+wreckage of torn and twisted railway material and destroyed ammunition
+presenting itself to us when we got on the spot on November 7. There
+was another very fine example of the Navy's indirect fire a short
+distance northward of this railway station. A stone road bridge had
+been built over the wadi Hesi and it had to carry all heavy traffic,
+the banks of the wadi being too steep and broken to permit wheels
+passing down them as they stood. During our advance the engineers had
+to build ramps here. A warship, taking its line from an aeroplane,
+fired at the bridge from a range of 14,000 yards, got two direct hits
+on it and holed it in the centre, and there must have been thirty or
+forty shell craters within a radius of fifty yards. The confounding of
+the Turks was ably assisted by the Navy.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+CRUSHING THE TURKISH LEFT
+
+
+Now we return to the operations of XXth Corps and Desert Mounted Corps
+on our right. After the capture of Beersheba this force was preparing
+to attack the left of the Turkish main line about Hareira and Sheria,
+the capture of which would enable the fine force of cavalry to get
+to Nejile and gain an excellent water supply, to advance to the
+neighbourhood of Huj and so reach the plain and threaten the enemy's
+line in rear, and to fall on his line of retreat. It was proposed
+to make the attack on the Kauwukah and Rushdi systems at Hareira on
+November 4, but the water available at Beersheba had not been equal
+to the demands made upon it and was petering out, and mounted troops
+protecting the right flank of XXth Corps had to be relieved every
+twenty-four hours. The men also suffered a good deal from thirst. The
+weather was unusually hot for this period of the year, and the dust
+churned up by traffic was as irritating as when the khamseen wind
+blew. The two days' delay meant much in favour of the enemy, who was
+enabled to move his troops as he desired, but it also permitted our
+infantry to get some rest after their long marches, and supplies were
+brought nearer the front. 'Rest' was only a comparative term. Brigades
+were on the move each day in country which was one continual rise and
+fall, with stony beds of wadis to check progress, without a tree to
+lend a few moments' grateful relief from a burning sun, and nothing
+but the rare sight of a squalid native hut to relieve the monotony of
+a sun-dried desolate land.
+
+The troops were remarkably cheerful. They were on their toes, as the
+cavalry told them. They had drawn first blood profusely from the Turk
+after many weary months of waiting and getting fit, and they knew that
+those gaunt mountain ridges away on their right front held behind them
+Bethlehem and Jerusalem, goals they desired to reach more than any
+other prizes of war. They had seen the Turk, and had soundly thrashed
+him out of trenches which the British could have held against a much
+stronger force. Their confidence was based on the proof that they were
+better men, and they were convinced that once they got the enemy into
+the open their superiority would be still more marked. The events of
+the next six weeks showed their estimate of the Turkish soldier was
+justified.
+
+The 53rd Division with the Imperial Camel Corps on its right moved to
+Towal Abu Jerwal on November 1 to protect the flank guard of the XXth
+Corps during the pending attack on the Kauwukah system. The infantry
+had some fighting on that day, but it was mild compared with the
+strenuous days before them. The 10th Division attacked Irgeig railway
+station north-west of Beersheba and secured it, and waited there with
+the 74th Division on its right while the Welsh Division went forward
+to fight for Khuweilfeh on November 3. The Welshmen could not obtain
+the whole of the position on that day, and it was not until the 6th
+that it became theirs. Khuweilfeh is about ten miles due east of
+Sheria, the same distance north of Beersheba, and some five miles west
+of the Hebron road. It is in the hill country, difficult to approach,
+with nothing in the nature of a road or track leading to it, and there
+was no element in the position to suggest the prospect of an easy
+capture. When General Mott advanced to these forbidding heights the
+strength of the enemy in these parts was not realised. Prisoners
+taken during the day proved that there were portions of three or four
+Turkish divisions in the neighbourhood, and the strong efforts made to
+prevent the Welsh troops gaining the position and the furious attempts
+to drive them out of it suggested that most of the Turkish reserves
+had been brought over to their left flank to guard against a wide
+movement intended to envelop it. It afterwards turned out that von
+Kressenstein believed General Allenby intended to march on Jerusalem
+up the Hebron road, and he threw over to his left all his reserves to
+stop us. That was a supreme mistake, for when we had broken through at
+Hareira and Sheria the two wings of his Army were never in contact,
+and their only means of communication was by aeroplane.
+
+The magnificent fight the 53rd Division put up at Khuweilfeh against
+vastly superior forces and in the face of heavy casualties played a
+very important part in the overwhelming defeat of the Turks. For four
+days and nights the Welsh Division fought without respite and with the
+knowledge that they could not be substantially reinforced, since the
+plan for the attack on Hareira and Sheria entailed the employment of
+all the available infantry of XXth Corps. Attack after attack was
+launched against them with extreme violence and great gallantry, their
+positions were raked by gunfire, whilst water and supplies were not
+over plentiful. But the staunch Division held on grimly to what it had
+gained, and its tenacity was well rewarded by what was won on other
+portions of the field.
+
+During the night of November 5-6 and the day of the 6th, the 74th,
+60th, and 10th Divisions concentrated for the attack on the Kauwukah
+system. The enemy's positions ran from his Jerusalem-Beersheba railway
+about five miles south-east of Hareira, across the Gaza-Beersheba road
+to the wadi Sheria, on the northern bank of which was an exceedingly
+strong redoubt covering Hareira. The eastern portion of this line
+was known as the Kauwukah system, and between it and Hareira was
+the Rushdi system, all being connected up by long communication and
+support trenches, while a light railway ran from the Rushdi line to
+dumps south of Sheria. At the moment of assembly for attack our line
+from right to left was made up as follows: the 158th Infantry Brigade
+was on the right, south of Tel Khuweilfeh. Then came the 160th Brigade
+and 159th Brigade. The Yeomanry Mounted Division held a long line
+of country and was the connecting link between the 53rd and 74th
+Divisions. The latter division disposed from right to left the 231st
+Brigade, the 229th Brigade, and 230th Brigade, who were to march from
+the south-east to the north-west to attack the right of the Kauwukah
+system of entrenchments on the railway. The 181st Brigade, 180th
+Brigade, and 179th Brigade of the 60th Division were to march in the
+same direction to attack the next portion of the system on the left of
+the 74th Division's objectives, then swinging to the north to march
+on Sheria. The 31st Brigade, 30th Brigade, and 29th Brigade were to
+operate on the 60th Division's left, with the Australian Mounted
+Division watching the left flank of XXth Corps. The Turkish VIIth
+Army and 3rd Cavalry Division were opposing the XXth Corps, another
+Division was opposite the 53rd Division and the Imperial Camel Corps
+with the 12th Depot Regiment at Dharahiyeh on the Hebron road, the
+16th Division opposite our 74th, the 24th and 26th Divisions opposite
+our 69th, and the 54th against the 10th Division. The 3rd, 53rd, and
+7th Turkish Divisions were in the Gaza area.
+
+At daybreak the troops advanced to the attack. The first part of the
+line in front of the 231st Brigade was a serious obstacle. Two or
+three small outlying rifle pits had to be taken before the Division
+could proceed with its effort to drive the enemy out of Sheria and
+protect the flank of the 60th Division, which had to cross the railway
+where a double line of trenches was to be tackled, the rear line above
+the other with the flank well thrown back and protected by small
+advanced pits to hold a few men and machine guns. The Turks held on
+very obstinately to their ground east of the railway, and kept the
+74th Division at bay till one o'clock in the afternoon, but the
+artillery of that Division had for some time been assisting in the
+wire-cutting in front of the trenches to be assaulted by the 60th
+Division, and the latter went ahead soon after noon, and with the
+assistance of one brigade of the 10th Division, had won about 4000
+yards of the complicated trench system and most of the Rushdi system
+by half-past two. The Londoners then swung to the north and occupied
+the station at Sheria, while the dismounted yeomanry worked round
+farther east, taking a series of isolated trenches on the way, the
+Irish troops relieving the 60th in the captured trenches at Kauwukah.
+The 60th Division, having possession of the larger part of Sheria,
+intended to attack the hill there at nightfall, and the attack was in
+preparation when an enemy dump exploded and a huge fire lighted up the
+whole district, so that all troops would have been exposed to the
+fire of the garrison on the hill. General Shea therefore stopped the
+attack, but the hill was stormed at 4.30 next morning and carried at
+the point of the bayonet. A bridgehead was then formed at Sheria, and
+the Londoners fought all day and stopped one counter-attack when it
+was within 200 yards of our line. On that same morning the Irish
+troops had extended their gains westwards from the Rushdi system till
+they got to Hareira Tepe Redoubt, a high mound 500 yards across the
+top, which had been criss-crossed with trenches with wire hanging
+about some broken ground at the bottom. Here there was a hot tussle,
+but the Irishmen valiantly pushed through and not only gave XXth Corps
+the whole of its objectives and completed the turn of the enemy's left
+flank, but joined up with the XXIst Corps. The working of XXth Corps'
+scheme had again been admirable, and once more the staff work had
+enabled the movements to be timed perfectly.
+
+The Desert Mounted Corps was thus able to draw up to Sheria in
+readiness to take up the pursuit and to get the water supply at
+Nejile. This ended the XXth Corps' task for a few days, though the
+60th Division became temporarily attached to Desert Mounted Corps.
+XXth Corps had nobly done its part. The consummate ability, energy,
+and foresight of the corps commander had been supported throughout by
+the skill of divisional and brigade commanders. For the men no praise
+could be too high. The attention given to their training was well
+repaid. They bore the strain of long marches on hard food and a small
+allowance of water in a way that proved their physique to be only
+matched by their courage, and that was of a high order. Their
+discipline was admirable, their determination alike in attack and
+defence strong and well sustained. To say they were equal to the
+finest troops in the world might lay one open to a charge of
+exaggeration when it was impossible to get a fair ground of
+comparison, seeing the conditions of fighting on different fronts
+was so varied, but the trials through which the troops of XXth
+Corps passed up to the end of the first week of November, and their
+magnificent accomplishments by the end of the year, make me doubt
+whether any other corps possessed finer soldierly qualities. The men
+were indeed splendid. The casualties sustained by the XXth Corps from
+October 31 to November 16 were: killed, officers 63, other ranks 869;
+wounded, officers 198, other ranks 4246; missing, no officers, 108
+other ranks--a total of 261 officers and 5223 other ranks.
+
+During the period after Beersheba when the XXth Corps troops were
+concentrating to break up the Turks' defensive position on the left,
+the Desert Mounted Corps was busily engaged holding a line eight or
+ten miles north and north-east of Beersheba, and watching for any
+movement of troops down the Hebron road. The 2nd Australian Light
+Horse Brigade and 7th Mounted Brigade tried to occupy a line from
+Khuweilfeh to Dharahiyeh, but it was not possible to reach it--a fact
+by no means surprising, as in the light of subsequent knowledge it was
+clear that the Turks had put much of their strength there. A patrol
+of Light Horsemen managed to work round to the north of Dharahiyeh,
+a curious group of mud houses on a hill-top inhabited by natives who
+have yet to appreciate the evils of grossly overcrowded quarters as
+well as some of the elementary principles of sanitation, and they saw
+a number of motor lorries come up the admirably constructed hill road
+designed by German engineers. The lorries were hurrying from the
+Jerusalem area with reinforcements. Prisoners--several hundreds of
+them in all--were brought in daily, but no attempt was made to force
+the enemy back until November 6, when the 53rd Division, which for the
+time being was attached to the Desert Mounted Corps, drove the Turks
+off the whole of Khuweilfeh, behaving as I have already said with
+fine gallantry and inflicting severe losses. There were also
+counter-attacks launched against the 5th Mounted Brigade, the New
+Zealand Mounted Rifles Brigade, and the Imperial Camel Corps Brigade,
+but these were likewise beaten off with considerable casualties to
+the enemy. When the XXth Corps had captured the Khauwukah system, a
+detachment for the defence of the right flank of the Army was formed
+under the command of Major-General G. de S. Barrow, the G.O.C.
+Yeomanry Mounted Division, consisting of the Imperial Camel Corps
+Brigade, 53rd Division, Yeomanry Mounted Division, New Zealand Mounted
+Rifles Brigade, and two squadrons and eight machine guns of the 2nd
+Australian Light Horse Brigade. The Australian Mounted Division
+marched from Karm, whither it had been sent on account of water
+difficulties, to rejoin Desert Mounted Corps to whom the 60th Division
+was temporarily attached. The Desert Corps had orders on November 7 to
+push through as rapidly as possible to the line wadi Jemmameh-Huj, and
+from that day the Corps commenced its long march to Jaffa, a march
+which, though strongly opposed by considerable bodies of troops, was
+more often interfered with by lack of water than by difficulty in
+defeating the enemy.
+
+The scarcity of water was a sore trouble. There was an occasional pool
+here and there, but generally the only water procurable was in deep
+wells giving a poor yield. The cavalry will not forget that long
+trek. No brigade could march straight ahead. Those operating in the
+foothills on our right had to fight all the way, and they were often
+called upon to resist counter-attacks by strong rearguards issuing
+from the hills to threaten the flank and so delay the advance in
+order to permit the Turks to carry off some of their material. It was
+necessary almost every day to withdraw certain formations from the
+front and send them back a considerable distance to water, replacing
+them by other troops coming from a well centre. In this way brigades
+were not infrequently attached to divisions other than their own, and
+the administrative services were heavily handicapped. Several times
+whole brigades were without water for forty-eight hours, and though
+supplies reached them on all but one or two occasions they were often
+late, and an exceedingly severe strain was put on the transport.
+During that diagonal march across the Maritime Plain I heard infantry
+officers remark that the Australians always seemed to have their
+supplies up with them. I do not think the supplies were always there,
+but they generally were not far behind, and if resource and energy
+could work miracles the Australian supply officers deserve the credit
+for them. The divisional trains worked hard in those strenuous days,
+and the 'Q' staff of the Desert Mounted Corps had many a sleepless
+night devising plans to get that last ounce out of their transport men
+and to get that little extra amount of supplies to the front which
+meant the difference between want and a sufficiency for man and horse.
+
+On the 7th November the 60th Division after its spirited attack on
+Tel el Sheria crossed the wadi and advanced north about two miles,
+fighting obstinate rearguards all the way. The 1st Australian Light
+Horse took 300 prisoners and a considerable quantity of ammunition
+and stores at Ameidat, and with the remainder of the Anzac Division
+reached Tel Abu Dilakh by the evening, and the Australian Mounted
+Division filled the gap between the Anzacs and the Londoners, but
+having been unable to water could not advance further. The 8th
+November was a busy and brilliantly successful day. The Corps' effort
+was to make a wide sweeping movement in order first to obtain the
+valuable and urgently required water at Nejile, and then to push
+across the hills and rolling downs to the country behind Gaza to
+harass the enemy retreating from that town. The Turks had a big
+rearguard south-west of Nejile and made a strong effort to delay the
+capture of that place, the importance of which to us they realised
+to the full, and they were prepared to sacrifice the whole of the
+rearguard if they could hold us off the water for another twenty-four
+hours. The pressure of the Anzac Division and the 7th Mounted Brigade
+assisting it was too much for the enemy, who though holding on to the
+hills very stoutly till the last moment had to give way and leave the
+water in our undisputed possession. The Sherwood Rangers and South
+Notts Hussars were vigorously counter-attacked at Mudweiweh, but they
+severely handled the enemy, who retired a much weakened body.
+
+By the evening the Anzacs held the country from Nejile to the north
+bank of the wadi Jemmameh, having captured 300 prisoners and two guns.
+The Australian Mounted Division made an excellent advance round
+the north side of Huj, which had been the Turkish VIIIth Army
+Headquarters, and the 4th Australian Light Horse Brigade was in touch
+with the corps cavalry of XXIst Corps at Beit Hanun, while the 3rd
+Australian Light Horse Brigade had taken prisoners and two of the
+troublesome Austrian 5.9 howitzers.
+
+It was the work of the 60th Division in the centre, however, which
+was the outstanding feature of the day, though the Londoners readily
+admitted that without the glorious charge of the Worcester and
+Warwickshire Yeomanry in the afternoon they would not have been in the
+neighbourhood of Huj when darkness fell. The 60th were in the centre,
+sandwiched between the Anzacs and Australian Mounted Division, and
+their allotted task was to clear the country between Sheria and Huj, a
+distance of ten miles. The country was a series of billowy downs with
+valleys seldom more than 1000 yards wide, and every yard of the way
+was opposed by infantry and artillery. Considering the opposition the
+progress was good. The Londoners drove in the Turks' strong flank
+three times, first from the hill of Zuheilika, then from the
+cultivated area behind it, and thirdly from the wadi-torn district
+of Muntaret el Baghl, from which the infantry proceeded to the high
+ground to the north. It was then between two and three o'clock in the
+afternoon, and maps showed that between the Division and Huj there was
+nearly four miles of most difficult country, a mass of wadi beds and
+hills giving an enterprising enemy the best possible means for holding
+up an advance. General Shea went ahead in a light armoured car to
+reconnoitre, and saw a strong body of Turks with guns marching across
+his front. It was impossible for his infantry to catch them and,
+seeing ten troops of Warwick and Worcester Yeomanry on his right about
+a mile away, he went over to them and ordered Lieut.-Colonel H. Cheape
+to charge the enemy. It was a case for instant action. The enemy were
+a mile and a half from our cavalry. The gunners had come into action
+and were shelling the London Territorials, but they soon had to
+switch off and fire at a more terrifying target. Led by their gallant
+Colonel, a Master of Foxhounds who was afterwards drowned in the
+Mediterranean, the yeomen swept over a ridge in successive lines and
+raced down the northern slope on to the flat, at first making direct
+for the guns, then swerving to the left under the direction of Colonel
+Cheape, whose eye for country led him to take advantage of a mound on
+the opposite side of the valley. Over this rise the Midland yeomen
+spurred their chargers and, giving full-throated cheers, dashed
+through the Turks' left flank guard and went straight for the guns.
+Their ranks were somewhat thinned, for they had been exposed to a
+heavy machine-gun fire as well as to the fire of eight field guns and
+three 5.9 howitzers worked at the highest pressure. The gunners were
+nearly all Germans and Austrians and they fought well. They splashed
+the valley with shrapnel, and during the few moments' lull when the
+yeomanry were lost to view behind the mound they set their shell fuses
+at zero to make them burst at the mouth of the guns and act as case
+shot. They tore some gaps in the yeomen's ranks, but nothing could
+stop that charge. The Midlanders rode straight at the guns and sabred
+every artilleryman at his piece. The Londoners say they heard all the
+guns stop dead at the same moment and they knew they had been silenced
+in true Balaclava style. Having wiped out the batteries the yeomen
+again answered the call of their leader and swept up a ridge to deal
+effectively with three machine guns, and having used the white arm
+against their crews the guns were turned on to the retreating Turks
+and decimated their ranks. This charge was witnessed by General Shea,
+and I know it is his opinion that it was executed with the greatest
+gallantry and elan, and was worthy of the best traditions of British
+cavalry. The yeomanry lost about twenty-five per cent. of their
+number in casualties, but their action was worth the price, for they
+completely broke up the enemy resistance and enabled the London
+Division to push straight through to Huj. The Warwick and
+Worcester Yeomanry received the personal congratulations of the
+Commander-in-Chief, and General Shea was also thanked by General
+Allenby.
+
+During this day General Shea accomplished what probably no other
+Divisional Commander did in this war. When out scouting in a light
+armoured car he was within 500 yards of a big ammunition dump which
+was blown up. He saw the three men who had destroyed it running away,
+and he chased them into a wadi and machine-gunned them. They held up
+their hands and were astonished to find they had surrendered to a
+General. These men were captured in the nick of time. But for the
+appearance of General Shea they would have destroyed another dump,
+which we captured intact.
+
+I was with the Division the night after they had taken Huj. It was
+their first day of rest for some time, but the men showed few signs
+of fatigue. No one could move among them without being proud of the
+Londoners. They were strong, self-reliant, well-disciplined, brave
+fellows. I well remember what Colonel Temperley, the G.S.O. of the
+Division, told me when sitting out on a hill in the twilight that
+night. Colonel Temperley had been brigade major of the first New
+Zealand Infantry Brigade which came to Egypt and took a full share in
+the work on Gallipoli on its way to France. He had over two years of
+active service on the Western Front before coming out to Palestine for
+duty with the 60th Division, and his views on men in action were based
+on the sound experience of the professional soldier. Of the London
+County Territorials he said: 'I cannot speak of these warriors without
+a lump rising in my throat. These Cockneys are the best men in the
+world. Their spirits are simply wonderful, and I do not think any
+division ever went into a big show with higher moral. After three
+years of war it is refreshing to hear the men's earnestly expressed
+desire to go into action again. These grand fellows went forward
+with the full bloom on them, there never was any hesitation, their
+discipline was absolutely perfect, their physique and courage were
+alike magnificent, and their valour beyond words. The Cockney makes
+the perfect soldier.' I wrote at the time that 'whether the men came
+from Bermondsey, Camberwell or Kennington, or belonged to what were
+known as class corps, such as the Civil Service or Kensingtons, before
+the war, all battalions were equally good. They were trained for
+months for the big battle till their bodies were brought to such a
+state of fitness that Spartan fare during the ten days of ceaseless
+action caused neither grumble nor fatigue. The men may well be
+rewarded with the title "London's Pride," and London is honoured by
+having such stalwarts to represent the heart of the British Empire. In
+eight days the Londoners marched sixty-six miles and fought a number
+of hot actions. The march may not seem long, but Palestine is not
+Salisbury Plain. A leg-weary man was asked by an officer if his feet
+were blistered, and replied: "They're rotten sore, but my heart's
+gay." That is typical of the spirit of these unconquerable Cockneys. I
+have just left them. They still have the bloom of freshness and I do
+not think it will ever fade. Scorching winds which parched the throat
+and made everything one wore hot to the touch were enough to oppress
+the staunchest soldier, but these sterling Territorials, costers
+and labourers, artisans and tradesmen, professional men and men of
+independent means, true brothers in arms and good Britons, left their
+bivouacs and trudged across heavy country, fearless, strong, proud,
+and with the cheerfulness of good men who fight for right.' What I
+said in those early days of the great advance was more than borne out
+later, and in the capture of Jerusalem, in taking Jericho, and in
+forcing the passage of the Jordan this glorious Division of Londoners
+was always the same, a pride to its commander, a bulwark of the XXth
+Corps, and a great asset of the Empire.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THROUGH GAZA INTO THE OPEN
+
+
+On the Gaza section of the front the XXIst Corps had been busily
+occupied with preparations for a powerful thrust through the remainder
+of the defences on the enemy's right when the XXth Corps should have
+succeeded in turning the main positions on the left. The 52nd Division
+on the coast was ready to go ahead immediately there was any sign that
+the enemy, seeing that the worst was about to happen, intended to
+order a general retirement, and then it would be a race and a fight to
+prevent his establishing himself on the high ground north of the wadi
+Hesi. Should he fail to do that there was scarcely a possibility of
+the Turks holding us up till we got to the Jaffa-Jerusalem road,
+though between Gaza and that metalled highway there were many points
+of strength from which they could fight delaying actions. It is very
+doubtful whether the Turkish General Staff gave the cavalry credit for
+being able to move across the Plain in the middle of November when the
+wadis are absolutely dry and the water-level in the wells is lower
+than at any other period of the year. Nor did they imagine that the
+transport difficulties for infantry divisions fed as ours were could
+be surmounted. They may have thought that if they could secure the
+wadi Hesi line before we got into position to threaten it in flank
+they would immobilise our Army till the rains began, and there was a
+possibility of sitting facing each other in wet uncomfortable trench
+quarters till the flowers showed themselves in the spring, by which
+time, the Bagdad venture of the German Higher Command proving hopeless
+before it was started, a great volume of reinforcements might be
+diverted to Southern Palestine with Turkish divisions from the
+Salonika front and a stiffening of German battalions spared from
+Europe in consequence of the Russian collapse.
+
+Whatever they may have been, the Turkish calculations were completely
+upset. The cavalry's water troubles remained and no human foresight
+could have smoothed them over, but the transport problem was solved in
+this way. During the attack on Beersheba XXIst Corps came to the aid
+of XXth Corps by handing over to it the greater part of its camel
+convoys and lorries, so much transport, indeed, that a vast amount of
+work in the Gaza sector fell to be done by a greatly depleted supply
+staff. When Beersheba had been won and the enemy's left flank had been
+smashed and thrown back, the XXth Corps repaid the XXIst Corps, not
+only by returning what it had borrowed, but by marching back into the
+region of railhead at Karm, where it could live with a minimum of
+transport and send all its surplus to work in the coastal sector. The
+switching over of this transport was a fine piece of organisation. On
+the allotted day many thousands of camels were seen drawn out in huge
+lines all over the country intersected by the wadi Ghuzze, slowly
+converging on the spots at which they could be barracked and rested
+before loading for the advance. The lorries took other paths. There
+was no repose for their drivers. They worked till the last moment on
+the east, and then, caked with the accumulated dust of a week's weary
+labour in sand and powdered earth, turned westward to arrive just in
+time to load up and be off again in pursuit of infantry, some making
+the mistake of travelling between the West and East Towns of Gaza,
+while others took the longer and sounder but still treacherous route
+east of Ali Muntar and through the old positions of the Turks. These
+lorry drivers were wonderful fellows who laughed at their trials, but
+in the days and nights when they bumped over the uneven tracks and
+negotiated earth rents that threatened to swallow their vehicles, they
+put their faith in the promise of the railway constructors to open the
+station at Gaza at an early date. Even Gaza, though it saved them so
+many toilsome miles, did not help them greatly because of a terrible
+piece of road north-east of the station, but Beit Hanun was
+comfortable and for the relief brought by the railway's arrival at
+Deir Sineid they were profoundly grateful.
+
+But this is anticipating the story of Gaza's capture. The XXIst Corps
+had not received its additional transport when it gained the ancient
+city of the Philistines, though it knew some of it was on the way and
+most of it about to start on its westward trek. On the day of November
+4 and during the succeeding night the Navy co-operated with the Corps'
+artillery in destroying enemy trenches and gun positions, and the
+Ali Muntar Ridge was a glad sight for tired gunners' eyes. The enemy
+showed a disposition to retaliate, and on the afternoon of the 4th he
+put up a fierce bombardment of our front-line positions from Outpost
+Hill to the sea, including in his fire area the whole of the trenches
+we had taken from him from Umbrella Hill to Sheikh Hasan. Many
+observers of this bombardment by all the Turks' guns of heavy, medium,
+and small calibre declared it was the prelude not of an attack but
+of a retirement, and that the Turks were loosing off a lot of the
+ammunition they knew they could not carry away. They were probably
+right, though the enemy made no sign of going away for a couple of
+days, but if he thought his demonstration by artillery was going to
+hasten back to Gaza some of the troops assembling against the left of
+his main line he was grievously in error. The XXIst Corps was strong
+enough to deal with any attack the Turks could launch, and they would
+have been pleased if an attempt to reach our lines had been made.
+
+Next day the Turks were much quieter. They had to sit under a terrific
+fire both on the 5th and 6th November, when in order to assist
+XXth Corps' operations the Corps' heavy artillery, the divisional
+artillery, and the warships' guns carried out an intense bombardment.
+The land guns searched the Turks' front line and reserve systems,
+while the Navy fired on Fryer's Hill to the north of Ali Muntar,
+Sheikh Redwan, a sandhill with a native chief's tomb on the crest,
+north of Gaza, and on trenches not easily reached by the Corps' guns.
+
+During the night of November 6-7 General Palin's 75th Division, as
+a preliminary to a major operation timed for the following morning,
+attacked and gained the enemy's trenches on Outpost Hill and the
+whole of Middlesex Hill to the north of it, the opposition being less
+serious than was anticipated. At daylight the 75th Division pushed on
+over the other hills towards Ali Muntar and gained that dominating
+position before eight o'clock. The fighting had not been severe,
+and it was soon realised that the enemy had left Gaza, abandoning a
+stronghold which had been prepared for defence with all the ingenuity
+German masters of war could suggest and into which had been worked an
+enormous amount of material. It was obvious from the complete success
+of XXth Corps' operations against the Turkish left, which had been
+worked out absolutely 'according to plan,' that General Allenby had so
+thoroughly mystified von Kressenstein that the latter had put all
+his reserves into the wrong spot, and that the 53rd Division's stout
+resistance against superior numbers had pinned them down to the wrong
+end of the line. There was nothing, therefore, for the Turk to do but
+to try to hold another position, and he was straining every nerve to
+reach it. The East Anglian Division went up west of Gaza and held from
+Sheikh Redwan to the sea by seven o'clock, two squadrons of the Corps'
+cavalry rode along the seashore and had patrols on the wadi Hesi a
+little earlier than that, and the Imperial Service Cavalry Brigade,
+composed of troops raised and maintained by patriotic Indian princes,
+passed through Gaza at nine o'clock and went out towards Beit Hanun.
+To the Lowland Division was given the important task of getting to the
+right or northern bank of the wadi Hesi. These imperturbable Scots
+left their trenches in the morning delighted at the prospect of once
+more engaging in open warfare. They marched along the beach under
+cover of the low sand cliffs, and by dusk had crossed the mouth of
+the wadi and held some of the high ground to the north in face of
+determined opposition. The 157th Brigade, after a march through very
+heavy going, got to the wadi at five in the afternoon and saw the
+enemy posted on the opposite bank. The place was reconnoitred and the
+brigade made a fine bayonet charge in the dark, securing the position
+between ten and eleven o'clock. On this and succeeding days the
+division had to fight very hard indeed, and they often met the enemy
+with the bayonet. One of their officers told me the Scot was twice
+as good as the Turk in ordinary fighting, but with the bayonet his
+advantage was as five to one. The record of the Division throughout
+the campaign showed this was no too generous an estimate of their
+powers. After securing Ali Muntar the 75th Division advanced over
+Fryer's Hill to Australia Hill, so that they held the whole ridge
+running north and south to the eastward of Gaza. The enemy still held
+to his positions to the right of his centre, and from the Atawineh
+Redoubt, Tank Redoubt, and Beer trenches there was considerable
+shelling of Gaza and the Ali Muntar ridge throughout the day. A large
+number of shells fell in the plantations on the western side of the
+ridge; our mastery of the air prevented enemy aviators observing for
+their artillery, or they would have seen no traffic was passing along
+that way. We were using the old Cairo 'road,' and as far as I could
+see not an enemy shell reached it, though when our troops were in the
+town of Gaza there were many crumps and woolly bears to disturb the
+new occupation. But all went swimmingly. It was true we had only
+captured the well-cracked shell of a town, but the taking of it was
+full of promise of greater things, and those of us who looked on the
+mutilated remnants of one of the world's oldest cities felt we were
+indeed witnesses of the beginning of the downfall of the Turkish
+Empire. Next morning the 75th Division captured Beer trenches and Tank
+and Atawineh Redoubts and linked up with the Irish Division of XXth
+Corps on its right. They were shelled heavily, but it was the shelling
+of rearguards and not attackers, and soon after twelve o'clock we
+had the best of evidence that the Turks were saying good-bye to a
+neighbourhood they had long inhabited. I was standing on Raspberry
+Hill, the battle headquarters of XXIst Corps, when I heard a terrific
+report. Staff officers who were used to the visitations of aerial
+marauders came out of their shelters and searched the pearly vault of
+the heavens for Fritz. No machine could be found. Some one looking
+across the country towards Atawineh saw a huge mushroom-shaped cloud,
+and then we knew that one enormous dump at least contained no more
+projectiles to hold up an advance. This ammunition store must have
+been eight miles away as the crow flies, but the noise of the
+explosion was so violent that it was a considerable time before some
+officers could be brought to believe an enemy plane had not laid an
+egg near us. The blowing up of that dump was a signal that the Turk
+was off.
+
+The Lowlanders had another very strenuous day in the sand-dune belt.
+First of all they repulsed a strong counter-attack from the direction
+of Askalon. Then the 155th Infantry Brigade went forward and, swinging
+to the right, drove the Turks off the rising ground north-west of Deir
+Sineid, the possession of which would determine the question whether
+the Turk could hold on in this quarter sufficiently long to enable him
+to get any of his material away by his railway and road. The enemy put
+in a counter-attack of great violence and forced the Scots back.
+
+The 157th Brigade in the early evening attacked the ridge and gained
+the whole of their objectives by eight o'clock. There ensued some
+sanguinary struggles on this sandy ground during the night. The Turks
+were determined to have possession of it and the Scots were willing to
+fight it out to a finish. The first counter-attack in the dark hours
+drove the Lowlanders off, but they were shortly afterwards back on the
+hills again. The Turks returned and pushed the Highland Light Infantry
+and Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders off a second time. A third
+attack was delivered with splendid vigour and the enemy left many
+dead, but they renewed their efforts to get the commanding ground and
+succeeded once more. The dogged Scots, however, were not to be denied.
+They re-formed and swept up the heavy shifting sand, met the Turk on
+the top with a clash and knocked him down the reverse slope. Soon
+afterwards there was another ding-dong struggle. The Turks, putting in
+all their available strength, for a fourth time got the upper hand,
+and the Lowlanders had to yield the ground, doing it slowly and
+reluctantly and with the determination to try again. They were Robert
+Bruces, all of them. It's the best that stays the longest. After a
+brief rest these heroic Scots once more swarmed up the ridge. Their
+cheers had the note of victory in them, they drove their bayonets
+home with the haymakers' lift, and what was left of the Turks fled
+helter-skelter down the hill towards Deir Sineid, broken, dismayed,
+beaten, and totally unable to make another effort. The H.L.I.
+Brigade's victory was bought at a price. The cost of that hill was
+heavy, but the Turks' tale of dead was far heavier than ours, and
+we had won and held the hills and consolidated them. The Turks then
+turned their faces to the north and the Scots hurried them on. The
+Imperial Service Cavalry Brigade had also met with considerable
+resistance, but they worked up to and on the ridge overlooking Beit
+Hanun from the east and captured a 5.9. By evening these Indian
+horsemen were linked up with the 4th Australian Light Horse Brigade on
+their right and the 52nd Division on their left, and pursued the enemy
+as far as Tumrah and Deir Sineid.
+
+General Headquarters directed that two infantry divisions should
+advance to the line Julis-Hamameh in support of mounted troops, and
+the 75th Division was accordingly ordered from its position east of
+Gaza up to Beit Hanun. On the 9th November the 52nd Division was again
+advancing. The 156th Brigade had moved forward from the Gaza trenches.
+One officer, five grooms, and two signallers mounted on second horses
+formed a little party to reconnoitre Askalon, and riding boldly into
+the ancient landing place of the Crusader armies captured the ruined
+town unaided. There are visible remains of its old strength, but the
+power of Askalon has departed. It still stands looking over the blue
+Mediterranean as a sort of watch tower, a silent, deserted outpost of
+the land the Crusaders set their hearts on gaining and preserving for
+Christianity, but behind it is many centuries' accumulation of sand
+encroaching upon the fertile plain, and no effort has been made to
+stop the inroad. The gallant half-dozen having reported to the 156th
+Brigade that Askalon was open to them--the Brigade occupied the place
+at noon--rode across the sand-dunes to the important native town of
+Mejdel, where there was a substantial bazaar doing a good trade in the
+essentials for native existence, beans and cereals in plenty, fruit,
+and tobacco of execrable quality. At Mejdel the six accepted the
+surrender of a body of Turks guarding a substantial ammunition dump
+and rejoined their units, satisfied with the day's adventure. The
+Turks had retired a considerable distance during the day. The
+principal body was moving up what is called the main road from Deir
+Sineid, through Beit Jerjal to Julis, to get to Suafir esh Sherkiyeh,
+Kustineh, and Junction Station, from which they could reach Latron by
+a metalled road, or Ramleh by a hard mud track by the side of their
+railway. They were clearly going to oppose us all the way or they
+would lose the whole of their material, and their forces east and west
+of the road were well handled in previously selected and partially
+prepared positions.
+
+They left behind them the unpleasant trail of a defeated army. Turks
+had fallen by the way and the natives would not bury them. Our
+aircraft had bombed the road, and the dead men, cattle and horses,
+and smashed transport were ghastly sights and made the air offensive.
+There they lay, one long line of dead men and animals, and if a London
+fog had descended to blind the eyes of our Army the sense of smell
+would still have carried a scout on the direct line of the Turkish
+retreat.
+
+I will break off the narrative of fighting at this point to describe a
+scene which expressed more eloquently than anything else I witnessed
+in Palestine how deeply engraved in the native mind was the conviction
+that Britain stood for fair dealing and freedom. The inhabitants, like
+the Arabs of the desert, do not allow their faces to betray their
+feelings. They preserve a stolid exterior, and it is difficult to tell
+from their demeanour whether they are friendly or indifferent to
+you. But their actions speak aloud. Early on the morning after the
+Lowlanders had entered Mejdel I was in the neighbourhood. Our guns
+banging away to the north were a reminder that there was to be no
+promenade over the Plain, and that we had yet to make good the
+formidable obstacle of the wadi Sukereir, when I passed a curious
+procession. People whom the Turks had turned out of Gaza and the
+surrounding country were trekking back to the spots where they and
+their forefathers had lived for countless generations. All their
+worldly goods and chattels were packed on overloaded camels and
+donkeys. The women bore astonishingly heavy loads on their heads, the
+men rode or walked carrying nothing, while patriarchs of families
+were either held in donkey saddles or were borne on the shoulders of
+younger men. Agriculturists began to turn out to plough and till the
+fields which had lain fallow while the Turkish scourge of war was on
+the land, and the people showed that, now they had the security of
+British protection, they intended at once to resume their industry.
+The troops had the liveliest welcome in passing through villages,
+though the people are not as a rule demonstrative; and one could point
+to no better evidence of the exemplary behaviour of our soldiers than
+the groups of women sitting and gossiping round the wells during the
+process of drawing water, just as they did in Biblical days, heedless
+of the passing troops whom they regarded as their protectors. The man
+behind a rude plough may have stopped his ill-matched team of pony
+and donkey to look at a column of troops moving as he had never seen
+troops march before, a head of a family might collect the animals
+carrying his household goods and hurry them off the line of route
+taken by military transport, but neither one nor the other had any
+fear of interference with his work, and the life of the whole country,
+one of the most unchanging regions of the world, had suddenly again
+become normal, although only yesterday two armies had disputed
+possession of the very soil on which they stood. The moment we were
+victorious old occupations were resumed by the people in the way that
+was a tradition from their forefathers. Our victory meant peace
+and safety, according to the native idea, and an end to extortion,
+oppression, and pillage under the name of requisitions. It also meant
+prosperity. The native likes to drive a bargain. He will not sell
+under a fair price, and he asks much more in the hope of showing a
+buyer who has beaten him down how cheaply he is getting goods. The
+Army chiefly sought eggs, which are light to carry and easy to cook,
+and give variety to the daily round of bully, biscuit, and jam. The
+soldier is a generous fellow, and if a child asked a piastre (2-1/2d.)
+for an egg he got it. The price soon became four to five for a
+shilling in cash, though the Turks wanted five times that number for
+an equivalent sum in depreciated paper currency. The law of supply
+and demand obtained in this old world just as at home, and it became
+sufficient for a soldier to ask for an article to show he wanted it
+and would pay almost anything that was demanded. It was curious to see
+how the news spread not merely among traders but also among villagers.
