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Letters From the Trenches: A Soldier of the Great War

Page 17

by Bill Lamin


  23 D.H.Q, C Mess, I.E.F.

  Remember me to Agnes with best love

  Harry

  Dear Kate

  I have received your postal order alright, but I could have managed alright. I have left the Church Army so I have finished making tea I liked it alright. But you see the Batt moved to another place so I had to go with them. I have got another job now I am helping to cook at the Divisional Head Quarters mess but I dont know how to make fancy thing but you know I liked cooking, I should be very pleased if you would send me a small cookery book, it might be useful, but you see we cant get all the things we want, we have to make pies and pastry with self rising flour, you might give me a few wrinkles [hints or tips] how to go on how to make small meat savours [savouries] and a few sweets and so forth I am asking you all these things and I might get the sack but not out of the Army, I wish I could, I hope you received my letter telling you about me going to Venice, I enjoyed myself very much I am glad that they are going on alright at home, I shall be glad when I get there but I think it will be a few months yet there so quite a lot of our men taking on. I think it is this two & three months leave that is doing it, but it will take a lot to make me list I have wrote to Trumans factory but I have not heard from them yet Write as soon as you can well right away as soon as you get my letter my address at the present is

  32507 Pt Lamin

  23 D.H.Q, C.Mess, I.E.F

  With Best Love

  Harry

  In writing ‘it will take a lot to make me list,’ Harry is saying that he is not keen to join the Regular Army. Many soldiers, finding on demobilization that there were no civilian jobs, re-enlisted.

  In March, Harry is writing about 1920 as a date for his demobilization, which is not at all encouraging. Still, he is keeping his job cooking in the Officers’ Mess at Divisional HQ. By now the division has moved to Tavernelle, which seems to be the muster point for soldiers beginning the railway journey home. Willie has his third birthday on 23 March.

  March 12

  23. D.H.Q., 9th Batt Y+L., C.Mess., I.E.F., Italy

  Dear Kate

  Just a line to let you know that I am alright and still cooking but I expect the Division will break up in a week or two. your book came in very useful. I should not like to be without it. Here was four messes on D.H.Q and ours is the only one left. I thought I should have to leave and let on[e] of the other cooks come, but I still keep my place. I should like to be officers servant [also known as a batman or soldier-servant] when we break up, but I expect I shall be with army of occupation till I get demobed. I dont mean soldiering if I can get a job any how while I am in the army. I hope I am out of it before 1920 any way. Write as often as you can and let me know how you are getting on I will write and let you know how I am getting on and where I get too.

  With Love

  Harry

  He mentions the Army of Occupation again in his letter to Jack of the same day. Commanded by Plumer until April 1919 and based in Cologne, the presence of the British Army of Occupation on the Rhine was a condition of the peace treaty that was eventually signed in June that year.

  23. D.H.Q., C.Mess., I.E.F., Italy

  March 12

  Dear Jack

  Just a line to let you know that I am alright and still working. our mess is the only one left we keep getting fresh officers but I still keep my place as cook. I expect the division will break up in a week or two. I dont know were I shall get to. I shall try hard for officers servant when we break up but I expect I shall be with the army occupation for a while. but I dont mind so much as long that I am employed I have had my share of guards etc. I have received your tobacco alright and was very pleased with it. I am lucky to be here till now as all the cooks from the other three messes have finished I thought they would take me place, but I keep as clean as possible I think that as a lot to do with it not the cooking but its a big job as you always messing with the fire. We have had the General for dinner but I got on alright. mind you I dont cook any poultry or game. Write Every week and let me know how you are both getting on

  With Best Love to you Both

  Harry

  In April, after Harry has got to grips with his cooking duties – quite successfully, it seems – the Officers’ Mess is broken up and he moves to a new location further to the west, and a new job guarding an ammunition dump. The different jobs he’s been doing have caused him to be separated from the rest of his battalion, a significant parting of ways, given that he has spent nearly two years, through some hard and often dangerous times, with these men. At least his finances seem to be sound, his back pay accumulating the equivalent in today’s money of around £450.

