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Authors: Bill Lamin

Tags: #World War I, #Autobiography, #Personal Memoirs

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Food was tremendously important to the troops in the trenches. Since they were often cold, wet and muddy, and frequently very tired, it was understandable that they would think of hearty meals,
thick soups and stews, to fortify them against the elements. The reality, of course, was that almost the only edible treats came from their food parcels. Extra food from home was welcome as a
supplement to the very poor rations that they were expected to live off. Bread was an essential, but as we have seen, it was usually far from being very fresh. Now we learn that the quantities were
a real problem at this time. A shared loaf of stale bread between four or five – and Harry notes that it is a small loaf – is not exactly fighting fare. The bread would be supplemented
by tinned ‘bully beef’ (from French boeuf bouilli, boiled beef – i.e. corned beef, ‘corned’ meaning cured with salt), tea and endless cigarettes. Furthermore,
delivering hot food to the front line could be a real problem. The cooking facilities might be a mile or so behind the lines and the hay boxes used to keep the food hot while it was transported
were simply that – wooden boxes lined with hay. Sometimes, for any one of a number of reasons, hot food would not arrive in the front-line trenches, and the soldiers would resort to eating
anything they had cold, often bully beef with hard biscuits or Maconochie straight from the tin, supplemented with anything they might have left over from their parcels. Tea, though, they could
usually rustle up, heating the water on braziers or small spirit stoves.

Harry, very politely, frequently reminds Kate and Jack how much he appreciates their parcels. It is clear from his letters that he would, as was the normal practice, share his
‘extras’ with his pals. He would expect to share in their good fortune whenever it came around, and no doubt did.

We learn from his letter to Kate that Harry is about to write to his wife Ethel, and she plainly wrote to him, as can be seen from references he makes in his letters to Jack and Kate. The
letters to Ethel have not survived, however. In some ways I am grateful that I don’t have to make any decision about publishing what was surely very personal and possibly intimate
correspondence. I have been told that Ethel was extremely upset by the war and everything to do with it. I am not sure of the reasons behind this, but the upshot was that she destroyed all the
letters. It may be that she was a little less bitter by the time the ‘Jack and Kate’ letters came to her in the 1940s, which perhaps explains why she did not destroy those as well.

Before the battalion went back into the line on 20 September, it had been sent to an assembly point, as the war diary attests: ‘19th Moved from camp at 9.45 pm to BEDFORD HOUSE being
“A” Battn of Reserve Brigade.’

Bedford House was the name the British gave to Château Rosandel when it was first taken over as a command post. The château building had been destroyed by shelling during the course
of the fighting in the Salient, but the deep, secure cellars continued to be used as a headquarters. It is easily found today, situated on the main road, the N336, about two miles (3km) to the
south of Ypres. The grounds are now a war cemetery but, visiting it today, it is just possible to see the remains of the château. The old moat frames a beautiful and tranquil setting,
immaculately maintained, as these places always are, by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Since the British front line at this time would have been a little over a mile away from Bedford
House, it was an ideal stopping-off and assembly point for troops moving forward, or for regrouping on return.

On the Ypres battlefield as a whole, the distances involved are surprisingly small. The Dickebusch training area, the battalion’s last stop before Bedford House, was just over two miles
(4km) to the west of Ypres. Mount Sorrel, their objective at Messines Ridge, was as far again to the east. The Menin Road, the focus for much of the action in the coming few weeks, with
‘Hellfire Corner’, is about two miles to the north-east. ‘Hellfire Corner’, the junction of the Menin Road with a railway line, provided a perfect ‘bullseye’ for
the German artillery. The area was pre-registered on their guns, so as soon as any activity was noted there, a few shells could be sent on their way. It was not a place to linger in. The standard
practice was to get through it as quickly as possible by whatever means of transport – foot, horse, motor – was being used.

The cemetery at Bedford House today, seen from the road and showing part of the old moat of the château that had stood there until the war came.

