Part I
Details of casualties buried or commemorated
in the churchyard
Summary 1914 deaths listed in order of the
date of death
6th November 1914
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of Captain
Norman Neill, 13th Hussars (Brigade Major 7th
Cavalry Brigade) killed in action 6th November 1914 aged
34 years. Son of Robert Neill. Husband of
Eleanor de Courcy Neill, Yew Tree Cottage, Merrow,
Guildford, Surrey.. Born in 1880 and educated at
Harrow School, Norman Neill was a Lieutenant in the 5th
Militia Battalion Lancashire Fusiliers and served in the
South African War (1899-1902). Whilst serving in
South Africa Norman NeillI was gazetted into the 19th
(Queen Alexandra’s Own Royal) Hussars. In July
1910 he was promoted Captain. By 1914 he had
completed a course at Camberley Staff College.
When serving with the 13th Hussars, he was selected by
Brigadier General Charles Kavanagh CVO, CB, DSO
commanding 7th Cavalry Brigade to be Brigade
Major. The Brigade Major was the Chief of Staff of
a brigade and head of the Operations and Intelligence
section, overseeing Administration and Quartermasters
sections. He was responsible for the planning of
brigade operations and also ensuring that the Brigadiers
orders were transmitted to the units in the
Brigade. Frequently he would undertake that duty
personally, especially in times of crisis. The
three Cavalry Regiments in the Brigade were 1st Life
Guards, 2nd Life Guards and the Royal Horse Guards,
supported by XV Brigade Royal Horse Artillery. All
three cavalry regiments landed at Zeebrugge on the 7th /
8th October 1914 and with the 6th Cavalry Brigade formed
the 3rd Cavalry Division. On the 21st November
1914, the Royal Horse Guards moved to the 8th Cavalry
Brigade but remained in the 3rd Cavalry Division.
At 12.30 a.m. on the 9th October 1914 Operation
Orders No. 1 was issued by Captain Neill, as
Brigade-Major 7th Cavalry Brigade ordering the Cavalry
Regiments to concentrate in the Bruges area. By
the 14th October 1914 1st Life Guards at least had
arrived at Ypres.
On the 20th October the Brigade took up a defensive
position from Zonnebeke to cross roads north east of St.
Julien with the 6th Cavalry Brigade prolonging the line
to Langemark. There were casualties from shrapnel,
in the 1st Life Guards a Corporal being killed and 4
other ranks wounded and Captain Neill was also wounded
being evacuated to British General Hospital No. 13 at
Boulogne but he was back on duty on the 1st November
1914. In his absence, on the 23rd October the 7th
Brigade had relieved the 6th Brigade in trenches on the
line of the Zandvoorde-Hollebeke road and the officers
and men in the three Cavalry Regiments fought as
infantry until the end of the 1st Battle of Ypres on the
22nd November 1914.
By the 1st November 1915 Captain Neill was back with
his Brigade and he was issuing orders up until the early
hours of the 6th November 1914. He was killed that
afternoon whilst returning to Brigade Headquarters at
Verbranden Molen from ordering the Royal Horse Guards to
act in support of 2nd Life Guards in stemming the German
advance at Zwarteleen. Captain Norman Neill was awarded
the Victory and British War Medals and the 1914
Star.
At 12.30 a.m. on the 9th October 1914 Operation
Orders No. 1 was issued by Captain Neill, as
Brigade-Major 7th Cavalry Brigade ordering the Cavalry
Regiments to concentrate in the Bruges area. By
the 14th October 1914 1st Life Guards at least had
arrived at Ypres.
On the 20th October the Brigade took up a defensive
position from Zonnebeke to cross roads north east of St.
Julien with the 6th Cavalry Brigade prolonging the line
to Langemark. There were casualties from shrapnel,
in the 1st Life Guards a Corporal being killed and 4
other ranks wounded and Captain Neill was also wounded
being evacuated to British General Hospital No. 13 at
Boulogne but he was back on duty on the 1st November
1914. In his absence, on the 23rd October the 7th
Brigade had relieved the 6th Brigade in trenches on the
line of the Zandvoorde-Hollebeke road and the officers
and men in the three Cavalry Regiments fought as
infantry until the end of the 1st Battle of Ypres on the
22nd November 1914.
By the 1st November 1915 Captain Neill was back with
his Brigade and he was issuing orders up until the early
hours of the 6th November 1914. He was killed that
afternoon whilst returning to Brigade Headquarters at
Verbranden Molen from ordering the Royal Horse Guards to
act in support of 2nd Life Guards in stemming the German
advance at Zwarteleen. Captain Norman Neill was awarded
the Victory and British War Medals and the 1914
Star.
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of 2nd
Lieut. Baron Alexis George de Gunzberg 11th
(Prince Albert’s Own) Hussars (attached Royal Horse
Guards) killed in action 6th November 1914 aged 27
years. Youngest son of the late Baron and Baroness
Henriette de Gunzberg 199 Boulevard, St. Gennain,
Paris. Born in Paris in 1887, a Russian National
educated at Eton College, Windsor from 1901 to
1904. He had lived permanently in England from
1907. On war being declared he offered his
services as an intelligence officer, was granted British
nationality by mid August and was commissioned into the
11th Hussars. The Regiment landed in France the
same month as part of 1st Cavalry Brigade becoming part
of 1st Cavalry Division on the 16th November 1914. It
seems that although commissioned into the Hussars he was
acting as an interpreter for Lieutenant Colonel Gordon
Wilson as he had received no military training
whatsoever and was killed while crossing a field and
relaying the commanding officer’s orders at the same
time as Colonel Wilson was himself killed. His is one of
two private memorials in the churchyard paid for by his
family. He was awarded the Victory and British war
Medals and the 1914 Star.
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of
Lieut.Colonel Gordon Chesney Wilson
M.V.O. Royal Horse Guards killed in
action 6th November 1914 aged 49 years. Eldest son
of Sir Samuel Wilson Kt. Husband of Lady Sarah Wilson
R.R.C., of 23c Bruton Street London. Born in
August 1865 in Melbourne, Australia, he went to Eton
College, Windsor and then Christ Church College Oxford.
In 1888 he was commissioned into the Royal Horse
Guards. In 1891 he married Lady Sarah
Spencer-Churchill, the sister of Lord Randolph
Churchill. He served in the South African War as
ADC to Major General Robert Baden-Powell, being promoted
in 1911 to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel to take
command of the Regiment. The Royal Horse Guards
landed at Zeebrugge on the 7th October 1914 as part of
7th Cavalry Brigade, 3rd Cavalry Division.
