Showing posts with label Battle of Loos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Battle of Loos. Show all posts

Friday, 24 January 2020

Leicestershire in the Great War

First and only novel about Leicestershire Regiment in First World War launches in Leicestershire
The author signing copies of the book.
Photograph by Lynne Dyer (https://lynneaboutloughborough.blogspot.com/2019/12/the-carillon-perfect-setting.html)





Saturday 21 December 2019 saw the launch of ‘Don’t Be Late in the Morning’ – the first and only novel to be written about the Leicestershire Regiment in the First World War.

The two launch events were held at the Hub cafe in Syston in the morning, and the Carillon Tower and War Memorial Loughborough in the afternoon, where there was opportunity to speak to the author, Dr Karen Ette, buy a discounted and signed copy of the book and even sample a ‘rum ration’. The borough Carillonneur, Caroline Sharpe, played the clavier and familiar tunes, such as ‘Pack up your troubles’ ‘It’s a long way to Tipperary’ and ‘Keep the home fires burning’ rang out across Queens Park.

Set in Syston, and culminating at the Battle of Loos in October 1915, this flagship novel tells the previously untold story of David Adcock, a Leicester Tiger, who fights alongside friends from his hometown of Syston and other town and villages across our historic county.

Based on research carried out during her PhD at Loughborough University, this unique work of fiction uses exclusive private sources along with published accounts and Dr Ette weaves together truth and fiction to illuminate what has become a forgotten battle, fought by men from a town often overlooked in considerations of the Great War – Leicester.

Importantly, these unpublished primary sources reveal the human and personal cost of the conflict and this is very important to author, Dr Karen Ette who says:
“My intention is that writing a novel using original, previously unseen documents, and real people, will rightfully establish the second offensive of the Battle of Loos in literature as one of the recognised battles rather than a forgotten one.”

Publisher, Sarah Houldcroft ­– Goldcrest Books, also said:
My interest was piqued when Karen explained to me that her story was based on original letters and diaries. When I heard more about the content, how could I not want to get involved with the book! So many brave men lost their lives for us in that awful war. I don’t usually get emotional when typesetting a manuscript but when I saw and read the magazine articles included in the book it did bring tears to my eyes. It is a wonderful testimony to all those young men.

If you missed the launches, Dr Ette will be at Church View Nursery, Barkby’s Food and Craft Fair on Sunday, 23 February, where you will be able, once again, to enjoy discounted copies of the book plus the ‘rum ration’.

Available to buy from Amazon, the publisher, Charnwood Museum, plus a number of other local outlets, this exceptional novel is already receiving great reviews, Clive Curtis said:

“Very engaging and accessible. An excellent account of the life of ordinary people at the beginning of the twentieth century”.

"A well-researched, engaging book. The author has clearly worked hard to weave many sources of information together to produce this vivid account, and is to be applauded. Value for money - recommended."

"Coming from the area where this book was set, I found it extremely interesting. The details of the soldiers life during training and the in battle were sometimes funny and sometimes heartbreaking. It was also good to hear the stories of the families left at home while the young men of the village went off to war."

Synopsis of Don’t Be Late in the Morning.

David Adcock, grows up in the Leicestershire village of Syston. Popular and respected by his friends, they later become his pals on the Western Front where, as a ‘fighting Leicester Tiger’, he experiences one of the most catastrophic and overlooked battles of the First World War.
Emily Jane Wade, is the only girl in a family of five children who is sent to live with a cruel aunt and uncle after her mother’s death.
In 1911 David's widowed mother, Mary Adcock, and Emily's father, Alfred Wade, marry and they become step-brother and -sister. When war is declared in August 1914 David is working at the local shoe factory. After a village recruitment meeting he knows that at twenty he is old enough to serve abroad and volunteers to join the army, along with his pals, when there is still a sense of adventure and excitement about going to fight ‘the Hun’. 
Emily is in domestic service, but moves back home where she takes over the running of the village post office after her fiancĂ© is killed in action. Here she receives the ‘real’ letters from serving soldiers, which are shared with the vicar. 
Realising that he will be sent to the Front very soon, David comes home on leave and asks Emily to marry him and scandal shrouds their relationship.
 In March 1915 the theatre of war in France and Flanders is the setting. The 1/4 battalion of the Leicestershire Regiment are mobilised and strong bonds are formed between the ‘Leicester Lads’, culminating in the little-known battle: Loos, 13th October 1915. Many of David's pals are killed and he is left for dead in a cellar after being badly wounded, whilst Emily waits for news.
Don't Be Late in the Morning is written about real people from original, unpublished letters and diaries, filling a lacuna in British Great War fiction.

