F.W. Springett letter 25 June 1917

6649 Pte F.W. Springett

D Company 1st Platoon

22nd Training Reserve

St Albans Herts

June 25th 1917

 

My Dear Brother Sid,

 

Just a few lines hoping they will find you in the best of health, as I am A1 at present.  I am sorry I haven’t answered your letter before, but it is the same old tale, no time.  I am glad you enjoyed your days outing. St Albans certainly is a very nice place.  Well, Sid I don’t think we are moving after all, at least until we are 18-8.  They have altered it now.  A draught went away last week to the Norfolk Reg. and Bob Lambert went with them.  He was 18-8, still I can easily find another mate.  I am sorry I made you so tired but I guess you didn’t mind it.  We are still having some lovely weather but not quite so hot as that Sunday.  I think that was the limit.  Well Sid I haven’t much to say this time so I suppose I must close.

Thanks very much for the way in which you treated me last Sunday.

Well Goodnight Sid

From your

Affec Brother

Frank

 

 

Letter with cover ST ALBANS 9.15 PM JU

A.A. Laporte Payne letter to Muriel 22 June1917

A.A. Laporte Payne letter to Muriel 22 June1917

Belgium.
June 22nd 1917

My darling,

Thank you very much for your two long letters which I was most glad to get. In spite of all your hard work you do not seem to have forgotten me. I hope by now you have received my letter telling you something about the 7th.

Your news was very interesting. You do seem to have had a hot and hard time of it. Don’t you find it very trying? You seem to appreciate your Saturday afternoons and Sundays and you appear to make good use of them.

A person I don’t like is Bampfilde. She is the one who talks spiritualistic nonsense isn’t she? Surely you don’t take her seriously. People like that are only to be laughed at. I had to study some of their books etc during my philosophy course and it was the silliest rot imaginable. If you want to know anything about it I will tell you all I know and give you books from both points of view. You see, dear, lots of so called brainy people go mad but that is no reason why sensible people should do likewise. One or two dotty professors and a lot of hysterical women run such doctrines and they are not worth your precious breath to talk about them.

Forgive my preaching which is not meant as such for of course I know you don’t take that sort of thing seriously. We can leave all such twaddle to Mrs Bands and people like unto her.

I hope you are having cooler weather- we are, and a lot of rain too unfortunately but I suppose it is wanted.

How are they all at home? Well I hope. Mrs Cross must not do too much house work or she will undo all the good of her holiday.

Thank you for enquiring about my hand. It is quite well now but I have got a beastly raw blister from the reins. The mare got jumpy with the noise of the guns and pulled badly with the result that I got blisters.

You seem to have had some very good nights out. I shall have to come home and look after you. When do you return home? At the end of July? You might let me know the exact date sometime.

I am probably leaving Headquarters shortly. I have fought the Colonel enough about it and I really believe he is giving way. I am a bit tired of running signals and such like things. I want to be with the guns again. But I have had a good time here and for that reason shall be sorry to leave. I may go back to “A” Battery.

You will be surprised to hear that we have been taken out for a rest – the men needed it badly and the horses as well. They have had a very bad time – so we are trying to recover just behind the line.

I don’t know how long it will last I am sure – not very long though.

The Colonel and I dined with the General last night, and had some strawberries for the first time. Tomorrow the Corps Commander is inspecting the Brigade – it is a great fuss – everybody is cleaning harness and vehicles.

Your letter was not at all flabby – and what do you know about the ‘little language’? Were you thinking of Swift and Stella?

I have been thinking how nice it would be to have a week by the sea somewhere with you. We could go off somewhere with a convenient chaperone and have a gorgeous time boating, bathing, and slacking generally. How would you like it?
I must close now
Hoping you are well dearest & cheerful
With all my love & many kisses
Ever your
Arch.

