Showing posts with label de Buriatte. Show all posts
Showing posts with label de Buriatte. Show all posts

Saturday, 4 August 2018

Four Years On




Sunday 4th August 1918

Today is the fourth anniversary of our country joining this Great War to End All Wars to put an end to Prussian aggression and the misery it has inflicted on its neighbours. The 4th Battalion, Bedfordshire, formerly the Hertfordshire Militia, was then a part-time formation which met for training exercises each summer. Since 1916 it has been part of 63rd (Royal Naval) division and has taken part in some of the greatest struggles such as the closing days of the great Somme Battle and the swamps of Passchendaele. Today the battalion held a special church parade to commemorate four years of war, top remember fallen comrades and to pledge itself anew to the struggles to come in the hope that Victory will crown the efforts of 1918.

Captain S E D Cline [X550/1/81]

The 2nd Battalion, meanwhile, received that last of the 7th Battalion vintage. Captain S E D Cline, Lieutenant H de Buriatte, 2nd Lieutenants T H Flavell, A D Greenwood and J Kerr(1)

Sources: X550/3/wd; X550/5/3

(1) Arthur Donald Greenwood would not see out the month, he died on 30th August and is buried at Dantzig Alley Cemetery amongst 7th Battalion fatalities fro 1st July 1916. 



Wednesday, 5 April 2017

All Change

Second Lieutenant Pitts [X550/1/81]

Thursday 5th April 1917 from our correspondent in the field

The acting adjutant of the 2nd Battalion, Bedfordshire Regiment has been in contact to say that two of their company commanders, Captains L F Beal MC and P C Cavan have left the battalion temporarily for a Senior Officers Course of instruction at Aldershot. Lieutenant H de Buriatte has taken over command of A Company and Second Lieutenant J P Pitts "D" Company.

Source: X550/3/WD

Wednesday, 22 March 2017

After Operations

Captain P C Cavan [X550/1/81]

Thursday 22nd March 1917 from our correspondent in the field

The 2nd Battalion, Bedfordshire Regiment has today moved back to Bretencourt after its operations around Mercatel, arriving at 8.30 am. In a reshuffle, Captain P C Cavan took over command of A Company from Lieutenant H de Buriatte, Captain R.Hopkins rejoined from hospital and took over command of B Company from 2nd Lieutenant A P Methuen and Lieutenant L A L Fink MC also rejoined from hospital.

Source: X550/3/WD

Saturday, 18 March 2017

2nd Battalion Advances




Lieutenant de Buriatte [X550/1/81]

Sunday 18th March 1917 from our correspondent in the field

During last night and early this morning the 2nd Battalion, Bedfordshire Regiment, at Agny south-west of Arras observed a number of fires behind the German lines and also loud explosions were heard. At 7.30 this morning they received information that the Brigade on their Right (175th Inf.Bde of 58th (2nd/1st London) Division) had advanced and occupied the German Trenches.

Second Lieutenant Methuen [X550/1/81]

At about 8 am orders were received from Brigade Headquarters to send over patrols to ascertain if the Germans in front of the Battalion had gone. One Platoon of A Company under Second Lieutenant T G Searle and one platoon of B Company under Second Lieutenant F T Matthews (both men recently promoted from the ranks) entered the German lines and found them unoccupied.

At about 9.30 A and B Companies under Lieutenant H de Buriatte and Second Lieutenant A P Methuen respectively advanced and occupied the German front and support line. During this occupation of the Battalion was subject to a little artillery fire, chiefly 77 mm and some 4.8 howitzers. Quite a number of traps were encountered, 2nd Lieutenant R H Hose, who only joined the battalion two days ago, and 21111 Private T.Pearson being both killed by bomb traps. The advance was continued and about 1 pm patrols were next pushed on to Malplaquet Trench, also unoccupied by the enemy.

Second Lieutenant R H Hose [X550/1/81]

At 5.45 pm one platoon of "D" Company under Second Lieutenant A W Joyce was ordered to reconnoitre towards Mercatel and ascertain if it was occupied. We have just heard from the adjutant that the village is occupied.