Tuesday, 13 October 2015

Battle of Loos and the 46th (North Midland) Division


They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old:
Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn.
At the going down of the sun and in the morning
We will remember them.

At 1400 hours on the 13th October 1915 a whistle blew. The men of the 46th (North Midland) Division began their attack on the Hohenzollern Redoubt. 137th Brigade went first and were immediately hit by heavy machine gun fire. The attacking battalions were annihilated without achieving anything.

Of the two companies of the 1/5 South Staffords, every single officer and man was hit as they tried to advance.

138th Brigade attacked at 2.05 p.m.. They managed to reach their first objective with fewer losses. Then, as they carried on, heavy fire cut across them resulting in very high casualties. The attack came to a standstill within ten minutes. Trench fighting continued, but once again the shortage of bombs proved decisive. The Division lost 180 officers and 3,583 men within ten minutes, and achieved absolutely nothing.

The ceremony of remembrance, attended by the Mayor, was held at the 46th (North Midland) Division Memorial close to the Redoubt at 2,00 p.m. on the 13th October 2015. 




Wreath of the Leicestershire Regiment

After the laying of wreaths

Leicestershire Regimental Wreath
To read more about the 46th (North Midland) Division, please click here and for further information about the memorial, click here

To read For the Fallen  by Robert Binyon, follow this link

Their Name Liveth for Evermore

Friday, 24 October 2014

Leicestershire Regiment and a Gurkha VC

The Leicestershire Regiment, its India connection and a Gurkha VC
The Royal Leicestershire Regiment was raised on the 27th September 1688 and was known as the 17th Regiment of Foot. In 1804 the Regiment embarked for India and served there for over eighteen years. Here they saw challenging times in some of the most remote parts of the country. In 1807 they fought in Bundelkund, in 1808 on the Sutlej and against the ferocious Gurkhas in Nepal during 1813-1814. Ironically, one hundred years later, the Leicesters were fighting with the Gurkhas.
 The Regiment left India in 1823 and as the service of all its ranks was considered so valuable and abounding in courage and endurance, it was granted that they could carry the Green Tiger and the word ‘Hindoostan’ on their colours. In 1825 the Regiment was awarded the Honour of wearing the insignia of the Royal Tiger superimposed with the word Hindoostan, in recognition of its exemplary service and conduct during its campaigning and long tour in India from 1804-1823. Since that time the Regiment has always proudly been called "The Tigers".
The 2nd Battalion of the Leicestershire Regiment was raised in 1858. They too had a gruelling period of service in India and Burma from 1874, and eventually returned home in 1890.  In 1881 the 17th Regiment of Foot became The Leicestershire Regiment. It was made up of two Regular battalions and two Militia battalions, and the Headquarters of the Regimental District was at Glen Parva Barracks, in South Wigston

At the outbreak of the First World War the 2nd Battalion was once again in India and were brought to France as the British Battalion of the Garhwal Brigade of the 7th Indian Division. [1]

At the Battle of Neuve Chapelle in March 1915 the Garhwal Brigade’s Indian battalions were held up by uncut wire, but the 2nd Battalion Leicestershire Regiment were able to attack and quickly overwhelmed the enemy and held the trenches. There were many ‘gallant deeds’ reported that day by the “Tigers”, the most notable being that of Private William Buckingham who was awarded the Victoria Cross.

On the 25th September 1915 the Battle of Loos began and another Victoria Cross was awarded, this time to a Gurkha soldier, Kulbir Thapa.

Kulbir Thapa was born on the 15th December 1889 in Palpa, Nepal. When the Battle of Loos began on the 25th September 1915 he was 26 and serving as a Rifleman with the 2nd Battalion of the 3rd Queen Alexandra’s Own Gurkha Rifles. The Allied Infantry assault began at 6.00 a.m. and under the cover of thick smoke Kulbir Thapa was in one of the leading companies who tried to break through the German wire at Fauquissart.
Kulbir was wounded and became stranded on the German side when he came across a wounded soldier of the 2nd Battalion, Leicestershire Regiment behind the first-line German trench. The ‘Tiger’ was Bill Keightley from Melton Mowbray,[2] and despite his injuries Kulbir Thapa stayed with him all day and all night. A mist had formed the following morning and Kulbir was able to drag Bill Keightley through the German wire and take him to a place of relative safety. He then went back and in broad daylight, fetched two wounded Gurkha soldiers and took them, too, to safety.[3]