Whilst the 7th Division was fighting a successful action
in the neighbourhood of Ghent on the 11th October,
in the period from the 7th to the 12th October the 3rd
Cavalry Division was holding lines of protection.
On the 13th October in accordance with an operation
order the 3rd Cavalry Division marched to join up with
the 2nd Cavalry Division passing through Ypres then
going on towards Menin, reported as held by the enemy,
and the 7th Cavalry Brigade was preparing to attack when
it was ordered to retire to billets. By the 16th
October the Division was occupying a general line
Poelcappelle Station-St. Julian and 4 days later, 20th
October, the 7th Cavalry Brigade was taking up a
defensive position from Zonnebeke to a position North
East of St. Julian. At 6.15 a.m. on the 22nd October the
Brigade moved to Hooge where it remained until retiring
to billets in Klein Zillebeke. At 8.30 a.m. on the
23rd October the Brigade was ordered to relieve the 6th
Cavalry Brigade in trenches on the line of the
Zandvoorde-Hollebeke and remained in the general area of
Zandvoode-Klein-Zillebeke-Verbranden Molen until early
November, the Royal Horse Guards coming into action on
the 2nd November supporting infantry before
Gheluvelt. Lieutenant Colonel Wilson
was killed whilst leading his Regiment in the attack to
retrieve the situation when 1st Irish Guards and 2nd
Grenadier Guards had been exposed by the retirement of
French troops. Headstone bears inscription “Life
is a city of crooked streets Death the market place
where all men meet.” (Inscription probably based
on the poem on the reverse of the Grave of James Handley
(died 11th March 1694) in Redmile Churchyard,
Leicestershire “This world it is a city full of crooked
streets Death is a market place where all men meet If
life were marchandice that men could buy Rich men would
ever live and poor men die.”) Lieutenant Colonel Gordon
Wilson was awarded the Victory and British War Medals
and the 1914 Star.
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of
2nd Lieutenant William Sinclair Petersen Royal
Horse Artillery attached 2nd Life Guards killed in
action 6th November 1914 aged 22 years. William
Petersen was born in July 1892 and was the only son of
Sir William and Mrs. Petersen. Sir William was
chairman of Petersen and Co. Ltd., ship owners and had
further considerable interests in the shipping
world. William Petersen was educated at Glenalmond
College, Perthshire and then Dieppe before going to
Trinity College Cambridge in October 1910. In the
Summer of 1914, William Petersen was commissioned into a
Territorial Unit, Essex Field Artillery, but on the
outbreak of the war applied successfully for a transfer
to the 2nd Life Guards being commissioned as 2nd
Lieutenant in late September 1914. He landed in
France on the 20th October 1914 joining his Regiment
when it was north of Ypres. Lieutenant Petersen
was killed whilst attacking with his Regiment in the
advance to retrieve the situation when 1st Irish Guards
and 2nd Grenadier Guards had been exposed by the
retirement of French troops. He was awarded
the Victory and British War Medals and the 1914 Star.
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of Lieutenant
Carleton Wyndham Tufnell 2nd
Battalion Grenadier Guards killed in action 6th November
1914 aged 22 years. Son of Carleton Fowell Tufnell
and Laura Gertrude Tufnell of Watendone Manor, Kenley,
Surrey. Carleton Tufnell was one of 4 sons and had
a sister. He was educated at Eton College Windsor from
1905 to 1910 and then Sandhurst being commissioned into
the Grenadier Guards in September 1912. The 2nd
Battalion Grenadier Guards was in 4th Guards Brigade in
the 2nd Division, landing at Havre on the 15th August
1914. Not directly involved in the Battle of Mons,
by the 26th August 1914 the Battalion was at Landrecies
and by the end of the month had retreated to
Soissons. On the 6th September the Brigade had
crossed the Petit Moin and now heading north crossed the
Marne and on the 14th September the Aisne River.
At the beginning of October the BEF began its transfer
to Flanders and by the middle of the month the 4th
Guards Brigade was at Hazebrouck. On the 20th October
the Battalion was in billets at St. Jean and on the 21st
October took up defensive positions to the east of the
Zonnebeke-Langemarck road. On the 25th October the
Brigade was ordered to take the Reutel spur, north west
of Becekaere, but the advance of the 1st Battalion Irish
Guards and the 2nd Battalion Grenadier Guards was
fiercely opposed and the next day the German machine-gun
and artillery superiority prevented any material
progress being made. On the 29th October the
Germans launched a heavy attack upon the point of
junction between the 1st and 7th Divisions in the
neighbourhood of the cross-roads south-east of Gheluvelt
and for a time the British line was broken. The
2nd Battalion was then in divisional reserve. At
about 3 p.m. on the 30th October Brigadier the Earl of
Cavan got news that there had been a serious break in
the line about 2 miles to the south and was instructed
to send up the 2nd Battalion Grenadier Guards and 1st
Battalion Irish Guards and the 2nd Battalion Oxfordshire
Light Infantry to protect the right flank of the 2nd
Brigade and the three battalions left Polygon Wood to
march towards Klein Zillebeke to a position of readiness
a mile south of Hooge. By this time the rain and
mud began seriously to affect the arms of the troops.
The rifles, almost choked with mud would not properly
eject the cartridge cases. Rifle oil was
unobtainable, and it was practically impossible to keep
the weapons
clean.
Lieutenant Tufnell landed in France on the 11th
September 1914 when the Battalion was in the area of the
Aisne River. At Hazebrouck he took over as
battalion machine-gun officer and was successful in
stopping a German attack on the 2nd November. On
the 6th November Lieutenant Colonel Wilfred Smith,
C.O. 2nd Battalion, sent Lieutenant Tufnell with his
machine-gun section and Lieutenant Lord Congleton with
one platoon from No. 3 Company to stop the Germans
passing through a gap at the rear of the
Battalion. Lieutenant Tufnell’s machine-gun
section had been posted to guard a ride through the wood
across which the Germans would have had to come to get
behind the Grenadier Guards line of trenches.
However he went with the machine-gun section with Lord
Congleton’s platoon and he was shot through the throat
and mortally wounded on the 6th November 1914 shortly
after taking up a position where he could find a good
target in the advancing enemy. Described as a
“first rate Officer and a great loss.” He was awarded
the Victory and British War Medals and the 1914
Star.