+The men who first occupied a place found oranges, vegetables, fresh
+bread, and eggs cheap. In Ramleh, for example, a market was opened for
+our troops immediately they got to the town, and the goods were sound
+and sold at fair rates. The next day prices were up, and the standards
+fixed behind the front soon ruled at the line itself. There was no
+real control attempted, and while the extortionate prices charged by
+Jews in their excellent agricultural colonies and by the natives made
+a poor people prosperous, it gave them an exaggerated idea of the size
+of the British purse, and they may be disappointed at the limitation
+of our spending powers in the future. Also it was hard on the bravest
+and most chivalrous of fighting men. But it opened the eyes of the
+native, whose happiness and contentment were obvious directly we
+reached his doors.
+
+Our movements on November 9 were limited by the extent to which
+General Chauvel was able to use his cavalry of the Desert Mounted
+Corps. Water was the sole, but absolute handicap. The Yeomanry Mounted
+Division rejoined the Corps on that day and got south of Huj,
+but could not proceed further through lack of water and supply
+difficulties. The Australian Mounted Division also had to halt for
+water, and it was left to Anzac Mounted Division, plus the 7th Mounted
+Brigade, to march eighteen miles north-westwards to occupy the line
+Et Tineh-Beit Duras-Jemameh-Esdud (the Ashdod of the Bible). The 52nd
+Division occupied the area Esdud-Mejdel-Herbieh by the evening of the
+10th, and on the way, Australian cavalry being held up on a ridge
+north of Beit Duras, the 157th Brigade made another of its fine
+bayonet charges at night and captured the ground, enabling the cavalry
+to get at some precious water. The brigade made the attack just after
+completing a fourteen miles' march in heavy going, achieving the
+remarkable record of having had three bayonet battles on three
+nights out of four. On this occasion the Turks again suffered heavy
+casualties in men and lost many machine guns. The 75th Division
+prolonged the infantry line through Gharbiyeh to Berberah. The 54th
+Division was in the Gaza defences with all its transport allotted to
+the divisions taking part in the forward move, but as the 54th had
+five days' rations in dumps close at hand it was able to maintain
+itself, and the railway was being pushed on from the wadi Ghuzze with
+the utmost speed. The iron road in war is an army's jugular vein,
+and each mile added to its length was of enormous value during the
+advance.
+
+General Allenby, looking well ahead and realising the possibilities
+opened out by his complete success in every phase of the operations on
+the Turks' main defensive line, on the 10th November ordered the 52nd
+and 75th Divisions to concentrate on their advanced guards so as
+to support the cavalry on their front and to prevent the Turk
+consolidating on the line of the wadi Sukereir. The enemy was
+developing a more organised resistance on a crescent-shaped line from
+Et Tineh through Yasur to Beshshit, and it was necessary to adopt
+deliberate methods of attack to move him. The advance on the 11th was
+the preliminary to three days of stirring fighting. The Turks put up
+a very strong defence by their rearguards, and when one says that
+at this time they were fighting with courage and magnificent
+determination one is not only paying a just tribute to the enemy but
+doing justice to the gallantry and skill of the troops who defeated
+him. The Scots can claim a large share of the success of the next two
+days, but British yeomanry took a great part in it, and their charge
+at Mughar, and perhaps their charge at Abu Shushe as well, will find a
+place in military text-books, for it has confounded those critics who
+declared that the development of the machine gun in modern warfare has
+brought the uses of cavalry down to very narrow limits.
+
+The 156th Brigade was directed to take Burkah on the 12th so as to
+give the infantry liberty of manoeuvre on the following day. Burkah
+was a nasty place to tackle. The enemy had two lines of beautifully
+sited trenches prepared before he fell back from Gaza. The Scots had
+to attack up a slope to the first line, and having taken this to pass
+down another slope for 1000 yards before reaching the glacis in front
+of the second line. The Scottish Rifles assaulted this position by day
+without much artillery support, but they took it in magnificent style.
+It looked as if the Turks had accepted the verdict, but at night they
+returned to a brown hill on the right and drove the 4th Royal Scots
+from it. This battalion came back soon afterwards and retook the
+hill with the assistance of some Gurkhas of General Colston's 233rd
+Infantry Brigade, and the Turk retired to another spot, hoping that
+his luck would change. While this fighting was going on about Burkah
+the 155th Brigade went ahead up a road which the cavalry said was
+strongly held. They got eight miles north of Esdud, and were in
+advance of the cavalry, intending to try to secure the two heights
+and villages of Katrah and Mughar on the following day. Katrah was a
+village on a long mound south of Mughar, native mud huts constituting
+its southern part, whilst separated from it on the northern side by
+some gardens was a pretty little Jewish settlement whose red-tiled
+houses and orderly well-cared-for orchards spoke of the industry of
+these settlers in Zion. All over the hill right up to the houses the
+cactus flourished, and the hedges were a replica of the terrible
+obstacles at Gaza. From Katrah the ground sloped down to the flat on
+all four sides, so that the village seemed to stand on an island in
+the plain. A mile due west of it was Beshshit, while one mile to the
+north across more than one wadi stood El Mughar at the southern end of
+an irregular line of hills which separated Yebnah and Akir, which will
+be more readily recognised, the former as the Jamnia of the Jews and
+the latter as Ekron, one of the famous Philistine cities. While the
+75th Division was forcing back the line Turmus-Kustineh-Yasur and
+Mesmiyeh athwart the road to Junction Station the 155th Brigade
+attacked Katrah. The whole of the artillery of two divisions opened a
+bombardment of the line at eight o'clock, but the Turks showed more
+willingness to concede ground on the east than at Katrah, where the
+machine-gun fire was exceptionally heavy. General Pollak M'Call
+decided to assault the village with the bulk of his brigade, and
+seizing a rifle and bayonet from a wounded man, led the charge
+himself, took the village, and gradually cleared the enemy out of the
+cactus-enclosed gardens. The enemy losses at Katrah were very heavy.
+In crossing a rectangular field many Turks were caught in a cross fire
+from our machine guns, and over 400 dead were counted in this one
+field.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+TWO YEOMANRY CHARGES
+
+
+In front of the mud huts of Mughar, so closely packed together on the
+southern slope of the hill that the dwellings at the bottom seemed to
+keep the upper houses from falling into the plain, there was a long
+oval garden with a clump of cypresses in the centre, the whole
+surrounded by cactus hedges of great age and strength. In the
+cypresses was a nest of machine guns whose crews had a perfect view
+of an advance from Katrah. The infantry had to advance over flat open
+ground to the edge of the garden. The Turkish machine-gunners and
+riflemen in the garden and village were supported by artillery firing
+from behind the ridge at the back of the village, and although the
+brigade made repeated efforts to get on, its advance was held up in
+the early afternoon, and it seemed impossible to take the place by
+infantry from the south in the clear light of a November afternoon.
+The 6th Mounted Brigade commanded by Brigadier-General C.A.C. Godwin,
+D.S.O., composed of the 1/1st Bucks Hussars, 1/1st Berkshire Yeomanry,
+and 1/1st Dorset Yeomanry, the Berkshire battery Royal Horse
+Artillery, and the 17th Machine Gun Squadron--old campaigners with
+the Egyptian Expeditionary Force--had worked round to the left of
+the Lowlanders and had reached a point about two miles south-west of
+Yebnah, that place having been occupied by the 8th Mounted Brigade,
+composed of the 1/1st City of London Yeomanry, 1/1st County of London
+Yeomanry, and the 1/3rd County of London Yeomanry. At half-past twelve
+the Bucks Hussars less one squadron and the Berks battery, which were
+in the rear of the brigade, advanced _via_ Beshshit to the wadi Janus,
+a deep watercourse with precipitous banks running across the plain
+east of Yebnah and joining the wadi Rubin. One squadron of the Bucks
+Hussars had entered Yebnah from the east, co-operating with the 8th
+Brigade. General Godwin was told over the telephone that the infantry
+attack was held up and that his brigade would advance to take Mughar.
+This order was confirmed by telegram a quarter of an hour later as
+the brigadier was about to reconnoitre a line of approach. The Berks
+battery began shelling Mughar and the ridge behind the village from a
+position half a mile north of Beshshit screened by some trees. Brigade
+headquarters joined the Bucks Hussars headquarters in the wadi Janus
+half a mile south-east of Yebnah, where Lieut.-Colonel the Hon. F.
+Cripps commanding the Bucks Hussars had, with splendid judgment,
+already commenced a valuable reconnaissance, the Dorset and Berks
+Yeomanry being halted in a depression out of sight a few hundred yards
+behind. The Turks had the best possible observation, and, knowing they
+were holding up the infantry, concentrated their attention upon the
+cavalry. Therein they showed good judgment, for it was from the
+mounted troops the heavy blow was to fall. Lieut. Perkins, Bucks
+Hussars, was sent forward to reconnoitre the wadi Shellal el Ghor,
+which runs parallel to and east of the wadi Janus. He became the
+target of every kind of fire, guns, machine guns, and rifles opening
+on him from the ridge whenever he exposed himself. Captain Patron, of
+the 17th Machine Gun Squadron, was similarly treated while examining
+a position from which to cover the advance of the brigade with
+concentrated machine-gun fire. It was not an easy thing to get cavalry
+into position for a mounted attack. Except in the wadis the plain
+between Yebnah and Mughar offered no cover and was within easy range
+of the enemy's guns. The wadi Janus was a deep slit in the ground with
+sides of clay falling almost sheer to the stony bottom. It was hard to
+get horses into the wadi and equally troublesome to get them to bank
+again, and the wadi in most places was so narrow that horses could
+only move in single file. The Dorsets were brought up in small parties
+to join the Bucks in the wadi, and they had to run the gauntlet of
+shell and rifle fire. The Berks were to enter the wadi immediately the
+Bucks had left it. Behind Mughar village and its gardens the ground
+falls sharply, then rises again and forms a rocky hill some 300 yards
+long. There is another decline, and north of it a conical shaped hill,
+also stony and barren, though before the crest is reached there is
+some undulating ground which would have afforded a little cover if the
+cunning Turks had not posted machine guns on it. The Dorset Yeomanry
+were ordered to attack this latter hill and the Bucks Hussars the
+ridge between it and Mughar village, the Berks Yeomanry to be kept in
+support. There seems to be no reason for doubting that Mughar would
+not have been captured that day but for the extremely brilliant charge
+of these home counties yeomen. The 155th Brigade was still held fast
+in that part of the wadi Janus which gave cover south-west and south
+of Mughar, and after the charge had been completely successful and the
+yeomanry were working forward to clear up the village a message was
+received--timed 2.45 P.M., but received at 4 P.M.--which shows the
+difficulties facing that very gallant infantry brigade: '52nd Division
+unable to make progress. Co-operate and turn Mughar from the north.'
+
+It was a hot bright afternoon. The dispositions having been made, the
+Bucks Hussars and Dorset Yeomanry got out of the wadi and commenced
+their mounted attack, the Berks battery in the meantime having
+registered on certain points. The Bucks Hussars, in column of
+squadrons extended to four yards interval, advanced at a trot from
+the wadi, which was 3000 yards distant from the ridge which was their
+objective. Two machine guns were attached to the Bucks and two to the
+Dorsets, and the other guns under Captain Patron were mounted in a
+position which that officer had chosen in the wadi El Ghor from which
+they could bring to bear a heavy fire almost up to the moment the
+Bucks should be on the ridge. This machine-gun fire was of the highest
+value, and it unquestionably kept many Turkish riflemen inactive. 'B'
+squadron under Captain Bulteel, M.C., was leading, and when 1000 yards
+from the objective the order was given to gallop, and horses swept
+over the last portion of the plain and up the hill at a terrific pace,
+the thundering hoofs raising clouds of dust. The tap-tap of machine
+guns firing at the highest pressure, intense rifle fire from all parts
+of the enemy position, the fierce storm of shells rained on the hill
+by the Berks battery, which during the charge fired with splendid
+accuracy no fewer than 200 rounds of shrapnel at a range of 3200 to
+3500 yards, and the rapid fire of Turkish field guns, completely
+drowned the cheers of the charging yeomen. 'C' squadron, commanded by
+Lord Bosebery's son, Captain the Hon. Neil Primrose, M.C., who was
+killed on the following day, made an equally dashing charge and came
+up on the right of 'B' squadron. Once the cavalry had reached the
+crest of the hill many of the Turks surrendered and threw down their
+arms, but some retired and then, having discovered the weakness of the
+cavalry, returned to some rocks on the flanks and continued the fight
+at close range. Captain Primrose's squadron was vigorously attacked on
+his left flank, but Captain Bulteel was able to get over the ridge and
+across the rough, steep eastern side of it, and from this point he
+utilised captured Turkish machine guns to put down a heavy barrage on
+to the northern end of the village. 'A' squadron under Captain Lawson
+then came up from Yebnah at the gallop, and with his support the whole
+of the Bucks' objectives were secured and consolidated.
+
+The Dorset Yeomanry on the left of the Bucks had 1000 yards farther
+to go, and the country they traversed was just as cracked and broken.
+Their horses at the finish were quite exhausted. At the base of the
+hills Captain Dammers dismounted 'A' squadron, which charged on the
+left, and the squadron fought their way to the top of the ridge on
+foot. The held horses were caught in a cone of machine-gun fire, and
+in a space of about fifty square yards many gallant chargers perished.
+'B' squadron (Major Wingfield-Digby) in the centre and 'C' squadron
+(Major Gordon, M.C.) on the right, led by Colonel Sir Randolf Baker,
+M.P., formed line and galloped the hill, and their horse losses were
+considerably less than those of the dismounted squadron. The Berks
+Yeomanry moved to the wadi El Ghor under heavy machine-gun and rifle
+fire from the village and gardens on the west side, and two squadrons
+were dismounted and sent into the village to clear it, the remaining
+squadron riding into the plain on the eastern side of the ridge, where
+they collected a number of stragglers. Dotted over this plain were
+many dead Turks who fell under the fire of the Machine-Gun Squadron
+while attempting to get to Ramleh. The Turkish dead were numerous and
+their condition showed how thoroughly the sword had done its work. I
+saw many heads cleft in twain, and Mughar was not a sweet place to
+look upon and wanted a good deal of clearing up. The yeomanry took 18
+officers and 1078 other ranks prisoners, whilst fourteen machine guns
+and two field guns were captured. But for the tired state of the
+horses many more prisoners would have been taken, large numbers being
+seen making their way along the red sand tracks to Ramleh, and
+an inspection of the route on the morrow told of the pace of the
+retirement brought about by the shock of contact with cavalry. Machine
+guns, belts and boxes of ammunition, equipment of all kinds were
+strewn about the paths, and not a few wounded Turks had given up the
+effort to escape and had lain down to die.
+
+The casualties in the 6th Mounted Brigade were 1 officer killed and
+6 wounded, 15 other ranks killed and 107 wounded and 1 missing, a
+remarkably small total. Among the mortally wounded was Major de
+Rothschild, who fell within sight of some of the Jewish colonies which
+his family had founded. Two hundred and sixty-five horses and two
+mules were killed and wounded in the action.
+
+Mughar was a great cavalry triumph, and the regiments which took part
+in it confirmed the good opinions formed of them in this theatre
+of war. The Dorsets had already made a spirited charge against the
+Senussi in the Western Desert in 1916,[1] and having suffered from the
+white arm once those misguided Arabs never gave the cavalry another
+chance of getting near them. The Bucks and Berks, too, had taken part
+in that swift and satisfactory campaign. All three regiments on the
+following day were to make another charge, this time on one of the
+most famous sites in the battle history of Palestine. The 6th Mounted
+Brigade moved no farther on the day of Mughar because the 22nd Mounted
+Brigade, when commencing an attack on Akir, the old Philistine city of
+Ekron, were counter-attacked on their left. During the night, however,
+the Turks in Akir probably heard the full story of Mughar, and did not
+wait long for a similar action against them. The 22nd Mounted Brigade
+drove them out early next morning, and they went rapidly away across
+the railway at Naaneh, leaving in our hands the railway guard of
+seventy men, and seeking the bold crest of Abu Shushe. They moved, as
+I shall presently tell, out of the frying-pan into the fire.
+
+[Footnote 1: _The Desert Campaigns_: Constable.]
+
+The 155th Infantry which helped to finish up the Mughar business took
+a gun and fourteen machine guns. Then with the remainder of the 52nd
+Division it had a few hours of hard-earned rest. The Division had had
+a severe time, but the men bore their trials with the fortitude of
+their race and with a spirit which could not be beaten. For several
+days, when water was holding up the cavalry, the Lowlanders kept ahead
+of the mounted troops, and one battalion fought and marched sixty-nine
+miles in seven days. Their training was as complete as any infantry,
+even the regimental stretcher-bearers being taught the use of Lewis
+guns, and on more than one occasion the bearers went for the enemy
+with Mills bombs till a position was captured and they were required
+to tend the wounded. A Stokes-gun crew found their weapon very useful
+in open warfare, and at one place where machine guns had got on to a
+large party of Turks and enclosed them in a box barrage, the Stokes
+gun searched every corner of the area and finished the whole party.
+The losses inflicted by the Scots were exceptionally severe. Farther
+eastwards on the 13th, the 75th Division had also been giving of
+its best. The objective of this Division was the important Junction
+Station on the Turks' Jaffa-Jerusalem railway, and a big step forward
+was made in the early afternoon by the overcoming of a stubborn
+resistance at Mesmiyeh, troops rushing the village from the south and
+capturing 292 prisoners and 7 machine guns. The 234th Brigade began
+an advance on Junction Station during the night, but were strongly
+counter-attacked and had to halt till the morning, when at dawn they
+secured the best positions on the rolling downs west of the station,
+and by 7.30 the station itself was occupied. Two engines and 45
+vehicles were found intact; two large guns on trucks and over 100
+prisoners were also taken. The enemy shelled the station during the
+morning, trying in vain to damage his lost rolling stock. This booty
+was of immense value to us, and to a large extent it solved the
+transport problem which at this moment was a very anxious one indeed.
+The line was metre gauge and we had no stock to fit it, though later
+the Egyptian State Railways brought down some engines and trucks from
+the Luxor-Assouan section, but this welcome aid was not available
+till after the rains had begun and had made lorry traffic temporarily
+impossible between our standard gauge railhead and our fighting front.
+Junction Station was no sooner occupied than a light-railway staff
+under Colonel O'Brien was brought up from Beit Hanun. The whole of the
+line to Deir Sineid was not in running order, but broken culverts were
+given minor repairs, attention was bestowed on trucks, and the engines
+were closely examined while the Turks were shelling the station. The
+water tanks had been destroyed, as a result of which two men spent
+hours in filling up the engines by means of a water jug and basin
+found in the station buildings, and the Turks had the mortification of
+seeing these engines steam out of the station during the morning to
+a cutting which was effective cover from their field-gun fire. The
+light-railway staff were highly delighted at their success, and the
+trains which they soon had running over their little system were
+indeed a boon and a blessing to the fighting men and horses.
+
+On this morning of November 14 the infantry were operating with Desert
+Mounted Corps' troops on both their wings. The Australian Mounted
+Division was on the right, fighting vigorous actions with the enemy
+rearguards secreted in the irregular, rocky foothills of the Shephelah
+which stand as ramparts to the Judean Mountains. It was a difficult
+task to drive the Turks out of these fastnesses, and while they held
+on to them it was almost impossible to outflank some of the places
+like Et Tineh, a railway station and camp of some importance on the
+line to Beersheba. They had already had some stiff fighting at Tel el
+Safi, the limestone hill which was the White Guard of the Crusaders.
+The Division suffered severely from want of water, particularly the
+5th Mounted Brigade, and it was necessary to transfer to it the 7th
+Mounted Brigade and the 2nd Australian Light Horse Brigade. On the
+left of the infantry the Yeomanry Mounted Division was moving forward
+from Akir and Mansura, and after the 22nd Mounted Brigade had taken
+Naaneh they detailed a demolition party to blow up one mile of
+railway, so that, even if the 75th Division had not taken Junction
+Station, Jerusalem would have been entirely cut off from railway
+communication with the Turkish base at Tul Keram, and Haifa and
+Damascus.
+
+Between Naaneh and Mansura the 6th Mounted Brigade was preparing for
+another dashing charge. The enemy who had been opposing us for two
+days consisted of remnants of two divisions of both the Turkish VIIth
+and VIIIth Armies brought together and hurriedly reorganised. The
+victory at Mughar had almost, if not quite, split the force in two,
+that is to say that portion of the line which had been given the duty
+of holding Mughar had been so weakened by heavy casualties, and the
+loss of moral consequent upon the shock of the cavalry charge, that
+it had fallen back to Ramleh and Ludd and was incapable of further
+serious resistance. There was still a strong and virile force on the
+seaside, though that was adequately dealt with, but the centre was
+very weak, and the enemy's only chance of preventing the mounted
+troops from working through and round his right centre was to fall
+back on Abu Shushe and Tel Jezar to cover Latron, with its good water
+supply and the main metalled road where it enters the hills on the way
+to Jerusalem. The loss of Tel Jezar meant that we could get to Latron
+and the Vale of Ajalon, and the action of the 6th Mounted Brigade on
+the morning of the 14th gave it to us.
+
+The Berks Yeomanry had had outposts on the railway south-east of
+Naaneh since before dawn. They had seen the position the previous day,
+and at dawn sent forward a squadron dismounted to engage the machine
+guns posted in the walled-in house at the north of the village. From
+the railway to the Abu Shushe ridge is about three miles of up and
+down country with two or three rises of sufficient height to afford
+some cover to advancing cavalry. General Godwin arranged that six
+machine guns should go forward to give covering fire, and, supported
+by the Berks battery R.H.A. from a good position half a mile west
+of the railway, the Bucks Hussars were to deliver a mounted attack
+against the hill, with the assistance on their left of two squadrons
+of Berks Yeomanry. The Dorset Yeomanry were moved up to the red hill
+of Melat into support.
+
+At seven o'clock the attack started, the 22nd Mounted Brigade
+operating on foot on the left. The Bucks Hussars, taking advantage of
+all the dead ground, galloped about a mile and a half until they came
+to a dip behind a gently rising mound, when, it being clear that the
+enemy held the whole ridge in strength, Colonel Cripps signalled to
+Brigade Headquarters at Melat for support. The Dorset Yeomanry moved
+out to the right of the Bucks, and the latter then charged the hill a
+little south of the village and captured it. It was a fine effort. The
+sides of the hill were steep with shelves of rock, and the crest was a
+mass of stones and boulders, while from some caves, one or two of them
+quite big places, the Turks had machine guns in action. When the Bucks
+were charging there was a good deal of machine-gun fire from the
+right, but the Dorsets dealt with this very speedily, assisted by the
+Berks battery which had also moved forward to a near position from
+which they could command the ridge in flank. A hostile counter-attack
+developed against the Dorsets, but this was crushed by the Berks
+battery and some of the 52nd Division's guns. Two squadrons of the
+Berks Yeomanry in the meantime had charged on the left of the Bucks
+and secured the hill immediately to the south-east of Abu Shushe
+village, and at nine o'clock the whole of this strong position was
+in our hands, the brigade having sustained the extremely slight
+casualties of three officers and thirty-four other ranks killed and
+wounded. So small a cost of life was a wonderful tribute to good and
+dashing leading, and furnished another example of cavalry's power when
+moving rapidly in extended formation. To the infinite regret of the
+brigade, indeed of the whole of General Allenby's Army, one of the
+officers killed that day was the Hon. Neil Primrose, an intrepid
+leader who, leaving the comfort and safety of a Ministerial
+appointment, answered the call of duty to be with his squadron of the
+Bucks Hussars. He was a fine soldier and a favourite among his men,
+and he died as a good cavalryman would wish, shot through the head
+when leading his squadron in a glorious charge. His body rests in the
+garden of the French convent at Ramleh not far from the spot where
+humbler soldiers take their long repose, and these graves within
+visual range of the tomb of St. George, our patron saint, will stand
+as memorials of those Britons who forsook ease to obey the stern call
+of duty to their race and country.
+
+The overwhelming nature of this victory is illustrated by a comparison
+of the losses on the two sides. Whereas ours were 37 all told, we
+counted between 400 and 500 dead Turks on the field, and the enemy
+left with us 360 prisoners and some material. The extraordinary
+disparity between the losses can only be accounted for first by the
+care taken to lead the cavalry along every depression in the ground,
+and secondly by rapidity of movement. The cavalry were confronted by
+considerable shell fire, and the volume of machine-gun fire was heavy,
+though it was kept down a good deal by the covering fire of the 17th
+Machine Gun Squadron.
+
+I have referred to the importance of Jezar as dominating the
+approaches to Latron on the north-east and Ramleh on the north-west.
+Jezar, as we call it on our maps, has been a stronghold since men of
+all races and creeds, coloured and white, Pagan, Mahomedan, Jew, and
+Christian, fought in Palestine. It is a spot which many a great leader
+of legions has coveted, and to its military history our home county
+yeomen have added another brilliant page. Let me quote the description
+of Jezar from George Adam Smith's _Historical Geography of the Holy
+Land_, a book of fascinating interest to all students of the Sacred
+History which many of the soldiers in General Allenby's Army read with
+great profit to themselves:
+
+'One point in the Northern Shephelah round which these tides of war
+have swept deserves special notice--Gezer, or Gazar. It is one of the
+few remarkable bastions which the Shephelah flings out to the west--on
+a ridge running towards Ramleh, the most prominent object in view of
+the traveller from Jaffa towards Jerusalem. It is high and isolated,
+but fertile and well watered--a very strong post and striking
+landmark. Its name occurs in the Egyptian correspondence of the
+fourteenth century, where it is described as being taken from the
+Egyptian vassals by the tribes whose invasion so agitates that
+correspondence. A city of the Canaanites, under a king of its
+own--Horam--Gezer is not given as one of Joshua's conquests, though
+the king is; but the Israelites drave not out the Canaanites who dwelt
+at Gezer, and in the hands of these it remained till its conquest by
+Egypt when Pharaoh gave it, with his daughter, to Solomon and Solomon
+rebuilt it. Judas Maccabeus was strategist enough to gird himself
+early to the capture of Gezer, and Simon fortified it to cover the way
+to the harbour of Joppa and caused John his son, the captain of the
+host, to dwell there. It was virtually, therefore, the key of Judea at
+a time when Judea's foes came down the coast from the north; and, with
+Joppa, it formed part of the Syrian demands upon the Jews. But this is
+by no means the last of it. M. Clermont Ganneau, who a number of years
+ago discovered the site, has lately identified Gezer with the Mont
+Gisart of the Crusades. Mont Gisart was a castle and feif in the
+county of Joppa, with an abbey of St. Katharine of Mont Gisart, "whose
+prior was one of the five suffragans of the Bishop of Lydda." It was
+the scene, on the 24th November 1174, seventeen years before the Third
+Crusade, of a victory won by a small army from Jerusalem under the
+boy-king, the leper Baldwin IV., against a very much larger army under
+Saladin himself, and, in 1192, Saladin encamped upon it during his
+negotiations for a truce with Richard.
+
+'Shade of King Horam, what hosts of men have fallen round that citadel
+of yours. On what camps and columns has it looked down through the
+centuries, since first you saw the strange Hebrews burst with the
+sunrise across the hills, and chase your countrymen down Ajalon--that
+day when the victors felt the very sun conspiring with them to achieve
+the unexampled length of battle. Within sight of every Egyptian and
+every Assyrian invasion of the land, Gezer has also seen Alexander
+pass by, and the legions of Rome in unusual flight, and the armies of
+the Cross struggle, waver and give way, and Napoleon come and go. If
+all could rise who have fallen around its base--Ethiopians, Hebrews,
+Assyrians, Arabs, Turcomans, Greeks, Romans, Celts, Saxons,
+Mongols--what a rehearsal of the Judgment Day it would be. Few of
+the travellers who now rush across the plain realise that the first
+conspicuous hill they pass in Palestine is also one of the most
+thickly haunted--even in that narrow land into which history has so
+crowded itself. But upon the ridge of Gezer no sign of all this now
+remains, except in the Tel Jezer, and in a sweet hollow to the north,
+beside a fountain, where lie the scattered Christian stone of Deir
+Warda, the Convent of the Rose.
+
+'Up none of the other valleys of the Shephelah has history surged as
+up and down Ajalon and past Gezer, for none are so open to the north,
+nor present so easy a passage to Jerusalem.'
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+LOOKING TOWARDS JERUSALEM
+
+
+The Anzac Mounted Division had only the 1st Australian Light Horse and
+the New Zealand Mounted Rifles Brigade operating with it on the 14th.
+The Australians, by the evening, were in the thick olive groves on the
+south of Ramleh, and on the ridges about Surafend. On their left the
+Turks were violently opposing the New Zealanders who were working
+along the sand-dunes with the port and town of Jaffa as their ultimate
+objective. There was one very fierce struggle in the course of the
+day. A force attacked a New Zealand regiment in great strength and for
+the moment secured the advantage, but the regiment got to grips with
+the enemy with hand-grenades and bayonets, and so completely repulsed
+them that they fled in hopeless disorder leaving many dead and wounded
+behind them. It was unfortunate that there was no mobile reserve
+available for pursuit, as the Turks were in such a plight that a large
+number would have been rounded up. General Cox's brigade seized Ramleh
+on the morning of the 15th, taking ninety prisoners, and then advanced
+and captured Ludd, being careful that no harm should come to the
+building which holds the grave of St. George. In Ludd 360 prisoners
+were taken, and the brigade carried out a good deal of demolition work
+on the railway running north. The New Zealanders made Jaffa by noon
+on the 16th, the Turks evacuating the town during the morning without
+making any attempt to destroy it, though there was one gross piece of
+vandalism in a Christian cemetery where monuments and tombstones had
+been thrown down and broken. In the meantime, in order to protect the
+rear of the infantry, five battalions of the 52nd Division with three
+batteries were stationed at Yebnah, Mughar, and Akir until they could
+be relieved by units of the 54th Division advancing from Gaza. To
+enable the 54th to move, the transport lent to the 52nd and 75th
+Divisions had to be returned, which did not make the supply of those
+divisions any easier. The main line of railway was still a long way in
+the rear, and the landing of stores by the Navy at the mouth of the
+wadi Sukereir had not yet begun. A little later, and before Jaffa had
+been made secure enough for the use of ships, many thousands of tons
+of supplies and ammunition were put ashore at the wadi's mouth, and at
+a time when heavy rains damaged the newly constructed railway tracks
+the Sukereir base of supply was an inestimable boon. Yet there were
+times when the infantry had a bare day's supply with them, though
+they had their iron rations to fall back upon. It speaks well for
+the supply branch that in the long forward move of XXIst Corps the
+infantry were never once put on short rations.
+
+While the 54th were coming up to take over from the 52nd, plans were
+prepared for the further advance on Jerusalem. The Commander-in-Chief
+was deeply anxious that there should be no fighting of any description
+near the Holy Places, and he gave the Turks a chance of being
+chivalrous and of accepting the inevitable. We had got so far that the
+ancient routes taken by armies which had captured Jerusalem were just
+before us. The Turkish forces were disorganised by heavy and repeated
+defeats, the men demoralised and not in good condition, and there was
+no hope for them that they could receive sufficient reinforcements
+to enable them to stave off the ultimate capture of Bethlehem and
+Jerusalem, though as events proved they could still put up a stout
+defence. We know from papers taken from the enemy that the Turks
+believed General Allenby intended to go right up the plain to get
+to the defile leading to Messudieh and Nablus and thus threaten the
+Hedjaz railway, in which case the position of the enemy in the Holy
+City would be hopeless, and the Turks formed an assault group of three
+infantry divisions in the neighbourhood of Tul Keram to prevent this,
+and continued to hold on to Jerusalem. General Allenby proposed to
+strike through the hills to the north-east to try to get across the
+Jerusalem-Nablus road about Bireh (the ancient Beeroth), and in this
+operation success would have enabled him to cut off the enemy forces
+in and about the Holy City, when their only line of retreat would have
+been through Jericho and the east of the Jordan. The Turks decided
+to oppose this plan and to make us fight for Jerusalem. That was
+disappointing, but in the end it could not have suited us better, for
+it showed to our own people and to the world how after the Turks had
+declined an opportunity of showing a desire to preserve the Holy
+Places from attack--an opportunity prompted by our strength, not by
+any fear that victory could not be won--General Allenby was still able
+to achieve his great objective without a drop of blood being spilled
+near any of the Holy Sites, and without so much as a stray rifle
+bullet searing any of their walls. That indeed was the triumph of
+military practice, and when Jerusalem fell for the twenty-third time,
+and thus for the first time passed into the hands of British soldiers,
+the whole force felt that the sacrifices which had been made on the
+gaunt forbidding hills to the north-west were worth the price, and
+that the graves of Englishman, Scot and Colonial, of Gurkha, Punjabi,
+and Sikh, were monuments to the honour of British arms. The scheme was
+that the 75th Division would advance along the main Jerusalem road,
+which cuts into the hills about three miles east of Latron, and occupy
+Kuryet el Enab, and that the Lowland Division should go through Ludd,
+strike eastwards and advance to Beit Likia to turn from the north the
+hills through which the road passes, the Yeomanry Mounted Division
+on the left flank of the 52nd Division to press on to Bireh, on the
+Nablus road about a dozen miles north of Jerusalem. A brief survey
+of the country to be attacked would convince even a civilian of the
+extreme difficulties of the undertaking. North and east of Latron
+(which was not yet ours) frown the hills which constitute this
+important section of the Judean range, the backbone of Palestine.
+The hills are steep and high, separated one from another by narrow
+valleys, clothed here and there with fir and olive trees, but
+elsewhere a mass of rocks and boulders, bare and inhospitable.
+Practically every hill commands another. There is only one road--the
+main one--and this about three miles east of Latron passes up a narrow
+defile with rugged mountains on either side. There is an old Roman
+road to the north, but, unused for centuries, it is now a road only in
+name, the very trace of it being lost in many places. In this strong
+country men fought of old, and the defenders not infrequently held
+their own against odds. It is pre-eminently suitable for defence, and
+if the warriors of the past found that flint-tipped shafts of wood
+would keep the invader at bay, how much more easily could a modern
+army equipped with rifles of precision and machine guns adapt Nature
+to its advantage? It will always be a marvel to me how in a country
+where one machine gun in defence could hold up a battalion, we made
+such rapid progress, and how having got so deep into the range it was
+possible for us to feed our front. We had no luck with the weather.
+In advancing over the plain the troops had suffered from the abnormal
+heat, and many of the wells had been destroyed or damaged by the
+retreating enemy. In the hills the troops had to endure heavy rains
+and piercingly cold winds, with mud a foot deep on the roads and
+the earth so slippery on the hills that only donkey transport was
+serviceable. Yet despite all adverse circumstances the infantry and
+yeomanry pressed on, and if they did not secure all objectives, their
+dash, resource, and magnificent determination at least paved the way
+for ultimate triumph.
+
+To the trials of hard fighting and marching on field rations the wet
+added a severe test of physical endurance. The troops were in enemy
+country where they scrupulously avoided every native village, and no
+wall or roof stood to shelter them from wind or water. The heat of
+the first two weeks of November changed with a most undesirable
+suddenness, and though the days continued agreeably warm on the plain
+into December, the nights became chilly and then desperately cold. The
+single blanket carried in the pack--most of the infantry on the march
+had no blanket at all--did not give sufficient warmth to men whose
+blood had been thinned by long months of work under a pitiless Eastern
+sun, and lucky was the soldier who secured even broken sleep in the
+early morning hours of that fighting march across the northern part of
+the Maritime Plain. The Generals, with one eye on the enemy and the
+other on the weather, must have been dismayed in the third week of
+November at the gathering storm clouds which in bursting flooded the
+plain with rains unusually heavy for this period of the year. The
+surface is a very light cotton soil several feet deep. When baked by
+summer sun it has a cracked hard crust giving a firm foothold for man
+and horse, and yielding only slightly to the wheels of light cars;
+even laden lorries made easy tracks over the country. The lorries
+generally kept off the ill-made unrolled Turkish road which had been
+constructed for winter use and, except for slight deviations to avoid
+wadis and gullies cut by Nature to carry off surplus water, the supply
+columns could move in almost as direct a course as the flying men.
+When the heavens opened all this was altered. The first storm turned
+the top into a slippery, greasy mass. In an hour or two the rain
+soaked down into the light earth, and any lorry driver pulling out of
+the line to avoid a skidding vehicle ahead, had the almost certainty
+of finding his car and load come to a full stop with the wheels held
+fast axle deep in the soft soil. An hour's hard digging, the fixing
+of planks beneath the wheels, and a towing cable from another lorry
+sometimes got the machine on to the pressed-down track again and
+enabled it to move ahead for a few miles, but many were the supply
+vehicles that had to wait for a couple of sunny days to dry a path for
+them.
+
+My own experience of the first of the winter rains was so like that of
+others in the force who moved on wheels that I may give some idea of
+the conditions by recounting it. We had taken Ludd and Ramleh, and
+guided by the ruined tower of the Church of the Forty Martyrs I had
+followed in the cavalry's wake. I dallied on the way back to see if
+Akir presented to the latter-day Crusader any signs of its former
+strength when it stood as the Philistine stronghold of Ekron. Near
+where the old city had been the ghastly sight of Turks cut down by
+yeomanry during a hot pursuit offended the senses of sight and smell,
+and when you saw natives moving towards their village at a rate
+somewhat in excess of their customary shuffling gait you were almost
+led to think that their superstitious fears were driving them home
+before sundown lest darkness should raise the ghosts of the Turkish
+dead. A few of the Jewish settlers, whose industry has improved the
+landscape, were leaving the fields and orchards they tended so well,
+though there was still more than an hour of daylight and their tasks
+were not yet done. They were weatherwise. They could have been deaf to
+the rumblings in the south and still have noticed the coming of the
+storm. I was some forty miles from the spot at which my despatch could
+be censored and passed over land wire and cable to London, when a
+vivid lightning flash warned me that the elements were in forbidding
+mood and that I had misread the obvious signal of the natives'
+homeward movement.
+
+The map showed a path from Akir through Mansura towards Junction
+Station, from which the so-called Turkish road ran south. In the
+gathering gloom my driver picked up wheel tracks through an olive
+orchard and, crossing a nullah, found the marks of a Ford car's wheels
+on the other side. The rain fell heavily and soon obliterated all
+signs of a car's progress, and with darkness coming on there was
+a prospect of a shivering night with a wet skin in the open. An
+Australian doctor going up to his regiment at grips with the Turk told
+me that he had no doubt we were on the right road, for he had been
+given a line through Mansura, which must be the farmhouse ahead of us.
+These Australians have a keen nose for country and you have a sense
+of security in following them. The doctor's horse was slipping in the
+mud, but my car made even worse going. It skidded to right and left,
+and only by the skill and coolness of my driver was I saved a ducking
+in a narrow wadi now full of storm water. After much low-gear work we
+pulled up a slight rise and saw ahead of us one or two little fires.
+Under the lee of a dilapidated wall some Scottish infantry were
+brewing tea and making the most of a slight shelter. It was Mansura,
+and if we bore to the right and kept the track beaten down by lorries
+across a field we might, by the favour of fortune, reach Junction
+Station during the night. The Scots had arranged a bivouac in that
+field before it became sodden. They knew how bad it had got, and a
+native instinct to be hospitable prompted an invitation to share the
+fire for the night. However, London was waiting for news and I decided
+to press on. The road could not be worse than the sea of mud in which
+I was floundering, and it might be better. We turned right-handed
+and after a struggle came up against three lorry drivers hopelessly
+marooned. They had turned in. Up a greasy bank we came to a stop and
+slid back. We tried again and failed. I relieved the car of my weight
+and made an effort to push it from behind, but my feet held fast in
+the mud and the car cannoned into me when it skidded downhill. 'Better
+give it up till the morning,' said an M.T. driver whose sleep was
+disturbed by the running of our engine. 'Can't? Who've you got there?