His courageous act attracted a great deal of attention and it is reputed that when he brought yet another wounded soldier to safety, carrying him over his shoulder, that the Germans applauded him.
In the February 1915 Parish Magazine of St Peter and St Paul, Syston, there was a letter from a Leicestershire soldier, Percy Pollard. He had written to his mother on Christmas Eve, 1914 and said:  “We saw an Indian soldier do a brave deed. He went right out in front of our trenches to get one of our wounded in. He carried him about twenty yards and then got wounded. Then another Indian went out and brought them both safely in. It was worth a VC.” 
Percy Pollard may well have been speaking of Kulbir Thapa, when they were both at Loos in September 1915. Rifleman Thapa was indeed awarded the Victoria Cross for the Battle of Loos and was gazetted on the 18th November 1915.
Kulbir Thapa rejoined his battalion in Egypt on 4 January 1916 and he later achieved the rank of Havildar, which is equivalent to the rank of Sergeant. His Victoria Cross is displayed at the Gurkha Museum in Winchester. [4]

Darwan Negi of the 39th Garwhal Rifles was also awarded a VC for his brave action 23-24 November 1914 at FestubertFrance.

Karen Ette  


[1] http://blog.operationwardiary.org/2014/09/30/the-indian-army-arrives-in-france

[2] http://www.leicestermercury.co.uk/wounded-Tiger-heroic-Gurkha-saved-life/story-22927165-detail/story.html [accessed 20 October 2014]  NO LONGER AVAILABLE
[3] http://www.cwgc.org/foreverindia/military-honours/kulbir-thapa.php [accessed 20 October 2014]  NO LONGER AVAILABLE
[4] http://www.thegurkhamuseum.co.uk

Saturday, 4 February 2012

46 (North Midland) Division Memorial - Angles - Degrees - Loss

On 13th October 1915, at 2.00 p.m. (1400 hrs) the men of the 46th Division went ‘over the top’ in an attempt to capture the Hohenzollern Redoubt.

137th Brigade went first and were immediately hit by heavy machine gun fire. The attacking battalions were annihilated without achieving anything.

Of the two companies of the 1/5 South Staffords, every single officer and man was hit as they tried to advance.

138th Brigade attacked at 2.05 p.m.. They managed to reach their first objective with fewer losses. Then, as they carried on, heavy fire cut across them resulting in very high casualties. The attack came to a standstill within ten minutes. Trench fighting continued, but once again the shortage of bombs proved decisive. The Division lost 180 officers and 3,583 men within ten minutes, and achieved absolutely nothing.

Decades later, a great deal of distress was caused by the dumping of waste on what had been the Hohenzollern Redoubt.  This was addressed and there is now a permanent ban on any dumping.


On 13th October 2006 a Memorial to the 46th (North Midland) T F Division was  put in place on land close to the Redoubt donated by the local farmer, Michel Dedourage. 


The land where the memorial stands is 46 sqm.  It is made from Portland Stone (the same as the Dorset Memorial) in the form of a ‘Broken Column’ and was designed by Michael Credland.

The top of the column is tilted at an angle of 46 degrees.


The bottom step is 46 inches across and the column is 46 inches high. 


Every angle: the top, the base, the steps and the facets of the column are 46 degrees.


Each of the eight sides has a gun-metal plaque bearing the cap badges and names of the battalions: Lincolnshires, Leicestershires, Sherwood Foresters, North Staffordshires, South Staffordshires,  1st Monmouths, RFA and RE.  The plaques were made by the famous Bell Founders: Taylors of Loughborough. 

The Inscription "THEIR COUNTRY FOUND THEM READY", which is carved on the top step of the Memorial, was chosen by Martin Middlebrook, who wrote of Captain Staniland's Journey: The North Midland Territorials Go To War. It comes from the popular war-time song "Keep the home fires burning" composed by Ivor Novello In 1915.


Photographs of three brothers who served with the 46th (North Midland) Division.  The larger photograph is of a Hohenzollern Redoubt Survivor 

 St. Mary's Advanced Dressing Station Cemetery on the Hulluch to Vermelles road, Haisnes.


46th North Midland Memorial, Vermelles


THEIR NAME LIVETH FOR EVERMORE


46th (North Midland) Division - short history
The Dorsetshire Memorial

©Karen Ette