The First Seven Divisions. Lord Ernest Hamilton
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Lord Ernest Hamilton
The First Seven Divisions
Being a Detailed Account of the Fighting from Mons to Ypres
Published by Good Press, 2019
EAN 4064066219925
Table of Contents
THE BIRTH OF THE YPRES SALIENT
THE STAND OF THE FIFTH DIVISION [5]
THE RELIEF OF THE SEVENTH DIVISION
The following abbreviations are used:—
The C. in C. | = | Field Marshal Sir John French |
A.C. | = | Army Corps |
C.B. | = | Cavalry Brigade |
K.O.S.B. | = | King's Own Scottish Borderers |
K.O.Y.L.I. | = | King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry |
K.R.R. | = | King's Royal Rifles (60th) |
LIST OF MAPS
Showing the first seven days of the retreat from Mons, with the routes followed by each division. | Facing Title Page |
Showing disposition of troops at the battle of Mons. | Facing page 12 |
Showing line occupied by British troops after the battle of the Aisne. | 102 |
Ypres and district | 162 |
THE FIRST SEVEN DIVISIONS
BEFORE MONS
When an entire continent has for eighteen months been convulsed by military operations on so vast a scale as almost to baffle imagination, the individual achievements of this division or of that division are apt to fade quickly out of recognition. Fresh scenes peopled by fresh actors hold the public eye, and, in the quick passage of events, the lustre of bygone deeds soon gets blurred. People forget. But when the deeds are such as to bring a thrill of national pride; when they set up an all but unique standard of valour for future generations to live up to, it is best not to forget.
On the outbreak of war with Germany on August 3rd, 1914, the British Army was so small as to be a mere drop in the ocean of armed men who were hurrying to confront one another on the plains of Belgium. It was derisively described as "contemptible." And yet, in the first three months of the war, this little army, varying in numbers from 80,000 to 130,000, may justly claim to have in some part moulded the history of Europe. It was the deciding factor in a struggle where the sides—at first—were none too equally matched. For this alone its deeds are worthy of record, and they are worthy of record too for another reason. They represent the supreme sacrifice in the interests of the national honour of what was familiarly known as our "regular army." Since the outbreak of the war, fresh armies have arisen, of new and unprecedented proportions. The members of these new armies are as familiar now to the public eye as the representatives of the old regular army are scarce. With the doings of these new armies the present pages have no concern. They are, it is true, the expression of a spirit of patriotism and duty so remarkable that their voluntary growth must for ever stand out as one of the grandest monuments in the history of Britain. But they form no part of the subject matter of these pages, which deal solely with the way in which the old regular army, led by the