With a Preface by
THE RT. HON. A. BONAR LAW, M.P., LL.D.,
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE COLONIES
And an Introduction by
THE RT. HON. SIR ROBERT BORDEN, G.C.M.G., M.P., LL.D.,
PRIME MINISTER OF CANADA
WITH MAPS AND APPENDICES
TO THE OFFICERS AND MEN
NOW SERVING IN THE CANADIAN EXPEDITIONARY FORCE IN FLANDERS AND TO THE
MEMORIES OF THOSE WHO HAVE FALLEN, I DEDICATE THIS LITTLE BOOK.
PREFACE
By the Rt. Hon. A. Bonar Law, M.P.
The author of this book
is an intimate personal friend, and possibly for that reason I take too
favourable a view of his work; but I think he has already rendered a
great service, and not to Canada alone.
As Canadian Record
Officer, he published a glowing account of the part played in the Battle
of Ypres by the Canadian contingent. This account was circulated widely,
and it contributed largely to make the deeds of the Canadian soldiers a
household word, not only throughout the Dominion, but in the United
Kingdom as well.
The present work seems
to me a model of lucid, picturesque, and sympathetic narrative, and it
will have, I feel sure, a lasting value.
We have a right to feel
very proud of the part which is being played in the terrible tragedy of
this war by the great Dominions of the British Crown. We had no power to
compel any one of them to contribute a single penny, or to send a single
man, but they have given of their best, not to help us, though I think
they would have done that also, but to defend the Empire which is theirs
as much as ours.
Led by a General who a
few years ago was in arms against us and who is the Prime Minister of
South Africa, the Union Government have wrested from Germany a territory
larger than the whole German Empire; and a South African contingent is
now in England ready to play their part on the battlefields of Flanders.
The Australians and New
Zealanders have shown in the Dardanelles that in courage,
resourcefulness, and tenacity better troops have never existed in the
world. Whatever the final result of that operation may be, the blood
which has been shed there has not been shed in vain. Not to Australians
and New Zealanders alone, but to men of every race throughout the
British Empire, the Peninsula of Gallipoli will for ever be sacred
ground because of the brave men who lie buried there.
“In glory will they
sleep, and endless sanctity.”
What Canada has done,
and is doing, shines out in every page of this book. Higher praise could
not be given than was contained in the despatch of the
Commander-in-Chief after the Battle of Ypres: “ In spite of the danger
to which they were exposed, the Canadians held their ground with a
magnificent display of tenacity and courage, and it is not too much to
say that the bearing and conduct of these splendid troops averted a
disaster which might have been attended with most serious consequences.”
Our enemies said, and
probably they believed, that the outbreak of war would be the signal for
the breaking-up of the British Empire. They have been mistaken. After
this war the relations between the great Dominions and the Mother
Country can never be the same again. The pressure of our enemies is
welding us together, and the British Empire is becoming in reality, as
well as in name, a united nation.
A. Bonar Law.
Colonial Office,
December 6th, 1915.
INTRODUCTION
By Rt. Hon. Sir Robert L. Borden, G.C.M.G.
More than a year ago
the bugles of the Empire sounded throughout the world the call to duty.
The justice of the cause was recognised in every quarter of the King’s
dominions, and nowhere more fully than in Canada; it has since been
confirmed by the judgment of the civilised world. Within a week Canada
had sprung to arms; within three weeks 35,000 men were
marshalled on Valcartier Plain, which had been transformed, as if by
magic, into a great military camp; within six weeks from the outbreak of
war a Canadian Division, fully organised and equipped in every branch of
the service, with a surplus of guns and ammunition nearly sufficient for
another Division, and with a detail of reinforcements amounting to
10,000 men, was ready to proceed overseas.
Twice in September of
last year I saw these forces march past under review by the Duke of
Connaught. Later, I visited every unit of the contingent, addressed
their officers, and bade them all God-speed. The Armada which left the
shores of Gaspe on October 3rd, 1914, carried the largest army that ever
crossed the Atlantic at one time.
In the midst of the
following winter they went to the front. Few of them had any previous
experience of war. They had lived in a peace-loving country; they had
been gathered from the varied avocations of our national life; they had
come from the hills and valleys and surf-beaten shores of the Maritime
Provinces; from the banks of the St. Lawrence and its hundred affluents
in the two great central Provinces; from the mining and lumber camps of
the north; from the broad prairie Provinces and their northern
hinterlands; from the majesty of the mountains that look to the east
upon the prairies and to the west upon the Pacific; from the shores of
the great western ocean; from all the far-flung communities of our
Dominion they had hurried, quickly responsive to the call.
