The Kaikoura war memorial has a commanding position on the waterfront and there is an interesting plaque which tells the history of the gardens which surround the memorial which were begun by Lydia Washington. She had a plot which commemorated the battles of the Somme, Gallipoli, Passchendaele and Jutland. There was also a plot for nurses in the Edith Cavell plot and one dedicate to Tom Cooke a local boy who won a Victoria Cross while serving in the Australian Army. She tended the garden up until she passed away in 1946.
My goal is to personally visit and collate information from 100 New Zealand World War One memorials throughout New Zealand to commemorate the Centenary of World War One and to remember those who paid the ultimate price.
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Tuesday, October 29, 2013
Kaikoura Memorial - Marlborough
The Kaikoura war memorial has a commanding position on the waterfront and there is an interesting plaque which tells the history of the gardens which surround the memorial which were begun by Lydia Washington. She had a plot which commemorated the battles of the Somme, Gallipoli, Passchendaele and Jutland. There was also a plot for nurses in the Edith Cavell plot and one dedicate to Tom Cooke a local boy who won a Victoria Cross while serving in the Australian Army. She tended the garden up until she passed away in 1946.
Rawene Memorial - Northland
The Rawene memorial is often mistaken for the obelisk behind the memorial gates. Although I suspect the plaques were originally on an earlier memorial.
Kaitaia War Memorial - Northland
Kaitaia Memorial in its originally position
'World War I memorial, Kaitaia. Northwood brothers :Photographs of
Northland. Ref: 1/1-010637-G. Alexander Turnbull Library, Wellington,
New Zealand. http://natlib.govt.nz/records/23057963'
The memorial in its position today
The Kaitaia World War One Memorial was one of the first unveiled in New Zealand on 24 March 1916. The memorial was the initiative of Riapo Puhipi (Leopold Busby) a leader of Te Rarawa. The inscription of the memorial is unusually in Maori and English and reads:
'In loving memory and in honour of our sons and relations both Maori and Pakeha, dead or living from the country of Mangonui who willingly offered to sacrifice their lives to uphold the honour of the King and Empire for the Glory of God in this terrible war which began in Europe in August 1914, and has since spread over the greater part of the world.
Splashing through the mountainous waves of the Indian Ocean our brave lads uphold the names of your noble ancestors, seek to avenge the death of your relations that have fallen. God will give victory to the righteous.'
Today the memorial is part of a memorial to both wars and the names of those lost in both wars are mounted on a wall behind the monument. Sadly the angel has lost one of her arms and the lettering on the monument could do with some restoration. I did read an article in the Northern Advocate from last year that an application had been put in to the lotteries commission to raise funds to restore the memorial I hope this was successful.
Memorials in Northland
Have just spent a wonderful weekend in the Hokianga and managed to photograph six more memorials which brings my total to 93 memorials. With a visit to Oamaru planned in December I should reach 100 memorials by the end of the year. It will be hard to stop at 100 memorials as I have yet to visit Southland which is on my wish list. With the six Northland memorials to research and three others I will be kept very busy between now and Christmas.
British archaeologists unearth scale model of Flemish battle site
Another great find and this one has a New Zealand connection.
http://www.flanderstoday.eu/living/british-archaeologists-unearth-scale-model-flemish-battle-site
http://www.flanderstoday.eu/living/british-archaeologists-unearth-scale-model-flemish-battle-site
Love story from the trenches - The Huddersfield Daily Examiner
What a lovely story and what a find.
http://www.examiner.co.uk/news/world-war-one-soldiers-love-6242877
http://www.examiner.co.uk/news/world-war-one-soldiers-love-6242877
Wednesday, October 23, 2013
"WW1 deaths showed the humanity amid the horror"
"A newly-emerged story of the deaths of two British airmen in the First World
War - one the son of a seaside entertainer, the other the nephew of a
wartime chancellor - shows how humanity and compassion did survive among the
slaughter"
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/history/world-war-one/10340753/WW1-deaths-showed-the-humanity-amid-the-horror.html
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/history/world-war-one/10340753/WW1-deaths-showed-the-humanity-amid-the-horror.html
The Crowhurst Brothers - Newmarket Memorial, Auckland
Inscribed on Newmarket’s,
Auckland war memorial adjacent to the Olympic Swimming pools on Broadway are
the names of three brothers Samuel Alfred Crowhurst, Arthur Frederick Crowhurst
and Francis Ernest Crowhurst who together with two other brothers Victor Roy
Crowhurst and Leslie Upton Clifford Crowhurst volunteered like thousands of
others to serve in World War One.