+Eh? Oh, very well. Here, Jim, give them a hand or we'll have no sleep
+to-night'--or words to that effect. Three of the lorry men and the
+engine got us on the move, and before they took mud back with them to
+the dry interiors of the lorries they hoped, they said, that we would
+reach G.H.Q., but declared that it was hopeless to try.
+
+Before getting much farther a light, waved ahead of us, told of some
+one held up. I walked on and found General Butler, the chief of the
+Army Veterinary Service with the Force, unable to move an inch. The
+efforts of two drivers failed to locate the trouble, and everything
+removable was taken off the General's car and put into ours, and with
+the heavier load we started off again for Junction Station. This was
+not difficult to pick up, for there were many flares burning to enable
+working parties to repair engines, rolling stock, and permanent way.
+We got on to the road ultimately, carrying more mud on our feet than I
+imagined human legs could lift. Leaving a driver and all spare gear at
+the station, we thrashed our way along a road metalled with a soft,
+friable limestone which had been cut into by the iron-shod wheels of
+German lorries until the ruts were fully a foot deep, and the soft
+earth foundation was oozing through to the surface. It was desperately
+hard to steer a course on this treacherous highway, and a number of
+lorries we passed had gone temporarily out of action in ditches. The
+Germans with the Turks had blown up most of the culverts, and the road
+bridges which had been destroyed had only been lightly repaired with
+planks and trestles, no safety rails being in position. To negotiate
+these dangerous paths in the dark the driver had to put on all
+possible speed and make a dash for it, and he usually got to the other
+side before a skid became serious. Most of the lorry drivers put out
+no light because they thought no car would be able to move on such a
+night, and we had several narrow escapes of finishing our career on a
+half-sunken supply motor vehicle.
+
+Reinforcements for infantry battalions moved up the road as we came
+down it. They were going to the front to take the place of casualties,
+for weather and mud are not considered when bayonets are wanted in the
+line. So the stolid British infantryman splashed and slipped his way
+towards the enemy, and he would probably have been sleeping that night
+if there had not been a risk of his drowning in the mud. The Camel
+Transport Corps fought the elements with a courage which deserved
+better luck. The camel dislikes many things and is afraid of some. But
+if he is capable of thinking at all he regards mud as his greatest
+enemy. He cannot stand up in it, and if he slips he has not an
+understanding capable of realising that if all his feet do not go
+the same way he must spread-eagle and split up. This is what often
+happens, but if by good luck a camel should go down sideways he seems
+quite content to stay there, and he is so refractory that he prefers
+to die rather than help himself to his feet again. On this wild night
+I had a good opportunity of seeing white officers encourage the
+Egyptian boys in the Camel Transport Corps. At Julis the roadway
+passes through the village. There was an ambulance column in
+difficulties in the village, and while some cars were being extricated
+a camel supply column came up in the opposite direction. The camels
+liked neither the headlights nor the running engines, and these had to
+be made dark and silent before they would pass. The water was running
+over the roadway several inches deep, carrying with it a mass of
+garbage and filth which only Arab villagers would tolerate. Officers
+and Gyppies coaxed and wheedled the stubborn beasts through Julis,
+but outside the place the animals raised a chorus of protest and went
+down. They held me up for an hour or more, and though officers and
+boys did their utmost to get them going again it was a fruitless
+effort, and the poor beasts were off-loaded where they lay. That night
+of rain and thunder, wind and cold, was bad alike for man and beast,
+but beyond a flippant remark of some soldier doing his best and the
+curious chant of the Gyppies' chorus you heard nothing. Tommy could
+not trust himself to talk about the weather. It was too bad for words,
+for even the strongest.
+
+It took our car ten hours to run forty miles, and as the last ten
+miles was over wet sand and on rabbit wire stretched across the
+sand where the car could do fifteen miles an hour, we had averaged
+something under three miles an hour through the mud. Wet through,
+cold, with a face rendered painful to the touch by driven rain, I
+reached my tent with a feeling of thankfulness for myself and deep
+sympathy for the tens of thousands of brave boys enduring intense
+discomfort and fatigue, coupled with the fear of short rations for the
+next day or two. The men in the hills which they were just entering
+had a worse time than those in the waterlogged plain, but no storms
+could damp their enthusiasm. They were beating your enemies and mine,
+and they were facing a goal which Britain had never yet won. Jerusalem
+the Golden was before them, and the honour and glory of winning it
+from the Turk was a prize to attain which no sacrifice was too great.
+Those who did not say so behaved in a way to show that they felt it.
+They were very gallant, perfect knights, these soldiers of the King.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+INTO THE JUDEAN HILLS
+
+
+When the 52nd Division were moving out of Ludd on the 19th November
+the 75th Division were fighting hard about Latron, where the Turks
+held the monastery and its beautiful gardens and the hill about Amwas
+until late in the morning. Having driven them out, the 75th pushed
+on to gain the pass into the hills and to begin two days of fighting
+which earned the unstinted praise of General Bulfin who witnessed it.
+For nearly three miles from Latron the road passes through a flat
+valley flanked by hills till it reaches a guardhouse and khan at the
+foot of the pass which then rises rapidly to Saris, the difference
+in elevation in less than four miles being 1400 feet. Close to the
+guardhouse begin the hills which tower above the road. The Turks had
+constructed defences on these hills and held them with riflemen and
+machine guns, so that these positions dominated all approaches. Our
+guns had few positions from which to assist the infantry, but they did
+sterling service wherever possible. In General Palin the Division
+had a commander with wide experience of hill fighting on the Indian
+frontier, and he brought that experience to bear in a way which must
+have dumb-founded the enemy. Frontal attacks were impossible and
+suicidal, and each position had to be turned by a wide movement
+started a long way in rear. All units in the Division did well, the
+Gurkhas particularly well, and by a continual encircling of their
+flanks the Turks were compelled to leave their fastnesses and fall
+back to new hill crests. Thus outwitted and outmatched the enemy
+retreated to Saris, a high hill with a commanding view of the pass for
+half a mile. The hill is covered with olive trees and has a village on
+its eastern slope, and as the road winds at its foot and then takes
+a left-handed turn to Kuryet el Enab its value for defence was
+considerable.
+
+The Turks had taken advantage of the cover to place a large body of
+defenders with machine guns on the hill, but with every condition
+unfavourable to us the 75th Division had routed out the enemy before
+three o'clock and were ready to move forward as soon as the guns
+could get up the pass. Rain was falling heavily, the road surface was
+clinging and treacherous, and, worse still, the road had been blown up
+in several places. The guns could not advance to be of service that
+day, and the infantry had, therefore, to remain where they were for
+the night. There was a good deal of sniping, but Nature was more
+unkind than the enemy, who received more than he gave. The troops were
+wearing light summer clothing, drill shorts and tunics, and the sudden
+change from the heat and dryness of the plain to bitter cold and wet
+was a desperate trial, especially to the Indian units, who had little
+sleep that night. They needed rest to prepare them for the rigour of
+the succeeding day. A drenching rain turned the whole face of the
+mountains, where earth covered rock, into a sea of mud. On the
+positions about Saris being searched a number of prisoners were taken,
+among them a battalion commander. Men captured in the morning told us
+there were six Turkish battalions holding Enab, which is something
+under two miles from Saris.
+
+The road proceeds up a rise from Saris, then falling slightly it
+passes below the crest of a ridge and again climbs to the foot of a
+hill on which a red-roofed convent church and buildings stand as a
+landmark that can be seen from Jaffa. On the opposite side of the road
+is a substantial house, the summer retreat of the German Consul in
+Jerusalem, whose staff traded in Jordan Holy Water; and this house,
+now empty, sheltered a divisional general from the bad weather while
+the operations for the capture of the Holy City were in preparation. I
+have a grateful recollection of this building, for in it the military
+attaches and I stayed before the Official Entry into Jerusalem, and
+its roof saved us from one inclement night on the bleak hills. On the
+20th November the Turks did their best to keep the place under German
+ownership. The hill on which it stands was well occupied by men under
+cover of thick stone walls, the convent gardens on the opposite side
+of the highway was packed with Turkish infantry, and across the deep
+valley to the west were guns and riflemen on another hill, all of them
+holding the road under the best possible observation. The enemy's
+howitzers put down a heavy barrage on all approaches, and on the
+reverse of the hill covering the village lying in the hollow
+there were machine guns and many men. Reconnaissances showed the
+difficulties attending an attack, and it was not until the afternoon
+that a plan was ready to be put into execution. No weak points in the
+defences could be discovered, and just as it seemed possible that a
+daylight attack would be held up, a thick mist rolled up the valley
+and settled down over Enab. The 2/3rd Gurkhas seized a welcomed
+opportunity, and as the light was failing the shrill, sharp notes
+of these gallant hillmen and the deep-throated roar of the 1/5th
+Somersets told that a weighty bayonet charge had got home, and that
+the keys of the enemy position had been won. The men of the bold 75th
+went beyond Enab in the dark, and also out along the old Roman road
+towards Biddu to deny the Turks a point from which they could see the
+road as it fell away from the Enab ridge towards the wadi Ikbala. That
+night many men sought the doubtful shelter of olive groves, and built
+stone sangars to break the force of a biting wind. A few, as many as
+could be accommodated, were welcomed by the monks in a monastery in
+a fold in the hills, whilst some rested and were thankful in a crypt
+beneath the monks' church, the oldest part of the building, believed
+to be the work of sixth-century masons. The monks had a tale of woe to
+tell. They had been proud to have as their guest the Latin Patriarch
+in Jerusalem, who was a French protege, and this high ecclesiastic
+remained at the monastery till November 17, when Turkish gendarmerie
+carried him away. The Spanish Consul in Jerusalem lodged a vigorous
+protest, and, so the monks were told, he was supported by the German
+Commandant. But to no purpose, for when General Allenby entered
+Jerusalem he learned that the Latin Patriarch had been removed to
+Damascus. For quite a long time the monks did many kindly things for
+our troops. They gave up the greater part of the monastery and church
+for use as a hospital, and many a sick man was brought back to health
+by rest within those ancient walls. Some, alas, there were whose
+wounds were mortal, and a number lie in the monks' secluded garden.
+They have set up wooden crosses over them, and we may be certain that
+in that quiet sequestered spot their remains will rest in peace and
+will have the protection of the monks as surely as it has been given
+to the grave of the Roman centurion which faces those of our brave
+boys who fell on the same soil fighting the same good fight.
+
+While the 75th Division were making their magnificent effort at Enab
+the Lowlanders had breasted other and equally difficult hills to the
+north. General Hill had posted a strong force at Beit Likia, and then
+moved south-east along the route prepared by Cestius Gallus nearly
+1900 years ago to the height of Beit Anan, and thence east again
+to Beit Dukku. On the 21st the road and ground near it were in
+exceedingly bad condition, and the difficulty of moving anything on
+wheels along it could hardly have been greater. Already the 52nd
+Division had realised it was hopeless to get all their divisional
+artillery into action, and only three sections of artillery were
+brought up, the horses of the guns sent back to Ramleh being used to
+double the teams in the three advanced sections. It was heavy work,
+too, for infantry who not only had to carry the weight of mud-caked
+boots, but were handicapped by continual slipping upon the rocky
+ground. The 75th advancing along the road from Enab to Kustul got an
+idea of the Turkish lack of attention to the highway, the main road
+being deep in mud and full of dangerous ruts. They won Kustul about
+midday, and officers who climbed to the top got their first glimpse
+of the outskirts of Jerusalem from the ruined walls of a Roman castle
+that gives its name to the little village perched on the height. They
+did not, however, see much beyond the Syrian colony behind the main
+Turkish defences, and the first view of Jerusalem by the troops of
+the British Army was obtained by General Maclean's brigade when they
+advanced from Biddu to Nebi Samwil, that crowning height on which many
+centuries before Richard the Lion Heart buried his face in his casque
+and exclaimed: 'Lord God, I pray that I may never see Thy Holy City,
+if so be that I may not rescue it from the hands of Thine enemies.'
+
+What a fight it was for Nebi Samwil! The Turk had made it his advanced
+work for his main line running from El Jib through Bir Nabala, Beit
+Iksa to Lifta, as strong a chain of entrenched mountains as any
+commander could desire. General Maclean's brigade advanced from Biddu
+along the side of a ridge and up the exposed steep slope of Nebi
+Samwil, not all of which, in the only direction he could select for an
+advance, was terraced, as it was on the Turks' side. He was all
+the time confronted by heavy artillery and rifle fire, and, though
+supported by guns firing at long range from the neighbourhood of Enab,
+he could not make Nebi Samwil in daylight. Round the top of the hill
+the Turk had dug deeply into the stony earth. He knew the value
+of that hill. From its crest good observation was obtained in all
+directions, and if, when we had to attack the main Jerusalem defences
+on December 8, the summit of Nebi Samwil had still been in Turkish
+hands, not a movement of troops as they issued from the bed of the
+wadi Surar and climbed the rough face of the western buttresses of
+Jerusalem would have escaped notice. The brigade won the hill and held
+it just before midnight, but the battle for the crest ebbed and flowed
+for days with terrific violence, we never giving up possession of it,
+though it was stormed again and again by an enemy who, it is fair to
+admit, displayed fine courage and not a little skill. That hill-top at
+this period had to submit to a thunderous bombardment, and the Mosque
+of Nebi Samwil became a battered shell. Here are supposed to lie the
+remains of the Prophet Samuel. The tradition may or may not be well
+founded, but at any rate Mahomedans and Christians alike have held
+the place in veneration for centuries. The Turk paid no regard to the
+sanctity of the Mosque, and, as it was of military importance to him
+that we should not hold it, he shelled it daily with all his available
+guns, utterly destroying it. There may be cases where the Turks will
+deny that they damaged a Holy Place. They could not hide their guilt
+on Nebi Samwil. I was at pains to examine the Mosque and the immediate
+surroundings, and the photographs I took are proof that the wreckage
+of this church came from artillery fired from the east and north, the
+direction of the Turkish gun-pits. It is possible we are apt to be
+a little too sentimental about the destruction in war of a place of
+worship. If a general has reason to think that a tower or minaret
+is being used as an observation post, or that a church or mosque is
+sheltering a body of troops, there are those who hold that he is
+justified in deliberately planning its destruction, but here was a
+sacred building with associations held in reverence by all classes and
+creeds in a land where these things are counted high, and to have set
+about wrecking it was a crime. The German influence over the Turk
+asserted itself, as it did in the heavy fighting after we had taken
+Jerusalem. We had batteries on the Mount of Olives and the Turk
+searched for them, but they never fired one round at the Kaiserin
+Augusta Victoria Hospice near by. That had been used as Falkenhayn's
+headquarters. General Chetwode occupied it as his Corps Headquarters
+soon after he entered Jerusalem. There was a wireless installation and
+the Turks could see the coming and going of the Corps' motor cars. I
+have watched operations from a summer-house in the gardens, and no
+enemy plane could pass over the building without discovering the
+purpose to which it was put. And there were spies. But not one shell
+fell within the precincts of the hospice because it was a German
+building, containing the statues of the Kaiser and Kaiserin, and (oh,
+the taste of the Hun!) with effigies of the Kaiser and his consort
+painted in the roof of the chapel not far from a picture of the
+Saviour. Britain is rebuilding what the Turks destroyed, and there
+will soon arise on Nebi Samwil a new mosque to show Mahomedans that
+tolerance and freedom abide under our flag.
+
+When the 75th Division were making the attack on Nebi Samwil the 52nd
+Division put all the men they could spare on to the task of making
+roads. To be out of the firing line did not mean rest. In fact, as
+far as physical exertion went, it was easier to be fighting than in
+reserve. From sunrise till dark and often later the roadmakers were at
+work with pick, shovel, and crowbar, and the tools were not too many
+for the job. The gunners joined in the work and managed to take their
+batteries over the roads long before they were considered suitable
+for other wheels. The battery commanders sometimes selected firing
+positions which appeared quite inaccessible to any one save a mountain
+climber, but the guns got there and earned much credit for their
+teams.
+
+On the 22nd Nebi Samwil was thrice attacked. British and Indian troops
+were holding the hill, but the Turks were on the northern slopes. They
+were, in fact, on strong positions on three sides, and from El Burj,
+a prominent hill 1200 yards to the south-east, and from the wooded
+valley of the wadi Hannina, they could advance with plenty of cover.
+There was much dead ground, stone walls enclosed small patches of
+cultivation, and when troops halted under the terraces on the slopes
+no gun or rifle fire could reach them. The enemy could thus get quite
+close to our positions before we could deal with them, and their
+attacks were also favoured by an intense volume of artillery fire from
+5.9's placed about the Jerusalem-Nablus road and, as some people in
+Jerusalem afterwards told me, from the Mount of Olives. The attackers
+possessed the advantage that our guns could not concentrate on them
+while the attack was preparing, and could only put in a torrent of
+fire when the enemy infantry were getting near their goal. These three
+attacks were delivered with the utmost ferocity, and were pressed home
+each time with determination. But the 75th Division held on with a
+stubbornness which was beyond praise, and the harder the Turk tried
+to reach the summit the tighter became the defence. Each attack was
+repulsed with very heavy losses, and after his third failure the enemy
+did not put in his infantry again that day.
+
+The 75th Division endeavoured to reach El Jib, a village on the hill a
+mile and a half to the north of Nebi Samwil. The possession of El Jib
+by us would have attracted some of the enemy opposing the advance
+of the Yeomanry Mounted Division on the left, but not only was the
+position strongly defended in the village and on the high ground on
+the north and north-west, but our infantry could not break down the
+opposition behind the sangars and boulders on the northern side of
+Nebi Samwil. The attack had to be given up, but we made some progress
+in this mountainous sector, as the 52nd Division had pushed out from
+Dukku to Beit Izza, between 3000 and 4000 yards from El Jib, and
+by driving the enemy from this strong village they made it more
+comfortable for the troops in Biddu and protected the Nebi Samwil
+flank, the securing of which in those days of bitter fighting was
+an important factor. It was evident from what was happening on this
+front, not only where two divisions of infantry had to strain every
+nerve to hold on to what they had got but where the Yeomanry Mounted
+Division were battling against enormous odds in the worse country to
+the north-west, that the Turks were not going to allow us to get
+to the Nablus road without making a direct attack on the Jerusalem
+defences. They outnumbered us, had a large preponderance in guns, were
+near their base, and enjoyed the advantage of prepared positions and a
+comparatively easy access to supplies and ammunition. Everything was
+in their favour down to the very state of the weather. But our army
+struggled on against all the big obstacles. On the 23rd the 75th
+Division renewed their attack on El Jib, but although the men showed
+the dash which throughout characterised the Division, it had to be
+stopped. The garrison of El Jib had been reinforced, and the enemy
+held the woods, wadi banks, and sangars in greater strength than
+before, while the artillery fire was extremely heavy. Not only was the
+75th Division tired with ceaseless fighting, but the losses they had
+sustained since they left the Plain of Ajalon had been substantial,
+and the 52nd Division took over from them that night to prepare
+for another effort on the following day. The Scots were no more
+successful. They made simultaneous attacks on the northern and
+southern ends of Nebi Samwil, and a brigade worked up from Beit Izza
+to a ridge north-west of El Jib. Two magnificent attempts were made
+to get into the enemy's positions, but they failed. The officer
+casualties were heavy; some companies had no officers, and the troops
+were worn out by great exertions and privations in the bleak hills.
+The two divisions had been fighting hard for over three weeks, they
+had marched long distances on hard food, which at the finish was not
+too plentiful, and the sudden violent change in the weather conditions
+made it desirable that the men should get to an issue of warmer
+clothing. General Bulfin realised it would be risking heavy losses to
+ask his troops to make another immediate effort against a numerically
+stronger enemy in positions of his own choice, and he therefore
+applied to General Allenby that the XXth Corps--the 60th Division was
+already at Latron attached to the XXIst Corps--might take over the
+line. The Commander-in-Chief that evening ordered the attack on the
+enemy's positions to be discontinued until the arrival of fresh
+troops. During the next day or two the enemy's artillery was as active
+as hitherto, but the punishment he had received in his attacks made
+him pause, and there were only small half-hearted attempts to reach
+our line. They were all beaten off by infantry fire, and the reliefs
+of the various brigades of the XXIst Corps were complete by November
+28. It had not been given to the XXIst Corps to obtain the distinction
+of driving the Turks for ever from Jerusalem, but the work of
+the Corps in the third and fourth weeks of November had laid the
+foundation on which victory finally rested. The grand efforts of the
+52nd and 75th Divisions in rushing over the foothills of the Shephelah
+on to the Judean heights, in getting a footing on some of the most
+prominent hills within three days of leaving the plain, and in
+holding on with grim tenacity to what they had gained, enabled the
+Commander-in-Chief to start on a new plan by which to take the Holy
+City in one stride, so to speak. The 52nd and 75th Divisions and, as
+will be seen, the Yeomanry Mounted Division as well, share the glory
+of the capture of Jerusalem with the 53rd, 60th, and 74th Divisions
+who were in at the finish.
+
+The fighting of the Yeomanry Mounted Division on the left of the 52nd
+was part and parcel of the XXIst Corps' effort to get to the Nablus
+road. It was epic fighting, and I have not described it when narrating
+the infantry's daily work because it is best told in a connected
+story. If the foot sloggers had a bad time, the conditions were
+infinitely worse for mounted troops. The ground was as steep, but the
+hillsides were rougher, the wadis narrower, the patches of open flat
+fewer than in the districts where infantry operated. So bad indeed was
+the country that horses were an encumbrance, and most of them were
+returned to the plain. After a time horse artillery could proceed no
+farther, and the only guns the yeomanry had with them were those of
+a section of the Hong Kong and Singapore mountain battery, manned by
+Sikhs, superb fellows whose service in the Egyptian deserts and in
+Palestine was worthy of a martial race. But their little guns were
+outranged by the Turkish artillery, and though they were often right
+up with the mounted men they could not get near the enemy batteries.
+The supply of the division in the nooks and crannies where there was
+not so much as a goat-path was a desperate problem, and could not have
+been solved without the aid of many hundreds of pack-donkeys which
+dumped their loads of supplies and ammunition on the hillsides,
+leaving it to be carried forward by hand. The division were fighting
+almost continually for a fortnight. They got farther forward than
+the infantry and met the full force of an opposition which, if not
+stronger than that about Nebi Samwil, was extremely violent, and they
+came back to a line which could be supplied with less difficulty
+when it was apparent that the Turks were not going to accept the
+opportunity General Allenby gave them to withdraw their army from
+Jerusalem. The Division's most bitter struggle was about the
+Beth-horons, on the very scene where Joshua, on a lengthened day,
+threw the Canaanites off the Shephelah.
+
+The Yeomanry Mounted Division received orders on the afternoon of
+November 17 to move across Ajalon into the foothills and to press
+forward straight on Bireh as rapidly as possible. Their trials they
+began immediately. One regiment of the 8th Brigade occupied Annabeh,
+and a regiment of the 22nd Brigade got within a couple of miles of
+Nalin, where a well-concealed body of the enemy held it up. Soon the
+report came in that the country was impassable for wheels. By
+the afternoon of the next day the 8th Brigade were at Beit ur el
+Foka--Beth-horon the Upper--a height where fig trees and pomegranates
+flourish. Eastwards the country falls away and there are several
+ragged narrow valleys between some tree-topped ridges till the eye
+meets a sheikh's tomb on the Zeitun ridge, standing midway between
+Foka and Beitunia, which rears a proud and picturesque head to bar the
+way to Bireh. The wadis cross the valleys wherever torrent water can
+tear up rock, but the yeomanry found their beds smoother going, filled
+though they were with boulders, than the hill slopes, which generally
+rose in steep gradients from the sides of watercourses. During every
+step of the way across this saw-toothed country one appreciated to
+the full the defenders' advantage. If dead ground hid you from one
+hill-top enemy marks-men could get you from another, and it was
+impossible for the division to proceed unless it got the enemy out of
+all the hills on its line of advance. The infantry on the right were
+very helpful, but the brigade on the left flank had many difficulties,
+which were not lessened when, on the second day of the movement, all
+Royal Horse Artillery guns and all wheels had to be sent back owing to
+the bad country. Up to this point the fight against Nature was more
+arduous than against the enemy. Thenceforward the enemy became more
+vigilant and active, and the hills and stony hollows more trying. All
+available men were set to work to make a road for the Hong Kong and
+Singapore gunners, a battery which would always get as far into the
+mountains as any in the King's Army. The road parties laboured night
+and day, but it was only by the greatest exertions that the battery
+could be got through. The heavy rain of the 19th added to the
+troubles. The 8th Brigade, having occupied Beit ur et Tahta
+(Beth-horon the Lower) early on the morning of the 19th, proceeded
+along the wadi Sunt until a force on the heights held them up, and
+they had to remain in the wadi while the 6th Mounted Brigade turned
+the enemy's flank at Foka. The 22nd Mounted Brigade on the north met
+with the same trouble--every hill had to be won and picqueted--and
+they could not make Ain Arik that day. As soon as it was light on the
+following morning the 6th Mounted Brigade brushed away opposition in
+Foka and entered the village, pushing on thence towards Beitunia. The
+advance was slow and hazardous; every hill had to be searched, a task
+difficult of accomplishment by reason of the innumerable caves and
+boulders capable of sheltering snipers. The Turk had become an adept
+at sniping, and left parties in the hills to carry on by themselves.
+When the 6th Brigade got within two miles of the south-west of
+Beitunia they were opposed by 5000 Turks well screened by woods on the
+slopes and the wadi. Both sides strove all day without gaining ground.
+Divisional headquarters were only a short distance behind the 6th, and
+the 8th Brigade was moved up into the same area to be ready to assist.
+By two o'clock in the afternoon the 22nd Brigade got into Ain Arik and
+found a strong force of the enemy holding Beitunia and the hill of
+Muntar, a few hundred yards to the north of it, thus barring the way
+to Ramallah and Bireh. Rain fell copiously and the wind was chilly.
+After a miserable night in bivouac, the 6th Brigade was astir before
+daylight on the 21st. They were fighting at dawn, and in the half
+light compelled the enemy to retire to within half a mile of Beitunia.
+A few prisoners were rounded up, and these told the brigadier that
+3000 Turks were holding Beitunia with four batteries of field guns and
+four heavy camel guns. That estimate was found to be approximately
+accurate. A regiment of the 8th Brigade sent to reinforce the 6th
+Brigade on their left got within 800 yards of the hill, when the guns
+about Bireh and Ramallah opened on them and they were compelled to
+withdraw, and a Turkish counter-attack forced our forward line back
+slightly in the afternoon. The enemy had a plentiful supply of
+ammunition and made a prodigal use of it. While continuing to shell
+fiercely he put more infantry into his fighting line, and as we had
+only 1200 rifles and four mountain guns, which the enemy's artillery
+outranged, it was clear we could not dislodge him from the Beitunia
+crest. The 22nd Mounted Brigade had made an attempt to get to Ramallah
+from Ain Arik, but the opposition from Muntar and the high ground
+to the east was much too severe. Our casualties had not been
+inconsiderable, and in face of the enemy's superiority in numbers and
+guns and the strength of his position it would have been dangerous and
+useless to make a further attack. General Barrow therefore decided to
+withdraw to Foka during the night. All horses had been sent back in
+the course of the afternoon, and when the light failed the retirement
+began. The wounded were first evacuated, and they, poor fellows, had
+a bad time of it getting back to Foka in the dark over four miles of
+rock-strewn country. It was not till two o'clock on the following
+morning that all the convoys of wounded passed through Foka, but by
+that time the track to Tahta had been made into passable order, and
+some of these helpless men were out of the hills soon after daylight,
+journeying in comparative ease in light motor ambulances over the
+Plain of Ajalon.
+
+The arrangements for the withdrawal worked admirably. The 8th Mounted
+Brigade, covering the retirement so successfully that the enemy knew
+nothing about it, held on in front of Beitunia till three o'clock,
+reaching Foka before dawn, while the 22nd Brigade remained covering
+the northern flank till almost midnight, when it fell back to Tahta.
+The Division's casualties during the day were 300 killed and wounded.
+We still held the Zeitun ridge, observation was kept on Ain Arik from
+El Hafy by one regiment, and troops were out on many parts north and
+east of Tahta and Foka.
+
+On the next two days there was nothing beyond enemy shelling and
+patrol encounters. On the 24th demonstrations were made against
+Beitunia to support the left of the 52nd Division's attack on El Jib,
+but the enemy was too strong to permit of the yeomanry proceeding
+more than two miles east of Foka. The roadmakers had done an enormous
+amount of navvy work on the track between Foka and Tahta. They had
+laboured without cessation, breaking up rock, levering out boulders
+with crowbars, and doing a sort of rough-and-ready levelling, and by
+the night of the 24th the track was reported passable for guns.
+The Leicester battery R.H.A. came along it next morning without
+difficulty. I did not see the road till some time later and its
+surface had then been considerably improved, but even then one felt
+the drivers of those gun teams had achieved the almost impossible. The
+Leicester battery arrived at Foka just in time to unlimber and get
+into action behind a fig orchard in order to disperse a couple of
+companies of enemy infantry which were working round the left flank of
+the Staffordshire Yeomanry at Khurbet Meita, below the Zeitun height.
+The enemy brought up reinforcements and made an attack in the late
+afternoon, but this was also broken up. The Berkshire battery reached
+Tahta the following day and, with the Leicester gunners, answered the
+Turks' long-range shelling throughout the day and night. On the 27th
+the enemy made a determined attempt to compel us to withdraw from the
+Zeitun ridge, which is an isolated hill commanding the valleys on both
+sides. The 6th Mounted Brigade furnished the garrison of 3 officers
+and 60 men, who occupied a stone building on the summit. Against them
+the enemy put 600 infantry with machine guns, and they also brought a
+heavy artillery fire to bear on the building from Beitunia, 4000 yards
+away. The garrison put up a most gallant defence. They were compelled
+to leave the building because the enemy practically destroyed it by
+gunfire and the infantry almost surrounded the hill, but they
+obtained cover on the boulder-strewn sides of the hill and held their
+assailants at bay. At dusk, although the garrison was reduced to 2
+officers and 26 men, they refused to give ground. They were instructed
+to hold on as long as possible, and a reinforcement of 50 men was sent
+up after dark--all that could be spared, as the division was holding a
+series of hills ten miles long and every rifle was in the line. This
+front was being threatened at several points, and the activity of
+patrols at Deir Ibzia and north of it suggested that the enemy was
+trying to get into the gap of five miles between the yeomanry and the
+right of the 54th Division which was now at Shilta. It was an anxious
+night, and No. 2 Light Armoured Car battery was kept west of Tahta
+to enfilade the enemy with machine guns should he appear in the
+neighbourhood of Suffa. The 7th Mounted Brigade was ordered up to
+reinforce. The fresh troops arrived at dawn on the 28th, and had no
+sooner got into position at Hellabi, half a mile north-west of Tahta,
+than their left flank was attacked by 1000 Turks with machine guns.
+The 155th Brigade of the 52nd Division was on its way through Beit
+Likia to rest after its hard work in the neighbourhood of Nebi Samwil
+and El Jib, and it was ordered up to assist. At midday the brigade
+attacked Suffa but could not take it. The Scots, however, prevented
+the Turks breaking round the left flank of the yeomanry. The post
+which had held Zeitun so bravely was brought into Foka under cover of
+the Leicester and Berkshire batteries' fire, and very heavy fighting
+continued all day long on the Foka-Tahta-Suffa line, but though the
+enemy employed 3000 infantry in his attack, and had four batteries
+of 77's and four heavy camel guns, he was unsuccessful. At dusk the
+attack on Tahta, which had been under shell-fire all day, was beaten
+off and the enemy was compelled to withdraw one mile. Suffa was still
+his, but his advanced troops on the cairn south of that place had
+suffered heavily during the day at the hands of the 7th Mounted
+Brigade, who several times drove them off. Some howitzers of the 52nd
+Division were hauled over the hills in the afternoon and shelled
+the cairn so heavily that the post sought shelter in Suffa. To the
+south-east of the line of attack the Turks were doing their utmost to
+secure Foka. They came again and again, and their attacks were always
+met and broken with the bayonet by yeomen who were becoming fatigued
+by continuous fighting, and advancing and retiring in this terrible
+country. They could have held the place that night, but there was no
+possibility of sending them reinforcements, and as the enemy had been
+seen working round to the south of the village with machine guns it
+might have been impossible to get them out in the morning. General
+Barrow accordingly withdrew the Foka garrison to a new position on a
+wooded ridge half-way between that place and Tahta, and the enemy made
+no attempt to get beyond Foka. Late at night he got so close to Tahta
+from the north that he threw bombs at our sangars, but he was driven
+off.
+
+During the evening the Yeomanry Mounted Division received welcome
+reinforcements. The 4th Australian Light Horse Brigade were placed
+in support of the 6th Mounted Brigade and a battalion of the 156th
+Infantry Brigade assisted the 7th Mounted Brigade.
+
+On the 29th the Turks made their biggest effort to break through the
+important line we held, and all day they persisted with the greatest
+determination in an attack on our left. At midnight they had again
+occupied the cairn south of Suffa, and remained there till 8 A.M.,
+when the 268th Brigade Royal Field Artillery crowned the hill with a
+tremendous burst of fire and drove them off. The machine-gunners
+of the 7th Mounted Brigade caught the force as it was retiring and
+inflicted many casualties. The Turks came back again and again, and
+the cairn repeatedly changed hands, until at last it was unoccupied by
+either side. Towards dusk the Turks' attacks petered out, though the
+guns and snipers continued busy, and the Yeomanry Mounted Division was
+relieved by the 231st Infantry Brigade of the 74th Division and the
+157th Infantry Brigade of the 52nd Division, the Australian Mounted
+Division ultimately taking over the left of the line which XXth Corps
+troops occupied.
+
+The Yeomanry Mounted Division had made a grand fight against a vastly
+superior force of the enemy in a country absolutely unfavourable to
+the movement of mounted troops. They never had more than 1200 rifles
+holding a far-flung barren and bleak line, and the fine qualities
+of vigorous and swift attack, unfaltering discipline and heroic
+stubbornness in defence under all conditions, get their proof in
+the 499 casualties incurred by the Division in the hill fighting,
+exclusive of those sustained by the 7th Mounted Brigade which
+reinforced them. The Division was made up entirely of first-line
+yeomanry regiments whose members had become efficient soldiers in
+their spare time, when politicians were prattling about peace and
+deluding parties into the belief that there was little necessity to
+prepare for war. Their patriotism and example gave a tone to the
+drafts sent out to replace casualties and the wastage of war, and were
+a credit to the stock from which they sprang.
+
+While the Yeomanry Mounted Division had been fighting a great battle
+alongside the infantry of the XXIst Corps in the hills, the remainder
+of the troops of the Desert Mounted Corps were employed on the plain
+and in the coastal sector, hammering the enemy hard and establishing
+a line from the mouth of the river Auja through some rising ground
+across the plain. They were busily engaged clearing the enemy out of
+some of the well-ordered villages east of the sandy belt, several of
+them German colonies showing signs of prosperity and more regard
+for cleanliness and sanitation than other of the small centres of
+population hereabouts. The village of Sarona, north of Jaffa, an
+almost exclusively German settlement, was better arranged than any
+others, but Wilhelma was a good second.
+
+The most important move was on November 24, when, with a view to
+making the enemy believe an attack was intended against his right
+flank, the New Zealand Mounted Rifles Brigade was sent across the
+river Auja to seize the villages of Sheikh Muannis near the sea, and
+Hadrah farther inland, two companies of infantry holding each of the
+two crossings. The enemy became alarmed and attacked the cavalry in
+force early next morning, 1000 infantry marching on Muannis. The
+Hadrah force was driven back across the Auja and the two companies of
+infantry covering the crossing suffered heavily, having no support
+from artillery, which had been sent into bivouac. Some of the men had
+to swim the river. A bridge of boats had been built at Jerisheh mill
+during the night, and by this means men crossed until Muannis was
+occupied by the enemy later in the morning. The cavalry crossed the
+ford at the mouth of the Auja at the gallop. The 1/4th Essex held on
+to Hadrah until five out of six officers and about fifty per cent. of
+the men became casualties. There was a good deal of minor fighting on
+this section of the front, and in a number of patrol encounters the
+resource of the Australian Light Horse added to their bag of prisoners
+and to the Army's store of information. Nothing further of importance
+occurred in this neighbourhood until we seized the crossings of the
+Auja and the high ground north of the river a week before the end of
+the year.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+THE DELIVERANCE OF THE HOLY CITY
+
+
+The impossibility of getting across the road north of Jerusalem by
+making a wide sweep over the Judean hills caused a new plan to be put
+into execution. This necessitated a direct attack on the well-prepared
+system of defences on the hills protecting Jerusalem from the west,
+but it did not entail any weakening of General Allenby's determination
+that there should be no fighting by British troops in and about the
+precincts of the Holy City. That resolve was unshaken and unshakable.
+When a new scheme was prepared by the XXth Corps, the question was put
+whether the Turks could be attacked at Lifta, which was part of their
+system. Now Lifta is a native village on one of the hill-faces to the
+west of Jerusalem, about a mile from the Holy City's walls, and, as
+it is not even connected by a road with any of the various colonies
+forming the suburbs of Jerusalem, could not by any stretch of
+imagination be described by a Hun propaganda merchant as part
+of Jerusalem. I happen to know that on the 26th November the
+Commander-in-Chief sent this communication to General Chetwode: 'I
+place no restriction upon you in respect of any operation which you
+may consider necessary against Lifta or the enemy's lines to the south
+of it, except that on no account is any risk to be run of bringing
+the City of Jerusalem or its immediate environs within the area of
+operations.' The spirit as well as the letter of that order was
+carried out, and in the very full orders and notes on the operations
+issued before the victorious attack was made, there is the most
+elaborate detail regarding the different objectives of divisions and
+brigades, and scrupulous care was taken that no advance should be made
+against any resisting enemy within the boundaries not only of the
+Holy City but of the suburbs. We shall see how thoroughly these
+instructions were followed.
+
+When it became obvious that Jerusalem could not be secured without the
+adoption of a deliberate method of attack, there were many matters
+requiring the anxious consideration of the XXth Corps staff. They took
+over from XXIst Corps at a time when the enemy was still very active
+against the line which they had gained under very hard conditions. The
+XXth Corps, beginning with the advantage of positions which the XXIst
+Corps had won, had to prepare to meet the enemy with equal gun power
+and more than equality in rifle strength. We had the men and the
+guns in the country, but to get them into the line and to keep
+them supplied was a problem of considerable magnitude. Time was an
+important factor. The rains had begun. The spells of fine weather were
+getting shorter, and after each period of rain the sodden state of the
+country affected all movement. To bring up supplies we could only rely
+on road traffic from Gaza and Deir Sineid, and the light soil had
+become hopelessly cut up during the rains. The main line of railway
+was not to be opened to Mejdel till December 8, and the captured
+Turkish line between Deir Sineid and Junction Station had a maximum
+capacity of one hundred tons of ordnance stores a day, and these had
+to be moved forward again by road. An advance must slow down while
+communications were improved. The XXth Corps inherited from the XXIst
+Corps the track between Beit Likia and Biddu which had been prepared
+with an infinity of trouble and exertion, but this and the main
+Latron-Jerusalem road were the only highways available.
