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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of With the Ulster Division in France, by
-Arthur Purefoy Irwin Samuels and Dorothy Gage Samuels
-
-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: With the Ulster Division in France
- A Story of the 11th Battalion Royal Irish Rifles (South
- Antrim Volunteers), From Bordon to Thiepval.
-
-Author: Arthur Purefoy Irwin Samuels
- Dorothy Gage Samuels
-
-Release Date: October 17, 2013 [EBook #43969]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WITH THE ULSTER DIVISION IN FRANCE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Demian Katz, Paul Clark and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (Images
-courtesy of the Digital Library@Villanova University
-(http://digital.library.villanova.edu/))
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber's Note:
-
- Every effort has been made to replicate this text as faithfully as
- possible, including inconsistent use of accents. Some changes have
- been made. They are listed at the end of the text. Illustrations
- have been moved.
-
- Italic text has been marked with _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
- With the Ulster Division
- in France.
-
- _From Bordon to Thiepval._
-
- _A Story of the 11th Battalion
- ROYAL IRISH RIFLES
- (South Antrim Volunteers)._
-
-
-
-
- THIS BOOK
- IS
- Dedicated to the people of Ulster
-
- [Illustration]
-
- In remembrance of those
- who have given their lives
- for their King and Country.
-
-
-
-
- WITH
- THE ULSTER DIVISION
- IN FRANCE.
-
- A STORY OF THE 11th BATTALION
- ROYAL IRISH RIFLES
- (South Antrim Volunteers),
-
- From BORDON to THIEPVAL.
-
- IN FOUR PARTS,
- INCLUDING PHOTOGRAPHS AND MAPS.
- BY
- A.P.I.S. AND D.G.S.
-
- [Illustration: QUIS SEPARABIT]
-
- "The sequel of to-day unsolders all
- The goodliest fellowship of famous knights
- Whereof this world holds record:
- Such a sleep they sleep--the men I loved,
- I think that we shall never more, at any future time,
- Delight our souls with talk of knightly deeds
- Walking about the gardens and the halls
- Of Camelot, as in the days that were."
-
- _From "The Passing of Arthur,"_
- --LORD TENNYSON.
-
-
- BELFAST:
- WILLIAM MULLAN & SON, 4 DONEGALL PLACE.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: THE KING REVIEWING THE ULSTER DIVISION.]
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-The appearance of this little book needs a word of explanation. While
-at the front with the Ulster Division, the late Captain A. P. I.
-Samuels, had kept a very complete record of events, and collected
-all the material available, with the object of being in a position,
-some day, to publish an account of the doings of the Division, and
-particularly of his own Battalion, the 11th Royal Irish Rifles (South
-Antrim Volunteers.) It has been willed, however, that he should not be
-spared to carry out his intention. Like so many of his gallant comrades
-he gave his life for his country, being killed in action on September
-24th, 1916. His name is now on Ulster's Roll of Honour, among those
-whose death has brought unspeakable grief to thousands of our homes,
-and yet has filled the hearts of Ulstermen and women with pride, and
-bequeathed such renown to our Province as will last while it endures.
-His papers, and the materials he had gathered have naturally come into
-my hands, and I have endeavoured, though in a very small and inadequate
-manner, to carry out the purpose for which they were collected.
-
-This little book does not profess to be in any way a history of the
-Ulster Division, nor even of the 11th Batt. Royal Irish Rifles. Being
-compiled from the diary of Captain Samuels, supplemented by the records
-he was able to obtain, its scope is necessarily limited, and the story
-closes with the historic advance of the Ulster Division on the Somme at
-Thiepval on 1st July, 1916. In some respects this necessary limitation
-is a fitting one. To many in Ulster this great event marks in reality
-the passing of the glorious Division recruited during the first six
-months of the war, trained by Battalions in various camps in Ireland,
-and finally, as a Complete Division, at Seaford and Borden, before
-being sent to France. True, those permitted to survive that awful shock
-of July 1st, and those drafts in reserve at home remained to carry
-the fame of Ulster to Messines Ridge and Cambrai, but the Division
-was never again quite the same as before that memorable day. At that
-time it was unique. All its members were identified with the Northern
-Province. Each Battalion was recruited from some particular part, and
-even small districts and villages were represented separately in the
-Companies and Platoons. It was inevitable that after the Somme battle
-distinctive units should become merged, and that as the war progressed
-officers and men should find their way to the 36th Division who were
-not strictly representative of Ulster.
-
-It is hoped that these memoirs may be of interest to Ulster people as
-describing the everyday life of a unit of their Division during its
-first eight months in France before the novelty of the life in billets
-and in trenches had worn off, and become merely monotonous, and while
-the point of view was still that of the native Ulsterman rather than
-the British soldier.
-
-[Illustration: THE REVIEW OF THE ULSTER DIVISION.]
-
-
-
-
-PART I.
-
-
-We fell in at 4 o'clock on the afternoon of October 4, 1915, on the
-parade ground of St. Lucia Barracks, Borden. So mechanical a proceeding
-is a regimental parade, and so extremely heavy were the packs that
-we carried, that there was little opportunity for pondering over the
-changed conditions that we were soon to undergo. As far as the men were
-concerned--and the same applied to a large number of the officers--they
-had left their homes and all that home implied when they left Ireland
-three months before.
-
-As we marched to the station we were struck by the apathy displayed
-by the few civilians we saw. There was no cheering, waving of
-handkerchiefs, or kissing of hands; even the children, making mud
-pies on the side of the road did not trouble to look up. We were only
-one of the many units that had passed down that same road during the
-previous fourteen months. It was almost an everyday sight now for the
-people who lived there to see regiments entraining for France. So it
-was, that as we marched down the short road to Borden station, we felt
-that we were only going on our business, and that those plain-clothed
-civilians--many of them young and physically fit men--were going on
-theirs. At Borden station the somewhat questionable spirits of the men
-were revived by large cups of excellent tea, brought round by ladies,
-a parting kindness which was greatly appreciated, and which none of
-us will forget. The first train, with Brigade Headquarters, Battalion
-Headquarters, and A and B Companies, steamed out of the station at 5-10
-p.m., followed at 5-35 by the second train with C and D Companies.
-Blinds were drawn in the carriages soon after starting, and with only
-one stop the train ran through to Folkestone Pier, where we went on
-board the transport "Onward." At 9-35 p.m. we left the shores of
-England, bound for France and the unknown. A war-time cross-channel
-steamer, converted into a troopship for short runs, is as uncomfortable
-a form of craft as one can wish to sail in, and the "Onward" was no
-exception to the rule. In addition to our battalion there were several
-drafts, principally from Scotch regiments, on board. Luckily it was a
-fine, warm night, and the sea was as smooth as glass. The dining-room
-and lounge were boarded up and stripped as bare as a barrack floor,
-while the corridors, and every available inch of accommodation below
-were packed with men, in all those extraordinary attitudes, recumbent
-and sprawling, which the sleeping Tommy can only adopt. On deck it was
-just the same, and quite impossible to walk from one end of the boat to
-the other. There were strict orders against smoking on deck, and the
-task of the unfortunate officer, whose sense of duty was sufficiently
-strong to prevent him from winking at any breach of discipline, was
-unenviable. A cigarette, like Nerissa's candle, throws a long beam,
-and every effort to reach the culprit was fraught with such curses and
-mutterings from the bodies over which one stumbled, that it would have
-disheartened even the adamant spirit of the Secretary for War himself.
-
-We reached Boulogne at 11-30 p.m., and, after the usual disembarkation
-formalities, in which the Disembarkation Officers and R.T.O.'s always
-seem to exercise their unlimited powers to the full, the Battalion fell
-in by companies about 300 yards down the pier. In the darkness and
-heavy rain which now began to fall this proceeding took a considerable
-amount of time, but after half an hour we moved off, all thoroughly
-soaked through. At the best of times the way from the pier at Boulogne
-to the Rest Camp, some distance out of the town, is not pleasant,
-but that October night it was particularly bad. The streets were wet
-and slippery, the men heavily laden with blankets and equipment, and
-the road up to the Rest Camp led up a steep incline. The leading
-company, however, stepped out at their normal pace. A few, mindful of
-the landing of the original Expeditionary Force, and the ever famous
-"Tipperary" scenes, burst into song, but the Frenchman retires early to
-bed, and, with the exception of one long, thin arm fluttering a pocket
-handkerchief from a top window, we saw no sign of life in the deserted
-streets. After a very steep climb of about two miles, we came to the
-Rest Camp, and a series of gasoline flares lit up the muddy flats on
-which the tents were pitched. The mud, ankle deep, sucked up round our
-boots, and torrents of rain danced in the puddles. It was a matter of
-ten minutes before each company was allotted its area, and after that,
-in less time than it takes to tell, the sleep, which only those who
-have spent a night in a Rest Camp at Boulogne know, had fallen on all.
-
-The day after we landed was an easy one. No orders came as to moving,
-and the time was spent by our men in parading about the camp, sleeping,
-and talking to the numerous women and small boys who wandered round
-the railings, clamouring for "biscuit," "penny," or "bully beef." So
-urgent was the appeal for these commodities, that the men took it for
-granted that the entire population of France was starving, and handed
-over that somewhat elusive "unconsumed portion" of the previous day's
-ration, or any that remained of it. As the day wore on and word was
-received that there would be no move until the following morning, some
-of the officers were allowed into town in the afternoon. Boulogne in
-war-time is not an interesting place, and an hour was sufficient for
-exploration purposes. With the exception of a few French territorials,
-guarding the bridges and railway station, the town seemed to be
-entirely handed over to the British, whose motor ambulances glided in
-every direction. The "Cambria," with her green and white topsides and
-large Red Cross flag at her masthead, lay alongside at the quay, a
-sight to make one home-sick, which brought one's mind back to Dublin
-Bay and Kingstown Harbour in the days of peace. It rained off and on
-all day, and was bitterly cold, an early foretaste of the bitter winds
-we were to experience in France. We fell in next morning, Wednesday,
-6th October, at 10-15, and marched to the Central station, where we
-entrained. Speculation was rife as to where we were going, whether
-Belgium, which savoured of Ypres and all that that name implied, or
-the new line between Arras and the Somme. The latter was a sector taken
-over by the British from the French in the July preceding, and had the
-name of being quiet and pleasant compared to the more northerly parts
-of the line. As the day wore on and we steamed South through Abbeville,
-and finally came to Amiens, there was no doubt as to our destination.
-From Amiens we moved on to a side line, and at 6-15 came to Flesselles,
-a small town about 15 miles south of Amiens, where we detrained. It
-was a lovely autumn evening, and with a slight breeze blowing from the
-East, and as we stood fallen in ready to move off from the station, we
-heard the low rumble and occasional growl of a big gun. From Flesselles
-we had to march some twelve kilometres to Rubenpre, which was to be
-our billeting town. Very heavily laden as we all were, officers and
-men, again the mistake was made of setting too fast a pace. It was an
-exceptionally warm evening, the men were tired, hungry and thirsty,
-after the long train journey, and as an hour, and then two, passed by,
-and we still appeared to be some distance from our town, the softer
-hearts in the battalion collapsed. There is no necessity to dwell on
-the unpleasant memories of our first route march in France; it was the
-most trying experience for both officers and men that we had for many a
-long day. As we marched East, and as the night grew darker, the flares,
-and the lurid flashes of gunfire became more vivid, and helped to
-keep up the interest of the men and distract their attention from the
-general weariness; at any rate we were, after eleven months' training,
-getting to the "Front" at last.
-
-[Illustration: RUBENPRE.]
-
-When we reached Rubenpre, at 11 o'clock at night, many of the men
-done up and all very tired, we halted at the head of the village. The
-second in command had gone on the previous day with the advance party
-to arrange the billeting, but in the darkness, of a more than usually
-dark night, the result of his effort was practically impossible to
-find. The village consisted, as far as one could judge by the light
-of electric torches or matches, of a series of long barns with doors
-most of which were barred and bolted, and presented a remarkably
-inhospitable appearance. A few days before we had left Borden we
-had been paraded, and in the course of a ten minutes' harangue, the
-Commanding Officer had dwelt upon the good name of the battalion,
-and its excellent conduct while in England. He told the men that he
-relied on them to maintain that high record in the country to which
-they were going. Especially he told them to respect the religious
-susceptibilities of the people. "Hanging over your beds in your billets
-you will find crucifixes, pictures of the Virgin Mary, and the Saints,
-and other emblems of the Roman Catholic Church and religion. You will
-respect these emblems, and remember that you and your Allies have
-come to free these people from the Germans." So throughout that march
-from Flesselles to Rubenpre, the men had before them the vision and
-anticipation of feather beds which all the saints in the catalogue
-might adorn, so long as it was a bed. No such luck, however, as
-feather beds could be hoped for in the land which the men had already
-christened "No man's land." So dark was the night, and so impossible
-to find were the billets allotted to each Company, that after nearly
-half-an-hour's halt at the entrance to the village, Company Commanders
-and Officers took the matter into their own hands, threw off their
-packs and equipment on the side of the street, and led their worn-out
-men down the village. They burst open the doors of barns, and put in,
-here 20, there 30, men, despite the irate remonstrances of the owners,
-often punctuated by some shrill scream from some female proprietor,
-who thought that at any rate her last hour had come. At length, on
-straw and hay, on floors hard and soft, everyone found a bed, and,
-tired, as they were, one or two were heard to mutter, Orangemen though
-they might be, that they wouldn't mind a bed even if the picture of
-the Pope himself hung at the head. In this part of France there are
-no farms. The country is dotted at intervals of a kilometre or two
-with villages, some small, some large, mostly the same in appearance,
-with their orchards, and grey church spires sticking up above the
-knots of trees. All round these villages the country stretches away
-in gently rolling plains, like a great checkerboard, no ditches or
-hedges, reminding one of what England must have looked like in the days
-of the "common field" system. This part of the country is intensely
-cultivated, not an inch of land is allowed to go to waste, and in
-war time the work is done entirely by young girls and old women. A
-young man was never seen, either in the fields or villages; there
-seemed to be few old men, and the small boys spend most of their day
-at school. These Picard villages are intensely dirty, and Rubenpre
-was even dirtier than most of them. The barns were in a bad state
-of repair, and the yards were swimming with filthy water from the
-great heaps of manure which were piled up in front of each house,
-often right up against the windows, yet, curiously enough, the houses
-themselves were in most cases neat and clean. The houses are built of
-laths, plastered with mud and straw, poor in construction, and, owing
-to lack of men, in many cases whole villages presented a dilapidated
-and tumbled-down appearance. Rubenpre was, therefore, an inhospitable
-place, and the reception we received from the people themselves was
-not what we expected. We felt that we had come to the country to fight
-for the people, and to free them from the enemy; in other words we
-looked upon ourselves in a mild way as deliverers, and felt to a small
-extent that we were entitled to be received as such. But our eyes were
-soon opened,--those bolted barns and inhospitable entrances were an
-index of the regard in which the people held us; we were received with
-suspicion, and often with dislike, in every village to which we came
-during our long peregrinations in Picardy. It speaks volumes for our
-men to be able to say, as we can say with truth, that we always went
-away with the good wishes and blessings of the people, and there were
-many in the battalion who, when a day off came, would walk eight or
-ten miles to revisit some of their French friends. It was only after
-we had been some time in the country that we discovered the reason for
-this coldness. Robbed first of all by the Germans, they had endured
-successive invasions of Zouave, English, Scotch, and Indian troops, and
-now an Irish Division, a form of terror formerly unknown was thrust
-upon them in its entirety. We saw that there was a certain amount to be
-said for their apparent inhospitality, and put up with it.
-
-The first couple of days at Rubenpre were devoted to "shaking down." As
-far as my Company was concerned, we were, on the whole, fortunate with
-regard to our billets. There was at first a lack of straw, but this
-was soon remedied, and the men very soon accustomed themselves to the
-novelty of their surroundings. Large fatigue parties were put on from
-each Company, and within a week the town was cleaner than it had been
-for many a long day. The people looked on with quiet amusement, but
-they too soon became resigned to what they considered the British mania
-for cleaning.
-
-Battalion headquarters were in a cottage, and at first a battalion
-officers' mess was tried in an estaminet which had a room in which
-a stove was riveted in the centre. In a short time, however, the
-difficulty of running a four company and headquarters mess in the same
-house became apparent, and two companies, A and B, seceded and formed a
-mess of their own in another cafe. C Company and headquarters remained
-in the same house, but before we had been many weeks in France the
-advantages of company messes became evident. Our company headquarters
-was in a disused and rather tumbled down house, but it had a good
-orchard and field behind, which we used for musketry and range finding.
-In return for the use of the house, we lent the owner a few men every
-day as a help to thresh his corn and milk his cows. There was no lack
-of fresh milk, eggs, potatoes, and apples. Eggs cost three sous each,
-milk four sous per litre.
-
-We remained at Rubenpre for about two weeks, and during that time had
-the usual routine of parades and training as at home. We were inspected
-by the G.O.C. Third Army, Sir Charles Munro, who expressed himself very
-pleased with our bearing on parade. We had two or three brigade field
-days and one divisional day, the latter the first divisional exercise
-under the eyes of our new G.O.C. Division, General Nugent. The remarks
-of our General on the day's performance were, to say the least of
-them, hardly as complimentary as we should have wished. They left an
-impression on the minds of those who heard them that will never fade,
-and they had their effect on all ranks.
-
-[Illustration: MAILLY-MAILLET.]
-
-[Illustration: MAILLY-MAILLET SUCRIER.]
-
-On 18th October we left Rubenpre to go up to the line for that
-instruction period which everyone in the New Army in France knows
-so well. As we got nearer to the line the sound of the guns became
-more distinct, and the tiny puffs of white smoke in the sky from
-the German aircraft guns was the first sign of the nearness of the
-trenches. The country was just the same as at Rubenpre every inch
-cultivated. At Varennes we were met by a band of the South Lancs.,
-and played through the town and along the road as far as Forceville.