  In his letters that April, Harry talks about Fiume (which he spells ‘Fuime’), to which the rest of the battalion has been sent. With the breakup of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, this former Austrian port on the north-eastern Adriatic coast (now Rijeka in Croatia) was claimed by Italy, along with the nearby ports of Trieste and Pola (Pula); in 1919 an expedition of Italian volunteers under the poet and adventurer Gabriele d’Annunzio seized Fiume, which they held until 1921. Italy maintained its claims on the city and the surrounding territories but, at this stage of the international deliberations (the Paris Peace Conference was still in session), seemed to be losing out. Allied troops were therefore sent to the port to keep the peace and encourage stability.

  April 5/1919

  Dear Kate

  Just a line to let you know that I am alright and in the best of health. I had a letter from Ethel she told me you have had your letters returned no wonder they could not find me as I have been all over the shop lately. D.H.Q as broke up and gone to England so have finished working I was the only cook left so I did very well but such a lot of work I had ten officers and more to cook for at the finish to much at it from 6.30 AM to 10.30 PM they must have thought it was a restaurant but I pulled through we had the General with us to finish up with had a big dinner last night seven courses and I got congratulated on it so I was satisfied. I have not drawn a money since January 28 and I got 10/6 [£0.525] bonus from Feb 1st so that is about £9.00 to my credit and I have never had so much money while I have been in the army you see the officers gave us so much a week so I am set up now for a bit, I liked the job but I did not feel so well always being shut up I dont know how I shall get on when I get back to the factory again. I hope I shall be seeing you before long, how is Connie getting on. The weather here is very fine

  My address at present is

  9th Y+L Regt., G.H.Q Demob, Concentration Camp,

  I.E.F Italy

  I might get one with a bit of luck but I can quite understand the letters going back as I have been all over the shop lately I am in a little place call Tavernelle in the province of Vicenza near the province of Verona you will see it on the map. I hope you get this letter and I hope I shall be seeing you all before long

  With Best Love

  Harry

  In his letter to Jack of the same date, he expands a little on his disaffection with the Army and the slowness of his progress towards demobilization:

  April 5th/1919

  Dear Jack

  Just a line to let you know that I am alright and in good health I am not at Fuime but a small place called Tavernelle in the province of Vicenza it is next province to Verona. All the lads from our batt as gone to Fuime. I finished cooking two or three days ago when the D.HQ broke up. Ours was the only mess left and we had BGD general Beaman [Brigadier-General A. B. Beauman, commanding 69 Brigade] with us the last few days so we had some big dinners all the officers thought me and the waiter was on the D.H.Q cadre and was going with them to England they were surprised we had to stop had they known we should have gone with them but it does not matter we should have been soldiers in England when I come home I want to get demobed. There is to much work cooking for officers 6.30 AM till 10.30 PM to much if I can get out I shall. We had ten officers and more sometimes to look after not bad I had a big dinner last night and got congra
tulated on it by all the officers and one or two had their wives with them so I was satisfied although I had a lot of work. Remember me to Agnes. If there are any more leave trains to Rome or Naples I shall try my best to get on one as I shall never get the chance again. I hope I do not have to go to Fuime I dont want any more guards or sloping arms [a rifle drill] as I am fed up with that I would rather be up the mountains again. when do you think peace will be signed, cooking as been a good thing for me as I have not drawn any money since January 29 and I get the 10/6 bonus from Feb 1st so that is over £9.00 to my credit. My address at present is

  32507 PT Lamin

  9th Y+L C of G.H.Q, Concentration Camp, I.E.F, Italy

  You can send a letter here I might get it with a bit of luck and I might not as I dont think we shall be here long