+
+General Chetwode's Corps relieved General Bulfin's Corps during
+the day of November 28, and viewed in the most favourable light it
+appeared that there must be at least one week's work on the roads
+before it would be possible for heavy and field batteries, in
+sufficient strength to support an attack, to be got into the
+mountains. A new road was begun between Latron and Beit Likia, and
+another from Enab to Kubeibeh, and these, even in a rough state of
+completion, eased the situation very considerably. An enormous amount
+of labour was devoted to the main road. The surface was in bad order
+and was getting worse every hour with the passage of lorry traffic. It
+became full of holes, and the available metal in the neighbourhood
+was a friable limestone which, under heavy pressure during rains, was
+ground into the consistency of a thick cream. Pioneer battalions were
+reinforced by large parties of Egyptian labour corps, and these worked
+ceaselessly, clearing off top layers of mud, carrying stones down from
+the hills and breaking them, putting on a new surface and repairing
+the decayed walls which held up the road in many places. The
+roadmakers proved splendid fellows. They put a vast amount of energy
+into their work, but when the roads were improved rain gravely
+interfered with traffic, and camels were found to be most
+unsatisfactory. They slipped and fell and no reliance could be placed
+on a camel convoy getting to its destination in the hills. Two
+thousand donkeys were pressed into service, and with them the troops
+in the distant positions were kept supplied. It would not be possible
+to exaggerate the value of this donkey transport. In anticipation of
+the advance the Quartermaster-General's department, with the foresight
+which characterised that department and all its branches throughout
+the campaign, searched Egypt for the proper stamp of asses for pack
+transport in the hills. The Egyptian donkey is a big fellow with
+a light-grey coat, capable of carrying a substantial load, hardy,
+generally docile, and less stubborn than most of the species. He is
+much taller and heavier than the Palestine donkey, and our Army never
+submitted him to the atrociously heavy loads which crush and break the
+spirit of the local Arabs' animals. It is, perhaps, too much to hope
+that the natives will learn something from the British soldier's
+treatment of animals. It was one of the sights of the campaign to see
+the donkey trains at work. They carried supplies which, having been
+brought by the military railway from the Suez Canal to railhead, were
+conveyed by motor lorries as far as the state of the road permitted
+self-propelled vehicles to run, were next transhipped into limbers,
+and, when horse transport could proceed no farther, were stowed on to
+the backs of camels. The condition of the road presently held up the
+camels, and then donkey trains took over the loads. Under a white
+officer you would see a chain of some two hundred donkeys, each roped
+in file of four, led by an Egyptian who knew all that was worth
+knowing about the ways of the ass, winding their way up and down
+hills, getting a foothold on rocks where no other animal but a goat
+could stand, and surmounting all obstacles with a patient endurance
+which every soldier admired. They did not like the cold, and the
+rain made them look deplorably wretched, but they got rations
+and drinking-water right up to the crags where our infantry were
+practising mountaineering. Shell-fire did not disturb them much,
+and they would nibble at any rank stuff growing on the hillsides to
+supplement the rations which did not always reach their lines at
+regular intervals. The Gyppy boys were excellent leaders, and to them
+and the donkeys the front-line fighting men in the hill country owe
+much. They were saved a good deal of exhausting labour in manhandling
+stores from the point where camels had to stop, and they could
+therefore concentrate their attention on the Turk.
+
+By December 2 the fine exertions of the troops on the line of
+communications had enabled the XXth Corps Commander to make his plans
+for the capture of Jerusalem, and at a conference at Enab on the
+following day General Chetwode outlined his scheme, which, put in
+a nutshell, was to attack with the 60th and 74th Divisions in an
+easterly direction on the front Ain Karim-Beit Surik and, skirting the
+western suburbs of Jerusalem, to place these two divisions astride the
+Jerusalem-Nablus road, while the 53rd Division advanced from Hebron to
+threaten the enemy from the south and protect the right of the 60th
+Division. I will not apologise for dealing as fully as possible with
+the fighting about Jerusalem, because Jerusalem was one of the great
+victories of the war, and the care taken to observe the sanctity of
+the place will for all time stand out as one of the brightest examples
+of the honour of British arms. But before entering upon those details
+I will put in chronological sequence the course of the fighting on
+this front from the moment when the XXth Corps took over the
+command, and show how, despite enemy vigilance and many attacks, the
+preparations for the outstanding event of the campaign were carried
+through. It is remarkable that in the short period of ten days
+the plans could be worked out in detail and carried through to a
+triumphant issue, notwithstanding the bad weather and the almost
+overwhelming difficulties of supply. Only the whole-hearted
+co-operation of all ranks made it possible. On the day after the
+XXth Corps became responsible for this front General Chetwode had a
+conference with Generals Barrow, Hill, and Girdwood, and after a full
+discussion of the situation in the hills decided to abandon the plan
+of getting on to the Jerusalem-Nablus road from the north in favour
+of attempting to take Jerusalem from the west and south-west. The
+commanders of the Yeomanry Mounted Division and the 52nd Division were
+asked to suggest, from their experience of the fighting of the past
+ten days, what improvement in the line was necessary to make it
+certain that the new plan would not be interfered with by an enemy
+counter-attack. They were in favour of taking the western portion
+of the Beitunia-Zeitun ridge. Preparations were made immediately
+to relieve the Yeomanry Mounted Division by the Australian Mounted
+Division, and when the 10th Division arrived--it was marching up from
+Gaza--the 52nd Division was to be returned to the XXIst Corps. The
+hard fighting and the determined attacks of the Turks had made it
+unavoidable that some portions of the divisions should be mixed, and
+the reliefs were not completed till the 2nd of December.
+
+The Yeomanry Mounted Division troops gave over the Tahta defences to
+the 157th Infantry Brigade on the night of November 29-30, and the
+enemy made an attack on the new defenders at dawn, but were swiftly
+beaten off. A local effort against Nebi Samwil was easily repulsed,
+but the 60th Division reported that the enemy had in the past few days
+continued his shelling of the Mosque, and had added to his destruction
+of that sacred place by demolishing the minaret by gunfire. The 231st
+Infantry Brigade with one battalion in the front line took over from
+the 8th Mounted Brigade from Beit Dukku to Jufna, and while the
+reliefs were in progress there was continual fighting in the Et
+Tireh-Foka area. The former place was won and lost several times, and
+finally the infantry consolidated on the high ground west of those
+villages. Early on the 30th a detachment of the 231st Brigade took
+Foka, capturing eight officers and 298 men, but as it was not possible
+to hold the village the infantry retired to our original line. On
+December 1 the 10th Division relieved the 52nd in the sector wadi
+Zait-Tahta-Kh. Faaush, but on that day the 155th Brigade had had
+another hard brush with the Turks. A regiment of the 3rd Australian
+Light Horse on a hill north of El Burj in front of them was heavily
+attacked at half-past one in the morning by a specially prepared
+sturmtruppen battalion of the Turkish 19th Division, and a footing
+was gained in our position, but with the aid of a detachment of the
+Gloucester Yeomanry and the 1/4th Royal Scots Fusiliers the enemy
+was driven out at daybreak and six officers and 106 unwounded and 60
+wounded Turks, wearing steel hats and equipped like German storming
+troops, were taken prisoners. The attack was pressed with the greatest
+determination, and the enemy, using hand grenades, got within thirty
+yards of our line. During the latter part of their advance the Turks
+were exposed to a heavy cross fire from machine guns and rifles of
+the 9th Light Horse Regiment, and this fire and the guns of the 268th
+Brigade Royal Field Artillery and the Hong Kong and Singapore battery
+prevented the retirement of the enemy. The capture of the prisoners
+was effected by an encircling movement round both flanks. Our
+casualties were 9 killed and 47 wounded. That storming battalion left
+over 100 dead about our trenches. At the same time a violent attack
+was made on the Tahta defences held by the 157th Brigade; the enemy,
+rushing forward in considerable strength and with great impetus,
+captured a ridge overlooking Tahta--a success which, if they had
+succeeded in holding the position till daylight, would have rendered
+that village untenable, and would have forced our line back some
+distance at an important point. It proved to be a last desperate
+effort of the enemy at this vital centre. No sooner were the Scots
+driven off the ridge than they re-formed and prepared to retake it.
+Reinforced, they attacked with magnificent courage in face of heavy
+machine-gun fire, but it was not until after a rather prolonged period
+of bayonet work that the Lowland troops got the upper hand, the Turks
+trying again and again to force them out. At half-past four they gave
+up the attempt, and from that hour Tahta and the rocks about it were
+objects of terror to them.
+
+Nor did the Turks permit Nebi Samwil to remain in our possession
+undisputed. The Londoners holding it were thrice attacked with extreme
+violence, but the defenders never flinched, and the heavy losses of
+the enemy may be measured by the fact that when we took Jerusalem
+and an unwonted silence hung over Nebi Samwil, our burying parties
+interred more than 500 Turkish dead about the summit of that lofty
+hill. Their graves are mostly on the eastern, northern, and southern
+slopes. Ours lie on the west, where Scot, Londoner, West Countryman,
+and Indian, all equally heroic sons of the Empire, sleep, as they
+fought, side by side.
+
+The last heavy piece of fighting on the XXth Corps' front before the
+attack on Jerusalem was on December 3, when a regiment of yeomanry,
+which like a number of other yeomanry regiments had been dismounted
+to form the 74th Division, covered itself with glory. The 16th (Royal
+Devon Yeomanry) battalion of the Devon Regiment belonging to the 229th
+Brigade was ordered to make an attack on Beit ur el Foka in the dark
+hours of the morning. All the officers had made reconnaissances and
+had learned the extreme difficulties of the ground. At 1 A.M. these
+yeomen worked their way up the wadi Zeit to the head of that narrow
+watercourse at the base of the south-western edge of the hill on which
+the village stands. The attack was launched from this position, the
+company on the right having the steepest face to climb. Here the
+villagers, to get the most out of the soil and to prevent the winter
+rains washing it off the rocks into the wadi, had built a series of
+terraces, and the retaining walls, often crumbling to the touch,
+offered some cover from the Turkish defenders' fire. With the
+advantage of this shelter the troops on the right reached the southern
+end of the village soon after 2 o'clock, but the company on the left
+met with much opposition on the easier slope, and had to call in aid
+the support of a machine-gun section posted in the woods on a ridge
+north-west of the village. By 3 o'clock the whole battalion was in
+the village, using rifle and bayonet in the road scarcely more than
+a couple of yards wide, and bombing the enemy out of native mud and
+stone houses and caves. Two officers and fifteen unwounded men were
+taken prisoners with three machine guns, but before any consolidation
+could be done the Turks began a series of counter-attacks which lasted
+all day. As we had previously found, Foka was very hard to defend.
+It is overlooked on the north, north-east, and east by ridges a few
+hundred yards away, and by a high hill north of Ain Jeruit, 1200 yards
+to the north, by another hill 1000 yards to the east, and by the
+famous Zeitun ridge about 1500 yards beyond it, and attacks from these
+directions could be covered very effectively by overhead machine-gun
+fire. To enlarge the perimeter of defence would be to increase the
+difficulties and require a much larger force than was available, and
+there was no intention of going beyond Foka before the main operation
+against Jerusalem was started. To hold Foka securely a force must be
+in possession of the heights on the north and east, and to keep these
+Beitunia itself must be gained. Before daylight arrived some work on
+defences was begun, but it was interfered with by snipers and not much
+could be done. Immediately the sun rose from behind the Judean hills
+there was a violent outburst of fire from machine guns and rifles on
+three sides, increasing in volume as the light improved. The enemy
+counter-attacked with a determination fully equal to that which he had
+displayed during the past fortnight's battle in the hills. He had the
+advantage of cover and was supported by artillery and a hurricane of
+machine-gun fire, but although he climbed the hill and got into the
+small gardens outside the very houses, he was repulsed with bomb and
+bayonet. At one moment there was little rifle fire, and the two sides
+fought it out with bombs. The Turks retired with heavy losses, but
+they soon came back again and fought with the same determination,
+though equally unsuccessfully. The Devons called for artillery, and
+three batteries supported them splendidly, though the gunners were
+under a great disadvantage in that the ground did not permit the
+effect of gunfire to be observed and it was difficult to follow the
+attackers. The supplies of bombs and small-arms ammunition were
+getting low, and to replenish them men had to expose themselves to a
+torrent of fire, so fierce indeed that in bringing up two boxes of
+rifle ammunition which four men could carry twelve casualties were
+incurred. A head shown in the village instantly drew a hail of bullets
+from three sides. Reinforcements were on the way up, and the Fife and
+Forfar Yeomanry battalion of the Royal Highlanders were prepared to
+make a flank attack from their outpost line three-quarters of a
+mile south-east of Foka to relieve the Devons, but this would have
+endangered the safety of the outpost line without reducing the fire
+from the heights, and as the Fife and Forfar men would have had to
+cross two deep wadis under enfilade fire on their way to Foka their
+adventure would have been a perilous one. By this time three out of
+four of the Devons' company commanders were wounded and the casualties
+were increasing. The officer commanding the battalion therefore
+decided, after seven hours of terrific fighting, that the village of
+Foka was no longer tenable, and authority was given him to withdraw.
+In their last attack the enemy put 1000 men against the village,
+and it was not until the O.C. Devons had seen this strength that he
+proposed the place should be evacuated. His men had put up a great
+fight. The battalion went into action 762 strong; it came out 488.
+Three officers were killed and nine wounded, and 49 other ranks killed
+and 132 wounded. Thirteen were wounded and missing and 78 missing. In
+Foka to-day you will see most of the battered houses repaired, but
+progress through the streets is partially barred by the graves of
+Devon yeomen who were buried where they fell. It was not possible to
+hew a grave in rock, therefore earth and stone were piled up round the
+bodies, so that in at least two spots you find several graves serving
+as buttresses to rude dwellings. On one of these graves, beside the
+identification tablet of two strong sons of Devon, you will find, on
+a piece of paper inserted in a slit cut into wood torn from an
+ammunition box, the words 'Grave of unknown Turk.' Friend and foe
+share a common resting-place. The natives of this village are more
+than usually friendly, and those graves seem safe in their keeping.
+
+Between the 4th and 7th December there was a reshuffling of the troops
+holding the line to enable a concentration of the divisions entrusted
+with the attack on the defences covering Jerusalem. The 10th Division
+relieved the 229th and 230th Brigades of the 74th Division and
+extended its line to cover Beit Dukku, a point near and west of Et
+Tireh, to Tahta, and when the enemy retired from the immediate front
+of the 10th Division's left, Hellabi and Suffa were occupied. The
+Australian Mounted Division also slightly advanced its line. On the
+night of December 5 the 231st Brigade relieved the 60th Division in
+the Beit Izza and Nebi Samwil positions, and on December 6 the line
+held by the 74th was extended to a point about a mile and a half north
+of Kulonieh. The 53rd Division had passed through Hebron, and its
+advance was timed to reach the Bethlehem-Beit Jala district on
+December 7. The information gained by the XXth Corps led the staff to
+estimate the strength of the enemy opposite them to be 13,300 rifles
+and 2700 sabres, disposed as follows: east of Jerusalem the 7th
+cavalry regiment, 500 sabres; the 27th Division covering Jerusalem and
+extending to the Junction Station-Jerusalem railway at Bitter Station,
+1200 rifles; thence to the Latron-Jerusalem road with strong points at
+Ain Karim and Deir Yesin, the 53rd Turkish Division, 2000 rifles; from
+the road to Nebi Samwil (Beit Iksa being very strongly held) the 26th
+Turkish Division, 1800 rifles; Nebi Samwil to Beit ur el Foka, 19th
+Turkish Division with the 2/61st regiment and the 158th regiment
+attached, 4000 rifles; Beit ur el Foka to about Suffa, the 24th
+Division, 1600 rifles; thence to the extreme left of the XXth Corps
+the 3rd Cavalry Division, 1500 sabres. The 54th Turkish Division was
+in reserve at Bireh with 2700 rifles. The enemy held a line covering
+Bethlehem across the Hebron road to Balua, then to the hill Kibryan
+south-west of Beit Jala, whence the line proceeded due north to Ain
+Karim and Deir Yesin, both of which were strongly entrenched, on to
+the hill overlooking the Jerusalem road above Lifta. From this
+point the line crossed the road to the high ground west of Beit
+Iksa--entrenchments were cut deep into the face of this hill to cover
+the road from Kulonieh--thence northward again to the east of Nebi
+Samwil, west of El Jib, Dreihemeh (one mile north-east of Beit Dukku)
+to Foka, Kh. Aberjan, and beyond Suffa.
+
+During the attack the Australian Mounted Division was to protect the
+left flank of the 10th Division, which with one brigade of the 74th
+Division was to hold the whole of the line in the hills from Tahta
+through Foka, Dukku, Beit Izza to Nebi Samwil, leaving the attack to
+be conducted by two brigade groups of the 74th Division, the whole of
+the 60th Division, and two brigade groups of the 53rd Division, with
+the 10th regiment of Australian Light Horse watching the right flank
+of the 60th Division until the left of the 53rd could join up with
+it. One brigade of the 53rd Division was to advance from the
+Bethlehem-Beit Jala area with its left on the line drawn from Sherafat
+through Malhah to protect the 60th Division's flank, the other brigade
+marching direct on Jerusalem, and to move by roads south of the
+town to a position covering Jerusalem from the east and north-east,
+but--and these were instructions specially impressed on this
+brigade--'the City of Jerusalem will not be entered, and all movements
+by troops and vehicles will be restricted to roads passing outside the
+City.' The objective of the 60th and 74th Divisions was a general line
+from Ras et Tawil, a hill east of the Nablus road about four miles
+north of Jerusalem, to Nebi Samwil, one brigade of the 74th Division
+holding Nebi Samwil and Beit Izza defences and to form the pivot of
+the attack. The dividing line between the 60th and 74th Divisions was
+the Enab-Jerusalem road as far as Lifta and from that place to the
+wadi Beit Hannina. The form of the attack was uncertain until it was
+known how the enemy would meet the advance of the 53rd Division,
+which, on the 3rd December, was in a position north of Hebron within
+two ten-mile marches of the point at which it would co-operate on
+the right of the 60th. If the enemy increased his strength south of
+Jerusalem to oppose the advance of the 53rd Division, General Chetwode
+proposed that the 60th and 74th Divisions should force straight
+through to the Jerusalem-Nablus road, the 60th throwing out a flank
+to the south-east, so as to cut off the Turks opposing the 53rd from
+either the Nablus or the Jericho road. It was not considered probable
+that the enemy would risk the capture of a large body of troops south
+of Jerusalem. On the other hand, should the Turks withdraw from in
+front of the Welsh Division, the alternative plan provided that the
+latter attack should take the form of making a direct advance on
+Jerusalem and a wheel by the 60th and 74th Divisions, pivoting on
+the Beit Izza and Nebi Sainwil defences, so as to drive the enemy
+northwards. The operations were to be divided into four phases. The
+first phase fell to the 60th and 74th Divisions, and consisted in the
+capture of the whole of the south-western and western defences of
+Jerusalem.
+
+These ran from a point near the railway south-west of Malhah round to
+the west of Ain Karim, then on to the hill of Khurbet Subr, down a
+cleft in the hills and up on to the high Deir Yesin ridge, thence
+round the top of two other hills dominating the old and new roads to
+Jerusalem from Jaffa as they pass by the village of Kulonieh. North of
+the new road the enemy's line ran round the southern face of a bold
+hill overlooking the village of Beit Iksa and along the tortuous
+course of the wadi El Abbeideh. In the second phase the 60th Division
+was to move over the Jaffa-Jerusalem road with its right almost up
+to the scattered houses on the north-western fringe of Jerusalem's
+suburbs, and its left was to pass the village of Lifta on the slope of
+the hill rising from the wadi Beit Hannina. The objective of the 60th
+Division in the third phase was the capture of a line of a track
+leaving the Jerusalem-Nablus road well forward of the northern suburb
+and running down to the wadi Hannina, the 74th Division advancing down
+the spur running south-east from Nebi Samwil to a point about 1000
+yards south-west of Beit Hannina, the latter a prominent height with a
+slope amply clothed with olive trees. The fourth phase was an advance
+astride the road to Ras et Tawil. As will be seen hereafter all these
+objectives were not obtained, but the first, and chief of them, was,
+and the inevitable followed--Jerusalem became ours.
+
+Let us now picture some of the country the troops had to cross and the
+defences they had to capture before the Turks could be forced out
+of Jerusalem. We will first look at it from Enab, the ancient
+Kir-jath-jearim, which the Somersets, Wilts, and Gurkhas had taken at
+the point of the bayonet. From the top of Enab the Jaffa-Jerusalem
+road winds down a deep valley, plentifully planted with olive and fig
+trees and watered by the wadi Ikbala. A splendid supply of water
+had been developed by Royal Engineers near the ruins of a Crusader
+fortress which, if native tradition may be relied on, housed Richard
+of the Lion Heart. From the wadi rises a hill on which is Kustul,
+a village covering the site of an old Roman castle from which,
+doubtless, its name is derived. Kustul stands out the next boldest
+feature to Nebi Samwil, and from it, when the atmosphere is clear,
+the red-tiled roofs of houses in the suburbs of Jerusalem are plainly
+visible. A dozen villages clinging like limpets to steep hillsides are
+before you, and away on your right front the tall spires of Christian
+churches at Ain Karim tell you you are approaching the Holy Sites.
+Looking east the road falls, with many short zigzags in its length, to
+Kulonieh, crosses the wadi Surar by a substantial bridge (which the
+Turks blew up), and then creeps up the hills in heavy gradients till
+it is lost to view about Lifta. The wadi Surar winds round the foot of
+the hill which Kustul crowns, and on the other side of the watercourse
+there rises the series of hills on which the Turks intended to hold
+our hands off Jerusalem. The descent from Kustul is very rapid and the
+rise on the other side is almost as precipitous. On both sides of the
+wadi olive trees are thickly planted, and on the terraced slopes vines
+yield a plentiful harvest. Big spurs run down to the wadi, the sides
+are rough even in dry weather, but when the winter rains are falling
+it is difficult to keep a foothold. South-west of Kustul is Soba, a
+village on another high hill, and below it and west of Ain Karim, on
+lower ground, is Setaf, both having orchards and vineyards in which
+the inhabitants practise the arts of husbandry by the same methods
+as their remote forefathers. An aerial reconnaissance nearly a year
+before we took Jerusalem showed the Turks busily making trenches on
+the hills east of the wadi Surar. An inspection of the defences proved
+the work to have been long and arduous, though like many things
+the Turk began he did not finish them. What he did do was done
+elaborately. He employed masons to chisel the stone used for
+revetting, and in places the stones fit well and truly one upon the
+other, while an enormous amount of rock must have been blasted to
+excavate the trenches. The system adopted was to have three fire
+trenches near the top of the hills, one above the other, so that were
+the first two lines taken the third would still offer a difficult
+obstacle, and, if the defenders were armed with bombs, it would be
+hard for attackers to retain the trenches in front of them. There was
+much dead ground below the entrenchments, but the defences were so
+arranged that cross fire from one system swept the dead ground on the
+next spur, and, if the hills were properly held, an advance up them
+would have been a stupendous task. The Turk had put all his eggs into
+one basket. Perhaps he considered his positions impregnable--they
+would have been practically impregnable in British hands--and he made
+no attempt to cut support trenches behind the crest. There was one
+system only, and his failure to provide defences in depth cost him
+dear.
+
+Looking eastwards from Kustul, the Turkish positions south of the
+Jaffa-Jerusalem road, each of them on a hill, were called by us the
+'Liver Redoubt' (near Lifta), the 'Heart Redoubt,' 'Deir Yesin,' and
+'Khurbet Subr,' with the village of Ain Karim in a fold of the hills
+and a line of trenches south-west of it running down to the railway.
+Against the 74th Division's front the nature of the country was
+equally difficult. From Beit Surik down to the Kulonieh road the hills
+fell sharply with the ground strewn with boulders. Our men had to
+advance across ravines and beds of watercourses covered with
+large stones, and up the wooded slopes of hills where stone walls
+constituted ready-made sangars easily capable of defence. The hardest
+position they had to tackle was the hill covering Beit Iksa, due
+north of the road as it issued from Kulonieh, where long semicircular
+trenches had been cut to command at least half a mile of the main
+road. In front of the 53rd Division was an ideal rearguard country
+where enterprising cavalry could have delayed an advance by infantry
+for a lengthened period. To the south of Bethlehem, around Beit Jala
+and near Urtas, covering the Pools of Solomon, an invaluable water
+supply, there were prepared defences, but though the Division was
+much delayed by heavy rain and dense mist, the fog was used to their
+advantage, for the whole of the Division's horses were watered at
+Solomon's Pools one afternoon without opposition from the Urtas
+garrison.
+
+December 8 was the date fixed for the attack. On December 7 rain
+fell unceasingly. The roads, which had been drying, became a mass of
+slippery mud to the west of Jerusalem, and on the Hebron side the
+Welsh troops had to trudge ankle deep through a soft limy surface. It
+was soon a most difficult task to move transport on the roads. Lorries
+skidded, and double teams of horses could only make slow progress with
+limbers. Off the road it became almost impossible to move. The ground
+was a quagmire. On the sodden hills the troops bivouacked without a
+stick to shelter them. The wind was strong and drove walls of water
+before it, and there was not a man in the attacking force with a dry
+skin. Sleep on those perishing heights was quite out of the question,
+and on the day when it was hoped the men would get rest to prepare
+them for the morrow's fatigue the whole Army was shivering and awake.
+So bad were the conditions that the question was considered as to
+whether it would not be advisable to postpone the attack, but General
+Chetwode, than whom no general had a greater sympathy for his men,
+decided that as the 53rd Division were within striking distance by the
+enemy the attack must go forward on the date fixed. That night was
+calculated to make the stoutest hearts faint. Men whose blood had been
+thinned by summer heat in the desert were now called upon to endure
+long hours of piercing cold, with their clothes wet through and water
+oozing out of their boots as they stood, with equipment made doubly
+heavy by rain, caked with mud from steel helmet to heel, and the
+toughened skin of old campaigners rendered sore by rain driven against
+it with the force of a gale. Groups of men huddled together in the
+effort to keep warm: a vain hope. And all welcomed the order to fall
+in preparatory to moving off in the darkness and mist to a battle
+which, perhaps more than any other in this war, stirred the emotions
+of countless millions in the Old and New Worlds. Yet their spirits
+remained the same. Nearly frozen, very tired, 'fed up' with the
+weather, as all of them were, they were always cheerful, and the man
+who missed his footing and floundered in the mud regarded the incident
+as light-heartedly as his fellows. An Army which could face the trials
+of such a night with cheerfulness was unbeatable. One section of the
+force did regard the prospects with rueful countenances. This was the
+Divisional artillery. Tractors, those wonderfully ugly but efficient
+engines which triumphed over most obstacles, had got the heavies into
+position. The 96th Heavy Group, consisting of three 6-inch howitzer
+batteries, one complete 60-pounder battery, and a section of another
+60-pounder battery, and the Hong Kong and Singapore Mountain Battery,
+were attached to and up with the 74th Division. The 10 and B 9
+Mountain Batteries were with the 60th Division waiting to try their
+luck down the hills, and the 91st Heavy Battery (60-pounders)
+was being hauled forward with the 53rd. The heavies could get
+in long-range fire from Kustul, but what thought the 18-pounder
+batteries? With the country in such a deplorable state it looked
+hopeless for them to expect to be in the show, and the prospect of
+remaining out of the big thing had more effect upon the gunners than
+the weather. As a matter of fact but few field batteries managed to
+get into action. Those which succeeded in opening fire during the
+afternoon of December 8 did most gallant work for hours, with enemy
+riflemen shooting at them from close range, and their work formed a
+worthy part in the victory. The other field gunners could console
+themselves with the fact that the difficulties which were too great
+for them--and really field-gun fire on the steep slopes could not be
+very effective--prevented even the mountain batteries, which can go
+almost anywhere, from fully co-operating with the infantry.
+
+The preliminary moves for the attack were made during the night. The
+179th Infantry Brigade group consisting of 2/13th London, 2/14th
+London, 2/15th London, and 2/16th London with the 2/23rd London
+attached, the 10th Mountain Battery and B 9 Mountain Battery, a
+section of the 521st Field Coy. R.E., C company of Loyal North
+Lancashire Pioneers, and the 2/4th Field Ambulance specially equipped
+on an all-mule scale, moved to the wadi Surar in two columns. The
+right column was preceded by an advance guard of the Kensington
+battalion, the Loyal North Lancashire Pioneers, and the section of
+R.E., which left the brigade bivouacs behind Soba at five o'clock
+on the afternoon of the 7th to enable the pioneers and engineers to
+improve a track marked on the map. For the greater part of the way the
+track had evidently been unused for many years, and all traces of it
+had disappeared, but in three hours' time a way had been made down the
+hill to the wadi, and the brigade got over the watercourse just north
+of Setaf a little after midnight. As a preliminary to the attack on
+the first objective it was necessary to secure the high ground south
+of Ain Karim and the trenches covering that bright and picturesque
+little town. At two o'clock, when rain and mist made it so dark it was
+not possible to see a wall a couple of yards ahead, the Kensingtons
+advanced to gain the heights south of Ain Karim in order to enable
+the 179th Brigade to be deployed. A scrambling climb brought the
+Kensingtons to the top of the hill, and, after a weird fight of
+an hour and a half in such blackness of night that it was hard to
+distinguish between friend and foe, they captured it and beat off
+several persistent counter-attacks. The 179th Brigade thus had the
+ground secured for preparing to attack their section of the main
+defences. The 180th Infantry Brigade, whose brigadier, Brig.-General
+Watson, had the honour of being the first general in Jerusalem, the
+first across the Jordan, and the first to get through the Turkish line
+in September 1918 when General Allenby sprang forward through the
+Turks and made the mighty march to Aleppo, was composed of the 2/17th
+London, 2/18th London, 2/19th London, and 2/20th London, 519th Coy.
+R.E., two platoons of pioneers, and the 2/5th Field Ambulance. It
+reached its position of assembly without serious opposition, though a
+detachment which went through the village of Kulonieh met some enemy
+posts. These, to use the brigadier's phrase, were 'silently dealt
+with.'
+
+It was a fine feat to get the two brigades of Londoners into their
+positions of deployment well up to time. The infantry had to get from
+Kustul down a precipitous slope of nearly a thousand feet into a wadi,
+now a rushing torrent, and up a rocky and almost as steep hill on the
+other side. Nobody could see where he was going, but direction was
+kept perfectly and silence was well maintained, the loosened stones
+falling into mud. The assault was launched at a quarter-past five, and
+in ten minutes under two hours the two brigades (the 181st Brigade
+being in reserve just south of Kustul) had penetrated the whole of the
+front line of the defences. The Queen's Westminsters on the left
+of the Kensingtons had cleared the Turks out of Ain Karim and then
+climbed up a steep spur to attack the formidable Khurbet Subr
+defences. They took the garrison completely by surprise, and those
+who did not flee were either killed or taken prisoners. The Queen's
+Westminsters were exposed to a heavy flanking fire at a range of about
+a thousand yards from a tumulus south-east of Ain Karim, above the
+road from the village to the western suburbs of Jerusalem. Turkish
+riflemen were firmly dug in on this spot, and their two machine
+guns poured in an annoying fire on the 179th Brigade troops which
+threatened to hold up the attack. Indeed preparations were being made
+to send a company to take the tumulus hill in flank, but two gallant
+London Scots settled the activity of the enemy and captured the
+position by themselves. Corporal C.W. Train and Corporal F.S.
+Thornhill stalked the garrison. Corporal Train fired a rifle grenade
+at one machine gun, which he hit and put out of action, and then shot
+the whole of the gun team. Thornhill was attacking the other gun, and
+he, with the assistance of Train, accounted for that crew as well. The
+two guns were captured and Tumulus Hill gave no more trouble. Both
+these Scots were rewarded, and Train has the unique honour of wearing
+the only V.C. awarded during the capture of Jerusalem.
+
+At about the same time there was another very gallant piece of work
+being done by two men of the Queen's Westminsters above the Khurbet
+Subr ridge. When the battalion got to the first objective an enemy
+battery of 77's was found in action on the reverse slope of the hill.
+The guns were firing from a hollow near the Ain Karim-Jerusalem track,
+some 600 yards behind the forward trenches on Subr, and were showing
+an uncomfortable activity. A company was pushed forward to engage the
+battery. The movement was exposed to a good deal of sniping fire, and
+it was not a simple matter for riflemen to work ahead on to a knoll on
+the east of the Subr position to deal with the guns. To two men may be
+given the credit for capturing the battery. Lance-Corporal W.H. Whines
+of the Westminsters got along quickly and brought his Lewis gun to
+bear on the battery and, with an admirably directed fire, caused many
+casualties. Two gun teams were wiped out, either killed or wounded, by
+the corporal. At the same time Rifleman C.D. Smith, who had followed
+his comrade, rushed in on another team and bombed it. Smith's rifle
+had been smashed and was useless, but with his bombs he laid low all
+except one man. His supply was then exhausted, but before the Turk
+could use his weapons Smith got to grips and a rare wrestling
+bout followed. The Turk would not surrender, and Smith gave him a
+stranglehold and broke his neck. The enemy managed to get one of the
+four guns away. The battery horses were near at hand, but while this
+one gun was escaping at the gallop the Westminsters' fire brought
+down one horse and two drivers, and I saw their bodies on the road as
+evidence of how the Westminsters had developed the art of shooting at
+a rapidly moving target. The two incidents I have described in detail
+merely as examples of the fighting prowess, not only of one but of all
+three divisions alike in the capture of Jerusalem. Perhaps it would
+be fairer to say that they were examples of the spirit of General
+Allenby's whole force, for English, Scottish, Irish, Welsh,
+Australians, New Zealanders, Indians, cavalry, infantry, and
+artillery, had all, during the six weeks of the campaign, shown the
+same high qualities in irresistible attack and stubborn defence.
+
+The position of the 179th Brigade at this time was about one mile east
+of Ain Karim, where it was exposed to heavy enfilade fire from its
+right and, as it was obvious that the advance of the 53rd Division had
+been delayed owing to the fog and rain, the brigadier decided not to
+go further during the early part of the day but to wait till he could
+be supported by the mountain batteries, which the appalling state of
+the ground had prevented from keeping up with him.
+
+Now as to the advance of the 180th Infantry Brigade. Their principal
+objective was the Deir Yesin position, the hill next on the northern
+side of Subr, from which it was separated by a deep though narrow
+valley. The trenches cut on both sides of this gorge supported Subr
+as well as Deir Yesin, and the Subr defences were also arranged to be
+helpful to the Deir Yesin garrison by taking attackers in flank. The
+180th Brigade's advance was a direct frontal attack on the hill, the
+jumping-off place being a narrow width of flat ground thickly planted
+with olive trees on the banks of the wadi Surar. The 2/19th Londons,
+the right battalion of the 180th Brigade, had not got far when it
+became the target of concentrated machine-gun fire and was unable to
+move, with the result that a considerable gap existed between it and
+the 179th Brigade. The stoppage was only temporary, for, with the
+advance of the centre and right, the 19th battalion pushed forward in
+series of rushes and, with the other battalions, carried the crest of
+Deir Yesin at the point of the bayonet, so that the whole system of
+entrenchments was in their hands by seven o'clock. The brigade at once
+set about reorganising for the attack on the second objective, which,
+as will be remembered, was a wheel to the left and, passing well on
+the outside of the western suburbs of Jerusalem, an advance to the
+rocky ground to the north-west of the city down to the wadi Beit
+Hannina. The commander of the 2/18th Londons in his preparations
+had pushed out a platoon in advance of his left, and these men at
+half-past nine saw 200 of the enemy with pack mules retiring down a
+wadi north-east of Kulonieh. The platoon held its fire until the Turks
+were within close range, and then engaged them with rifles and machine
+guns, completely surprising them and taking prisoners the whole of the
+survivors, 5 officers and 50 men. The Turks now began to develop a
+serious opposition to the 180th Brigade from a quarry behind Deir
+Yesin and from a group of houses forming part of what is known as the
+Syrian colony, nearly a mile from the Deir Yesin system. There were
+some Germans and a number of machine guns in these houses, and by noon
+they held up the advance.
+
+The brigade was seriously handicapped by the difficulty in moving
+guns. The road during the morning had got into a desperate state. It
+was next to impossible to haul field guns anywhere off the road, and
+as the Turks had paid no attention to the highway for some time--or
+where they had done something it was merely to dump down large stones
+to fill a particularly bad hole--it had become deeply rutted and
+covered with a mass of adhesive mud. The guns had to pass down from
+Kustul by a series of zigzags with hairpin bends in full view of enemy
+observers, and it was only by the greatest exertion and devotion to
+duty that the gunners got their teams into the neighbourhood of
+the wadi. The bridge over the Surar at Kulonieh having been wholly
+destroyed, they had to negotiate the wadi, which was now in torrent
+and carrying away the waters which had washed the face of the hills
+over a wide area. The artillery made a track through a garden on the
+right of the village just before the road reached the broken bridge,
+and two batteries, the 301st and 302nd, got their guns and limbers
+across. They went up the old track leading from Kulonieh to Jerusalem,
+when first one section and then another came into action at a spot
+between Deir Yesin and Heart Redoubt, where both batteries were
+subjected to a close-range rifle fire.
+
+For several hours the artillery fought their guns with superb courage,
+and remained in action until the fire from the houses was silenced by
+a brilliant infantry attack. At half-past one General Watson decided
+he would attack the enemy on a ridge in front of the houses of the
+Syrian colony with the 18th and 19th battalions. With them were units
+of other battalions of the Brigade. Soon after three o'clock they
+advanced under heavy fire from guns, machine guns, and rifles, and at
+a quarter to four a glorious bayonet charge, during which the London
+boys went through Germans and Turks in one overwhelming stride, sealed
+the fate of the Turk in Jerusalem. That bayonet charge was within
+sight of the Corps Commander, who was with General Shea at his
+look-out on Kustul, and when he saw the flash of steel driven home
+with unerring certainty by his magnificent men, General Chetwode may
+well have felt thankful that he had been given such troops with which
+to deliver Jerusalem from the Turks. The 74th Division, having taken
+the whole of its first objectives early in the morning and having
+throughout the day supported the left of the London Division, was
+ready to commence operations against the second objective. The
+dismounted yeomanry, whose condition through the wet and mud was
+precisely similar to that of the 60th Division troops, for they, too,
+had found the hills barren of shelter and equally cold, did extremely
+well in forcing the enemy from his stronghold on the hill covering
+Beit Iksa and the Kulonieh-Jerusalem road, from which, had he not been
+ejected, he could have harassed the Londoners' left. The Beit Iksa
+defences were carried by a most determined rush. A gallant attempt was
+also made to get the El Burj ridge which runs south-east from Nebi
+Samwil, but owing to strong enfilade fire from the right they could
+not get on.
+
+There was no doubt in any minds that Jerusalem would be ours, but the
+difficulties the 53rd Division were contending with had slowed down
+their advance. Thus the right flank of the 60th Division was exposed
+and a considerable body of Turks was known to be south of Jerusalem.
+Late in the afternoon the advance was ordered to be stopped, and the
+positions gained to be held. With a view to continuing the advance
+next day the 181st Brigade (2/21st London, 2/22nd London, 2/23rd
+London, and 2/24th London) was ordered to get into a position of
+readiness to pass through the 179th Brigade and resume the attack
+on the right of the 180th Brigade. On the evening of December 8 the
+position of the attacking force was this. The 53rd Division (I will
+deal presently with the advance of this Division) was across the
+Bethlehem-Hebron road from El Keiseraniyeh, two miles south of
+Bethlehem, to Ras el Balua in an east and west direction, then
+north-west to the hill of Haud Kibriyan with its flank thrown south to
+cover Kh. el Kuseir. The 10th Australian Light Horse were at Malhah.