June 1917

 

June 1917

The Western Front

The Battle of Messines took place between the 7th and 14th June 1917. It was an offensive conducted by the British Second Army, under the command of General Sir Herbert Plumer, on the Western Front near the village of Messines in Belgium. The French Nivelle Offensive in April and May had failed to achieve its ambitious aims which led to the demoralisation of French troops and the dis-location of the Anglo-French strategy for 1917. The offensive at Messines forced the Germans to move reserves from the Arras and Aisne fronts and relieve the pressure on the French. The tactical objective of the attack at Messines was to capture the German defences on the ridge and deprive the German army of the high ground south of Ypres. At 3.10 on the morning of the 7th June 1917, nineteen mines containing over one million pounds of Ammonal were detonated under the ridge. In one of the largest non-nuclear explosion in history, it was said the blast could be heard and felt in England. The tunnelling had started as early as January 1916 by six Royal Engineer tunnelling companies, three of which were British, two Canadian and one Australian. The idea for the offensive was Plumer’s, who was one of the few Generals on the Western Front who understood the need for careful planning and precise knowledge of the situation. The plan to punch a hole into German lines was first put forward in 1915 and in 1916 the plan had the approval of Commander in Chief Sir Douglas Haig. Prior to the detonation of the mines more than 2,200 British guns of various sizes were used with a bombardment of over three and a half million shells. The bombardment had commenced on the 21st May 1917 using high explosive and gas shells. When the mines were exploded it is estimated that around ten thousand German soldiers were killed. All allied objectives were achieved because of the creeping barrage employed, and although the Germans attempted counter offensives they were constantly repulsed. The ridge was finally secured by the British on the 14th June 1917 with the Allies sustaining casualties of about 17,000 and the Germans having losses of about 25,000. It was considered a much needed moral boost for the British and French troops, as the attackers lost considerably less than the defence. The Battle of Messines was a prelude to a far larger Third Battle of Ypres campaign, the preliminary bombardment for which began on the 11th July 1917.

On the 25th June1917 the first U.S. troops began to arrive in France, forming the American Expeditionary Force. Only 14,000 troops came over as the initial force. General John Pershing, commander of the AEF, insisted his troops would be well-trained and would not be used to fill gaps in the British and French armies. American involvement in the war did happen until President Woodrow Wyatt declared war on Germany in April 1917. American troops required training and equipment before they could join in the effort, and for several months were relegated to support efforts as the Allied leaders were wary of putting an army lacking experience in large-scale warfare. In spite of this the American presence provided a much needed boost to Allied morale, knowing that future reinforcements would tip the manpower balance in favour of the Allies.

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Various Campaigns

Victor Richardson died of wounds on the 9th June 1917. He was one of the “Three Musketeer” friends of Vera Brittain, the other two being Geoffrey Thurlow and Edward Brittain. Richardson had sustained  a serious head wound at Arras on the 9th April 1917 and had been transferred to England for specialist treatment in an effort to save the sight in right eye, after having had his left eye removed. Vera visited Richardson on the 28th May 1917 and stayed with him at his bedside for the next ten days, possibly with the intention to marry him in order that she could devote her life caring for him. On the 8th June 1917 his conditioned suddenly deteriorated and on the 9th June 1917 he died from a cerebral abscess. He was posthumously awarded t he Military Cross for his action at the Battle of Arras.

The Battle of Mount Ortigara began on the 10th June 1917 in the mountainous border between Italy and Austria. The Italian army decided to launch an offensive against the Austro/Hungarian army in order to take possession of Mount Ortigara on the Asiago plateau. The Austrians had strengthened their defensive positions the previous year in order to threaten the Isonzo region. The battle commenced on the 10th June 1917 with 300,000 Italian troops and 1,600 guns facing 100,000 Austro/Hungarian troops and 500 guns. The Austro/Hungarians expected the offensive and their guns were positioned in very strong positions. The Italians concentrated on a few kilometres of front line ensuring their line was overcrowded making manoeuvrability difficult. After fierce fighting the Italians managed to capture Mount Ortigara. By the 25th June 1917 the Austrian troops had counter-attacked and retook Mount Ortigara.

On the 13th June 1917, a squadron of German Gotha G.IV aircraft successfully carried out a daylight raid on London. Among the dead were eighteen children with many more injured when a bomb fell on the Upper North Street Primary School in Poplar, East London. This was the deadliest civilian raid of the war and all the Gothas’ successfully returned to their base. The reason for the relatively large numbers of casualties seem to have been the ignorance of the potential threat posed by aerial bombardment on the city in daylight, and everybody crowded out into the street to watch the activity instead of taking cove.