Special Memorial for Lieutenant the
Honourable William Reginald Wyndham
Lincolnshire Yeomanry attached 1st Life Guards killed in
action 6th November 1914 aged 38 years. Second son
of Henry Wyndham 2nd Baron Leconfield of Petworth House,
Sussex. William Wyndham was born in 1876 and was
educated at Eton College Windsor between 1889 and
1893. He went to Sandhurst until January 1896 and
on the 24th March was a 2nd Lieutenant in the 17th (Duke
of Cambridge’s Own) Lancers. The 17th Lancers went
to South Africa in 1900 but 2nd Lieutenant Wyndham
remained behind in Ireland with the reserve squadron not
going to South Africa until March 1901. The
Regiment returned from South Africa in 1902 but in 1903
he was badly injured in a riding accident and, the
Regiment being under orders to serve in India, resigned
his commission. He later obtained a commission in
the Lincolnshire Yeomanry, being resident for most
winters in Grantham, and at the outbreak of the war,
aged 38 years, got himself attached to the 1st Life
Guards. He landed with the Regiment at Zeebrugge
on the 8th October 1914. On the 11th October he
led a patrol towards Thielt but could find no sign of
the enemy. On the 27th October the Regiment,
dismounted, took over the trenches at Zandvoorde and
remained there until about 10 a.m. on the 30th October
when a heavy German artillery bombardment was followed
by a German infantry attack. There was no
ammunition for the Maxim machine gun, although the
troops had inflicted substantial losses on the
attackers, and this forced a retirement. Almost
the whole of Captain Lord Hugh Grosvenor’s Squadron was
lost, most including Lord Hugh, being killed.
Lieutenant Wyndham was probably in the 1st Life
Guards Squadron to the right of the machine guns of the
Royal Horse Guards. The Regiment returned to Verbranden
Molen and moved into woods south of the village to await
orders. In the period up to the 6th November 1914 the
Regiment remained in support during a time of some
confusion with uncertainty as to the enemy’s intention
until on the 6th November 1914 the 4th (Guards) Brigade
asked for support, on the retirement of some French
units, when the Regiment dismounted advanced with 2nd
Life Guards on the right and Royal Horse Guards in
support. During the course of this attack,
Lieutenant William Wyndham was killed his body being
recovered that night and taken back to the Churchyard
for burial but the grave was subsequently lost through
shellfire and he is now commemorated by a Special
Memorial. He was awarded the Victory and British
War Medals and the 1914 Star.
7th November 1914
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of No. 16387
Private Walter Fredrick Siewertsen, 3rd Company
2nd Battalion Grenadier Guards killed in action 7th
November 1914 aged 20 years. Son of Hans Christian
Siewertsen and Mary Ann Siewertsen of 4 Biggerstaffe
Road, Stratford, London. He had enlisted in the
Grenadier Guards in April 1913 and landed with his
Battalion at Havre on the 13th August 1914. The
Battalion was in 4th Guards Brigade, 2nd Division and
with the 1st Division formed First Corps commanded by
Lieutenant General Sir Douglas Haig.
See the entry above for Lieutenant Carleton Wyndham
Tufnel for the background of the 2nd Battalion Grenadier
Guards in France prior to the affair at Zillebeke.
When darkness fell on the 6th November Lord Cavan
instructed Colonel Smith to try and establish a new line
and at 1 a.m. on the 7th November, although dead tired,
the men began to dig and the trenches were completed by
4 a.m., a fine performance on a pitch-dark night. For
the next three days the Battalion remained in the
trenches at Klein Zillebeke without any direct attack
being made but shelling went on all day with monotonous
regularity. On the 7th November 19 men of the
Battalion were killed, 46 wounded and 3 were missing,
one of those killed was Private Siewertsen and he was
taken back to the Churchyard for burial. He was
awarded the Victory and British War Medals and the 1914
Star.
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of Major Robert
Edward Rising D.S.O., 1st Battalion
the Gloucestershire Regiment killed in action 7th
November 1914 aged 43 years. Headstone bears
inscription “Dulce et decorum est Pro patria mori.” Son
of Thomas and Kate Rising of the Manor House, Great
Ormesby, Norfolk. Husband of Constance Elizabeth
Rising of The Old Hall, Great Ormesby, Norfolk.
Robert Rising was born on the 23rd May 1871 the
eldest of four children. In April 1885 he began
attendance at Charterhouse School where he remained
until 1890 when he went to Trinity College, Cambridge in
October 1890. He did not complete his degree
course because in September 1891 he went to
Sandhurst. In November 1892 he was commissioned
into the Gloucestershire Regiment. In 1896 he
married Amy Worship. The 1st Battalion went to
India where his wife died within a year of their arrival
from peritonitis. The 1st Battalion was sent to
South Africa and took part in the South African War
1899-1902. In early 1901 Robert Rising was married
again to Constance Elizabeth Edis and the couple had two
children. By March 1914 he was a Captain in the
Gloucestershire Regiment and on the outbreak of the War
the Battalion was at Bordon as part of 3rd Brigade, 1st
Division, landing at Havre on the 13th August
1914. Captain Rising landed with the Regiment. The
Battalion participated in the Battle of Mons and then,
in common with all units of the B.E.F. retreated from
Mons to the Marne River continuing south to cross the
Petit Morin and Grand Morin Rivers to reach Rozoy
some 30 miles South East of Paris on the 5th
September. the next day the Advance to the Aisne
began, the Marne was crossed by the 9th, the Aisne by
the 13th and by the 14th September the Battalion was in
the area of Vendresse. On the 15th September the
Battalion was relieved by French forces and the
following day began its move North to Flanders. By
the 19th September the concentration of the 1st Division
in the area St. Omer – Cassel was complete. A month
later Field Marshal Sir John French was proposing a
general advance in the direction of Thorout using the
road Ypres-Passchendaele-Roulers and the roads to the
North but the enemy was attacking towards Ypres and
there was severe fighting on the 21st October which
resulted in the German advance being stemmed. The
1st Battalion Gloucesters were involved in the fighting
on the northern outskirts of Langemarck and sustained
many casualties. Captain Rising who commanded
three of the platoons was awarded the D.S.O. the
citation stating that “he went up with supports and
conspicuously controlled the defence of the Battalion’s
trenches against a determined attack by the enemy.
But for this stout defence the line must have been
penetrated”. Next came the Battle of Gheluvelt
29th – 31st October when again the Battalion was
involved. On the night of the 5th November the 3rd
Brigade was relieve by the 6th Cavalry Brigade and moved
back to Railway Wood near Bellewaarde Farm. The morning
of the 6th was spent in reorganizing but the Germans had
resumed their attacks on the southern end of the
Salient, French troops defending the line south of the
Zillebeke-Zandvoorde road had been forced back
uncovering the right flank of the Irish Guards who put
up stout resistance and a dangerous gap existed.