-Here we halted in a field for dinners. After dinners we fell in, and
-marched off by companies at ten minutes' interval, for we were now
-within the zone of artillery fire, being about 31/2 miles from the
-trenches. It was only when we left Forceville that we saw any change
-in the aspect of the country. We now passed several lines of heavily
-wired trenches, which made long, white streaks across the otherwise
-brown and regular landscape. In other respects there were the same
-signs of intensive agriculture as far behind the line. We reached,
-at length, Mailly-Maillet, which was to be our billeting town during
-the instructional period. In peace time Mailly-Maillet had evidently
-been a very pretty little town of about 1,000 to 1,500 inhabitants,
-considerably better built and evidently much more prosperous than
-any of the villages we had seen since we came to France. There was a
-chateau with a fine avenue of elms which had its entrance on one side
-of the main street. The chateau was a Brigade Headquarters, while the
-avenue of elms was used as a park for transport, and was crowded with
-limbers and G.S. waggons up to the axles in mud. There was not a pane
-of glass to be seen in any of the houses; many were without doors,
-and some were pierced by great shell holes. Generally Mailly-Maillet
-had a dejected and war-worn appearance. A battery of howitzers close
-by caused all the window-frames in the place to shake, and every now
-and then a few slates would come tumbling down. As the town was
-full of troops, and we were an additional battalion, our billets were
-very poor. The men were in a very bad outhouse with little straw,
-while C Company Headquarters was an empty room with a tile floor in an
-extremely rickety condition. The first few days in Mailly were devoted
-to working parties. A Company was attached to the 1st Batt. Essex
-Regt., B Company to the 8th South Lancs., and C to the 1st Batt. Kings
-Own Royal Lancaster Regiment, and D Company to the 2nd Royal Lancaster
-Fusiliers; all belonging to the 12th Brigade of the 4th Division.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration: IN TRAINING BEHIND THE LINES.]
-
-The more or less eventful period of instruction which C Company
-experienced with the King's Own began on the night of 19th October,
-when No. 11 and 12 platoons working at the second line trenches on
-the Mailly-Serre Road, were fired on by a machine gun. It was the
-christening. On the 21st we paraded at 5-30 a.m. and with guides from
-the King's Own supplied to each platoon, marched to the trenches by
-platoons at five minutes' interval. The front held by the King's Own
-ran from the Serre Road on the right to slightly below and to the
-left of La Ligny farm. On our left was the Essex Regiment, while on
-our right were the Lancs. Fusiliers. No. 12 platoon was attached to
-A Company of the King's Own on the right of the Batt. line; No. 10
-was attached to C Company in the centre; No. 11 to B Company on the
-left, and No. 9 to D Company in reserve. I was with B Company on the
-left with Vance. The line held by the 12th Brigade formed part of the
-trenches taken from the Germans by the French in the preceding June.
-These trenches, known as the "Toutvent" trenches, had been subjected to
-a prolonged bombardment by the French. The latter would cease firing at
-intervals, during which the Germans would man the front line, and on
-the bombardment recommencing would retire to their dug-outs. This sort
-of thing went on for over a fortnight, and finally, one morning, the
-Germans got tired of coming out of their dugouts when the bombardment
-stopped, and the French swept down from their trenches behind La
-Ligny farm, and caught them. The victorious French advanced as far as
-the village of Serre, but had to fall back in the face of a terrific
-German counter attack, and eventually took up their position in what
-had been the old German second line. This trench they consolidated and
-held. The regiment which took the trenches was a local one, consisting
-of men from the region around Hebuterne, Mailly, and Bapaume. There
-had been reports of terrible outrages committed by the Germans on the
-villages behind the lines, and evidence was found in the trenches
-themselves to prove the truth of these reports. The story goes that
-little quarter was given, and the French took few prisoners, the
-Germans, caught like rats in a trap, being bombed in their dugouts.
-
-B Company of the King's Own, to which I was attached, had its
-headquarters in a dugout known as "The Catacombs." Built by the
-Germans, no labour had been spared to make it shellproof and
-comfortable. Twenty feet deep, cut out of solid chalk, it was about
-twenty yards long by seven feet broad. It was divided into sections
-for signallers, mess, and servants' quarters, but into the wall from
-the mess were nooks containing beds for six officers. The whole inside
-of this dugout was riveted with massive planks four to six inches in
-thickness. There were five entrances approached by flights of steep,
-narrow steps. This was typical of the living dugouts in this hive of
-trenches. The English never built dugouts like this one in front line
-trenches, owing to the difficulty of getting men out of them in a hurry
-in case of emergency, and time after time they have proved death traps
-to the Germans themselves. The method of training for a battalion up
-for instruction is as follows:--Officers, N.C.O.'s and men are attached
-to their opposite numbers. Company Commander to Company Commander,
-Platoon Commander to Platoon Commander, sergeant to sergeant, corporal
-to corporal, and sentry to sentry. For three nights this proceeding
-is carried out, then, on the fourth night, the instructing companies
-withdraw to reserve, and each company takes over a sector of line on
-its own. Thus, bit by bit the officers and men are broken in. The
-first night we were in the trenches was an ideal one. A full moon made
-things easy, and it was quite possible to get the lie of the trenches
-and those of the enemy. Opposite B Company the Germans were about 100
-to 120 yards away; in the centre their trenches ran to within 40 yards,
-and on the right about 100. There were a number of "saps" formed out of
-what had originally been old German communication trenches. Sand bag
-barricades built by each side in these formed the "sap heads." In one
-"sap" these barricades were about 15 feet from each other.
-
-One may forget the incidents of one's first night in the trenches,
-but one never forgets the first dawn. Gradually, out of the darkness,
-things begin to take upon themselves their proper shapes. The first
-impression is that of desolation, for there is nothing so utterly
-forsaken or forlorn as "No man's land" at first grey dawn. A maze of
-misty barbed wire, some in loose coils lying on the ground, some draped
-from stumps and stakes driven in at all angles, some in shell holes,
-all in a shapeless and indescribable jumble, stretches for about three
-yards in depth in front of the parapet. Then there is that desolate and
-shell-pocketed strip of land which terminates with the German wire, and
-beyond that again great heaps of chalk and brown earth begin to appear
-as the daylight comes. These are the German trenches, and behind them
-is the rolling country out of which the sun now begins to rise; country
-that is in the hands of the Germans, away beyond the pale. Those
-coils of rusty wire, hung on the rickety posts, form the boundary of
-civilization.
-
-[Illustration: ONE OF THE SERGEANTS OF "C" COMPANY IN THE TRENCHES.]
-
-[Illustration: IN THE TRENCHES.]
-
-The 22nd of October promised to be the most lovely day. Except for the
-usual amount of desultory rifle and machine-gun fire at "stand to,"
-there was nothing to show that the Germans were about to depart from
-the normal state of inactivity that characterised the warfare on this
-sector of the front. About 8 a.m. a corporal of the King's Own who had
-been doing observation work reported that the Germans had removed all
-their own wire, with the exception of a few strands, on their front
-opposite the sector held by C and B Companies. This Captain Woodgate,
-commanding B Company, confirmed himself. In the "Comic Cuts," or
-Corps' Summary, of the previous day it was noted that the enemy had
-also removed his wire opposite the line held by the French, north of
-Hebuterne. The natural conclusion was, therefore, that he was going
-to attack. The state of the wire in front of our own trenches was
-wretched. A month before, during the period of fighting in Champagne
-and the battle of Loos, the wire all along the front had been removed
-in readiness for a possible advance, and little trouble had been taken
-to replace it afterwards. At 9-35 a.m., Woodgate, Vance, Brown (one
-of Woodgate's subalterns), and myself were having breakfast in the
-"Catacomb." Suddenly--"whiz-bang, whiz-bang" right at the door of the
-dugout. The blast from the shells knocked the cups and plates off the
-table. There was a pause for a second, then a terrific explosion which
-shook the whole earth. In half a minute we had on our equipment, and
-Woodgate, followed by myself, Brown, and Vance, ran up the stairs of
-the dug-out. The air was full of dust, and the ground in front of
-us seemed to be in a blaze of bursting shells. "This way," called
-Woodgate, and following him we ran down a communication trench leading
-to the front line. We had only gone a few yards when we ran into a
-man rushing back, blood pouring from his shoulder and arm. Woodgate
-stopped and caught hold of him, calling to us to run on. We ran down
-the trench, bending low, for a hail of shells was passing us and
-bursting on all sides. In a few seconds Woodgate caught us up again. I
-led, then Brown, Woodgate, and Vance. Suddenly, just round a curve in
-the trench, and about ten yards in front of me, there was a terrific
-explosion. I was lifted clean off my feet into the air, and thrown
-flat on my stomach on the ground. Almost simultaneously another shell
-hit the top of the trench, and before I could think where I was, or
-recover my breath, the whole side of the trench leant over, and fell
-on top of me. It was a wonderful sensation, and I remember saying to
-myself aloud: "I wonder when this is going to stop." Still the earth
-kept falling, and the weight on my shoulders and the small of my back
-became oppressive. One thing was pleasing, there was dead silence under
-ground. I began to heave with my shoulders, and took a deep breath.
-There was no difficulty in breathing as the earth seemed full of air.
-On the second heave I felt I was able to move, and after what seemed
-ages I got my head and shoulders clear. I was firmly fixed from my
-waist down, but in less than a minute had dragged myself out. I looked
-round, and saw that the entire trench had been filled in. There was no
-sign of any of the others, but a small bit of British warm coat was
-sticking out of the hole where I had been which represented Brown. I
-got hold of it and pulled hard. Gradually Brown emerged, cursing like
-a trooper, and spitting clay out of his mouth. With little difficulty
-we got Woodgate out, and Vance appeared behind him. We then ran on,
-and when we came to the fire trench Woodgate called out: "Get the men
-out of the living trench into the front line." The living trench was
-one running just behind and parallel to the fire trench. In it were a
-large number of what were called "funk holes," scooped out of the front
-of the trench, in which the men slept when off duty. Leading from each
-company in the fire trench there was a passage to the living trench.
-It should be explained that by day the minimum number of men possible
-are on duty in the fire trench. Sentry duty is most exhausting work,
-and it is possible for one man by day to suffice where it would take
-ten or even twenty men by night. In a company frontage of perhaps 500
-to 600 yards three sentries, one to each platoon would be ample in the
-firing line provided there was a clear field of view to the front;
-but of course it is entirely a matter of situation and the nature of
-the ground. Woodgate called to me: "You take the two centre platoons
-and get everyone into the trench as quickly as possible." I ran along
-the living trench rousing the men, who despite the terrific din of
-bursting shells were mostly sound asleep, and telling them to get
-out. Shells were falling mostly in the living trench and just behind
-it, and I had to go round by way of the fire trench as the passage
-behind was blocked up. Meanwhile the air was thick with flying debris
-of every kind--posts, iron sheets, great baulks of timber were flying
-everywhere as the enemy blew our wire to bits. In particular I watched
-with fascination, a sheet of corrugated iron, blown from the roof of
-a dug-out, which flew about in the air like a card, and dashed hither
-and thither, finally coming down with a great slant on the parados of
-the bay next to where I was. It is no easy matter to wake the sleeping
-soldier, and as I worked my way down the living trench I thought I
-would never get the men out of the dug-outs. Here and there, however,
-where a bit of trench had been blown in, men were creeping out, pulling
-their rifles from under the fallen clay. At last, after what seemed
-an age, they began to file into the bays. The front trench was very
-narrow, deep, and well sand-bagged, and once they had thoroughly
-realised what was going on they knew it was the safest place. Owing
-to the double number in the trenches nearly every bay was manned by
-at least two men. Bayonets were fixed, and ten rounds fixed into the
-magazine, and we felt quite ready for what I expected would come any
-minute. The shell fire now became terrific, and practically the whole
-living line was filled in, the shells just missing the front line and
-lighting on the step of ground some ten yards inside separating it from
-the living trench. Curiously enough no shells were lighting in the
-fire trench. Two bays on the right of the two platoons under my charge
-had been knocked in during the first few minutes of the bombardment.
-They formed a small salient, and presented a very easy target to the
-enemy, whose artillery was mostly operating from Serre wood. Once the
-fire trench was manned there was little to do except go up and down the
-trench and see that all was well. The stuff the Germans were sending
-over was composed of every imaginable form of ordnance. The biggest
-shells were probably eight inch, and the air was thick with aerial
-torpedoes, minenwerfer, and oil drums. The latter came hurling through
-the air turning over and over and exploding with a terrific crack,
-making a very large crater. Aerial torpedoes, designed more for moral
-effect than to cause actual damage, burst with a nerve shattering
-explosion. I noticed that the closer one was to a bursting shell or
-aerial torpedo the less the noise, it was more of a sharp click, the
-greatest effect would be at almost 30 yards, under that the sound
-did not seem so great, though the concussion of course was terrific.
-Meanwhile the Germans, though they had blown most of our wire away
-showed no signs of attacking. It was just one of those small intensive
-bombardments known at the front as "a morning hate" or "straffe."
-When this had lasted about an hour and a half, our artillery began to
-retaliate. Those were the days when ammunition was precious, and each
-battery strictly limited. It was a pleasant sound, however, to hear
-the whiz of our own shells overhead and see a great mass of earth rise
-from the German lines, and this had a marvellous effect on the men.
-They at once became cheerful, the Lancashire men especially. "Thar goes
-a Lloyd George for you," as the whiz of a heavy shell like an express
-train overhead was heard. "Bah, he's a dud." "Say, Jock, the lassie
-'as made 'im forgot to put in the vital spark." "There goes Fritz's
-iron rations" as a salvo of shrapnel burst over the first line. On the
-whole, however, our artillery retaliation was poor.
-
-About 11-30 the bombardment began to die down, and by 12-30 it was
-over. The damage done, considering the number of shells fired into such
-a small sector was very small. Two bays on the right of "B" Company
-were completely flattened, otherwise there was no damage done to the
-fire trench. The living trench and communication trenches suffered
-more. Two of the latter had been knocked in, while the living trench
-along the company line had been badly battered. One very gruesome
-effect was noticed. There were a large number of Frenchman's graves in
-the parapet of the fire trench, for the French have a habit of burying
-a man where he falls, whether at his post or not. A hole was opened in
-the side of the trench, the body was shoved in, and the grave filled
-up. A little cross surmounted by the dead man's cap, and often his
-bayonet and rifle, marking the spot. In places where the fire trench
-had been hit or shaken many of the remains stuck out, and in many cases
-buttons and badges were "souveneered" by the men.
-
-When the bombardment was over Woodgate told me it was the most severe
-they had experienced since May 8th, at Ypres, and quite an unusual
-occurrence on that front. Two men were killed and sixteen wounded,
-very small casualties taking into consideration the intensity of the
-fire. That night we dug a new trench behind the small sector blown in.
-There was a full moon, and walking about on top was very interesting.
-The ground was honeycombed with shell holes, while in all directions
-unexploded shells were lying about. A trench which had been used by
-the French for the purpose of burying dead had been unearthed in many
-places and the ground was littered with old equipment, clothes, and
-bones. I remember thinking it was the most appalling refuse heap I had
-ever seen. Next day was very quiet, we began work on the new trench at
-about 7-30, and I took charge of the three working parties in it. A
-considerable amount of work had been done the night before, and only a
-short piece remained to be dug in the centre. At 8-55 I told the men to
-take a ten minutes "easy" and went up to the left platoon to see one of
-the Sergeants about rations. I had gone about five minutes when a salvo
-of "whiz bangs" (77 mm shells) burst right in the trench where the men
-had been working, and immediately afterwards very heavy rifle fire
-broke out on our right. The "stand to" was passed down and the rifle
-fire went on for about half-an-hour, especially in the direction of
-"C" Company. All had quieted down about 10 o'clock. I then ascertained
-that a party of Germans had endeavoured to bomb "C" Company's trenches.
-A very large number of bombs were thrown, and in all sixteen men
-were wounded. For their coolness in this attack our men were greatly
-commended, and one man, Andrew Marshall, of No. 11 platoon, was
-specially recommended for devotion to duty. Badly wounded in the hand,
-and unable to use his rifle, he refused to leave the trench, and kept
-loading rifles for the men on the fire step.
-
-The remainder of our time in the trenches was very quiet. On Sunday,
-24th October, we took over the line held by "A" Company King's Own as
-a Company the King's Own going back into support, and the following
-evening we marched back to our billets in Mailly-Maillet. Our period
-of instruction had been most useful, for "C" Company in particular. We
-had experienced a bombardment and a bomb attack in both of which the
-men had proved their metal, and shown what was in them. As far as the
-Officers of "C" Company were concerned, those who came in contact with
-Capt. Woodgate will never forget the lesson they learned from him. "A"
-and "B" Companies attached to the Essex and South Lancs. Regiments
-had a quiet time, but "D" Company attached to the Lancs. Fusiliers in
-the Redan salient had their initiation into mine warfare, a platoon
-being in the salient when the Germans blew up a mine without, however,
-causing any loss of life. A good story is here told of Lieutenant
-W. He was out one night with a small patrol, the pass word being
-"Shakespeare." A large German patrol was sighted and W and his patrol
-had to retire in some haste. W himself fell headlong into a sap on the
-top of the astonished sentries with the ejaculation "For God's sake
-let's in, Shakespeare."
-
-[Illustration: FIENVILLERS.]
-
-[Illustration: FIENVILLERS.]
-
-We left Mailly early in the morning of October 26th, and marched
-down through Forceville and Varennes to Puchvillers where we stayed
-the night. Next day we marched to Fienvillers and went into billets.
-Fienvillers was a better town than Rubenpre. There were better barns
-for the men, and for a company headquarters mess we were lucky to get
-a lovely house standing in its own grounds with bedrooms for each
-Officer. We now had heard our fate, it was that the 107th Brigade was
-to go up to the trenches to take the place of the 12th Brigade of the
-4th Division, which was coming out and going to be attached to our
-Division. Our two remaining Brigades were to be in Army reserve for
-about three months. Our Battalion, with the 14th R.I.R. from the 109th
-Brigade, was attached to the 12th Brigade under General Auley, taking
-the places of the Essex Regiment attached to the 109th Brigade, and
-Lancashire Fusiliers attached to the 108th. We joined the 12th Brigade
-at St. Leger-les-Domarts on the 5th November, the King's Own being
-billeted in the same town. We now began a new and extensive system of
-training, both in march discipline and attack. General Auley, during
-the first week that we were in his Brigade gave the Officers a series
-of lectures on the retreat from Mons and the subsequent advance to the
-Marne. We heard the story from his own personal point of view, which
-made it a fascinating narrative rather than a tactical lecture. During
-the five weeks in which we were attached to his Brigade we obtained
-much practical and useful knowledge. In march discipline, especially,
-we improved greatly. We were taught that the most men can do with
-comfort is 112 paces to the minute. The pace was set from the rear and
-not from the head of the column. Company Commanders riding at the rear
-of their Companies were made to check the pace. The utmost importance
-was paid to keeping in step, and keeping the sectors of fours well
-dressed and well covered down. The rifle was carried at the sling,
-never over the shoulder, the reason for this being that men, when they
-get tired, will let their butts drop, and keeping hitting the man in
-the sector of fours behind, thus causing loss of space in the section,
-in the Company, and so on down to the Brigade and Division on the
-march. We did many long route marches, and the General used to hide in
-all sorts of weird places to watch us go past, and take us unawares.