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The Eastern Front

Alexander Kerensky replaced Prince Georgy Yevgenievich Lvov as Prime Minister of Russia on the 21st June 1917. Lvov had been the head of the Provisional Government after Tsar Nicholas II abdicated, and he had appointed Kerensky as Minister of Justice. In May 1917 Kerensky had replaced Alexander Guchov as Minister of War. The Bolsheviks, with the assistance of Lenin, favoured peace negotiations but Lvov was unwilling to withdraw Russia from the war. The Russian people were unhappy with this decision and this caused him to resign and Kerensky replaced him. However, Kerensky was also unwilling to end the war as he had received Allied backing, although this made him unpopular with the Russian Army.

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The Balkans

By early June 1917, Flora Sandes, the only English Lady to fight in the trenches, had applied on numerous occassions to return to the front line of the Serbian army. She had been seriously wounded on the 29th November 1916 while serving as sergeant in the 4th Company (Iron Regiment) of the 2nd Regiment in the Serbian 1st Army. For her military actions and service to Serbia she had been awarded the Kara George Star, Serbia’s highest military medal. The Gallantry Medal automatically promoted her to Sergeant-Major. Eventually she was considered fit enough to re-join her regiment only to be informed the 4th Company did not exist any longer. She was transferred to the 1st Company as the 4th had been amalgamated into one unit. Flora found to her dismay there were only sixteen of her company left, the others had been lost during her time recovering from her wounds. The Serbian Army were advancing and fought alongside British, French and Italian forces in the trenches near Monastir where the Bulgarians were blocking the Serbians from re-entering Serbia through the Babuna Pass.

King Constantine of Greece abdicated on the 12th June 1917, and his son Alexander took the throne rather than his elder brother Crown Prince George. The Allies favoured Alexander as they believed he was pro-Entente while George was pro-Central powers. The Allies were also keen to bring Greece into the war on their side and consequently Greece declared war on the Central Powers on the 30th June 1917. Greece had been able to stay neutral from the beginning of the war but historically Greece and Bulgaria had been in conflict for years over surrounding territories. Eventually an agreement was reached by a peace treaty signed in June 1913 whereby Greece, Montenegro, Serbia and Romania laid claim to one side of the land involved and Bulgaria the other. However, Greece was divided into two factions whereby the Prime Minister Eleftherios Venizelos favoured an alliance with the Entente Powers and King Constantine favouring the Central Powers. His wife, Queen Sophia was German and he also believed Germany had military superiority and therefore Greece stayed neutral until Bulgaria invaded Serbia, and joined the Central Powers. Numerous political activities took place but the dispute between the King and Venizelos continued until Britain and France recognised Venizelos’ government effectively splitting Greece into two separate factions. Britain demanded the King’s abdication which he accepted and subsequently the entire Greek army mobilised and began to participate in military operations against the army of the Central Powers on the Macedonia front.

 

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The Great War- June 1917

 

The Great War- June 1917

Western Front

7th to 14th June            Battle of Messines

25th June                       First American troops land in France

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Various Campaigns

9th June                         Victor Richardson, friend of Vera Brittain, dies of wounds

10th to 25th June           Battle of Ortigara

13th June                        First successful heavy bomber raid on London

————————————

The Eastern Front

21st June                       Kerensky Replaces Lvov as Minister-President of Russian Government

————————————

The Balkans

Early June                       Flora Sandes rejoins her Serbian regiment after being wounded

12th June                       Greece: King Constantine I abdicates

30th June                        Greece declares war on the Central powers

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A.A. Laporte Payne letter to Muriel 18 June 1917

A.A. Laporte Payne letter to Muriel 18 June 1917

 

B.E.F.

June 18th 1917

 

Darling,

 

Having so often to write at a small table with others I have got into the habit of leaving out the initial words of my letter until it is finished and then forgetting to put them in – and now I am conscientious that you have received letters with no beginnings. I don’t know what you could have thought but that is the reason.  Please forgive.

 

Thank you so much for all your letters and photos. I was very glad to see the house where you live.  They were very good photos.  I wish I had a camera here but they won’t let us.

 

Did you get my letter giving my view of the operations of the 7th?  I thought perhaps it might get stopped by the censor.  They don’t know what to censor and what not.  Living where they do on the lines of communications with the A.S.C. and such like they don’t know what information is important.

 

You must be having a hot and trying time. I think it is very good of you to carry on as you do.  Aren’t you tired of it?

 

I too have been dreaming of May week and Henley and shady rivers and cool lawns and all such things – but heaven isn’t for a sinner like me.  All such things seem to belong to quite another life altogether.

