Title: Glorious Deeds of Australasians in the Great War
Author: E. C. Buley
Release date: March 12, 2016 [eBook #51427]
Most recently updated: October 23, 2024
Language: English
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London: ANDREW MELROSE, LTD.
GLORIOUS DEEDS
OF AUSTRALASIANS
in the Great War
By
E. C. BULEY
Author of "Australian Life in Town and Country"
FIFTH (ENLARGED) EDITION
LONDON: ANDREW MELROSE, LTD.
3 YORK STREET, COVENT GARDEN, W.C.
1916
First printed October, 1915.
Reprinted November, 1915.
" twice in December, 1915.
New edition (enlarged) January, 1916.
In the course of writing this book I have interviewed some hundreds of wounded Australasian soldiers in London hospitals. From their narratives, delivered with a modesty which I have not sought to reproduce here, I gathered much material not obtainable in the short official accounts given of their exploits.
The temptation to record individual deeds of remarkable bravery has been strong, but in most cases it has been resisted. This comparatively small force, which has suffered 25,000 casualties in less than five months, consists of men who are all heroes. After the first few days on Gallipoli, its officers recognized the impossibility of officially recognizing deeds of bravery, and practically no awards have been made since the end of April.
I have collected a large number of remarkable instances of gallantry, but I have concluded that to mention these would be invidious, since the bulk of such exploits has not come under my notice. Such an exception as I have made in the case of Private Simpson, the dead hero of the Ambulance section, will be pardoned. No Australasian ever speaks of him without saying, "He earned the V.C. a dozen times."
I have heard Australasian officers recount deeds of wonderful bravery which they have not cared to report, because "Any of my men would have done the same"; and, in my attempt to record the main incidents of this great adventure, I am constrained to accept this very high standard of duty. Its effect has been to win for Australasian soldiers a reputation for "daredevil bravery" in the mass, and to ignore the supreme efforts of the individual.
I have to thank the Daily Mail for the permission to reproduce three of the wonderful exclusive photographs its enterprise obtained from the Anzac zone; the British Australasian for the use of all the remaining photographs with which the book is illustrated; and the Weekly Dispatch for permission to reproduce matter which first appeared in that paper.
Finally, I have spoken to no wounded Australasian in this country who has not taken occasion to mention the great kindness shown by the people of Great Britain. Many of them, hearing that I was writing a book on Australasia's part in the war, have asked me to mention this. Their thankfulness has been so spontaneous, and they have been so profoundly touched, that I have ventured to refer to it. Their gratitude cannot be too widely made known on this side of the world; nor can the attentions which elicited it be too freely indicated to those who sent them from Australasia.
The rapid exhaustion of four editions of this book has been accepted by myself as sufficient proof that I have succeeded in carrying out the main idea suggested to me by Mr. Andrew Melrose, the publisher. He divined that some continuous account of the deeds of Australasians in the war would be received with interest, pending the appearance of an authoritative work by the official historian of the Anzacs. I have now extended the book to include all the main incidents of the fighting in Gallipoli, and the evacuation of the Peninsula.
I wish to thank my many friends of the Australian and New Zealand Imperial Forces who have written pointing out errors in the original text, and amplifying my accounts of various engagements. The appreciation they have expressed of my modest performance has indeed been gratifying, and any fear I may have had of their misunderstanding the purpose of the book has been entirely removed.
I have added an alphabetical list of those members of the Anzac Army who have been decorated for services in the field, or mentioned in dispatches. I hope it will be found useful, as well as the index to the contents of the book. With these additions I am content to let the fifth edition go, in the fullest confidence that it will be accepted for what it is intended to be, a brief and simple outline of the most adventurous enterprise and most heroic deeds that the whole history of war can discover.