-
-
-ST LEGER
-
-[Illustration: LIEUT. VANCE, CAPTAIN SAMUELS, LIEUT. YOUNG, LIEUT.
-ELLIS.]
-
-[Illustration: "C" COMPANY, ST. LEGER.]
-
-During the time we were in St. Leger, Major Clarke (Officer Commanding
-"C" Company) left the Battalion and joined the 108th Brigade as Staff
-Captain. I took over command of "C" Company on November 12th. Our
-Company headquarters were in the Cure's house, the Cure, like most of
-his confreres in France, having gone to the front. On 27th we moved
-from St. Leger to Buigny l'Abbe, a small village about three kilometres
-from St. Requier where we were billeted until December 10th. Buigny
-was an unhealthy low lying village, and we experienced a considerable
-amount of sickness, principally influenza. Our stay of a fortnight
-was unpleasant, it rained most of the time, and the people were
-inhospitable. This, we found, was due to bad conduct on the part of a
-Regiment which had preceded us there. The triangular pond, which is
-a feature of all Picard villages, had in former days formed the fish
-pond of the ancient monastery of Buigny l'Abbe; and for this reason was
-held in more respect by the villagers than most ponds of its kind.
-Unfortunately, whether by accident or design, some bombs were thrown
-into this pond one night, and in the morning the villagers woke up
-to find their pond gone, and in its place a chasm of liquid mud. On
-investigation it was found that the bombs had burst in what proved to
-be the roof of a subterranean passage leading from the monastery, and
-through this the water had disappeared. During our stay in the town we
-had working parties engaged in making good the damage.
-
-On December 10th we rejoined the 108th Brigade, moving from Buigny
-l'Abbe to St. Mauguille, a faubourg of St. Requier. This proved to
-be the most pleasant town in which we had as yet been billeted. Two
-Companies "B" and "C" were in St. Mauguille at Neuville, about one mile
-from St. Riquier. We had excellent billets both for Officers and men,
-and as we had now thoroughly acquired the nack of making ourselves at
-home, settled down very comfortably. The people were most hospitable.
-There were excellent hot and cold shower baths for the men, and a
-Battalion laundry was set up. For our Company Mess, Monsieur Vivien,
-the manager of a big phosphate works gave us the greater part of his
-house, and he and Madame Vivien with their daughter, did all they could
-to make us feel at home. St. Requier was a most interesting old town.
-It had successfully stood siege by Henry V. and the English on two
-occasions, but had been sacked and burnt by the Burgundians in the end
-of the 15th century. Large portions of the walls still remain, and some
-of the old towers. In a moated farm-house just outside the town Jeanne
-D'Arc spent a night on her way to her trial at Rouen. Another fact
-of great interest was that the ancient Abbey of St. Requier had been
-founded by our own countrymen in the 6th century[1].
-
-[Illustration: TOMB OF THE FIRST IRISH SAINTS.]
-
-[Illustration: MONSIEUR VIVIEN AND FAMILY.]
-
-We spent a happy Xmas at St. Requier, and as we were in billets decided
-to make the best of it. The men were in excellent health and spirits,
-football, shooting, and route marches keeping them in training. The
-18th of December being "Lundy Day," was celebrated by some Derry
-men and other Ulster boys, the following being a description of the
-celebration by an Officer. Two Lundy's had been prepared, one large
-and the other small. Some of the inhabitants suggested that they
-were father and son. The father was about eleven feet long, stuffed
-with straw, and with rockets put in unexpected places. He had large
-wooden feet and wire knees, and his head filled with gunpowder and
-surrounded by a large yellow trimmed hat in the shape of an Admiral's.
-On his chest was a placard bearing the words "Lundy the traitor." The
-procession, headed by torchlights and band, marched through the village
-playing such airs as "No Surrender," "Derry Walls" and "The Boyne
-Water." Lundy was then let down on a wire rope from a tree where he had
-been strung up, and set on fire, amidst great cheering and boohing.
-He was well soaked with petrol and burnt excellently. Every now and
-then someone gave him a shake and his knees wobbled in most realistic
-fashion. Bombs made of jam tins were thrown into a pond just beside
-him, and of course broke the windows of houses in the vicinity. The
-procession then reformed, and marching to the top of the village, where
-Lundy junior was burnt with like ceremony.
-
-Christmas, of course, produced a series of dinners given by the
-Officers Commanding Companies and Battalion Headquarters. To read the
-menu cards it was hard to believe we were in France, and that this was
-the second year of the war. One particularly elaborate dinner was given
-on Christmas day, to which we invited Madame Vivien, our kind hostess,
-and her family. The following is a copy of the menu in which most of
-the guests are represented.
-
- Potage Vivien.
- Poulets Roti au Capitaine.
- Petits pois Lieutenant.
- Rosbif au Docteur.
- Pommes de terre Louis (the little son).
- Fruits, plumb pudding, Xmas desserts.
- Cafe.
- Vins--Muscatel--Bordeau--Whiskey.
-
-
- TOASTS.
-
- Le Presedent de la Republique.
- Le Roi D'Angleterre.
- Mesdames, Messures Vivien.
- Les Allies au paix glorieuse.
-
-A service was held in the ancient Abbey of St. Requier on Christmas
-Day, and a sacred concert, which gave our men an opportunity of
-listening to Christmas music.
-
-An incident happened about this time at St. Requier which caused
-no little excitement. A French billet belonging to the Downs (13th
-Battalion Royal Irish Rifles) went on fire. At the sound of the fire
-alarm every one turned out to assist the French people who stripped to
-the waist were hard at work trying to save their farm. The fire was
-raging fiercely round the stables and out-houses, and it was quite
-impossible to save all the horses, some of whom were burned to death in
-their stalls. It was a horrible sight.
-
-[Illustration: THREE SERGEANTS OF "C" COMPANY.]
-
-[Illustration: AT ST. RIQUIER.]
-
-On January 8th, our Battalion moved to Bernavillers. We were now
-beginning to think of the trenches again, and many were the rumours.
-Everyone seemed to know for certain our exact peregrinations during
-the next few months, but in truth no one could tell from day to day
-what our next move would be. There were also rumours of a more pleasant
-character, but so far only spoken of with bated breath, the one and
-only hope of our existence--"Leave" had begun. Our first "leave" and
-all that the word means. There is no doubt of it that the first leave
-is the best, but your first leave you are then indeed a hero, whether
-from billets or trenches, and your dear people who have not yet become
-accustomed to those short ten days have waited and watched for it
-with an intense longing and pride in their hearts; is it any wonder
-one's blood thrills with the thought of that never-to-be-forgotten home
-coming.
-
-At Bernavillers an excellent concert party was formed by Lord Farnham,
-called "The Divisional Follies" or "The Merry Mauve Melody Makers."
-Their first concert was honoured by a visit from The Most Rev. Dr.
-Crozier, Lord Primate of Ireland, who had come to France on a tour
-among the Irish Divisions. He had already paid a visit to the 107th
-Brigade, who had been having a strenuous training in the trenches ever
-since October. They had escaped with very few casualties.
-
-[Illustration: OFFICERS OF "C" COMPANY.]
-
-[Illustration: ST. LEGER.]
-
-My Company now got orders to move to Beauval, where we took over
-billets from the Y.C.V.'s (14th Battalion Royal Irish Rifles). They
-were the cleanest billets I can remember in France, and the Y.C.V.'s
-deserve great praise for the way in which they were left for us. After
-a week of preparation we moved on to Canaples, and from there to
-Martinsart where we again manned the trenches, and went in alongside
-the 9th Inniskilling Fusiliers by Companies, "C" and "D" Companies in
-front with "A" and "B" in reserve. The next week we went into support
-with "D" Company, and "A" and "B" took our place in front. This time we
-were not attached to a regular Battalion for training, but took over
-part of the line ourselves. Our period in the trenches was uneventful,
-it was a quiet part of the line, and the trenches were deep and well
-made. This time we gave the Bosche 500 to every 50 of theirs, so all
-taken into consideration we were lucky. The weather, however, was by
-no means favourable, the trenches being full of slush and water. A
-heavy fall of snow also made the ground in a bad condition, and the
-men suffered greatly from the cold, which was intense. Several new
-Officers joined our Battalion about this time, for which we were very
-thankful, as leave was able to proceed without difficulty, two Officers
-being sent each week. On February 29 our first death occurred, poor
-young Watt of No. 12 platoon. He was killed by a shell while standing
-outside the door of his billet in Mesnil, and buried in Mesnil Ridge
-Cemetery. From this time on we went into the trenches by Battalions,
-alternately with the Downs (13th Royal Irish Rifles). Our casualties
-were not great, but always a few, the expected result of trench
-warfare. Indeed, if it had not been for a tot of rum at "stand to"
-on those very cold mornings, I feel sure there would have been more
-work for the hospitals. About March 6th the weather began to improve
-and we occasionally felt dry. We now began to think about giving
-Jerry something to stir him up as he seemed to have gone underground
-completely during the cold weather. Evidently Battalion Headquarters
-also felt that the time had come to stir for we received a message to
-supply a specimen of German wire as it was wanted by the corps. The
-job was given in "C" Company to Young, our scout Officer, and four
-other scouts. On a dark and snowy night they crept out on patrol, and
-procured a good specimen about a yard long. The other Companies also
-procured specimens and the Corps appeared satisfied with results.
-Our Batteries also began to wake up, and we kept them well informed
-as to the position of the German transports, which from this time on
-never got a moment of peace. The 10th Inniskillings on our right,
-under command of Colonel Ross-Smyth, got a terrific shelling from the
-Bosche on the night of the 10th-11th of March. Shells came over at the
-rate of 60 to the minute, but the 10th showed splendid coolness and
-gallantry, keeping up a steady fire from the front trenches throughout
-the bombardment, which was evidently intended by the Germans to cover a
-raid on our lines, similar to one which took place elsewhere the same
-night. An Officer, describing the bombardment in a letter, writes--
-
-"The Bosche has been very prodigal of shells for a day or two, all
-along the front, but particularly on the somewhat unpleasant sector
-occupied by the "Derry's." On this particular afternoon he had
-subjected it to a smart bombardment with "heavies," field guns, and
-trench mortars. Then he fell short and waited. At eleven o'clock
-precisely he opened fire with guns of all calibres. Over the Derrys
-he burst shrapnel, reserving his high explosive for the Donegals and
-Fermanaghs, and for the Brigade on their right. Not content with
-peppering the line, the supports, and the reserves, he shelled half a
-dozen villages to the rear, with which he did not as a rule concern
-himself. It was a very dark night, and the flashes of the guns seemed
-to cut through the darkness like spear points. Before the Bosche had
-been firing five minutes our guns had begun to reply to him, and the
-eighteen pounders commenced to whiz over our heads on to their front
-line, and soon the men in the trenches heard the welcome whistle of
-a high travelling howitzer over their heads in the right direction.
-Then indeed the din was indescribable, so fast and furious did the
-game become that at one time it seemed as if the boom of the big
-guns, the harsher bark of the small, the explosion of the shells,
-and the tearing crash of bursting mortars were all blended into one
-continuous roar. The trenches of the "Derrys" had an ugly time of it.
-Dug-outs were caved in, and traverses smashed down, one whole sector
-of the front line being practically ploughed up. At one time the enemy
-proceeded to pound the flank out of one Company with high explosives
-for several minutes, then lifted to the opposite flank and gave it
-the same measure. This evidently appeared to him a satisfactory idea
-as he repeated the manoeuvre. But the Company Officer had by now
-appreciated his tactics, and by his work undoubtedly prevented a great
-number of casualties. Gradually the German fire on the front line
-slackened and ceased, though it still continued overhead, and our
-"heavies" now warmed up to their work showed no inclination to give
-up. It was at this juncture that a sentry came running back from the
-sap head to report that he had seen Germans moving in front of the
-wire. The order was given to the men to stand up on the fire step,
-and send bursts of rapid fire in the direction of the German line. If
-the raiders had intended coming over this caused them to change their
-minds. The "Derrys" stood to till morning, but nothing fresh occurred.
-Through the night the men prayed their Officers to lead them over to
-vengeance, but for that they will have to wait. The loss was slight
-considering the intensity of the bombardment. When morning came the
-"Derrys" learned that the famous raiders had entered the trenches of
-the Battalion on their right, which, by the way, did not belong to the
-Ulster Division, and carried off an Officer and nine men as prisoners.
-It was a workmanlike job without a doubt, for the raiding party had
-come and gone within ten minutes."
-
-[Illustration: Bombs found on night patrol just in front of BEAUMONT
-HAMEL, March, 1916.]
-
-Several of the men of the Inniskillings earned commendation from
-Colonel Ricardo for conspicuous gallantry on this occasion; their names
-were Private D. Little, Private J. J. Young, Lance Corporal Black, and
-Private W. Dinsmore. They were serving as Company Officers, Orderlies,
-Signallers, and Messengers. Captain Cruickshank, of Omagh, also showed
-great coolness and valour on that occasion.
-
-The weather still continued fine, and our time was spent in building
-new traverses, and rivetting and sandbagging the parados and firesteps.
-Bosche aeroplanes, taking advantage of the fine nights, crossed our
-lines, and green flares were sent up from the enemy to show our
-positions. The Germans would then send over a number of shells, and we
-had several casualties, Lieutenant Waring of "A" Company being hit by
-shrapnel, and Privates Moffat and McBride of "C" Company badly wounded.
-Poor Moffat subsequently died from his wounds.
-
-We were now stirred to think of raids and night patrols. The following
-is an example of a patrol done by one of my Officers and some men of
-"C" Company. Lieutenant Young, Sergeant Renshaw, Riflemen Storey,
-Pollock, M'Dowell and M'Kelvey. March 16th. "C" Company Patrol Report.
-
-"Patrol went out from Sap in Sector 41 at 7-30 p.m., consisting of
-one Officer, one Sergeant, and four Riflemen. On leaving our wire we
-turned north, striking sunken road which runs north-east in direction
-of German trenches. After going about 100 yards down this road we
-turned off under a ditch running north-west from the road. There were
-a number of small thorn trees on this ditch, and we could distinctly
-see footprints and elbow marks round them, also pits had been dug which
-could be used by snipers. Further along the ditch we came to a lone
-tree, which can be seen from Sector 49 in our lines, here we halted.
-About 20 yards from the tree we discovered a wire which came from the
-direction of the German lines. Following this we found it entered the
-parapet of a sniper's pit, just beneath the lone tree. We then dug
-out the wire, and discovered it was attached to a square box covered
-with felt. This box we opened, thinking it contained a telephone, but
-instead found four German grenades with the detonators attached to the
-wire. We quickly disconnected the wire, and dug out the box. Not far
-from the spot we found another German grenade which we also took with
-us. At 10 p.m. we returned to our own trenches. A working party of the
-enemy could be heard, but it was difficult to say from which direction
-the sound came. Otherwise, everything was normal."
-
- G. O. Young, Lieutenant.
-
-[Illustration: THIEPVAL CHATEAU.]
-
-[Illustration: MESNIL CHATEAU.]
-
-On March 18th we went into reserve, and were billeted in Englebelmer,
-being relieved on 24th by the 13th Royal Irish Rifles (The Downs). This
-time the 11th Battalion East Yorks were attached to us for instruction.
-They saw a fair amount of shelling for their first period in the
-trenches, the Germans putting a lot of trench mortars over on Thiepval
-hill. All that remained of the Chateau at Thiepval being the walls,
-about as high as the hall door, and a few holes where windows once had
-been, in all about 7ft. high by 20ft. long. The German trenches lay in
-front of it, on the carriage drive, and ours right up to the other side
-of the avenue, almost into them. Not a pleasant place, with an active
-sniper in the Chateau. Our trenches also ran through Thiepval wood,
-in which the trees were now thick with foliage. The birds built their
-nests and sang merrily enough on those Spring mornings. They did not
-appear to mind the shelling, even a cuckoo could sometimes be heard,
-reminding us that winter was over "this winter of our discontent."
-Spring had indeed come, a time when the birds call, the trees call,
-all nature calls for life, while we were there to kill and to be
-killed. There were moments when a lull came in the busy day's work,
-when the monotony of trench warfare left time to think, that thoughts
-such as these arose.
-
-[Illustration: Thiepval Wood. G. Sector.]
-
-We spent Easter in billets, in Martinsart village. The 23rd of April
-being Easter Sunday, a general holiday was given to the Battalion.
-Amiens, once the capital of Picardy, was about twenty-five miles
-distant, a long ride, but an interesting old town, and well worth
-visiting. Its fortifications have been turned into Boulevards, but
-it still retains its old citadel, and the Cathedral of Notre Dame is
-indeed a masterpiece of Gothic architecture. The great straight road
-that leads from Amiens to the front, or Albert, is the great route
-nationale, running from Rouen through Amiens, Albert, Pozieres, Le Sars
-and Bapaume on to Mons and Valenciennes. It was on this road that the
-famous Gordon Bennet races took place, and a better road for riding
-on or motoring on, it would be hard to find. The road is lined on
-either side with poplar trees, and a screen used to be hung from tree
-to tree to hide the traffic to and from Albert. There are few trees
-left now, and only the barest stumps, owing to bombardment. Amiens, as
-a rule, was out of bounds to both Officers and men, unless they were
-the possessors of a pass, but on Easter Monday official permission
-was granted to all, and many availed themselves of the opportunity to
-explore the ancient town. It was a chance to see civilization again,
-and to dine in a restaurant. At that time Amiens had not been badly
-shelled, even the Bosche aeroplanes seemed to be busy elsewhere, and
-life went on much the same as in towns at the Base. People went about
-their business and pleasure with very little thought of the enemy who
-were comparatively few miles away. The ride back at night from Amiens
-was rather an interesting experience. After the first six miles the sky
-was lit up like sheet lightning. Then the villages all became dark,
-no lights to be seen, then came the halts at the different outposts,
-the constant flashes and rockets in the sky, awful, yet fascinating.