+The 179th and 180th Brigades of the 60th Division occupied positions
+extending from Malhah through a line more than a mile east of the
+captured defences west of Jerusalem to Lifta, with the 181st Brigade
+in divisional reserve near Kustul. The 229th and 230th Brigades of the
+74th Division held a due north and south line from the Jaffa-Jerusalem
+road about midway between Kulonieh and Lifta through Beit Iksa to Nebi
+Samwil. The 53rd Division had not reached their line without enormous
+trouble. But for the two days' rain and fog it is quite possible that
+the whole of the four objectives planned by the XXth Corps would have
+been gained, and whether any substantial body of Turks could have left
+the vicinity of Jerusalem by either the Nablus or Jericho roads is
+doubtful. The weather proved to be the Turks' ally. The 53rd Division
+battled against it. Until fog came down to prevent reconnaissance
+in an extremely bad bit of country they were well up to their march
+table, and in the few clear moments of the afternoon of the 7th,
+General Mott, from the top of Ras esh Sherifeh, a hill 3237 feet high,
+the most prominent feature south of Jerusalem, caught a glimpse of
+Bethlehem and the Holy City. It was only a temporary break in the
+weather, and the fog came down again so thick that neither the
+positions of the Bethlehem defences nor those of Beit Jala could be
+reconnoitred.
+
+The Division, after withstanding the repeated shocks of enemy attacks
+at Khuweilfeh immediately following the taking of Beersheba, had had a
+comparatively light time watching the Hebron road. They constructed
+a track over the mountains to get the Division to Dharahiyeh when
+it should be ordered to take part in the attack on the Jerusalem
+defences, and while they were waiting at Dilbeih they did much to
+improve the main road. The famous zigzag on the steep ridge between
+Dharahiyeh and Dilbeih was in good condition, and you saw German
+thoroughness in the gradients, in the well-banked bends, and in the
+masonry walls which held up the road where it had been cut in the side
+of a hill. It was the most difficult part of the road, and the
+Germans had taken as much care of it as they would of a road in the
+Fatherland--because it was the way by which they hoped to get to the
+Suez Canal. Other portions of the road required renewing, and the
+labour which the Welshmen devoted to the work helped the feeding of
+the Division not only during the march to Jerusalem but for several
+weeks after it had passed through it to the hills on the east and
+north-east. The rations and stores for this Division were carried by
+the main railway through Shellal to Karm, were thence transported by
+limber to a point on the Turks' line to Beersheba, which had been
+repaired but was without engines, were next hauled in trucks by mules
+on the railway track, and finally placed in lorries at Beersheba
+for carriage up the Hebron road. At this time the capacity of the
+Latron-Jerusalem road was taxed to the utmost, and every bit of the
+Welshmen's spadework was repaid a hundredfold. The 159th Brigade got
+into Hebron on the night of the 5th of December, but instead of going
+north of it--if they had done so an enemy cavalry patrol would have
+seen them--they set to work to repair the road through the old
+Biblical town, for the enemy had blown holes in the highway. Next day
+the infantry had a ten-miles' march and made the wadi Arab, a brigade
+being left in Hebron to watch that area, the natives of which were
+reported as not being wholly favourable to us. There were many rifles
+in the place, and a number of unarmed Turks were believed to be in the
+rough country between the town and the Dead Sea ready to return to
+take up arms. Armoured cars also remained in Hebron. The infantry and
+field artillery occupied the roads during the day, and the heavy guns
+came along at night and joined the infantry as the latter were about
+to set off again.
+
+On the night of the 6th the Division got to a strong line unopposed
+and saw enemy cavalry on the southern end of Sherifeh, on which the
+Turks had constructed a powerful system of defences, the traverses and
+breastworks of which were excellently made. In front of the hill the
+road took a bend to the west, and the whole of the highway from this
+point was exposed to the ground in enemy hands south of Bethlehem, and
+it was necessary to make good the hills to the east before we could
+control this road. Next morning the 7th Cheshires, supported by the
+4th Welsh, deployed and advanced direct on Sherifeh and gained the
+summit soon after dawn in time to see small parties of enemy cavalry
+moving off; then the fog and rain enveloped everything. The 4th Welsh
+held the hill during the night in pouring rain with no rations--pack
+mules could not get up the height--and the men having no greatcoats
+were perished with the cold. Colonel Pemberton, their C.O., came down
+to report the men all right, and asked for no relief till the morning
+when they could be brought back to their transport. The General went
+beyond Solomon's Pools and was within rifle fire from the Turkish
+trenches in his efforts to reconnoitre, but it was impossible to see
+ahead, and instead of being able to begin his attack in the Beit
+Jala-Bethlehem area on the morning of the 8th, that morning arrived
+before any reconnaissance could be made. He decided to attack on the
+high ground of Beit Jala (two miles north-west of Bethlehem) from the
+south, to send his divisional cavalry, the Westminster Dragoons, on
+the infantry's left to threaten Beit Jala from the west and to refuse
+Bethlehem.
+
+Before developing this attack it was essential to drive the enemy off
+the observation post looking down upon the main road along which the
+guns and troops had to pass. The fog enabled the guns to pass up the
+road, although the Turks had seven mountain guns in the gardens of a
+big house south of Bethlehem and had registered the road to a yard.
+They also had a heavy gun outside the town. The weather cleared at
+intervals about noon, but about two o'clock a dense fog came down
+again and once more the advance was held up. Late in the afternoon the
+Welsh Division troops reached the high ground west and south-west of
+Beit Jala, but the defences of Bethlehem on the south had still to be
+taken. Advance guards were sent into Bethlehem and Beit Jala during
+the night, and by early morning of the 9th it was found that the enemy
+had left, and the leading brigade pressed on, reaching Mar Elias,
+midway between Bethlehem and Jerusalem, by eleven o'clock, and the
+southern outskirts of Jerusalem an hour later.
+
+Meanwhile the 60th and 74th Divisions had actively patrolled their
+fronts during the night, and the Turks having tasted the quality of
+British bayonets made no attempt to recover any of the lost positions.
+We had outposts well up the road above Lifta, and at half-past eight
+they saw a white flag approaching. The nearest officer was a commander
+of the 302nd Brigade Royal Field Artillery, to whom the Mayor, the
+head of the Husseiny family, descendants of the Prophet and hereditary
+mayors of Jerusalem, signified his desire to surrender the City.
+The Mayor was accompanied by the Chief of Police and two of the
+gendarmerie, and while communications were passing between General
+Shea, General Chetwode and General Headquarters, General Watson rode
+as far as the Jaffa Gate of the Holy City to learn what was happening
+in the town. I believe Major Montagu Cooke, one of the officers of the
+302nd Artillery Brigade, was the first officer actually in the town,
+and I understand that whilst he and his orderly were in the Post
+Office a substantial body of Turks turned the corner outside the
+building and passed down the Jericho road quite unconscious of the
+near presence of a British officer. General Shea was deputed by the
+Commander-in-Chief to enter Jerusalem in order to accept the surrender
+of the City. It was a simple little ceremony, lasting but a minute
+or two, free from any display of strength, and a fitting prelude to
+General Allenby's official entry. At half-past twelve General Shea,
+with his aide-de-camp and a guard of honour furnished by the 2/17th
+Londons, met the Mayor, who formally surrendered the City. To the
+Chief of Police General Shea gave instructions for the maintenance
+of order, and guards were placed over the public buildings. Then the
+commander of the 60th Division left to continue the direction of his
+troops who were making the Holy City secure from Turkish attacks. I
+believe the official report ran: 'Thus at 12.30 the Holy City was
+surrendered for the twenty-third time, and for the first time to
+British arms, and on this occasion without bloodshed among the
+inhabitants or damage to the buildings in the City itself.'
+
+Simple as was the surrender of Jerusalem, there were scenes in the
+streets during the short half-hour of General Shea's visit which
+reflected the feeling of half the civilised world on receiving the
+news. It was a world event. This deliverance of Jerusalem from Turkish
+misgovernment was bound to stir the emotions of Christian, Jewish, and
+Moslem communities in the two hemispheres. In a war in which the
+moral effect of victories was only slightly less important than a
+big strategical triumph, Jerusalem was one of the strongest possible
+positions for the Allies to win, and it is not making too great a
+claim to say that the capture of the Holy City by British arms gave
+more satisfaction to countless millions of people than did the winning
+back for France of any big town on the Western Front. The latter might
+be more important from a military standpoint, but among the people,
+especially neutrals, it would be regarded merely as a passing incident
+in the ebb and flow of the tide of war. Bagdad had an important
+influence on the Eastern mind; Jerusalem affected Christian, Jew, and
+Moslem alike the world over. The War Cabinet regarded the taking of
+Jerusalem by British Imperial troops in so important a light that
+orders were given to hold up correspondents' messages and any
+telegrams the military attaches might write until the announcement of
+the victory had been made to the world by a Minister in the House of
+Commons. This instruction was officially communicated to me before we
+took Jerusalem, and I believe it was the case that the world received
+the first news when the mouthpiece of the Government gave it to
+the chosen representatives of the British people in the Mother of
+Parliaments.
+
+The end of Ottoman dominion over the cradle of Christianity, a place
+held in reverence by the vast majority of the peoples of the Old and
+New World, made a deep and abiding impression, and as long as people
+hold dearly to their faiths, sentiment will make General Allenby's
+victory one of the greatest triumphs of the war. The relief of the
+people of Jerusalem, as well as their confidence that we were there
+to stay, manifested itself when General Shea drove into the City. The
+news had gone abroad that the General was to arrive about noon, and
+all Jerusalem came into the streets to welcome him. They clapped their
+hands and raised shrill cries of delight in a babel of tongues.
+Women threw flowers into the car and spread palm leaves on the road.
+Scarcely had the Turks left, probably before they had all gone and
+while the guns were still banging outside the entrances to Jerusalem,
+stray pieces of bunting which had done duty on many another day were
+hung out to signify the popular pleasure at the end of an old, hard,
+extortionate regime and the beginning of an era of happiness and
+freedom.
+
+After leaving Jerusalem the enemy took up a strong position on the
+hills north and north-east of the City from which he had to be driven
+before Jerusalem was secure from counter-attack. During the morning
+General Chetwode gave orders for a general advance to the line laid
+down in his original plan of attack, which may be described as the
+preliminary line for the defence of Jerusalem. The 180th and 181st
+Brigades were already on the move, and some of the 53rd Division had
+marched by the main road outside the Holy City's walls to positions
+from which they were to attempt to drive the enemy off the Mount of
+Olives. The 180th Brigade, fresh and strong but still wet and muddy,
+went forward rapidly over the boulders on the hills east of the wadi
+Beit Hannina and occupied the rugged height of Shafat at half-past
+one. Shafat is about two miles north of Jerusalem. In another
+half-hour they had driven the Turks from the conical top of Tel el
+Ful, that sugar-loaf hill which dominates the Nablus road, and which
+before the end of the year was to be the scene of an epic struggle
+between Londoner and Turk. The 181st Brigade, on debouching from
+the suburbs of Jerusalem north-east of Lifta, was faced with heavy
+machine-gun and rifle fire on the ridge running from the western edge
+of the Mount of Olives across the Nablus road through Kh. es Salah.
+On the left the 180th Brigade lent support, and at four o'clock the
+2/21st and 2/24th Londons rushed the ridge with the bayonet and drove
+off the Turks, who left seventy dead behind them. The London Division
+that night established itself on the line from a point a thousand
+yards north of Jerusalem and east of the Nablus road through Ras
+Meshari to Tel el Ful, thence westwards to the wadi behind the
+olive orchards south of Beit Hannina. The 74th Division reached its
+objective without violent opposition, and its line ran from north of
+Nebi Samwil to the height of Beit Hannina and out towards Tel el
+Ful. The 53rd Division was strongly opposed when it got round the
+south-east of Jerusalem on to the Jericho road in the direction of
+Aziriyeh (Bethany), and it was necessary to clear the Turks from the
+Mount of Olives. Troops of the Welsh Division moved round the Holy
+City and drove the enemy off the Mount, following them down the
+eastern spurs, and thus denied them any direct observation over
+Jerusalem. The next day they pushed the enemy still farther eastwards,
+and by the night of the 10th held the line from the well at Azad, 4000
+yards south-east of Jerusalem, the hill 1500 yards south of Aziriyeh,
+Aziriyeh itself, to the Mount of Olives, whence our positions
+continued to Ras et Tawil, north of Tel el Ful across the Nablus road
+to Nebi Samwil. This was our first line of positions for the defence
+of Jerusalem, and we continued to hold these strong points for some
+time. They were gradually extended on the east and north-east by the
+Welsh Division in order to prevent an attack from the direction of
+Jericho, where we knew the Turks had received reinforcements. Indeed,
+during our attack on the Jerusalem position the Turks had withdrawn a
+portion of their force on the Hedjaz railway. A regiment had passed
+through Jericho from the Hedjaz line at Amman and was marching up
+the road to assist in Jerusalem's defence, but was 'Too late.'
+The regiment was turned back when we had captured Jerusalem. Our
+casualties from November 28 to December 10--these figures include the
+heavy fighting about Tahta, Foka, and Nebi Samwil prior to the XXth
+Corps' attack on the Jerusalem defences--were: officers, 21 killed,
+64 wounded, 3 missing; other ranks, 247 killed, 1163 wounded, 169
+missing, a total of 1667. The casualties of the 60th Division during
+the attack on and advance north of Jerusalem on December 8-9 are
+interesting, because they were so extremely light considering the
+strength of the defences captured and the difficulties of the ground,
+namely: 8 officers killed and 24 wounded, 98 other ranks killed, 420
+wounded and 3 missing, a total of 553. The total for the whole of the
+XXth Corps on these days was 12 officers killed, 35 wounded, and 137
+other ranks killed, 636 wounded and 7 missing--in all 47 officers and
+780 other ranks. The prisoners taken from November 28 to December 10
+were: 76 officers, 1717 other ranks--total, 1793. On December 8 and 9,
+68 officers and 918 other ranks--986 in all--were captured. The
+booty included two 4-2 Krupp howitzers, three 77-mm. field guns and
+carriages, nine heavy and three light machine guns, 137 boxes of
+small-arms ammunition, and 103,000 loose rounds.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+GENERAL ALLENBY'S OFFICIAL ENTRY
+
+
+Jerusalem became supremely happy.
+
+It had passed through the trials, if not the perils, of war. It had
+been the headquarters and base of a Turkish Army. Great bodies
+of troops were never quartered there, but staffs and depots were
+established in the City, and being in complete control, the military
+paid little regard to the needs of the population. Unfortunately a not
+inconsiderable section of Jerusalem's inhabitants is content to live,
+not by its own handiwork, but on the gifts of charitable religious
+people of all creeds. When war virtually shut off Jerusalem from the
+outer world the lot of the poor became precarious. The food of the
+country, just about sufficient for self-support, was to a large extent
+commandeered for the troops, and while prices rose the poor could not
+buy, and either their appeals did not reach the benevolent or funds
+were intercepted. Deaths from starvation were numbered by the
+thousand, Jews, Christians, and Moslems alike suffering, and there
+were few civilians in the Holy City who were not hungry for months at
+a time.
+
+When I reached Jerusalem the people were at the height of their
+excitement over the coming of the British and they put the best face
+on their condition, but the freely expressed feeling of relief that
+the days of hunger torture were nearly past did not remove the signs
+of want and misery, of infinite suffering by father, mother, and
+child, brought about by a long period of starvation. That a people,
+pale, thin, bent, whose movements had become listless under the lash
+of hunger, could have been stirred into enthusiasm by the appearance
+of a khaki coat, that they could throw off the lethargy which comes
+of acute want, was only to be accounted for by the existence of a
+profound belief that we had been sent to deliver them. Some hours
+before the Official Entry I was walking in David Street when a Jewish
+woman, seeing that I was English, stopped me and said: 'We have prayed
+for this day. To-day I shall sing "God Save our Gracious King, Long
+Live our Noble King." We have been starving, but what does that
+matter? Now we are liberated and free.' She clasped her hands across
+her breasts and exclaimed several times, 'Oh how thankful we are.' An
+elderly man in a black robe, whose pinched pale face told of a long
+period of want, caught me by the hand and said: 'God has delivered us.
+Oh how happy we are.' An American worker in a Red Crescent hospital,
+who had lived in Jerusalem for upwards of ten years and knew the
+people well, assured me there was not one person in the Holy City who
+in his heart was not devoutly thankful for our victory. He told me
+that on the day we captured Nebi Samwil three wounded Arab officers
+were brought to the hospital. One of them spoke English--it was
+astonishing how many people could speak our mother tongue--and
+while he was having his wounds dressed he exclaimed: 'I can shout
+Hip-hip-hurrah for England now.' The officer was advised to be
+careful, as there were many Turkish wounded in the hospital, but he
+replied he did not care, and in unrestrained joy cried out, 'Hurrah
+for England.'
+
+The deplorable lot of the people had been made harder by profiteering
+officers. Those who had money had to part with it for Turkish paper.
+The Turkish note was depreciated to about one-fifth of its face value.
+German officers traded in the notes for gold, sent the notes
+to Germany where, by a financial arrangement concluded between
+Constantinople and Berlin, they were accepted at face value. The
+German officer and soldier got richer the more they forced Turkish
+paper down. Turkish officers bought considerable supplies of wheat and
+flour from military depots, the cost being debited against their pay
+which was paid in paper. They then sold the goods for gold. That
+accounted for the high prices of foodstuffs, the price in gold being
+taken for the market valuation.
+
+In the middle of November when there was a prospect of the Turks
+evacuating Jerusalem, the officers sold out their stocks of provisions
+and prices became less prohibitive, but they rose again quickly when
+it was decided to defend the City, and the cost of food mounted to
+almost famine prices. The Turks by selling for gold that which was
+bought for paper, rechanging gold for paper at their own prices,
+made huge profits and caused a heavy depreciation of the note at the
+expense of the population. Grain was brought from the district east of
+the Dead Sea, but none of it found its way to civilian mouths except
+through the extortionate channel provided by officers. Yet when we got
+into Jerusalem there were people with small stocks of flour who were
+willing to make flat loaves of unleavened bread for sale to our
+troops. The soldiers had been living for weeks on hard biscuit and
+bully beef, and many were willing to pay a shilling for a small cake
+of bread. They did not know that the stock of flour in the town was
+desperately low and that by buying this bread they were almost taking
+it out of the mouths of the poor. Some traders were so keen on getting
+good money, not paper, that they tried to do business on this footing,
+looking to the British Army to come to the aid of the people. The Army
+soon put a stop to this trade and the troops were prohibited
+from buying bread in Jerusalem and Bethlehem. As it was, the
+Quarter-master-General's branch had to send a large quantity of
+foodstuffs into the towns, and this was done at a time when it was a
+most anxious task to provision the troops. Those were very trying days
+for the supply and transport departments, and one wonders whether
+the civilian population ever realised the extent of the humanitarian
+efforts of our Army staff.
+
+During the period when no attempt was made to alleviate the lot of the
+people the Turks gave them a number of lessons in frightfulness. There
+were public executions to show the severity of military law. Gallows
+were erected outside the Jaffa Gate and the victims were left hanging
+for hours as a warning to the population. I have seen a photograph of
+six natives who suffered the penalty, with their executioners standing
+at the swinging feet of their victims. Before the first battle of Gaza
+the Turks brought the rich Mufti of Gaza and his son to Jerusalem,
+and the Mufti was hanged in the presence of a throng compulsorily
+assembled to witness the execution. The son was shot. Their only crime
+was that they were believed to have expressed approval of Britain's
+policy in dealing with Moslem races. Thus were the people terrorised.
+They knew the Turkish ideas of justice, and dared not talk of events
+happening in the town even in the seclusion of their homes. The evils
+of war, as war is practised by the Turk, left a mark on Jerusalem's
+population which will be indelible for this generation, despite the
+wondrous change our Army has wrought in the people.
+
+When General Allenby had broken through the Gaza line the Turks in
+Jerusalem despaired of saving the City. That all the army papers were
+brought from Hebron on November 10, shows that even at that date von
+Kress still imagined we would come up the Hebron road, though he had
+learnt to his cost that a mighty column was moving through the coastal
+sector and that our cavalry were cutting across the country to join
+it. The notorious Enver reached Jerusalem from the north on November
+12 and went down to Hebron. On his return it was reported that the
+Turks would leave Jerusalem, the immediate sale of officers' stocks of
+foodstuffs giving colour to the rumour. Undoubtedly some preparations
+were made to evacuate the place, but the temptation to hold on was too
+great. One can see the influence of the German mind in the Turkish
+councils of war. At a moment when they were flashing the wireless news
+throughout the world that their Caporetto victory meant the driving of
+Italy out of the war they did not want the icy blast of Jerusalem's
+fall to tell of disaster to their hopes in the East. Accordingly on
+the 16th November a new decision was taken and Jerusalem was to be
+defended to the last. German officers came hurrying south, lorries
+were rushed down with stores until there were six hundred German lorry
+drivers and mechanics in Jerusalem. Reinforcements arrived and the
+houses of the German Colony were turned into nests of machine guns.
+The pains the Germans were at to see their plans carried out
+were reflected in the fighting when we tried to get across the
+Jerusalem-Nablus road and to avoid fighting in the neighbourhood
+of the Holy City. But all this effort availed them nought. Our
+dispositions compelled the enemy to distribute his forces, and when
+the attack was launched the Turk lacked sufficient men to man his
+defences adequately. And German pretensions in the Holy Land, founded
+upon years of scheming and the formation of settlements for German
+colonists approved and supported by the Kaiser himself, were shattered
+beyond hope of recovery, as similar pretensions had been shattered at
+Bagdad by General Maude. The Turks had made their headquarters at the
+Hospice of Notre Dame in Jerusalem, and, taking their cue from the
+Hun, carried away all the furniture belonging to that French religious
+institution. They had also deported some of the heads of religious
+bodies. Falkenhayn wished that all Americans should be removed from
+Jerusalem, issuing an order to that effect a fortnight before we
+entered. Some members of the American colony had been running the Red
+Crescent hospital, and Turkish doctors who appreciated their good work
+insisted that the Americans should remain. Their protest prevailed in
+most cases, but just as we arrived several Americans were carried off.
+
+I have asked many men who were engaged in the fight for Jerusalem what
+their feelings were on getting their first glimpse of the central spot
+of Christendom. Some people imagine that the hard brutalities of war
+erase the softer elements of men's natures; that killing and the rough
+life of campaigning, where one is familiarised with the tragedies of
+life every hour of every day, where ease and comfort are forgotten
+things, remove from the mind those earlier lessons of peace on earth
+and goodwill toward men. That is a fallacy. Every man or officer I
+spoke to declared that he was seized with emotion when, looking from
+the shell-torn summit of Nebi Samwil, he saw the spires on the Mount
+of Olives; or when reconnoitring from Kustul he got a peep of the red
+roofs of the newer houses which surround the old City. Possibly only a
+small percentage of the Army believed they were taking part in a great
+mission, not a great proportion would claim to be really devout men,
+but they all behaved like Christian gentlemen. One Londoner told me
+he had thought the scenes of war had made him callous and that the
+ruthless destruction of those things fashioned by men's hands in
+prosecuting the arts of peace had prompted the feeling that there was
+little in civilisation after all, if civilisation could result in so
+bitter a thing as this awful fighting. Man seemed as barbaric as in
+the days before the Saviour came to redeem the world, and whether
+we won or lost the war all hopes of a happier state of things were
+futile. So this Cockney imagined that his condition showed no
+improvement on that of the savage warrior of two thousand years ago,
+except in that civilisation had developed finer weapons to kill with
+and be killed by. The finer instincts had been blunted by the naked
+and unashamed horrors of war. But the lessons taught him before war
+scourged the world came back to him on getting his first view of the
+Holy City. He felt that sense of emotion which makes one wish to be
+alone and think alone. He was on the ground where Sacred History was
+made, perhaps stood on the rock the Saviour's foot had trod. In the
+deep stirring of his emotions the rougher edges of his nature became
+rounded by feelings of sympathy and a belief that good would come out
+of the evil of this strife. That view of Jerusalem, and the knowledge
+of what the Holy Sites stand for, made him a better man and a better
+fighting man, and he had no doubt the first distant glimpse of the
+Holy City had similarly affected the bulk of the Army. That bad
+language is used by almost all troops in the field is notorious,
+but in Jerusalem one seldom heard an oath or an indecent word. When
+Jerusalem was won and small parties of our soldiers were allowed to
+see the Holy City, their politeness to the inhabitants, patriarch or
+priest, trader or beggar, man or woman, rebuked the thought that the
+age of chivalry was past, while the reverent attitude involuntarily
+adopted by every man when seeing the Sacred Places suggested that no
+Crusader Army or band of pilgrims ever came to the Holy Land under a
+more pious influence. Many times have I watched the troops of General
+Allenby in the streets of Jerusalem. They bore themselves as soldiers
+and gentlemen, and if they had been selected to go there simply to
+impress the people they could not have more worthily upheld the good
+fame of their nation. These soldier missionaries of the Empire left
+behind them a record which will be remembered for generations.
+
+If it had been possible to consult the British people as to the
+details to be observed at the ceremony of the Official Entry into
+Jerusalem, the vast majority would surely have approved General
+Allenby's programme. Americans tell us the British as a nation do
+not know how to advertise. Our part in the war generally proves the
+accuracy of that statement, but the Official Entry into Jerusalem will
+stand out as one great exception. By omitting to make a great
+parade of his victory--one may count elaborate ceremonial as
+advertisement--General Allenby gave Britain her best advertisement.
+The simple, dignified, and, one may also justly say, humble order of
+ceremony was the creation of a truly British mind. To impress the
+inhabitant of the East things must be done on a lavish ostentatious
+scale, for gold and glitter and tinsel go a long way to form a
+native's estimate of power. But there are times when the native is
+shrewd enough to realise that pomp and circumstance do not always
+indicate strength, and that dignity is more powerful than display.
+Contrast the German Emperor's visit to Jerusalem with General
+Allenby's Official Entry. The Kaiser brought a retinue clothed in
+white and red, and blue and gold, with richly caparisoned horses, and,
+like a true showman, he himself affected some articles of Arab dress.
+He rode into the Holy City--where One before had walked--and a wide
+breach was even made in those ancient walls for a German progress. All
+this to advertise the might and power of Germany.
+
+In parenthesis I may state we are going to restore those walls to the
+condition they were in before German hands defiled them. The General
+who by capturing Jerusalem helped us so powerfully to bring Germany
+to her knees and humble her before the world, entered on foot by an
+ancient way, the Jaffa Gate, called by the native 'Bab-el-Khalil,'
+or the Friend. In this hallowed spot there was no great pageantry of
+arms, no pomp and panoply, no display of the mighty strength of a
+victorious army, no thunderous salutes to acclaim a world-resounding
+victory destined to take its place in the chronicles of all time.
+There was no enemy flag to haul down and no flags were hoisted. There
+were no soldier shouts of triumph over a defeated foe, no bells in
+ancient belfrys rang, no Te Deums were sung, and no preacher mounted
+the rostrum to eulogise the victors or to point the moral to the
+multitude. A small, almost meagre procession, consisting of the
+Commander-in-Chief and his Staff, with a guard of honour, less than
+150 all told, passed through the gate unheralded by a single trumpet
+note; a purely military act with a minimum of military display told
+the people that the old order had changed, yielding place to new. The
+native mind, keen, discerning, receptive, understood the meaning and
+depth of this simplicity, and from the moment of high noon on December
+11, 1917, when General Allenby went into the Mount Zion quarter of the
+Holy City, the British name rested on a foundation as certain and sure
+as the rock on which the Holy City stands. Right down in the hearts of
+a people who cling to Jerusalem with the deepest reverence and piety
+there was unfeigned delight. They realised that four centuries of
+Ottoman dominion over the Holy City of Christians and Jews, and 'the
+sanctuary' of Mahomedans, had ended, and that Jerusalem the Golden,
+the central Site of Sacred History, was liberated for all creeds from
+the blighting influence of the Turk. And while war had wrought this
+beneficent change the population saw in this epoch-marking victory a
+merciful guiding Hand, for it had been achieved without so much as a
+stone of the City being scratched or a particle of its ancient dust
+disturbed. The Sacred Monuments and everything connected with the
+Great Life and its teaching were passed on untouched by our Army.
+Rightly did the people rejoice.
+
+When General Allenby went into Jerusalem all fears had passed away.
+The Official Entry was made while there was considerable fighting on
+the north and east of the City, where our lines were nowhere more than
+7000 yards off. The guns were firing, the sounds of bursts of musketry
+were carried down on the wind, whilst droning aeroplane engines in the
+deep-blue vault overhead told of our flying men denying a passage to
+enemy machines. The stern voices of war were there in all their harsh
+discordancy, but the people knew they were safe in the keeping of
+British soldiers and came out to make holiday. General Allenby motored
+into the suburbs of Jerusalem by the road from Latron which the
+pioneers had got into some sort of order. The business of war was
+going on, and the General's car took its place on the highway on even
+terms with the lorry, which at that time when supplying the front was
+the most urgent task and had priority on the roads. The people had put
+on gala raiment. From the outer fringe of Jerusalem the Jaffa road was
+blocked not merely with the inhabitants of the City but with people
+who had followed in the Army's wake from Bethlehem. It was a
+picturesque throng. There were sombre-clad Jews of all nationalities,
+Armenians, Greeks, Russians, and all the peoples who make Jerusalem
+the most cosmopolitan of cities. To the many styles of European dress
+the brighter robes of the East gave vivid colour, and it was obvious
+from the remarkably free and spontaneous expression of joy of these
+people, who at the end of three years of war had such strong faith in
+our fight for freedom, that they recognised freedom was permanently
+won to all races and creeds by the victory at Jerusalem. The most
+significant of all the signs was the attitude of Moslems. The Turks
+had preached the Holy War, but they knew the hollowness of the cry,
+and the natives, abandoning their natural reserve, joined in loud
+expression of welcome. From flat-topped roofs, balconies, and streets
+there were cries of 'Bravo!' and 'Hurrah!' uttered by men and women
+who probably never spoke the words before, and quite close to the
+Jaffa Gate I saw three old Mahomedans clap their hands while tears of
+joy coursed down their cheeks. Their hearts were too full to utter a
+word. There could be no doubt of the sincerity of this enthusiasm. The
+crowd was more demonstrative than is usual with popular assemblies in
+the East, but the note struck was not one of jubilation so much as
+of thankfulness at the relief from an insufferable bondage of bad
+government. Outside the Jaffa Gate was an Imperial guard of honour
+drawn from men who had fought stoutly for the victory. In the British
+Guard of fifty of all ranks were English, Scottish, Irish, and Welsh
+troops, steel-helmeted and carrying the kit they had an hour or two
+earlier brought with them from the front line. Opposite them were
+fifty dismounted men of the Australian Light Horse and New Zealand
+Mounted Rifles, the Australians, under the command of Captain
+Throssel, V.C., being drawn from the 10th Light Horse regiment, which
+had been employed in the capture of Jerusalem on the right of the
+London Division. These Colonial troops had earned their place, for
+they had done the work of the vanguard in the Sinai Desert, and their
+victories over the Turks on many a hard-won field in the torrid heat
+of summer had paved the way for this greater triumph. A French and an
+Italian guard of honour was posted inside the Jaffa Gate. As I have
+previously said, the Italians had held a portion of the line in front
+of Gaza with a composite brigade, but the French troops had not yet
+been in action in Palestine, though their Navy had assisted with a
+battleship in the Gaza bombardment. We welcomed the participation of
+the representatives of our Allies in the Official Entry, as it showed
+to those of their nationality in Jerusalem that we were fighting
+the battle of freedom for them all. Outside the Jaffa Gate the
+Commander-in-Chief was received by Major-General Borton, who had
+been appointed Military Governor of the City, and a procession being
+formed, General Allenby passed between the iron gates to within the
+City walls. Preceded by two aides-de-camp the Commander-in-Chief
+advanced with the commander of the French Palestine detachment on his
+right and the commander of the Italian Palestine detachment on his
+left. Four Staff officers followed. Then came Brigadier-General
+Clayton, Political Officer; M. Picot, head of the French Mission; and
+the French, Italian, and United States Military Attaches. The Chief
+of the General Staff (Major-General Sir L.J. Bols) and the
+Brigadier-General General Staff (Brigadier-General G. Dawnay) marched
+slightly ahead of Lieutenant-General Sir Philip W. Chetwode, the XXth
+Corps Commander, and Brigadier-General Bartholomew, who was General
+Chetwode's B.G.G.S. The guard closed in behind. That was all.
+
+The procession came to a halt at the steps of El Kala, the Citadel,
+which visitors to Jerusalem will better remember as the entrance to
+David's Tower. Here the Commander-in-Chief and his Staff formed up on
+the steps with the notables of the City behind them, to listen to the
+reading of the Proclamation in several languages. That Proclamation,
+telling the people they could pursue their lawful business without
+interruption and promising that every sacred building, monument, holy
+spot, shrine, traditional site, endowment, pious bequest, or customary
+place of prayer of whatsoever form of three of the great religions
+of mankind would be maintained and protected according to existing
+customs and beliefs to those to whose faiths they are sacred, made
+a deep impression on the populace. So you could judge from the
+expressions on faces and the frequent murmurs of approval, and it was
+interesting to note how, when the procession was being re-formed, many
+Christians, Jews, and Moslems broke away from the crowd to run and
+spread the good news in their respective quarters. How faithfully and
+with what scrupulous care our promises have been kept the religious
+communities of Jerusalem can tell.
+
+The procession next moved into the old Turkish barrack square less
+than a hundred yards away, where General Allenby received the notables
+of the City and the heads of religious communities. The Mayor of
+Jerusalem, who unfortunately died of pneumonia a fortnight later, and
+the Mufti, who, like the Mayor, was a member of a Mahomedan family
+which traces its descent back through many centuries, were presented,
+as were also the sheikhs in charge of the Mosque of Omar, 'the Tomb
+of the Rock,' and the Mosque of El Aksa, and Moslems belonging to the
+Khaldieh and Alamieh families. The Patriarchs of the Latin, Greek
+Orthodox, and Armenian Churches and the Coptic bishop had been removed
+from the Holy City by the Turks, but their representatives were
+introduced to the Commander-in-Chief, and so too were the heads of
+Jewish communities, the Syriac Church, the Greek Catholic Church, the
+Abyssinian bishop, and the representative of the Anglican Church. A
+notable presentation was the Spanish Consul, who had been in charge of
+the interests of almost all countries at war, and whom General Allenby
+congratulated upon being so busy a man. The presentations over, the
+Commander-in-Chief returned to the Jaffa Gate and left for advanced
+General Headquarters, having been in the Holy City not more than a
+quarter of an hour.
+
+For succinctness it would be difficult to improve upon the
+Commander-in-Chief's own description of his Official Entry into
+Jerusalem. Cabling to London within two hours of that event, General
+Allenby thus narrated the events of the day:
+
+(1) At noon to-day I officially entered this City with a few of my
+Staff, the commanders of the French and Italian detachments, the heads
+of the Picot Mission, and the Military Attaches of France, Italy, and
+the United States of America.
+
+The procession was all on foot.
+
+I was received by Guards representing England, Scotland, Ireland,
+Wales, Australia, India, New Zealand, France, and Italy at the Jaffa
+Gate.
+
+(2) I was well received by the population.
+
+(3) The Holy Places have had Guards placed over them.
+
+(4) My Military Governor is in touch with the Acting Custos of Latins,
+and the Greek representative has been detailed to supervise Christian
+Holy Places.
+
+(5) The Mosque of Omar and the area round it has been placed under
+Moslem control and a military cordon composed of Indian Mahomedan
+officers and soldiers has been established round the Mosque. Orders
+have been issued that without permission of the Military Governor
+and the Moslem in charge of the Mosque no non-Moslem is to pass this
+cordon.
+
+(6) The Proclamation has been posted on the walls, and from the steps
+of the Citadel was read in my presence to the population in Arabic,
+Hebrew, English, French, Italian, Greek, and Russian.
+
+(7) Guardians have been established at Bethlehem and on Rachel's Tomb.
+The Tomb of Hebron has been placed under exclusive Moslem control.
+
+(8) The hereditary custodians of the Wakfs at the Gates of the Holy
+Sepulchre have been requested to take up their accustomed duties in
+remembrance of the magnanimous act of the Caliph Omar who protected
+that Church.
+
+As a matter of historical interest I give in the Appendix the orders
+issued on the occasion of the Official Entry into Jerusalem, the order
+of General Allenby's procession into the Holy City for the reading of
+the Proclamation, together with the text of that historic document,
+and the special orders of the day issued by the Commander-in-Chief to
+his troops after the capture of Jerusalem.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: See Appendix VII.]
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+MAKING JERUSALEM SECURE
+
+
+General Allenby within two days of capturing Jerusalem had secured a
+line of high ground which formed an excellent defensive system, but
+his XXth Corps Staff was busy with plans to extend the defences to
+give the Holy City safety from attack. Nothing could have had so
+damaging an influence on our prestige in the East, which was growing
+stronger every day as the direct result of the immense success of the
+operations in Palestine, as the recapture of Jerusalem by the Turks.
+We thought the wire-pulling of the German High Command would have its
+effect in the war councils of Turkey, and seeing that the regaining of
+the prize would have such far-reaching effect on public opinion no one
+was surprised that the Germans prevailed upon their ally to make the
+attempt. It was a hopeless failure. The attack came at a moment when
+we were ready to launch a scheme to secure a second and a third line
+of defences for Jerusalem, and gallantly as the Turks fought--they
+delivered thirteen powerful attacks against our line on the morning
+of December 27--the venture had a disastrous ending, and instead of
+reaching Jerusalem the enemy had to yield to British arms seven miles
+of most valuable country and gave us, in place of one line, four
+strong lines for the defence of the Holy City. By supreme judgment,
+when the Turks had committed themselves to the attack on Tel el Ful,
+without which they could not move a yard on the Nablus road, General
+Chetwode started his operations on the left of his line with the 10th
+and 74th Divisions, using his plan as it had been prepared for some
+days to seize successive lines of hills, and compelled the enemy,
+in order to meet this attack, to divert the fresh division held in
+waiting at Bireh to throw forward into Jerusalem the moment the
+storming troops should pierce our line. With the precision of
+clockwork the Irish and dismounted yeomanry divisions secured their
+objectives, and on the second day of the fighting we regained the
+initiative and compelled the Turks to conform to our dispositions.
+On the fourth day we were on the Ramallah-Bireh line and secured for
+Jerusalem an impregnable defence. Prisoners told us that they had been
+promised, as a reward for their hoped-for success, a day in Jerusalem
+to do as they liked. We can imagine what the situation in the Holy
+City would have been had our line been less true. The Londoners who
+had won the City saved it. Probably only a few of the inhabitants had
+any knowledge of the danger the City was in on December 27. Their
+confidence in the British troops had grown and could scarcely be
+stronger, but some of them were alarmed, and throughout the early
+morning and day they knelt on housetops earnestly praying that our
+soldiers would have strength to withstand the Turkish onslaughts. From
+that day onward the sound of the guns was less violent, and as our
+artillery advanced northwards the people's misgivings vanished and
+they reproached themselves for their fears.
+
+It will be remembered how the troops of the XXth Corps were disposed.