 

Poor old Reg has overdone it. I am so sorry for him.  He will be angry but if it is not serious I am very relieved that he is out of it at least for a bit.  It is very hot just at present in more senses than one, and I was afraid of worse things than a bad heart.  I hope he is in England now and I hope they will keep him there.

 

We are still as busy as ever – moving forward is not easy. Telephone lines have to be laid all over the place and as there are no time or facilities for burying the cable, the lines get cut by shell fire and my fellows are out all day and night mending them.

 

The Boche is not taking his defeat lying down by any means and unfortunately he is paying a lot of unwelcome attention to our batteries

 

I do hope you are keeping well, dearest, and enjoying the fine weather in spite of your hard work.

 

I must close now

With all my love & kisses

Ever yours

Arch.

Letter to Rev. R.M. Laporte Payne 18 June 1917

Letter to Rev. R.M. Laporte Payne 18 June 1917

 

13 Friern Park

  1. Finchley

N.

18.6.17

 

Dear Mr. Laporte Payne,

 

I have to thank you for your kind letter of the 14th inst received on my return from Birmingham.  It was kind of you to have taken so much trouble, I will keep Mr. Storr’s letter by me and as you say I think the best thing to do is to get into an O.T.C. and train for the Artillery.

 

When the time comes and it is necessary to fill up papers etc I shall avail myself of your kind offer to sign same.

 

I am anxious to get into “Khaki” as soon as possible, London is no place for the “unemployed” at the present altho’ I have not had a holiday for nearly 4 years excepting of course the journey home from Singapore.

 

I shall look forward to letting you know how I get on and with kind regards, I am

Yours sincerely

Signature unreadable.

G Hammond letter 17 June 1917

Sunday

17-6-17

My Dear F & M & Gladys,

I was delighted to receive your letter the other day as I was beginning to get a little anxious.  I was not aware that Gladys was taking her exam until I received a letter from Elsie saying she was taking her intermediate.  I am glad to hear Fred is OK.  I should imagine that he sees very little of active operations which is a good thing.  I do hope Gladys gets through alright.  I think she will as she appeared to do very well in her Term exams. I am afraid Gladys would not walk very far if she were here the heat is intense.  It is very hard to realise that it is Sunday everything is just the same.  I am pleased to hear Mrs. Boon is recovering from the shock.  I hope she soon forgets the horrid part of it all but its no use worrying.  I don’t know how Sturman manages to keep at home so long, well perhaps he is better there than here.  Glad to hear the garden is doing so well.  It will be like a little farm before long at the rate the vegetables seem to be growing.

I wrote to Will sometime last week, it is quite a long time since I heard from him.  I believe he is getting very thin at least he says so.  How is the clock going now?  I suppose Dad has had the whole thing to pieces for oiling.  When is Gladys going to Liverpool?  I think she will have a good time.  Well there is very little doing here at present.  The greatest difficulty is to keep cool.  Now don’t forget to let me have those two books as soon as possible as I want then very badly.  It is so funny to walk down the trenches and see all the flowers growing, of course they really are only weeds but it makes things look much pleasanter.

Well this is all at present, don’t forget to write every Sunday or thereabouts as I become anxious if there is no letter during the week.

Fondest love to all

George

Post card 17 June 1917 A.A. Laporte Payne

F.S.P.C. 17 June 1917

 

 

I am quite well

 

I have been admitted to hospital sick wounded and am going on well.

 

I am being sent down to the base.

 

I have received your letter dated telegram  parcel

 

Letter follows at first opportunity.

 

I have received no letter from you lately for a long time.

 

Signature only A.A. Laporte Payne

 

Date June 17th 1917

 

Addressee Miss Muriel Cross, C/O Post Office, Eardiston, Tenbury Wells Worcester.     Postmark ARMY POST OFFICE R.W.3  Dated JU 18 17

1 E. Yorks Regt Order 15 June 1917

Certified True Copy. Operation Orders by Lt. Col. R.H. WAITMAN.