The area today is, of course, very different from how it was in the autumn of 1917. Trees, hedges and undergrowth dominate the landscape, where Harry would have seen a shell-pocked morass of
mud, littered with the debris of warfare. There would be nothing but desolation between the two front lines. The war diary takes up the account following the actions on 20–22 September:

23rd [September] Misty: protective barrage 5.30 a.m. Heavy bursts of enemy artillery throughout the day.

24th Protective barrage in early morning: heavy enemy shelling 5.15 a.m. to 7 a.m.: 6 p.m. to 7.30 p.m.

24th–25th night relieved by 11th SUSSEX
[Royal Sussex Regiment]
: relief complete 8.45 p.m. Enemy got to know of our relief and shelled heavily. Casualties
during tour: Officers, killed 1, wnd 7: O.R’s killed 22 wounded 83, missing 4.

It would appear from his next letter (see
here
) that Harry missed this uncomfortable couple of days, having been detached from the battalion and sent, presumably with a working party, to help
shift artillery. He met with some interesting experiences on the 25th or 26th, as he was to recount to Jack. Things became even more interesting, however, after he returned from the working party
to the front-line trenches, as the war diary reports:

25th Batt at CHIPPAWA CAMP
[Chippewa: another Native American tribe]
cleaning, reorganizing etc.

26th Inspection by Divisional General.

27th Proceeded to RIDGE WOOD, arr 5 pm.

28th 10.00 am to BEDFORD HOUSE. 8.30 pm ordered to relieve 8th KOYLI
[King’s Own Yorkshire Light Infantry]
in front line.

29th relief complete about 10 pm: took over right sector, right Brigade: relief slightly delayed by shelling. DISPOSITIONS: front line C Coy: close support A Coy less 2
platoons: counter-attack coy, D Coy: Batt reserve, 2 platoons A Coy & 2 plats B Coy: Gen reserve, B Coy less 2 platoons.

30th About 4 am very thick mist; 4.30 am intense bombardment helped on with minenwerfers
[German trench mortars]
& smoke bombs: 5.15 am enemy discovered in
large numbers advancing against our trench especially on our right: mist still very thick: enemy used bombs and flammenwerfer
[flamethrowers].
Heavy fire with rifles, Lewis machine guns
and bombs was opened on them & none reached our trench: S.O.S. sent up but was not seen at Batt H.Q. owing to mist: an orderly arrived with the first news at 7.20 am. About 6 am enemy again
attacked but was driven off: took 2 prisoners, 1 flammenwerfer & a machine gun: 60 or 70 dead were left in front of our trenches: the attack was repulsed entirely with the fire of the
infantry: the artillery did not barrage our front: a wire fence, put up during the previous night by a pioneer battn helped greatly to impede the enemy. A short barrage was put down on our
lines at 10 am: the remainder of the day was normal.

The location of all this action is likely to have been on the south side of the Menin Road, close to the hamlet of Gheluvelt (Geluveld).

The war diary entry for the following two days also makes interesting reading:

Menin Road

1st
[October]
During night Sept 30th–Oct 1st front line garrison was increased by 3 sections & wire was repaired. 5 am to 6 am heavy enemy shelling: our
protective barrage opened at 5.15 am. S.O.S. went up on our left at 6am but no infantry action followed on our front. Heavily shelled about 12.30 pm especially round Batt H.Q. Enemy aeroplanes
active all day flying low and firing: fire was opened from the ground but without effect. 6.30 pm enemy bombarded & at 7 pm was seen massing: the artillery put down the barrage promptly in
reply to our S.O.S. & quashed the attack; after this, the night was quiet.

2nd Protective barrage at dawn. Intermittent shelling during the day. Relieved by 1st R. West Kents
[Royal West Kent Regiment].
Relief complete 11.45 pm.

Casualties during tour killed 1 officer 3 O.R. Wounded 3 officers 22 O.R.s: Missing 3 O.R.s.