  With Best Love to you both

  Harry

  Of a letter to Kate three days later, only the first page survives. It carries momentous news, however, told with Harry’s typical matter-of-factness:

  April 8th 1919

  Dear Kate

  Just a line to let you know I am alright I am still in Italy at a small village called Rivalto it is very nearly in France it is alright I have finished cooking for a bit it is nice to get out D.H.Q broke up and all officers went to England so I was let behind my Batt had gone to Fuime in Austria what was left of them. I am now attached to the Royal Munster Fusiliers it is an Irish Regt they wear the shamrock behind the cap badge. I have not changed my badge. I still . . . [the rest of the letter is missing]

  After nearly two years with the 9th York and Lancasters, Harry transfers to a different regiment, the Royal Munster Fusiliers.

  The Royal Munster Fusiliers (RMF) was disbanded, with a number of other Irish regiments, in 1922, after the establishment of the Irish Free State (now the Republic of Ireland) as a country independent of the United Kingdom. The 1st (Garrison) Battalion, RMF, to which Harry has been attached, served in Italy from January 1918 to April 1920, based at Arquata Scriva, about twenty miles (32km) south-east of Alessandria, in Piedmont. Harry’s next letter, to Jack nearly three weeks later, makes no reference to his change of regiment, other than the initials ‘RMF’ in his address.

  32507 9th Y+L

  attached R.M.F., A.P.O [Army Post Office],

  L. 1 Box R, Italy

  April 26/19

  Dear Jack

  Just a line to let you know that I am alright and in good health I have not had any letters for about six weeks now. but I have been moving about a lot I hope I am settled down now till they send me home for good send me a paper or two regular if you can. I have seen no news for a long time. The weather here as been very nice lately. we are in a little country place about like Strelly [Strelley, a small Nottinghamshire village just east of Ilkeston] guarding ammunition etc. there is only about forty of us all together but there is a lot of Italians guarding it too. I hope Agnes is keeping well and all at home. I hope to get a letter from you soon. I expect Willie is getting quite a man now he is turned three expect I am for army of occupation as I have got my 10/6 bonus. How is things going on in England and what do you think about the Fuime job and America.

  Write soon With Best Love to you both

  Harry

  British troops were still in Fiume – where d’Annunzio was effectively establishing himself as a dictator – largely to keep the peace between the Italians and the local population. The reference to America may come from the stance of US President Woodrow Wilson at the Paris Peace Conference, who was markedly determined not to see the German people punished too harshly by the peace terms, in contrast to the attitude of, in particular, the French. Wilson was also determined to establish a ‘League of Nations’, as a means of ensuring that such a war could never again take place. Harry appears to have sent only one letter – or only one that survives – in May, and he does not seem to have been able to write to Jack again that month.

  Dear Jack

  Just a line to let you know that I have received your letter. We are in a out of the way place just now, if you have an old shirt or a towel will you send it on as soon as possible as it is very hard to get changes up here there is about 40 of us guarding a dump it consists of all sorts guns etc. Write as soon as you can and let me know all the news. I am please that you and Agnes are keeping in good health. If you have got an old shirt send it on as soon as possible. my address is at present.

  32507, 9th Y+L, attached R.M.F, A.P.O.,

  L. 1 Box R, I.E.F., Italy

  With Best love to you both Harry

  I will write again in a day or two and tell you a bit more.

  In June, however, he is able to write at greater length. As always with requests to Jack or Kate, Harry’s request for a shirt has been swiftly answered:

  32507/9th Y+L, attached R.M.F,

  A.P.O. Box R., L. 1 I.E.F, Italy

  June 1st/1919

  Dear Jack

  I have received the shirt alright it is very nice. but I have not got the towel yet I am sure it is very good of you to be so much trouble. but my shirt is in half it has been a job to get exchanges were we are but I think we shall get some before long. I am very pleased that you and Agnes are keeping in good health. and I hop you enjoy your holidays. the weather hear is very hot. We are at a small country place about like Cossall [a hamlet a mile east of Ilkeston] it is very pleasant there is only about forty infantry men here altogether. I think we are all being transfered to the Munsters that is not very nice as the Munsters have been here all the time we have been in Italy they were all old men and B1 or 2 [Army fitness grades, A1 being the highest] you see they never went in the line but just did garrision duty about fifty miles behind the line but I dont care as long as I get home alright. Write and tell me as soon as you see anything about demob in the papers as we can get to know nothing about it out here. I have had a letter telling me that Annie is getting married. I hope she will be happy. I dont know what Ethel and Willie will do I am sure as it means giving the house up at Whitworth Rd. I am pleased to hear that you are thinking of getting a better job soon I hope you get to a nice place it will be alright. Write as often as you can I am getting letters pretty regular now.

  With Best Love to you both Harry

  P.S It would be nice for Willie to pay you a visit if you were near Ilkeston I am sure he would enjoy himself.

  June 22/19

  Dear Jack

  Just a line to let you know that I have received your letter and the towel you sent it is very good of you to sent it. Ethel and Annie wants me to try and get home on leave for August, but its no use me asking from this end there is some men here now with 18 months in without leave although they are going on leave from Fuime with eight months if they write for leave they want to send to the war office as it is no use at all sending here any way I hope to be home on leave by October as I think it will get down to twelve months when peace is signed let me know as soon as that happens as we dont here much out here. I am still officers servant and cook but I dont know out long it will last. Do you think you could send Ethel 10/- [10 shillings – £0.50] a month and begin in the first week in July and then the first week in August till I get a leave and then I might draw some credits [against his Army pay]. No doubt they will ask you to write for a special leave if you do write to the war office ask I should like to get home when things break up, any way let me know what you think best. Write as often as you can and let me know all the news, do you think the Germans will sign peace, if they do we should be demobed in six months time. I shall be very pleased to get out of it although I have not done any drilling now for about six months and I have always had eggs and bacon for breakfast while I have been a this country place and plenty of new potatoes and fruit I was surprised at the Derby winner [the unfancied Grand Parade, which came home at 33-1; the Derby was run at Newmarket from 1915 to 1918, but returned to Epsom in 1919]. I will write a line to Mrs Higgins when I have time and tell her that I did not receive her parcel which she sent at ch
ristmas. Are you going home for Annie wedding she told me in her last letter that she had wrote and ask you, let me know if you do, Ethel tells me that they have given notice at Whitworth Rd. I dont think it will be very healthy for Willie at Mill street. I hope she gets another house. Write as often as you can hoping you and Agnes are keeping in the best of health.

  With Best Love

  Harry

  Address 32507 attached 9th Y+L., Royal Munster Fusiliers,

  A.P.O. Box.R. L.I., I.E.F Italy

  put R.M.F in full

  On 28 June 1919 the Treaty of Versailles was signed, finally ending the war with Germany (there were different treaties for each of the enemy combatant nations: Hungary signed its on 4 June 1919, Austria on 10 September, Bulgaria on 27 November and Turkey on 10 August 1920, although the latter was never ratified). I was always a little confused to find that one of Harry’s medals indicated that the Great War lasted from 1914 to 1919, when everyone knew that the fighting finished in November 1918. But of course the various armistices only marked the end of offensive operations, whereas the treaties formalized the end of the war, and were signed by all the combatant nations.

  There are only two surviving letters from July, and Harry is still no nearer being demobilized. The weather would be very hot by now, so sleeping in the open air wouldn’t be a great hardship. His sister Sarah Anne (Annie) is getting married, and so that is a point of interest. Jack has clearly written, perhaps to Divisional HQ, or to the battalion, about Harry, and this seems to have caused some problems. The family would want him home for Annie’s wedding, I imagine, but he is certain that the military authorities will take no notice; he has already told Jack not to send any more such letters.

 

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