Enemy shell Ypres for 2 hours with 10.5 cm. Transport suffer heavy casualties. Am very busy all day.
Ypres-Rampats
residence_1916_world
world
Wednesday 28 June 1916
For 3 hours at night 8:30 to 11:30 PM the enemy shells the Bde Headquarters & Battalion. Awful noise & concussion.
Tuesday 27 June 1916
Enemy shells Ypres most diligently
Monday 26 June 1916
Very heavy shelling by enemy at different times during the day.
Have a very busy day making maps, tracings etc for division etc.
St Pierre Church is now almost a complete wreck thro’ enemy shells.
Heavy rain at night as my Regiment enter trenches.
Sunday 25 June 1916 – fine
Working very hard all day.
Frightful bombardment by us and the enemy. Our operations are a success, – Bombing attack etc.- Tis’ Sunday! Attack dies down midnight (from 8:30 PM)
Saturday 24 June 1916 – fine
Rain in morning. Occasional showers during day.
Enemy shelling barracks, & etc. Finish sketch.
Enemy shell heavily at night.
Our whole Battn is stationed in Ypres.
Friday 23 June 1916
I go out in the open to sketch the Ramparts for Sir Max Aitken. Enemy very active and sketching almost impossible. Many aeroplanes around also.
Enemy shell the Ramparts heavily for fully three hours straight. 17 inch shells being among them. — From 8:30 PM 11:30 PM a most terrific & frightful bombardment.
Rain at night.
Sir William Maxwell “Max” Aitken, 1st Baron Beaverbrook –An English-Canadian business man, politician and author. He owned multiple newspapers and served in the Government during the war by creating the Canadian War Records Office in London. He ensured that Canada’s efforts in the war were reported on in Canadian and British news as well as establishing a war memorial fund. In 1916 he published the first of a 3 volume collection called Canada in Flanders, which told of the achievements of Canadian soldiers during the war.
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