+The 53rd Division held the line south-east and east of Jerusalem from
+Bir Asad through Abu Dis, Bethany, to north of the Mount of Olives,
+whence the 60th Division took it up from Meshari, east of Shafat to
+Tel el Ful and to Beit Hannina across the Jerusalem-Nablus road. The
+74th Division carried on to Nebi Samwil, Beit Izza to Beit Dukku, with
+the 10th Division on their left through Foka, Tahta to Suffa, the gap
+between the XXth Corps to the right of the XXIst Corps being held
+by the 3rd Australian Light Horse Brigade of the Australian Mounted
+Division. Against us were the 27th Turkish Division and the 7th and
+27th cavalry regiments south of the Jericho road, with the 26th, 53rd,
+19th, and 24th Divisions on the north of that road and to the west of
+the Jerusalem-Nablus road, one division being in reserve at Bireh, the
+latter a new division fresh from the Caucasus. The 6th and 8th Turkish
+cavalry regiments were facing our extreme left, the estimated strength
+of the enemy in the line being 14,700 rifles and 2300 sabres. Just as
+it was getting dark on December 11 a party of the enemy attacked the
+179th Brigade at Tel el Ful but were repulsed. There was not much
+activity the following day, but the 53rd Division began a series of
+minor operations by which they secured some features of tactical
+importance. On the 13th the 181st Brigade made a dashing attack on Ras
+el Kharrabeh and secured it, taking 43 prisoners and two machine guns,
+with 31 casualties to themselves.
+
+It was about this time the Corps Commander framed plans for the
+advance of our front north of Jerusalem. There had been a few days of
+fine weather, and a great deal had been done to improve the condition
+of the roads and communications. An army of Egyptian labourers had
+set to work on the Enab-Jerusalem road and from the villages had come
+strong reinforcements of natives, women as well as men (and the women
+did quite as much work as the men), attracted by the unusual wage
+payable in cash. In Jerusalem, too, the natives were sent to labour on
+the roads and to clean up some of the filth that the Turks had allowed
+to accumulate for years, if not for generations, inside the Holy City.
+The Army not merely provided work for idle hands but enabled starving
+bodies to be vitalised. Food was brought into Jerusalem, and with the
+cash wages old and young labourers could get more than a sufficiency.
+The native in the hills proved to be a good road repairer, and the
+boys and women showed an eagerness to earn their daily rates of pay;
+the men generally looked on and gave directions. It was some time
+before steam rollers crushed in the surface, but even rammed-in stones
+were better than mud, and the lorry drivers' tasks became lighter.
+
+General Chetwode's plan was to secure a line from Obeid, 9000 yards
+east of Bethlehem, the hill of Zamby covering the Jericho road three
+miles from Jerusalem, Anata, Hismeh, Jeba, Burkah, Beitun, El Balua,
+Kh. el Burj, Deir Ibzia to Shilta. The scheme was to strike with the
+53rd and 60th Divisions astride the Jerusalem-Nablus road, and at the
+same time to push the 10th Division and a part of the 74th Division
+eastwards from the neighbourhood of Tahta and Foka. The weather again
+became bad on December 14 and the troops suffered great discomfort
+from heavy rains and violent, cold winds, so that only light
+operations were undertaken. On the 17th the West Kent and Sussex
+battalions of the 160th Brigade stalked the high ground east of Abu
+Dis at dawn, and at the cost of only 26 casualties took the ridge with
+5 officers and 121 other ranks prisoners, and buried 46 enemy dead.
+One battalion went up the hill on one side, while the Sussex crept up
+the opposite side, the Turks being caught between two fires. The 53rd
+Division also improved their position on the 21st December. As one
+leaves Bethany and proceeds down the Jericho road one passes along a
+steep zigzag with several hairpin bends until one reaches a guardhouse
+near a well about a mile east of Bethany. The road still falls
+smartly, following a straighter line close to a wadi bed, but hills
+rise very steeply from the highway, and for its whole length until
+it reaches the Jordan valley the road is always covered by high bare
+mountains. Soon after leaving the zigzag there is a series of three
+hills to the north of the road. It was important to obtain possession
+of two of these hills, the first called Zamby and the second named by
+the Welsh troops 'Whitehill,' from the bright limestone outcrop at the
+crest. The 159th Brigade attacked and gained Zamby and then turned
+nearer the Jericho road to capture Whitehill. The Turks resisted very
+stoutly, and there was heavy fighting about the trenches just below
+the top of the hill. By noon the brigade had driven the enemy off, but
+three determined counter-attacks were delivered that day and the
+next and the brigade lost 180 killed and wounded. The Turks suffered
+heavily in the counter-attacks and left over 50 dead behind them; also
+a few prisoners. At a later date there was further strong fighting
+around this hill, and at one period it became impossible for either
+side to hold it.
+
+By the 21st there was a readjustment of the line on the assumption
+that the XXth Corps would attack the Turks on Christmas Day, the 53rd
+Division taking over the line as far north as the wadi Anata, the 60th
+Division extending its left to include Nebi Samwil, and the 74th going
+as far west as Tahta. As a preliminary to the big movement the 180th
+Brigade was directed to move on Kh. Adaseh, a hill between Tel el Ful
+and Tawil, in the early hours of December 23, and the 181st Brigade
+was to seize a height about half a mile north of Beit Hannina. The
+latter attack succeeded, but despite the most gallant and repeated
+efforts the 180th Brigade was unable to gain the summit of Adaseh,
+though they got well up the hill. The weather became bad once more,
+and meteorological reports indicated no improvement in the conditions
+for at least twenty-four hours, and as the moving forward of artillery
+and supplies was impossible in the rain, General Chetwode with the
+concurrence of G.H.Q. decided that the attack should not be made on
+Christmas Day. The 60th Division thereupon did not further prosecute
+their attack on Adaseh. On the 24th December, while General Chetwode
+was conferring with his divisional commanders, information was brought
+in that the Turks were making preparations to recapture Jerusalem by
+an attack on the 60th Division, and the Corps Commander decided that
+the moment the enemy was found to be fully committed to this attack
+the 10th Division and one brigade of the 74th Division would fall on
+the enemy's right and advance over the Zeitun, Kereina, and Ibzia
+ridges. How well this plan worked out was shown before the beginning
+of the New Year, by which time we had secured a great depth of ground
+at a cost infinitely smaller than could have been expected if the
+Turks had remained on the defensive, while the Turkish losses, at a
+moment when they required to preserve every fighting man, were much
+greater than we could have hoped to inflict if they had not come into
+the open. There was never a fear that the enemy would break through.
+We had commanding positions everywhere, and the more one studied our
+line on the chain of far-flung hills the more clearly one realised the
+prevision and military skill of General Chetwode and the staff of the
+XXth Corps in preparing the plans for its capture before the advance
+on Jerusalem was started. The 'fourth objective' of December 8-9 well
+and truly laid the foundations for Jerusalem's security, and relieved
+the inhabitants from the accumulated burdens of more than three years
+of war. We had nibbled at pieces of ground to flatten out the line
+here and there, but in the main the line the Turks assaulted was that
+fourth objective. The Turks put all their hopes on their last card. It
+was trumped; and when we had won the trick there was not a soldier in
+General Allenby's Army nor a civilian in the Holy City who had not a
+profound belief in the coming downfall of the Turkish Empire.
+
+Troops in the line and in bivouac spent the most cheerless Christmas
+Day within their memories. Not only in the storm-swept hills but on
+the Plain the day was bitterly cold, and the gale carried with it
+heavy rain clouds which passed over the tops of mountains and rolled
+up the valleys in ceaseless succession, discharging hail and rain in
+copious quantities. The wadis became roaring, tearing torrents fed by
+hundreds of tributaries, and men who had sought shelter on the lee
+side of rocks often found water pouring over them in cascades. The
+whole country became a sea of mud, and the trials of many months of
+desert sand were grateful and comforting memories. Transport columns
+had an unhappy time: the Hebron road was showing many signs of
+wear, and it was a long journey for lorries from Beersheba when the
+retaining walls were giving way and a foot-deep layer of mud invited a
+skid every yard. The Latron-Jerusalem road was better going, but the
+soft metal laid down seemed to melt under the unceasing traffic in the
+wet, and in peace time this highway would have been voted unfit
+for traffic. The worst piece of road, however, was also the most
+important. The Nablus road where it leaves Jerusalem was wanted to
+supply a vital point on our front. It could not be used during the day
+because it was under observation, and anything moving along it was
+liberally dosed with shells. Nor could its deplorable condition be
+improved by working parties. The ground was so soft on either side of
+it that no gun, ammunition, or supply limber could leave the track,
+and whatever was required for man, or beast, or artillery had to be
+carried across the road in the pitch-black hours of night. Supplies
+were only got up to the troops after infinite labour, yet no one went
+hungry. Boxing Day was brighter, and there were hopes of a period of
+better weather. During the morning there were indications that an
+enemy offensive was not far off, and these were confirmed about noon
+by information that the front north of Jerusalem would be attacked in
+the night. General Chetwode thereupon ordered General Longley to start
+his offensive on the left of the XXth Corps line at dawn next morning.
+Shortly before midnight the Turks began their operations against the
+line held by the 60th Division across the Nablus road precisely where
+it had been expected. They attacked in considerable strength at Ras et
+Tawil and about the quarries held by our outposts north of that hill,
+and the outposts were driven in. About the same time the 24th Welsh
+Regiment--dismounted yeomanry--made the enemy realise that we were on
+the alert, for they assaulted and captured a hill quite close to Et
+Tireh, just forestalling an attack by a Turkish storming battalion,
+and beat off several determined counter-attacks, as a result of which
+the enemy left seventy killed with the bayonet and also some machine
+guns on the hill slopes.
+
+The night was dark and misty, and by half-past one the Turks had
+developed a big attack against the whole of the 60th Division's front,
+the strongest effort being delivered on the line in front of Tel el
+Ful, though there was also very violent fighting on the west of the
+wadi Ed Dunn, north of Beit Hannina. The Turks fought with desperate
+bravery. They had had no food for two days, and the commander of one
+regiment told his men: 'There are no English in front of you. I have
+been watching the enemy lines for a long time; they are held by
+Egyptians, and I tell you there are no English there. You have only to
+capture two hills and you can go straight into Jerusalem and get food.
+It is our last chance of getting Jerusalem, and if we fail we shall
+have to go back.' This officer gave emphatic orders that British
+wounded were not to be mutilated. Between half-past one and eight A.M.
+the Turks attacked in front of Tel el Ful eight times, each attack
+being stronger than the last. Tel el Ful is a conical hill covered
+with huge boulders, and on the top is a mass of rough stones and
+ruined masonry. The Turks had registered well and severely shelled our
+position before making an assault, and they covered the advance
+with machine guns. In one attack made just after daybreak the enemy
+succeeded in getting into a short length of line, but men of the
+2/15th Londons promptly organised a counter-attack and, advancing
+with fine gallantry, though their ranks were thinned by a tremendous
+enfilade fire from artillery and machine guns, they regained the
+sangars. For several hours after eight o'clock this portion of the
+line was quieter, but the Turk was reorganising for a last effort. A
+very brilliant defence had been made during the night of Beit Hannina
+by the 2/24th Londons, which battalion was commanded by a captain, the
+colonel and the majors being on the sick list. The two companies
+in the line were attacked four times by superior numbers, the last
+assault being delivered by more than five hundred men, but the
+defenders stood like rocks, and though they had fifty per cent,
+of their number killed or wounded, and the Turks got close to the
+trenches, the enemy were crushingly defeated.
+
+The morning lull was welcome. Our troops got some rest though their
+vigilance was unrelaxed, and few imagined that the Turks had yet given
+up the attempt to reach Jerusalem. We were ready to meet a fresh
+effort, but the strength with which it was delivered surprised
+everybody. The Turk, it seemed, was prepared to stake everything on
+his last throw. He knew quite early on that morning that his Caucasus
+Division could not carry out the role assigned to it. General Chetwode
+had countered him by smashing in with his left with a beautiful
+weighty stroke precisely at the moment when the Turk had compromised
+himself elsewhere, and instead of being able to put in his reserves to
+support his main attack the enemy had to divert them to stave off an
+advance which, if unhindered, would threaten the vital communications
+of the attackers north of Jerusalem.
+
+It was a remarkable situation, but all the finesse in the art of war
+was on one side. Every message the Turkish Commander received from his
+right must have reported progress against him. Each signal from the
+Jerusalem front must have been equally bitter, summing up want of
+progress and heavy losses. With us, Time was a secondary factor; with
+the Turk, Time was the whole essence of the business, so he pledged
+his all on one tremendous final effort. It was almost one o'clock when
+it started, and it was made against the whole front of our XXth Corps.
+It was certainly made in unexpected strength and with a courage
+beyond praise. The Turk threw himself forward to the assault with the
+violence of despair, and his impetuous onrush enabled him to get into
+some small elements of our front line; but counter-attacks immediately
+organised drove him out. Over the greater portion of the front the
+advance was stopped dead, but in some places the enemy tried a
+whirlwind rush and used bomb against bomb. He had met his match.
+
+The 60th Division which bore the brunt of the onslaught, as it was
+bound to do from its position astride the main road, was absolutely
+unbreakable, and at Tel el Ful there lay a dead Turk for every yard
+of its front. The enemy drew off, but to save the remnants of his
+storming troops kept our positions from near Ras et Tawil, Tel el Ful
+to the wadi Beit Hannina under heavy gunfire for the rest of the day.
+The Turk was hopelessly beaten, his defeat irretrievable. He had
+delivered thirteen costly attacks, and his sole gains were the exposed
+outpost positions at the Tawil and the quarries. All his reserves had
+been vigorously engaged, while at two o'clock in the afternoon General
+Chetwode had in reserve nineteen battalions less one company still
+unused, and the care exercised in keeping this large body of troops
+fresh for following up the Turkish defeat undoubtedly contributed
+to the great success of the advances on the next three days.
+Simultaneously with their attack on the 60th Division positions the
+Turks put in a weighty effort to oust the 53rd Division from the
+positions they held north and south of the Jericho road. Whether in
+their wildest dreams they imagined they could enter Jerusalem by this
+route is doubtful, but if they had succeeded in driving in our line on
+the north they would have put the 53rd Division in a perilous position
+on the east with only one avenue of escape. The Turks concentrated
+their efforts on Whitehill and Zamby. A great fight raged round the
+former height and we were driven off it, but the divisional artillery
+so sprinkled the crest with shell that the Turk could not occupy it,
+and it became No Man's Land until the early evening when the 7th Royal
+Welsh Fusiliers recaptured and held it. The contest for Zamby lasted
+all day, and for a long time it was a battle of bombs and machine
+guns, so closely together were the fighting men, but the Turks never
+got up to our sangars and were finally driven off with heavy loss,
+over 100 dead being left on the hill. The Turkish ambulances were seen
+hard at work on the Jericho road throughout the day. There was a stout
+defence of a detached post at Ibn Obeid. A company of the 2/10th
+Middlesex Regiment had been sent on to Obeid, about five miles east
+of Bethlehem, to watch for the enemy moving about the rough tracks
+in that bare and broken country which falls away in jagged hills and
+sinuous valleys to the Dead Sea. The little garrison, whose sole
+shelter was a ruined monastic building on the hill, were attacked at
+dawn by 700 Turkish cavalry supported by mountain guns. The garrison
+stood fast all day though practically surrounded, and every attack was
+beaten off. The Turks tried again and again to secure the hill, which
+commands a track to Bethlehem, but, although they fired 400 shells
+at the position, they could not enter it, and a battalion sent up to
+relieve the Middlesex men next morning found that the company had
+driven the enemy off, its casualties having amounted to only 2 killed
+and 17 wounded. Thus did the 'Die Hards' live up to the traditions of
+the regiment.
+
+Having dealt with the failure of the Turkish attacks against the 60th
+and 53rd Divisions in front of Jerusalem, let us change our view point
+and focus attention on the left sector of XXth Corps, where the enemy
+was feeling the full power of the Corps at a time when he most wished
+to avoid it. General Longley had organised his attacking columns in
+three groups. On the right the 229th Brigade of the 74th Division was
+set the task of moving from the wadi Imeish to secure the high ground
+of Bir esh Shafa overlooking Beitunia; the 31st Brigade, starting from
+near Tahta, attacked north of the wadi Sunt, to drive the enemy from a
+line from Jeriut through Hafy to the west of the olive orchards
+near Ain Arik; while the left group, composed of the 29th and 30th
+Brigades, aimed at getting Shabuny across the wadi Sad, and Sheikh
+Abdallah where they would have the Australian Mounted Division on
+their left. The advance started from the left of the line. The
+29th Brigade leading, with the 30th Brigade in support, left their
+positions of deployment at six o'clock, by which time the Turk had had
+more than he had bargained for north and east of Jerusalem. The 1st
+Leinsters and 5th Connaught Rangers found the enemy in a stubborn mood
+west of Deir Ibzia, but they broke down the opposition in the proper
+Irish style and rapidly reached their objectives. The centre group
+started one hour after the left and got their line without much
+difficulty. The right group was hotly opposed. Beginning their advance
+at eight o'clock the 229th Brigade had reached the western edge of the
+famous Zeitun ridge in an hour, but from this time onwards they were
+exposed to incessant artillery and machine-gun fire, and the forward
+movement became very slow. In five hours small parties had worked
+along the ridge for about half its length, fighting every yard, and it
+was not until the approach of dusk that we once more got control of
+the whole ridge. It was appropriate that dismounted yeomen should gain
+this important tactical point which several weeks previously had been
+won and lost by their comrades of the Yeomanry Mounted Division.
+Descending from the ridge the brigade gave the Turk little chance to
+stand, and with a bayonet charge they reached the day's objective
+in the dark. At two o'clock, when the Turks' final effort against
+Jerusalem had just failed, the 60th and 74th Divisions both sent
+in the good news that the Turkish commander was moving his reserve
+division from Bireh westwards to meet the attack from our left. Airmen
+confirmed this immediately, and it was now obvious that General
+Chetwode's tactics had compelled the enemy to conform to his movements
+and that we had regained the initiative. At about ten o'clock the 24th
+Royal Welsh Fusiliers of the 231st Brigade captured Kh. ed Dreihemeh
+on the old Roman road a mile east of Tireh, and at eleven o'clock
+advanced to the assault of hill 2450, a little farther eastward. They
+gained the crest, but the enemy had a big force in the neighbourhood
+and counter-attacked, forcing the Welshmen to withdraw some distance
+down the western slope. They held this ground till 4.30 when our guns
+heavily bombarded the summit, under cover of which fire the infantry
+made another attack. This was also unsuccessful owing to the intense
+volume of fire from machine guns. The hill was won, however, next
+morning.
+
+The night of December 27-28 was without incident. The Turk had staked
+and lost, and he spent the night in making new dispositions to meet
+what he must have realised was being prepared for him on the following
+day.
+
+It is doubtful whether there was a more successful day for our Army in
+the Palestine campaign than December 27. The portion of our line which
+was on the defensive had stood an absolutely unmovable wall, against
+which the enemy had battered himself to pieces. Our left, or attacking
+sector, had gained all their objectives against strong opposition in
+a most difficult country, and had drawn against them the very troops
+held in reserve for the main attack on Jerusalem. The physical powers
+of some of our attacking troops were tried highly. One position
+captured by the 229th Brigade was a particularly bad hill. The
+slope up which the infantry had to advance was a series of almost
+perpendicular terraces, and the riflemen could only make the ascent by
+climbing up each others' backs. When dismounted yeomen secured another
+hill some men carrying up supplies took two hours to walk from the
+base of the hill to the summit. The trials of the infantry were shared
+by the artillery. What surprises every one who has been over the route
+taken by the 10th and 74th Divisions is that any guns except those
+with the mountain batteries were able to get into action. The road
+work of engineers and the 5th Royal Irish Regiment (Pioneers) was
+magnificent, and they made a way where none seemed possible; but
+though these roadmakers put their backs into their tasks, it was only
+by the untiring energies of the gunners and drivers that artillery was
+got up to support the infantry. The guns were brought into action well
+ahead of the roads, and were man-hauled for considerable distances.
+Two howitzers and one field gun were kept up with the infantry on the
+first day of the advance where no horses could get a foothold, and the
+manner in which the gunners hauled the guns through deep ravines
+and up seemingly unclimbable hills constituted a wonderful physical
+achievement. The artillery were called upon to continue their arduous
+work on the 28th and 29th under conditions of ground which were even
+more appalling than those met with on the 27th. The whole country was
+devoid of any road better than a goat track, and the ravines became
+deeper and the hills more precipitous. In some places, particularly
+on the 10th Division front, the infantry went forward at a remarkable
+pace; but guns moved up with them, and by keeping down the fire of
+machine guns dotted about on every hill, performed services which
+earned the riflemen's warm praise. The 9th and 10th Mountain Batteries
+were attached to the 10th Division, but field and howitzer batteries
+were also well up. On the 28th the 53rd Division bit farther into the
+enemy's line in order to cover the right of the 60th Division, which
+was to continue its advance up the Nablus road towards Bireh. The
+158th Brigade captured Anata, and after fighting all day the 1/7th
+Royal Welsh Fusiliers secured Ras Urkub es Suffa, a forbidding-looking
+height towering above the storm-rent sides of the wadi Ruabeh. The
+1/1st Herefords after dark took Kh. Almit.
+
+In front of the 60th Division the Turks were still holding some strong
+positions from which they should have been able seriously to delay
+the Londoners' advance had it not been for the threat to their
+communications by the pressure by the 10th and 74th Divisions. The
+Londoners had previously tested the strength of Adaseh, and had found
+it an extremely troublesome hill. They went for it again--the 179th
+Brigade this time--and after a several hours' struggle took it at
+dusk. Meanwhile the 181st Brigade had taken the lofty villages of Bir
+Nebala and El Jib, and after Adaseh became ours the Division went
+ahead in the dark and got to the line across the Nablus road from Er
+Ram to Rafat, capturing some prisoners. The 74th Division also made
+splendid progress. In the early hours the Division, with the 24th
+Royal Welsh Fusiliers and the 24th Welsh Regiment attached, secured
+Jufeir and resumed their main advance in the afternoon, the 230th and
+231st Brigades cooperating with the 229th Brigade which was under the
+orders of the 10th Division. Before dark they had advanced their line
+from the left of the 60th Division in Rafat past the east of Beitunia
+to the hill east of Abu el Ainein, and this strong line of hills
+once secured, everybody was satisfied that the Turks' possession of
+Ramallah and Bireh was only a question of hours. Part of this line had
+been won by the 10th Division, which began its advance before noon in
+the same battle formation as on the 27th. Soon after the three groups
+started the heavy artillery put down a fierce fire on the final
+objectives, and before three o'clock the Turks were seen to be
+evacuating Kefr Skyan, Ainein, and Rubin. The enemy put up a stout
+fight at Beitunia and on a hill several hundred yards north-west of
+the village, but the 229th Brigade had good artillery and machine-gun
+assistance, and got both places before four o'clock, capturing seventy
+prisoners, including the commander of the garrison, and a number of
+machine guns. The left group was hotly opposed from a hill a mile west
+of Rubin and from a high position south-west of Ainein. The nature of
+the ground was entirely favourable to defence and for a time the Turk
+took full advantage of it, but our artillery soon made him lose his
+stomach for fighting, and doubtless the sound of many shell-bursts
+beyond Ramallah made him think that his rock sangars and the deep
+ravines in front of him were not protection against a foe who fought
+Nature with as much determination as he fought the Turkish soldier.
+Six-inch howitzers of the 378th Siege Battery had been brought up to
+Foka in the early hours, and all the afternoon and evening they
+were plastering the road from Ramallah along which the enemy were
+retreating. The left group defied the nests of machine guns hidden
+among the rocks and broke down the defence. The centre group had been
+delayed by the opposition encountered by the left, but they took Skyan
+at six o'clock and all of the objectives for one day were in our hands
+by the early evening. An advance along the whole front was ordered to
+begin at six o'clock on December 29. On his right flank the enemy was
+willing to concede ground, and the 159th Brigade occupied Hismeh,
+Jeba, and the ridges to the north-west to protect the flank of the
+60th Division. The 53rd Division buried 271 enemy dead on their front
+as the result of three days' fighting. The 181st Brigade made a rapid
+advance up the Nablus road until they were close to Bireh and Tahunah,
+a high rocky hill just to the north-west of the village. The Turks had
+many machine guns and a strong force of riflemen in these places, and
+it was impossible for infantry to advance against them over exposed
+ground without artillery support. The 303rd Field Artillery Brigade
+was supporting the brigade, and they were to move up a track from
+Kullundia while the foot-sloggers used the high road, but the track
+was found impassable for wheels and the guns had to be brought to the
+road. The attack was postponed till the guns were in position. The
+gunners came into action at half-past two, and infantry moved to the
+left to get on to the Ramallah-Bireh metalled road which runs at right
+angles to the trunk road between Nablus and Jerusalem. The 2/22nd
+and the 2/23rd Londons, working across the road, reached the Tahunah
+ridge, and after a heavy bombardment dashed into the Turkish
+positions, which were defended most stubbornly to the end, and thus
+won the last remaining hill which commanded our advance up the Nablus
+road as far as Bireh. On the eastern side of the main highway the
+180th Brigade had once more done sterling service. There is a bold
+eminence called Shab Saleh, a mile due south of Bireh. It rises almost
+sheer from a piece of comparatively flat ground, and the enemy held it
+in strength. The 2/19th and the 2/20th Londons attacked this feature,
+and displaying great gallantry in face of much machine-gun fire seized
+it at half-past three. Once again the gunners supported the infantry
+admirably. The 2/17th and 2/18th Londons pushed past Saleh in a
+north-easterly direction and, leaving Bireh on their left, got into
+extremely bad country and took the Turks by surprise on a wooded ridge
+at Sheikh Sheiban. The two brigades rested and refreshed for a couple
+of hours and then advanced once more, and by midnight they had routed
+the Turks out of another series of hills and were in firm possession
+of the line from Beitin, across the Nablus road north of the Balua
+Lake, to the ridge of El Burj, having carried through everything which
+had been planned for the Division.
+
+Ramallah had been taken at nine o'clock in the morning without
+opposition by the 230th and 229th Brigades, and at night the 74th
+Division held a strong line north of the picturesque village as far as
+Et Tireh. The 10th Division also occupied the Tireh ridge quite
+early in the day, and one of their field batteries and both mountain
+batteries got within long range of the Nablus road, and not only
+assisted in shelling the enemy in Bireh but harassed with a hot fire
+any bodies of men or transport seen retreating northwards. The Flying
+Corps, too, caused the Turks many losses on the road. The airmen
+bombed the enemy from a low altitude and also machine-gunned them, and
+moreover by their timely information gave great assistance during
+the operations. By the 30th December all organised resistance to our
+advance had ceased and the XXth Corps consolidated its line, the 60th
+Division going forward slightly to improve its position and the other
+divisions rearranging their own. The consolidation of the line was not
+an easy matter. It had to be very thoroughly and rapidly done. The
+supply difficulty compelled the holding of the line with as few troops
+as possible, and when it had been won it was necessary to put it in a
+proper order in a minimum of time, and to bring back a considerable
+number of the troops who had been engaged in the fighting to hold
+the grand defensive chain which made Jerusalem absolutely safe. The
+standard gauge railway was still a long way from Ramleh, and the
+railway construction parties had to fight against bad weather and
+washouts. The Turkish line from Ramleh to Jerusalem was in bad order;
+a number of bridges were down, so that it was not likely the railway
+could be working for several weeks. Lorries could supply the troops in
+the neighbourhood of the Nablus road, though the highway was
+getting into bad condition, but in the right centre of the line the
+difficulties of terrain were appalling. The enemy had had a painful
+experience of it and was not likely to wish to fight in that country
+again; consequently it was decided to hold this part of the line with
+light forces.
+
+In this description of the operations I have made little mention of
+the work of the Australian Mounted Division which covered the gap
+between XXth and XXIst Corps. These Australian horsemen and yeomanry
+guarded an extended front in inaccessible country, and every man in
+the Division will long remember the troubles of supply in the hills.
+They had some stiff fighting against a wily enemy, and not for a
+minute could they relax their vigilance. When, with the Turks' fatal
+effort to retake Jerusalem, the 10th Division changed their front
+and attacked in a north-easterly direction, the Australian Mounted
+Division moved with it, and they found the country as they progressed
+become more rugged and bleak and extremely difficult for mounted
+troops. The Division was in the fighting line for the whole month of
+December, and when they handed over the new positions they had reached
+to the infantry on the last day of the year, their horses fully needed
+the lengthened period of rest allotted to them.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+A GREAT FEAT OF WAR
+
+
+From the story of how Jerusalem was made secure (for we may hope the
+clamour of war has echoed for the last time about her Holy Shrines and
+venerable walls) we may turn back to the coastal sector and see how
+the XXIst Corps improved a rather dangerous situation and laid the
+foundations for the biggest break-through of the world struggle. For
+it was the preparations in this area which made possible General
+Allenby's tremendous gallop through Northern Palestine and Syria,
+and gave the Allies Haifa, Beyrout, and Tripoli on the seaboard, and
+Nazareth, Damascus, and Aleppo in the interior. The foundations were
+soundly laid when the XXIst Corps crossed the Auja before Christmas
+1917, and the superstructure of the victory which put Turkey as
+well as Bulgaria and Austria out of the war was built up with many
+difficulties from the sure base provided by the XXIst Corps line. The
+crossing of the Auja was a great feat of war, and this is the first
+time I am able to mention the names of those to whom the credit of the
+operation is due. It was one of the strange regulations of the Army
+Council in connection with the censorship that no names of the
+commanders of army corps, divisions, brigades, or battalions should be
+mentioned by correspondents. Nor indeed was I permitted to identify
+in my despatches any particular division, yet the divisions
+concerned--the 52nd, 53rd, 54th, 60th, and so on--had often been
+mentioned in official despatches; the enemy not only knew they were in
+Palestine but were fully aware of their positions in the line; their
+commanders and brigadiers were known by name to the Turks. On the
+other hand, in describing a certain battle I was allowed to speak of
+divisions of Lowland troops, Welshmen and Londoners, allusions which
+would convey (if there were anything to give away) precisely as much
+information to the dull old Turk and his sharper Hun companion in
+arms as though the 52nd, 53rd, and 60th Divisions had been explicitly
+designated. This practice seemed in effect to be designed more with
+the object of keeping our people at home in the dark, of forbidding
+them glory in the deeds of their children and brothers, than of
+preventing information reaching the enemy. Some gentleman enthroned in
+the authority of an official armchair said 'No,' and there was an
+end of it. You could not get beyond him. His decision was final,
+complete--and silly--and the correspondent was bound hand and foot by
+it. Doubtless he would have liked one to plead on the knee for some
+little relaxation of his decision. Then he would have answered 'No'
+in a louder tone. Let me give one example from a number entered in
+my notebooks of how officers at home exercised their authority.
+In January 1917 the military railway from the Suez Canal had been
+constructed across the Sinai Desert and the first train was run into
+El Arish, about ninety miles from the Canal. I was asked by General
+Headquarters to send a cablegram to London announcing the fact that
+railhead was at El Arish, the town having been captured a fortnight
+previously after a fine night march. That message was never published,
+and I knew it was a waste of time to ask the reason. I happened to be
+in London for a few days in the following August and my duties took me
+to the War Office. A Colonel in the Intelligence Branch heard I was
+there and sent for me to tell me I had sent home information of value
+to the enemy. I reminded him there was a G.H.Q. censorship in Egypt
+which dealt with my cablegrams, and asked the nature of the valuable
+information which should have been concealed. 'You sent a telegram
+that the railway had reached El Arish when the Turks did not know it
+was beyond Bir el Abd.' Abd is fifty miles nearer the Suez Canal than
+El Arish. What did this officer care about a request made by G.H.Q. to
+transmit information to the British public? He knew better than G.H.Q.
+what the British public should know, and he was certain the enemy
+thought we were hauling supplies through those fifty miles of sand
+to our troops at El Arish, an absolutely physical impossibility, for
+there were not enough camels in the East to do it. But he did not
+know, and he should have known, being an Intelligence officer, that
+the Turks were so far aware of where our railhead was that they were
+frequently bombing it from the air. I had been in these bombing raids
+and knew how accurately the German airmen dropped their eggs, and had
+this Intelligence officer taken the trouble to inquire he would have
+found that between thirty and forty casualties were inflicted by one
+bomb at El Arish itself when railhead was being constructed. This
+critic imagined that the Turk knew only what the English papers told
+him. If the Turks' knowledge had been confined to what the War Office
+Intelligence Branch gave him credit for he would have been in a
+parlous state. While this ruling of the authorities at home prevailed
+it was impossible for me to give the names of officers or to mention
+divisions or units which were doing exceptionally meritorious work.
+Unfortunately the bureaucratic interdict continued till within a
+few days of the end of the campaign, when I was told that, 'having
+frequently referred to the work of the Australians, which was
+deserved,' the mention of British and Indian units would be welcomed.
+We had to wait until within a month of the end of the world war before
+the War Office would unbend and realise the value of the best kind
+of propaganda. No wonder our American friends consider us the worst
+national advertisers in the world.
+
+The officer who was mainly responsible for the success of the Auja
+crossing was Major-General J. Hill, D.S.O., A.D.C., commanding the
+52nd Division. His plan was agreed to by General Bulfin, although the
+Corps Commander had doubts about the possibility of its success, and
+had his own scheme ready to be put into instant operation if General
+Hill's failed. In the state of the weather General Hill's own
+brigadiers were not sanguine, and they were the most loyal and devoted
+officers a divisional commander ever had. But despite the most
+unfavourable conditions, calling for heroic measures on the part of
+officers and men alike to gain their objectives through mud and water
+and over ground that was as bad as it could be, the movements of the
+troops worked to the clock. One brigade's movements synchronised with
+those of another, and the river was crossed, commanding positions were
+seized, and bridges were built with an astoundingly small loss to
+ourselves. The Lowland Scots worked as if at sport, and they could not
+have worked longer or stronger if the whole honour of Scotland had
+depended upon their efforts. At a later date, when digging at Arsuf,
+these Scots came across some marble columns which had graced a hall
+when Apollonia was in its heyday. The glory of Apollonia has long
+vanished, but if in that age of warriors there had been a belief
+that those marble columns would some day be raised as monuments to
+commemorate a great operation of war the ancients would have had a
+special veneration for them. Three of the columns marked the spots
+where the Scots spanned the river, and it is a pity they cannot tell
+the full story to succeeding generations.
+
+The river Auja is a perennial stream emptying itself into the blue
+Mediterranean waters four miles north of Jaffa. Its average width is
+forty yards and its depth ten feet, with a current running at about
+three miles an hour. Till we crossed it the river was the boundary
+between the British and Turkish armies in this sector, and all the
+advantage of observation was on the northern bank. From it the town of
+Jaffa and its port were in danger, and the main road between Jaffa and
+Ramleh was observed and under fire. The village of Sheikh Muannis,
+about two miles inland, stood on a high mound commanding the ground
+south of the river, and from Hadrah you could keep the river in sight
+in its whole winding course to the sea. All this high ground concealed
+an entrenched enemy; on the southern side of the river the Turks were
+on Bald Hill, and held a line of trenches covering the Jewish colony
+of Mulebbis and Fejja. A bridge and a mill dam having been destroyed
+during winter the only means of crossing was by a ford three feet deep
+at the mouth, an uncertain passage because the sand bar over which one
+could walk shifted after heavy rain when the stream was swollen with
+flood water. Reconnaissances at the river mouth were carried out with
+great daring. As I said, all the southern approaches to the river were
+commanded by the Turks on the northern bank, who were always alert,
+and the movement of one man in the Auja valley was generally the
+signal for artillery activity. So often did the Turkish gunners salute
+the appearance of a single British soldier that the Scots talked of
+the enemy 'sniping' with guns. To reconnoitre the enemy's positions
+by daylight was hazardous work, and the Scots had to obtain their
+first-hand knowledge of the river and the approaches to it in the dark
+hours.
+
+An officers' patrol swam the river one night, saw what the enemy was
+doing, and returned unobserved. A few nights afterwards two officers
+swam out to sea across the river mouth and crept up the right bank of
+the stream within the enemy's lines to ascertain the locality of the
+ford and its exact width and depth. They also learnt that there were
+no obstacles placed across the ford, which was three feet deep in
+normal times and five feet under water after rains. It was obvious
+that bridges would be required, and it was decided to force the
+passage of the river in the dark hours by putting covering troops
+across to the northern bank, and by capturing the enemy's positions to
+form a bridgehead while pontoon bridges were being constructed for the
+use of guns and the remainder of the Division.
+
+Time was all-important. December and January are the wettest months
+of the season at Jaffa, and after heavy rains the Auja valley becomes
+little better than a marsh, so that a small amount of traffic will cut
+up the boggy land into an almost impassable condition.
+
+The XXIst Corps' plan was as follows: At dawn on December 21 a heavy
+bombardment was to open on all the enemy's trenches covering the
+crossings, the fire of heavy guns to be concentrated on enemy
+batteries and strong positions in the rear, while ships of the Royal
+Navy bombarded two strong artillery positions at Tel el Rekket and El
+Jelil, near the coast. When darkness fell covering troops were to be
+ferried across the river, and then light bridges would be constructed
+for the passage of larger units charged with the task of getting the
+Turks out of their line from Hadrah, through El Mukras to Tel el
+Rekket. After these positions had been gained the engineers were to
+build pontoon bridges to carry the remainder of the Division and guns
+on the night of the 22nd-23rd December, in time to advance at daylight
+on the 23rd to secure a defensive line from Tel el Mukhmar through
+Sheikh el Ballatar to Jelil. On the right of the 52nd Division the
+54th Division was to attack Bald Hill on the night of 21st-22nd
+December, and on the following morning assault the trench system
+covering Mulebbis and Fejja; then later in the day to advance to
+Rantieh, while the 75th Division farther east was to attack Bireh and
+Beida. This plan was given to divisional commanders at a conference in
+Jaffa on December 12. Two days later General Hill submitted another
+scheme which provided for a surprise attack by night with no naval
+or land artillery bombardment, such a demonstration being likely to
+attract attention. General Hill submitted his proposals in detail.
+General Bulfin gave the plan most careful consideration, but decided
+that to base so important an operation on the success of a surprise
+attack was too hazardous, and he adhered to his scheme of a deliberate
+operation to be carried through systematically. He, however, gave
+General Hill permission to carry out his surprise attack on the
+night of December 20, but insisted that the bombardment should begin
+according to programme at daylight on the 21st unless the surprise
+scheme was successful.
