December Webinars

The Western Front Association is offering two more of its popular webinars this December. To attend, please follow the link for each webinar to register.

From Plumstead to Palestine – Some Cockney War Stories,  Clive Harris
Monday 12 December, 8pm (UK time)
The size and story of London’s contribution in the Great War fades into the pages of history somewhat. This presentation charts the story of London’s regiments, its people and the city’s sacrifices.
To register for this event click here

The Russian Civil War and the Allied Intervention Force, Gordon Corrigan
Monday 19 December, 8pm (UK time)
In this presentation, Gordon will explain how the Russian civil war was supported by a British led Allied Intervention Force. This force included not only British but American, French, Czech and Japanese troops and the Royal Navy operating in the Baltic and the Black Sea and with gunboats on the rivers. 
To register for this event click here


Featured image by Wynn Pointaux from Pixabay

They shall grow not old …

Pillar Hill Cemetery, Doiran Front, Salonika. © IWM Q 64343

Allied war cemeteries at Monastir, the cemetery in the foreground is French, 17 January 1917. © IWM Q 78321

An Austro-Hungarian mule train passing by a monument to German and Bulgarian dead. The inscription reads “Our Heroes” in German and Cyrillic alphabet. © IWM Q 86225

A German military cemetery near Cericani, Bosnia and Hercegovina, 1917. The nearest grave belongs to Oberjager F. K. Muller of the 3rd Company, Guard-Schutzen Battalion, died on 22 July 1917. © IWM Q 86565

A military cemetery of Austro-Hungarian prisoners near Uskub (Skopje), 1917. Note a cross with a word “Swabia”, frequently written on other crosses. © IWM Q 86467

… we will remember them!

Remembrance

With Bonfire Night a rather damp memory we are now very firmly in the season of remembrance, although for our Society remembrance of the achievements, suffering and sacrifice of the British Salonika Force – and associated organisations, individuals and even animals in the campaign – is ongoing and not restricted to a specific time of year. Even so, members and friends will be gathering at war memorials across the country and at CWGC cemeteries further afield in the coming week.

I’ve long been fascinated by war memorials, which come in different shapes and styles: the one where I grew up (Barnet) has a splendid ‘winged victory’, but as she’s topless it was a bit embarrassing!; my local one (Dereham, Norfolk) is a sober Cenotaph lookalike; Bishop’s Stortford memorial once caught my eye because it has items of soldiers’ kit carved in stone; I rather like the one in Cambridge, showing a fully equipped ‘Tommy’ swinging along in fine style with victors’ laurels slung on his rifle. I think, though, that my favourite is in Rawtenstall, Lancashire.

I have mentioned it before, but make no excuse for including it again. What makes it so interesting is that it isn’t just about the army, or even the wider armed services in the First World War, nor is it dedicated to ‘The Glorious Dead’ alone, but has a much wider dedication. Entitled Tribute of Honour, it reads as follows:

To the men who made the supreme sacrifice, to the men who came back and to those who worked at home to win safety for the Empire. 1914-1918.

No mention of women specifically in the dedication, but they certainly feature in the friezes around the base of the memorial, which I shared with you on an International Women’s Day. For this remembrance season here are all the friezes, showing many aspects of the war effort at home and overseas.

We will remember them all.

Winter Webinars 2 – with Alan Wakefield

Online Talk and Live Q&A with Alan Wakefield
‘Britain’s Forgotten Army in Salonika’

Streaming Live: 7pm, 27th October 2022

Alan Wakefield’s talk will focus on two battalions of the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry which gained for the Regiment the battle honours Doiran 1917-18 and Macedonia 1915-18. Using first-hand accounts, Salonika Campaign Society Chair Alan Wakefield will paint a vivid picture of life for the British Army in Salonika.

This talk is hosted by the Soldiers of Oxfordshire Museum. It is free to view, but please consider making a donation to support the work of the museum.

Click HERE for the talk – 7pm on Thursday 27th October 2022.


Featured image source: Soldiers of Oxfordshire Museum. Men of 8th (Service) Battalion Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry, photographed while building a POW camp, shovels still in hand.

Winter Webinars

Now that winter evenings are setting in, why not watch and participate in an online webinar? The Western Front Association (WFA) and The Gallipoli Association are offering the following online talks in October and November:

1. The Western Front Association

Monday 31 October – The Flying Sikh – Hardit Singh Malik, the RFC and the First World War
From his arrival in the UK alone in 1908 as a fourteen-year-old, to Balliol College, Oxford and into the Royal Flying Corps during the First World War, Hardit Singh Malik lived an extraordinary life, often in the face of great adversity, yet always with charm and good humour. He played cricket for Sussex and was an Oxford blue in golf, playing with the Prince of Wales.
This presentation by Stephen Barker describes Hardit Singh Malik’s fascinating story.
To register for this webinar, click here: The Flying Sikh

Monday 7 November – The Coal Black Sea: Winston Churchill and the Worst Naval Catastrophe of the First World War
On the morning of 22 September 1914, just six weeks into the First World War, three Royal Navy armoured cruisers were sunk by a German U-boat in the southern North Sea. The action lasted less than 90 minutes but the lives of 1,459 men and boys were lost – more than the British losses at the Battle of Trafalgar or in the sinking of RMS Lusitania. Yet, curiously, few have ever heard of the incident.
Using a range of official and archival records, Stuart Heaver exposes this false narrative and corrects over a century of misinformation to honour those who lost their lives in the worst naval catastrophe of the First World War. 
To register for this webinar, click here: The Coal Black Sea