-Nearer Albert the sound of the guns became clearer, and in the distance
-could be seen the great Church tower of Notre Dame de Brebieres with
-the leaning figure of the Virgin holding the infant Christ above her
-head. For over a year she had hung at an angle of 15 degrees below
-horizontal, face downwards to the street below. The French people
-believed that the day the holy figures fell, would see the end of the
-War, and that the German shell which threw down the blessed Virgin of
-Brebieres would shatter the throne of the Hohenzollerns.
-
-[Illustration: ALBERT.]
-
-[Illustration: RUINS OF ALBERT.]
-
-Our Battalion being now out of the trenches the Companies were divided
-among the small villages around. My Company had the luck to be billeted
-in Autuille, a small village on the Ancre. We were able to get
-plenty of amusement there between rat hunting, fishing and bathing.
-Captain E. and I spent several afternoons trying for trout, and sent
-our finest specimen to "B" Company with compliments. The Ancre at
-Autuil was an excellent place for fishing, and this would have been
-a pleasant occupation were it not for the fact that snipers found us
-out in a short time. The bathing place was hardly 600 yards from the
-German lines. On May 7th the "Tyrones" had the honour of carrying
-out the first raid made by the Division. The following is contained
-in a special order of the day issued by Major General O. S Nugent,
-D.S.O., Officer Commanding Division. "A raid on the German trenches
-was carried out at midnight on the 7th inst., by the 9th Battalion
-Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers, the raiding party consisting of Major
-W. J. Peacock, Captain J. Weir, Lieut. W. S. Furness, Sec.-Lieut. L.
-W. H. Stevenson, Sec.-Lieut. R. W. M'Kinley, Sec.-Lieut. J. Taylor,
-and 84 other ranks. The raid was completely successful and was carried
-out exactly as planned. Six German dug-outs, in which it is certain
-there were a considerable number of men, were thoroughly bombed, and
-a machine gun was blown up, while a lively bombing fight took place
-between the blocking detachments of the raiding party and the Germans.
-Having accomplished the purpose of the raid the party was withdrawn
-with the loss of one man killed and two wounded. The raid was ably
-organised by Major Peacock, and was carried out by the Officers and
-men in accordance with plan, the discipline and determination of the
-party being all that could be desired. The Divisional Commander desires
-that his congratulations should be extended to all who took part in it."
-
-Brigadier-General Hickman in a special Brigade Order says--"The
-arrangements and plans reflect the greatest credit on Colonel Ricardo,
-Major Peacock, and the Officers concerned. The whole scheme was
-executed with great dash and determination, with cool judgment and
-nerve."
-
-The following awards were issued--Major Peacock received the D.S.O.,
-Sec.-Lieutenant Stevenson the Military Cross, Sergeant Barker, D.C.M.,
-and Lance-Corporal D. Armour, M.M.
-
-[Illustration: THE RUINS OF ALBERT CATHEDRAL.]
-
-At this time an important change took place in the Command of the
-11th Battalion Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers. Lieutenant-Colonel W. F.
-Hessey was promoted to Brigadier-General, and given Command of the
-110th Infantry Brigade. His place was taken by Major G. H. Brush,
-Second in Command of the 10th Battalion (Derry Volunteers). The
-following farewell Order was issued by Lieutenant-Colonel Hessey to his
-Battalion. "Lieutenant-Colonel Hessey wishes God Speed to all members
-of the 11th Inniskillings, and thanks them for the loyal support they
-have given him from the raising of the Battalion to this day. He leaves
-the Battalion with very sincere regret, but with feelings of great
-pride that he has had the privilege of Commanding such a fine lot of
-Officers, N.C.O.'s and men, and that their "esprit de corps" has made
-the Battalion a worthy part of the 27th Inniskilling Regiment of Foot."
-During the following days we spent alternate periods in and out of
-the trenches, with little excitement to keep our spirits up. On May
-16th we again took over from the 13th Battalion Royal Irish Rifles
-(Downs), and this time a spell of beautiful weather favoured us and the
-trenches were quite dry and habitable. We had the usual machine gun
-fire at night, especially from the direction of Thiepval Chateau, also
-a large number of shrapnel shells and whizbangs fell in our Sector.
-The enemy was apparently very busy during the night on his front line
-opposite our Company. We could hear the sound of picking and shovelling
-going on, and stakes being driven into the ground. During 18th-19th
-the enemy gave us little peace, between trench mortars, heavies, and
-whizbangs. Several salvoes of shrapnel managed to do considerable
-damage to our inspection trench and Whit Church Street. During a heavy
-bombardment, while the shells went over and round us at a tremendous
-rate I was lying flat on my stomach to avoid some shrapnel that burst
-near. I looked round to see if there were any casualties among the men
-following, and noticed a head emerging from the earth which had fallen
-in all round; suddenly there was a splutter, the head moved, and a very
-solemn voice said "Boys o' boys it's aboot time the referee blew his
-whistle," his thoughts must have been far away on the Balmoral football
-ground, perhaps he was thinking of a tough fight Malone v. Queen's, in
-the old days.
-
-We were glad to notice that the German trenches opposite suffered
-severely on the retaliation of our artillery. The following nights were
-busy putting up wire and sending out patrols. On one occasion a sentry
-reported having seen an aeroplane fall in flames some distance to the
-east of Thiepval, just before it fell three planes had been observed
-very high in the air, and the sound of machine-gun fire heard coming
-from them.
-
-On the 20th there was considerable enemy machine gun activity, and a
-very large number of flares were sent up during the night from the
-German lines. At 9-30 p.m. two red flares were sent up apparently
-from the German salient opposite "Mary Redan." Immediately afterwards
-two salvoes of shrapnel were fired, and appeared to burst in the
-neighbourhood of "Mary Redan," while enemy search lights could be seen
-near Serre.
-
-During the 21st the enemy continued his constant machine gun fire, and
-at night our wiring parties were much hampered on this account, one
-being forced to come in. At 10-30 p.m. on the 22nd, red rockets were
-sent up from the German lines north of the river Ancre. Immediately
-afterwards a heavy bombardment by enemy artillery began, apparently on
-our lines in front of Thiepval, which lasted about half-an-hour. We had
-a more or less quiet day on the 23rd, and on the 24th were relieved by
-the 13th Royal Irish Rifles. "C" Company was sent to Autile, "B" to
-South Antrim Villas, and the other two Companies to Mesnil. We spent
-a pleasant few days in billets, the usual rat hunts and bathing in
-the Ancre gave plenty of amusement to the men. On May 31st we got our
-orders to join "D" Company in Martinsart, and the following day moved
-to Harponville via Bouzincourt and Varrennes, where we rejoined our
-Brigade, and started Divisional exercises on a large training ground
-known as the Clairfaye trenches. These trenches had been dug from
-aeroplane photographs, and were an exact reproduction of the German
-trenches opposite Thiepval. It was here that we heard the terrible news
-of the death of Lord Kitchener, to whose genius we owed so much. During
-our period of training the 107th Brigade held the trenches at Thiepval.
-
-[Illustration: THIEPVAL VILLAGE]
-
-On June 15th, at 3 p.m., the Battalion marched off, and with the 9th
-Royal Irish Fusiliers bivouacked in Martinsart Wood. Martinsart village
-was already occupied by numerous troops sent up in readiness for the
-great battle of the Somme. We sent working parties down to Thiepval
-wood to help in the digging of assembly trenches. Our working party was
-very unfortunate, and out of No. 11 platoon we had six men wounded,
-Miller, Lyle, Brown, Galloway, Quinn, and "B" Company also lost eleven
-men.
-
-On 17th several new Officers joined the Battalion in Martinsart Wood,
-among them Lieut. J. Marshall, posted to "B" Company, afterwards proved
-to be the only officer of the 11th Battalion who went over the top on
-the 1st July without getting wounded. All was bustle and excitement, we
-heard we were to hold the line from Thiepval Wood to La Boiselle and
-Fricourt.
-
-On 22nd the Tyrones went into the trenches. We had a fine concert in
-"D" Company Mess, and I had a last talk to the N.C.O.'s. On 23rd we
-paraded at 7-45 p.m. and marched to our trenches in Thiepval Wood.
-Our Company Officers consisted of the following--myself, in command,
-Captain Ewart, Lieutenants Vance, Ellis, Young, Carson and Murphy. It
-was a very hot march but a glorious day, and all of us were in good
-heart. "C" and "D" Companies manned the front line, with "A" and "B"
-behind, "C" holding from Elgin Avenue to Garden Gate at the head of
-Cromarty Avenue. "C" Company Headquarters were in Thurso Street, and
-Battalion Headquarters in Cromarty Avenue. On the 26th, at 2-30, we had
-planned a gas attack, but there was not much wind, and the gas did not
-go well. Young and myself happened to be the next casualties, luckily
-both of us slight. Young was gassed while on duty at a gas cylinder,
-and I got a touch of shrapnel from a whiz bang. It meant No. 29 C.C.S.
-for both of us, and very reluctantly we had to leave our men just on
-the eve of the first and greatest battle ever fought by the Division.
-
-
-
-
-PART II.
-
-THE CHARGE OF THE ULSTER DIVISION.
-
-ULSTER'S SACRIFICE.
-
-
- Ah! fair July of tear and sigh
- Sad was the news you brought
- To many an ancient noble Hall,
- And humble peasants' cot,
- Within our old courageous land
- Of honour, truth and worth
- Grave Ulster of the Iron Will,
- Proud Province of the North.
-
- H. G. Gallagher.
-
-
-The following account of the great battle is taken from different
-stories and official accounts given by Officers and men who came
-through that memorable day. It has been censored by several Commanding
-Officers in the Division, who ascertain to the correctness of it in
-detail. In a letter received by General Sir George Richardson, K.C.B.,
-commanding the Ulster Volunteer Force, from General Nugent, commanding
-the Ulster Division, the following passages occur:--
-
-"Before you get this we shall have put the value of the Ulster Division
-to the supreme test. I have no fear of the result. I am certain no
-General in the Army out here has a finer Division, fitter or keener. I
-am certain they will be magnificent in attack, and we could hardly have
-a date better calculated to inspire national traditions amongst our men
-of the North.[2] It makes me very sad to think what the price may be,
-but I am quite sure the Officers and men reck nothing of that."
-
-[Illustration: Map showing the Lines of Advance taken by Ulster
-Division, July, 1st, 1916.]
-
-Our Divisional line on the right ran through Moy and Crucifix (see
-map), and on the left from "Mary Redan" on the other side of the
-river. The 109th Brigade held the line on the extreme right, 9th
-Inniskilling Fusiliers, and 10th Inniskilling Fusiliers in front,
-with 11th Inniskilling Fusiliers and 14th Royal Irish Rifles behind.
-Of the 108th Brigade, our Battalion was on the right nearest the 10th
-Inniskilling Fusiliers, then came 13th Royal Irish Rifles with 9th
-Royal Irish Fusiliers and the 12th Royal Irish Rifles on the extreme
-left. Our Battalion formed "B" and "A" Companies in front, with "D"
-and "C" Companies in support, "C" supporting "A" on the right, "D"
-supporting "B" on the left. Our object was the line marked "Omagh"
-"Strabane." "C" Company was to consolidate "Omagh" and "A" Company
-"Strabane." "D" and "B" Companies commanded by Captain Webb and Captain
-Craig, "Strabane" and "Enniskillen". That was as far as we had to
-go, which meant consolidating the 3rd German line running through
-"Coleraine," "Portadown," "Enniskillen," "Strabane," "Omagh." The 107th
-Brigade were in support behind the 108th, and we were supported by the
-15th Battalion Royal Irish Rifles. The object of the 107th Brigade was
-then to pass through to the 4th German line, "Portrush," "Bundoran,"
-"Derry," and consolidate it. This was as far as the Division was to
-go. We were to be relieved by the 49th Division when we had "done our
-bit." After an intense bombardment the great day of battle broke in
-"sunshine and mist" the mist almost obscuring the brilliant sunshine
-as the morning advanced. The previous night had been passed quietly
-in the trenches, the enemy submitting in silence to the terrific gun
-fire. The German lines were pulverised, shells being discharged at the
-rate of 140 rounds of shell per minute. In spite of this their dug-outs
-mostly remained uninjured. For half-an-hour it seemed as if the guns
-had gathered themselves together for one grand final effort before
-the British lines should be let loose on their prey. Presently the
-mist cleared away and heavy black smoke clouds could be seen drifting
-across the German lines on a slight south-westerly breeze, the result
-of the bursting of our heavy shells. This proved small assistance to
-us later on, when, with the sun in their faces, our men advanced from
-the trenches. At seven o'clock, eight of our 'planes flying over the
-German lines were fired at, but not much damage done. The Germans still
-lying low, not a single German aviator could be seen at any time that
-morning. Soon after 7 a.m. there was a perceptible slackening of our
-fire, and at 7-30 a.m. the attack began, our gallant soldiers leapt
-from their trenches and advanced against the enemy. The very moment
-that our men slipped over the parapet they were met with a hail of
-machine-gun bullets and shrapnel played on them. It was then that
-Captain Webb, of "D" Company fell, and many others. They advanced in
-waves 50 yards apart, and were mown down like hay. "A" Company was soon
-wiped out, and "C" Company, supporting it, suffered very severely;
-but they pressed on, gaining all their objectives. By this time there
-had been a severe thinning out of officers and others in command, and
-the men, too eager, shoved on towards the 4th line very quickly, and
-got into the fire of our own artillery. Some of "B" and "D" Company
-actually got into Grandcourt. A war correspondent said: "The gallantry
-displayed by the carrying parties at this part of the fight was most
-conspicuous, and tiny escorts showed complete contempt of danger in
-bringing prisoners across an area which was being ploughed up by shell
-fire. One man, unaided, shepherded across the valley of death a party
-of fifteen Germans who showed extreme reluctance to risk the fire of
-their own guns; they wanted to lie down and wait. 'Not at all,' said
-the Ulsterman, covering them with his rifle, 'just you go across, and
-they'll look after you when you get there.' In the course of a brief
-conversation several of the prisoners said that the effect of our
-bombardment prior to the launching of the attack had been terrific.
-They had been in the front lines, and while they had a reserve supply
-of food, our barrage fire had prevented them getting any water. Their
-machine-guns, they said, had been protected by being placed in deep
-dug-outs, and were brought up and used against our troops when they
-advanced." Within an hour and a half after the opening of the battle
-our men had taken five lines of German trenches and captured several
-hundred prisoners, advancing wave after wave like an irresistible
-tide. We were in advance of the Division on our left, who were to take
-Beaumont Hamel, and consequently the whole left flank was exposed to
-batteries of machine-guns: it was through this that the 12th Battalion
-Royal Irish Rifles suffered so severely, also the 9th Royal Irish
-Rifles, who supported them. "The men advanced as if on parade; one or
-two remembering the ancient watchwords, sang out "Dolly's Brae" and
-"No Surrender," but for the most part they kept the stiff upper lip
-and clenched teeth that meant death or victory." There was no thought
-of giving way, merely duty to be done and a task to be completed. Into
-the very furnace heat of the German fire our gallant lads went, and
-as shot and shell raked their ranks, others pressed forward to take
-their places. From both flanks they were enfiladed by machine-gun
-fire. On the right, Germans lying low in dug-outs came up from the
-cellars in Thiepval village with machine-guns and poured a hail of
-bullets into the 109th Brigade and 108th Brigade from behind. "As they
-emerged from Thiepval Wood they fell in hundreds, the German fire at
-this point being protracted and perfect." The trees were slashed and
-cut till nothing but bare stumps remained. No one could cross that No
-Man's Land and escape the fire; even the wounded were shot through
-and through on the ground as they lay. The 107th Brigade, passing
-through in support to the 108th, did magnificent work. All day long
-the remnants of the battalions held on to the lines of the German
-trenches which had been captured, though nearly all the officers were
-gone, but no supplies of bombs or ammunition could be got across. In
-the evening, about six o'clock, a big German counter-attack was made,
-and we had to fall back, leaving our wounded, who were too bad to be
-moved, in dug-outs. These advanced points could not be held for long;
-the enemy might be killed and captured, but the place had developed
-into a dangerous salient, while the flanking fire from right and left
-made the position a terrible one, the Division on either side being
-held up by unsurmountable obstacles. The order to retire was given, and
-on Saturday night, July 1st, we were once more on our old front line.
-Apparently all the sacrifice had been in vain. At 1 o'clock on Sunday
-afternoon the remnants of the 107th Brigade and all that was left of
-our battalion and the 13th Royal Irish Rifles counter-attacked and
-easily retook the three German lines. The crucial point was the ridge
-that ran through "Omagh," and unless that could be held we could not
-hope to hold Serre and the line to La Boiselle. On the left, Beaumont
-Hamel commanded all, and on the right Thiepval village was the strong
-point. Unless these were captured our divisional line became a salient
-raked by machine-gun fire. The 32nd Division actually passed through
-Thiepval village, but the Germans, who were hidden in the cellars and
-concrete dug-outs, allowed them to pass, and then came up from behind,
-and the casualties were appalling. The 12th Royal Irish Rifles and the
-9th Royal Irish Fusiliers, on our left, were practically wiped out. The
-Germans staked all on holding the ridge. 70 of the 15th Royal Irish
-Rifles and 113 of our 11th Battalion answered their names on Saturday
-night, and that was before the fierce fighting of Sunday. One of the
-most remarkable facts was the enormous number of slightly wounded men
-among our casualties; and as for the medical organisation, nothing
-could surpass it; no tribute could be great enough for the divisional
-medical staff. It was a magnificently heroic fight, and one of which
-Ulster has every reason to be proud.
-
-
-
-
-THE RED HAND OF ULSTER.
-
-SOMME--JULY 1ST, 1916.
-
-
- When one great wave has shatter'd
- A coast that gleamed in light,
- We look, and share the wonder,
- Amazement and affright;
- But what can hide its grandeur,
- And what can veil its might?
-
- * * * * *
-
- On grey and heathy hillsides,
- In valleys bowered in leaves;
- In wide and flowery meadows,
- Where peaceful sheep and beeves
- Strayed thro' the days of waiting,
- No change the eye perceives.
-
- The mist-clouds veil the mountains,
- The mist-rains drift and wing
- Across the ancient castle,
- The homely cot, where cling
- The climbing sprays of woodbine,
- Where wild birds hop and sing.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Now comes the news of battle--
- The long-awaited roll
- Of our great Western rampant--
- A wall of thews, and soul--
- And Ulster's sons are writing
- Their names upon a scroll.