London, February 25, 1916.
| CHAP. | PAGE | |
| I | The Long Black Ships | 13 |
| II | The End of the Raider "Emden" | 29 |
| III | In the Land of Pharaoh | 47 |
| IV | The Battle of Brighton Beach | 59 |
| V | Occupying the Land | 75 |
| VI | Pope's Hill and Gaba Tepe | 95 |
| VII | The Charge at Krithia | 107 |
| VIII | The Battle of Quinn's Post | 121 |
| IX | A Thorn in the Flesh | 133 |
| X | The Soul of Anzac | 149 |
| XI | The Story of Lone Pine | 159 |
| XII | The Charge of the Light Horse | 169 |
| XIII | The Mighty New Zealanders | 181 |
| XIV | The Valley of Torment | 193 |
| XV | The Great Night March | 203 |
| XVI | The Story of the "Southland" | 215 |
| XVII | The V.C.'s of Anzac | 225 |
| XVIII | Said an Australian Officer | 239 |
| XIX | The Band of Brothers | 253 |
| XX | A Tribute to the Turk | 267 |
| XXI | Gurkhas, White and Brown | 279 |
| XXII | The Man who wasn't Let | 291 |
| XXIII | The Australasian Soldier | 303 |
| XXIV | Filling the Gaps | 315 |
| XXV | The Armies of Australasia | 331 |
| XXVI | Clearing the Pacific | 343 |
| XXVII | The Youngest Navy in the World | 353 |
| XXVIII | The Heart of Empire Stirred | 369 |
| XXIX | The Second Division | 385 |
| XXX | The Last of Anzac | 397 |
| FACING | |
| PAGE | |
| General Birdwood, "the Soul of Anzac" | Frontispiece |
| Australian Infantry Training at Broadmeadows | 14 |
| Troops Leaving Brisbane | 20 |
| The Australians returning to Camp at Mena, in Egypt | 48 |
| Australian Soldiers at the Foot of the Pyramids | 50 |
| Sir George Reid, High Commissioner for the Commonwealth, Reviewing the Australian Expeditionary Force at Mena Camp, Egypt | 52 |
| Transports bearing the Australasians to Anzac Cove. | 62 |
| The Landing at Anzac Cove on Sunday, April 25, 1915 | 66 |
| Shrapnel bursting over Anzac Cove | 70 |
| Roll-call on Brighton Beach. The Sad Scene after an Engagement | 80 |
| Sir George Reid, High Commissioner for the Australian Commonwealth, 1914-15 | 90 |
| General James McCay, commanding 2nd Brigade, Australian Infantry | 100 |
| The New Zealanders Reviewed at Heliopolis | 110 |
| General Bridges, who commanded the 1st Expeditionary Force from Australia | 116 |
| General Monash, Commander of the 4th Brigade, Australian Infantry | 122 |
| Australian Field Artillery in Action | 124 |
| Map showing the stretch of Gallipoli Peninsula from Gaba Tepe to Suvla Bay | 134 |
| A Battery of Australian Field Artillery going into Action | 162 |
| Sergt.-Major Wynn, a Typical Trooper of the Australian Light Horse | 174 |
| A Battalion of New Zealand Mounted Rifles | 182 |
| General Legge, who commanded the Second Division | 218 |
| General Sir Newton Moore, in Charge of the Australasian Depôt at Weymouth | 240 |
| The Valley of Death | 248 |
| Captain Richardson of the 1st Brigade | 252 |
| A New South Wales Battalion, ready for the Front | 304 |
| The Last March through Sydney Streets | 310 |
| General Sir A. J. Godley commanding the New Zealanders and the 4th Brigade, Australian Infantry | 316 |
| Farewell to the Troops in Melbourne | 324 |
| The Canterbury Section of the New Zealand Expeditionary Force | 326 |
| The Australian Submarines AE 1 and AE 2, both lost in the First Year of War | 346 |
| Rear-Admiral Sir George Patey, commanding the Australian Squadron | 348 |
| H.M.A.S. Australia in Sydney Harbour | 356 |
| The Governor-General of Australia | 364 |
| Australian Guns in Action before Sari Bair | 390 |