Source: X550/3/WD

Wednesday, 1 March 2017

All Change in the 2nd Battalion

Lieutenant-Colonel H S Poyntz

Thursday 1st March 1917 from our correspondent in the field

The 2nd Battalion, Bedfordshire Regiment are still in the front line at Agny, south-west of Arras. It has been a quiet day without casualties but with a few changes. The commanding officer, Lieutenant-Colonel H D Poyntz has taken over as commender of 89th Infantry Brigade in the absence of Brigadier-General F C Stanley. Captain H A W Pearse has gone to 89th Infantry Brigade Headquarters for instruction and Lieutenant H de Buriatte has taken over command of A Company.

Source: X550/3/WD

Friday, 28 October 2016

Day One Hundred and Twenty on the Somme



Saturday 28th October 1916 From our Correspondent in the Field

We understand that 33rd Division has taken a small step towards the village of Le Transloy having captured Rainy and Dewdrop Trenches east of Lesboeufs early this morning.

The adjutant of the 1st Battalion tells me that Captain Morris has been put in command of a composite company, composed of eighty men from B and D Companies, who are to take part in a raid near Festubert in the near future. All, for the moment, is quiet.


Captain L F Beal

Captain L F Beal of 2nd Battalion has been made Town Major of Pommier, a village just to the north of the Somme battlefield. This means he is in charge of keeping good order in the place. The Battalion has been joined today by Lieutenant H de Buriatte, who has been posted to A Company.


Lieutenant de Buriatte

Sources: X550/2/5; X550/3/wd

Saturday, 7 November 2015

2nd Battalion in Action Again Near Givenchy


Second Lieutenant Anns 

Sunday 7th November 1915: the adjutant of the 2nd Battalion tells us that the Battalion went into action again near Givenchy-lès-la-Bassée yesterday. They are just north of the la Bassée Canal and close to an area known as the Duck’s Bill in front of which are a number of old mine craters. Their position extends from a trench named Willow Road on their right to one called Shaftesbury Avenue on their left.

At 11.30 a.m. while the Battalion was relieving the Yorkshire Regiment in the front line, verbal orders were received from the Brigadier to the effect that a mine would be exploded at 3 pm if possible and that the lip of the resulting crater must be occupied, at the same time the near edges of the other craters in front of the Duck’s Bill were to be occupied and also that of another, detached crater on the left towards which there was already a sap. As it was expected the Battalion’s trenches would be filled with debris, parties were to de detailed to clear and hold them. All men within 200 yards of the mine were to be withdrawn.

Orders were accordingly issued, and by 3.45 pm the battalion was ready. The Companies detailed to go forward were B Company under Captain R B Gibson on the left, C Company under Captain R O Wynne in the centre and A Company under Captain H de Buriatte on the right, D Company under Captain P C Cavan being in support. The companies were to send out small parties of three Riflemen and three bombers to occupy the crater edges, each party to be followed by a consolidating party of ten men with shovels.

At 4.10 pm the mine was exploded, all the parties went over the parapet and the near edge of the lone crater on the left was occupied and made good and the sap to it completed. The new crater was just in front of the two old ones, these were occupied and observation and communication saps were dug out to them. One party got across the new crater and for a short time established themselves on the far edge of it, they were however bombed out, losing Second Lieutenant H C Lovely, wounded and three other ranks also wounded by bombs. A fairly heavy rifle fire was developed by the enemy on the lips of the occupied craters and Second Lieutenant F Anns was killed whilst superintending a digging party in one of them. Work was continued all night, and by this morning the position, which was required for observation only, was secure. The enemy had thrown a large number of bombs but they all fell just short of the craters occupied.


Source: X550/3/wd

Tuesday, 29 September 2015

Colonel Monteith’s Good Work



Wednesday 29th September 1915: Colonel Monteith, commanding officer of the 2nd Bedfords, tells us more of his experiences at Loos. It seems that the front line is quite a nervous place to be at present, he told us – that units from the King’s Royal Rifle Corps and Worcestershire Regiment are “rather nervy, passing down a lot of silly messages” which he has put a stop to.

