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You are here: Home / Archives for mp3

Monday 3 October 1916

October 3, 2016 by Sarah McLennan

https://monova.ca/greatwarchronicles/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Monday_October_2_1916.mp3
Enemy shelling our place vigorously, we are replying. Horrible din. I go up to observation post. Enemy shelling front line, Zollerngraben and Fabeckgraben*, etc with a murderous fire. Our guns are silent for what seems a horrible period then – Fritz knows what followed. The battlefield looks horrible, many mangled corpses are lying about. I return after getting information & on way back have to dodge many shells. One poor fellow is killed by shrapnel & covered in blood (a man of the 31st) he is buried by roadside. A shell bursts not far from us and fragments cut a piece out of a man’s head, others are wounded. Many men on verge of madness & crying thro’ shell shock.
The innocent horses are [?] but very brave. Rations are up & I root out the reluctant, hesitating men to get them in. Action must be quick as horses get nervous. Rations in, I dispatch the driver to Albert by a shorter road.
Get some warm tea at […….?] Cook house. First since we came here.


*named German trenches

Filed Under: 1916, Diary Entries Tagged With: Fabeckgraben, mp3, Zollerngraben

Sunday 1 October 1916

October 1, 2016 by Sarah McLennan

https://monova.ca/greatwarchronicles/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Sunday_October_1_1916.mp3
Up the line early for information. Enemy shelling hard and so are we.
At 4 PM we receive orders to move up the line in front of Pozieres. It rained hard & much mud. I act as guide to the Brigade. An awful bombardment is going on on both sides, numerous colored flares being used, much rifle fire & bombs being used also.
Arrive at a fork road close to a battery when we come to a dead stop as the road was full of shell holes. Night dark. Location of Cemetery (our Hdqrs) difficult. We unload the wagon on to a railway (trench tramway) much sliding and cursing and shouting. I had to shout orders out in order to be heard, a horrible din. L/c White, my ass’t. draughtsman is frightfully nervous. Have to use stern measures with him.
On our way to HQRS we encounter soldier on a truck (tramway) with leg blown off. Our truck was full & I gave orders to unload in order to let him pass. They did not know of a dressing Stn, so I referred them to the one @ the Cemetery. He was attended to.
Our Sergt Major is drunk & a nuisance. Everything is left to me to manage. Arr @ HDQR a deep dugout about 20 feet. Will only hold 8 men. We are all wet thro’ & covered in slimy mud. This is war. A man is brought in on a stretcher by a party, they want him to see a doctor. L/c comes, says – “just lay him over there.” He’s dead! Many wounded coming in.

Filed Under: 1916, Diary Entries Tagged With: mp3, Pozieres

Saturday 16 September 1916

September 16, 2016 by Sarah McLennan

https://monova.ca/greatwarchronicles/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Saturday_September_16_1916.mp3
First objective of attack by PPCLI achieved, a second one contemplated.
B’n lose heavily 49 on our left and 25 Bn (2nd Division) on our right in Courcellette. Many wounded. No stretchers nor bearers. Men cannot be spared to look after wounded. Water badly needed Capt Sullivan OC No 2 Coy. Major Martin and Mr Rosamund killed. No 4 Co lose heavily. C.S.M. Jacques & Sergt Clason are killed also Pte Matthews of Vancouver. All PPCLI.
Bn take 62 prisoners.

Filed Under: 1916, Diary Entries Tagged With: mp3, PPCLI, Vancouver

Friday 15 September 1916

September 15, 2016 by Sarah McLennan

https://monova.ca/greatwarchronicles/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Friday_September_15_1916.mp3
I go up the line with an orderly – Pt Fetherstone. Visit La Boiselle & Pozieres, dodge heavy [or, many?] shells. Nothing remains of both villages but a series of shell holes. Mounds of Earth, debris, and scattered all over is the wreckage of war. Whilst at Pozieres 4 shells come over at us in rapid succession bursting about 20 to 30 yards away. Witness a terrific bombardment, many dead around us. Our artillery has supremacy. Return to Albert at 9 PM. Motor traffic goes as far as Pozieres. Hundreds of wounded & Hun prisoners walking along the road from firing lines to Albert. Scenes of carnage. Horrible.


*Battle of Flers – Courcelette – Part of the Somme offensive, this battle was launched on Sept 15th 1916 and lasted until the 22nd of September. It was the final general offensive attempted by the British army during the Battle of the Somme. The idea was to use artillery and infantry attacks to create a hole in the German line. Allied troops would then use cavalry to create maximum gains though this hole. The breakthrough was not successful, but Allied troops were able to capture some important villages during the battle. It was at the Battle of Flers that the first tanks were ever used in warfare. All 49 British tanks manufactured for the war were sent into battle. The tanks were a mixed success, as many broke down or were unable to manage the battlefield terrain. However their psychological effect was powerful, greatly intimidating German troops.

