War Diary of AA Laporte Payne Jan 1916

War Diary of AA Laporte Payne

 

Extracted from

 

Brigade Diary, Personal Diary, Operation Orders, Note Books, Memoranda &

Correspondence

—————–

 

1916

 

 

January 3, 1916.

R.P.

“Even though it was for so short a while I was very glad to get leave and see you all again. I arrived back at the battery this morning.  We expect to be off at any time now.

 

Tomorrow I am out all day on a Divisional Field Day.

 

D/175 Brigade.

Corton Camp.

Codford.

Wilts.

 

JANUARY 4 1916.

D, 175th BRIGADE R.F.A.

No 4 CAMP CORTON

CODFORD WILTS.

 

“We are nearly ready to move now and expect to go any day. All leave for men and officers had been stopped here, so I am afraid I shall not be able to get away again.

The weather down here is really awful, and the mud. I have been out with the infantry to-day, getting to know the officers with whom I shall have to work at the front.  I shall be a forward observing officer, and shall sleep one night in three at the Headquarters of the 4th Battalion Tyneside Scottish.  My job will be to direct artillery fire over the telephone to support the infantry.

 

We drew all our first lot of ammunition on Saturday. 704 rounds of 18 pdr. shrapnel shell.  I wonder how many Germans we shall kill with that little lot.

 

I had a good day on Sunday. I left camp at 10.30 a.m., arrived at Finchley at 5.15 p.m., left again at 8.15 pm, and got back to camp at 8.15 a.m. on Monday morning.  Some travelling for three hours at home.  Au revoir.

 

BATH 7.57.p.m. 7th January 1916

 

Payne, Christchurch Vicarage, North Finchley, N.

 

We leave early Monday letters to France.  au revoir.

Arch.

 

January 8, 1916.

R.P.

“I wired yesterday to say we were leaving early on Monday morning. If you did not get the wire it was stopped by the Post Office.  Please send letters to France.

 

Now we are in a muddle and rush to pack and clear up. I have tied all the Horses’ tails in my section with Cambridge blue ribbon to distinguish then during transhipment.  I have one train for my section alone, two guns, horses, men wagons and baggage.  Au revoir.

Boyton Camp.

 

MONDAY JANUARY 10. 1916.

 

Diary.

 

“The Left Section of “D” Battery left the camp at Corton at 11 a.m., and marched to Codford Station. As this was my section I was in charge, but Hopkins came with us.  It was a fine morning.  Several people came to see us off.  While Hopkins superintended the loading of the vehicles, I entrained the horses.  My mare was very stupid and gave a lot of trouble.  We travelled via Salisbury, where we dropped a R.A.M.C. Colonel who had asked for a lift.  We arrived at Southampton at 3 p.m., and immediately detrained.  I inspected the horses and discovered no casualties.  After signing the embarkation book we went on board the S.S. “North Western Miller” of the Furness Line.  We sailed at 8 p.m. for Havre.  I was lucky in getting accommodation in the Chief’s cabin.  After attending to the posting of stations and seeing the horses fed and life-belts served out, I turned in and wrote a letter home.  I had already sent two wires from the docks.  My wristlet watch, a luminous one went wrong; my first casualty.  We sailed without lights.

The appearance of the horses closely packed between decks in the flicking lamp-light was most weird. All their heads swayed with the motion of the ship.

At Codford we entrained in 25 minutes.

 

TUESDAY JANUARY 11 1916.

 

Diary.

 

“We had a smooth crossing, and arrived off Havre about 4 a.m. Then we anchored, and waited for the tide.  I was up at 4.30 a.m., a bit tired but not much.  It was a beautiful morning.  We remained at anchor until 11.30 a.m., when we entered harbour.  All the officers were on the bridge.  After a long delay the ship was tied up to the proper hangar.  We saw Hopkins and Freeman-Cowan waiting on shore with sixty of our gunners.  They had preceded us in an old paddle-wheel steamer.

 

The Landing Staff caused trouble by interfering with our arrangements. The Staff as usual gave us a job of work to do and then worried us by all sorts of ridiculous suggestions.  Why cannot they leave us alone?  We are quite capable of disembarking.

 

The horses were turned loose in the ship and driven down a gang-way to be caught by the drivers at the bottom. My mare did not like it at all, and again caused trouble.  The hairies, however seemed glad to be on firm ground once again, and there were no casualties.

 

As at Codford and Southampton I again had charge of the horses. We sorted them out as best we could on the quay side.  After a lot of trouble in finding our guns and vehicles and watering the horses we hooked in and moved off to No. 5 Camp on the Havre-Harfleur Road about 5 p.m.  In the dark we marched through the wilderness of the docks to the camp.  There we found good hard horse lines under cover.  The officers and men slept in tents.  It was quite a warm night.

 

We had dinner in the officers’ mess at the price of 3 fr. 60 cs. each. After dinner Freeman-Cowan and I stood coffee drinks to all the men of the battery at the Y.M.C.A. Canteen as no arrangements had been made for a meal for them.

 

Then we went to bed on the floor of our tent by candle light.

 

My impressions of the place are few and seem to include only acres of dirty water, miles of dirtier quay-side in the wildest confusion with a population of English ladies selling coffee and German prisoners, guarded by a few French Territorials in grubby uniforms, working on the railway and making camps.

 

I posted a card home.

 

R.P.

On Board a Transport

Havre

January 11, 1916.

 

We arrived safely, although the Ship’s officers tried to frighten us by saying there were submarines on the look out for us. We had an escort of two destroyers.

 

We left Codford by train yesterday morning about 11 a.m., and arrived at Southampton Docks about 3 p.m., so you see we did not hurry to leave England.  My section got on board quite safely without any mishaps.  I was lucky in getting the chief’s cabin to sleep in on the way over.  There were 16 officers with us and accommodation for only 10.  so six had to sleep on the floor.

 

The crossing was quiet and without incident. I do not know what awaits us on shore as we have not yet landed.

 

The B.C. is walking up and down outside my cabin at the moment making sundry rude remarks, or jokingly pretending he is the skipper of the ship, ordering us to weigh anchor, hoist the mainsail, water the horses and such like.

 

The poor horses have had a bad time, and my mare gave a lot of trouble. She is so nervous, and had to have a separate compartment, and even then I thought she would kill herself.

 

We have started our battery mess, and I am in charge of ours. In order to get these arrangements going and to get accustomed to messing by batteries on Friday last we eat in our bedrooms and slept in the Brigade Mess Room.

 

One night I went into one mess and found some sausages hanging out of the window by a string to keep them cool. My first effort was breakfast of porridge, eggs and bacon, and marmalade and toast.

 

I ran into Bath on Friday night to make some last minute purchases, among them a luminous wristlet watch, but it has already gone wrong.

 

The men had a bad night as they were so crowded. Last night we all put on our lifebelts and paraded at emergency stations in the dark, for we shewed no lights.  It was weird.  Not far from the ship we could just make out the forms of our escorts.

 

As I write I can hear the bells of Havre though faintly. But I cannot see much yet.

 

My kit is cumbersome and wearying. It consists of a revolver and thirty rounds of ammunition, field glasses, flash lamp, map case, haversack full of toilet articles, gas helmet, water bottle, knife fork and spoon in a case, a megaphone, compass wire cutters, and what not.  I am sure I shall lose half of them before long.

 

Did you get my wire from Southampton?

 

WEDNESDAY JANUARY 12 1916.

Diary.

 

The first sounds of the early morning I heard were made by a Company Sergeant Major shouting in a raucous voice for “B Company”. We had breakfast in the Officer’s Mess at two francs a head.  The morning was occupied in “stables” and arranging the guns and wagons in the roadway.  It rained heavily the whole time.  Detachments paraded at 1.15 p.m., hooked in at 2 p.m., and moved off to the Gare des Marchandises to entrain.  I had considerable amount of trouble in getting the horses into the wagons.  They were boxed in eights, four aside and facing inwards, and fastened by breast ropes and by roof rings.  A fussy little Railway Transport Officer interfered and made confusion worse confounded.  He did not show much knowledge of horses.

 

Two companies of the Tyneside Scottish travelled with us. Before leaving we obtained some hot coffee served to us by English ladies in the station.  I had our mess boxes placed in our carriage, and brought four large French loaves, the Illustrated London News of December 25th and La Vie Parisienne.  Captain Longhorne and Hopkins were in one carriage, and Freeman-Cowan and I in another.  The men were in cattle trucks.