He told us that there is: “A lot of shelling going on”. So he went round the trenches and found that A Company had done nothing to improve their firing positions. He could not find the Company Commander, Captain de Buriatte only “Poor little Dyer asleep, woke him and told him what to do”(1).

He came back to find the General Staff Officer of 1st Army- Robinson – with whom he had a run-in yesterday about the defence scheme. He was “in a very panicky state rather inclined to hang me but on learning that I had a line in front and that my proposal was to fire with second line behind parapet he became easier. I saw him out to the front”.

After he got something to eat: “News has come in that French have broken through and are fighting the Huns in the open!(2) I also heard, inadvertently, that Brigade are very pleased with my work. Pip! Pip!”

Source: X550/3/wd


(1) Second Lieutenant E F S Dyer, who joined the Battalion on 13th July 1915 and was to go home wounded on 13th October 1915.
(2) Sadly untrue

Saturday, 26 September 2015

The Bedfords and the Battle of Loos


The Attack of the 7th Division at Loos (The Official History of the War - Military Operations in France and Belgium 1915 Vol II)

Sunday 26th September 1915: We have just heard from 2nd Bedfords who yesterday took part in the big push around Loos, intended to break through the German lines. We understand that while gains have been made the break through as yet remains elusive.

21st Brigade, of which the Battalion forms part, was held in reserve, the other two brigades of 7th Division undertaking the initial assault. At about 11.30 a.m. the Battalion, which had proceeded from the village of Vermelles, entered the former British Front Line. They then advanced on a frontage of two companies immediately north of the road from Vermelles to Hulluch(1) [shown in pink on the above plan]

By this time the 20th Brigade, to which they were acting as support, were already a long way ahead. The Battalion moved across and over the former enemy front line [shown in blue on the above plan] practically without casualties. B Company was on the left, D Company on the right, C Company in support and A Company in reserve. As soon as it began to advance across the open behind the German front line, however, it came under a very heavy rifle fire from the direction of the quarries [shown in yellow on the above plan] and the northern houses of Cité-Saint-Elie.


Captain J W Hurrell [X550/1/81]

The Battalion now suffered severely but continued to advance by rushes of small parties until Gun Trench [shown in red on the above plan] was reached. Second Lieutenant Forward was killed and Lieutenant-Colonel Onslow, Captain and Adjutant J W Hurrell, Captain J W Hutchinson, Second Lieutenant H E Mudford and Second Lieutenant R Hopkins were wounded. Sadly, Captain Hutchinson died from wounds later in the day. Between two and three hundred other ranks also became casualties.


Captain J W Hutchinson [X550/1/82]

Two platoons got about 100 yards in front of Gun Trench, but being unsupported had to fall back by ones and twos – Captain J McM Milling and Second Lieutenant R L Shaw were then wounded. So the Battalion remained in Gun trench holding the gun pits north of the road during the afternoon, digging itself in. At dusk the men of the 20th Brigade who were in the trench were sorted out and rejoined their Brigade. All four Battalion Machine Guns were in the trench.


Captain J McM Milling [X550/1/82]

At about 7 pm A and C Companies were withdrawn from Gun Trench and started digging a Support trench about 100 yards in the rear. At about midnight a number of men were seen coming down the Hulluch Road at a double calling out "Don't shoot we're the Gordons"(2); close behind them came a number of Germans. Almost at the same time the Borders(3) holding Gun Trench south of the road began to retire. At once bombs were rained upon Gun Trench and men began to leave it in increasing numbers, falling back on support trench, where they stopped. The Company on the left of B Company was not attacked and stood firm. Two Machine Guns were with the company and remained in action.


Lieutenant R L Shaw [X550/1/82]

A heavy fire was brought to bear from support trench and shortly afterwards a charge was organised, which was completely successful, practically all the Germans in Gun Trench were killed or taken prisoners, including the artillery captain who led the counter-attack. Second Lieutenant T C Pearson and Second Lieutenant K L Stephenson were killed and Second Lieutenant C J Hunter wounded. The left company suffered some casualties from our own shrapnel during this counter-attack. The rest of the night passed quietly. Two Companies were in Gun Trench and two Companies in the support trench.