 

  1. The Bn will be relieved in the line by the 9th K.O.Y.L.I. tonight 16th June.
  2. On relief Bn will take over the position of “C” Bn. (Area T.9.d. & T.10c.) & 1 Coy in HIND TRENCH.
  3. A Coy will be the Coy in HIND TRENCH & will change places with A Coy 9 K.O.Y.L.I. before 10.30 p.m.
  4. Coys will relieve & march as follows. C relieving C. D relieves D & B – B.
  5. 1 Guide per platoon to be at junction of FIT LANE & HIND TRENCH at 11 p.m. & report to Cpl Goldthorpe.
  6. All trench stores etc will be handed over to advance parties & receipts forwarded to Bn H.Q.
  7. O.C. Coys will render by 8 p.m. tomorrow of work done & work proposed.
  8. Coy C.Q.M. Sergts of H.Q., B, C, & D Coys will take over C Bn
  9. 1 Guide per Coy will report to 2Lt. S*** at Bn H.Q. at 4.30 p.m. tomorrow, to new position & return.
  10. LEWIS GUNNERS will carry out their guns.

 

Sgd A.H.E. Lt Adjt

About 15/6/17

 

Orders for night 16/17 June 1917

 

  1. Operation Orders Herewith
  2. All trenches & posts to be left clean & latrines emptied.
  3. Trench Stores will be handed over as for two Coys. there will be one *** dump only S. of RIVER ROAD.
  4. Posts will be improved as previously returned by O.C. Coy up to 11.30 p.m.
  5. At 11.30 p.m. all posts will stand to until relieved.
  6. Lt Briggs will report to me when C Coy is relieved sending “Whiskey” over phone.
  7. Coys will be shown to new positions by the guides & Platoons will march at 2 minute intervals from Flag T.5.a.8.1.
  8. In the event of Heavy Shelling Platoon ** will be responsible for proceeding independently to new area.
  9. Guides for incoming unit to report to C.S.M. Raggett at Coy H.Q. 9.45 p.m.
  10. 2 Lt Crane will relieve 2 Lt Dean in YORK Trench at 10 p.m.
  11. 2 Lt Stephenson will hand over post occupied by 13 Platoon & see that York Post is relieved quickly. 2.50 p.m.

 

W.C. Green

Capt

O.C. D Coy

1 Copy to 2Lt Briggs

16.6.16

 

 

BRASS

WORK REPORT in accordance with Op Or 15.6.17.

(A). WIRE   A second band of wire has been started from SENSEE RIVER N to RIVER ROAD.

 

About 2/3 of this distance has now a good fence about 80x in front of *** positions.  Altogether about 60 coils have been put out & stakes accordingly.

All the wire put out is about 50x in front wire existing when we took over.

Wire should be continued & joined up with existing wire about 100x E of Junction SHAFT TRENCH & RIVER ROAD & then thickened N’wards to YORK TRENCH.

 

(B) Construction & Improvements of Posts.

 

No of Post WORK DONE SUGGESTIONS for work
1. Clearing Debris in trench Suggest proper bombing Post with T trench facing S & wire ready to pull in trench.
2 & 3. FIRE BAY should be constructed from 2 to 3 connecting these 2 posts at edge of debris on parapet
4. Entrance deepened. None Urgent.   Entrance to sap should be sandbagged on S side.
5. Nothing Urgent
6. Trench leading to post deepened. Should be sandbagged on S side.
7. do Do & FIRE Bay in new position to be constructed with FIRE STEP.
8. New Post completely dugout with FIRE Bays (2) Sandbagging & FIRE Positions to be constructed.
9. Not Urgent. Requires sandbagging in SHAFT TRENCH RE’s have this in hand.
10. Entrance to new SAP deepened. FIRE Step required in new Position.
11. LEWIS GUN post dugout & entrance to position remade after being hit by shell. Require still further deepening & strengthening as this post is a good one but liable to Shell Fire.
12. Nil Nil
YORK TRENCH. Post 400x down trench has been considerably deepened & improved. Nil Will depend on situation

 

Generally.  It was arranged with O.C. 126 Field Coy that we should dig out the new positions & that he would make & revet the fire steps etc.

 

W.C. Green

Capt.

O.C. D Coy

5 p.m.

16/6/17

F.S.P.C. 12 June 1917 A.A. Laporte Payne

F.S.P.C. 12 June 1917

I am quite well

I have received your letter

Letter follows at first opportunity.

Signature only A.A. Laporte Payne

Date June 12 1917

Addressee Miss Muriel Cross, C/O Post Office, Eardiston, Tenbury Wells Worcester Postmark ARMY POST OFFICE R.W.3 Dated JU 12 17