 

We commenced our journey about 6 p.m. Twenty minutes later we had dinner of bully beef, bread and jam, with tea to drink.  The train was tediously slow, and took us through Rouen and Boulogne to Calais. Hopkins was ill.  I slept moderately well on the seat of the carriage under my Burberry.  I was very tired and a bit stiff, caused by the weight of my equipment, which I had worn all day, and to which I was unaccustomed.  Late at night we had some coffee and cake.

 

THURSDAY JANUARY, 13 1916.

 

Diary.

 

I was awake before dawn, and saw we were passing through Calais.  For breakfast we had bread, bully beef and tea.  I gave the men two loaves.

 

Our train consisted of about fifty wagons and carriages propelled by two engines, one in front and one behind. It seemed that when one wanted to progress with some speed the other desired to stop or save coal, thereby neutralising one another’s efforts and considerably delaying our progress, which was accompanied by shrill and almost continuous blasts from their whistles.

 

After leaving Calais we passed through Audruicq.  Later we arrived at St. Omer, where we thought we should detrain; but we passed through.  G.H.Q. is at St. Omer.  Finally we arrived at Wizernes, five hours late.  We were glad to detrain, and did so quickly.  Again I had the horses to see to, and detrained them by means of two moveable ramps.  We watered at the river Aa, and six horses fell in.  Finally we got away about 5 p.m., and marched for Herbelle, which is about four miles due south of Wizernes.  It was a dark but moonlight night, cold and with a high wind blowing.

 

I had to bring up the rear, and had great difficulty with one wagon, which the horses refused to pull up hill. One man was thrown and trodden on.  We actually marched about five miles and parked in a meadow with an inconveniently narrow entrance.

 

The Battery Headquarters and B.C’s billet were in a farm in the village. Cowan and I managed to find a bedroom over the village schoolroom at the top of the village.

 

There were no casualties to the horses, and after watering and feeding we issued horse rugs. After dinner of soup, three eggs each, bully beef and a very tasteless village loaf, Cowan and I turned in and sought our beds.  There was no water, so we had to search for it in the dark, finally procuring it from a pump in a farm near by, and carrying it in our canvass buckets to our room.

 

BRIGADE WAR DIARY.

 

Billets.             A,B, & C Batteries at Clety.

Headquarters and D Battery at Herbelle

The Ammunition Column at Inghem.

 

FRIDAY JANUARY 14 1916.

 

Diary.

 

I had breakfast at 8.30 a.m., of porridge and eggs. Then we went to stables and I saw to the erection of incinerators, latrines and cooking places.  “C” Sub-section was 35 minutes late for early morning stables.  An aeroplane went over, and contradictory to orders every one stared up at it.

 

It was a beautifully fine day. In the afternoon I took the horses for water over to Therouanne some two miles away.  The river Lys flows through the place.  I also did some shopping but could not get much, and I was done over change.  I tore my breeches and damaged my leg.

 

Later we changed the horse lines.

We heard that the 176th Brigade had lost over a hundred horses in a stampede caused by a hail storm, and that A/175 were seven hours wandering about looking for their billets.  The telephone was installed in our billet and wired to Headquarters at the house of the village cure.  Our first mail arrived.

 

January 14 1916.

R.P.

D/175, Bde. R.F.A.

34th Division,

B.E.F.

France.

 

We arrived, and the weather is now beautiful. Fortunately we had no casualties on the journey, except very minor ones.  Disembarking the men, guns and horses took some time, and we were not ready to move off till dusk.  Then we had some way to go through the streets and other camps, before we arrived at our lodgings for the night.  The officers got dinner for three francs per head in the mess, and slept in tents.  It was not very cold.  Next day we left camp for the station at 2 p.m.  All were on the train by 5 p.m., the men and horses in cattle trucks.  The officers of our battery had a compartment in the carriage at the end of the train to accommodate two.  The journey started at 6.30 p.m., and we travelled all night.  It was very slow.  There were two engines, one at each end.  When one wanted to stop, the other did not, and the result was a snail’s crawl.

 

We arrived at our destination at 3 p.m., the next day. For meals on board we managed to get a primus stove going so we were alright.

 

After we had detrained we watered the horses, six falling into the stream. At dusk we took the road, and marched five miles to our billets.  On the way one wagon would not go up a hill, so I had to obtain spare horses and see it going again.  One man was thrown and trodden on, so I put him in the mess cart.  The roads are not too bad here, but the cars move at such a rate that they frighten the horses.  My mare as usual gave a lot of trouble and was full of life even after the long journey.  I felt rather tired, and my equipment was heavy, and I am unaccustomed to wearing it.

 

We finally got into billets about 9 p.m.  The horse lines were in an orchard.  Then we dined on fresh eggs, and bully.  My bedroom is over the village school-room, and I share it with Freeman-Cowan.  The mess is in a farm a little way away.  The men are in barns in the village.  Our two troubles at present are sanitary and drawing rations and forage.  The water for the horses is also a long way away.  This afternoon I had to take the horses four miles for water.

However it is better that Corton.

 

JANUARY 14 1916.

D/175 Bde R.F.A.

34 Div. B.E.F.

Somewhere in France.

 

Our first post has just come and I got five letters. At last we are here.  We started last Monday at 10.30 a.m., and arrived last night Thursday at 9 p.m.,  As we are not allowed to mention places I will only say that we came by the usual route for troops.  We marched from camp to station by sections.  My section had a train to itself. We had 1 ½ hours to entrain and we did it in 25 minutes.  The train being troop, moved as such, but it eventually got us to the port of embarkation.  It took some time to get all the men, guns vehicles and horses aboard.  We started at night, escorted over by a war boat of sorts.  I was very lucky and managed to get the Chief’s berth on board, as he was on duty on the bridge, so I slept in comfort.  Some of the officers slept on the cabin floor.  It was a large boat and took a large number of horses.  The poor brutes did not relish it at all.  It was amusing to see all their heads swaying to the movement of the boat.  The Ship’s officers tried to be funny, and told us that there were three submarines on the look out for us.  However we arrived at our port in safely; but it took us from 4 a.m., till 1 o’clock to get into dock.  Then more trouble and worry until about 5 p.m. we got clear, and watered the horses and hooked in.  My mare was very restless and fooled about a lot.  We marched about three miles to our camp, and slept in tents.  We managed to get a fairly decent dinner at 9 o’clock.  The next day we entrained for a long railway journey.  One long train took the whole battery, horses, guns and men, in cattle trucks, and one carriage behind for the officers, two officers to a compartment.  We loaded up with our mess box, primus stove, 5 French loaves, bully beef, jam and tea.  I got the loaves from a stall where English ladies were doling out food to the men.  There is a story of a man who came down after behind in the trenches for a long time, and went up to one of these stalls, and said “’Ere, miss oi’ve bin told as ‘ow yer are Hinglish.”  Assured he went on “Good Gawd, lets ‘ave a look at yer.”

 

Our journey started about 6 p.m. Two engines helped us on our way, as much as in them lay, one to the front and one behind.  When one got tired, or wished to economise in coal, the other wanted to go full speed ahead and whistled like fury.  The net result was a snail’s crawl full of jolts and jerks.  I managed to sleep fairly well on the seat covered by a Burberry; but I could not get a wash for 36 hours, and I was black.  We passed through many well known places, and arrived at our destination at 3 p.m.  We detrained and watered our horses, six fell in the river.  We marched 5 miles from the railhead to our billets in a small country village.  The battery headquarters are in a farmhouse, horses in the open, and the men in barns.  I have a

room is over the village schoolroom. One man was thrown and trodden on during the march so I shoved him in the mess cart.

On one wagon caused trouble as the horses refused to pull up a steep hill. I did not wish to leave it behind as it had my kit on board.  The village people are most hospitable, and we are busy learning French with a Yorkshire accent.

 

I like these old French villages but they are dirty.

 

My mare gave a lot of trouble coming across, but she has arrived quite safely. In the train she had to have a partition put up for her, and she objected very much to the ship.

 

We have developed into thieves out here, by what we call “collecting”. We have already one cart, two horses, hay, oats, and harness to the good.

 

SATURDAY JANUARY 15, 1916.

Diary.

 

I was up early and took stables and also the exercise. The day was spent in cleaning harness and vehicles.

 

Why is it that no one troubles about lights in France, as they do so strongly in England?

 

A large post arrived. Censoring letters is rarely amusing and generally boring.  It is our evening’s occupation.  I wrote home.  I felt tired and out of sorts.  The village is getting frightfully muddy.

 

SUNDAY JANUARY 16, 1916.

Diary.

 

Today I felt very ill. I had a bad stomach ache similar to the one I had last summer.  It must be the bad food or water.  Consequently I was very dull and dismal, and also bored.  I laid telephone wire, paid the battery in francs.  Later I wrote letters in answer to the three I had received today.