-
- That rain-swept mist-land gathers
- Before their eyes, as forth
- They sweep--the watched-for Ulsters,
- For honour of the North;
- For Freedom's best and dearest,
- For Britain's word and worth.
-
- That wave of Northern valour
- Is like the advancing tide,
- And nought can cool or curb it,
- And nought can change its stride;
- In "Derry," "Enniskillen,"
- And Omagh they reside!
-
- 'Tis Lurgan and Dungannon,
- Armagh and proud Belfast,
- St. Johnston, Londonderry,
- And Donegal's grey vast
- That flit before their vision
- As trench by trench is passed.
-
- The roar of bursting cannon
- Breaks voices faintly heard--
- The voices of their youth-time,
- Familiar jest and word;
- But, hark! the call is "Onward!"
- And visions grow more blurred.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Hurrah! the drive so eager,
- So long-continued, deep,
- The firmly-driven bayonet,
- The stumble and the leap
- Grow less intense; the foeman
- Has wavered in the sweep!
-
- And in the lone, grey cottage
- A trembling hand essays
- To hold the fateful message
- Which speaks a proud son's praise:
- "He nobly did his duty,
- And fell--there is a haze....."
-
- Read in another homestead--
- A loftier home, now chill;--
- The page tells of a soldier
- Who led his men, until
- There came the hue of sunset--
- He lives in honour still.
-
- "Dead," do you call these heroes?
- Dead?--who have given birth
- To all that makes life living--
- To all that is of worth;
- No, never, never write it--
- This "death" is Freedom's girth!
-
- This wounding is for homeland--
- For Britain's winsome weal--
- Through all the years advancing,
- A theme for song, a peal
- That swings in jubilation--
- How Ulster met the steel!
-
- How Ulster claimed the expected,
- Already-given cheer;
- How Ulster's hand directed
- The torch which yet shall sear
- The remnant of the Prussian,
- And make the future clear!
-
- WILLIAM J. GALLAGHER.
-
- Galdonagh, Manorcunningham,
- Co. Donegal.
-
- 10th July, 1916.
-
-(Published by permission of the Author.)
-
-
-
-
-PART III.
-
-
-In a specially written account of the part taken in the big advance of
-July 1st by the Tyrone Battalion of the Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers,
-Lieut.-Col. Ricardo, D.S.O., commander of the battalion, says:--Just
-now it is a hard struggle between pride and sorrow, and every moment
-the latter surges up, and it takes a mighty effort to keep our chins
-up; but we shall see it through and begin again, however hard. Out
-of 19 officers who went over, 12 have gone, the very best, and all
-dear pals; four came back untouched, and three wounded got back--one
-of these lay out for 24 hours, and one for 48--whilst the casualties
-in the rank and file were numerous. Early on the 1st July (the boys
-were convinced the date had been chosen for their especial benefit)
-the battle began. Every gun on both sides fired as fast as it could,
-and during that din our dear boys just walked out of the wood and up
-gaps we had cut through our parapet, and out through lanes in our
-wire. I shall never forget for one minute the extraordinary sight.
-The Derrys, on our left, were so eager they started a few minutes
-before the ordered time, and the Tyrones were not going to be left
-behind, and they got going without delay--no fuss, no shouting, no
-running; everything orderly, solid, and thorough, just like the men
-themselves. Here and there a boy would wave his hand to me as I shouted
-"good-luck" to them through my megaphone, and all had a happy face.
-Many were carrying loads. Fancy advancing against heavy fire carrying
-a heavy roll of barbed wire on your shoulders! The leading battalions
-suffered comparatively little getting out, but when they came close
-to the German front line they came under appalling machine-gun fire,
-which obliterated whole platoons. And alas! for us, the division on
-our right could not get on, and the same happened to the division
-on our left, so we came in for the concentrated fire of what would
-have been spread over three divisions. But every man who remained
-standing pressed on, and without officers or N.C.O.'s they "carried
-on," faithful to their job. Not a man turned back, not one. Eventually,
-small knots belonging to all the battalions of the Division (except
-two) gathered into the part of the German line allotted to the Division
-and began to consolidate it. Major John Peacocke, a cousin of Lady
-Carson, a most gallant and dashing officer, was sent forward after
-the advance to see how matters stood. He took charge, and gave to
-the representatives of each unit a certain task in the defence. The
-situation after the first few hours was indeed a cruel one for the
-Ulster Division. There they were, a wedge driven into the German line,
-only a few hundred yards wide, and for 14 hours they bore the brunt of
-the German machine-gun fire and shell fire from the sides; and even
-from behind they were not safe. The parties told off to deal with the
-German first and second lines had in many cases been wiped out, and the
-Germans sent parties from the flanks in behind our boys. The Division
-took 800 prisoners, and could have taken hundreds more, but could not
-handle them. Major Peacocke sent back many messages by runners. They
-asked for reinforcements, for water, and for bombs, but no one had
-any men in reserve, and no men were left to send across. We were told
-reinforcements were at hand and to hold on, but it was difficult, I
-suppose, to get fresh troops up in time. At any rate, the help did not
-come. I sent off every man I had--my own servant, my shorthand clerk,
-and so on--to get water out of the river; the pipes had long before
-been smashed. On their way, many, including both above-named, were
-killed by shell fire. At 10-30 p.m. the glorious band had to come back;
-they had reached the third line. At 8-30 a.m. they fought to the last,
-and threw their last bomb, and were so exhausted that most of them
-could not speak; and shortly after they came back, help came, and the
-line they had taken and held was re-occupied without opposition, the
-Germans, I suppose, being as exhausted as we were. Our side eventually
-lost the wedge-like bit, after some days. It was valueless, and could
-only be held at very heavy cost. We were withdrawn late on Sunday
-evening, very tired and weary. There are many instances of outstanding
-gallantry, but it is almost impossible to collect evidence. We may hear
-more of it when some of our wounded come back.
-
-
-A correspondent to the "Times" wrote:--
-
- I am not an Ulsterman, but yesterday as I followed their amazing
- attack I felt I would rather be an Ulsterman than anything else
- in the world. My position enabled me to watch the commencement
- of their attack from the wood in which they formed up, but which
- long prior to the hour of assault was being overwhelmed with shell
- fire, so that the trees were stripped and the top half of the wood
- ceased to be anything but a slope of bare stumps, with innumerable
- shell holes peppered in the chalk. It looked as if nothing could
- live in the wood, and indeed the losses were heavy before they
- started, two companies of one battalion being sadly reduced in the
- assembly trenches. When I saw the men emerge through the smoke and
- form up as if on parade, I could hardly believe my eyes. Then I saw
- them attack, beginning at a slow walk over No Man's Land, and then
- suddenly let loose as they charged over the two front lines of the
- enemy's trenches, shouting "No surrender, boys!" The enemy's fire
- raked them from the left, and machine-guns in a village enfiladed
- them on the right, but battalion after battalion came out of
- that awful wood as steadily as I have seen them at Ballykinlar,
- Clandeboye, or Shane's Castle. The enemy's third line was soon
- taken, and still the waves went on, getting thinner and thinner,
- but without hesitation. The enemy's fourth line fell before these
- men, who could not be stopped. There remained the fifth line.
- Representatives of the neighbouring corps and division, who could
- not withhold their praise at what they had seen, said no human
- man could get to it until the flanks of the Ulster Division was
- cleared. This was recognised, and the attack on the last German
- line was countermanded. The order arrived too late, or perhaps the
- Ulstermen, who were commemorating the anniversary of the Boyne,
- would not be denied, but pressed on. I could see only a small
- portion of this advance, but could watch our men work forward,
- seeming to escape the shell fire by a miracle, and I saw parties
- of them, now much reduced indeed, enter the fifth line of the
- German trenches, our final objective. It could not be held, as the
- Division had advanced into a narrow salient. The Corps on our right
- and left had been unable to advance, so that the Ulstermen were the
- target of the concentrated hostile guns and machine-guns behind
- and on both flanks, though the enemy in front were vanquished and
- retreating. The order to retire was given, but some preferred to
- die on the ground they had won so hardly. As I write, they still
- hold the German two first lines, and occasionally batches of German
- prisoners are passed back over the deadly zone; over 500 have
- arrived, but the Ulstermen took many more, who did not survive the
- fire of their own German guns. My pen cannot describe adequately
- the hundreds of heroic acts that I witnessed, nor how yesterday a
- relieving force was organised of men who had already been fighting
- for 36 hours to carry ammunition and water to the gallant garrison
- still holding on.
-
-The following letter sent to the "Times," July 3rd, is a description of
-the great day by a senior officer:--
-
- The 1st of July should for all time have a double meaning for
- Ulstermen. The attack carried out by the Ulster Division was the
- finest thing the new armies have done in this war. Observers
- from outside the Division who saw it say it was a superb example
- of discipline and courage. We had to come through a wood which
- was being literally blown to pieces, form up in successive lines
- outside of it under a devastating fire, and then advance across the
- open for 400 yards to the German first line trenches. It was done
- as if it was a parade movement on the barrack square. The losses
- were formidable before we ever reached the first line, but the men
- never faltered, and finally rushed the first line, cheering and
- shouting, "Boyne" and "No Surrender!" From then onwards they never
- checked or wavered until they reached the fifth line of German
- trenches, which was the limit of the objective laid down for us.
- They captured and brought in many hundred prisoners, and actually
- captured many more who were either killed by the German fire before
- they reached our lines, or were able to get away in the maze of
- trenches owing to the escort being knocked over. I can hardly
- bring myself to think or write of it. It was magnificent--beyond
- description. Officers led their men with a gallantry to which I
- cannot do justice, and the men followed them with equal gallantry;
- and when the officers went down, the men went on alone. The
- Division was raked by machine-gun and shell fire from in front and
- from both flanks, and our losses have been very severe.
-
-Ulster should be very proud of her sons.
-
-
-
-
-PART IV.
-
-
-Messages of tribute to the Ulster Division from:--
-
- The Corps Commander.
- The Divisional Commander.
- The Commanding Officer of the Ulster Volunteer Force.
- Sir E. Carson.
- The Lord Primate.
- The Bishop of Down.
- The Bishop of Clogher.
- Belfast.
-
-Lieut.-General Sir T. L. N. Morland, K.C.B., D.S.O., commanding the
-Army Corps in which the Ulster Division was serving, has issued the
-following order:--
-
- The General Officer Commanding the Corps wishes to express to the
- General Officer of the Division and all ranks his admiration of
- the dash and gallantry with which the attack was carried out, and
- which attained a large measure of success under very unfavourable
- conditions. He regrets the heavy and unavoidable losses sustained,
- and feels sure that after a period of rest the Division will be
- ready to respond to any call made upon it.
-
- G. WEBB,
- Brigadier-General, D.A. and Q.M.G.
-
-The General Officer Commanding the Ulster Division has issued the
-following special order:--
-
- The General Officer Commanding the Ulster Division desires that the
- Division should know that in his opinion nothing finer has been
- done in the war than the attack by the Ulster Division on July 1st.
- The leading of the company officers, the discipline and courage
- shown by all ranks of the Division will stand out in the future
- history of the war as an example of what good troops, well led, are
- capable of accomplishing. None but troops of the best quality could
- have faced the fire which was brought to bear on them, and the
- losses suffered during the advance. Nothing could have been finer
- than the steadiness and discipline shown by every battalion, not
- only in forming up outside its own trenches, but in advancing under
- severe enfilading fire. The advance across the open to the German
- line was carried out with the steadiness of a parade movement under
- a fire from front and flanks which could only have been faced
- by troops of the highest quality. The fact that the objects of
- the attack on one side were not obtained is no reflection on the
- battalions which were entrusted with the task. They did all that
- men could do, and in common with every battalion in the Division,
- showed the most conspicuous courage and devotion. On the other
- side the Division carried out every portion of its allotted task
- in spite of the heaviest losses. It captured nearly 600 prisoners,
- and carried its advance triumphantly to the limits of the objective
- laid down. There is nothing in the operations carried out by the
- Ulster Division on July 1st that will not be a source of pride to
- all Ulstermen. The Division has been highly tried, and has emerged
- from the ordeal with unstained honour, having fulfilled in every
- particular the great expectations formed of it. Tales of individual
- and collective heroism on the part of officers and men come in
- from every side, too numerous to mention, but all showing that the
- standard of gallantry and devotion attained is one that may be
- equalled but is never likely to be surpassed. The General Officer
- Commanding the Division deeply regrets the heavy losses of officers
- and men. He is proud beyond description, as every officer and man
- in the Division may well be, of the magnificent example of sublime
- courage and discipline which the Ulster Division has given to the
- Army. Ulster has every reason to be proud of the men she has given
- to the service of our country. Though many of our best men have
- gone, the spirit which animated them remains in the Division, and
- will never die.
-
-The following orders of the day have been issued by General Sir George
-Richardson, K.C.B., G.O.C., Ulster Volunteer Force:--
-
- 1. The General Officer Commanding wishes to take this opportunity
- of recording an appreciation of the gallantry of the officers and
- men of the Ulster Division. Perhaps it may serve as a solace to
- those on whom will fall the heaviest burden of sorrow, and that
- it will help to sustain them in the knowledge that duty was nobly
- done, and that the great warm heart of Ulster goes out to them in
- affectionate sympathy and takes an unfathomable and unforgettable
- pride in every man of them.
-
- 2. Perhaps more especially the officers and men U.V.F. offer their
- heartfelt sympathy to the relatives of those who fell on the 1st
- July, 1916. They were put to the supreme test, and history will
- claim its own record.
-
- 3. For those who fell in the service of their King, the Empire, and
- the glory of Ulster, we mourn, but we have no regrets. We are proud
- of our comrades. Our path of duty is clear. Every effort must be
- made to fill up the casualties in the Division, and maintain the
- glorious lead given by the brave men of Ulster.
-
- 4. The attack of this Division is already talked of outside the
- Division as a superb example of what discipline, good leading and
- magnificent spirit can make men capable of performing. Much was
- expected of the Ulster Division, and nobly they have fulfilled
- expectation.
-
- 5. I will quote from a letter received:--"There was never a sign
- of falter. On the right two battalions of the 108th, the 109th and
- the 107th swept over four successive lines of German trenches,
- capturing nearly 600 prisoners and reaching the objective laid
- down for them absolutely on the stroke of the hour fixed as the
- time they might be expected to get there. On the left the 12th
- Royal Irish Rifles made a magnificent effort, but were swept away
- by machine-gun fire. They did all that men could do. The 9th Royal
- Irish Rifles went to them, and succeeded in getting into the
- German trenches, and were held up there by weight of munition and
- machine-guns."
-
- 6. It fills me with pride to think how splendidly our men were
- capable of performing.
-
- 7. On the 30th September, 1915, His Majesty the King was graciously
- pleased to say to the Ulster Division:--"I am confident that in the
- field you will nobly uphold the traditions of the fine regiments
- whose name you bear." This mandate has been faithfully obeyed with
- a heroism and devotion that will establish a rich record in the
- annals of the British Army, and conveyed to us by the war cry of
- Ulster--"No Surrender."
-
- GEO. RICHARDSON,
- Lt.-General, G.O.C., U.V.F.
-
-Sir E. Carson has issued the following message to the Ulster people:--
-
- I desire to express, on my own behalf and that of my colleagues
- from Ulster, the pride and admiration with which we have learnt of
- the unparalleled acts of heroism and bravery which were carried out
- by the Ulster Division in the great offensive movement on July 1st.
-
- From all accounts that we have received they have made the supreme
- sacrifice for the Empire of which they were so proud, with a
- courage, coolness, and determination, in the face of the most
- trying difficulties, which has upheld the great tradition of the
- British Army. Our feelings are, of course, mingled with sorrow and
- sadness at the loss of so many men who were to us personal friends
- and comrades; but we believe that the spirit of their race will at
- a time of such grief and anxiety sustain those who mourn their loss
- and set an example to others to follow in their footsteps.
-
-His Grace the Lord Primate of All Ireland, who was in Dungannon holding
-a visitation of the clergy of the rural deaneries of Dungannon, Aghalo,
-and Tullyhogue, has given us the following message to the people of
-Ulster:--
-
- All Ireland is proud of the noble gallantry of the Ulster Division.
- I have lived amongst these officers and men for the greater
- part of my life, and I expected nothing else. They are of the
- stock from which our heroes come and to whom our Empire owes so
- much--unconquered and unconquerable.
-
- To-day our hearts are bowed with woe for their relatives at home
- who have been so grievously bereaved. For many years to come the
- gallantry of these sons of Ulster will be an inspiration to fresh
- generations of Irishmen.
-
- I spent a considerable time with them last January in France,
- and I can testify to their patience and pluck, as well as to
- their chivalry and courtesy. Oh! the wild charge they made! Their
- services for honour and truth, after they have passed on into the
- near presence of God, will never be forgotten.
-
-The Right Rev. Dr. D'Arcy, the Bishop of Down, in a message, says:--
-
- The 1st of July will for all the future be remembered as the most
- glorious in the annals of Ulster. Terrible indeed are the losses
- sustained. Many of our noblest and best young men, to whom we
- looked for help and leadership in the time to come, have given
- their lives in the service of their country and for the welfare
- of humanity. But our deep sorrow is permeated by the sense of the
- joyful exultation at their splendid heroism. They have proved
- themselves worthy of the grandest traditions of their race. They
- have, indeed, surpassed all records of ancient chivalry. Wherever
- Ulstermen go they will carry with them something of the glory
- of the great achievement of the 1st July. The spirit of willing
- sacrifice for the sake of those great ideals of liberty and
- progressive humanity which belonged to all that is best in the
- British race, and which has inspired Ulster throughout all her
- recent struggles, was never more magnificently exhibited.
-
-The Right Rev. Dr. Day, the Bishop of Clogher, writes:--
-
- I most heartily join with the Lord Primate, the Bishop of Down and
- others in offering my congratulations to the Ulster Division on
- the record of their noble deeds at the front in taking a prominent
- part in the great offensive which was begun on July 1st by the
- united forces of France and England. While we regret the heavy roll
- of casualties with which their great achievements were carried out,
- and sincerely sympathise with the sorrowing relatives of those who
- have fallen in the cause of their King and country, the "order of
- the day" issued by General Nugent is a testimony to valour and
- determination which may well rouse the admiration of everyone who
- is associated with Ulster.