The Crowhurst family was a large one living in Roxburgh Street, Newmarket where parents Samuel and Catherine Crowhurst (married in 1876) had a large family of 12 children all born in Auckland. Today Roxburgh Street is an area of light industry and retail and it is hard to imagine families such as the Crowhurst’s living there.
Samuel and Victor Crowhurst were
the first of the brothers to enlist both embarking with the Auckland Infantry
Battalion on 17 April 1915, they were 25 and 22 years old respectively. Before enlisting Samuel had worked for the New
Zealand Railways in Mercer and Victor had been a civil servant and both were unmarried. They served at Gallipoli and it was here the
news of their brother Arthur’s death would have reached them.
Arthur Crowhurst enlisted in May
1915 aged 20 years old and whilst in training at Trentham camp he fell
dangerously ill contracting cerebral meningitis (there was a mild epidemic of the disease at the time). As a result he died in Wellington General
Hospital on 8 August 1915. His body was
returned to his grieving family in Auckland and was given a military funeral at
St Mark’s Church, Remuera where he was buried.
Samuel promoted to
Sergeant during the battle and was awarded the Military Medal for his devotion
to duty during the battle itself, his citation is below:
For devotion to duty. This non-commissioned officer established a
strong point when his platoon officer and sergeant had been put out of action.
When the post was established he kept the garrison together and hung on through
heavy shellfire until relieved. The garrison was on several occasions buried by
shell.
L.G. 16 August 1917, p8429, Rec No 938.
Tragically Samuel was later
killed in action on 21 August 1917 at Ypres, Belgium, he was 27 years old. His Military Medal was presented to his
father on 12 March 1918 by Sir James Allen the then Defence Minister in a ceremony
held at the Auckland Town Hall. Samuel
is buried at Mud Corner Cemetery, Comines-Warneton, Hainaut, Belgium.
The presentation of Samuel’s
Military Medal must have been a proud yet very sad moment for the Crowhurst family
and unfairly more tragedy was to come.
The final two brothers Francis
and Leslie embarked on 13 October 1917 no doubt still grieving the loss of
their brothers. Francis had not been at the
front long when he was killed in action on the Somme on 20 April 1918. He is buried at Bertrancourt Military
Cemetery, Somme, France.
For his family back in
Auckland the loss of another son was devastating. Catherine Crowhurst their mother could not
bear the loss of another son and consequently she appealed to the Military
Board that her son Leslie be kept away from the front on the grounds that she
had lost three sons in two and half years with a further being invalided back
to New Zealand. The board agreed and
recommended that Leslie be removed, the Crowhurst family had suffered enough.
The Newmarket Council at the time decided to rename Portland Street (off Khyber Pass Road), Crowhurst Street in recognition of the family’s sacrifice. Crowhurst Street today is a very different from when the Crowhurst family lived around the corner in Roxburgh Street. Despite the changes the name of the street remains an everlasting tribute to the sons of Samuel and Catherine Crowhurst.
Crowhurst Street (2013)
Samuel and Francis Crowhurst are also remembered together
with a cousin Joseph Edward Wood who was killed in action on 1 August 1917 in
St Marks Churchyard, Remuera alongside their brother Arthur.
Mourn not for him, nor lay your hearts
Within that lonely grave
Think you those narrow bounds could hold
That spirit pure and brave;
Earth’s uniform discarded now beneath
The sod is laid;
He had his marching orders – as a
Soldier he obeyed.
(Inscription on Arthur Crowhurst’s grave stone above)
For Victor Crowhurst the
tragedy of World War One would repeat itself again in World War Two when he
lost two sons Jack and Samuel Crowhurst who were both serving in the Royal New
Zealand Air Force. Samuel was shot down
over Germany on 12 December 1941 and is buried at Reichswald Forest War
Cemetery, Kleve, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany he was 21 years old. Jack was killed in an incident on 14 January
1945 at Woodbourne, Marlborough and is buried at Hillsborough Cemetery,
Hillsborough Road, Auckland, he too was 21 years old.
It would be great if a plaque could be erected
somewhere on Crowhurst Street in remembrance of the Crowhurst family’s
sacrifice especially with the centenary of World War one only around the corner.