 

MONDAY JANUARY 17. 1916.

Diary.

 

It was a fine morning, but later it turned to rain. I was still feeling rotten, but occupied myself in gun laying, sight testing, and telephone laying.  That together with stables fully employed me.  More letters arrived.

 

We heard that one of our transports when returning was torpedoed.

 

TUESDAY JANUARY 18 1916.

Diary.

 

It was a wet day, occupied in dull routine. I was orderly officer, drew rations in the morning, and took stables.  Watering horses here is a perfect nuisance.  We have so far to go.

 

Could not our wonderful Staff find a more convenient place for a horsed unit in all this waterlogged country?

 

WEDNESDAY JANUARY 19 1916.

Diary.

 

We again changed our horse lines to a field next the farm. The old were already hock high in thick mud.  Of course we had a frightful row with the inhabitants, who strongly objected to our spoiling their land.  What else can we do?  We must keep our horses as fit as possible.

The evening turned in wet again. No doubt the new horse lines will be just as bad tomorrow.

 

THURSDAY JANUARY 20 1916.

Diary.

 

I took long exercise in drill order, passing through among other places Therouanne. This place seems to be an interesting road junction of several quite straight roads, which meet here to cross the river Lys.  Doubtless these roads are of Roman origin.  One running in a north westerly direction may have joined another in the neighbourhood of Lumbres which runs straightly in the direction of Boulogne.  Perhaps Roman legionaries went these ways journeying to Britain.  On this occasion we had a hail storm and I got thoroughly wet as I had no coat.  It was very cold too.  I took stables, and after lunch laid some more telephone wire.  I received a box of cigarettes from M.  Later I wrote home.

 

This country side is not prepossessing. Why is it that the French are so dirty.  Is it because there is no better class to set a good example?  But then why is there no better class as there is across the channel?  There is a great distinction between the chateau and the village.  There is the cure, but he usually does not seem to be better than he should be, at least in cleanliness and his habits.

 

The numerous signs of their religion are curious. Every where giant crucifixes and wayside shrines, which the troops call “Jesus boxes”.  Their religious decorations and observances are almost grotesque, and the power of priests great, but the inhabitants of the villages do not seem to be more moral than the English, while their practices are certainly more superstitious.

 

Upon them descends the British army! With its curious little ways.  The General curses the C.O., who curses the B.C., who curses the Section Commander, who curses the Sergeant, who curses the gunner, and all because the rifles are dirty.  But then how could it be otherwise, seeing that there is no oil to clean them with.  How can we make bricks without straw?  So the gunner goes and consoles himself in the village estaminet and spends the few francs which a grateful country allows him on bad beer and the village women.  Who can blame him?  Still I am surprised how few there are who live riotously.

 

Living among the people here is very different to spending a holiday in Paris or Brussels.  I remember my former visit with my Father to these parts, when I got very different impressions.

 

JANUARY 20 1916.

 

Thank you very much for the Cigarettes, which are much appreciated. Up to the present we have been existing on packets of nasty Will’s cigarettes called “Scissors”, really terrible things.  Things are much the same here as in England only worse.  The mud is terrible.  Apparently you did not get a wire I sent you from Southampton.  I gave two to a dock hand to send for me but neither seem to have arrived.

 

FRIDAY JANUARY 21 1916.

 

Diary.

 

I rode in to meet new officers at Refilling Point, which was at a place 800 yards south west of the “h” in Pihem, but they did not turn up.  So I rode into St. Omer with six horses and the mess cart.  We arrived there at 1 p.m.  I went to the station and saw the R.T.O., who informed me that they had gone.  Thanks to Captain Simmonds of the Artists Rifles, I was able to water and feed the horses at the cavalry barracks.  The Artists are G.H.Q. Guard.  I had lunch with him at the infantry barracks.  Then I went to the Field Cashier and drew 75 francs for myself.  I bought a Morning Post and a Nash’s magazine.  We started back at 2.30 p.m., and rode home against a head wind.  I was very tired when I got in.

 

I heard that D. d’ A Clarke (18th Division) had been killed, and also General Fitton, G.O.C. 101st Infantry Brigade.

 

Our new officer is one Cheadle, an Australian just out from Colchester.

 

SATURDAY JANUARY 22 1916.

Diary.

 

In the morning I took exercises and watered at Therouanne. In the afternoon the officers of the Division went in motor busses and wagons to Divisional Headquarters for a lecture on Gas Attacks and Gas Helmets.  We arrived so late that we returned immediately without being instructed.  So the army works.  We arrived back at 7 p.m., too late to do anything.

We heard that Baugh Allen, Adjutant of the 152, Brigade had been sent to the Base suffering from D.Ts. What a noble exit!  Also Fletcher of B Battery is under arrest for neglect of duty, and Newnham of the Ammunition Column as well for drinking in an estaminet with a French poilu.

 

On the way I saw a British officer try to jump his horse over the high iron foot-bridge at Arques. The horse caught its foot in the iron bars and tore its foot badly.  This officer was put under arrest by Harvey Coomb, the A.P.M.  We went by Herbelle, Bientques, Wizernes, St. Omer, Arques, Fort Rouge, la Crosse, le Nieppe.  All arrangements, of course, by the staff, with the result that all officers, Colonels to junior subalterns were kept away from their units from noon to 7 p.m., without profit, with a considerable wastage of time and petrol.

 

The difference between the English and French soldiers on guard is very striking. The latter slouch about anyhow.

I received a parcel of cigarettes and writing paper from home. The evening I employed in writing home.

The telephone communication in the division is shockingly bad, and the Staff consistently inconsiderate, which I suppose is the nature of Staffs.

I am very glad we are leaving our dirty and smelly billets.

 

Messing.

 

19-23 Janvier 1916

Lait,                             3 frs.50

Beurre,                                    5 frs.

Oeufs,                         5 frs.50.

Pommes,                      3 frs.60.

Pommes de terre         0 frs.80.

Oignons et carottes     0 frs.70.

 

Charbon pour faire la cuisine et

chamber chauffee,                               12 frs.

 

31 frs.10.

 

Groceries, Maison Klob-Royer,

19, Place Victor Hugo.

St. Omer.

 

Expeditionary Force Canteen, 100, De Reske Cigarettes, 7 frs.

 

Madame for mess room                      36 frs.50.

 

SUNDAY JANUARY 23 1916.

Diary.

 

The day was fine for our move from Herbelle. I paraded my section without undue confusion or loss.  We marched by Inghem, Ecques, Roquetoire, Wittes, our destination.

On the way the two horses of the baggage wagon gave up. I had to get men on the drag ropes, send for leaders.  As a result I got left behind with the wagon.  I put two men under arrest for buying in shops on the line of march against orders.

We left at 11, a.m., and arrived at 3.30 p.m.

Our new billet at Wittes is much better and cleaner than the last. We have a mess room, two bed rooms, a servants’ room and a kitchen.  Freeman-Cowan, Cheadle and myself are in one bedroom, which is certainly an arrangement which suits me.

At Roquetoire we passed the 54th Territorial Division, which had been out some time but made no move.

Here we can hear the guns firing quite plainly.

We are near the railway and also a stream. There are no stables and the horses are on open lines.  The mud is worse than ever, and the sergeants are disgruntled because there is no room for a mess.

 

BRIGADE WAR DIARY.

The 34th Division was attached to the 3rd Corps, First Army.  The Brigade moved into billets at Wittes.

 

January 23 1916.

 

We have moved our quarters today, and are now in much cleaner billets. We are also near a stream, so it does not take us such a long time to water.

I have been to G.H.Q. twice in two days. Once by car and once on my horse.

The mud is the worst I have ever experienced, so I wear gum boots all day.

 

MONDAY JANUARY 24, 1916.

Diary.

As it was my turn for Orderly Officer, I was up early. The whole of my left section was late for stables.

After breakfast I rode into Aire to shop. I went to the Expeditionary Force Canteen for groceries, and then to a greengrocer.  I spent about thirty francs.  In the Square I bought the Sunday Times and Pictorial and La Vie Parisienne.  I delivered letters at the Field Post Office.  I had much trouble purchasing nut-meg, as I could not remember the French name.  There were three people in the shop, whom I completely mystified, but at last a girl understood.  I also bought two sacks of coal.  My mare cast a shoe, so I had to send her home and rode back in the mess cart.  I got back in time for stables.  After lunch it came on to rain, so I rugged up the horses at once.  One horse in C Sub-section died in some agony from pneumonia.  I had it dragged by two of the farm horses through the yard and buried in a hole or rather pit dug with considerable labour by the troops.

