The Project Gutenberg eBook of Australasia Triumphant!: With the Australians and New Zealanders in the Great War on Land and Sea
Title: Australasia Triumphant!: With the Australians and New Zealanders in the Great War on Land and Sea
Author: Arthur St. John Adcock
Release date: November 3, 2021 [eBook #66658]
Most recently updated: October 18, 2024
Language: English
Original publication: United Kingdom: Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent & Co. Ltd, 1916
Credits: Tim Lindell, Chris Pinfield, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
Transcriber's Note:
Obvious printer errors have been corrected. Hyphenation has been rationalised.
The flagship of the Expeditionary Forces, here identified as the Orverto, is elsewhere identified as the Orvieto.
Frontispiece: THE BATTERED "EMDEN" AFTER GOING ASHORE ON COCOS ISLAND.
Australasia Triumphant!
WITH THE AUSTRALIANS AND
NEW ZEALANDERS IN THE
GREAT WAR ON LAND AND SEA
BY
A. ST. JOHN ADCOCK
WITH 36 ILLUSTRATIONS
LONDON: SIMPKIN, MARSHALL, HAMILTON,
KENT & CO., LTD., 4 STATIONERS' HALL CT., E.C.
Copyright
First published, January 1916
AUTHOR'S NOTE
It is too soon to attempt the telling at large and in detail of all that has been done by Australia and New Zealand in the Great War. There is much that has, for military reasons, not yet been revealed; and what has been told has come to us from various sources in more or less fragmentary fashion, so that one must read several accounts of the same event in order to get anything of an adequate idea of it. All I have done here is to collate such documents as are available and gather together a connected narrative, not only of the actual campaigning, but of the spiritual and mental experiences the Australasians have passed through since August 1914, the way they have faced this crisis in their history, and the effect the war has had on their national life. I have drawn on official documents, on the dispatches of Sir Ian Hamilton, the reports of the various correspondents of our English and the chief Australian and New Zealand newspapers, on the speeches of public men and letters of private citizens, and on a few conversations I have had with some of the wounded Anzacs whom I have met in these latter days about London. In all which I have been little more than an enthusiastic and, I hope, faithful compiler, endeavouring to set down as vividly as I could the impressions I formed from my reading and hearing of these things, and trying occasionally to guess, according to my lights, at the spirit and inner significance of this wonderful uprising of our Australasian kinsfolk–at the ideal for which they are fighting with such glorious heroism and for which so many of them have ungrudgingly laid down their lives. Some, who have had no hand in the fighting, have very confidently criticised both the Commander-in-Chief who has led these gallant soldiers in the sternest of their battles and the Government that has been responsible for the campaigns they have undertaken; but I have not ventured to compete with such critics, chiefly because I accept the judgment of the sturdy New Zealander who said to me, discussing the nagging diatribes of a certain newspaper: "It's all fluff. If these fellows knew a little more they wouldn't have so much to say."
CONTENTS
| page | ||
| Britons All | 1 | |
| chapter | ||
| I. | Making Ready | 3 |
| II. | Patrolling the Pacific | 15 |
| III. | The Triumph of the "Sydney" | 25 |
| IV. | En Route for Egypt | 33 |
| V. | Christmas at the Pyramids | 43 |
| VI. | The Fight for the Suez Canal | 51 |
| VII. | The Epic of the Dardanelles Begins | 59 |
| VIII. | The Dare-devil Anzacs | 73 |
| IX. | The Australasian Ideal | 91 |
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
| The Battered "Emden" after going ashore on Cocos Island | Frontispiece |
| Facing page | |
| French Men-of-War and Australian Troopships in Suez Canal, Port Said | 4 |
| Men of the Australian Light Horse in Cairo | 5 |
| Near the Pyramids: The Camp of the Australians, against whom no German-trained Turkish Army can be successful | 12 |
| "Strangers in the Land of Egypt" | 13 |
| Football in Camp at Abassia | 13 |
| With our Colonial Troops in Egypt | 16 |
| Australian Army Field-kitchens marching past at a Review of Troops in Egypt | 17 |
| A Small Portion of the Army in Egypt | 20 |
| The Australian Troops in Egypt | 21 |
| From Different Points of the Compass | 21 |
| The Horse Lines at Abassia, Egypt | 28 |
| The Australian Remounts Depot at Abassia | 28 |
| Our Troops in Egypt | 29 |
| With our Troops in Egypt | 32 |
| An Australian Scout in the Egyptian Desert | 33 |
| Camp of the Australians at Mudros Bay | 36 |
| Sultan of Egypt visits the Dardanelles Wounded | 36 |
| Second Division leaving Mudros Bay with Australians on the Fore Deck | 37 |
| The Last Service on board the "London" for the Australians | 44 |
| The Dardanelles–Australians and Bluejackets on a Transport | 45 |
| An Australian Landing Party for the Dardanelles | 52 |
| Australians preparing to Disembark at the Dardanelles | 53 |
| Australians landing North of Gaba Tepe | 53 |
| The Dardanelles–Australian Troops at the Landing | 60 |
| Australia's Splendid Corps of Mounted Ambulance Men (1) | 60 |
| The Brave Australians | 61 |
| Australia's Mounted Ambulance Men (2) | 61 |
| The Dardanelles–Soldiers taking their Horses for a Bathe | 68 |
| General Birdwood, in command of the Australians at the Dardanelles | 69 |
| Australia's Mounted Ambulance Men (3) | 76 |
| The Dardanelles–Men bathing after returning from an Attack | 77 |
| Heroes from the Dardanelles | 84 |
| Heroes of the Dardanelles | 85 |
| The Dardanelles Operations | 92 |
| The Dardanelles–Australian and New Zealand Troops in a Ravine | 93 |