Almost in the dawn of
their experience at the front there came to them an ordeal such as has
seldom tested the most tried of veterans. An unknown and terrible means
of warfare, which temporarily shattered the gallant forces that held the
line at their left, poured upon them torture and death. The bravest and
most experienced troops might well have been daunted and driven back by
the fierceness of the onslaught to which they were exposed and by the
horrible methods of the attack. Assailed by overwhelming numbers on
front and flank, they held their own in a conflict which raged for days;
they barred the path against the German onrush and saved the day for the
Empire, for the Allies, and for the world.
The story of their
tenacity, their valour, and their heroism has been well told in the
pages that follow. But it can never be completely told. Many of those
upon whose memories alone splendid incidents of that story were
indelibly engraven lie beneath the sod in Northern France and in
Belgium.
On more than one
stricken field the record thus made by the 1st Canadian Division has
held good. From the lips of those who fought at Festubert and at
Givenchy, from dauntless survivors of the Princess Patricia’s Regiment,
I have heard, in many a hospital and convalescent home in the
Motherland, what their comrades had dared and done.
No Canadian can ever
look forth unmoved upon that valley where Ypres lies shattered in the
distance, and the sweep of the hills over1ooks the graves of more than
100,000 men who fell because a remorseless militarist autocracy decreed
this war.
In the years to come it
will be the duty and the pride of Canada to rear, both in this Dominion
and beyond the ocean, monuments which will worthily commemorate the
glorious deeds of her sons who offered the supreme sacrifice for liberty
and civilisation.
R. L. Borden.
Ottawa, December 6th, 1915.
Carry the word to my
Sisters—
To the Queens of the East and the South.
I have proven my faith in the Heritage
By more than the word of the mouth.
They that are wise may follow
Ere the world’s war-trumpet blows:
But I—I am first in the battle
Said our Lady of the Snows.”
—Kipling.
AUTHOR’S NOTE
I am so conscious of
the imperfections of the Chapters which follow that I was for long
unwilling to publish them in the form of a book. They were written under
great difficulties and in many moods; nor am I unaware that the excuse
for collecting them is very slender. It was, however, represented to me
by persons of much authority, that the subjects dealt with excited an
interest so lively in Canada that imperfections in the workmanship would
be readily overlooked in the Dominion.
I therefore publish my
impressions of the fortunes of the 1st Canadian Division and of Princess
Patricia’s Regiment. Some of the scenes described fell in whole, or in
part, under my own observation. In dealing with others I have had
access, in the discharge of my duties, to a large number of military
diaries and official documents.
It may be stated that
the greatest care is being taken by the Canadian Government to collect
and preserve every authoritative document which may hereafter throw
light upon the military history of the Canadian Expeditionary Force. Nor
is there reason to doubt that the official historian of Canada (whoever
he may prove to be) will find abundant material for a grave and adequate
work. Perhaps such a one may find here and there in these hurriedly
written pages a contemporary echo, however faint and elusive, of the
clash and passion of war which the author has attempted to describe.
I shall be content if
one Canadian woman draws solace from this poor record of her dead
husband’s bravery; if even one reader recognises for the first time the
right of the Canadians to stand as equals in the Temple of Valour with
their Australian brothers who fought and died at Anzac; if the task of
consolidating our Imperial resources, which may be the one positive
consequence of this orgy of destruction, counts one adherent the more
among those who have honoured me by reading these records.
And of Englishmen I ask
nothing but that they shall hereafter think of my countrymen as Brothers
in whom a man trusts even if a great quarrel arises.
W. M. Aitken.
CONTENTS
Chapter I - Mobilisation
War without warning—Canada’s loyalty—Improvising an Army—Efforts of the
Minister of Militia—Camp at Val-cartier—Canadian Armada sails—Arrival at
Plymouth— Lord Roberts’s interest—King’s visit to Canadian Camp
—Training completed—Sailing for France.
Chapter II - Warfare
“Plug Street”—British Army in being—At General Headquarters—Rest
billets—Mud or death—The trenches— Buzzing bullets—Sir Douglas Haig—The
Front— Restrictions on the narrative—Reviewed by
Commander-in-Chief—Canadians in the trenches—Our men take to
football—“Jack Johnsons”—A German challenge— General Alderson—The
General’s methods—His speech to the Canadians—A fine Force.