+
+A brigade of the 54th Division and the 1st Australian Light Horse
+Brigade relieved the Scots in the trenches for three nights before the
+attempt. Every man in the Lowland Division entered upon the work of
+preparation with whole-hearted enthusiasm. There was much to be done
+and materials were none too plentiful. Pontoons were wired for and
+reached Jaffa on the 16th. There was little wood available, and some
+old houses in Jaffa were pulled down to supply the Army's needs. The
+material was collected in the orange groves around the German colony
+at Sarona, a northern suburb of Jaffa, and every man who could use a
+tool was set to work to build a framework of rectangular boats to a
+standard design, and on this framework of wood tarpaulins and canvas
+were stretched. These boats were light in structure, and were so
+designed that working parties would be capable of transferring them
+from their place of manufacture to the river bank. Each boat was to
+carry twenty men fully armed and equipped over the river. They became
+so heavy with rain that they in fact only carried sixteen men. The
+boat builders worked where enemy airmen could not see them, and
+when the craft were completed the troops were practised at night in
+embarking and ferrying across a waterway--for this purpose the craft
+were put on a big pond--and in cutting a path through thick cactus
+hedges in the dark. During these preparations the artillery was also
+active. They took their guns up to forward positions during the night,
+and before the date of the attack there was a bombardment group of
+eight 6-inch howitzers and a counter battery group of ten 60-pounders
+and one 6-inch Mark VII. gun in concealed positions, and the artillery
+dumps had been filled with 400 rounds for each heavy gun and 700
+rounds for each field piece. The weather on the 18th, 19th, and 20th
+December was most unfavourable. Rain was continuous and the valley of
+the Auja became a morass. The luck of the weather was almost always
+against General Allenby's Army, and the troops had become accustomed
+to fighting the elements as well as the Turks, but here was a
+situation where rain might have made all the difference between
+success and failure. General Bulfin saw General Hill and his
+brigadiers on the afternoon of the 20th. The brigadiers were depressed
+owing to the floods and the state of the ground, because it was then
+clear that causeways would have to be made through the mud to the
+river banks. General Hill remained enthusiastic and hopeful and, the
+Corps Commander supporting him, it was decided to proceed with the
+operation. For several nights, with the object of giving the enemy
+the impression of a nightly strafe, there had been artillery and
+machine-gun demonstrations occurring about the same time and lasting
+as long as those planned for the night of the crossing. After dusk on
+December 20 there was a big movement behind our lines. The ferrying
+and bridging parties got on the move, each by their particular road,
+and though the wind was searchingly cold and every officer and man
+became thoroughly drenched, there was not a sick heart in the force.
+The 157th Brigade proceeded to the ford at the mouth of the Auja, the
+156th Brigade advanced towards the river just below Muannis, and the
+155th Brigade moved up to the mill and dam at Jerisheh, where it was
+to secure the crossing and then swing to the right to capture Hadrah.
+The advance was slow, but that the Scots were able to move at all is
+the highest tribute to their determination. The rain-soaked canvas
+of the boats had so greatly added to their weight that the parties
+detailed to carry them from the Sarona orange orchards found the task
+almost beyond their powers. The bridge rafts for one of the crossings
+could not be got up to the river bank because the men were continually
+slipping in the mud under the heavy load, and the attacking battalion
+at this spot was ferried over in coracles. On another route a section
+carrying a raft lost one of its number, who was afterwards found sunk
+in mud up to his outstretched arms. The tracks were almost impassable,
+and a Lancashire pioneer battalion was called up to assist in
+improving them. The men became caked with mud from steel helmet to
+boots, and the field guns which had to be hauled by double teams
+were so bespattered that there was no need for camouflage. In those
+strenuous hours of darkness the weather continued vile, and the storm
+wind flung the frequent heavy showers with cutting force against the
+struggling men. The covering party which was to cross at the ford
+found the bar had shifted under the pressure of flood water and that
+the marks put down to direct the column had been washed away. The
+commanding officer reconnoitred, getting up to his neck in water, and
+found the ford considerably out of position and deeper than he had
+hoped, but he brought his men together in fours and, ordering each
+section to link arms to prevent the swirling waters carrying them out
+to sea, led them across without a casualty. In the other places
+the covering parties of brigades began to be ferried over at eight
+o'clock. The first raft-loads were paddled across with muffled oars.
+A line was towed behind the boats, and this being made fast on either
+side of the river the rafts crossed and recrossed by haulage on the
+rope, in order that no disturbance on the surface by oars on even such
+a wild night should cause an alarm. As soon as the covering parties
+were over, light bridges to carry infantry in file were constructed by
+lashing the rafts together and placing planks on them. One of these
+bridges was burst by the strength of the current, but the delay thus
+caused mattered little as the surprise was complete. When the bridges
+of rafts had been swung and anchored, blankets and carpets were laid
+upon them to deaden the fall of marching feet, and during that silent
+tramp across the rolling bridges many a keen-witted Scot found it
+difficult to restrain a laugh as he trod on carpets richer by far than
+any that had lain in his best parlour at home. He could not see the
+patterns, but rightly guessed that they were picked out in the bright
+colours of the East, and the muddy marks of war-travelled men were
+left on them without regret, for the carpets had come from
+German houses in Sarona. How perfectly the operation was
+conducted--noiselessly, swiftly, absolutely according to
+time-table--may be gathered from the fact that two officers and
+sixteen Turks were awakened in their trench dug-outs at the ford
+by the river mouth two hours after we had taken the trenches. The
+officers resisted and had to be killed. Two miles behind the river the
+Lowlanders captured the whole garrison of a post near the sea, none
+of whom had the slightest idea that the river had been crossed. An
+officer commanding a battalion at Muannis was taken in his bed, whilst
+another commanding officer had the surprise of his life on being
+invited to put his hands up in his own house. He looked as if he had
+just awakened from a nightmare. In one place some Turks on being
+attacked with the bayonet shouted an alarm and one of the crossings
+was shelled, but its position was immediately changed and the passage
+of the river continued without interruption. The whole of the Turkish
+system covering the river, trenches well concealed in the river
+banks and in patches of cultivated land, were rushed in silence and
+captured. Muannis was taken at the point of the bayonet, the strong
+position at Hadrah was also carried in absolute silence, and at
+daylight the whole line the Scots had set out to gain was won and the
+assailants were digging themselves in. And the price of their victory?
+The Scots had 8 officers and 93 other ranks casualties. They buried
+over 100 Turkish dead and took 11 officers and 296 other ranks
+prisoners, besides capturing ten machine guns.
+
+The forcing of the passage of the Auja was a magnificent achievement,
+planned with great ability by General Hill and carried out with that
+skill and energy which the brigadiers, staff, and all ranks of the
+Division showed throughout the campaign. One significant fact serves
+to illustrate the Scots' discipline. Orders were that not a shot was
+to be fired except by the guns and machine guns making their nightly
+strafe. Death was to be dealt out with the bayonet, and though the
+Lowlanders were engaged in a life and death struggle with the Turks,
+not a single round of rifle ammunition was used by them till daylight
+came, when, as a keen marksman said, they had some grand running-man
+practice. During the day some batteries got to the north bank by way
+of the ford, and two heavy pontoon bridges were constructed and a
+barrel bridge, which had been put together in a wadi flowing into the
+Auja, was floated down and placed in position. There was a good deal
+of shelling by the Turks, but they fired at our new positions and
+interfered but little with the bridge construction.
+
+On the night of the 21st-22nd December the 54th Division assaulted
+Bald Hill, a prominent mound south of the Auja from which a
+magnificent view of the country was gained. Stiff fighting resulted,
+but the enemy was driven off with a loss of 4 officers and 48 other
+ranks killed, and 3 officers and 41 men taken prisoners. At dawn the
+Division reported that the enemy was retiring from Mulebbis and Fejja,
+and those places were soon in our hands. H.M.S. _Grafton_, with
+Admiral T. Jackson, the monitors M29, M31, and M32, and the destroyers
+_Lapwing_ and _Lizard_, arrived off the coast and shelled Jelil and
+Arsuf, and the 52nd Division, advancing on a broad front, occupied the
+whole of their objectives by five o'clock in the afternoon. The 157th
+Brigade got all the high ground about Arsuf, and thus prevented the
+enemy from obtaining a long-range view of Jaffa. A few rounds of shell
+fired by a naval gun at a range of nearly twenty miles fell in Jaffa
+some months afterwards, but with this exception Jaffa was quite free
+from the enemy's attentions. The brilliant operation on the Auja had
+saved the town and its people many anxious days. By the end of the
+year there were three strong bridges across the river, and three
+others substantial enough to bear the weight of tractors and their
+loads were under construction. The troops received their winter
+clothing; bivouac shelters and tents were beginning to arrive. Baths
+and laundries were in operation, and the rigours of the campaign began
+to be eased. But the XXIst Corps could congratulate itself that,
+notwithstanding two months of open warfare, often fifty to sixty miles
+from railhead, men's rations had never been reduced. Horses and mules
+had had short allowances, but they could pick up a little in the
+country. The men were in good health, despite the hardships in the
+hills and rapid change from summer to winter, and their spirit could
+not be surpassed.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+BY THE BANKS OF THE JORDAN
+
+
+We have seen how impregnable the defences of Jerusalem had become as
+the result of the big advance northwards at the end of December.
+As far as any military forecast could be made we were now in an
+impenetrable position whatever force the Turk, with his poor
+communications, could employ against us either from the direction of
+Nablus or from the east of the Jordan. There seemed to be no risk
+whatever, so long as we chose to hold the line XXth Corps had won,
+of the Turks again approaching Jerusalem, but the Commander-in-Chief
+determined to make the situation absolutely safe by advancing
+eastwards to capture Jericho and the crossings of the Jordan. This was
+not solely a measure of precaution. It certainly did provide a means
+for preventing the foe from operating in the stern, forbidding,
+desolate, and awe-inspiring region which has been known as the
+Wilderness since Biblical days, and doubtless before. In that rough
+country it would be extremely difficult to stop small bands of
+enterprising troops getting through a line and creating diversions
+which, while of small military consequence, would have been
+troublesome, and might have had the effect of unsettling the natives.
+A foothold in the Jordan valley would have the great advantage of
+enabling us to threaten the Hedjaz railway, the Turks' sole means
+of communication with Medina, where their garrison was holding out
+staunchly against the troops of the King of the Hedjaz, and any
+assistance we could give the King's army would have a far-reaching
+effect on neutral Arabs. It would also stop the grain trade on the
+Dead Sea, on which the enemy set store, and would divert traffic in
+foodstuffs to natives in Lower Palestine, who at this time were to a
+considerable extent dependent on supplies furnished by our Army. The
+Quartermaster-General carried many responsibilities on his shoulders.
+Time was not the important factor, and as General Allenby was anxious
+to avoid an operation which might involve heavy losses, it was at
+first proposed that the enemy should be forced to leave Jericho by the
+gradually closing in on the town from north and south. The Turks had
+got an immensely strong position about Talat ed Dumm, the 'Mound of
+Blood,' where stands a ruined castle of the Crusaders, the Chastel
+Rouge. One can see it with the naked eye from the Mount of Olives,
+and weeks before the operation started I stood in the garden of the
+Kaiserin Augusta Victoria hospice and, looking over one of the most
+inhospitable regions of the world, could easily make out the Turks
+walking on the road near the Khan, which has been called the Good
+Samaritan Inn. The country has indeed been rightly named. Gaunt, bare
+mountains of limestone with scarcely a patch of green to relieve the
+nakedness of the land make a wilderness indeed, and one sees a drop
+of some four thousand feet in a distance of about fifteen miles. The
+hills rise in continuous succession, great ramparts of the Judean
+range, and instead of valleys between them there are huge clefts in
+the rock, hundreds of feet deep, which carry away the winter torrents
+to the Jordan and Dead Sea. Over beyond the edge of hills are the
+green wooded banks of the Sacred River, then a patch or two of stunted
+trees, and finally the dark walls of the mountains of Moab shutting
+out the view of the land which still holds fascinating remains of
+Greek civilisation.
+
+But there was no promise of an early peep at such historic sights, and
+the problem of getting at the nearer land was hard enough for present
+deliberation. It was at first proposed that the whole of the
+XXth Corps and a force of cavalry should carry out operations
+simultaneously on the north and east of the Corps front which should
+give us possession of the roads from Mar Saba and Muntar, and also
+from Taiyibeh and the old Roman road to Jericho, thus allowing two
+cavalry forces supported by infantry columns to converge on Jericho
+from the north and south. However, by the second week of February
+there had been bad weather, and the difficulties of supplying a line
+forty miles from the railway on roads which, notwithstanding a
+vast amount of labour, were still far from good, were practically
+insuperable, and it was apparent that a northerly and easterly advance
+at the same time would involve a delay of three weeks.
+
+New circumstances came to light after the advance was first arranged,
+and these demanded that the enemy should be driven across the Jordan
+as soon as possible. General Allenby decided that the operations
+should be carried out in two phases. The first was an easterly advance
+to thrust the enemy from his position covering Jericho, to force him
+across the Jordan, and to obtain control of the country west of the
+river. The northerly advance to secure the line of the wadi Aujah was
+to follow. This river Aujah which flows into the Jordan must not be
+confused with the Auja on the coast already described.
+
+The period of wet weather was prolonged, and the accumulation of
+supplies of rations and ammunition did not permit of operations
+commencing before February 19. That they started so early is an
+eloquent tribute to the hard work of the Army, for the weather by the
+date of the attack had improved but little, and the task of getting
+up stores could only be completed by extraordinary exertions. General
+Chetwode ordered a brigade of the 60th Division to capture Mukhmas
+as a preliminary to a concentration at that place. On the 19th the
+Division occupied a front of about fourteen miles from near Muntar,
+close to which the ancient road from Bethlehem to Jericho passes,
+through Ras Umm Deisis, across the Jerusalem-Jericho road to Arak
+Ibrahim, over the great chasm of the wadi Farah which has cliff-like
+sides hundreds of feet deep, to the brown knob of Ras et Tawil. The
+line was not gained without fighting. The Turks did not oppose us at
+Muntar--the spot where the Jews released the Scapegoat--but there
+was a short contest for Ibrahim, and a longer fight lasting till the
+afternoon for an entrenched position a mile north of it; Ras et Tawil
+was ours by nine in the morning. Tawil overlooks a track which has
+been trodden from time immemorial. It leads from the Jordan valley
+north-west of Jericho, and passes beneath the frowning height of Jebel
+Kuruntul with its bare face relieved by a monastery built into the
+rock about half-way up, and a walled garden on top to mark the Mount
+of Temptation, as the pious monks believe it to be. The track then
+proceeds westwards, winding in and out of the tremendous slits in
+rock, to Mukhmas, and it was probably along this rough line that
+the Israelites marched from their camp at Gilgal to overthrow the
+Philistines. On the right of the Londoners were two brigades of the
+Anzac Mounted Division, working through the most desolate hills and
+wadis down to the Dead Sea with a view to pushing up by Nebi Musa,
+which tradition has ascribed as the burial place of Moses, and thence
+into the Jordan valley. Northward of the 60th Division the 53rd was
+extending its flank eastwards to command the Taiyibeh-Jericho road,
+and the Welsh troops occupied Rummon, a huge mount of chalk giving a
+good view of the Wilderness. This was the position on the night of
+19th February.
+
+At dawn on the 20th the Londoners were to attack the Turks in three
+columns. The right column was to march from El Muntar to Ekteif, the
+centre column to proceed along the Jerusalem-Jericho road between the
+highway and the wadi Farah, and the left column was to go forward by
+the Tawil-Jebel Kuruntul track. The 1st Australian Light Horse Brigade
+and the New Zealand Mounted Rifles Brigade were, if possible, to make
+Nebi Musa.
+
+The infantry attack was as fine as anything done in the campaign. I
+had the advantage of witnessing the centre column carry out the whole
+of its task and of seeing the right column complete as gallant an
+effort as any troops could make, and as one saw them scale frowning
+heights and clamber up and down the roughest of torrent beds, one
+realised that more than three months' fighting had not removed the
+'bloom' from these Cockney warriors, and that their physique and
+courage were proof against long and heavy trials of campaigning. The
+chief objective of the centre column was Talat ed Dumm which, lying on
+the Jericho road just before the junction of the old and the new road
+to the Jordan valley, was the key to Jericho. It is hard to imagine a
+better defensive position. To the north of the road is the wadi Farah,
+a great crack in the rocks which can only be crossed in a few places,
+and which a few riflemen could cover. Likewise a platoon distributed
+behind rocks on the many hills could command the approaches from all
+directions, while the hill of Talat ed Dumm, by the Good Samaritan
+Inn, and the height whereon the Crusader ruins stand, dominated a
+broad flat across which our troops must move. This position the 180th
+Brigade attacked at dawn. The guns opened before the sun appeared
+above the black crest line of the mountains of Moab, and well before
+long shadows were cast across the Jordan valley the batteries were
+tearing to pieces the stone walls and rocky eyries sheltering
+machine-gunners and infantry. This preliminary bombardment, if short,
+was wonderfully effective. From where I stood I saw the heavies
+pouring an unerring fire on to the Crusader Castle, huge spurts of
+black smoke, and the dislocation of big stones which had withstood
+the disintegrating effect of many centuries of sun power, telling the
+Forward Observing Officer that his gunners were well on the target and
+that to live in that havoc the Turks must seek the shelter of vaults
+cut deep down in the rock by masons of old. No enemy could delay
+our progress from that shell-torn spot. Lighter guns searched other
+positions and whiffs of shrapnel kept Turks from their business. There
+are green patches on the western side of Talat ed Dumm in the early
+months of the year before the sun has burned up the country. Over
+these the infantry advanced as laid down in the book. The whirring
+rap-rap of machine guns at present unlocated did not stop them, and
+as our machine-gun sections, ever on the alert to keep down rival
+automatic guns, found out and sprayed the nests, the enemy was seen
+to be anxious about his line of retreat. One large party, harried by
+shrapnel and machine-gun fire, left its positions and rushed towards
+a defile, but rallied and came back, though when it reoccupied its
+former line the Londoners had reached a point to enfilade it, and it
+suffered heavily. We soon got this position, and then our troops,
+ascending some spurs, poured a destructive fire into the defile and so
+harassed the Turks re-forming for a counterattack as to render feeble
+their efforts to regain what they had lost.
+
+By eight o'clock we had taken the whole of the Talat ed Dumm position,
+and long-range sniping throughout the day did not disturb our secure
+possession of it. Immediately the heights were occupied the guns went
+ahead to new points, and armoured cars left the road to try to find a
+way to the south-east to protect the flank of the right column. They
+had a troublesome journey. Some of the crews walked well ahead of the
+cars to reconnoitre the tracks, and it speaks well for the efficiency
+of the cars as well as for the pluck and cleverness of the drivers
+that in crossing a mile or two of that terribly broken mountainous
+country no car was overturned and all got back to the road without
+mishap.
+
+Throughout the night and during the greater part of the day of
+February 20 the right column were fighting under many difficulties. In
+their march from the hill of Muntar they had to travel over ground so
+cracked and strewn with boulders that in many parts the brigade could
+only proceed in single file. In some places the track chosen had a
+huge cleft in the mountain on one side and a cliff face on the other.
+It was a continual succession of watercourses and mountains, of uphill
+and downhill travel over the most uneven surface in the blackness of
+night, and it took nearly eight hours to march three miles. The nature
+of the country was a very serious obstacle and the column was late in
+deploying for attack. But bad as was the route the men had followed
+during the night, it was easy as compared with the position they had
+set out to carry. This was Jebel Ekteif, the southern end of the range
+of hills of which Talat ed Dumm was the northern. Ekteif presented to
+this column a face as precipitous as Gibraltar and perhaps half as
+high. There was a ledge running round it about three-quarters of the
+way from the top, and for hours one could see the Turks lying flat on
+this rude path trying to pick off the intrepid climbers attempting a
+precarious ascent. Some mountain guns suddenly ranged on the enemy on
+this ledge, and, picking up the range with remarkable rapidity, forced
+the Turks into more comfortable positions. The enemy, too, had some
+well-served guns, and they plastered the spurs leading to the crest
+from the west, but our infantry's audacity never faltered, and
+after we had got into the first lines on the hill our men proceeded
+methodically to rout out the machine guns from their nooks and
+crannies. This was a somewhat lengthy process, but small parties
+working in support of each other gradually crushed opposition, and
+the huge rocky rampart was ours by three o'clock in the afternoon.
+Meanwhile two brigades of the Anzac Mounted Division were moving
+eastwards from Muntar over the hills and wadis down to the Dead Sea,
+whence turning northwards they marched towards Nebi Musa to try to
+get on to the Jordan valley flats to threaten the Turks in rear. The
+terrain was appallingly bad and horses had to be led, the troops
+frequently proceeding in Indian file. No guns could be got over the
+hills to support the Anzacs, and when they tried to pass through a
+narrow defile south of Nebi Musa it was found that the enemy covered
+the approach with machine guns, and progress was stopped dead
+until, during the early hours of the following morning, some of the
+Londoners' artillery managed by a superhuman effort to get a few guns
+over the mountains to support the cavalry. By this time the Turks
+had had enough of it, and while it was dark they were busy trekking
+through Jericho towards the Ghoraniyeh bridge over the river, covered
+by a force on the Jebel Kuruntul track which prevented the left column
+from reaching the cliffs overlooking the Jordan valley. By dawn on the
+21st Nebi Musa was made good, the 1st Australian Light Horse Brigade
+and the New Zealand Brigade were in Jericho by eight o'clock and
+had cleared the Jordan valley as far north as the river Aujah, the
+Londoners holding the line of cliffs which absolutely prevented any
+possibility of the enemy ever again threatening Jerusalem or Bethlehem
+from the east. This successful operation also put an end to the Turks'
+Dead Sea grain traffic. They had given up hope of keeping their
+landing place on the northern shores of the Dead Sea when we took
+Talat ed Dumm, and one hour after our infantry had planted themselves
+on the Hill of Blood we saw the enemy burning his boats, wharves, and
+storehouses at Rujm el Bahr, where he had expended a good deal of
+labour to put up buildings to store grain wanted for his army.
+Subsequently we had some naval men operating motor boats from this
+point, and these sailors achieved a record on that melancholy waterway
+at a level far below that at which any submarine, British or German,
+ever rested.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+THE TOUCH OF THE CIVILISING HAND
+
+
+It is doubtful whether the population of any city within the zones of
+war profited so much at the hands of the conqueror as Jerusalem. In
+a little more than half a year a wondrous change was effected in the
+condition of the people, and if it had been possible to search the
+Oriental mind and to get a free and frank expression of opinion,
+one would probably have found a universal thankfulness for General
+Allenby's deliverance of the Holy City from the hands of the Turks.
+And with good reason. The scourge of war so far as the British Army
+was concerned left Jerusalem the Golden untouched. For the 50,000
+people in the City the skilfully applied military pressure which
+put an end to Turkish misgovernment was the beginning of an era
+of happiness and contentment of which they had hitherto had no
+conception. Justice was administered in accordance with British
+ideals, every man enjoyed the profits of his industry, traders no
+longer ran the gauntlet of extortionate officials, the old time
+corruption was a thing of the past, public health was organised as far
+as it could be on Western lines, and though in matters of sanitation
+and personal cleanliness the inhabitants still had much to learn, the
+appearance of the Holy City and its population vastly improved under
+the touch of a civilising hand. Sights that offended more than one of
+the senses on the day when General Allenby made his official entry had
+disappeared, and peace and order reigned where previously had been but
+misery, poverty, disease, and squalor.
+
+One of the biggest blots upon the Turkish government of the City was
+the total failure to provide an adequate water supply. What they
+could not, or would not, do in their rule of four hundred years His
+Majesty's Royal Engineers accomplished in a little more than two
+months, and now for the first time in history every civilian in
+Jerusalem can obtain as much pure mountain spring water as he wishes,
+and for this water, as fresh and bright as any bubbling out of Welsh
+hills, not a penny is charged. The picturesque, though usually
+unclean, water carrier is passing into the limbo of forgotten things,
+and his energies are being diverted into other channels. The germs
+that swarmed in his leathern water bags will no longer endanger the
+lives of the citizens, and the deadly perils of stagnant cistern water
+have been to a large extent removed.
+
+For its water Jerusalem used to rely mainly upon the winter rainfall
+to fill its cisterns. Practically every house has its underground
+reservoir, and it is estimated that if all were full they would
+contain about 360,000,000 gallons. But many had fallen into disrepair
+and most, if not the whole of them, required thorough cleansing. One
+which was inspected by our sanitary department had not been emptied
+for nineteen years. To supplement the cistern supply the Mosque of
+Omar reservoir halved with Bethlehem the water which flowed from near
+Solomon's Pools down an aqueduct constructed by Roman engineers under
+Herod before the Saviour was born. This was not nearly sufficient, nor
+was it so constant a supply as that provided by our Army engineers.
+They went farther afield. They found a group of spring-heads in an
+absolutely clean gathering ground on the hills yielding some 14,000
+gallons an hour, and this water which was running to waste is lifted
+to the top of a hill from which it flows by gravity through a long
+pipe-line to Jerusalem, where a reservoir has been built on a high
+point on the outskirts of the city. Supplies of this beautiful water
+run direct to the hospitals, and at standpipes all over the city the
+inhabitants take as much as they desire. The water consumption of the
+people became ten times what it was in the previous year, and this
+fact alone told how the boon was appreciated.
+
+The scheme did not stop at putting up standpipes for those who fetched
+the water. A portion of the contents of the cisterns was taken for
+watering troop horses in the spring--troops were not allowed to drink
+it. The water level of these cisterns became very low, and as they
+got emptied the authorities arranged for refilling them on the one
+condition that they were first thoroughly cleansed and put in order.
+The British administration would not be parties to the perpetuation
+of a system which permitted the fouling of good crystal water. A
+householder had merely to apply to the Military Governor for water,
+and a sanitary officer inspected the cistern, ordered it to be
+cleansed, and saw that this was done; then the Department of Public
+Health gave its certificate, and the engineers ran a pipe to the
+cistern and filled it, no matter what its capacity. Two cisterns were
+replenished with between 60,000 and 70,000 gallons of sparkling water
+from the hills in place of water heavily charged with the accumulation
+of summer dust on roofs, and the dust of Jerusalem roads, as we had
+sampled it, is not as clean as desert sand.
+
+The installation of the supply was a triumph for the Royal Engineers.
+In peace times the work would have taken from one to two years to
+complete. A preliminary investigation and survey of the ground was
+made on February 14, and a scheme was submitted four days later. Owing
+to the shortage of transport and abnormally bad weather work could not
+be commenced till April 12. Many miles of pipe line had to be laid and
+a powerful pumping plant erected, but water was being delivered to the
+people of Jerusalem on the 18th of June. Other military works have
+done much for the common good in Palestine, but none of them were of
+greater utility than this. Mahomedans seeing bright water flow into
+Jerusalem regarded it as one of the wonders of all time. It is
+interesting to note that the American Red Cross Society, which sent a
+large and capable staff to the Holy Land after America came into the
+war, knew of the lack of an adequate water supply for Jerusalem, and
+with that foresight which Americans show, forwarded to Egypt for
+transportation to Jerusalem some thousand tons of water mains to
+provide a water service. When the American Red Cross workers reached
+the Holy City they found the Army's plans almost completed, and
+they were the first to pay a tribute to what they described as the
+'civilising march of the British Army.'
+
+Those who watched the ceaseless activities of the Public Health
+Administration were not surprised at the remarkable improvement in the
+sick and death rates, not only of Jerusalem but of all the towns and
+districts. The new water supply will unquestionably help to lower the
+figures still further. A medical authority recently told me that
+the health of the community was wonderfully good and there was no
+suspicion of cholera, outbreaks of which were frequent under the
+Turkish regime. Government hospitals were established in all large
+centres. In this country where small-pox takes a heavy toll the
+'conscientious objector' was unknown, and many thousands of natives
+in a few months came forward of their own free will to be vaccinated.
+Typhus and relapsing fever, both lice-borne diseases, used to claim
+many victims, but the figures fell very rapidly, due largely, no
+doubt, to the full use to which disinfecting plants were put in all
+areas of the occupied territory. The virtues of bodily cleanliness
+were taught, and the people were given that personal attention which
+was entirely lacking under Turkish rule. It is not easy to overcome
+the prejudices and cure the habits of thousands of years, but progress
+is being made surely if slowly, and already there is a gratifying
+improvement in the condition of the people which is patent to any
+observer.
+
+In Jerusalem an infants' welfare bureau was instituted, where
+mothers were seen before and after childbirth, infants' clinics were
+established, a body of health was formed, and a kitchen was opened to
+provide food for babies and the poor. The nurses were mainly local
+subjects who had to undergo an adequate training, and there was no one
+who did not confidently predict a rapid fall in the infant mortality
+rate which, to the shame of the Turkish administration, was fully a
+dozen times that of the highest of English towns. The spadework
+was all done by the medical staff of the Occupied Enemy Territory
+Administration. The call was urgent, and though labouring under
+war-time difficulties they got things going quickly and smoothly. Some
+voluntary societies were assisting, and the enthusiasm of the American
+Red Cross units enabled all to carry on a great and beneficent work.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+OUR CONQUERING AIRMEN
+
+
+The airmen who were the eyes of the Army in Sinai and Palestine
+can look back on their record as a great achievement. Enormous
+difficulties were faced with stout hearts, and the Royal Flying Corps
+spirit surmounted them. It was one long test of courage, endurance,
+and efficiency, and so triumphantly did the airmen come through the
+ordeal that General Allenby's Army may truthfully be said to have
+secured as complete a mastery of the air as it did of the plains
+and hills of Southern Palestine. Those of us who watched the airmen
+'carrying on,' from the time when their aeroplanes were inferior to
+those of the Germans in speed, climbing capacity, and other qualities
+which go to make up first-class fighting machines, till the position
+during the great advance when few enemy aviators dared cross our
+lines, can well testify to the wonderful work our airmen performed.
+
+With comparatively few opportunities for combat because the enemy knew
+his inferiority and declined to fight unless forced, the pilots and
+observers from the moment our attack was about to start were always
+aggressive, and though the number of their victims may seem small
+compared with aerial victories on the Western Front they were
+substantial and important. In the month of January 1917 the flying men
+accounted for eleven aeroplanes, five of these falling victims to
+one pilot. The last of these victories I myself witnessed. In a
+single-seater the pilot engaged two two-seater aeroplanes of a late
+type, driving down one machine within our line, the pilot killed by
+eleven bullets and the observer wounded. He then chased the other
+plane, whose pilot soon lost his taste for fighting, dropped into a
+heavy cloud bank, and got away. No odds were too great for our airmen.
+I have seen one aeroplane swoop down out of the blue to attack a
+formation of six enemy machines, sending one crashing to earth and
+dispersing the remainder. In one brief fight another pilot drove down
+three German planes. The airman does not talk of his work, and we knew
+that what we saw and heard of were but fragments in the silent records
+of great things done. Much that was accomplished was far behind our
+visual range, high up over the bleak hills of Judea, above even the
+rain clouds driven across the heights by the fury of a winter gale, or
+skimming over the dull surface of the Dead Sea, flying some hundreds
+of feet below sea level to interrupt the passage of foodstuffs of
+which the Turk stood in need.
+
+All through the Army's rapid march northwards from the crushed
+Gaza-Beersheba line the airmen's untiring work was of infinite value.
+When the Turkish retreat began the enemy was bombed and machine-gunned
+for a full week, the railway, aerodromes, troops on the march,
+artillery, and transport being hit time and again, and five smashed
+aeroplanes and a large quantity of aircraft stores of every
+description were found at Menshiye alone. The raid on that aerodrome
+was so successful that at night the Germans burnt the whole of the
+equipment not destroyed by bombs. Three machines were also destroyed
+by us at Et Tineh, five at Ramleh and one at Ludd, and the country
+was covered with the debris of a well-bombed and beaten army. After
+Jerusalem came under the safe protection of our arms airmen harassed
+the retiring enemy with bombs and machine guns. The wind was strong,
+but defying treacherous eddies, the pilots came through the valleys
+between steep-sloped hills and caught the Turks on the Nablus road,
+emptying their bomb racks at a height of a few hundred feet, and
+giving the scattered troops machine-gun fire on the return journey.
+
+A glance at the list of honours bestowed on officers and other ranks
+of the R.F.C. serving with the Egyptian Expeditionary Force in 1917
+is sufficient to give an idea of the efficiency of the service of our
+airmen. It must be remembered that the Palestine Wing was small, if
+thoroughly representative of the Flying Corps; its numbers were few
+but the quality was there. Indeed I heard the Australian squadron of
+flying men which formed part of the Wing described by the highest
+possible authority as probably the finest squadron in the whole of the
+British service. This following list of honours is, perhaps, the most
+eloquent testimony to the airmen's work in Palestine:
+
+ Victoria Cross . . . . . 1
+ Distinguished Service Order . . . 4
+ Military Cross . . . . . 34
+ Croix de Guerre . . . . 2
+ Military Medal . . . . . 1
+ Meritorious Service Medal . . . 14
+ Order of the Nile . . . . 2
+
+The sum total of the R.F.C. work was not to be calculated merely from
+death and damage caused to the enemy from the air. Strategical and
+tactical reconnaissances formed a large part of the daily round,
+and the reports brought in always added to our Army's store of
+information. In Palestine, possibly to a greater extent than in any
+other theatre of war, our map-makers had to rely on aerial photographs
+to supply them with the details required for military maps. The best
+maps we had of Palestine were those prepared by Lieutenant H.H.
+Kitchener, R.E., and Lieutenant Conder in 1881 for the Palestine
+Exploration Fund. They were still remarkably accurate so far as they
+went, but 'roads,' to give the tracks a description to which they were
+not entitled, had altered, and villages had disappeared, and newer and
+additional information had to be supplied. The Royal Flying Corps--it
+had not yet become the Royal Air Force--furnished it, and all
+important details of hundreds of square miles of country which survey
+parties could not reach were registered with wonderful accuracy by
+aerial photographers.
+
+The work began for the battle of Rafa, and the enemy positions on the
+Magruntein hill were all set out before General Chetwode when the
+Desert Column attacked and scored an important victory. Then when
+12,000 Turks were fortifying the Weli Sheikh Nuran country covering
+the wadi Ghuzze and the Shellal springs, not a redoubt or trench but
+was recorded with absolute fidelity on photographic prints, and long
+before the Turks abandoned the place and gave us a fine supply of
+water we had excellent maps of the position. In time the whole
+Gaza-Beersheba line was completely photographed and maps were
+continually revised, and if any portion of the Turkish system of
+defences was changed or added to the commander in the district
+concerned was notified at once. To such perfection did the R.F.C.
+photographic branch attain, that maps showing full details of new or
+altered trenches were in the hands of generals within four hours
+of the taking of the photographs. Later on the work of the branch
+increased enormously, and the results fully repaid the infinite care
+and labour bestowed upon it.
+
+The R.F.C. made long flights in this theatre of war, and some of them
+were exceptionally difficult and dangerous. A French battleship when
+bombarding a Turkish port of military importance had two of our
+machines to spot the effect of her gunfire. To be with the ship when
+the action opened the airmen had to fly in darkness for an hour and a
+half from a distant aerodrome, and they both reached the rendezvous
+within five minutes of the appointed time. The Turks on their lines of
+communication with the Hedjaz have an unpleasant recollection of being
+bombed at Maan. That was a noteworthy expedition. Three machines set
+out from an aerodrome over 150 miles away in a straight line, the
+pilots having to steer a course above country with no prominent
+landmarks. They went over a waterless desert so rough that it would
+have been impossible to come down without seriously damaging a plane,
+and if a pilot had been forced to land his chance of getting back to
+our country would have been almost nil. Water bottles and rations
+were carried in the machines, but they were not needed, for the three
+pilots came home together after hitting the station buildings at Maan
+and destroying considerable material and supplies.
+
+The aeroplane has been put to many uses in war and, it may be, there
+are instances on other fronts of it being used, in emergencies, as an
+ambulance. When a little mobile force rounded up the Turkish post at
+Hassana, on the eastern side of the Sinai Peninsula, one of our men
+received so severe a wound that an immediate operation was necessary.
+An airman at once volunteered to carry the wounded man to the nearest
+hospital, forty-four miles away across the desert, and by his action a
+life was saved.
+
+
+
+APPENDICES
+
+
+I
+
+
+The following telegram was sent by Enver Pasha to Field-Marshal von
+Hindenburg, at Supreme Army Command Headquarters, from Constantinople
+on August 23, 1917:
+
+ The news of the despatch of strong enemy forces to Egypt,
+ together with the nomination of General Allenby as Commander-in-Chief
+ on our Syrian Front, indicates that the
+ British contemplate an offensive on the Syrian Front, and
+ very probably before the middle of November.
+
+ The preservation of the Sinai Front is a primary condition
+ to the success of the Yilderim undertaking.
+
+ After a further conversation with the Commander of
+ the IVth Army (Jemal Pasha) I consider it necessary to
+ strengthen this front by one of the infantry divisions intended
+ for Yilderim, and to despatch this division immediately
+ from Aleppo.
+
+ With this reinforcement the defence of the Sinai Front
+ by the IVth Army is assured.
+
+ General von Falkenhayn takes up the position that he
+ does not consider the defence assured, and that the further
+ reduction of Yilderim forces is to be deprecated under any
+ circumstances.
+
+ He consequently recommends that we on our side should
+ attack the British, and as far as possible surprise them,
+ before they are strengthened. He wishes to carry out this
+ attack with four infantry divisions, and the 'Asia' Corps.
+ Two of the four infantry divisions have still to be despatched
+ to the front.
+
+ I cannot yet decide to support the proposal, nor need
+ I do so, as the transport of an infantry division from Aleppo
+ to Bayak requires twenty days. During this period the
+ situation as regards the enemy will become clear, and one
+ will become better able to estimate the chance of success
+ of an attack.
+
+ I must, however, in any case be able to dispose of more
+ forces than at present, either for the completion of Yilderim,
+ or for the replacement of the very heavy losses which will
+ certainly occur in the Syrian attack.
+
+ I must consequently reiterate, to my deep regret, my
+ request for the return of the VIth Army Corps (which was
+ operating at that time in the Dobrudja) and for the despatch
+ of this Corps, together with the 20th Infantry Division,
+ commencing with the 15th Infantry Division.
+
+ In my opinion the Army Corps could be replaced by
+ Bulgarians, whose task is unquestionably being lightened
+ through the despatch of troops (British) to Egypt.
+
+ Should this not be the case, I would be ready to exchange
+ two divisions from the Vth Army for the two infantry divisions
+ of the VIth Army Corps, as the former are only suited
+ for a war of position, and would have to be made mobile
+ by the allotment of transport and equipment.
+
+ If these two infantry divisions were given up, the Vth
+ Army would have only five infantry divisions of no great
+ fighting value, a condition of things which is perhaps not
+ very desirable.
+
+ For the moment my decision is: Defence of Syria by
+ strengthening that front by one infantry division, and
+ prosecution of the Yilderim scheme.
+
+ Should good prospects offer of beating the British decisively
+ in Syria before they have been reinforced I will take
+ up General von Falkenhayn's proposal again, as far as it
+ appears possible to carry it out, having in view the question
+ of transport and rationing, which still has to be settled in
+ some respects.--Turkish Main Headquarters, ENVER.
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+Von Falkenhayn despatched the following telegram from Constantinople
+on August 25, 1917, to German General Headquarters:
+
+ The possibility of a British attack in Syria has had to
+ be taken into consideration from the beginning. Its repercussion
+ on the Irak undertaking was obvious. On that
+ account I had already settled in my conversations in Constantinople
+ during May that, if the centre of gravity of
+ operations were transferred to the Sinai Front, command
+ should be given me there too. The news now to hand--reinforcement
+ of the British troops in Egypt, taking over
+ of command by Allenby, the demands of the British Press
+ daily becoming louder--makes the preparation of a British
+ attack in Syria probable.
+
+ Jemal Pasha wishes to meet it with a defensive. To
+ that end he demands the divisions and war material which
+ were being collected about Aleppo for Yilderim. The
+ natural result of granting this request will be that true
+ safety will never be attained on the Sinai Front by a pure
+ defensive, and that the Irak undertaking will certainly
+ fritter away owing to want of driving power or to delays.