Monday, October 21, 2013
Never before seen interviews with First World War soldiers revealing the true horror of going 'over the top'
- Hours of unseen interviews with veterans to be shown for the first time
- German veteran asks why soldiers went for each other 'like mad dogs'?
- Footage filmed in 1964 for iconic series The Great War
- Between 2014 and 2018, BBC will show more than 2,500 hours of TV and radio dedicated to the war
- Corporation will collect nearly 1,500 stories, photos and trench diaries on website
Wounded by Emily Mayhew
- Soldiers in the First World War suffered horrific wounds in battle
- They were treated in unsanitary conditions by overstretched doctors
- Many of the men would die on their painful journey to Britain
- Wounded, a new book by Emily Mayhew, tells the awful story of the injured and their carers in The Great War
Sergeant Major Arthur Comyn Pigou - from Trooper McMahon's letter
"Image courtesy of Marlborough Museum - Marlborough Historical Society Inc"
Arthur Comyn Pigou was the eldest son of Robert Arthur Comyn Pigou and Elizabeth Ellen Pigou. Prior to enlisting Arthur was farming with his father at Spring Creek, Blenheim.
He initially embarked with the Canterbury Mounted Rifles as part of the Main Body on 16 October 1914. A letter he wrote to his parents while on Gallipoli reported on the death of Trooper McMahon and was printed in the Marlborough Express:
Marlborough Express, Volume XLIX, Issue 269, 13 November 1915, Page 2
Before the evacuation of the Gallipoli pennisular Arthur fell ill and was invalided back to England. Once recovered he returned to New Zealand and gained a commission. He then once again embarked with on 31 May 1917 with the 26th Reinforcements returning to the Middle East where he continued to serve until the end of the war. After surviving the war his family back in New Zealand must have been full of hope of his return however Arthur tragically died on 12 December 1918 from influenza. He was buried at Chanak Consular Cemetery, Turkey.
I found an obituary for Arthur Pigou in the Marlborough Express and these words below taken from it sum up the tragedy of his death and those who died from influenza after the war ended.
"His death will be widely regretted and it is an event invested with particular sadness in view of his lengthy services for King and country and the fact that hostilities have ceased."
Marlborough Express, 17 December 1918, pg 5.
Friday, October 18, 2013
Bodies of two Austro-Hungarian soldiers found 95 years after their death in Italian Alps.
Great find and so pleased to know that soldiers were finally given a proper burial.
http://www.warhistoryonline.com/war-articles/dead-body-austro-hungarian-soldiers-found-95-years-death-italian-alps.html
http://www.warhistoryonline.com/war-articles/dead-body-austro-hungarian-soldiers-found-95-years-death-italian-alps.html
BBC announces plans to mark the First World War Centenary.
What a fantastic line up of TV & Radio programme. Well done BBC. I hope we get some of these showing on New Zealand television, please.
http://www.centenarynews.com/article?id=1169
http://www.centenarynews.com/article?id=1169
Trooper Colin Campbell Patterson - from the Trooper McMahon's letter
http://muse.aucklandmuseum.com/databases/Cenotaph/12076.detail?Ordinal=2&c_serialnumber_search=7/255
Trooper Thomas Colin Campbell Patterson (known as 'Col') was the son of Matthew Campbell Patterson and Harriett Patterson of Mahakipawa, Marlborough, Blenheim.
He embarked with the Canterbury Mounted Rifles on 16 October 1914 with the Main Body. Trooper Patterson died of his wounds on 30 May 1915 in his letter Trooper McMahon recounts how he died.
"Poor 'Col.'
Patterson was wounded one evening just before we were relieved by another
squadron. I stayed out on the hill with him till twelve o'clock, when Father
Dore came with two stretcher-bearers. Poor fellow! He died half an hour after
we got him into camp."
Trooper Patterson is also buried at the Canterbury Cemetery, Anzac Cove, Gallipoli, Turkey. As far as I can gather Trooper Patterson was one of four brothers to serve in World War One, the other brothers all survived the war.
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
Incredible photos from WW1 reveal the backbreaking and often dangerous work taken on by British women during the Great War
My Great Grandmother worked at Woolwich Arsenal, London during WW1 and I loved looking at the images of women at the munitions factories.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2411052/Incredible-photos-shed-light-working-life-Britains-women-First-World-War.html
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2411052/Incredible-photos-shed-light-working-life-Britains-women-First-World-War.html
Mother, tell them I'm only 17: Soldier's last letters home - Daily Telegraph
A documentation of endearing naivety, Steven Brown's final correspondence stands as a poignant reminder of the terrifying responsibilities shouldered by inexperienced troops.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/history/world-war-one/inside-first-world-war/10273499/first-world-war-letters-home.html
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
Sgt. Richard Arthur Boden - from the Trooper Charles McMahon letter
Sergeant Richard Arthur Boden known as 'Dick' was born in Woodville, Manawatu the son of William Francis Boden of Wellington.