Chapter III - Neuve
Chapelle
Canadians' valuable help—A ride in the dark—Pictures on the road—Towards
the enemy—At the cross-roads—“Six kilometres to Neuve Chapelle”—Terrific
bombardment— Grandmotherly howitzers—British aeroplanes—Fight with a
Taube—Flying man’s coolness—Attack on the village—German prisoners—A
banker from Frankfort—The Indians’ pride—A halt to our hopes—Object of
Neuve Chapelle—What we achieved—German defences underrated—Machine gun
citadels—Great infantry attack— Unfortunate delays—Sir John French’s
comments—British attack exhausted—Failure to capture Aubers Ridge—
“Digging in”—Canadian Division’s baptism of fire— “Casualties”—Trenches
on Ypres salient.
Chapter IV - Ypres
Canadians’ glory—A civilian force—Ypres salient—Poelcappelle
road—Disposition of troops—Gas attack on French— Plight of the 3rd
Brigade—Filling the gap—General Turner’s move—Loss of British
guns—Canadian valour— St. Julien—Attack on the wood—Terrible
fire—Officer casualties—Reinforcements—Geddes detachment—Second Canadian
Brigade bent back—Desperate position—Terrible casualties—Col. Birchall’s
death—Magnificent artillery work—Canadian left saved—Canadians relieved—
Story of 3rd Brigade—Gas attack on Canadians—Canadian recovery — Major
Norsworthy killed — Major McCuaig’s stand—Disaster averted—Col. Hart-McHarg
killed—Major Odium—General Alderson’s efforts— British reinforce
Canadians—3rd Brigade withdraws— General Currie stands fast—Trenches
wiped out—Fresh gas attack—Germans take St. Julien—British cheer
Canadians— Canadians relieved — Heroism of men — Col. Watson’s dangerous
mission—The Ghurkas’ dead— Record of all units—Our graveyard in
Flanders.
Chapter V - A Wave of
Battle
Individual heroism—Canadian tenacity—Before the battle— The civilian
element—A wave of battle—New meaning of “Canada”—“Northern Lights”—The
fighting paymaster—Major serves as lieutenant—Misfortunes of Hercule
Barr6—“Runners”—A messenger’9 apology—Swimming a moat—Rescue of
wounded—Colonel Watson’s bravery—Colonel Watson’s leadership—His heroic
deed—Dash of Major Dyer ^nd Capt. Hilliam— Major Dyer shot—“I have
crawled home”—Lieut. Whitehead’s endurance—Major King saves his guns—
Corpl. Fisher, V.C.—The real Canadian officer—Some delusions in
England—German tricks—Sergt. Richardson’s good sense;—“No surrender 1 ”—Corpl.
Baker’s heroism—Bombs from the dead—Holding a position single-handed—The
brothers Mclvor—Daring of Sergt. -Major Hall—Sergt. Ferris, Roadmender—Heroism
of the sappers—Sergt. Ferris, Pathfinder—A sergeant in command—Brave
deeds of Pte. Irving—He vanishes—Absurdities in tragedy—Germans murder
wounded—Doctors under fire—The professional manner—Red hours—Plight of
refugees—Canadian colony in London—Unofficial inquiries—Canada’s
destiny.
Chapter VI - Festubert
Objective of Aubers and Festubert—Allies’ co-operation—Great French
offensive—Terrific bombardment—British support —Endless German
fortresses—Shortage of munitions —Probable explanation—Effect of Times
disclosures— Outcry in England—Coalition Government—After Ypres —The
Canadian advance—Disposition of Canadians— Attack on the
Orchard—Canadian Scottish—Sapper Harmon’s exploits—Drawback to
drill-book tactics—A Canadian ruse—“Sam Slick”—The Orchard won— Arrival
of Second Brigade—The attempt on “Bexhill”—In the German trenches—Strathcona’s
Horse—King Edward’s Horse—Cavalry fight on foot—Further attack on “
Bexhill ”—Redoubt taken—“ Bexhill ” captured— “Dig in and hang
on”—Attack on the “Well”—Heroic efforts repulsed—General Seely assumes
command—A critical moment—Heavy officer casualties—The courage of the
cavalry—Major Murray’s good work—Gallantry of Sergt. Morris and Corpl.