After tea there were prisoners for trial. Captain Towel came for dinner at 8 p.m.  I received a letter from Reg.  Went to bed late very tired.

 

TUESDAY JANUARY 25, 1916.

Diary.

I changed the Left Section’s horse lines to a place nearer their billet. I took exercise of the left section.  A driver went up to an overworked and much harassed storeman and asked,”Where are the latrines?”  The reply was, “Dunno which wagon they were packed on.”

A dog arrived and was duly taken on the strength. His name is Chirgwan, the white eyed kaffir.  He becomes the battery mascot.  He is a small black dog with the aforesaid eye.

I have a bad cold and felt very ill and rotten.

 

BRIGADE WAR DIARY.

Orders were received that the 34th Division should relieve the 23rd Division in action at Armentieres, the 175th Brigade relieving the 104th Brigade R.F.A.

 

WEDNESDAY JANUARY, 26 1916.

Diary.

I was ill and in bed all day, with a bad cold. The doctor visited me, and told me to remain in bed.  I read “In the Firing Line”.  I received a letter from Father and a parcel of two books, which were acceptable.

 

THURSDAY JANUARY, 27. 1916.

Diary.

I felt much better and got up. Later the doctor came and saw me.  I did not go out at all, wrote five letters, and went to bed fairly late.  Captain Langhorne went up to the front to visit the battery we are relieving shortly.

 

FRIDAY JANUARY, 28. 1916.

Diary.

I felt rotten again, but took early morning stables. The weather was very bad.  Marching drill started in the afternoon, and I took some gun laying.

Lice troubles among the men begin.

 

SATURDAY JANUARY 29, 1916.

Diary.

I turned out my section in marching order. We were inspected by Colonel Stevenson, who was in a very bad temper.  He said my harness was disgraceful.  This was quite untrue.  It had never been so clean.  C, gun team was exceptionally good.  At the end even the Colonel grudgingly admitted it.  He was also annoyed because the blankets were rolled on the saddles instead of overcoats.  We had a short route march to Boeseghem, followed by stables.  A bad morning.

All afternoon was occupied with harness cleaning as a result of the cursing. It was quite clean this morning, but even the Colonel could not find a speck now.  The trouble is that these pre-war regular officers expect these new troops to keep their horses and equipment as clean as they did in peace time in barracks.  They forget that the horses are standing in fields, and sometimes the equipment is never dry.  The conditions cannot be compared.

In the evening there was a lecture on gas-helmets at Brigade Headquarters. The scene was weird.  The interior of a smelly village schoolroom, dimly lit by three guttering candles.  Officers sat at desks suited for infants of three.

The Doctor took up his tale. He explained that the Germans had used a new and deadly gas, which had put the staff at their wits’ end.  It travels low and quickly, and though apparently not at once noticeable, it is effectively deadly enough up to 9000 yards.  At first it causes lassitude, and then is lethal.

This was most interesting and cheering news!! Especially as this is the worst time of year, and we go up into the line in a week.  It was a strange sight to see all the officers sitting solemnly in this tiny schoolroom in the dim light with their gas-masks on, looking like members of the Spanish Inquisition holding a midnight sitting hatching some horrible plot.

After dinner I had a bath and was in bed by nine o’clock.

 

SUNDAY JANUARY, 30. 1916.

Diary.

Hopkins, whose turn was next, departed this day for the front line, and I was left in charge of the battery.  Cheadle was Orderly Officer, and took rough exercise at 7 a.m.

The battery paraded at 9.30 a.m., when I gave them a lecture on gas and gas-helmets. I rubbed in what I heard last night.  The whole battery put them on twice under my directions.  Then I inspected mess-tins, bandoliers, ammunition, water-bottles, field service dressings and identity discs.  We are all wearing gas masks slung in new satchels.  I inspected rifles and found them dirty.  After stables I changed my left section horse lines for a better place.  I thought I had better make hay while the sun shone, the battery commander was away.

The day in reality was very dull, a moist, cold foggy day.

My mare is lame. She was pricked in shoeing.

The Captain returned.

 

MONDAY JANUARY, 31 1916.

Diary.

 

The battery went out under Captain in marching order. We left at 9.30 a.m., I got cursed because the harness was not as clean as it should be.  I had not had harness cleaning the day before because I considered it more important to do what I did, viz, inspect the mens’ equipment and teach them about gas.  We marched by the main road Wittes to Racquinghem, turned right at Belle Croix for Wardrecques Station, and so back by the outskirts of Blaringhem to Wittes.

In the afternoon we did harness cleaning, and stables.

 

JANUARY 31 1916.

 

A large bundle of magazines has just arrived. Four other officers wish to convey their thanks also, for here we have all things in common.  It is extraordinary how the arrival of the Post is the event of the day.  It arrives about 1.45 p.m., and is delivered in an enormous mail bag, full of parcels and letters for the battery.

 

We are five in the mess. There is the Battery commander Captain Langhorne, who was for about four years A.D.C. to General Willcocks in India, then there is Hopkins, who has been in the army for ten years.  The next in seniority is Freeman-Cowan, an “enfant terrible”, fresh from the “shop”, and quite a good sort.  The other is Cheadle, who has only held a commission for 8 weeks.  He is a better sort of Australian.

 

I am Mess President. We live chiefly on our rations, which consist of Beef, bread or biscuit, tea, sugar, bacon, jam, tinned butter, salt, pepper, mustard, and sometimes potatoes.  Everything else we buy, such as eggs, fresh butter, milk and vegetables.  But the mess cook is the limit, slack and oily, and half asleep, assisted by one who is even worse.  So you can imagine my trials.  It is a red letter day when we get a clean cloth for the table and clean utensils.

 

Gas. Now why on earth can’t the Boche – strafe them – wage war like gentlemen, as in old days when the doughty knight rode forth clad in armour and all that, and the troops were drawn up on either facing one another.  Then some one called out “Are we all present?  Then let the fight begin”.  Now if you please, we wander about like with satchels slung over us carrying two gas-helmets – just like school boys.  These things have to be inspected once a day by N.C.Os and three times a week by Section Commanders, and once a week by the Battery Commander, besides numerous returns saying all is correct, or indents asking for more.  But the sight for the gods is to see us in these things, for we look like the Spanish Inquisition let loose.

 

There has been a good deal of artillery activity lately and the guns have been making a bit of a row. The French do not seem to mind the Zepps a bit.  And they do not darken their towns at all as we do in England.

 

Yesterday we received boxes in black and gold containing chocolates from the colonies of Trinidad, Granada and St. Lucia.  The colonies have turned up trumps.  They have at least done more than was expected of them.

 

An officer wrote home the other day for some photographic chemicals. His letter was promptly opened by the censor, and court-martialed for having a camera in his possession.  It is just as well I did to not bring mine out.

 

War Diary of AA Laporte Payne Dec 1915

War Diary of AA Laporte Payne

 

Extracted from

 

Brigade Diary, Personal Diary, Operation Orders, Note Books, Memoranda & Correspondence

—————–

 

1915

 

Sunday December 5, 1915.

R.P.

Tilshead House.

 

“We arrived here on Thursday last in the wet & mud by road. There is no station within thirteen miles.  I had three wagons full of forage, rations and what not.

 

My days are as follows:

 

7.30 a.m. Rise.

8          Breakfast.

Order dinner and see to the general management of the Headquarters staff and our household. We have eight horses, thirteen men to run the place for three officers.  The house has two sitting rooms, four large bedrooms, and at the top accommodation for the orderlies, servants and clerks.

8.45, a.m. The General and Captain Waller and I go to the ranges for firing. My job is to check the laying of each gun to see that it does not fire in the wrong direction and so do any damage to persons or property.  This goes on all day with no time for lunch until 4 p.m., when we return and change our soaking things and have hot baths.

It has rained every day so far, and on Saturday it did not stop. My Burberry is no good it lets the rain through badly.

 

At night there is all the correspondence to see to, and the accounts to do. Rations and forage are always wrong.  They do not come out to Sutton Veny as regularly and correctly as they should.

 

We dine at eight. I shall in future sympathise in future with housekeepers.  It is an awful job.  I shall be glad to give it up at any time.  We have had the Colonel of each Brigade staying with us every night in turn.  Sunday is no exception.  This goes on for twelve days.  I am absolutely fed up with it.  I do not want this job at all.

 

The ammunition arrived and there was no place to put it. So I was ordered to find a place.  I managed after a hunt to store it in a room the size of a very small bedroom, which was completely filled to the roof.  I hope it does not blow up.  This out-house now contains 1200 rounds of shrapnel and 400 rounds of 4.5 Howitzer ammunition.  I superintended the unloading of this at ten o’clock at night in the pitch dark and pouring rain.  What a life!  It is not as if I should have the pleasure of firing it off.  Others will have that job while I look on and see that the round does not blow up an inoffensive citizen of the Plain.