At the same time as the Household Cavalry arrived and
restored the situation the 1st Battalion Gloucesters
were ordered down to this part of the line arriving in
the dark and ordered to relieve the cavalry north of
Zwarteleen. However, the Battalion was unable to
muster sufficient rifles despite being reinforced a few
days before by 200 men to effect a relief of the 1st and
2nd Life Guards and only the 2ndLife Guards were
relieved, the 1st Life Guards having to remain until2.30
a.m. when Companies from the Royal Sussex and Royal
Munsters came up. The morning of the 7th November was
misty and first the Battalion was ordered to assist in
an attack by firing into a wood but the fog led to that
operation being cancelled, then came a message that the
adjoining attack had been successful and the enemy
trenches opposite the Gloucesters had been
captured. The Battalion pushed forward in two
lines, the first led by Captain Rising (now 2nd in
command of the Battalion) and the second 50 yards behind
by Major J O’D Ingram (in command of the
Battalion) but were assailed by intense rifle fire and
machine-gun fire, the enemy holding houses at the
eastern end of the village. Both officers and men
were exhausted, and many men had to lie down all day in
the open unable to get back to the trenches dug the
night before. Major Ingram was shot in the knee whilst
crossing the road for the fifth time whilst attempting
to point out the line to be held and was carried back to
the dressing station and shortly afterwards Captain
Rising was brought in as well mortally wounded.
His promotion to Major was recorded in the London
Gazette in January 1915.
As well as the D.S.O., he was awarded the Victory and
British War Medals and the 1914 Star.
10th November 1914
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of Lieutenant
Michael George Stocks 2nd Battalion
Grenadier Guards killed in action 10th November 1914
aged 21 years. Son of Michael and Charlotte
Stocks, Woodhall, Downham, Norfolk. Michael Stocks
was born in November 1892 and he was educated at Eton
College, Windsor from 1906 to 1910. He then went
to Sandhurst in 1911. By the 12th August 1914 he
was a Lieutenant appearing on the Roll of officers
embarking for France, landing at Havre on the 13th
August 1914. See the entry above for Lieutenant
Carleton Wyndham Tufnel for the background of the 2nd
Battalion Grenadier Guards in France prior to the affair
at Zillebeke and the fighting on the 6th November.
From the early hours of the 7th November the 2nd
Battalion was in the trenches due that morning until the
11th November. The 10th November was a bad day for
the Battalion. After a quiet night, terrific
shelling started soon after daybreak and lasted
practically without intermission throughout the
day. Trenches were taken in enfilade and badly
knocked about by direct hits from German shells.
The casualties that day were 24 killed, 37 wounded and
16 missing. Lieutenant Stocks was one of those
killed by this shell fire.
He was awarded the Victory and British War Medals and
the 1914 Star.
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of Lieutenant
the Right Honourable Henry Bligh Fortescue Parnell (5th
Baron Congleton) 2nd Battalion Grenadier Guards
killed in action 10th November 1914 aged 24 years.
Eldest son of Major General Henry 4th Baron Congleton
C.B. and Baroness Congleton. Lord Henry Parnell
was born on the 6th September 1890 in Ireland the son of
Major General Henry Parnell the 4th Baron and Elizabeth
Peter Dove. He had two brothers, John Brooke
Molesworth Parnell, a Lieutenant in the Royal Navy, who
succeeded him as 6th Baron and William Alastair Damer
Parnell who joined the Grenadier Guards in 1915.
He was educated at Eton College, Windsor. He
succeeded to the title of 5th Baron on the 12th November
1906 his country seat being Minstead Lodge, Lyndhurst,
Hampshire. He graduated from New College Oxford in
1912 but had already joined the Grenadier Guards that
year as a University candidate. His commission was
ante-dated to July 1911. He was promoted
Lieutenant in March 1913. He joined the 2nd
Battalion Grenadier Guards in France on the 19th
September 1914 when the Battalion was engaged in the
crossing of the Aisne River. He was mentioned in
Despatches for the skilful handling of his platoon on
the 6th November 1914 when his platoon had stopped
a lot of Germans getting through the gap which he had
been able to hold between the Royal Sussex and the
Cavalry. On the 10th November again there had been
a terrible shelling by the enemy which continued
throughout the whole day all over the wood, many
trenches were blown to pieces, many men buried and
the trees fell in dozens. Lord Congleton was killed in
action on the 10th November, shot through the heart when
leading No. 3 Company. Headstone bears inscription
“Son of Major General Parnell 4th Baron Congleton.
Beloved and Honoured.” He would have been awarded the
Victory and British War Medals and the 1914 Star.
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of Major Lord
Bernard Charles Gordon-Lennox 2nd Battalion
Grenadier Guards killed in action 10th November 1914
aged 36 years. Third son of Charles Henry
Gordon-Lennox, the 7th Duke of Richmond and
Gordon. Husband of Lady Evelyn Gordon Lennox of
Halnaker House, Chichester, Surrey. His brother,
the eldest son, the Earl of March, was Commanding
Officer of the Sussex Yeomanry in 1914 and 1915, the
second eldest Esme Gordon-Lennox served with the
2nd Battalion Scots Guards and later in the war
commanded the 95th Infantry Brigade. Lord Bernard
was educated at Eton College, Windsor and Sandhurst and
joined the 2nd Battalion Grenadier Guards in 1898 and
served in South Africa 1899-1900. He was promoted
Captain in 1905. He married in July 1907 Evelyn, sister
of Edward 2nd Baron Loch, and was promoted Major in
1913. The 2nd Battalion landed at Havre on the
13th August 1914 as part of 4th Guards Brigade, 2nd
Division with Major Lord Gordon-Lennox commanding No. 3
Company. Major Gordon-Lennox served at Mons on the
23rd August and the subsequent Retreat; the battles of
the Marne and Aisne. In October 1914 the Battalion moved
North arriving at Hazebrouck on the 14th October. The
Battalion arrived in the Ypres sector going into
trenches at St. Jean north of Ypres on the 20th October
1914. “Marched off at 6 a.m. to Ypres, through
which we marched. Crowds of people in the streets
to see us march through, and there seemed to be a
tremendous lot of priests and nuns. Rather a nice
old town with narrow, cobble-stoned streets, and some
fine buildings. We marched through to St. Jean
where we took up a position and entrenched facing north
east.” On the 27th October there was a redistribution of
the line and the 2nd Division moved near the
Moorslede-Zonnebeke road, the 2nd Battalion moving back
to Nonne-Bosschen Wood on the 28th October. For
the beginning of the action on the 10th November, see
the record of Lieutenant Stocks above. “After a
quiet night terrific shelling started soon after
daybreak and lasted practically without intermission
throughout the day. Our trenches on the right
where the line was thrown back were taken in enfilade
and badly knocked about, and as they (German artillery)
have now located us pretty well there were a few direct
hits and consequent casualties. The trees too were
knocked down.” Lord Bernard Lennox-Gordon was one
of the casualties, killed in action on the 10th November
1914 by a high explosive shell.
