“I feel one can say with some conviction that no man should willingly leave his home to fight, wound, maim or kill other men about whom he knows little and whom he certainly does not hate. When all men refuse to commit such follies the foundations of a true civilisation will have only just started to be laid.”
- Sam Sutcliffe, circa 1974 (extracted from his Memoir)

Sunday 23 July 2017

Sam’s Battalion’s route-march wanderings conclude at a stately home where their naive trainers prepare them for their return to the Front with drill, polishing buttons “and similar harmless pastimes”…

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Dear all

A hundred years ago this week… In the days before Passchendaele began, heavy artillery battles raged in Flanders (July 24 and 29), and the French had a successful time regaining lost ground north of the Aisne (24) and then repelling German counterattacks (25-7) and a further attack at Mont Haut, Champagne (26-7). In one of the war’s many necessary organisational steps to recognise new weaponry, the British Army founded the Tank Corps (28).
    But the most decisive action of the week saw the revived Romanian Army, supported by Russian Divisions, follow up an artillery bombardment along a 36-kilometre front at Marasti with an infantry onslaught which steadily drove the previously omnipotent German/Austro-Hungarian invaders back 20 kilometres, the most rapid rate of advance achieved in any 1917 battle (July 22-August 1; Romanian/Russian casualties 4,879, German/Austro-Hungarians 9,600).
    However, on the Eastern Front, the Battle Of Galicia (July 19-29) continued to run briskly against the Russian Army as Austrian and German forces retook Stanislau and Tarnopol (24; now in Ukraine), advanced in the Carpathians (25), crossed the Rover Sereth to take Kolomea (26), and reached the Russian frontier (28).

[Memoir background: my father, Lance Corporal Sam Sutcliffe from Edmonton, north London, under-age 2/1st Royal Fusiliers volunteer and Gallipoli veteran (Blogs September 20, 2015, to January 3, 2016), had fought on the Somme Front with his second outfit the Kensingtons (Blogs May 15 to September 25, 2016)… until officialdom spotted his real age – 18 on July 6, 1916, legally too young for the battlefield – and told him he could take a break from the fighting until he was 19. He did so, though with an enduring sense of guilt. By December, 1916, he ended up posted to Harrogate, Yorkshire, and re-allocated again, this time to the Essex Regiment 2/7th Battalion, along with a bunch of other under-age Tommies until such time as they severally became eligible for the trenches again… It was an interesting year all right – four months of blizzards, a meningitis scare, special training in various northern locations – but my father didn’t write enough about his eventual 13 months “off” to cover 1917 in weekly chunks (I can hardly blame him; writing his Memoir in the 1970s he wasn’t really thinking about his son and editor’s self-publishing blog requirements come 2017). So, the blog broke away from current narrative and, May 14-July 9, looked back at his childhood and early teens – his formative years – under the title The Making Of FootSoldierSam. Now, though, we’ve returned to my father’s (approx.) 100 years-ago-this-week stories from summer 1917…]

FOOTSOLDIERSAM SPEAKS
Last week, my father recalled  the start of the Battalion’s (probably) July route march and a terrible thunderstorm that broke over them when they camped outside Tadcaster – his young/old-hand experience ensuring his tentmates remained dry simply because he’d bought a ball of string and cunningly deployed it to raise the edges of the canvas a crucial couple of inches.
    Now he continues the story of their wanderings with an extended stint to a location of almost hotel-like comfort:

‘In fact, after my months of exposure to all sorts of weather, particularly in the Middle East, I quite enjoyed this soldiering in the homeland. I was aware that, during service on two Fronts, spells of over-exertion on poor diets had done me no good. My skinny body and limbs proved that. These months in England must build me up to better physical condition**, so that when the time came, as it would, when I must once more endure the front line, I should be the better able to cope.
     Some days of marching and nights of bivouacking terminated when we passed through the entrance to a huge ducal estate***. There, according to a careful plan, we erected the many Army bell tents which awaited us.
     Each day, supervised by trained officers, we had many jobs to do, all concerned with building a camp complete with efficient arrangements for cooking, feeding, ablutions, drainage and sanitation. Nothing must be wasted, we were told. We even installed filters to recover fat from waste water. It was required for explosives manufacture, along with all large bones – glycerine extracted became an important part of a compound which would cause havoc among our enemies (whereas I had thought of it as a sweet, sticky fluid which relieved sore throats). Whatever the nature of the work to be done, its purpose was explained.
     Eventually, we’d made the large camp as nearly perfect as possible. Then, the study and practice of warlike skills filled many of our waking hours – though our activities bore little resemblance to the training for trench warfare I had done at the base camp near Rouen when we arrived there from Egypt. In France, the officers and NCOs who operated the Battle Training Schools had all served at the Front, so they confined their methods to showing the troops how best to tackle the enemy, their slogan being “Kill! Kill! Kill!” But the so far home-based Division**** with whom I now served set great store by well-polished equipment and boots, correct drilling and marching, and similar harmless pastimes.
     They had, of course, heard that a great war had been raging for three years, but many of them must have hoped that it would not disturb the quiet, orderly existence secured for them by good luck and a little influence. One Company Captain had notices displayed summoning musicians to assemble in a marquee when the day’s work was done, bringing their instruments. Soon after that we had a musical Sunday afternoon, provided by a competent orchestra and several accomplished singers, al fresco, on an improvised stage.
     Our musical fame thus established, soon all ranks were invited to a Sunday afternoon concert held in the Duke’s riding school, a spacious and lofty building. Rows of chairs and forms occupied most of the floor space and faced a small stage. In front of this sat our orchestra, and to one side of them, almost facing us, the party from the Duke’s mansion, headed by the Duchess. I recall the pleasure I felt, sitting there in the front row and able to observe these people from a world apart from mine. The music was nice enough, most of the singing very good, and appreciative applause gave confidence to the hastily formed ensemble and their conductor.
     The elite clapped heartily and beamed their smiles on the performers and on us in the audience as well, not appearing stiff-necked and haughty as some of our cheap magazine stories had led us to believe they might be.
     Inevitably, the sweet elegance of the occasion gave me a pang of regret that my brother was not here to share my enjoyment*****. In such situations, I usually stifled reflections on how I had taken advantage of recurring opportunities to prolong this period of safety. I knew it must end ere long. One day I would be savouring these advantages, pursuing my role – encouraged by my tentmates and other acquaintances – of dry humourist and general “Pisstaker”******, when suddenly my name would be called and that would be the end of this peaceful existence.’
** However, “these months in England” already numbered eight since he left the Somme and an interim cushy number at the great British Army camp in Harfleur, near Le Havre – his physical problems were clearly more deep-seated than could be dealt with by three square (Army) meals a day, as will emerge in a forthcoming episode.
*** You may be able to put me right on this, dear reader – I hope so – but I can’t find any “ducal” estates in Yorkshire. The main stately-home possibilities owned by lesser noble ranks at the time seem to be Harewood House (11 miles west of Tadcaster, their march’s first destination), seat of the Lascelles family and a succession of Earl Harewoods, and Castle Howard (26 miles northeast of Tadcaster), then seat of the Howard Earls and, more recently, impassive star of the Brideshead Revisited movie. My guess is the former, although I can find no positive evidence for it. But the latter is pretty much eliminated by www.yorkpress.co.uk’s noting that, in 1914, ‘When the Lord Lieutenant wanted to requisition Castle Howard for his Divisional HQ, she [the 9th Countess] went through the roof. “I don't want them swarming about the house and park,” Rosalind wrote. “Let them go to the Fevershams or the Middletons or to Hovingham”’– so WW1 was all very well, but definitely not in her backyard.
**** See Blog 131, January 8, 2017, for Sam’s strange account of the alleged/rumoured/maligned “Lost Division” – whose entry into the battlefield seemed to be forever deferred – to which his Essex Regiment Battalion, or at least some stray, under-age members, had been attached in Harrogate.
***** Ted, aged 21, remained somewhere on the Western Front.
****** My father earned this nickname – hence the cap. P – on the Somme with the Kensingtons in the bitter aftermath of his original Gallipoli-bonded 2/1st Royal Fusiliers being disbanded by the Army. As he wrote: “with pleasant fellows in my platoon, on the whole, and a new mood now upon me – occasioned by living among strangers – I could behave in a relaxed manner, laugh without restraint at even the corniest joke, and make a few cheeky comments about people around me (usually taken in good part). The underlying bitterness remained in me, though, and stoked up the fire of reckless humour which ruled out thoughts of a serious nature and ensured that nobody would wish to attempt serious conversation with me – while roughly the opposite of my style in the old Battalion, this resulted in a sort of coarse popularity which pleased me. Consequently, I quickly earned for myself a soubriquet I liked, to wit, The Pisstaker.” (See Blog 98, May 22, 2016, to read this story in context. And I can avouch that, for all his finer qualities, he remained a sarcy so-and-so to the end!)

All the best – FSS

Next week: A Captain Sam detests startles him by offering direct promotion from Lance Corporal to commissioned rank! What should he do? Meanwhile, everybody gets a medical to check their readiness for a return to the Front…

* In his 70s, Sam Sutcliffe wrote Nobody Of Any Importance, a Memoir of his life from childhood through Gallipoli, the Somme, Arras 1918 and eight months as a POW to the 1919 Peace parade.

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