+
+ I had consequently proposed to the Turkish Higher
+ Command to send two divisions and the 'Asia' Corps as
+ quickly as possible to Southern Syria, so as to carry out
+ a surprise attack on the British by means of an encircling
+ movement before the arrival of their reinforcements. Railways
+ allow of the assembly of these forces (inclusive of heavy
+ artillery, material and technical stores) in the neighbourhood
+ of Beersheba by the end of October. The disposable parts
+ of the IVth Army (two to three divisions) would be added
+ to it.
+
+ In a discussion between Enver, Jemal, and myself, Enver
+ decided first of all to strengthen the IVth Army by the
+ inclusion of one division from the Army Group. This
+ division would suffice to ward off attack. The Irak undertaking
+ could be carried through at the same time. Judging
+ from all former experiences I am firmly convinced as soon
+ as it comes to a question of the expected attack on the
+ Sinai Front, or even if the IVth Army only feels itself seriously
+ threatened, further troops, munitions, and material will be
+ withdrawn from the Army Group, and Turkey's forces will
+ be shattered.
+
+ Then nothing decisive can be undertaken in either theatre
+ of war. The sacrifice of men, money, and material which
+ Germany is offering at the present moment will be in vain.
+
+ The treatment of the question is rendered all the more
+ difficult because I cannot rid myself of the impression that
+ the decision of the Turkish Higher Command is based far
+ less on military exigencies than on personal motives. It
+ is dictated with one eye on the mighty Jemal, who deprecates
+ a definite decision, but yet on the other hand opposes the
+ slightest diminution of the area of his command.
+
+ Consequently as the position now stands, I consider the
+ Irak undertaking practicable only if it is given the necessary
+ freedom for retirement through the removal of the danger
+ on the Syrian Front. The removal of this danger I regard
+ as only possible through attack. V. FALKENHAYN.
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+Here is another German estimate of the position created by our
+War Cabinet's decision to take the offensive in Palestine, and in
+considering the view of the German Staff and the prospect of success
+any Turkish attack would have, it must be borne in mind that under
+the most favourable circumstances the enemy could not have been in
+position for taking an offensive before the end of October. Von
+Falkenhayn wished to attack the British 'before the arrival of their
+reinforcements.' Not only had our reinforcements arrived before the
+end of October, but they were all in position and the battle had
+commenced. Beersheba was taken on October 31. This appreciation was
+written by Major von Papen of Yilderim headquarters on August 28,
+1917:
+
+ Enver's objections, the improbability of attaining a
+ decisive result on the Sinai Front with two divisions plus
+ the 'Asia Corps' and the difficulty of the Aleppo-Rayak
+ transport question, hold good.
+
+ The execution of the offensive with stronger forces is
+ desirable, but is not practicable, as, in consequence of the
+ beginning of the rainy weather in the middle of November,
+ the British offensive may be expected at the latest during
+ the latter half of October; ours therefore should take place
+ during the first part of that month.
+
+ The transport question precludes the assembly of stronger
+ forces by that date.
+
+ Should the idea of an offensive be abandoned altogether
+ on that account?
+
+ On the assumption that General Allenby--after the two
+ unsuccessful British attacks--will attack only with a marked
+ superiority of men and munitions, a passive defence on a
+ thirty-five kilometre front with an exposed flank does not
+ appear to offer any great chance of success.
+
+ The conditions on the Western Front (defensive zone,
+ attack divisions) are only partially applicable here, since
+ the mobility of the artillery and the correct tactical handling
+ of the attack division are not assured. The intended passive
+ defensive will not be improved by the theatrical attack with
+ one division suggested by General von Kress.
+
+ On the contrary this attack would be without result, as
+ it would be carried out too obliquely to the front, and would
+ only mean a sacrifice of men and material.
+
+ The attack proposed by His Excellency for the envelopment
+ of the enemy's flank--if carried out during the first
+ half of October with four divisions plus the 'Asia Corps'--will
+ perhaps have no definite result, but will at all events
+ result in this: that the Gaza Front flanked by the sea
+ will tie down considerable forces and defer the continuation
+ of British operations in the wet season, during which, in
+ the opinion of General von Kress, they cannot be carried
+ on with any prospect of success.
+
+ The situation on the Sinai Front will then be clear. Naturally
+ it is possible that the position here may demand the
+ inclusion of further effectives and the Yilderim operation
+ consequently become impracticable. This, however, will
+ only prove that the determining factor of the decisive operation
+ for Turkey during the winter of 1917-1918 lies in Palestine
+ and not in Mesopotamia. An offensive on the Sinai
+ Front is therefore--even with reduced forces and a limited
+ objective--the correct solution.
+
+ PAPEN.
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+_Letter from General Kress von Kressenstein to Yilderim headquarters,
+dated September_ 29, 1917, _on moral of Turkish troops_.
+
+A question which urgently needs regulating is that of deserters.
+According to my experience their number will increase still more with
+the setting in of the bad weather and the deterioration of rations.
+
+Civil administration and the gendarmerie fail entirely; they often
+have a secret understanding with the population and are open to
+bribery.
+
+The cordon drawn by me is too weak to prevent desertion. I am also
+too short of troops to have the necessary raids undertaken in the
+hinterland. It is necessary that the hunt for deserters in the area
+between the front and the line Jerusalem-Ramleh-Jaffa be formally
+organised under energetic management, that one or two squadrons
+exclusively for this service be detailed, and that a definite reward
+be paid for bringing in each deserter. But above all it is necessary
+that punishment should follow in consequence, and that the
+unfortunately very frequent amnesties of His Majesty the Sultan be
+discontinued, at least for some time.
+
+The question of rationing has not been settled. We are living
+continually from hand to mouth. Despite the binding promises of
+the Headquarters IVth Army, the Vali of Damascus, the Lines of
+Communication, Major Bathmann and others, that from now on 150 tons of
+rations should arrive regularly each day, from the 24th to the 27th of
+this month, for example a total of 229 tons or only 75 tons per diem
+have arrived.
+
+I cannot fix the blame for these irregularities. The Headquarters IVth
+Army has received the highly gratifying order that, at least up to the
+imminent decisive battle, the bread ration is raised to 100 grammes.
+This urgently necessary improvement of the men's rations remains
+illusory, if a correspondingly larger quantity of flour (about one
+wagon per day) is not supplied to us. So far the improvement exists
+only on paper. The condition of the animals particularly gives
+cause for anxiety. Not only are we about 6000 animals short of
+establishment, but as a result of exhaustion a considerable number of
+animals are ruined daily. The majority of divisions are incapable
+of operating on account of this shortage of animals. The ammunition
+supply too is gradually coming into question on account of the
+deficiency in animals. The menacing danger can only be met by a
+regular supply of sufficient fodder. The stock of straw in the area of
+operations is exhausted. With gold some barley can still be bought in
+the country.
+
+Every year during the rainy season the railway is interrupted again
+and again for periods of from eight to fourteen days. There are also
+days and weeks in which the motor-lorry traffic has to be suspended.
+Finally we must calculate on the possibility of an interruption of our
+rear communications by the enemy. I therefore consider it absolutely
+necessary that at least a fourteen days' reserve of rations be
+deposited in the depots at the front as early as possible.
+
+The increase of troops on the Sinai Front necessitates a very
+considerable increase on the supply of meat from the Line of
+Communication area, Damascus district.
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+The troops of General Allenby's Army before the attack on Beersheba
+were distributed as follows:
+
+ XXTH CORPS.
+
+ 10th Division.
+
+ _29th Brigade. 30th Brigade. 31st Brigade_.
+
+6th R. Irish Rifles. 1st R. Irish Regt. 5th R. Inniskillings.
+5th Con. Rangers. 6th R. Munst. Fus. 6th R. Inniskillings.
+6th Leinsters. 6th R. Dublin Fus. 2nd R. Irish Fus.
+1st Leinsters 7th R. Dublin Fus. 5th R. Irish Rifles.
+
+
+ 53rd Division.
+
+ _158th Brigade. 159th Brigade. 160th Brigade._
+
+1/5th R. Welsh Fus. 1/4th Cheshires. 1/4th R. Sussex.
+1/6th " 1/7th " 2/4th R. West Surrey.
+1/7th " 1/4th Welsh 2/4th R. West Kent.
+1/1st Hereford. 1/5th " 2/10th Middlesex.
+
+
+ 60th Division.
+
+ _179th Brigade. 180th Brigade. 181st Brigade_.
+
+2/13th London. 2/17th London. 2/21st London.
+2/14th " 2/18th " 2/22nd "
+2/15th " 2/19th " 2/23rd "
+2/16th " 2/20th " 2/24th "
+
+
+ 74th Division.
+
+ _229th Brigade. 230th Brigade. 231st Brigade_.
+
+16th Devons (1st 10th E. Kent (R.E. 10th Shrop. (Shrop.
+ Devon & R.N. Kent & W. Kent & Cheshire Yeo.).
+ Devon Yeo.). Yeo.).
+12th Somerset L.I. 16th R. Sussex 24th R. Welsh Fus.
+ (Yeo.). (Yeo.). (Denbigh Yeo.).
+14th R. Highrs.(Fife 15th Suffolk (Yeo.) 25th R. Welsh Fus.
+ & Forfar Yeo.). (Montgomery Yeo.
+ & Welsh Horse).
+12th R. Scots Fus. 12th Norfolk (Yeo.) 24th Welsh Regt.
+ (Ayr & Lanark (Pembroke & Glanmorgan
+ Yeo.). Yeo.).
+
+
+ XXIst CORPS.
+
+ 52nd (Lowland) Division.
+
+ _155th Brigade. 156th Brigade. 157th Brigade._
+
+l/4th R. Scots Fus. 1/4th Royal Scots. 1/5th H.L.I.
+l/5th R. Scots Fus. 1/7th Royal Scots. 1/6th H.L.I.
+l/4th K.O.S.B. 1/7th Scot. Rifles. 1/7th H.L.I.
+l/5th K.O.S.B. 1/8th Scot. Rifles. 1/5th A. & S. Highrs.
+
+
+ 54th (East Anglian) Division.
+
+ _161th Brigade. 162th Brigade. 163th Brigade._
+
+l/4th Essex. 1/5th Bedfords. 1/4th Norfolk.
+l/5th Essex. 1/4th Northants. 1/5th Norfolk.
+l/6th Essex. 1/10th London. 1/5th Suffolk.
+l/7th Essex. 1/11th London. 1/8th Hampshire.
+
+
+ 75th Division.
+
+ _232th Brigade. 233th Brigade. 234th Brigade._
+
+1/5th Devon. 1/5th Somersets. 1/4th D.C.L.I.
+2/5th Hampshire. 1/4th Wilts. 2/4th Dorsets.
+2/4th Somersets. 2/4th Hampshire. 123rd Rifles.
+2/3rd Gurkhas. 3/3rd Gurkhas. 58th Rifles.
+
+
+ DESERT MOUNTED CORPS.
+
+ Anzac Mounted Division.
+
+ _1st A.L.H. Bde. 2nd A.L.H. Bde. N.Z. Mtd. Rifles Bde._
+
+1st A.L.H. Regt. 5th A.L.H. Regt. Auckland M. Rifles.
+2nd A.L.H. Regt. 6th A.L.H. Regt. Canterbury M. Rifles.
+3rd A.L.H. Regt. 7th A.L.H. Regt. Wellington M. Rifles.
+
+
+ Australian Mounted Division.
+
+ _3rd L.H. Brigade. 4th L.H. Brigade. 5th Mtd. Brigade._.
+8th A.L.H. Regt. 4th A.L.H. Regt. 1/1st Warwick Yeo.
+9th " 11th " 1/1st Gloucester Yeo.
+10th " 12th " 1/1st Worcester Yeo.
+
+
+ Yoemanry Mounted Division
+
+ _6th Mtd. Brigade. 8th Mtd. Brigade. 22nd Mtd. Brigade_.
+1/1st Bucks Hussars. 1/1st City of London 1/1st Lincolnshire
+Yeo. Yeo.
+1/1st Berkshire Yeo. 1/1st Co. of London 1/1st Staffordshire
+Yeo. Yeo.
+1/1st Dorset Yeo. l/3rd Co. of London 1/1st E. Riding
+Yeo. Yeo.
+
+
+ 7th Mounted Brigade (attached Desert Corps).
+
+ 1/1st Sherwood Rangers. 1/1st South Notts Hussars.
+
+
+ Imperial Camel Brigade.
+
+
+
+VI
+
+
+There can be no better illustration of how one battle worked out
+'according to plan' than the quotation of the following Force Order:
+
+
+ FORCE ORDER
+
+
+ GENERAL HEADQUARTERS,
+ _22nd October_ 1917.
+
+ It is the intention of the Commander-in-Chief to take the
+ offensive against the enemy at Gaza and at Beersheba, and
+ when Beersheba is in our hands to make an enveloping
+ attack on the enemy's left flank in the direction of Sheria
+ and Hareira.
+
+ On Zero day XXth Corps with the 10th Division and
+ Imperial Camel Brigade attached and the Desert Mounted
+ Corps less one Mounted Division and the Imperial Camel
+ Brigade will attack the enemy at Beersheba with the object
+ of gaining possession of that place by nightfall.
+
+ As soon as Beersheba is in our hands and the necessary
+ arrangements have been made for the restoration of the
+ Beersheba water supply, XXth Corps and Desert Mounted
+ Corps complete will move rapidly forward to attack the
+ left of the enemy's main position with the object of driving
+ him out of Sheria and Hareira and enveloping the left flank
+ of his army. XXth Corps will move against the enemy's
+ defences south of Sheria, first of all against the Kauwukah
+ line and then against Sheria and the Hareira defences.
+ Desert Mounted Corps calling up the Mounted Division left
+ in general reserve during the Beersheba operation will move
+ north of the XXth Corps to gain possession of Nejile and of
+ any water supplies between that place and the right of
+ XXth Corps and will be prepared to operate vigorously
+ against and round the enemy's left flank if he should throw
+ it back to oppose the advance of the XXth Corps.
+
+ On a date to be subsequently determined and which will
+ probably be after the occupation of Beersheba and 24 to
+ 48 hours before the attack of XXth Corps on the Kauwukah
+ line, the XXIst Corps will attack the south-west defences
+ of Gaza with the object of capturing the enemy's front-line
+ system from Umbrella Hill to Sheikh Hasan, both inclusive.
+
+ The Royal Navy will co-operate with the XXIst Corps
+ in the attack on Gaza and in any subsequent operations
+ that may be undertaken by XXIst Corps.
+
+ On Z--4 day the G.O.C. XXIst Corps will open a systematic
+ bombardment of the Gaza defences, increasing in volume
+ from Z--1 day to Zx2 day and to be continued until Zx4
+ day at the least.
+
+ The Royal Navy will co-operate as follows: On Z--1 and
+ Zero days two 6-inch monitors will be available for bombardment
+ from the sea, special objective Sheikh Hasan.
+ On Zero day a third 6-inch monitor will be available so that
+ two of these ships may be constantly in action while one
+ replenishes ammunition. On Zxl day 6-inch monitors will
+ discontinue their bombardment which they will reopen
+ on Zx2 day. From Zxl day the French battleship _Requin_
+ and H.M.S. _Raglan_ will bombard Deir Sineid station and
+ junction for Huj, the roads and railway bridges and camps
+ on the wadi Hesi and the neighbourhood. The _Requin_ and
+ _Raglan_ will be assisted by a seaplane carrier.
+
+ From Zero day one 92 monitor will be available from
+ dawn, special objective Sheikh Redwan.
+
+ From Z--1 day inclusive demands for naval co-operation
+ will be conveyed direct from G.O.C. XXIst Corps to the
+ Senior Naval Officer, Marine View, who will arrange for
+ the transmission of the demands so made.
+
+ XXth Corps will move into position during the night of
+ Z-l=Zero day so as to attack the enemy at Beersheba on
+ Zero day south of the wadi Saba with two divisions while
+ covering his flank and the construction of the railway
+ east of Shellal with one division on the high ground overlooking
+ the wadis El Sufi and Hanafish. The objective of XXth Corps
+ will be the enemy's works west and south-west
+ of Beersheba as far as the Khalasa-Beersheba road
+ inclusive.
+
+ Desert Mounted Corps will move on the night of Z-1=Zero
+ day from the area of concentration about Khalasa and
+ Asluj so as to co-operate with XXth Corps by attacking
+ Beersheba with two divisions and one mounted brigade.
+ The objective of Desert Mounted Corps will be the enemy's
+ defences from south-east to the north-east of Beersheba
+ and the town of Beersheba itself.
+
+ The G.O.C. Desert Mounted Corps will endeavour to turn
+ the enemy's left with a view to breaking down his
+ resistance at Beersheba as quickly as possible. With this
+ in view the main weight of his force will be directed against
+ Beersheba from the east and north-east. As soon as the
+ enemy's resistance shows signs of weakening the G.O.C.
+ Desert Mounted Corps will be prepared to act with the utmost
+ vigour against his retreating troops so as to prevent their
+ escape, or at least to drive them well beyond the high ground
+ immediately overlooking the town from the north. He
+ will also be prepared to push troops rapidly into Beersheba
+ in order to protect from danger any wells and plant connected
+ with the water supply not damaged by the enemy before
+ Beersheba is entered.
+
+ The Yeomanry Mounted Division will pass from the
+ command of the G.O.C. XXth Corps at five on Zero day
+ and will come directly under General Headquarters as part
+ of the general reserve in the hands of the Commander-in-Chief.
+
+ When Beersheba has been taken the G.O.C. XXth Corps
+ will push forward covering troops to the high ground north
+ of the town to protect it from any counter movement on
+ the part of the enemy. He will also put in hand the restoration
+ of the water supply in Beersheba. The G.O.C. Desert
+ Mounted Corps will be responsible for the protection of
+ the town from the north-east and east.
+
+ As soon as possible after the taking of Beersheba the
+ G.O.C. Desert Mounted Corps will report to G.H.Q. on the
+ water supplies in the wells and wadis east of Beersheba and
+ especially along the wadi Saba and the Beersheba-Tel-el-Nulah
+ road. If insufficient water is found to exist in this
+ area G.O.C. Desert Mounted Corps will send back such of
+ his troops as may be necessary to watering places from which
+ he started or which may be found in the country east of
+ the Khalasa-Beersheba road during the operations.
+
+ A preliminary survey having been made, the G.O.C. XXth
+ Corps will report by wire to G.H.Q. on the condition of the
+ wells and water supply generally in Beersheba and on any
+ water supplies found west and north-west of that place.
+ He will telegraph an estimate as soon as it can be made
+ of the time required to place the Beersheba water supply
+ in working order.
+
+ When the situation as regards water at Beersheba has
+ become clear so that the movement of XXth Corps and
+ Desert Mounted Corps against the left flank of the enemy's
+ main position can be arranged, the G.O.C. XXIst Corps
+ will be ordered to attack the enemy's defences south-west
+ of Gaza in time for this operation to be carried out prior
+ to the attack of XXth Corps on the Kauwukah line of works.
+ The objective of XXIst Corps will be the defences of Gaza
+ from Umbrella Hill inclusive to the sea about Sheikh Hasan.
+
+ Instructions in regard to the following have been issued
+ separate to all corps:
+
+ Amount of corps artillery allotted.
+
+ Amount of ammunition put on corps charge prior to operations.
+
+ Amount of ammunition per gun that will be delivered daily
+ at respective railheads and the day of commencement.
+
+ Amount of transport allotted for forward supply from
+ railheads.
+
+ The general average for one day's firing has been calculated
+ on the following basis:
+
+ Field and mountain guns and
+ mountain howitzers ...150 rounds per gun.
+ 4.5-inch howitzers....120 rounds per gun.
+ 60-pounders and 6-inch howitzers. 90 rounds per gun.
+ 8-inch howitzers and 6-inch Mark VII. 60 rounds per gun.
+
+ This average expenditure will only be possible in the
+ XXIst Corps up to Zx16 day and for the Desert Mounted
+ Corps and XXth Corps to Zx13. After these dates if the
+ average has been expended the daily average will have to
+ drop to the basis of 100 rounds per 18-pounder per day and
+ other natures in proportion.
+
+ AIRCRAFT, ARMY WING.--Strategical reconnaissance including
+ the reconnaissance of areas beyond the tactical zone
+ and in which the enemy's main reserves are located, also
+ distant photography and aerial offensive, will be carried out
+ by an Army squadron under instructions issued direct from
+ G.H.Q. Protection from hostile aircraft will be the main
+ duty of the Army fighting squadron. A bombing squadron
+ will be held in readiness for any aerial offensive which the
+ situation may render desirable.
+
+ CORPS SQUADRONS.--Two Corps squadrons will undertake
+ artillery co-operation, contact patrols, and tactical reconnaissance
+ for the Corps to which they are attached. In the
+ case of the Desert Mounted Corps one flight from the Corps
+ squadron attached to XXth Corps will be responsible for
+ the above work. Photography of trench areas will normally
+ be carried out daily by the Army Wing.
+
+
+VII
+
+
+ORDERS FOR THE OFFICIAL ENTRY INTO JERUSALEM
+
+1. The Commander-in-Chief will enter Jerusalem by the Bab-el-Khalil
+(Jaffa Gate) at 12 noon, 11th December 1917. The order of procession
+is shown below:
+
+ Two Aides-de-camp.
+ (Twenty paces.)
+O.C. Italian Palestine Commander-in-Chief. O.C. French Palestine
+Contingent(Col. Contingent
+Dagostino). (Col. Piepape).
+Staff Officer. Two Staff Officers. Staff Officer.
+ (Ten paces.)
+ M. Picot (Head of French Mission).
+French Mil. Brig.-Gen. Italian Mil. Att. American
+Att. (Capt. Clayton. (Major Caccia). Mil. Att.
+St. Quentin). (Col. Davis).
+ (Five paces.)
+ Chief of General Staff (Maj.-Gen. Sir L.J. Bols).
+ Brig.-General General Staff (Brig.-Gen. G. Dawnay).
+ (Five paces.)
+ G.O.C. XXth Corps, Lieut.-Gen. Sir Philip W. Chetwode,
+ Bart., D.S.O.
+ Staff Officer. Brig.-Gen. Bartholomew.
+ (Ten paces.)
+ British Guard.
+ Australian and New Zealand Guard.
+ French Guard.
+ Italian Guard.
+
+2. GUARDS.--The following guards will be found by XXth Corps:
+
+ Outside the Gate--
+
+ British Guard: Fifty of all ranks, including English, Scottish,
+ Irish, and Welsh troops.
+
+ Australian and New Zealand Guard: Fifty of all ranks, including
+ twenty New Zealand troops.
+
+ These guards will be drawn up facing each other, the right
+ flank of the British guard and the left flank Australian guard
+ resting on the City Wall. The O.C. British guard will be in
+ command of both guards and will give the words of command.
+
+ Inside the Gate--
+
+ French Guard: Twenty of all ranks.
+ Italian Guard: Twenty of all ranks.
+
+ These guards will be drawn up facing each other, the left flank
+ of the French guard and the right flank of the Italian guard
+ resting on the City Wall.
+
+3. SALUTE.--On the approach of the Commander-in-Chief, guards will
+come to the Salute and present arms.
+
+4. The Military Governor of the City will meet the Commander-in-Chief
+at the Gate at 12 noon.
+
+5. ROUTE.--The procession will proceed _via_ Sueikat Allah and El
+Maukaf Streets to the steps of El Kala (Citadel), where the notables
+of the City under the guidance of a Staff Officer of the Governor will
+meet the Commander-in-Chief and the Proclamation will be read to the
+citizens. The British, Australian and New Zealand, French and Italian
+guards will, when the procession has passed them, take their place in
+column of fours in the rear of the procession in that order.
+
+On arrival at El Kala the guards will form up facing steps on the
+opposite (_i.e._ east) side of El Maukaf Street, the British guard
+being thus on the left, Italian guard on the right of the line, and
+remain at the slope. The British and Italian guards will bring up
+their left and right flanks respectively across the street south and
+north of El Kala.
+
+On leaving the Citadel the procession will proceed in the same order
+as before to the Barrack Square, where the Commander-in-Chief will
+confer with the notables of the City. On entering the Barrack Square
+the guards will wheel to the left and, keeping the left-hand man of
+each section of fours next the side of the Barrack Square, march round
+until the rear of the Italian guard has entered the Square, when the
+guards will halt, right turn (so as to face the centre of the Square),
+and remain at the slope.
+
+The procession will leave the City by the same route as it entered and
+in the same order.
+
+As the Commander-in-Chief and procession move off to leave the Barrack
+Square the guards will present arms, and then move off and resume
+their places in the procession, the British guard leading.
+
+On arrival at the Jaffa Gate the guards will take up their original
+positions, and on the Commander-in-Chief's departure will be marched
+away under the orders of the G.O.C. XXth Corps.
+
+6. POLICE, etc.--The Military Governor of the City will arrange for
+policing the route of the procession and for the searching of houses
+on either side of the route. He will also arrange for civil officials
+to read the Proclamation at El Kala.
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+
+The Proclamation read from the steps of David's Tower on the occasion
+of the Commander-in-Chief's Official Entry into Jerusalem was in these
+terms:
+
+ To the inhabitants of Jerusalem the Blessed and the people dwelling
+ in its vicinity:
+
+ The defeat inflicted upon the Turks by the troops under
+ my command has resulted in the occupation of your City
+ by my forces. I therefore here and now proclaim it to be
+ under martial law, under which form of administration it
+ will remain as long as military considerations make it
+ necessary.
+
+ However, lest any of you should be alarmed by reason of
+ your experiences at the hands of the enemy who has retired,
+ I hereby inform you that it is my desire that every person
+ should pursue his lawful business without fear of interruption.
+ Furthermore, since your City is regarded with affection by
+ the adherents of three of the great religions of mankind, and
+ its soil has been consecrated by the prayers and pilgrimages
+ of multitudes of devout people of those three religions for
+ many centuries, therefore do I make it known to you that
+ every sacred building, monument, holy spot, shrine, traditional
+ site, endowment, pious bequest, or customary place
+ of prayer, of whatsoever form of the three religions, will be
+ maintained and protected according to the existing customs
+ and beliefs of those to whose faiths they are sacred.
+
+
+
+IX
+
+
+No story of the capture of Jerusalem would be complete without the
+tribute paid by General Allenby to his gallant troops of all arms. The
+Commander-in-Chief's thanks, which were conveyed to the troops in a
+Special Order of the Day, were highly appreciated by all ranks. The
+document ran as follows:
+
+ SPECIAL ORDER OF THE DAY
+
+ G.H.Q., E.E.P.,
+
+ _15th December_ 1917.
+
+ With the capture of Jerusalem another phase of the
+ operations of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force has been
+ victoriously concluded.
+
+ The Commander-in-Chief desires to thank all ranks of all
+ the units and services in the Force for the magnificent work
+ which has been accomplished.
+
+ In forty days many strong Turkish positions have been
+ captured and the Force has advanced some sixty miles on a
+ front of thirty miles.
+
+ The skill, gallantry, and determination of all ranks have
+ led to this result.
+
+ 1. The approach marches of the Desert Mounted Corps
+ and the XXth Corps (10th, 53rd, 60th, and 74th Divisions),
+ followed by the dashing attacks of the 60th and 74th Divisions
+ and the rapid turning movement of the Desert Mounted
+ Corps, ending in the fine charge of the 4th Australian Light
+ Horse Brigade, resulted in the capture of Beersheba with
+ many prisoners and guns.
+
+ 2. The stubborn resistance of the 53rd Division, units of
+ the Desert Mounted Corps and Imperial Camel Brigade in
+ the difficult country north-east of Beersheba enabled the
+ preparations of the XXth Corps to be completed without
+ interference, and enabled the Commander-in-Chief to carry
+ out his plan without diverting more than the intended
+ number of troops to protect the right flank, despite the many
+ and strong attacks of the enemy.
+
+ 3. The attack of the XXth Corps (10th, 60th, and 74th
+ Divisions), prepared with great skill by the Corps and Divisional
+ Commanders and carried out with such dash and
+ courage by the troops, resulted in the turning of the Turkish
+ left flank and in an advance to the depth of nine miles through
+ an entrenched position defended by strong forces.
+
+ In this operation the Desert Mounted Corps, covering the
+ right flank and threatening the Turkish rear, forced the
+ Turks to begin a general retreat of their left flank.
+
+ 4. The artillery attack of the XXIst Corps and of the
+ ships of the Royal Navy, skilfully arranged and carried out
+ with great accuracy, caused heavy loss to the enemy in the
+ Gaza sector of his defences. The success of this bombardment
+ was due to the loyal co-operation of the Rear-Admiral
+ S.N.O. Egypt and Red Sea, and the officers of the Royal
+ Navy, the careful preparation of plans by the Rear-Admiral
+ and the G.O.C. XXIst Corps, and the good shooting of the
+ Royal Navy, and of the heavy, siege, and field artillery of
+ the XXIst Corps.
+
+ 5. The two attacks on the strong defences of Gaza, carried
+ out by the 52nd and 54th Divisions, were each completely
+ successful, thanks to the skill with which they were thought
+ out and prepared by the G.O.C. XXIst Corps, the Divisional
+ Commanders and the Brigade Commanders, and the great
+ gallantry displayed by the troops who carried out these
+ attacks.
+
+ 6. The second attack resulted in the evacuation of Gaza
+ by the enemy and the turning of his right flank. The 52nd
+ and 75th Divisions at once began a pursuit which carried
+ them in three weeks from Gaza to within a few miles of
+ Jerusalem.
+
+ 7. This pursuit, carried out by the Desert Mounted Corps
+ and these two Divisions of the XXIst Corps, first over the
+ sandhills of the coast, then over the Plains of Palestine and
+ the foothills, and finally in the rocky mountains of Judea,
+ required from all commanders rapid decisions and powers
+ to adapt their tactics to varying conditions of ground. The
+ troops were called upon to carry out very long marches in
+ great heat without water, to make attacks on stubborn
+ rearguards without time for reconnaissance, and finally to
+ suffer cold and privation in the mountains.
+
+ In these great operations Commanders carried out their
+ plans with boldness and determination, and the troops of all
+ arms and services responded with a devotion and gallantry
+ beyond praise.
+
+ 8. The final operations of the XXth Corps which resulted
+ in the surrender of Jerusalem were a fitting climax to the
+ efforts of all ranks.
+
+ The attack skilfully prepared by the G.O.C. XXth Corps
+ and carried out with precision, endurance, and gallantry
+ by the troops of the 53rd, 60th, and 74th Divisions, over
+ country of extreme difficulty in wet weather, showed skill
+ in leading and gallantry and determination of a very high
+ order.
+
+ 9. Throughout the operations the Royal Flying Corps
+ have rendered valuable assistance to all arms and have
+ obtained complete mastery of the air. The information
+ obtained from contact and reconnaissance patrols has at
+ all times enabled Commanders to keep in close touch with
+ the situation. In the pursuit they have inflicted severe
+ loss on the enemy, and their artillery co-operation has contributed
+ in no small measure to our victory.
+
+ 10. The organisation in rear of the fighting forces enabled
+ these forces to be supplied throughout. All supply and
+ ammunition services and engineer services were called upon
+ for great exertions. The response everywhere showed great
+ devotion and high military spirit.
+
+ 11. The thorough organisation of the lines of communication,
+ and the energy and skill with which all the services
+ adapted themselves to the varying conditions of the operations,
+ ensured the constant mobility of the fighting
+ troops.
+
+ 12. The Commander-in-Chief appreciates the admirable
+ conduct of all the transport services, and particularly the
+ endurance and loyal service of the Camel Transport Corps.
+
+ 13. The skill and energy by which the Signal Service was
+ maintained under all conditions reflects the greatest credit
+ on all concerned.
+
+ 14. The Medical Service was able to adapt itself to all
+ the difficulties of the situation, with the result the evacuation
+ of wounded and sick was carried out with the least possible
+ hardship or discomfort.
+
+ 15. The Veterinary Service worked well throughout; the
+ wastage in animals was consequently small considering the
+ distances traversed.
+
+ 16. The Ordnance Service never failed to meet all demands.
+
+ 17. The work of the Egyptian Labour Corps has been of
+ the greatest value in contributing to the rapid advance of
+ the troops and in overcoming the difficulties of the communications.
+
+ 18. The Commander-in-Chief desires that his thanks and
+ appreciation of their services be conveyed to all officers and
+ men of the force which he has the honour to command.
+
+ G. DAWNAY, B.G.G.S.,
+
+ for Major-General, Chief of the General Staff, E.E.F.
+
+
+
+X
+
+
+The men of units forming the XXth Corps were deeply gratified to
+receive this commendation from their gallant Corps Commander:
+
+
+ SPECIAL ORDER OF THE DAY
+
+ BY
+
+ LIEUTENANT-GENERAL SIR PHILIP W. CHETWODE, BT.,
+ K.C.M.G., C.B., D.S.O., _commanding XXth Corps_
+
+ HEADQUARTERS, XXTH CORPS,
+ _13th December_ 1917.
+
+ Now that the efforts of General Sir E.H.H. Allenby's
+ Army have been crowned by the capture of Jerusalem, I
+ wish to express to all ranks, services, and departments of the
+ XXth Army Corps my personal thanks and my admiration
+ for the soldierly qualities they have displayed.
+
+ I have served as a regimental officer in two campaigns,
+ and no one knows better than I do what the shortness of
+ food, the fatigue of operating among high mountains, and
+ the cold and wet has meant to the fighting troops. But in
+ spite of it all, and at the moment when the weather was
+ at its worst, they responded to my call and drove the
+ enemy in one rush through his last defences and beyond
+ Jerusalem.
+
+ A fine performance, and I am intensely proud of having
+ had the honour of commanding such a body of men.
+
+ I wish to give special praise to the Divisional Ammunition
+ Columns, Divisional Trains A.S.C., Supply Services, Mechanical
+ Transport personnel, Camel Transport personnel, and to
+ the Royal Army Medical Corps and all services whose continuous
+ labour, day and night, almost without rest, alone
+ enabled the fighting troops to do what they did.
+
+
+ SPECIAL ORDER OF THE DAY
+
+ HEADQUARTERS, XXTH CORPS,
+ 31_st December_ 1917.
+
+ I have again to thank the XXth Corps and to express to
+ them my admiration of their bravery and endurance during
+ the three days' fighting on December 27, 28, and 29.
+
+ The enemy made a determined attempt with two corps
+ to retake Jerusalem, and while their finest assault troops
+ melted away before the staunch defence of the 53rd and
+ 60th Divisions, the 10th and 74th were pressing forward
+ over the most precipitous country, brushing aside all opposition
+ in order to relieve the pressure on our right.
+
+ Their efforts were quickly successful, and by the evening
+ of the 27th we had definitely regained the initiative, and
+ I was able to order a general advance.
+
+ The final result of the three days' fighting was a gain to
+ us of many miles and extremely heavy losses to the enemy.
+
+ A fine three days' work.
+
+
+
+INDEX
+
+
+ABU SHUSHE.
+Adaseh.
+Ain Ari.
+--Karim.
+Air Force honours.
+Akir.
+Allenby, General.
+--administration.
+American Red Cross Society.
+Arsuf.
+Askalon.
+Auja, River.
+
+BAKER, Colonel Sir Randolf.
+Bald Hill.
+Barrow, Major-General G. de S.
+Bartholomew, Brigadier-General.
+Bayley, Colonel.
+Beersheba, Anzac march on.
+--battle of
+--German preparations
+Beit Hannina.
+--Iksa.
+--Izza.
+--Jala.
+--ur el Foka.
+--ur et Tahta.
+Beitunia.
+Bethany.
+Beth-horons.
+Bethlehem.
+Biblical battlefields.
+Biddu.
+Bireh.
+Bols, Major-General.
+Borton, Major-General.
+Bulfin, Lieutenant-General.
+Bulteel, Captain.
+Burkah.
+Butler, Brigadier-General.
+
+CHAUVEL, Lieutenant-General.
+Chaytor, Major-General.
+Cheape, Lieutenant-Colonel H.
+Chetwode, Lieutenant-General Sir.
+--thanks to XXth Corps troops.
+Clayton, Brigadier-General
+Colston, Brigadier-General.
+Cox, Brigadier-General
+Cripps, Colonel Hon. F.
+
+DAMMERS, Captain.
+Dawnay, Brigadier-General.
+Deir Sineid.
+--Yesin.
+de Rothschild, Major.
+Desert railways.
+--pipeline.
+Dukku.
+
+EKTEIF.
+El Jib.
+El Kala.
+Enver.
+
+FARAH, wadi.
+Force Order, General Allenby's thanks to troops.
+Ful, Tel el.
+
+GAZA, plan of attack on.
+--Ali Muntar.
+--defences.
+--El Arish redoubt.
+--Great Mosque.
+--naval gunnery.
+--Outpost Hill.
+--Sea Post.
+Gaza, Sheikh Hasan.
+--Umbrella Hill.
+German Hospice.
+Gilgal.
+Girdwood, Major-General.
+Godwin, Brigadier-General.
+Good Samaritan Inn.
+Grant, Brigadier-General.
+
+Hadrah.
+Hanafish, action on wadi.
+Hebron.
+Hill 1070.
+Hill, Major-General J.
+Hodgson, Major-General.
+Hong Kong and Singapore battery.
+Huj.
+
+Ibn Obeid.
+Imperial Service cavalry.
+
+Jackson, Admiral T.
+Jaffa.
+--Gate.
+Jebel Kuruntul.
+Jelil.
+Jericho.
+Jerisheh.
+Jerusalem, battle of.
+--civil administration
+--Memorial to Army
+--Official Entry
+--order of procession
+--Proclamation to people
+--water supply
+Jordan.
+Jezar.
+Junction Station.
+
+Katrah.
+Kantara.
+Kanwukah.
+Khurbet Subr.
+Khuweilfeh.
+Kressenstein, von.
+Kulonieh.
+Kuryet el Enab.
+Kustul.
+
+Latron.
+Lawson, Captain.
+Lifta.
+Longley, Major-General.
+Ludd.
+
+M'Call, Brigadier-General Pollak.
+Maclean, Brigadier-General.
+Mejdel.
+Meldrum, Brigadier-General.
+Mott, Major-General.
+Mount of Olives.
+Mughar.
+Mukhmas.
+Mulebbis.
+
+Nablus Road.
+Nebi Musa.
+Nebi Samwil.
+Nejile.
+
+O'Brien, Colonel.
+
+Palestine Army, composition of.
+Palin, Major-General.
+Patron, Captain.
+Pemberton, Colonel.
+Perkins, Lieutenant.
+Primrose, Captain Hon. Neil.
+
+Ramallah.
+Ramleh.
+Raratongas.
+Ras et Tawil.
+Rushdi trenches.
+Ryrie, Brigadier-General.
+
+Saba, Tel el.
+Sakaty, Tel el.
+Saris.
+Sarona.
+Shea, Major-General H.
+Sheikh Muannis.
+Sheria.
+Sherifeh.
+Shilta.
+Smith, Rifleman.
+Soba.
+Solomon's Pools.
+Strategy in Palestine.
+--the German view.
+Suffa.
+Supplying the front.
+Surar, wadi.
+Sukereir, wadi.
+
+TALAT ED DUMM.
+Temperley.
+Thornhill, Corporal.
+Train, Corporal, V.C.
+Turkish line of communications.
+--moral.
+
+WATSON, Brigadier-General.
+Whines, Corporal.
+Whitehill.
+Wingfield-Digby, Captain.
+Wire roads.
+
+YEBNAH.
+Yilderim undertaking.
+--von Falkenhayn's doubts.
+
+ZAMBY.
+Zeitun ridge.
+
+
+Printed by T. and A. CONSTABLE, Printers to His Majesty at the
+Edinburgh University Press
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of How Jerusalem Was Won, by W.T. Massey
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