Pym—Death of Sergt. Hickey —Canadian Division withdrawn—Trench warfare
till June.
Chapter VII - Givenchy
Minor engagements—A sanguinary battle—Attacks on “Stony Mountain” and
“Dorchester’’—Disposition of Canadian troops—An enemy
bombardment—“Duck’s Bill”—A mine mishap—“Dorchester” taken—A bombing
party— Coy.-Sergt.-Major Owen’s bravery—Lieut. Campbell mounts
machine-gun on Private Vincent’s back—How Private Smith replenished the
bombers—Fighting the enemy with bricks—British Division unable to
advance— Canadians hang on—"I can crawl”—General Mercer’s
leadership—Private Clark’s gallantry—Dominion Day.
Chapter VIII Princess
Patricia’s Light Infantry
Review in Lansdowne Park—Princess Patricia presents the Colours—South
African veterans and reservists—Princess Patricias in the trenches—St.
Eloi—Major Hamilton Gault —A dangerous reconnaissance—Attack on a sap—A
German onslaught—Lessons from the enemy—A march to battle—Voormezeele—Death
of Colonel Farquhar— Polygone Wood—Regiment’s work admired—A move
towards Ypres—Heavily shelled—A new line—Arrival of Major Gault—Regiment
sadly reduced—Gas shells—A German rush—Major Gault wounded—Lieut. Niven
in command—A critical position—Corporal Dover’s heroism —A terrible
day—Shortage of small arms ammunition— Germans’ third attack—Enemy
repulsed—Regiment reduced to 150 rifles—Relieved—A service for the dead—
In bivouac—A trench line at Armenti&res—Regiment at full strength
again—Moved to the south—Back in billets —Princess Patricias instruct
new troops—Rejoin Canadians—A glorious record.
Chapter IX - THE Prime
Minister
The Prime Minister’s visit—Passing of Politics—End to domestic
dissensions—The Imperial idea—Sir Robert’s foresight—Arrival in
England—-At Shorncliffe—Meeting with General Hughes—Review of Canadian
troops —The tour in France—A Canadian base hospital—A British
hospital—Canadian graves—Wounded under canvas—Prince Arthur of
Connaught—Visiting battle scenes—Received by General Alderson—General
Turner’s Brigade—Speech to the men—First and Second Brigades —Sir Robert
in the trenches—Cheered ^ by Princess Patricias—Enemy aeroplanes—Meeting
with Sir John French—The Prince of Wales—With the French Army-General
Joffre—A conference in French—The French trenches—The stricken city of
Albert—To Paris—The French President—Conference with the French War
Minister—Shorncliffe again—Canadian convalescent home —A thousand
convalescents—Sir Robert’s emotion—His wonderful speech—End of journey.
Chapter X - The
Canadian Corps
Tranquil Canadian lines—German reconnaissance—Incident at “Plug Street”—Pte.
Bruno saves Capt. Tidy—A sniper’s month—Sharpshooters’ compact—Sergt.
Ballendine—The Ross rifle—“No Man’s Land”—Our bombers—Sergt. William
Tabernacle—His new profession—General Sir Sam Hughes’ visit—Canadian
patriotism—Civilian armies —“Last Word of Kings”—Art of the “soldier’s
speech” Lord Kitchener’s inspiration—Lord Roberts and the
Indians—General Hughes arrives in France—At British
Headquarters—Consultation with King Albert—Meeting with Prince Alexander
of Teck—Conference with General Alderson—The second Canadian
Contingent—In the firing line—Many friends—General Burstall’s
artillery—Inspection of cavalry—Meeting with Prince of Wales—The
Princess Patricias—Conference with Sir Douglas Haig— General Hughes’
suggestions—Meeting with General Foch—Impressed with General Joffre—The
ruin at Rheims—General Hughes’ message on departure—A quiet August—The
Canadian Corps—General Alderson’s New Command—An appreciation of a
gallant Commander —Conclusion.
Appendix I - The King’s
Messages to the Canadians.
Appendix II - Canadians
in Despatches.
Appendix III - The
Prime Minister and the War.
Appendix IV -
Lieut.-General E. A. H. Alderson, C.B., Commanding the Canadian Corps.
Appendix V - Honours
and Rewards Granted.
Appendix VI - Statement
of Casualties. |