He would have been awarded the Victory and British
War Medals and the 1914 Star.
11th November 1914
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of No. 743
Private William Gibson “F” Company, 1/14th
(County of London) Battalion, London Regiment (London
Scottish), killed in action 11th November 1914.
Son of John and Janet Gibson 38 Mayfair Avenue, Ilford,
Essex. Born Glasgow. The 1/14th Battalion
London Scottish was the first chosen from the whole
Territorial Force to go to the front, landing at Havre
on the 16th September 1914. Private Gibson landed
with the Battalion which had been employed on line of
communication duties until on the 25th October
Lieutenant Colonel G A Malcolm the C.O. received orders
to concentrate the Battalion at St. Omer going on to
Ypres, reached at 3 a.m.on the 30th October and St. Eloi
about 7 p.m. that night. The Battalion paraded at
4 a.m. on the 31st October to take its part in the
Battle of Messines Ridge to sustain a casualty roll of
394 officers and men. The Battalion had a short
spell in billets in Bailleul and then on the 4th
November was ordered back to Ypres to join the 1st
Guards Brigade but was diverted almost at once to the
4th Guards Brigade under Lord Cavan then desperately
trying to hold the line to the south of the Menin
Road. On the 6th November the Germans began a
series of furious attempts to break through the line
near Klein Zillebeke and the trenches, little more than
rifle pits, in the wood were under shell fire for 6 days
and nights. The Battalion had to hold on in the
woods with bursting shells shearing off branches,
bringing down tees and scattering showers of
splinters. “Soaked to the skin, and when you lay
down, lying in mud. I put my waterproof down, and
in the morning cannot find it. I suppose buried in
the mud.” German infantry attacks were met with
rifle fire at close range which inflicted serious loss
on the enemy culminating on the 11th November with an
attack along the whole front, the right of the London
Scottish nearly being enveloped being finally checked by
a counter-attack led by the Commanding Officer.
The failure of the offensive on the 11th and the ensuing
bad weather led to the gradual end of the battle.
Private Gibson was probably killed during the course
of the infantry attacks, his body being taken back to
the churchyard for burial.
He was awarded the Victory and British War Medals and
the 1914 Star.
15th November 1914
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of 2nd
Lieutenant Howard Avenel Bligh St. George, 1st
Life Guards, killed in action 15th November 1914 aged 19
years. Son of Howard Bligh St. George
and Florence Evelyn St. George of Coombe House, Kingston
Hill, Surrey. Educated at Eton College, Windsor he
joined the 1st Life Guards in January 1914 as a
probationary officer. The Regiment landed at
Zeebrugge on the 8th October 1914 as part of 7th Cavalry
Brigade, 3rd Cavalry division. 2nd
Lieutenant St. Bligh landed with his Regiment, which was
first in the area of Bruges. The Regiment
passed through Ypres on the 13th October going on down
the Menin Road. On the 30th October 1914 the
troops of the 1st Life Guards with the 1st Royal Welch
Fusiliers, the 2nd Life Guards, the Machine Gun section
of the Royal Horse Guards under the command of Charles
Sackville Pelham, Lord Worsley (see entry for him in
Belgium cemeteries-Ypres Town Cemetery and Extension)
and other troopers from the Royal Horse Guards, formed
the rim around Zandvoorde facing the German attack from
the south and east. See the entry above for
Lieutenant William Wyndham for the background of the 1st
Life Guards in France prior to the affair at
Zillebeke. From the 7th to the 11th November the
Regiment was in billets at Verloren Hoek. On the
11th November the 1st Squadron belonging to the
Composite Regiment joined the Regiment on absorption and
in the late afternoon moved to south of Bellewarde Farm
to support a counter-attack. On the 14th November
1914 the Regiment carried out reliefs providing 200
rifles to occupy the front trenches. The Regiment
was in trenches all day on the 15th November with their
position being shelled. 2nd Lieutenant St. George
was shot by a sniper. Headstone bears inscription
“Firmitas in Coelo.” He was awarded the Victory
and British War Medals and the 1914 Star.
17th November 1914
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of Captain
Cholmeley Symes-Thompson, 2nd Battalion
Grenadier Guards, killed in action 17th November 1914
aged 33 years. Son of the late Dr. Edmund
Symes-Thompson FRCP and Elizabeth Symes-Thompson.
Husband of Grace E J Symes-Thompson nee Churchill of 43
Argyll Road, Kensington, London. He had been in
the army since 1899 after leaving Harrow School. He was
commissioned in 1st Grenadier Guards and had landed in
France in August 1914 with the 2nd Battalion and had
been involved in the Retreat to the Marne and Advance
from the Aisne. The last serious attack on Ypres began
on the 17th November with the 2nd Battalion Grenadier
Guards in the trench line across Brown Road. At
about 8 a.m., a terrific German bombardment began,
the shelling lasting all morning and about 1 p.m. the
enemy infantry attacked in force but was driven back
with very heavy loss. The brunt of the attack fell
on Nos. 1 and 2 Companies An early casualty was
Captain Cholmeley Symes-Thompson commanding No. 1
Company shot by a sniper. Headstone bears
inscription “Your Joy No man taketh from you. John
16/32.” He would have been awarded the Victory and
British War Medals and the 1914 Star.
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of Lieutenant
John Henry Gordon Lee Steere 2nd Battalion
Grenadier Guards killed in action 17th November 1914
aged 19 years. Husband of Mrs. Lee Steere of Jayes
Park, Ockley, Surrey. At Eton College, Windsor
from 1908 to 1912 and Sandhurst in 1913, he was
commissioned in the Grenadier Guards and left
England in October 1914 landing at St. Nazaire on
the 12th October 1914 when on the 29th October he was
posted to the 2nd Battalion, arriving at the front on
the 3rd November 1914. On the night of the 14th November
the Battalion marched back to Klein Zillebeke to relieve
the Royal Munster Fusiliers in the woods near Klein
Zillebeke. 2nd Lieutenant John Lee-Steere from No. 2
Company was called up to take over command when
Captain Symes-Thompson was shot and came up the trench
to make sure Captain Symes-Thompson was dead. John
Steere sent back word that ammunition was very short and
then, trying to locate and deal with the sniper, was
himself shot through the head. “a very good boy,
who had only lately come out.” Unusually his headstone
remains as the private headstone originally placed at
the grave by his family and is inscribed, after details
of the action in which he lost his life, “He asked Life
of Thee.” He was awarded the Victory and British
War Medals and the 1914 Star.