Untitled

“British Mark I male tank Somme 25 September 1916” by Ernest Brooks – This is photograph Q 2486 from the collections of the Imperial War Museums (collection no. 1900-09). Licensed under Public domain via Wikimedia Commons – http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:British_Mark_I_male_tank_Somme_25_September_1916.jpg
#mediaviewer/File:British_Mark_I_male_tank_Somme_25_September_1916.jpg

Filed Under: 1916, Diary Entries Tagged With: Battle of Flers, mp3

Tuesday 5 September 1916

September 5, 2016 by Sarah McLennan

https://monova.ca/greatwarchronicles/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Tuesday_September_5_1916.mp3
Poperinghe shelled heavily. Reported missing yesterday. 8 men from Rgt join my staff as observers. I have to instruct them in field sketching and observing. L/c Driscoll F. is sent back to Rgt as he became lazy & stubborn.

Filed Under: 1916, Diary Entries Tagged With: L/c Driscoll, mp3, Poperinghe

Sunday 3 September 1916

September 3, 2016 by Sarah McLennan

https://monova.ca/greatwarchronicles/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Sunday_September_3_1916.mp3
Enemy bombarding Ypres & vicinity. Much aircraft activity – two of our AA guns fire 130 shells without result. (expense) An interesting fight takes place over Hooge but enemy aeroplane gets safely away.
5 of our planes go over enemy lines amidst a hail of shells and return 2 hours later amidst another hail, no damage to them.
In evening I go over Ypres with a dispatch rider to show him the sights. Much shelling of the Lille Gates. Enemy send over gas at 11 PM, 2 & 4 am little damage done.


*Lille Gate – A gate in town of Ypres just south of the city center it is the only surviving gate from the ramparts of the 14th century. The towers at the gate were used as military headquarters for a while due to the protection they provided from artillery fire. These were the only historic gateway in Ypres to survive the bombardment of WWI

Filed Under: 1916, Diary Entries Tagged With: Lille Gate, mp3, Ypres

Saturday 2 September 1916

September 2, 2016 by Sarah McLennan

https://monova.ca/greatwarchronicles/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Saturday_September_2_1916.mp3
Make maps for 2nd Lt Fraser-Luckie. Enemy bombard Lille Gate and Cav. Bks & Inf. Bks*. Gas is sent over to us by Enemy at Hooge and Mount Sorrel three times during night. An enemy aeroplane is brought down by our anti-a guns.


*Cavalry and Infantry Barracks

Filed Under: 1916, Diary Entries Tagged With: 2nd Lt Fraser-Luckie, Cavalry and Infantry Barracks, mp3

Sunday 20 August 1916

August 20, 2016 by Sarah McLennan

https://monova.ca/greatwarchronicles/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Sunday_August_20_1916.mp3
Intense bombardment. H.E. shells burst all round us. I work in the battered house which serves as a draughtsman’s office.
In afternoon one of my draughtsmen became very nervous which necessitated him going to shelter leaving me alone to finish the job.


*Draughtsman – An artist skilled in drawing, in this case the draughtsman would most likely help Draycott prepare maps.

Filed Under: 1916, Diary Entries Tagged With: Draughtsman, mp3

Sunday 4 June 1916 – fine and showery at night

June 4, 2016 by Sarah McLennan

https://monova.ca/greatwarchronicles/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Sunday_June_4_1916.mp3
Feeling awfully weak, am still in bed. Our Artillery are retaliating with heavy shells. Mr Wallis visits me. I hear my name is mentioned in dispatches. Thousands of troops are collecting here & sleeping in the open on the ground. Arms & ammunition are pouring in.
My wounds of yesterday are bound & paining but am still carrying on.
My head painful, eyes sore thro’ gas.

Filed Under: 1916, Diary Entries Tagged With: mp3

Saturday 3 June 1916 – fine

June 3, 2016 by Sarah McLennan

https://monova.ca/greatwarchronicles/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Saturday_June_3_1916.mp3
At 2 PM I go with Lieut. Willis (A.D.C. to General McDonnell) & an orderly, named Wall, to deliver secret dispatches to Colonel Griesbach of 49th (O.C. Battalions in firing line). When entering China Wall we walk over dead bodies for one mile after passing Halfway House the shelling is awfully intense, all calibre. Parapet blown in, burying & killing many. Am alone, orderly is killed. Push on to Yeomanry Post, rest halfway. Meet Willis. We go together reach Yeo. P. deliver dispatches. I take further dispatches to O.C. 60th BN (Col Gascoigne) deliver them under a murderous fire. Miraculous escapes. Hundreds dead and dying, also wounded. Fall many times from exhaustion. Bring more dispatches to Yeo. P. Intense bombardment at 8:30 PM. Stay Y.P. till 10 PM. Ypres 2 am.

Filed Under: 1916, Diary Entries Tagged With: General McDonnell, Lieut. Willis, mp3, Yeomanry Post

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