Prior to enlisting Sgt. Boden was employed as a Law Clerk for the firm McCallum, Mills & Spence in Blenheim. By all accounts Sgt. Boden was a keen sportsman and a very active member of the territorials so it was of no surprise that he would enlist early. He left Blenheim in command of the second contingent of Marlborough mounted men on 14 August 1914 riding on a horse that had been presented to him by the Marlborough High School Cadet Club.
Sgt. Boden embarked with the Canterbury Mounted Rifles as part of the Main Body on the 16 October 1914. He was was killed in action on 22 May 1915. Trooper McMahon in his letter gives no details of Sgt. Boden's death saying only that "They were fine fellows, and I thought a lot of
them".http://100nzmemorials.blogspot.co.nz/2013/10/a-letter-from-charles-patrick-mcmahon.html
In Terry Kinloch's book 'Echoes of Gallipoli in the words of New Zealand's Mounted Riflemen' I did however find an account of how Sgt. Boden was tragically killed:
'Sgt. Boden and Sergt. Johnstone of the 10th were both shot dead. The former was entering the trenches from the front at night time, which is certain death, as we shoot at sight so he was shot by one of his own men.'
A truly sad event not only for the Boden family but for the man who fired the shot that killed him, although many may have made the shot and hopefully no one person was attributed to his death. Sgt. Boden is buried at the Canterbury Cemetery, Anzac Cove, Gallipoli, Turkey.
Monday, October 14, 2013
Trooper William Henry Dalton from Trooper Charles Mahon's letter
Trooper William Henry Dalton was the son of William Henry Dalton and Annie Dalton. Prior to enlisting William had been farming with his family at Canvastown, Marlborough. He embarked on 16 October 1914 with the Canterbury Mounted Regiment as part of the Main Body. William was killed in action at Walkers Ridge, Gallipoli on 19 May 1915 aged 30 years and is buried at No. 2 Outpost Cemetery, Turkey.
His father William Henry Dalton died in New Zealand aged 63 in the same year only a few months after his son's death. I wonder how much the grief of his son's death contributed to his own death?
Trooper George Taylor from Trooper Charles Mahon's letter
Trooper George Taylor embarked with the Canterbury Mounted Rifles on 14 December 1914 as part of the 2nd reinforcements. He joined his brother Trooper Mitford Taylor who had left with the Main Body on 16 October 1914 and survived the war. George was sadly killed in action on 12 June 1915 he is buried at Canterbury Cemetery, Anzac Cove, Gallipoli, Turkey.
The Canterbury Cemetery is one of the central cemeteries in Anzac and was made after the Armistice. It contains the graves of 27 Commonwealth Servicemen of the First World War, five of them unidentified. 20 of the graves are of men of the New Zealand Mounted Rifles (mostly the Canterbury Mounted Rifles) http://www.cwgc.org/find-a-cemetery/cemetery/68700/CANTERBURY%20CEMETERY,%20ANZAC
Below is an extract from the Marlborough Express on George Taylor's death. Such extracts nearly always reported that death was instantaneous whilst this was the case for some, often it was reported to the families to spare them the harsh truth that death was often painful and slow.
Mr M. Taylor of Para has received details showing how his son Trooper George Taylor met his death: "We were on outpost duty about a mile from the main
camp when it happened," writes a comrade. "George was looking out
through one of the loopholes in the trenches. A bullet from a sniper
came right through the loophole, hitting him in the head death being
instantaneous. We are all very sorry to lose him as there was
hardly a better liked fellow in the squadron."
Sadly for the Taylor family back in Koromiko, Marlborough George was not the only member to lose his life during the war. I found a further two brothers who served Leonard Taylor who embarked with the 18th reinforcements on 16 October 1916 and who survived the war and Thomas Gledhill Taylor who embarked on 13 November 1917 with the 29th Reinforcements. Thomas died of Jaundice on 5 November 1918 in Egypt and he is buried at Cairo War Memorial Cemetery, Egypt, only days away from the end of the war.