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of No. 9451
Lance Corporal James William Whitfield, 2nd
Battalion Coldstream Guards, killed in action 17th
November 1914 aged 22 years. Only Son of William and
Sarah Whitfield of 25 West View, Medomsley Edge,
Medomsley, Co. Durham. The 2nd Battalion
Coldstream Guards was in 4th Guards Brigade in the 2nd
Division, landing at Havre on the 13th August
1914. James Whitfield landedwith his Battalion.
Not directly involved in the Battle of Mons, by the end
of August 1914the Battalion had retreated to
Soissons. On the 6th September the Brigade had
crossed the Petit Morin and now heading north crossed
the Marne and on the 14th September the Aisne
River. At the beginning of October the BEF began
its transfer to Flanders and by the middle of the month
the 4th Guards Brigade was at Hazebrouck. In the
period from 29th October to 17th November the Battalion
was in the trenches in Polygon Wood and whilst no
serious attack developed against them and they were not
moved from point to point to defend other positions,
nonetheless for 23 consecutive days and nights the
Battalion was in open earthworks exposed to bitter cold
winds, rain and snow without fires or light and
subjected to constant sniping. Long before dawn on
the 17th November the Battalion left Polygon Wood on the
march to Zillebeke, a march that was slow and tiring,
the road being deep in liquid mud with large holes and
as they got nearer to Zillebeke found the village a mere
heap of ruins. The Battalion was placed in Reserve
but that night Companies were sent forward to the firing
line to support the Grenadier and Irish Guards and it is
likely that that was when Lance Corporal Whitfield was
shot but his body was recovered for burial in the
churchyard. He was awarded the Victory and
British War Medals and the 1914 Star.
20th November 1914
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of Captain
Richard Long Dawson, 3rd Battalion Coldstream
Guards, killed in action 20th November 1914 aged 35
years. Eldest son of Captain the Honourable Richard
Maitland Westenra Dawson and Mrs. Dawson of Park Holme
Ashburton, Devon. His father the Honourable
Richard Dawson (who died in August 1914) was the 3rd son
of Richard Dawson 3rd Baron Cremorne and 1st Earl of
Dartrey, Monaghan, Southern Ireland. At Eton College
Windsor from 1893 to 1895 and then Sandhurst in 1897,
gazetted 2nd Lieutenant in the Coldstream Guards in
1898, he served in the South African War but resigned
his commission in 1907 and was placed on the Reserve of
Officers. On mobilisation he was ordered to report to
the 4th (Reserve) Battalion of the Coldstream Guards
being formed at Windsor. The 3rd Battalion
Coldstream Guards was in 4th Guards Brigade in the 2nd
Division, landing at Havre on the 15th August
1914. Not directly involved in the Battle of Mons,
by the 26th August 1914 the Battalion was at Landrecies
and by the end of the month had retreated to
Soissons. On the 6th September the Brigade had
crossed the Petit Morin and now heading north crossed
the Marne and on the 14th September the Aisne
River. Captain Dawson landed in France on the 11th
September 1914 and by the 24th September was commanding
No. 2 Company of the Battalion. At the beginning
of October the BEF began its transfer to Flanders and by
the middle of the month the 4th Guards Brigade was at
Hazebrouck. Captain Dawson commanding No. 2
Company during its period in Polygon Wood, was with the
3rd Battalion when it relieved about midnight on the
18th November the 2nd Battalion Grenadier Guards and
remained in the front line under the usual heavy
artillery fire until the 20th November. There were
four killed and 10 wounded and Captain Dawson was one of
those killed in action, struck on the 20th November by a
high-explosive shell that burst some 50 yards away from
him. Still his body was recovered for burial in
the churchyard. He was awarded the Victory and British
War Medals and the 1914 Star.
5th May 1915
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of Lieut.
Colonel Arthur de Courcy Scott, 1st Battalion
Cheshire Regiment, killed in action 5th May 1915 aged 49
years. Eldest son of the late Major General A de C
Scott (R.E.) and Mrs. Scott, “Hawley” Parkstone,
Dorset. Husband of Phyllis Auber formerly Scott of
Heatherlands, Lilliput, Dorset. Born in 1866, he
was educated at Wellington College and then Sandhurst
being commissioned in 1855 into the Cheshire
Regiment. At the outbreak of the war he was a
Major and 2nd in command of the 2nd Battalion stationed
at Jubbulpore in India. The Battalion arrived in
England on Christmas Eve 1914 and joined 84th Brigade,
28th Division landing at Havre on the 17th January
1915. At the beginning of May 1915 the 1st Battalion was
in casemates at Ypres and was so short of officers that
Colonel Scott, Captain Savage and Lieutenant Mills had
been sent to them from the 2nd Battalion. On the
4th May the 1st Battalion was called upon to move to the
support trenches facing Hill 60. The whole area was
being shelled by both British and German
artillery. Two companies then deployed between the
railway and the Zwartelen and commenced an advance with
the object of re-capturing the position but suffered
considerably from rifle and machine-gun fire.
Lieutenant Colonel Scott, the Commanding Officer, was
killed but his body was recovered and taken back to
Zillebeke Churchyard. Headstone bears
inscription “Jesus Put Forth his hand and touched
him.” He was awarded the Victory and British War
Medals and the 1915 Star.
9th December 1915
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of No.
12647 Lance Corporal Neill Thomson 11th
Battalion The Royal Scots (Lothian Regiment) killed in
action 9th December 1915. Son of Mr. N Thomson of
Crosscroes Farm, Avonbridge, Stirlingshire. The
Battalion was a Service Battalion raised at Edinburgh in
August 1914 which landed in France in May 1915 as part
of 27th Brigade, 9th (Scottish) Division. Lance
Corporal Thomson landed with his Battalion. The
Battalion took part in the Battle of Loos in September
1915 when the Battalion sustained very heavy casualties,
and then at the end of the month was, with other units
from the Division, moved North to the Ypres salient, the
Brigade relieving units of the 17th Division on the 5th
October 1915 in the trenches near Hill 60, the line
taken over laying south of Zillebeke and extending from
north of Hill 60 to a point south of the Ypres-Comines
Canal near Oosthoek. The Division was in this area for 3
months and when not in the trenches went 10 miles back
through Ypres to dismal and repellent shelters at
Dickebusch and Canada Huts.