Harry takes up the account of the German assault on the 30th:

3rd October 1917

Dear Jack

Just a line to let you know I’m going on all right. In my last letter I told you we was waiting for the lads coming out well that night I had to go up the line to
help them out with the guns. we brought them part way in the lumber waggons on the way we had a smash a motor lorry ran into us smashed the wheels of the lumber wagon and tipped us all out but we
only got a few bumps which we are used to. Three days after, we were called up the line again of course I went this time. We had to go to the front line were it was on the Menin Road no doubt you
have heard about it. We were there for three days it was awful the shelling day and night. We relieved the KOYLI about 10 o’clock
and what do you think Fritz came over about 5 o’clock
next morning we had an exciting time for about one hour and a half I can tell you. but we beat him off he never got in our trenches he was about two hundred strong it was a picked storming party
so the prisoners say that captured, they brought liquid fire
[flamethrowers]
with them and bombs and all sorts but not many got back we had twenty casuals and the captain got killed a
jolly good fellow too. I was pleased to get out of it but did not feel nervous when I saw them coming over. No 1 in our section was on the gun and we used our rifles. Our Coy as to go before
the
[divisional]
general for the good work we have done. We have just been given a long trousers again as we have had short ones all summer. I hope you are going on alright as was pleased
to hear you are keeping in good health, write again as soon as possible. I am always ready for a letter. I think the mug will be very nice for Willie

With best love

Harry

Harry, for once, gives a very clear account of the events of 29 and 30 September in this latest letter to Jack. He seems to have had quite an adventure a few days before. The ‘lumber
waggons’ would be the standard horse-drawn, open-bodied, four-wheeled general-service (GS) wagons designed for transporting the tons of timber, ammunition, barbed wire, equipment and pretty
much anything else used in trench warfare. Built of wood with metal fittings, they had spoked and iron-rimmed wooden wheels.

Even at this stage of the war, horse-drawn transport was still the main method of moving equipment, including artillery. The advantages of the motor lorry were just beginning to be realized;
meanwhile, the horses suffered dreadfully. The two technologies collide – literally, in Harry’s experience.

The enemy’s counter-attack on the morning of the 30th was a major action, and Harry was at the centre of it. The Germans had lost ground over the recent weeks and were becoming
demoralized. Their carefully prepared defences were – despite the interlocking pillboxes, the well-constructed trenches prepared in depth, the wire entanglements and the mud – falling
to the determined (if costly) Allied assaults. This counter-attack against the 9th York and Lancasters was important, and the preparation for it would have been meticulous. At five o’clock in
the morning it would have been dark, the visibility worsened by a thick mist lying over the battlefield.

The assault began with an ‘intense [artillery] bombardment helped on with minenwerfers & smoke bombs’. There is no way of telling how long the enemy bombardment would have
lasted. The minenwerfer was a short-range weapon, and would certainly have been fired from the enemy’s front line directly ahead. Possibly they caused the casualties among the battalion
rather than rifle and machine-gun fire during the assault. The whole performance, rather more than the normal morning’s ‘hate’, would have meant that the British troops, already
‘stood to’ at that time of day, would have been on guard for an attack.

When the attacking German infantry were spotted (I have no idea how the defenders would see – darkness, mist and smoke bombs must have made observation challenging, at the least),
following standard procedure a flare was sent up as an SOS, to call up artillery support. But at 5.15 a.m., in the poor conditions, nobody saw the flare, and so the battalion was left on its own,
to deal with the attack as best it could.

They did well. Harry’s letter to Jack of 3 October was the first, years ago, to catch my attention among the bundle in the drawer, describing the attack and his feelings. What struck me
especially was the line ‘I . . . did not feel nervous when I saw them coming over.’ In this, perhaps, lies a clue to the nature of the British infantry of the Great War, men who faced
danger and privation and terrible risks with a simple acceptance of reality and an unflinching shrug at their fate and their duty. Earlier in the same letter Harry writes, ‘we only got a few
bumps which we are used to.’ There is a wealth of character in that simple, understated aside.

BOOK: Letters From the Trenches: A Soldier of the Great War
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