Thursday, 23 July 2015

Telling It Like It Is


Friday 23rd July 1915: A member of the East Anglian Royal Engineers has spoken to us giving details about the dangerous and tiring lives they lead. “Occasionally one reads in your columns very interesting accounts of the useful work that is being done by the various Training and Territorial Battalions connected with the county and at times your public is given some idea of the impression which the real thing creates in the mind of the newly arrived fighting man, even if it is only by way of a description of a few minutes’ tour of the trenches with just a peep over the parapet. These letters are very interesting, but to those who have been at the front for some considerable time, they appear rather amusing insomuch as they treat with awe and wonder of those things which to the old-hand are of ordinary daily occurrence. On occasions too the veil of censorship is lifted and one gets a glimpse of the doings of the Engineer Field Company, worthy sons of the Town by the River. Were it possible, the sappers could give you not only a much more accurate description of what the war really has been like during an acquaintance lasting over several months; but if their modesty and the censor had permitted they could spin many a yarn which would make the old town justly proud of her children. It is not advisable for various reasons that detailed accounts should appear in the press, but this silence must not be taken to mean that our sappers have no tale to tell”.

“There were times when the Bedford lads might have felt a little piqued at the constant reference in your columns to the Highland Division who the Sappers felt had rather ousted from their rightful place in the local interest, but this was instantly forgotten when by a curious coincidence the Unit was called upon to share the ushering in to its military life in the line of this same Highland Division. Right well did the Scotchmen take to the game, although they hit it in not too soft a place”.

“To take up the tale of the Sappers. Arriving in France at the time when weather conditions were as bad as it is possible to conceive, they were attached immediately to a Regular Division, and were allowed to take their place in the line on the same footing as Regular troops – an honour which the Company was quick to appreciate. At the time the Territorial force was an entirely new element in the firing line and every sapper seemed to feel that all eyes were upon him and that the credit of the volunteer armies was in his keeping. How he acquitted himself is well-known at the front and very soon any doubt which their brothers in the Regiments might have had as to the manner in which they would discharge their duties was entirely dispelled”.

“For the first six weeks of their life abroad they hardly even saw the sun. Day after day an incessant downpour drenched them to the skin. Working in thick mud and water reaching well above the knees with boots worn through with no chance of drying their sodden garments, or even changing them for the night, they carried on cheerfully, making light of discomfort under conditions which it is difficult to imagine. The weather improved but their work has been continuous throughout, except for three short rests of a few days after a particularly trying time. In this respect, the RE differ from the other troops of their division. The infantryman spends four days in the trenches and at the end of that time he is relieved and has four days’ rest some miles behind the line, where he may employ the luxuries of life, such as baths, concerts etc., and he can there rest at night far from the noise made by bursting shells and the almost deafening crash of our own guns”.

“Not so the sapper, who is always on duty and liable to be called-on at a moment’s notice. His billets almost throughout have been in some shell-ridden house at no great distance from the front line whose walls are spattered at night with bullets which have been “overs” from the front line. His rest is often disturbed when enemy gunners are active by the sound of an arrival close by, which, with a slight difference in range or direction, would have brought his flimsy home about his ears. Sometimes by night, sometimes by day, but always within range of the enemy’s fire, the Bedford sappers have taken their share of ll that has been doing since they have been in the country – wiring out in no-man’s-land, building breastworks across spaces where no trench existed, mining, sapping, preparing defence works, drainage, construction of dug-outs and bridges, preparation of explosive bombs and mines, instructing the infantry in matters requiring special care or knowledge, supervising working parties of French and Belgian civilians, yeomanry, infantry and even naval men; in fact the hundred and one things that the RE are called upon to do have fallen within their sphere of activity. And the all-too-long casualty lists of the Company show that the element of danger has constantly been with them in their work”.

“The Sapper could tell you of nights spent in the “in between” where the lurid glow of the magnesium flares lights up for a while those strange, still-outstretched forms whose rest should be sacred, and over whose bodies passes the ceaseless requiem of both armies. He could tell you of the efforts of the Minenwerfer and hand grenade, of the “fizz-bang” and the cramp of nights spent in cellars whose regular occupants were rats and beetles, of hours spent in drowned communication trenches waiting further orders “the guns will lengthen out and storming parties will advance” and of the following wild rush in the open through a hail of shrapnel and rifle bullets. Of these and hundreds of other experiences the sapper could give first-hand details”.

“He could even tell of the delights of evening music from a borrowed piano, of gardens rich in fruit, whose legitimate owners had fled, of a very occasional game of football with a chance met field company but – THE CENSOR. The Engineers have taken part in the various attacks that have been made in the part of the line in which they have been stationed and have earned for themselves on more than one occasion the praise of those of high military rank under whom they have had the honour to serve”.

“Today they are just as cheerful, just as willing and as hardworking as they were in the beginning and it is due not only to the men themselves, but also to those left behind that Bedford should occasionally hear something of the part played in this great conflict by the lads we saw in former years parading in the Ashburnham Road

Source: Bedfordshire Times 23rd July 1915

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