No. 12647 Lance Corporal Neil Thomson was killed in
action on the 9th December 1915, the only fatal casualty
that the Battalion sustained that day, from German shell
fire. He was awarded the Victory and British War
Medals and the 1915 Star.
16th December 1915
Special Memorial for Private William John
Stewart, 11th Battalion The Royal Scots
(Lothian Regiment) killed in action 16th December 1915
aged 20 years. Son of William and Susannah Stewart
of 1 George Drive, East Linthouse, Goven, Glasgow. Born
Harwich, Essex. See the entry above for
Lance Corporal Thomson for the summary of the Regiment’s
service in France and Belgium.
No. 13239 Private William Stewart was killed in
action on the 16th December 1915, again the only fatal
casualty that the Battalion sustained that day. Private
Stewart would have been awarded the Victory and British
War Medals and the 1915 Star.
It is therefore probable that both Lance Corporal
Neil Thomson and Private William Stewart were killed by
German shellfire whilst in working parties near
Zillibeke when their fellow Royal Scots took their
bodies back to the Churchyard for burial.
23rd March 1916
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of No. 568
Sapper Charles Preston Ilsley 6th Field
Company, Canadian Engineers, Canadian Expeditionary
Force killed in action 23rd March 1916 aged 23
years. 6th Field Company Canadian Engineers were
the 2nd Canadian Division Engineers. The Company
left for England on the 24th April 1915, disembarked in
England 29th April 1915. In France by September
1915 in the Kemmel sector, the Company moved to the
Zillebeke area in March 1916. Son of Freeman A Ilsley,
Charles was born on the 11th September 1892.
Husband of Adelia Blance Ilsley.
No. 568 Sapper Charles Preston Ilsley was shot and
killed instantly on the 23rd March 1916 whilst loading
material at Bull Dump in Maple Copse and his body was
taken back for burial in Zillebeke Churchyard, about
1000 yards West of Maple Copse.
3rd June 1916
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of No. 27611
Corporal Charles Coyde 15th Battalion, Canadian
Infantry (48th Highlanders of Canada), Canadian
Expeditionary Force killed in action 3rd June 1916 aged
21 years. The 15th Battalion disembarked in
England 14th October 1914, landed in France on the 14th
February 1915 and served in 3rd Infantry Brigade 1st
Canadian Division from 15th February 1915 until the
Armistice.Only son of Charles and Isabella Coyde, he was
born on the 28th November 1892. His parents lived at 6
Marine Terrace, Banques, Guernsey, Channel Islands.
No. 27611 Corporal Charles Coyde was killed in action
either by artillery or machine-gun fire. The Battalion
had crossed Observatory Ridge Road and was attacking
towards Maple Copse. His body was recovered and taken
back to Zillebeke Churchyard for burial.
7th June 1916
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of No. 438053
Sergeant Walter William Davison 52nd Battalion
Canadian Infantry (North Ontario), Canadian
Expeditionary Force, killed in action 7th June 1916 aged
23 years. The 52nd Battalion left for England on 23rd
November 1915 and landed in France on the 21st February
1916 and served in 9th Infantry Brigade 3rd Division
until the Armistice. Son of John and Rachel Davison of
331 Bathurst Street, Toronto, Walter Davison was born on
the 13th November 1893.
A ration dump had been established near Maple Copse
and on the 7th June 1916 a German shell burst on the
dump inflicting several casualties amongst the men of
the battalion including No. 438053 Sergeant Walter
William Davison the Orderly Room Clerk reporting for
duty. Sufficient of his body remained to enable
his comrades to take these remains back to Zillebeke
Churchyard for burial.
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of No.
65891 Private John Carron Sime 24th Battalion
Canadian Infantry (Victoria Rifles) Canadian
Expeditionary Force, killed in action 7th June 1916 aged
23 years. The 24th Battalion embarked for England
on the 11th May 1915, landing in France on the16th
September 1915 and served in 5th Infantry Brigade 2nd
Division until the Armistice. Son of John and Catherine
B Sime of 5 Temple Crescent, Crail, Fife, Scotland, John
Sime was born on the 19th September 1892.
Private Sime was a member of “B” Company and
the Battalion was marching forward to front line
trenches at Maple Copse and at about 11.45 p.m. “B”
Company was passing in single file in front of the
church in Zillebeke when without warning a heavy shell
burst in the midst of No 5 Platooon. At first it
seemed No 5 Platoon had totally disappeared but
Lieutenant G V Walsh and C.S.M. L A Sewell were
unwounded. 12 men lay dead in the road with 11
severely wounded amongst them. The remains of No.
65891 Private John Carron Sime were recovered and buried
in the Churchyard opposite.
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of No.
445160 Private William John Croft 24th
Battalion Canadian Infantry (Victoria Rifles) Canadian
Expeditionary Force killed in action 7th June 1916
aged 19 years. The 24th Battalion embarked for
England on the 11th May 1915, landing in France 16th
September 1915 and served in 5th Infantry Brigade 2nd
Division until the Armistice. Son of William and
Sarah Croft of Chatham, New Brunswick, he was born in
1897.
Private Croft was a member of “B” Company and
the Battalion was marching forward to front line
trenches at Maple Copse and at about 11.45 p.m. “B”
Company was passing in single file in front of the
church in Zillebeke when without warning a heavy shell
burst in the midst of No 5 Platooon. At first it
seemed No 5 Platoon had totally disappeared but
Lieutenant G V Walsh and C.S.M. L A Sewell were
unwounded. 12 men lay dead in the road with 11
severely wounded amongst them. The remains
of No. 445160 Private William John Croft were
recovered and buried in the Churchyard opposite.
10th June 1916
Grave in Zillebeke Churchyard of Lieutenant
Frederick Johnston Watson 43rd Battalion
Canadian Infantry (Cameron Highlanders of Canada)
Canadian Expeditionary Force, killed in action 10th June
1916 aged 27 years. The 43rd Battalion disembarked in
England on the 9th June 1915, landing in France 20th
February 1916 and served in 9th Infantry Brigade, 3rd
Division until the Armistice. Son of Edwin
Alexander and Harriet Elliot Lee Watson. Born
Arbroath on the 24th June 1888.