-
- MAURICE CLOGHER.
-
-The following paragraph, taken from the "News-Letter," July 12th, 1916,
-shows how Belfast and the people of Ulster paid a tribute to their
-glorious dead:--
-
-"This year, for the first time in the history of the Orange Institution,
-the celebration of the anniversary of the Battle of the Boyne was
-abandoned, while the customary holidays were to a great extent
-postponed until next month, to enable the shipyards and munition works
-to complete immediate orders. At the suggestion of the Lord Mayor,
-all work, business and household, was temporarily suspended for five
-minutes following the hour of noon to-day, as a tribute to the men who
-have fallen in the great British offensive. Viewed from the City Hall,
-on the steps of which the Lord Mayor and Lady Mayoress were standing,
-the scene was most impressive. On the stroke of 12 all traffic came
-to a standstill, men raised their hats, ladies bowed their heads, the
-blinds in business and private houses were drawn, and flags were flown
-at half-mast. The bells at the Assembly Hall tolled, and after the
-interval of five minutes chimed the hymn 'Abide with Me.' Intercessory
-services were held in the Cathedral and other churches. Shortly before
-noon the following telegram was received by the Lord Mayor from Sir
-Edward and Lady Carson:--'Our prayers and solemn thoughts will be with
-you all at 12 o'clock, in memory of our illustrious dead, who have won
-glory for the Empire and undying fame for Ulster. May God bless and
-help their sorrowing families.'"
-
-[Illustration: THE EXTERIOR OF ST. RIQUIER CATHEDRAL.]
-
-
-
-
-NOTE ON ST. RIQUIER.
-
-(_Appendix I._)
-
-
-A beautiful description of St. Riquier and the foundation of the Abbey
-is given in a book by Margaret Stokes, "Three Months in the Forests of
-France."
-
- About the year 589, two Irishmen, named Caidox and Fricor,
- disembarked on the coast at the little town of Quentovic, on the
- mouth of the Somme, with twelve companions, and they followed the
- great Roman road, now called the Chaussee Brunehaut, preaching the
- Gospel on their way. They reached Centule (now St. Riquier), and
- remained there some days to rest. Some say they came to France
- with Columban, and that when Columban resumed his journey towards
- the Vosges, he left behind him these two monks that they might
- give instructions to the half-barbarous inhabitants, and initiate
- them into the mysteries of the Christian religion. "They fought
- on," said the old chronicler, "perceiving that the inhabitants of
- Centule (St. Riquier) were blinded by error and iniquity, and were
- subjected to the most cruel slavery; they laboured with all their
- strength to redeem their souls, and wash them in the Saviour's
- Blood." But the people could not understand the language of these
- heavenly messengers, and they rebelled against a teaching so
- holy and sublime. They demanded what these adventurers, who had
- just escaped out of a barbarous island, could be in search of,
- and by what right they sought to impose their laws on them. The
- voice of charity was met by cries, menaces, and outrage, and the
- natives strove to drive them from their shores by violence, when
- suddenly a young noble, named Riquier, appeared upon the scene.
- He commanded silence, and arrested the most furious amongst the
- mob, and taking the two strangers under his protection, he brought
- them into his house. He gave them food and drink, and in return
- they gave him such nourishment of the soul as he before had never
- tasted. He learned to know God and love Him beyond all things....
- When he had taken orders he became the founder of the celebrated
- Abbey of Centule (now St. Riquier), and the bodies of the two
- Irishmen from whom he had learned Christianity were interred with
- splendour in this church. When St. Angelbert, in the year 799,
- restored this church, he also restored the half-ruined tombs,
- decorated their shrines with such magnificence, and inscribed
- verses upon them in letters of gold. The relics of the two saints
- lay beneath the monument till the year 1070, when St. Geroinus
- transferred them to a silver shrine adorned with precious stones,
- and in this shrine also were laid the relics of another Irish
- saint, Mauguille. Their festival is celebrated on June 3rd. On the
- road from Abbeville to Doullens, on the edge of the wood of St.
- Riquier, and below the slope of a smiling hill, an ancient church,
- majestically seated in the valley below, comes into view. It is
- the Abbey Church of St. Riquier. The town rises from the foot of
- the church like an amphitheatre round the enclosure of its ancient
- walls. The great tower rises above the fertile fields around and
- above the summits of the distant hills and woodland glades. The
- little stream of Seardon, which almost threatens to disappear at
- its very source, passes through the lower town and on towards the
- south-west. The old chroniclers called it Reviere au Cardons, from
- the little flower cardoon. This little thread of water, rising at
- Bonnefontaine, under Isinbard's tomb, is swelled by the junction
- with the river Mirandeuil, or Misendeuil, a name derived from the
- fact that it was at this spot the ladies of St. Riquier first heard
- the fatal news that their husbands had fallen in the Battle of
- Crecy.... The labours of the Irish Church in Picardy, commenced
- by these two missionaries, Caidox and Fricor, and carried on by
- the disciples of Columban from Luxeuil, were destined to receive
- a fresh impetus from the parent country. Another mission, this
- time from the shores of Lough Corrib, in Galway, was undertaken.
- Fursa and his twelve companions, who landed at Mayoc, at the mouth
- of the river Somme, A.D. 638, went up the river to St. Riquier,
- a monastery in which he must have found traditions of his native
- Church.
-
-[Illustration: THE INTERIOR OF ST. RIQUIER CATHEDRAL.]
-
-[Illustration: OFFICERS 11th BATTALION ROYAL IRISH RIFLES. July. 1915
-
-_Top Row_--Lieut. Waring, 2nd Lieut. Ellis, 2nd Lieut. P. B. Thornely,
-Lieut. F. G. Hull, 2nd Lieut. D. J. Brown, Lieut. E. Vance, Lieut. R.
-H. Neill (Assistant Adjutant), 2nd Lieut. C. C. Canning.
-
-_Second Row_ (_standing_)--Lt. and Q.M. W. L. Devoto, Lieut. R.
-Thompson (Transport Officer), Lieut. C. F. K. Ewart, 2nd Lieut. C. G.
-F. Waring, 2nd. Lieut. S. A. M'Neill, 2nd Lieut. D. S. Priestly, 2nd
-Lieut. W. C. Boomer, 2nd Lieut. T. H. Wilson, 2nd Lieut. G. O. Young
-(Scout Officer), Lieut. K. M. Moore, Lieut. M. C. Graham (Medical
-Officer), Captain S. D. B. Masters.
-
-_Third Row_ (_sitting_)--Captain Smyth, Capt. C. C. Craig, M.P.,
-Capt. A. P. Jenkins, Capt. R. Rivers Smyth (Brigade Major, 108th Inf.
-Brigade), Major P. L. K. Blair Oliphant (2nd in Command), Lt.-Col. H.
-A. Pakenham (Commanding), Major W. D. Deverell (Adjutant), Capt. O. B.
-Webb, Capt. A. F. Charley, Capt. A. P. I. Samuels.
-
-_Two Officers sitting in front_--2nd Lieut. C. H. H. Orr, 2nd Lieut. J.
-C. Carson.]
-
-
-
-
-Biographies of Officers of 11th Royal Irish Rifles (South Antrim
-Volunteers,) who were killed or wounded during the Battle of the Somme.
-
-
-_In some cases Photographs could not be obtained_.
-
-[Illustration: CAPTAIN C. C. CRAIG.
-
-Commanding B Company; wounded and prisoner; M.P. for South Antrim.]
-
-[Illustration: MAJOR A. P. JENKINS, Lisburn.
-
-Commanding A Company; wounded and prisoner; first reported missing;
-received Commission as Captain in 11th Royal Irish Rifles, September,
-1914, served in France till July 1st, 1916, when wounded and made
-prisoner, released from Germany owing to wounds in December, 1916,
-spent from December, 1916, till November, 1917, as a repatriated
-prisoner of war in Switzerland, returned to England November, 1917.]
-
-[Illustration: CAPTAIN O. B. WEBB.
-
-Commanding D Company, killed in action; son of the late Mr. Charles J.
-Webb, J.P., the Old Bleach Linen Company, Randalstown.]
-
-[Illustration: CAPTAIN A. P. I. SAMUELS.
-
-Commanding C Company; wounded during bombardment previous to advance,
-afterwards killed at Messines, September, 1916; son of the Right Hon.
-Mr. Justice Samuels.]
-
-[Illustration: CAPTAIN E. F. SMITH.
-
-Wounded; son of Mr. Smith of Banbridge; before the war was an officer
-in the Lisburn contingent of the U.V.F.]
-
-[Illustration: LIEUT. E. B. VANCE.
-
-Died of wounds a prisoner in Germany; C Company; son of the late Mr.
-William Vance, Antrim.]
-
-[Illustration: CAPTAIN CECIL EWART.
-
-Killed in action; second in command of C Company; he took Command of
-the Company after Captain Samuels was wounded. Captain Ewart is the
-second son of Mr. F. W. Ewart, Derryvolgie, Lisburn.]
-
-[Illustration: LIEUT. R. H. NEILL.
-
-Killed; only son of Mr. Reginald Neill, Colingrove, Dunmurry;
-educated at Mourne Grange, Kilkeel, Co. Down, and Malvern College,
-Worcestershire. He was formerly an officer in the 2nd Batt. South
-Antrim Regiment, U.V.F.]
-
-[Illustration: LIEUT. W. ELLIS.
-
-C Company; wounded; son of Mr. Ellis, Toomebridge.]
-
-[Illustration: LIEUT. G. O. YOUNG.
-
-C Company, Scout Officer; gassed in bombardment previous to advance;
-son of Mr. George L. Young, J.P., Culdaff House, Co. Donegal, and
-Millmount, Randalstown.]
-
-[Illustration: SEC.-LIEUT. B. W. GAMBLE.
-
-A Company; wounded; son of Mr. Baptist Gamble, 2 Elmwood Avenue,
-G.W.R., Belfast.]
-
-[Illustration: SEC.-LIEUT. G. N. HUNTER.
-
-Wounded; second son of Mr. Samuel Hunter, Gracepark Gardens, Dublin,
-Public Valuer to His Majesty's Treasury in Ireland.]
-
-[Illustration: SEC.-LIEUT. E. DANIEL.
-
-Shell-shock; son of Mr Daniel, Dungannon.]
-
-[Illustration: SEC.-LIEUT. J. W. SALTER.
-
-B Company; prisoner; first reported killed.]
-
-[Illustration: SEC.-LIEUT. C. J. H. SAMUELS.
-
-D Company; wounded; nephew of the Right Hon. Mr. Justice Samuels.]
-
-[Illustration: SEC.-LIEUT. F. B. THORNELY.
-
-Wounded; B Company; nephew of Major Blair Oliphant, second in Command
-of the Battalion; received his commission from Uppingham School.]
-
-[Illustration: SEC.-LIEUT. J. C. CARSON.
-
-C Company; wounded; only son of Mr. J. Carson, of Parkmount, Lisburn,
-and the Stock Exchange, Belfast.]
-
-[Illustration: SEC.-LIEUT. J. C. ORR.
-
-Wounded; son of Mr. J. C. Orr, Londonderry. Was in the Hong Kong and
-Shanghai Bank, London, before the war. He was with the 108th Brigade
-Trench Mortar Battery during the advance.]
-
-[Illustration: SEC.-LIEUT. C. R. B. MURPHY.
-
-Wounded; son of the Rev. Dr. Murphy, Rector of St. George's Parish
-Church, Belfast.]
-
-[Illustration: SEC.-LIEUT. D. S. PRIESTLY.
-
-Killed, attached 108th Brigade Machine Gun Corps. This officer had been
-with D Company until January, 1916.]
-
-[Illustration: SEC.-LIEUT. W. C. BOOMER.
-
-D Company, Lisburn; wounded previous to July 1st.]
-
-[Illustration: SEC.-LIEUT. BRAMHAL.
-
-Wounded during bombardment previous to advance.]
-
-[Illustration: SEC.-LIEUT. S. WARING.
-
-A Company, Glenavy; wounded previous to July 1st.]
-
-SEC.-LIEUT. W. P. VINT.
-
-Wounded; was with the Machine Gun Company, 108th Brigade.
-
-
-
-
-ORDERS No. 237.
-
-
- By Lieut.-Col. H. A. Pakenham, Commanding 11th (Service) Battalion
- Royal Irish Rifles (South Antrim Regiment).
-
- 16th July, 1916.
-
-
- 313 CASUALTIES.
- KILLED--1/7/16.
-
-
- "A" COMPANY.
-
- Cpl. Dunlop, Q.
- L/Cpl. Lennox, F. J.
- R'man. Allen, W. J.
- " Clelland, G.
- " Harvey, J.
- " Marks, R.
- " Morrow, R.
- " Leckey, W.
-
-
- "B" COMPANY.
-
- R'man. Bell, H.
- " Brown, E.
- " Gaussen, C. L.
- " Haddock, T.
- Cpl. Lunn, J.
- R'man. Lewis, E.
- L/Cpl. M'Kechnie, R.
- R'man. M'Keown, W.
- " Neill, J.
- Cpl. Stewart, P. M.
- L/Cpl. Walker, G. F.
- R'man. Welch, Alex.
-
-
- "C" COMPANY.
-
- Sgt. Buick, J.
- R'man. Andrews, J.
- " Knox, F.
- " Magill, R. D.
- " Pollock, A.
- " Wallace, J.
-
-
- "D" COMPANY.
-
- C.S.M. Bell, J.
- L/Sgt. Bell, J.
- L/Cpl. Foster, J. B.
- " Cathcart, T.
- R'man. Ansell, J.
- " Dunleavy, J.
- " Gorman, D.
- " Hoy, S.
- " Harper, J.
- " Morrow, J.
- " M'Clean, J.
- " M'Mullen, J.
- " M'Clughan, R.
- " M'Gimpsey, J.
- " Nixon, R. W.
- " Robinson, E.
- " Smith, R.
- " Sloan, W.
- " Steadman, J.
- " Stephenson, J.
- " Toman, H.
- " White, J.
- " Weir, W.
-
-
- DIED FROM WOUNDS.
-
- R'man. Boyd, D.
-
-
- 614 CASUALTIES.
- WOUNDED--1/7/16.
-
-
- "A" COMPANY.
-
- Sgt. Abbott, J.
- " Patton, J.
- L/Sgt. Gillespie, G.
- " Beattie, V.
- L/Cpl. Atkinson, M.
- " Kerr, A.
- " Lynch, E. W.
- Upd.
- L/Cpl. M'Neice, E.
- L/Cpl. Corkin, W.
- R'man. Allen, S.
- " Beck, J.
- " Bell, R.
- " Buchanan, J.
- " Barrons, A.
- " Conway, W. C.
- " Corkin, J.
- " Connaughty, R.
- " Dodds, S.
- " Frazer, R.
- " Fulton, J.
- " Hawthorne, J.
- " Hunter, R.
- " Keery, S.
- " Lavery, Jas.
- " Lavery, John
- " Lewis, G.
- " Logan, W. J.
- " Lyness, C.
- " Maginess, W.
- " Morgan, J.
- " Murdock, J.
- " Morrison, T. G.
- " Mulligan, D.
- " Mulholland, C.
- " M'Cann, E.
- " M'Cann, J.
- " Matier, R. (2)
- " M'Neice, J. (1)
- " Orr, W.
- " Patterson, T.
- " Reid, J. E.
- " Salley, R.
- " Sewell, F.
- " Smyth, W.
- " Spratt, S.
- " Steele, J.
- " Semple, W.
- " Savage, E.
- " Ward, T.
- " Watson, A.
- " Weir, A.
- " M'Gorkin, R.
- " Hillis, J.
- " Hanna, B.
- " Coburn, J.
- " Abbott, T.
- " Agnew, J.
- " Atkinson, T.
- " Beattie, E.
- " Cassidy, J.
- " Chapman, Jas.
- " Fox, W. J.
- " Herron, J.
- " Hanna, R.
- " Murdock, T.
- " Rainey, S.
- " Williamson, R.
- " Watson, C.
- " Beattie, R.
- " Freeland, S.
-
-
- "B" COMPANY.
-
- R'man. Benson, A.
- " Blakes, T.
- " Bleaks, W.
- " Briggs, R.
- " Bryson, S.
- Sgt. Burke, F. G.
- L/Cpl. Crawford, W. J.
- R'man. Curry, W.
- " Crowe, J.
- " Crozier, W.
- " Dickson, C.
- " Dodds, J.
- " Duff, J.
- " Foreman, J.
- L/Cpl. Gill, D.
- R'man. Green, T.
- " Hawthorne, A.
- " Hill, S.
- L/Cpl. Hull, W. J.
- R'man. Hyndman, R. J.
- " Lewis, W.
- " Moore, R.
- " Mulholland, T. J.
- Sgt. Munn, H.
- R'man. Maybin, J.
- " Moody, T.
- " Marshall, G.
- Sgt. M'Clenahan, W. J.
- R'man. M'Cormick, J.
- " M'Donald, J.
- " M'Gurk, J.
- " M'Henry, J.
- " M'Knight, R.
- " M'Williams, F.
- " M'Williams, J.
- " M'Gall, J.
- " M'Cluskey, W.
- " O'Neill, J.
- " Patterson, T.
- " Ramsey, J.
- L/Cpl. Rennix, E.
- R'man. Scott, H.
- " Spears, D.
- " Smith, A.
- " Thompson, J.
- " Trousdale, G.
- " Verner, T.
- Sgt. Waring, G. D.
- R'man. Webb, H.
- " Webb, Jos.
- " Woods, J.
- " Woods, A. C.
- " Rea, S.
- " Dowling, A.
- " Matchett, J. H.
-
-
- "C" COMPANY.
-
- Sgt. Steele, M.
- " Kelly, A.
- " Whiteside, A.
- " Kernaghan, J.
- L/Sgt. Swann, J.
- Cpl. Flemming, H.
- " M'Burney, J.
- A/Cpl. M'Burney, T.
- L/Cpl. Reid, B.
- " Crookes, C. E.
- " Wallace, J.
- " O'Neill, J.
- R'man. Andrews, R. J.
- " Alderdice, R.
- " Bates, R.
- " Campbell, S.
- " Cullen, W.
- " Doole, I.
- " Dawson, J.
- " Ewart, H.
- " Ewart, H.
- " Esler, R.
- " Foster, W.
- " Greer, A.