Second Lieutenant T C Pearson [X550/1/82]

At the commencement of the action. Captain H de Buriatte commanded A Company, Captain J W Hutchinson commanded B Company Lieutenant R O Wynne commanded C Company and Captain J McM Milling commanded D Company. Second Lieutenant R B Gibson and Lieutenant B R Taylor, both of 3rd Battalion, South Staffordshire Regiment, attached, took command of B and D Companies respectively after Captains Hutchinson and Milling were wounded. Second Lieutenant W J Stonier has become Acting Adjutant.

The 2nd Battalion were not the only ones involved in the battle yesterday. The 8th Battalion, which only arrived in France at the beginning of this month arrived in Béthune in the early hours yesterday and just after midday moved towards the fighting. Their Brigade was ordered to support 72nd Brigade, 24th Division, in a move on Hulluch, meaning they were immediately south of the 2nd Battalion.

The 1st Division reported that it had captured Hulluch but these first, optimistic, reports later turned out to be wrong. Believing a great victory was at hand the Commander-in-Chief decide to throw in the two new divisions, 21st and 24th, to secure the crossings over the Haute Deule Canal to the east. The 24th Division accordingly assembled about la Rutoire farm, south of the Vermelles road believing that little more was require of it than a march after a tired and beaten enemy. The reality proved very different and the adjutant of the 8th Bedfords tells us, candidly, that he was very glad that the division’s orders to attack were countermanded due to the lateness fo the hour and the poor visibility.

Sources: X550/3/wd; X550/9/1


(1) Today’s D39.
(2) Presumably men on 2nd Battalion, Gordon Highlanders, 20th Brigade, 7rh Division.
(3) 2nd Battalion, Border Regiment, 20th Brigade.

Friday, 7 August 2015

Sniping

Lieutenant H de Buriatte [X550/1/81]

Saturday 7th August: Lieutenant H de Buriatte of the 2nd Bedfords tells us that he has been put in charge of a newly formed sniper squad. Sniping, or picking off individual soldiers at range using telescopic sights, is something at which the enemy has been our master hitherto. By collecting the best shots in the battalion together and by nominating them as snipers it is hoped that we will now begin to catch up. Snipers only kill a handful of men compared to the great killers – artillery and machine guns, but their effect on morale is out of all proportion to the numbers they “bag”.

A sniper means one is frightened to show any portion of oneself over the parapet at any time, causing men to creep about bent over like their grandfathers and this continual fear eats away at even the strongest nerves.

Explorer, adventurer, big game hunter and Hampshire fast bowler Major Hesketh Hesketh-Prichard has been put in charge of training for our armies’ snipers. He points out the need for telescopic sights, as the army presently has very few. These bring the image of the target sharply into focus and closer to the firer, making a killing shot more certain. It is hoped that appeals to private individuals for sights and for hunting rifles will yield enough for the first few snipers to use.

The Battalion also heard today that Major Cranleigh Onslow has been promoted to temporary Lieutenant-Colonel and Lieutenant J W Hurrell to Temporary Captain.

Source: X550/3/wd

Thursday, 25 December 2014

The Christmas Truce


H de Buriatte [X550/1/81]

Friday 25th December 1914: The commanding officer of the 2nd Battalion has been speaking with our news desk, telling us something which, to our minds, is not only strange and noteworthy but quite wonderful in the light it throws on our human condition. The battalion is in front line trenches near Fleurbaix and last night, about eight o’clock, the Germans were heard singing in their trenches celebrating the fact that it was Christmas Eve.

There were numerous lights on their parapets apparently suspended from Christmas trees. A voice shouted from their trenches in English and could be heard quite distinctly: "I want to arrange to bury the dead. Will someone come out and meet me?" A number of dead bodies, naturally, litter no man’s land between the two front lines at any one time, sometimes more, sometimes fewer, depending on whether there has been an attack, or whether a raid or patrol has been intercepted or whether man have been killed in the dangerous nightly task of checking the barbed wire in front of their own trenches.