 

December 11 1915.

R.P.

Saturday

Tilshead House

“The weather has improved a little, but last Thursday it rained hard all day. I shall be glad when firing practice is over.  It is very monotonous.  We leave on Wednesday I think.

 

There is a new Staff Captain here now. Rew has been given the push.  Captain Beal posted in his place was Adjutant to General Kirby in France, and has been over there five months.  It will my turn next and I shall not be sorry.

 

December 27 1915.

R.P.

Monday

Officer’s Mess

175th Brigade R.F.A.

Corton Camp

Codford St. Mary

Wilts.

 

“I arrived here on Sunday night and managed to get my kit housed out of the pouring rain. Today the weather has been very bad, with a high wind.

 

Orders for a move to Egypt have been cancelled for the time being.

 

THE 175th BRIGADE R.F.A.

 

This Brigade was raised locally in Staffordshire by Lieut. Colonel E.C. Meysey Thomson, M.P. Recruiting commenced on June 20th 1915, and closed approximately on the 12th August 1915, when the Brigade joined the 34th Division and moved to Kirby Malzeard.

 

On the 30th August it proceeded to Tidworth, and on the 2nd September Lieut. Colonel E.H. Stevenson, D.S.O., R.F.A. assumed command of the Brigade.

 

On the 2nd October the Brigade moved to Corton to complete training, and in December was warned for service in Egypt, but this was cancelled a week later.

 

Finally on the 3rd January it was warned for active service in France.

 

THE THIRTY FOURTH DIVISION.

 

175th BRIGADE

ROYAL FIELD ARTILLERY.

 

Lieut. Col.                               E.H. Stevenson D.S.O.

Adjutant.                                 Lieut. T. Payne.

Orderly Officer                       2/Lieut. G.M.A. Fletcher.

 

  1. Battery

O.C.                                        Captain A.C. Crookshank.

2/Lieut. S.W. Woodrow.

2/Lieut. D. Lowden.

 

  1. Battery

O.C.                                        Captain E.C. Howard.

2/Lieut. A. Roberts.

2/Lieut. J. Amour.

 

  1. Battery

O.C.                                        Captain G.T. Spain.

2/Lieut. A.B. MacDonald.

2/Lieut. R.W.R. Fleming.

 

  1. Battery

 

O.C.                                        Captain A.P.Y. Langhorne D.S.O.

Lieut. C.F.T. Hopkins.

2/Lieut. A.A. Laporte Payne

2/Lieut. C. Freeman-Cowan.

 

Brigade Ammunition Column.

 

Lieut. G.B. Morgan

2/Lieut. W.C. Hickman.

 

War Diary of AA Laporte Payne Nov 1915

War Diary of AA Laporte Payne

 

Extracted from

 

Brigade Diary, Personal Diary, Operation Orders, Note Books, Memoranda & Correspondence

—————–

 

1915

 

 

November 3, 1915.

R.P.

“Last Sunday I spent with S.E. Swann at Shirehampton near Bristol.

We are having a Route March on Friday for the whole Division. The artillery takes up six miles of road alone plus 270 yards.  The whole Division 15 miles.  I spent some time making out a road space table for the Division.

 

November 8 1915.

 

“The Staff Captain is away and I am doing his job. He is ill.

 

The General is leaving the Division, and that means I loose this job. I do not want to go with the General, as he is not going to France, so I shall probably apply to be posted to a Brigade going overseas soon, as I am tired of being in England.

Unfortunately one has to go where one is sent in the army.

 

November 8 1915.

 

Elm Lodge, Sutton Veny.

 

“The Staff Captain is away ill, and I have to try and do his job as well as my own.

I was on duty over the week end but I managed to get a good long ride on Sunday morning, also a lunch and tea out with friends near here. My mare has been recognised as an animal that has done something or other before the war.  She has nearly broken my neck twice already.

 

DIVISIONAL EXERCISE No. 5.

25th November, 1915

GENERAL IDEA.

 

The 34th Brown Division moving in a hostile country via FROMENSUTTON VENY on WYLYE is marching on the 25th November as left flank guard to the 12th Corps which is marching via MAIDEN BRADLEYNMONKTON DEVERILLNHINTON on FORFINGBRIDGE.

A White Force, strength estimated to be about 2 Inf. Brigades and 1 F.A. Brigade, the advanced guard of a White Corps moving south from SWINDON, is reported to have spent the night of 24/25th November in Billets at LITTLE CHEVERILL and WEST LAVINGTON.

 

GENERAL INSTRUCTIONS

 

OBJECT.

 

The object of this Exercise is (1.) to practice the Division in deploying rapidly to a flank and attacking an enemy who has just moved into position: (2) to practice intercommunication and the rapid transmission of information to Report Centres: (3) to practice the supply of ammunition and the handling of casualties.

 

SPECIAL IDEA.

(Brown Force)

At 9.50 a.m. on the 25th November, 1915 the 34th Division marching S.E. is disposed as follows,

  1. Advanced Guard. Head of Main Guard at Railway Station Bridge SHERRINGTON.
  2. Main Body. Head at the Road Junction at Boyton marching on the LONGBRIDGE DEVERELL-SUTTON VENY-SHERRINGTON-WYLYE Road.
  3. Flank Guard. Head at N of Upton Lovell marching on the HEYTESBURY-CODFORD ST. MARY ROAD.

 

ADVANCED GUARD.

1 Bn. 103rd Inf. Bde.

Motor Machine Gun Battery.

 

MAIN BODY.

Div. H.Q.

103rd Inf. Bde. (less 1 Bn.)

160th F.A. Bde. (less 1 Batt)

209th Field Co.

Bearer Div. 103rd Fd. Ambul.

102nd Inf. Bde.

175th F.A. Bde.

208th Fd. Co.

Bearer Div. 102nd Fd. Ambul.

176th F.A. Bde.

Div. AMM. Col.

 

FLANK GUARD.

 

  1. Sqn. N. Irish Horse.

34th Div. Cyclist Co.

101st Inf. Bde.

152nd F.A. Bde.

207th Field Co. (less Pontoon and Trestle wagons).

Bearer Div. 104th Fd. Amb.

 

At 9, a.m. the G.O.C. 34th Division receives the following reports:-

  • 21-25th Nov. Aerial Reconnaissance report the head of a hostile force, estimated at two Divisions, marching on POTTERNE ROAD left DEVIZES at 8.30 a.m. today and a small hostile force, estimated ar 2 Inf. Bdes. And 1 F.A. Bdes left IMBER marching south at 8 a.m. A.A.A.  From 3rd Corps 8.55 a.m.
  • 10-25th Nov. Following report just received from “C” Sqn. Div. Cav: – Have located some hostile infantry and artillery on the line 575-484.  they appear to be starting to entrench themselves.  I cannot work round their flanks as the ground West of Pt. 575 and east of point 484 is marshy and impassable.  From Flank Guard 8.50 a.m.

 

(SD) N.G. Cameron.

Lieut. Colonel.

General Staff.

 

Sunday November 28 1915.

R.P.

 

“We have had several Field Days lately, and we have been very busy. This week has been a round of Brigade Inspections on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, on Thursday a Divisional Field Day.  It was very cold too.  Waller is away, so the General and I are alone.

 

On Thursday we go to the Ranges for firing practice. Headquarters have taken Tilshead House with stabling for 22 horses for a fortnight.  We have to get our provisions from Devizes, ten miles away.

 

Next Tuesday there is to be a Divisional Route March, and on Thursday we move to Tilshead.

War Diary of AA Laporte Payne Oct 1915

War Diary of AA Laporte Payne

 

Extracted from

 

Brigade Diary, Personal Diary, Operation Orders, Note Books, Memoranda & Correspondence

—————–

 

1915

 

 

 

October 5 1915.

R.P.

Royal Artillery Headquarters,

34th Division,

Elm Lodge,

Sutton Veny

Nr. Warminster.

Wilts.

 

“We have just completed two days move in the rain, on Saturday and Sunday. Yesterday I went back to see that the old camp was cleared up.

The Brigade Major and I reside here alone, but the office is on the ground floor. The camp itself is about three miles away, where the troops are in huts.

 

October 7 1915.

 

R.A.H.Q. 34th Div.

Elm Lodge

Sutton Veny

 

“We moved here on Saturday and Sunday last in the wet. We got soaked to the skin.  It did not stop raining once.