- " Gillespie, J.
- " Hamilton, J.
- " Hughes, J.
- " Hamilton, T.
- " Hanlon, A. T.
- " Harvey, J. S.
- " Hume, J.
- " Kirkpatrick, S.
- " Harbinson, A.
- " M'Cammond, J.
- " Linton, W.
- " Millar, J.
- " Moore, J.
- " Magill, T.
- " Milligan, J.
- " Manning, R. J.
- " M'Kee, J.
- " M'Lean, W.
- " M'Connell, J.
- Upd.
- L/Cpl. M'Grugan, H.
- R'man. M'Clay, S.
- " M'Calmont, W. J.
- " Nicholl, S.
- " Patterson, J.
- " Sterling, D.
- " Storey, D.
- " Sergeant, T.
- " Shannan, A.
- " Stewart, J.
- " Thompson, S.
- " Thompson, J.
- " Wallace, A.
- " Woods, R.
- " Young, W.
- " Young, S.
- " Scullion, J.
- L/Cpl. Eakin, T.
- R'man. Bailey, W.
- " Millar, J.
- " Mulree, J.
-
-
- "D" COMPANY.
-
- Sgt. Higginson, W.
- " Mercer, J.
- Cpl. Matier, T.
- " Adamson, R. M.
- L/Cpl. O'Neill, E.
- " Wallace, W.
- " Shaw, J.
- " Allen, W.
- R'man. Ayre, S.
- " Adair, G.
- " Adair, B.
- " Adams, K. G.
- " Allen, D.
- " Ashe, E.
- " Boomer, R.
- " Boggs, J.
- " Calvert, W.
- " Christie, J.
- " Corkin, T.
- " Cochrane, G.
- " Cunningham, D.
- " Duffy, R. J.
- " Dalton, A.
- " Doole, G.
- " Dickson, S.
- " Dawson, A.
- " Fleming, W.
- " Harbinson, R.
- " Horner, J.
- " Hill, S.
- " Johnston, W.
- " Johnston, H.
- " Kennedy, G.
- " Leathem, W.
- " Stratton, W. J.
- " Jenkins, T.
- " Lowery, J.
- " Kerr, J.
- " Lyttle, J.
- " Millar, B.
- " M'Pherson, R.
- " M'Kee, J.
- " M'Kibben, R. M.
- " M'Cloy, W.
- " M'Kibben, L.
- " M'Dowell, W.
- " Martin, T.
- " Mawhinney, S.
- " M'Connell, W.
- " M'Garth, J.
- " M'Ilroy, H.
- " M'Dowell, D.
- " Neeson, J.
- " Peel, A.
- " Russell, J.
- " Ringland, G.
- " Rodgers, J.
- " Steele, J.
- " Stewart, W.
- " Smyth, W. J.
- " Smith, W.
- " Shields, S.
- " Todd, J.
- " M'Clelland, S.
- " Ingram, H.
-
-
- 615 MISSING
-
-
- "A" COMPANY.
-
- R'man. Chambers, J.
- " Cowan, Jos.
- " Doherty, A.
- " Davidson, J. H.
- " Emerson, D.
- " Freeland, S.
- " Kerr, D.
- " Kain, W.
- " Kidd, Jas.
- " Lightbody, J.
- " Logan, T.
- " Lyttle, S.
- " Russell, W.
- " Singleton, T.
- " Topping, S.
- " Totten, W.
- " Wright, W.
- " Kidd, R.
-
-
- "B" COMPANY.
-
- R'man. Beattie, G.
- " Blakely, S.
- " Bruce, W. J.
- Cpl. Cairns, E.
- Sgt. Cairns, T. G.
- R'man. Crowe, J.
- " Gordon, R.
- " Green, J.
- " Hawthorne, T.
- " Herron, W.
- " Henninger, W.
- " Hanna, D.
- " Irvine, W.
- " Kidd, G.
- " Kennedy, R. J.
- " Kennedy, R.
- " Logan, T.
- " Lowry, H.
- " Lyness, J.
- " Marks, T.
- " Murdock, H.
- Upd.
- L/Cpl. Murphy, T.
- R'man. Morrow, J.
- " Morrow, R. J.
- " M'Ilhatton, R.
- " M'Larnon, G.
- " Patterson, W.
- " Reid, D.
- " Stevenson, J.
- " Semple, S.
- " Sample, S. J.
- " Tollerton, R.
- " Wills, S.
-
-
- "C" COMPANY.
-
- Sgt. Stewart, W.
- " Miller, W.
- L/Cpl. Scott, J.
- " Ellis, S.
- R'man. Anderson, W. H.
- " Bell, A.
- " Clarke, A.
- " Coulter, J.
- " Drennan, R.
- " Dyers, J.
- " Derby, G.
- " Graham, D.
- " Greer, A.
- " Houston, W.
- " Linton, H.
- " Lyttle, F.
- " Marshall, A.
- " Mairs, E.
- " M'Dowell, J.
- " M'Fall, J.
- " Newell, T.
- " Nelson, W.
- " Orr, J.
- " Smith, W. J.
- " Wilkinson, W.
-
-
- "D" COMPANY.
-
- Sgt. Lavery, G.
- A/Cpl. Moore, W.
- Cpl. Glendinning, D.
- " Williamson, W. J.
- Upd.
- L/Cpl. Purdy, R.
- " M'Aleece, J.
- " Smyth, J.
- " Robinson, W.
- R'man. Bushe, S.
- " Bell, A.
- " Easton, S.
- " Goudy, J.
- " Heaney, T.
- " Logan, W.
- " Moore, H.
- " M'Curdy, W.
- " Moore, J.
- " M'Allister, J.
- " Patterson, R.
- " Skillen, W.
- " Thompson, J.
- " Williamson, A.
- " Wilson, T.
- " Hamill, J.
- " Graham, J.
- R'man. Boyd, W.
- " Boyd, D.
- " Henderson, J.
- Upd.
- L/Cpl. Millar, S.
-
-
- PRISONER OF WAR.
-
- R'man. Fisher, J.
- " Walker, H.
- " Frouten, A.
-
- ADJUTANT,
-
- 11th (S.) Bn. R.Ir.Rif.
-
-
-
-
-Embarkation List of Officers
-
-
-Embarkation List of Officers 11th Royal Irish Rifles who left Bordon
-Camp for France, October, 1915.
-
- Lieut.-Col. H. A. Pakenham, Commanding Officer.
- Major P. Blair Oliphant.
- Major Devonish Deverell, Adjutant.
- Lieut. R. Thompson, Transport Officer.
- Capt. Graham, Medical Officer.
- Lieut. F. Hull.
- Lieut. Devoto, Quartermaster.
-
-
-"A" COMPANY.
-
- Major A. P. Jenkins.
- Capt. E. F. Smith.
- Capt. C. Ewart.
- Lieut. C. G. F. Waring.
- Lieut. T. G. Thornely.
- Lieut. S. Waring.
-
-
-"B" COMPANY.
-
- Captain C. C. Craig.
- Captain A. T. Charley.
- Lieut. R. N. Neill.
- Lieut. Wilson.
- Lieut. Webb.
-
-
-"C" COMPANY.
-
- Major Cavendish Clark.
- Lieut. Vance.
- Captain A. P. I. Samuels.
- Lieut. Ellis.
- Lieut. Young.
- Lieut. Vint.
-
-
-"D" COMPANY.
-
- Captain O. B. Webb.
- Captain Masters.
- Lieut. Canning.
- Lieut. Waring.
- Lieut. W. C. Boomer.
- Lieut. Priestly.
-
-
-
-
-Embarkation List of N.C. Officers & Men.
-
-
- Sgt. Abbott, James
- R'man. Abbott, Thomas
- " Abbott, Wm. Robert
- " Allen, Samuel
- " Allen, Wm. John
- " Andrews, James
- " Andrews, James
- " Andrews, Thomas
- " Atkinson, Moses
- " Atkinson, Thomas
- " Adams, R.
- " Adams, John
- " Addis, David
- " Addis, Henry
- " Agnow, Edward
- " Andrews, William
- " Adams, Henry
- " Adams, James Alex.
- " Adams, Oliver
- " Allen, John
- " Anderson, Samuel A.
- " Anderson, Wm. Hy.
- L/Cpl. Andrews, Robt. John
- R'man. Ardery, Francis
- " Armstrong, William
- " Adair, Ben
- " Adair, George
- " Adams, Kenneth K.
- " Adams, Robert
- " Adamson, Robt. M'K.
- " Addis, James
- Cpl. Addis, Wm. Hy.
- R'man. Allen, William
- " Anderson, John Jos.
- " Ansell, John
- " Archer, Bertie
- " Ashe, Edward
- " Ayre, Samuel
- " Baxter, Isaac
- " Beattie, Ernest
- " Beattie, Robert
- Cpl. Beattie, Victor
- R'man. Beck, James
- " Bell, Robert
- " Bingham, William
- L/Cpl. Black, James
- R'man. Blakley, Edward Chas.
- " Boyd, David
- Sgt. Breathwaite, Samuel
- R'man. Brown, George
- " Brown, Isaac
- " Brown, Samuel
- " Buchanan, John
- C.Q.M.S. Bullick, Edwin
- L/Sgt. Bullick, Wm. Parker
- R'man. Barr, David Geo.
- " Barr, John Nathaniel
- " Beattie, George
- " Beck, Hg. Hy
- " Bell, Hy.
- " Bell, John
- L/Cpl. Brown, Samuel
- R'man. Benson, Albert
- L/Cpl. Benson, John
- R'man. Birney, Thomas
- " Black, William
- " Blakes, Thomas
- " Blakely, Alexander
- " Blakely, Samuel
- " Blakely, Thomas
- " Bleaks, William
- " Bloomfield, Sl.
- " Briggs, Robert
- " Brown, Edmund
- " Brown, George
- Cpl. Brown, James
- R'man. Brown, John
- " Brown, Samuel
- " Bruce, Albert E. G.
- " Bruce, William
- " Bruce, William
- " Bryans, David
- " Bryson, Samuel
- L/Sgt. Burke, Fk. Geo.
- R'man. Bankhead, Robt.
- " Barbour, Robt.
- " Barkley, Arthur
- " Bates, Robert
- " Beattie, Robert
- " Beattie, Robt. Jas.
- " Beattie, William
- " Beck, James
- " Bell, Andrew
- " Boyd, David
- " Brown, Fred Chas.
- " Brown, John
- " Brown, John
- " Brown, Robert
- Sgt. Buick, Jackson
- R'man. Buick, James
- " Burrowes, Hy.
- " Barkely, James
- " Beggs, James
- " Bell, Andrew
- " Bell, Alexander
- " Bell, Joseph
- C.S.M. Bell, John
- R'man. Bell, William
- " Brides, Michael
- " Brown, James
- Cpl. Bushe, James Hy.
- R'man. Campbell, Wm. Saml.
- C.M.S. Caton, Jack
- R'man. Ceaser, Hugh
- " Clarke, Arthur
- " Cairns, Robert
- " Calvert, William
- " Campbell, James
- " Campbell, John Hy.
- " Caskery, Francis
- " Cathcart, Thomas
- " Chapman, Jos.
- " Chapman, William
- " Christie, Jos.
- " Clarke, Hugh
- " Clarke, William
- " Clarke, Wm. Robt.
- " Cooper, William
- " Coulter, James
- Sgt. Chambers, Jas. Orr
- R'man. Chambers, Robert
- " Chapman, David
- " Chapman, James
- L/Cpl. Chapman, Joseph
- R'man. Chapman, William
- " Clarke, Chas.
- " Clarke, George
- Sgt. Clarke, Joseph
- R'man. Cleland, George
- " Coburn, James
- " Coburn, John
- " Collington, Edward
- " Connolly, John
- " Connor, James
- " Conway, William Chas.
- " Cordiner, Samuel
- " Cordner, George
- " Cordiner, Thomas
- Cpl. Corkin, Hy.
- R'man. Corkin, John J.
- Cpl. Corken, Robert J.
- R'man. Corkin, William
- " Corry, John
- " Cowan, Albert Wm.
- " Cowan, Joseph
- " Cowan, Samuel
- " Cowan, Thomas
- " Creighton, Robert
- " Crone, William
- " Crowe, Francis
- " Coulter, Thomas
- " Craig, Alexander
- " Craig, David
- L/Cpl. Crooks, Chas. Edward
- R'man. Crooks, Cecil
- " Cullen, William
- " Campbell, Edward
- " Cassidy, Joseph
- Cpl. Cathcart, David
- R'man. Chambers, James
- Cpl. Cairns, Edward
- R'man. Cairns, Samuel
- Sgt. Cairns, Thos. John
- R'man. Campbell, John
- C.Q.M.S. Campbell, William
- R'man. Carson, Robert
- " Carson, William
- " Caughey, Joseph
- " Chapman, Arthur
- " Clarke, Alfred James
- " Clarke, John
- " Clay, John
- " Colvin, Robert John
- " Crawford, William Jas.
- Sgt. Cree, John
- L/Cpl. Crockard, James
- Cpl. Croft, John
- R'man. Crone, Richard
- " Crothers, James
- " Crothers, Robt. James
- " Crowe, Fred
- " Crowe, John
- " Crowe, Thomas
- " Crozier, William
- Sgt. Crump, William
- R'man. Curry, William
- R'man. Christie, William John
- Sgt. Clarke, William
- Sgt. Clendinning, John
- R'man. Cochrane, George
- " Colvin, Samuel
- " Corken, Thomas
- " Cowan, Archie
- " Craig, James
- " Cunningham, Dl.
- " Currie, Robert
- " Dalton, David
- " Davidson, James Hall
- " Dodds, Samuel
- " Doherty, Alexander
- Sgt. Donnelly, James
- R'man. Douglas, Saml. James
- " Dowds, Joseph Hy.
- " Dowling, Albert
- " Drennan, David
- L/Cpl. Dunlop, Quinton
- R'man. Dunlop, William
- " Davison, Clem.
- " Dawson, John
- " Dempster, George
- " Dobbin, William H.
- " Doole, Isaac
- " Doole, William John
- " Drennan, Robert
- " Dalton, Arthur
- " Dalton, Thomas
- " Dennison, David
- " Dick, Samuel
- " Dickson, Samuel
- " Dole, George
- " Doyle, James Hy.
- " Duffy, Robert John
- " Dunleavy, James
- " Dickson, Chas.
- Sgt. Dickson, William G.
- R'man. Dodds, John
- " Doherty, Samuel
- " Dowling, Abraham
- " Duff, Joseph
- " Dunbar, Francis
- " Ederton, Henry
- " Elkin, Hugh Kelly
- " English, Alexander
- " English, William Jas.
- L/Cpl. Ewart, William Henry
- " Eakin, Thomas
- " Edgar, John
- R'man. Elliott, Samuel
- " Ellis, Samuel
- " English, Thomas
- " Erwin, Frank
- " Esler, Robert
- " Ewart, Henry
- " Ewart, Henry
- " Ellis, William
- " English, Thomas
- " English, Joseph
- Cpl. Fleming, Henry
- L/Cpl. Fleming, Robert
- R'man. Fleming, Thomas
- " Foster, William
- " Francey, Robt. James
- " French, George
- " French, John
- " Finlay, Hy.
- L/Cpl. Fleming, John
- " Fleming, Samuel
- R'man. Foster, Allen
- " Foster, John B.
- " Francey, William Jn.
- " Fullerton, Francis
- " Fleming, James
- " Fenton, John
- " Ferrin, Joseph
- " Flannagan, William
- " Fleming, William
- " Fox, William John
- " Foye, Silias
- " Fraser, Robert
- " Freeland, Samuel
- L/Cpl. Fulton, John
- R'man. Ferguson, Andrew
- L/Cpl. Fisher, David
- R'man. Fisher, Joseph
- " Foreman, Joseph
- " Forsythe, Fred
- " Forsythe, James
- " Frayer, George
- " Frazer, Robert
- " Gorman, James
- " Gausson, Chas. F.
- " Geddis, David
- " Gill, David
- " Gill, William
- " Gillian, William
- " Gillian, William
- " Gordon, Robert
- " Graham, Thomas
- Sgt. Graham, William Jn.
- R'man. Green, Thomas
- " Greene, Joseph
- L/Sgt. Gillespie, George
- R'man. Gill, Robert
- " Gorman, John
- Sgt. Goulding, Fred E.
- R'man. Gaston, Alex.
- " Gilmore, Thomas
- " Gowdy, Alex.
- " Graham, James
- " Graham, William
- " Graham, William Jn.
- " Grattan, Hugh
- " Gray, Robt. Jn.
- " Gregory, Joseph
- " Griffin, Martin
- " Galbraith, William
- " Galway, Alex.
- L/Cpl. Gleghorn, David
- R'man. Goudy, Jos.
- L/Cpl. Gourlay, David
- C.Q.M.S. Gourlay, David H. J.
- R'man. Graham, David
- " Graham, William
- " Greene, David
- " Greene, William John
- " Greer, Archibald
- L/Cpl. Glendinning, Dd.
- R'man. Gordon, James
- " Gorman, Daniel
- L/Cpl. Gorman, Phillip
- R'man. Goudy, James
- " Goudy, Jos. Hy.
- " Graham, John
- " Graham, Robert
- " Gray, Samuel
- Cpl. Gray, William
- Sgt. Gregg, Samuel
- R'man. Hanna, Boyd
- " Hanna, Fk. James
- " Hanna, Robert
- " Harvey, John
- " Haslett, George
- " Hawthorn, James
- " Hayes, William James
- " Heasley, William
- " Herron, John
- " Higginson, William Jas.
- " Hill, Thomas Robert
- " Hillis, John
- " Hodgin, John
- " Holmes, George
- " Hull, George Hy.
- " Hunter, Robert
- " Hamill, John
- Sgt. Harbinson, James
- R'man. Harbinson, Rd.
- " Harbinson, William
- R.S.M. Hall, Isaac
- R'man. Heaney, Thomas
- " Heaney, William E.
- " Hyndman, James
- " Hyndman, Robt. Jn.
- " Hailhwaite, C. J. G. M.
- " Hamill, John Edward
- Cpl. Hamill, Samuel
- R'man. Hamilton, Francis
- " Hamilton, James
- " Hamilton, Thomas J.
- " Hanlon, Alex. T.
- " Hanna, Robert
- " Hanna, James
- L/Cpl. Hannon, James
- R'man. Hannon, Samuel
- " Harvey, Jos. S.