Monday 14 November – Investigating the Australians at Pozieres
The victorious capture of the village of Pozieres on 23 July 1916 won the 1st Anzac Corps a reputation as a competent and polished formation, but a closer examination of ongoing activity along the Pozieres Ridge indicates that this is anything but the case. The lessons learned were deeply flawed, and indicative of the desperate nature of fighting on the Somme.
Dr Meleah Hampton was until recently a historian in the Military History Section, Australian War Memorial. She is a graduate of the University of Adelaide and completed her PhD with a thesis on the 1916 battles for Pozières and Mouquet Farm. Her primary interest is in the operational conduct of the First World War on the Western Front. 
To register for this webinar, click here: Investigating the Australians at Pozieres

Monday 28 November  – The Searchers: The Quest for the Lost of the First World War
By the end of the First World War, the whereabouts of more than half a million British soldiers were unknown. Most were presumed dead, lost forever under the battlefields of northern France and Flanders.
In this webinar, Robert Sackville-West brings together the extraordinary, moving accounts of those who dedicated their lives to the search for the missing. These stories reveal the remarkable lengths to which people will go to give meaning to their loss and the exhumation and reburial in military cemeteries of hundreds of thousands of bodies.
To register for this webinar, click here: The Searchers

To participate in the WFA webinars, you will need to register via the links above.

2. The Gallipoli Association

Wednesday 26 October – Gallipoli gallantry: Consistent courage, inconsistent recognition
In re-examining some of the most celebrated Victoria Cross actions of the 1915 Dardanelles campaign Stephen Snelling will look at the bureaucracy behind some of the awards as well as the erratic nature of some of the medals distributed. What his research has revealed is that bravery was not enough on its own to earn the highest honour. Determination and persistence on the part of those seeking to recognise acts of valour was often equally important.
Based in Norfolk, Stephen been a writer/ journalist for nearly 50 years, working variously as a sports editor, features editor and magazine editor. He is the author of eight books including one on the Victoria Cross recipients of the Gallipoli campaign and, most recently, a study of the V Beach landings, The Wooden Horse of Gallipoli.

Tuesday 29 November – 42nd Division at Gallipoli
A talk by author, Paul Knight on the 42nd Territorial Division at Gallipoli, and their exploits at Helles.

Gallipoli Association talks are free to GA members, but guests and the general public are encouraged to join the Association or make a small donation. To reserve a place, please email: education@gallipoli-association.org or warwickfus@btinternet.com


Featured image source: IWM – Lives of the First World War

AGM forced to go online!

UPDATE – FRIDAY 30th SEPTEMBER
Emails with details of how to join the online AGM have been sent out to members today. If you have not received the email, do please get in touch and we will email the details in time for the meeting on Saturday.

The rail strike announced for Saturday 1st October makes it very difficult, or near impossible, for many members of the Society and of the committee to attend. Regrettably, therefore, the AGM will now be taking place online and not in London. In addition, the preceding ceremony at the Cenotaph will not take place this year.

Details on how to join the online meeting will be sent out to members.

Please accept our sincere apologies for this but the committee believes that this is the only appropriate option given the circumstances, which are beyond our control.


Featured image by Alexandra_Koch from Pixabay

Heritage Open Days 9-18 September 2022

Many readers will know of Sandham Memorial Chapel and Stanley Spencer’s stunning paintings reflecting his experiences of Salonika. If you haven’t visited before, there is a great opportunity to do so this September as part of a programme that offers over 3,000 free in-person or virtual visits to sites in the UK.

The sites open this September include several military museums and other sites of relevant interest. For example, the Commonwealth War Graves Commission has created a number of open days and tours across the country.

To find out more about the sites open across the UK, use these links:
https://www.heritageopendays.org.uk/
https://discovernorthernireland.com/things-to-do/arts-culture-and-heritage/european-heritage-open-days
https://www.doorsopendays.org.uk/
https://cadw.gov.wales/visit/whats-on/open-doors-events


Featured image: Commonwealth War Graves Commission

Can you help the Society’s AGM go online?

On Saturday October 1st, the Society is holding its Annual General Meeting. The location, at the Civil Service Club is close to the Cenotaph where earlier in the day a short service of commemoration will be held. We hope that you will be able to travel to London to join us.

However, for many, making such a journey is not possible. Train and other travel issues, cost, travelling times, domestic/work responsibilities, or even continuing worries about COVID may make the trip unfeasible for many. Which is a shame as we would like as many as possible to participate in the AGM.

To that end, we have been exploring ways in which we could live stream, or web cast, the meeting. Our research shows that it would come at a cost – if done professionally. That cost is not extortionate – after all, a camera operator must earn a living, pay for equipment, and so on – but the likely cost is too high for a small society such as ours.

However, if we were to manage things ourselves, using one of the many free or low-cost services (for example, streaming live via Facebook) turning the AGM into an online event becomes much more of a possibility.

We are therefore throwing the net out to members and asking for help. Do you have experience in this area? Are you technically minded, willing to travel to London, and able to set up a streamed event? Do you have a friend, son, daughter, grandchild, niece or nephew who could help out?

If so, do please get in touch by emailing us at scswebeditor@gmail.com to discuss things in more detail. We would of course help to meet any necessary travel and other expenses.

Thanks for taking the time to read this and, with luck, we will meet each other both in person and online at the AGM.

Featured image by JB_Home from Pixabay