In the event the commanding officer despatched Second Lieutenant H. de Buriatte with three men under a flag of truce. In the middle of no man’s land they met with five Germans, the leader of whom spoke excellent English but was not an officer. He said he had lived in Brighton and in Canada. This German said they wished to bury about twenty four of their dead but would not do so at night as they were afraid that their artillery might open fire as they were jumpy about activity in no man’s land under cover of darkness. They could not stop their artillery doing this and it would not be fair to our men! As a result it was decided that no arrangement was made at the time.

Second Lieutenant de Buriatte struck up a conversation with the German, who gave him a postcard with the following information. The addressee was in the 12th Company, 3rd Battalion, 15th Infantry Regiment, 26th Infantry Brigade, VII Army Corps. The men also had the number 15 on their shoulder straps. The red band round their Caps was covered with grey cloth. This is astounding as such information is usually just the sort of thing that one side seeks to hide from another!

At ten o’clock this morning a German officer and two men, all of whom were unarmed, came out of their trenches with a white flag and were met by Captain H. C. Jackson and asked to be permitted to bury their dead. The Bedfords said they would not fire till 11.30 to give them time to go about their mournful task and this was done. The commanding officer of 2nd Battalion explained: “My men had already buried some of the dead last night. It was noticed that the German trenches were strongly held, there being a large number of men sitting on the parapet during the time the bodies were being buried. The men were a young lot from 19-25 years, well turned out and clean. I had given strict orders that none of my men were to go towards the enemy's lines without definite orders and that no one except those on duty were to be looking over the parapet. No Germans were allowed to come near our trenches. The German wire was closely inspected”.

During this time of unofficial truce, one of the 2nd Battalion’s Company Sergeant Majors was speaking to a German when an elderly officer passed. This German said they were very comfortable in a nice village behind but did not give the name! He seemed surprised that our troops were not an elderly Reserve class. The general impression was that the Germans had had enough and were anxious for the War to come to an end. Such events as this, we understand, have taken place all over those sectors of the front line held by or men, but not in those areas held by the French. The Germans’ behaviour seems extraordinary but the C. O. of the 2nd Battalion explains that a large percentage of the 15th Infantry Regiment seem to originate from Saxony. Apparently it is well known that the Saxons do not make very efficient or aggressive soldiers, in contrast to the swaggering Prussians or the murderous men from Württemburg. This reminds us that Germany was a group of different states – Bavaria, Westphalia, Prussia, Saxony, Württemburg and so on until formed together in a single nation state as recently as 1871.

The colonel of the 1st Battalion reports the receipt of Christmas cards from Their Majesties the King and Queen, which were distributed to all ranks of the Battalion as were brass tins containing chocolate or tobacco and other comforts – a present from Her Royal Highness Princess Mary. For them too it has been a quiet day, the Germans semaphoring over that they were not going to fire. No mention is made of any fraternisation with the enemy and so, presumably, there has been none.

We understand that fraternisation, such as that between 2nd Battalion and the German 15th Regiment has caused dismay in the upper echelons of the British Expeditionary Force. No doubt the top brass will feel it is something calculated to diminish the men’s martial spirit. In some cases, we believe, British units have engaged their enemies opposite in impromptu games of football in no man’s land!

No doubt there are two views to be taken of this. One view is that it is indeed to be deplored - a war for the very existence of civilization is under way. The Germans are the men who have committed acts of barbarism on civilians in both Belgium and France – mass murder, rape, looting and arson. Our men will need to be tough indeed to deal defeat to such a foe. The other view is that the men on both sides are just that – men, with all their faults and virtues – some, on both sides, will be very bad characters indeed, others will be full of decency, most will be somewhere in between, veering from one to the other at different times. Christmas marks the birth of our Saviour who died for all our sins, so a cessation of killing at such a time is a thing to be treasured – showing that there is still some spirit of peace abroad in the world. We invite readers to decide their own view for themselves.

Sources: X550/2/5; X550/3/wd