 

Luckily I travelled by car, but the troops got horribly wet, poor wretches. My housekeeping duties are not so oppressive now, partly because I am more accustomed to them, and partly because the General is not living with us now.  He has a house in Warminster, and a wife to cater for him.  Our mess has therefore dwindled to two, the B.M. and myself.  Unfortunately our H.Q. Office and Mess are fully 3 miles away from the camp which is now of hutments; but it does not take long in the new car, a 30/60 horse power 6 cylinder Sheffield-Simplex.

 

Last night we went into Bath.  The B.M. with his people, and had dinner at the Empire Hotel and went to the Dollar Princess afterwards, returning about 12.30 a.m.

 

The floors of the mess were polished today, and we are to have rugs. The house was in a filthy state when we came in, but I am learning the use of Zog, Bluebell and soda.

 

 

October 18 1915.

 

I motored to Bath on Saturday afternoon, called on some friends, and then went to the Pump Room Concert.  This week the Brigades are cooperating with the “feet” in night operations.  Wednesday night is the only one off, and we make an expedition to the Theatre at Bath.  Sutton Veny is enough to provide a suicide’s grave.

 

November 3, 1915.

R.P.

“Last Sunday I spent with S.E. Swann at Shirehampton near Bristol.

We are having a Route March on Friday for the whole Division. The artillery takes up six miles of road alone plus 270 yards.  The whole Division 15 miles.  I spent some time making out a road space table for the Division.

War Diary of AA Laporte Payne Sept 1915

War Diary of AA Laporte Payne

 

Extracted from

 

Brigade Diary, Personal Diary, Operation Orders, Note Books, Memoranda & Correspondence

—————–

 

1915

 

 

September 6 1915.

R.P.

R.A. Headquarters, 34th Division.

Tidworth, Hants.

 

There are 4 officers on the Staff, and we have three cars, so we are all well off for transport. The General is Brig Gen F. Elmslie C.B., but is a dug out, and has already commanded the Artillery in another Division, but he was not allowed to go overseas with them.  There are 23 Headquarter clerks and servants.

 

It is very cold and damp in camp. It rains most of the time.  The whole Division is under canvas, 3500 horses, guns, wagons, & men.

 

I have got quite good groom and servant, and my two chargers arrive on Wednesday from Salisbury.

 

September 4 1915.

R.A.H.Q. 34th Div. Tidworth.

 

“I have the unfortunate job of Mess Secretary, and what with contractors putting up tents, grocery bills, wines, servants, my life would be wearisome indeed if it were not for the fun you can get out of it. It has been very cold lately.  The band is playing China Town.  I went to Salisbury the day before yesterday.

 

September 9 1915.

 

Really beautiful weather, I am leaving this afternoon for two days on business I shall be back on Saturday morning. I have two new horses, or rather mares, one chestnut and one bay.  They are not so good as my last but still they are better than the rest of the chargers here.  At least they are English and not Canadian.  One is to be called Peg o’ my heart.  She is chestnut, so the name suits, the ginger hair.  Unfortunately last night she got unmercifully bitten by the other.  What shall I do with such a cannibal?  I see this morning news of a Zeppelin raid.  It is most amusing here at times.  The mules get loose and rush about camp at night, kicking all and sundry.  The wasps are awful.  The night before last two officers of our mess and a friend who was dining with us, turned out after dinner armed with a petrol can, some Daily Mails, electric torches, to burn out a nest situated just behind our servant’s tents.  They had already tried to destroy it but had failed.  These brave men, all recently returned from the front, were more frightened of wasps, I hope than they are of Germans, for they were scared.  One with the Military Cross ribbon on his tunic more so than the others.  He let us call him B.M., held the torch at a safe distance with G. still further in the distance offering wise advice but no help.  The guest held a paper funnel at arms length.  I, the very junior, tried to pour buckets of petrol down the hole, when out came the beasts, and hurled themselves at the lights and the onlookers.  Alas! I was the only casualty, and retired with an arm like a real German sausage.  A hither-to admiring crowd of servants around shrieked with delight.  The morning after the wasps were as happy as ever.  They probably thought that it was a remarkably fine and warm night for this time of year.  We are never off duty here.  At the moment I am supposed to be working out a scheme for a Divisional Concentration March, but I have got fed up with it.  I must go and find the Vet for my horse, then to the Ordnance to draw some stores, then to Salisbury to get a saddle.

 

September 9 1915.

 

I obtained two chargers from the Remount Depot, Salisbury, two chargers, Nos, 3981 and 4028.  They were certified by the Veterinary Officer as being “properly shod and free from Disease”.  I went for them on the 8th September, and took them on charge on the following day.

 

(The first is a chestnut mare, and I named her Peg o’ my heart.)

 

Servant 12472 Gunner Ernest Thompson.

 

Religions in four Brigades of Artillery.

 

Church of England                 3256

Wesleyan                                 236

Roman Catholic                      182

Presbyterian                               72

Jews                                           24

Others                                     114

———

3884

 

34th Division/1100/A

Headquarters

Royal Artillery

 

The following telegram has been received from War Office.

“223 S.T. Reference your 1100/A dated 9th instant A.A.A. War Office wires 4327 M.S.Q. appointment of 2nd Lieut. A.A. Laporte Payne, Royal Field Artillery, as Aide Camp to General Officer Commanding 34th Divisional Artillery has been approved with effect from 25 August 1915”.

This reference to your R.A. 4537 dated 7th instant.

R.F. Lock.

Major. D.A.A. & Q.M.G.

34th Division.

Cholderton.

16 September 1915.

 

September 23 1915.

Tidworth R.A.H.Q.

34th Div.

 

There has been a field day today, and now it is pouring with rain. We move from here on October 1st, and bivouac on the road to Warminster.  We take up our new quarters on the 2nd at Sutton Veny.  This will prove our last move, I hope, before we go overseas.  The Plain in the winter is too awful for words.  I am thinking of motoring to Bournemouth on Sunday.  We are having a series of dinner parties in the mess.  The General asks in a lot of old fogies, and the conversation is most boring.  You can imagine what agony I endure sometimes.  The servants are quite raw, and I have to train them as best I can.  They were miners a few months ago.  They are much better now, but I am always anxious how the food is coming up, or whether the drinks or soda-water are running out.  Housekeeping must be appalling, but usually one does not have six dishonest men doing away with every bit of food and all the drink they can lay their fingers on.

 

There are ladies to entertain too. The General’s wife and friends, and the Brigade Major’s mother and other relations, either for lunch or tea.  The B.M. has brought a two-seater Humber.  It is still raining.  There is no whiskey, no soda-water and no fruit for tonight’s dinner party.  Fancy going 14 miles to shop.

War Diary of AA Laporte Payne August 1915

War Diary of AA Laporte Payne

 

Extracted from

 

Brigade Diary, Personal Diary, Operation Orders, Note Books, Memoranda & Correspondence

—————–

 

1915

 

 

E.C. No. 2/61612(N.A.)

 

War Office.

London.  S.W.

19th August 1915

112/Artillery/2695.

(A.G. 6.)

 

Royal Field Artillery.                                      Sir,

Temp. Lieutenant A.A.                                   I am directed to inform you that the

Laporte Payne.                                                Officer named in the margin has been

From 4 “B” Reserve                                        posted as specified and should be

Brigade, Royal Field                                       Ordered to join.

Artillery.                                                          I am, Sir,

To 34th Divisional                                                        Your obedient Servant

Artillery, Ripon                                                           A. Young, Lieut-Colonel,

For Brigadier-General.

Director of Personal Services.

 

The General Officer Commanding-in-Chief,

Eastern Command in Horse Guards. S.W.

 

2.

 

General Officer Commanding, Troops.

Woolwich

For necessary action.

 

Horse Guards, S.W.                                        C.A. Harding, Captain

August 21st 1915.                                            A/D.A.A.G. Eastern Command

 

3.

 

G.O.C. Troops No. 13875/38

Officer Commanding 4th “B”  Reserve Brigade R.F.A.

 

For information, action and return please.

 

Woolwich                                                                    W.D. Nixon, Captain

23/8/15                                                                        Garrison Adjutant.

 

(Herewith copy of letter posting you. O. Marr, Capt.

Adjutant , 4th “B” Res Bde R.F.A. (26-8-15)

 

August 25 1915.

R.P.

161st Brigade R.F.A.

South Camp

Ripon.

 

I arrived here this evening about 6 p.m. and managed to find a Division here, but as they have not heard anything about me I go on tomorrow to another Division and make enquiries there.

 

(Subsequently I was gazetted to the Personal Staff as A.D.C. as from this day, 25th August 1915, and transferred to the General List.)

 

Second Supplement to the London Gazette of Tuesday, 21st September 1915.