Both brothers were remembered on a plaque in the Koromiko Church and I would love to know if the plaque is still there today.
A letter from Charles Patrick McMahon - Portage Pass Memorial
ON ACTIVE SERVICE
MARLBOROUGH TROOPER’S LETTER
MARLBOROUGH TROOPER’S LETTER
Following are extracts from a letter received by his relatives from Trooper Charles McMahon, who left New Zealand with the Mounted Rifles of the Main Body, and who left Egypt with the Mounteds on May 5th. The letter is dated June 29th, and is written after seven weeks of warfare:
"It
was hard for us to leave our horses behind, but we are told we shall get them
when we reach country suitable for horsemen. We spend our time in digging
ourselves in and trying to get a shot at the enemy. We dig to get at them, and
they dig to get at us. We are entrenched on the side of a hill, and in some
places we are only 15 yards from the Turks, and not more than 30. We have made
the place safer since we have been here, and the casualties are one-sixth of
what they were. Roads are coming, scrub
is going, and the dug-outs, our places of refuge from the bombs, are not bad.
"I
shall never forget in a hurry the sinking of the Triumph. We were on a hill,
and saw everything from the time the Germans torpedoed her until she sank. A
noise like a distant gun, a cloud of smoke and water rising in the air, but not
very high she went on her side, remained a few minutes, then slowly turned over
till you could almost see her keel, and sank. I don't know what we should have
done without the warships; we could not have landed or remained very long when
we did if it had not been for them. Now
when the Turks are wanted to get a 'move on' a couple of broadsides does it.
"Several
of the boys from there – I mean Picton and Havelock—have been wounded or
killed. Dalton, Taylor (from Koromiko), Sergt. Boden, and Sergt. Patterson were
killed alongside me. The first fight we were in poor ‘Dick' Boden, 'Col.'
Patterson, 'Bob' Anderson, a Nelson fellow and I were on guard on top of a hill
like the point near Portage that we call the peninsula, but not so big. A party
of Turks attacked us, and we killed 18 and wounded two, luckily for us they
were poor rifle shots. It was on the same hill later on that Boden and
Patterson were to fall. They were fine fellows, and I thought a lot of them. On
the other side of the hill the rest of our troop with the gun section killed
dozens. The ground was covered with dead Turks, so they asked for an armistice
to bury their dead; and yet at the end of another two days about 1500 Turks
were dead in front of our trenches. Poor
'Col.' Patterson was wounded one evening just before we were relieved by
another squadron. I stayed out on the hill with him till twelve o'clock, when
Father Dore came with two stretcher-bearers. Poor fellow! He died half an hour
after we got him into camp.
I often
long for a junck, not a slice, of cake, and when eating bully beef and biscuits
I think how I would enjoy fruit pie and cream.
"Bates
has been ill and is sent to the base.
Hume has been sick this last week. (Tpr. P. C. Hume has since been sent
to Malta). I am with the Morrison boys and Sergt. Major Pigou, and you would
laugh if you saw the way the lot of us scamper to our dug-outs' when the
shrapnel comes! We do burrow into the ground, but you can't blame us in trying
to save our skins."
[Word was received by his relatives on Saturday that Trooper McMahon had been killed in action]
http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=MEX19150830.2.4&srpos=56&e=--1915---1916--10-MEX-51--on--2pigou--
[Word was received by his relatives on Saturday that Trooper McMahon had been killed in action]
http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=MEX19150830.2.4&srpos=56&e=--1915---1916--10-MEX-51--on--2pigou--
The letter above was sent by Trooper Charles McMahon to his family from Gallipoli and printed in the Marlborough Express on 30 August 1915. The discovery of a letter written by a soldier who is on a memorial is always a great find such letters give us all a real insight into the conditions and lives of those fighting at the front. In his letter Trooper McMahon mentions his fellow soldiers and pals who have died at the front. In war death often becomes part of a macabre normality for those there however it would have taken a toll both emotionally and physically on those who continued to survive. Sadly Trooper McMahon lost his life on Gallipoli on the 6/7 August 1915 unable to 'save his skin' as he puts it in the letter above. He is remembered on the Chunuk Bair (New Zealand) Memorial, Chunuk Bair Cemetery, Gallipoli. Below is an extract from a letter received by Trooper McMahon's mother which recounts her sons death.
Marlborough Express, Volume XLIX, Issue 262, 5 November 1915, Page 5
I have decided to write about each of the soldier's mentioned in the letter in my next few blogs.