- " Henderson, John
- Cpl. Herdman, James
- R'man. Hewitt, William John
- " Hogg, James
- " Houston, John
- " Houston, Robert
- " Houston, Robert
- " Hughes, James
- L/Cpl. Hume, James
- R'man. Ingram, Henry
- " Irvine, David
- " Irvine, John
- " Irvine, James
- " Irvine, John
- " Irvine, Robert
- " Irvine, William
- " Johnston, George
- " Jenkins, Thomas
- " Johnston, David
- L/Cpl. Johnston, George
- Sgt. Jamison, John
- R'man. Jefferson, Walter
- " Johnston, John
- " Johnston, William
- " Jackson, Samuel
- " Johnston, John
- " Johnston, Robert
- " Johnston, William
- " Linton, William
- " Linton, John
- " Lyle, Samuel
- " Lyttle, Francis
- " Lyttle, Thomas
- " Lamont, William
- " Lamour, Alex.
- Cpl. Lavery, Alex.
- R'man. Lavery, James
- " Lavery, John
- Sgt. Lavery, William
- R'man. Lavery, William John
- L/Cpl. Leathem, John
- R'man. Leathem, William
- " Leckey, William
- " Lennox, Fk. John
- " Lewis, George
- " Logan, Thomas
- " Lynass, Matt
- " Lynch, Edward Watson
- " Lyness, Chas.
- " Lyness, Thomas
- " Lyttle, Samuel
- " Lightbody, James
- " Lavery, Joseph
- " Lennon, James
- " Lewis, Edward
- " Lockhart, Robert
- " Logan, Thomas
- " Long, Richardson
- " Lowery, Henry
- Sgt. Lavery, George
- L/Cpl. Leach, Arnold
- R'man. Leathem, William
- " Lennon, Osmond
- " Lewis, James
- Cpl. Lindop, Charles
- R'man. Lindsay, Hugh
- " Lindsay, Hugh
- " Lindsay, William
- " Logan, John
- " Logan William
- " Lowery, John
- " Luke, Archibald
- L/Cpl. Lyle, John
- R'man. Lyness, Charles
- " Lyttle, John
- L/Cpl. Lunn, James
- R'man. Lyness, James
- " Lyons, Thomas
- " Magill, Thomas
- " Mairs, William J.
- " Manning, Reg. Jos.
- " Marcus, Alexander
- " Mawhinney, Robt. J.
- " Miller, Hugh
- " Miller, James
- " Miller, John
- " Miller, John
- " Marshall, A.
- " Magill, William
- " Maginnis, John
- " Maginnis, Robert
- " Maginnis, William
- " Marshall, Andrew
- " Marks, Alexander
- " Marks, Thomas
- " Marwood, James
- " Matchett, James Hy.
- " May, Nathaniel
- " Mcgarry, Jos. Edward
- " Megrath, William
- " Minford, Alfred
- R.Q.M.S. Moore, Richard
- R'man. Moore, Robert
- " Moore, William Geo.
- " Morrow, John
- " Mount, James
- " Mulholland, Albert
- " Mulholland, Thos. Jn.
- L/Sgt. Munn, Henry
- R'man. Murdock, Henry
- " Murdock, Samuel
- " Murphy, Thomas
- " Morrow, James
- Cpl. Marsden, James
- R'man. Martin, David
- " Martin, Samuel
- " Mather, Joseph
- " Matier, John
- L/Cpl. Matier, Thomas
- Cpl. Mearns, Jas. Wilson
- R'man. Megarry, James
- L/Cpl. Mercer, James
- R'man. Miller, James
- " Mooney, Robert
- " Moore, Henry
- " Moore, James
- " Moore, William
- " Morrison, William
- " Morrow, James
- " Mynes, Charles
- " Miller, Samuel
- L/Sgt. Miller, William
- R'man. Miller, William
- " Milligan, David
- " Milligan, James H.
- " Milliken, Thomas C. C.
- " Moffat, Samuel
- " Montgomery, Jos.
- " Moore, Herbert J.
- " Moore, John
- " Moore, Walter
- L/Sgt. Mulholland, Hugh
- R'man. Mulree, Joseph
- " M'Aloney, William
- " M'Bride, Thomas
- L/Cpl. M'Burney, John C.
- " M'Burney, Thomas
- Cpl. M'Callen, James
- R'man. M'Calmont, Wm. J.
- " Martin, Hy.
- " Martin, Thomas
- " Matier, Robert
- " Maxwell, James
- " Megran, Thomas
- " Mills, Samuel
- Sgt. Mitchell, Aty. W.
- R'man. Moag, David
- L/Cpl. Moles, Hy. Smyth
- R'man. Mooney, Alex.
- " Moore, Alex.
- Sgt. Moore, John
- R'man. Moore, Norman Wilfred
- " Moore, William Alex.
- " Morgan, John
- " Morrison, Geo. Thomas
- " Morrow, Robert
- " Morrow, Wm. Hy.
- " Mulholland, Chas. Wm.
- " Mulholland, James
- " Mulligan, Jn.
- " Murdock, John
- " Murdock, Thomas
- " M'Allister, Pierce
- " M'Allister, William
- " M'Avoy, Lewis Patton
- " M'Cann, Edward
- " M'Carthy, Jn.
- " M'Caw, James
- " M'Cleery, Samuel
- " M'Cleeland, William
- " M'Cloy, Hy.
- " M'Cartney, John
- " M'Clintock, Thomas
- " M'Clure, William
- " M'Connell, John
- " M'Coy, William
- " M'Donald, James
- " M'Dowell, Johnston
- " M'adden, John
- " M'Fadden, William
- " M'Crubb, Daniel
- " M'Crugan, Hugh
- " M'Ilwaine, Thomas
- " M'Ivor, Samuel
- " M'Kee, James
- " M'Andrews, H.
- " M'Bride, Alexander
- " M'Cabe, Robert
- " M'Cauley, Robert
- " M'Clelland, John
- " M'Clements, William
- " M'Clenahan, John
- " M'Clenaghan, Rd.
- Sgt. M'Clenaghan, Wm. Jas.
- R'man. M'Clurg, Adam
- " M'Kee, John
- " M'Kee, Robert
- " M'Kee, William
- " M'Kelvey, Matt
- " M'Lean, William
- " M'Lean, William
- " M'Mullen, Samuel
- Cpl. M'Murray, James
- R'man. M'Veigh, William
- " M'Aleece, James
- " M'Allister, Charles
- " M'Allister, Jos.
- " M'Auley, Chas.
- " M'Cartney, John
- " M'Clean, John
- " M'Clelland, Samuel
- " M'Cloy, William
- L/Cpl. M'Comb, Edward
- R'man. M'Corkey, Matt. Geo.
- Cpl. M'Cord, Archie
- R'man. M'Court, John M.
- " M'Dowell, William
- " M'Dowell, William
- " M'Gimpsey, Jas.
- " M'Grath, Joseph
- " M'Ilroy, Henry
- " M'Intosh, Patrick
- L/Cpl. M'Kee, John
- R'man. M'Kee, John
- " M'Kee, William
- L/Sgt. M'Keown, William
- R'man. M'Kibbin, Langtry
- " M'Kibben, Rt. Millar
- " M'Kinney, David
- " M'Knight, Alex
- " M'Knight, William John
- " M'Mullen, James
- " M'Pherson, Robert
- L/Sgt. M'Quillan, William
- L/Cpl. M'Clurg, William
- R'man. M'Comb, Francis
- " M'Comb, James
- " M'Comb, John
- " M'Cormick, Joseph
- " M'Cracken, William
- Cpl. M'Cready, Robert
- R'man. M'Cullough, Andy
- " M'Cune, James
- " M'Curry, Thomas
- " M'Curley, Felix
- " M'Curley, James
- " M'Donald, Joseph
- " M'Donald, Samuel
- " M'Donald, William
- " M'Dowell, Thomas
- " M'Gurk, John
- " M'Henry, John
- " M'Ilroy, Edward
- " M'Ilroy, Roger
- L/Cpl. M'Kechnie, Robert
- R'man. M'Keown, Wm. Robt.
- " M'Kibbin, Eli
- " M'Knight, Robert
- " M'Larnan, George
- " M'Murray, William
- " M'Nair, William
- " M'Veigh, William
- " M'Williams, Fredk.
- " M'Williams, John
- " Neill, Thomas
- " M'Cloy, James
- " M'Clure, Thomas Jas.
- " M'Comb, William
- " M'Comiskey, Hbt.
- " M'Donald, Wm. Ed.
- " M'Geown, Samuel
- " M'Ilroy, James
- " M'Kaveney, John
- " M'Keaveney, James
- " M'Keaveney, David
- " M'Keown, William
- Cpl. M'Mullen, William
- L/Cpl. M'Mullen, Samuel
- R'man. M'Nair, John
- " M'Neice, Edward
- " M'Neice, James
- " M'Neill, Robert
- " M'Watters, Alex.
- " M'Watters, Alex.
- " Nash, Thomas
- " Neagle, William Jas.
- " Nicholson, John
- " Nolan, Rd. John
- " Neeson, John
- " Neill, John
- " Nelson, Robert
- " Nicholl, Samuel
- " Nicholl, Wm. Hy.
- " Nixon, Robt. Wm.
- " Norwood, Joseph
- " Nowell, Thomas
- " Nicholl, Samuel
- Cpl. Orr, George
- R'man. Orr, Robert Jas.
- Cpl. Partridge, John
- R'man. Patterson, John
- " Patterson, Thomas
- " Patterson, William
- " Peel, Michael Jos.
- Cpl. Phillips, John
- R'man. Poots, William
- " Purdy, Samuel
- " O'Neill, James
- " O'Neill, Hugh
- " Orr, John
- " O'Neill, Edward
- " Orr, William John
- " Osborne, William
- " Patterson, Robert
- " Patterson, Thomas
- " Patton, Daniel
- " Peel, Albert
- " Pollock, James
- " Pollock, James
- " Pollock, Samuel
- " Pershaw, John
- " Pritchard, Thomas
- " Purdy, Robert
- " Patterson, James
- " Patterson, Charles
- " Patterson, Samuel
- " Patterson, Thomas
- Sgt. Patton, James
- R'man. Potts, Stewart
- " Parker, Hugh
- " Patterson, James
- " Pollock, Alexander
- " Pollock, Victor
- " Pershaw, John
- " Quinn, Thomas
- " Quigley, David
- " Quigley, Samuel
- " Quigley, Matthew
- " Quinn, Robert
- " Quinn, William
- " Rainey, John
- " Rainey, Robert
- " Rankin, Thomas Hy.
- " Reford, James A. M.
- L/Cpl. Reid, Bristow
- R'man. Reid, James
- Sgt. Renshaw, James Hy.
- R'man. Roy, Matthew
- " Raddick, Jonathan
- " Rainey, Henry
- " Rainey, Samuel
- " Rainey, William John
- " Reford, Fras. Johnston
- " Regan, Hugh
- " Reid, Joseph Edward
- " Reid, William
- " Robinson, Henry
- " Rowan, William
- " Roy, Thomas
- " Roy, William James
- " Russell, William
- " Rea, David
- " Ringland, George
- " Roberts, Francis
- " Roberts, William
- " Robinson, Edward
- " Rodgers, James
- " Robinson, William
- " Rowley, James
- " Russell, James
- " Shaw, John
- " Sherritt, Joseph
- " Sinclair, William
- " Skillen, William
- " Sloan, William
- " Smith, Robert
- L/Cpl. Smylie, Samuel
- R'man. Smyth, James
- " Smyth, Thomas
- " Smyth, William
- " Smyth, William John
- " Steadman, John
- Cpl. Steele, Henry
- R'man. Stephenson, Joseph
- " Stewart, Brice
- " Stewart, Francis
- " Stewart, William
- " Stewart, William
- Sgt. Surgenor, James
- R'man. Surgenor, John
- " Scott, James
- " Scroggie, John
- " Sergeant, Thomas
- " Salley, Robert
- " Sewell, Francis
- " Shaw, John
- " Shields, Joseph
- " Simpson, Joseph
- " Singleton, Thomas
- " Skelly, James
- " Smith, William
- " Ramsey, John
- " Reid, David
- " Reid, John
- L/Cpl. Rennix, Edward G.
- R'man. Roberts, Samuel
- " Rodgers, Charles
- " Rush, Edward
- " Scott, Henry
- " Scott, Robert
- " Smyth, Thomas
- " Smyth, William Ed.
- " Stevenson, James
- " Stewart, James
- L/Cpl. Stewart, Patk. Mich.
- R'man. Stift, Arthur, Geo.
- " Taggart, Norman
- " Tannahill, Harry
- " Thompson, Hy. Jas.
- L/Cpl. Thompson, Joseph
- R'man. Smyth, Hugh
- " Smyth, Joseph
- " Smyth, Thomas Hy.
- " Smyth, William
- " Spratt, Samuel
- " Steadman, George
- " Stevenson, John
- " Stewart, Hugh
- " Swann, Samuel
- " Swindle, William
- " Shannon, Alexander
- " Skelton, Arthur
- " Sloan, John
- " Smith, Robert
- " Speedie, Thomas
- Sgt. Sprott, Robert
- " Steele, Martin
- " Stewart, William
- R'man. Sterling, David
- " Storey, David
- " Storey, Joseph
- " Straitt, Samuel
- Cpl. Swann, James
- R'man. Tate, William Hy.
- " Thompson, Jonathan
- " Thompson, Robert K.
- " Thompson, Samuel
- " Thursby, James
- " Taggart, Andrew
- " Tate, John
- " Thompson, John
- " Toman, Henry
- " Totten, Joseph
- " Turner, Samuel
- " Thompson, Samuel
- " Tolerton, Robert
- " Tollerton, Thomas
- " Verner, Thomas
- " Walker, George F.
- " Wallace, George
- " Wallace, William
- " Walsh, David
- " Walsh, William Hy.
- Sgt. Waring, Geo. Dickson
- R'man. Waring, James Banks
- " Waring, James
- " Waring, William
- R.S.M. Watson, John
- R'man. Watson, William
- " Webb, Herbert
- " Webb, Joseph
- " Weir, Thomas
- " Welch, Alexander
- " Wilkinson, Hugh
- L/Cpl. Williamson, Hy.
- Sgt. Williamson, Joe
- R'man. Wills, James
- " Wills, Samuel
- " Wilson, Robert
- " Woods, Clements, Alex.
- " Woods, James
- C.S.M. Woods, William Fdk.
- R'man. Wright, Alexander
- " Wright, Edward
- L/Cpl. Tate, David
- Cpl. Tate, James
- R'man. Taggart, Thomas
- " Thornton, John
- " Todd, Francis
- " Todd, John
- " Topping, Hy.
- " Topping, Samuel
- " Totten, William
- " Vogan, William
- " Walker, Isaac
- " Walker, John
- " Walker, Robert
- " Wallace, William John
- " Ward, Samuel
- " Ward, Thomas
- " Waring, Alfred
- Sgt. Waring, Samuel
- R'man. Waring, William
- " Watson, Alexander
- " Whiteside, Samuel
- " Wilson, Samuel
- " Windsor, Charles
- " Woods, James
- L/Cpl. Wright, William
- R'man. Woods, Samuel
- " Woods, William
- " Wright, Adam S.
- " Walker, John
- " Wallace, Joseph
- L/Cpl. Wallace, James
- R'man. Wallace, Joseph
- " Watt, Robert
- " White, Robert
- Sgt. Whiteside, Albert
- R'man. Wilkinson, William
- " Williamson, Fredk.
- " Wilson, Francis
- " Wilson, James
- " Wilson, Joseph
- " Woods, Robert
- L/Cpl. Walker, Henry Alb.
- R'man. Wallace, John
- " Wallace, William
- " Waring, John
- C.Q.M.S. Waring, Thomas
- R'man. Watson, Joseph
- " Watt, Samuel
- " Weir, William
- " Williamson, Andy
- " Williamson, Jos.
- " Williamson, Samuel
- " Williamson, Wm. John
- " Wilson, David
- " Wilson, James
- " Wood, Walter
- " Wylie, William
- " Yendall, William
- " Young, Thomas
- " Young, John
- " Young, John
- " Young, William
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] See Note, Appendix I.
-
-[2] General Nugent's reference is of course to the First of July, a
-date sacred to Orangemen.
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber's notes:
-
- The following is a list of changes made to the original.
- The first line is the original line, the second the corrected one.
-
- About 8 a.m. a corporal of the King's Own" who had been doing
- About 8 a.m. a corporal of the King's Own who had been doing
-
- Woodgate called to me "You take the two centre platoons
- Woodgate called to me: "You take the two centre platoons
-
- formed the fish pond of the ancient monastry of Buigny l'Abbe;
- formed the fish pond of the ancient monastery of Buigny l'Abbe;
-
- the roof of a subterranean passage leading from the monastry,
- the roof of a subterranean passage leading from the monastery,
-
- There were excellent, hot and cold shower baths for the men,
- There were excellent hot and cold shower baths for the men,
-
- "Two Lundy's had been prepared, one large and the other small.
- Two Lundy's had been prepared, one large and the other small.
-
- Fruits, plumb pudding, Xmas deserts.
- Fruits, plumb pudding, Xmas desserts.
-
- This time we gave the Boche 500 to every 50 of theirs,
- This time we gave the Bosche 500 to every 50 of theirs,
-
- On February 29 our first death occured, poor young Watt
- On February 29 our first death occurred, poor young Watt
-
- he shelled half a dozen villages to the rere,
- he shelled half a dozen villages to the rear,
-
- For over a year she had hung at an angle of 15 degees
- For over a year she had hung at an angle of 15 degrees
-
- a head emerging from the earth which had fallen in all round
- a head emerging from the earth which had fallen in all round;
-
- enemy artillery began, apparantly on our lines in front of Thiepval,
- enemy artillery began, apparently on our lines in front of Thiepval,
-
- the stiff upper lip and clenched teeth that meant death or victory.
- the stiff upper lip and clenched teeth that meant death or victory."
-
- the great Roman road, now called the Chausee Brunehaut,
- the great Roman road, now called the Chaussee Brunehaut,
-
- the founder of the celebrated Abbey of Centul (now St. Riquier),
- the founder of the celebrated Abbey of Centule (now St. Riquier),
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of With the Ulster Division in France, by
-Arthur Purefoy Irwin Samuels and Dorothy Gage Samuels
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