 

August 26 1915.

R.P.

34th Divisional Artillery Headquarters

The Clergy House

Ripon

 

“This is the account of my wanderings in search of a Division and a home. I caught the 9.13 a.m. train to Kings’ Cross, and from there the 9.50, a.m. to York, where I arrived about 1.45 p.m.  There I  changed and waited for three quarters of an hour.  Then I trained to Thirsk, changed again for Ripon where the train deposited me at 6 p.m.  There appeared to be about 80,000 troops in the neighbourhood, and nobody knew anybody else or where anything was.  Finally I wandered out to the 31st Divisional Artillery, and reported there; but they had heard nothing of me.  As it was late they took pity on me, and gave me part of a room to share with another man in a hutment.  There I stayed until this morning, when I came to the 34 Divisional Artillery.  I ascertained that I had been sent on approval to the G.O.C.R.A.  At present he is in France, but returns on Monday when I hope he will confirm my appointment as A.D.C.

 

The Brigade Major here is Captain Waller. Yesterday he received the M.C. from the King.

 

The Principal here is Mr. Major, or rather Vice Principal. He edits the Modern Churchman.  This evening he took me over the Cathedral.

 

The Division moves on Saturday to Salisbury Plain, Tidworth Pennings of all places! We  shall probably be travelling most of Saturday & Sunday.

 

It has been extraordinarily hot here to-day.

 

Later. I am remaining on here till Monday, when I travel in charge of the Headquarters Staff by train.  We go to Tidworth Park, then to Sutton Veny, and are due to go to France in October.

 

Saturday, August 28, 1915.

 

Plans again altered. We start tomorrow at 5 a.m. by troop train for Salisbury.  That means shuntings on to sidings for a whole day.  I dine with the Principal here tonight.

 

August 30 1915.

R.P.

R.A. Headquarters, 34th Division.

Tidworth

Salisbury.

 

On Friday afternoon I went to Fountains Abbey, which is a most beautiful place I think I have ever seen. On Saturday I met the General, and I am appointed temporarily as A.D.C. to see how I get on.

 

On Saturday evening I went out to Copgrove Rectory to dine with the Rector who is also the Vice-Principal of the Ripon Clergy School, Mr. Major.  He has a delightful old Rectory, full of old furniture.  It rained hard on my return journey, and I got soaked.

 

On Sunday morning I was up at 4 a.m., entrained the horses including the General’s two chargers, five tons of baggage, ten clerks, and myself aboard a troop train. It poured with rain the whole time.  We started at 7 a.m., and then crawled to Tidworth, where we arrived at 6 p.m.  On the way we stopped at Leicester, where the nurses of the Volunteer Aid served us with tea, coffee and cake.  We also watered the horses there.

 

When we arrived at our destination I met the Staff Captain and together we superintended the unloading and transport of the baggage to the camp by motor lorries.

 

There is only one hut in the camp, which we have for the Divisional Headquarters Office. I managed to get tents for the officers of the staff. It was a job to get the mess running at all.  However we are settling down.

 

The General, Elmslie, is a very fine looking chap. Waller, the Brigade Major is the son of the Dean of Kildare.  The Staff Captain is one Rew.

 

This afternoon I am going in to Salisbury.

 

(Train 5 a.m for 7 a.m. Troops 12 men, Horses G.O.C. 2 Capt Rew 2, Officers’ kit, Baggage 5 tons.)

 

SALISBURY TRAINING CENTRE.

 

G.O.C. General the Right Honourable Sir A.H. Paget, G.C.B., K.C.V.O.

Radnor House, Salisbury.

 

ORDERS BY

BRIGADIER GENERAL F.B. ELMSLIE. C.B.

COMMANDING ROYAL ARTILLERY 34th DIVISION.

Tidworth Park.

Hants.

Part 1.

Strength. 1.

2nd Lieut A.A. Laporte Payne R.F.A. reported his arrival on 25th 8. 1915., and is attached to Artillery Headquarters.

Lt. Col. K.J. Kincaid-Smith, D.S.O., R.A. reported his arrival on 1st September 1915, and is posted to command the 152nd Brigade, R.F.A.

Hubert F. Rew.

Captain,

Staff Captain R.A.

34th Division

 

August 30 1915.

 

R.A.HEADQUARTERS, 34th Division

Tidworth.

 

I am sitting in a large hut surrounded by clerks with noisy typewriters. Guns and wagons are making a great noise and dust passing up from the station.  The whole division is forming a new camp here to finish training before proceeding elsewhere – France, Dardanelles, Egypt, India, Who knows?  I hope France.  imagine the confusion.  It is taking R whole days, 12 trains unloading every 8 hours, guns, horses, wagons, baggage, men.  Tempers are shocking.  My head is a bit muddled.

 

Tuesday I travelled up to Ripon, arriving about 6 p.m. Dined and helped to run a concert in 161 Brigade Mess.  Slept in a hut on Wednesday.  Thursday I moved into Ripon Clergy Training College, where I was billeted.  Friday I went to Fountains Abbey in a car.  It is one of the most beautiful places I have ever seen.  The Elizabethan Mansion at the back was lovely.  It was a glorious day, and the creeper was just turning.  Saturday I packed and loaded 5 tons of stationary in a railway truck.  At night I went to Copgrove Rectory for dinner with the Rector and his wife.  It was a delightful old house full of queer passages, good old furniture brass and silver.  It was a great dinner.  We had Moselle, Claret, Portland Chartreuse to drink.  After dinner I did my best to admire his large collection of books and pictures.  It poured all the way home and I got very wet, however I was in bed by midnight; but up at 4 a.m.  I saw my four horses in the truck, and also my ten hangers on.  WE started about 7 a.m. thoroughly wet and miserable.  We arrived here at 6 p.m. and then had to unpack and get to camp 2 miles away.

 

I got to bed about midnight in a damp tent. Awfully jolly to be in camp again!  Today I superintended putting up tents for the H.Q. Mess, making horse lines, opening telegrams.  This afternoon I had a game of polo.  Now I am doing correspondence.  “Can I find a billet for a chauffeur”.  Can I get rooms for Col. So and So”  “Can I get a house for Mrs. Somebody-Else”.  To all of this I reply “NO!  not for love or money or influence”.  The place is full of khaki, that ubiquitous deadly dull colour.  I almost love a civilian.  I have just had put in front of me a large quantity of Memoranda and Bye-Laws of the Southern Command, and Salisbury Training Centre, which I must read, learn and inwardly digest.  The Mess bores me stiff.  All they talk about is the sins of the A.S.C., or horses.

War Diary of AA Laporte Payne June 1915

War Diary of AA Laporte Payne

 

Extracted from

 

Brigade Diary, Personal Diary, Operation Orders, Note Books, Memoranda & Correspondence

—————–

 

1915

 

 

June 13, 1915.

 

83rd Brigade

Heytesbury House

 

“I am unable to get away this week end. It has been truly glorious weather, much too hot for work.  We had two field days last week .  This week we are doing night digging.

I motored over to Bath one evening early last week and went with some friends to hear the band of the 1st Life Guards.  We got back about one in the morning.  The roads here are full of vehicles of every description ever invented since the Flood, from the donkey cart to the large steam lorry.  Even the railway has been carried along the Codford Road.  Hundreds of led horses, wagons of forage, stores, cause a vast confusion, and a solid block of sweating horses and men.  Everywhere and above all is thick dust, turning the troops white.

 

I have just managed to get a beautiful little mare. She looks well, and is full of life.  I have entered her for the Divisional Horse show to be held soon as a final social function.  The Howitzer Brigade are firing this afternoon about eight miles away, and most of the officers have gone over there.

 

I had to go to Church Parade this morning in the tin tabernacle. A most awful little parson preached.  He wore his wife’s fur stole round his neck.  It may have been white once.  Last Sunday afternoon I went to the Cathedral Service at Salisbury, and then had tea with some friends.  Field Days.  Colonel’s galloper.

 

June 22 1915.

 

“I had a most amazing journey last night. I caught the 9.50, from Paddington, and could not get further than Swindon, even with the help of a goods train.  There I got a room at the local Railway Hotel, until 4.30, this morning, and then travelled by the early morning train to Heytesbury, arriving at 8.10 A.M.  Today I have been Brigade Orderly Officer, and had the cleanliness of the camp to see to, and other similar duties, among them the inspection of prisoners in the cells.  One is a trifle mad, and threatens to murder any one who goes near him.  Tonight we are out picketing.  Tomorrow there is an inspection by the General in preparation for Thursday, for rumour has it that the King and Kitchener are going to review us on that day.  But I always doubt rumour.  There is little news in the Times today, bar the War Loan.

 

Heytesbury Hole is just the same, 1only whiter with age and dust. The 17th Division are just arriving, so more dust.

The Colonel had been away fishing and is in a good mood.

 

June 23 1915.

R.P.

I thoroughly enjoyed my week end at home. I had a long journey back via Swindon, where I spent the four midnight hours in the local Railway Hotel, and arrived at Heytesbury at 8 a.m. the next morning.

 

Tomorrow the King and Kitchener review us at Stonehenge, about fourteen miles from here.  The whole Division will turn out.  I am acting as Colonel’s Orderly Officer, so the Adjutant and I go by the saluting point together.  I hope my mare does not run away with me.  Tomorrow stables are at 4 a.m., and we start on our journey at 6.30 am.  We shall be dusty when get there, unless it rains which it is trying to do now.  The weather is on the change.  The dust has been somewhat trying lately, covering everything with a white deposit.  The day has been spent getting ready for tomorrow.  Yesterday we spent the night, “picketing out” on the Plain.

 

The Divisional Horse Show is on Saturday. I am putting in my new mare.

 

They are still building huts here. The place may be completed after we have left.

Heytesbury is white with dust.

 

(Left Heytesbury on Tuesday afternoon, June 30th 1915).

 

War Diary of AA Laporte Payne May 1915

War Diary of AA Laporte Payne

 

Extracted from

 

Brigade Diary, Personal Diary, Operation Orders, Note Books, Memoranda & Correspondence

—————–

 

1915

 

May 4 1915.

Shoeburyness

“…… We had a sort of (picnic) to-day. It consisted in tramping along dusty roads, carrying glasses, compasses, maps, directors etc., climbing up church towers, and locating places.  It was rather interesting but very hot and thirsty work.  It is a wonder our instructor got back at all as every one wanted him to have a pint at the village pub.  I managed to finish my paper on Sunday night after I got back and verified my calculations on Monday morning, so I was alright.  Several men missed the last train back and had to arrive with the milk in the morning.  Our instructor here is a very interesting man.  He was a non-commissioned officer in the famous “L” Battery R.H.A., which was blown to pieces by the Germans.  He and two others continued to serve their gun when every other gun was out of action, and the other men killed or wounded, for which he and two others got the V.C. and commissions.  He was badly wounded by the back burst of a high explosive shell ….

Thursday night is guest night with band, generally a lively time. (We have to honour the King in Mess Port!

 

May 12 1915.

 

After a strenuous morning riding, afternoon at gunnery, evening at lectures, we went out at 9 o’clock for gun-pit digging all night….. We returned this morning at eight.

 

Sunday May 15 1915.

R.P.

B.A.C. 83rd Brigade R.F.A.

Heytesbury House

Heytesbury

Wilts

 

I arrived this afternoon with Dexter, and found that the whole of the officers of the 18th Division were quartered in Heytesbury House.  The surroundings are lovely, but the house is bare and much too overcrowded.

The Commandant of the Shoeburyness School of Gunnery has just been appointed Colonel Commanding our Brigade.

 

Thursday May 20 1915.

 

Somewhere on Salisbury Plain.

 

“I am sitting in a haystack surrounded by the muddy plain. We are on a field day with the infantry…..  yesterday the whole 18th Division went on a divisional route march, and General Maxse inspected us.  As far as I can make out it was for the benefit of the ladies (wives of the generals and staff).  See what I command sort of show,…..very boring for the (regimental officers and men and a day wasted.

 

The weather has been truly awful. I have never seen such mud.  Thick chalky soup, almost up to one’s knees.  The horses and men are never dry.  You can imagine what it is like with the huts not yet finished.  No stables and the horses in open lines.

 

Our new Colonel had arrived and dined in Mess last night. He is going to lecture to us every night on gunnery…..

Heytesbury House is the residence of Baron Heytesbury. The only furniture they have left are some awful family portraits and one or two broken chairs.  Otherwise the place is empty and very dirty.  There is a great crowd in the house.  I am lucky as I am in a room with the adjutant and the Colonel’s galloper.  The mess is very badly run, so we are enjoying ourselves.

 

Opposite here is a large wood, and on either side are high mounds, old tumuli, which probably contain the bones of British warriors. The only sounds are larks singing and gunners snoring.  This American harness is very rotten, and is always breaking.  Fancy having to go to America for our harness.

 

Some of the men are looking for what they call “nesties”. The usual instinct for hunting something.  The language is a bit thick at times, but they are not bad chaps, very willing, though sometimes very stupid.  The second in command of this Brigade is a priceless major, and he affords endless amusement because he can’t ride at all.  He is very tall with long legs that hang down and dangle as he rides.  He sits hunched up over the withers of his horse, and is quite incapable of controlling it.  He backed into the General the other day, who was furious.  The funny part is that when the battery goes into action and his horse takes fright at the noise, as it generally does, he is sure to be taken off to the rear, and as his battery staff have to follow him everywhere and keep him in sight, it is probable that the whole lot will be missing at the critical moment.  They have put off our firing practice for a week, owing probably to the wet.

 

War Diary of AA Laporte Payne April 1915

War Diary of AA Laporte Payne

 

Extracted from

 

Brigade Diary, Personal Diary, Operation Orders, Note Books, Memoranda & Correspondence

—————–

 

1915

 

 

April 20 1915

R.P.

R.A. Mess

Shoeburyness

 

“There is plenty to do here, and we are kept hard at it. We wear canvas clothes and are treated as ordinary tommies.  We rise at 6.45 a.m.  Breakfast at 7.45 a.m.  Parades from 8.30 to noon or rather 12.30,p.m., then again from 1.30 to 5.30 p.m.  Then tea and lectures till dinner time.  Dinner takes an hour and a quarter.  They turn out about 200 officers a month here.  The detachment I am in consists of 24 subalterns under Captain Nelson V.C.  He was a sergeant in “L” Battery R.H.A. and is now a Captain and our instructor.  we are drilled by a regular sergeant one named Ford.

 

Eight of us live in one of the staff houses, and are quite comfortable. Two of us have a large room to ourselves.  I share with a man named Cousens.  Our camp kit is our furniture.  Dexter & Gould are both here.  The course lasts four weeks.

 

War Diary of AA Laporte Payne March 1915

War Diary of AA Laporte Payne

 

Extracted from

 

Brigade Diary, Personal Diary, Operation Orders, Note Books, Memoranda & Correspondence

—————–

 

1915

 

 

 

March 8, 1915

R.P.

“Training has been considerably stiffened up. There are parades on Sunday mornings and on other days before breakfast and after tea in addition to the normal work.  There are night marches and trench digging.  I have been inoculated with two doses, and as a result I am rather stiff and sore.   The 48 hours off duty which we are supposed to have, needless to say I never got.

 

Tomorrow I am motoring over to Ipswich where the 84th Brigade is stationed.  We are expecting to go into huts on the 20th of this month.  Leave has been cancelled from certain places such as Colchester, Braintree, Woolwich, Ipswich on account of the outbreak of cerebro-spinal meningitis which is bad.

 

We have had several officers convalescent after wounds posted us. Major Caruthers, Major Cornes and others.

 

On Sunday morning I took Church Parade of about 400 men. Then I groomed my own horse.  Each officer has to be able to do this.

 

 

The Dardanelles show seems to be going well.  How foolish the Turks are to join this war. Turkey will be the first empire to fall, and it should mean the end of the Ottoman Empire in Europe.

War Diary of AA Laporte Payne

 

Extracted from

 

Brigade Diary, Personal Diary, Operation Orders, Note Books, Memoranda & Correspondence

—————–

 

1915

 

 

 

March 8, 1915

R.P.

“Training has been considerably stiffened up. There are parades on Sunday mornings and on other days before breakfast and after tea in addition to the normal work.  There are night marches and trench digging.  I have been inoculated with two doses, and as a result I am rather stiff and sore.   The 48 hours off duty which we are supposed to have, needless to say I never got.

 

Tomorrow I am motoring over to Ipswich where the 84th Brigade is stationed.  We are expecting to go into huts on the 20th of this month.  Leave has been cancelled from certain places such as Colchester, Braintree, Woolwich, Ipswich on account of the outbreak of cerebro-spinal meningitis which is bad.

 

We have had several officers convalescent after wounds posted us. Major Caruthers, Major Cornes and others.

 

On Sunday morning I took Church Parade of about 400 men. Then I groomed my own horse.  Each officer has to be able to do this.

 

 

The Dardanelles show seems to be going well.  How foolish the Turks are to join this war. Turkey will be the first empire to fall, and it should mean the end of the Ottoman Empire in Europe.