On the 10th June 1916 the 43rd Battalion came forward
to relieve the 52nd Battalion with Battalion H.Q. at
Dormy House. This is a position about 500 yards
East of Zillebeke with Maple Copse a further 500
yards away to the East. There was heavy artillery
fire by both the enemy and the Canadian artillery all
evening and there were 33 casualties, 4 being killed in
action and one of these was Lieutenant Frederick
Johnston Watson. His body was recovered and taken
back to Zillebeke Churchyard for burial in the
Churchyard.
Part II
Outline of the fighting around
Zillebeke
At daybreak on the 30th October 1914 a storm of
shrapnel and high explosives fell on the Household
Cavalry trench lines at Zandvoorde, the trenches being
literally blown to pieces. The line ran from East
to West on the outskirts of the village of
Zandvoorde at the point where the Household Cavalry
Memorial now stands, the enemy advancing generally North
West from the Lys River/Comines and at this point almost
directly along the line of the road running South from
Zandvoorde to Comines. From left to right
the line was held by a squadron from 1st Life Guards, a
squadron from 2nd Life Guards, the machine guns of the
Royal Horse Guards and then a 2nd squadron of 1st
Life Guards and on the right a 2nd squadron of 2nd Life
Guards. A German infantry attack by at least a
division on the 7th Cavalry Brigade followed and the
brigade was forced to retire slowly down the hill but
the onslaught was so ferocious and concentrated that
Captain Lord Hugh William Grosvenor’s 1st Life Guards,
extreme left, and Captain A. M. Vandelour’s 2nd
Life Guards, next on the left, and Lieutenant Charles
Sackville Pelham, Lord Worsley’s machine-gun section
from the Royal Horse Guards suffered many casualties. In
addition to Captain Lord Grosvenor, 1st Life Guards had
13 killed in action, all like Lord Hugh commemorated on
the Ypres (Menin Gate) Memorial. In addition to Captain
Vandeleur, 2nd Life Guards had 4 killed in action, all
like Captain Vandelour commemorated on the Ypres (Menin
Gate) Memorial. The Royal Horse Guards had 11
killed in action as well as Lieutenant Lord Charles
Sackville Pelham 9 of whom are commemorated on the Ypres
(Menin Gate) Memorial, Lord Pelham being buried in Ypres
Town Cemetery Extension, Trooper Molineux in White House
Cemetery and Corporal of Horse J C Harris in Larch Wood
(Railway Cutting) Cemetery.
Soon after 9 a.m. the Zandvoorde trenches passed into
the hands of the enemy, the Cavalry Brigade and the 7th
Division on its left falling back towards
Zillebeke. It became necessary to call upon the
battalions in reserve to the 2nd Division and the 2nd
Grenadier Guards, 1st Irish Guards and the 2nd Oxford
and Bucks Light Infantry, stationed at the western edge
of Polygon Wood under the command of Brigadier
General Lord Cavan, were ordered to move at once towards
Klein Zillebeke.
The 31st October 1914 is usually reckoned the
most critical day in the whole struggle to keep the
Germans out of Ypres. On the 31st October the
Cavalry Corps was swept off the Messines Ridge after
heavy fierce fighting. That morning the enemy had
opened a heavy shell-fire on Lord Cavan’s force, holding
a line from East of the Ypres-Comines railway line
running East and along the Northern edge of Shrewsbury
Forest, hitting particularly the Irish Guards. It
lasted for 4 hours and was evidently designed to hold
the troops in their trenches whilst a heavy attack
developed around Gheluvelt. About 11.30 a.m. the
Germans broke into Gheluvelt and annihilated the 1st
Battalion of the Queen’s Royal (West Surrey) Regiment,
leaving only 32 other ranks, and the 2nd Battalion of
the Welch Regiment – out of a Company of 130, by
10 a.m. there were only 45 alive and only 16 rifles were
firing and by 11.45 a.m., the 37 survivors were
captured. Later in the day the counter-attack by
the 2nd Battalion of the Worcestershire Regiment
resulted in the greater part of the village of Gheluvelt
coming back into British hands.
The 6th November was another critical day at
Ypres. The German advance from the Zandvoorde area
continued towards the Ypres-Comines Canal. The woods
west of Hollebeke were lost. North of the Canal
were 5 French battalions with 2 artillery groups, De
Moussy’s force, with Lord Cavan’s Force on its
left and then 1st Division’s 2nd Brigade (2nd
Royal Sussex, 1st Loyal North Lancs., 1st Northamptons
and 2nd K.R.R.C.) stretching North to the Hooge –
Gheluvelt road. A particularly heavy bombardment
practically annihilated two companies of the French 90th
Regiment by 10 a.m. while on their way up to relieve two
others reported to be completely exhausted. The
enemy then attacked the French troops on the right of
the 1st Battalion Irish Guards, and the French fell back
towards Zillebeke so opening the flank of No. 2 Company
of the Irish Guards which in good order and fighting
fell back to its support trenches. This left No. 1
Company of the Irish Guards practically in the air and
as the Germans occupied the French trenches so they
opened enfilade fire on the Irish Guards. Next to
the Irish Guards was the 2nd Battalion Grenadier Guards
with enemy shell fire particularly affecting the right
company. Just before midday on the 6th, Lieutenant
Colonel Smith, commanding the 2nd Battalion received
instructions from Lord Cavan that his position must be
retained at all costs. Shortly afterwards it was
reported that the Germans had passed on penetrating to
Zwarteleen (a mile south east of Zillebeke) and almost
to Verbranden-molen, where was situate 7th Cavalry
Brigade’s H.Q. In common with all Cavalry
Brigades, the 7th Brigade had three Cavalry Regiments,
1st Life Guards, 2nd Life Guards and the Royal Horse
Guards. Each Cavalry Regiment had a H.Q.
establishment of 7 officers and 35 other ranks, 3
Squadrons of 160 men and 7 officers with nearly 200
horses and a Machine Gun section with 2 Vickers guns, 25
men and 4 officers supported by a Battery of the Royal
Horse Artillery with 6 13pounder field guns.
However in the 7th Cavalry Brigade each regiment had
only two squadrons because one from each regiment had
been formed into the Composite Regiment which landed at
Havre on the 16th August 1914 and it was not until the
11th November 1914 that the third (composite) squadrons
were released back to their parent regiment. Due
to mounting casualties, like most cavalry regiments, 7th
Brigade’s were below strength. In their advance
the enemy had reached Brown Road – a track which runs
from the Zillebeke – Klein Zillebeke road, just south of
Zwarteleen skirting the northern edge of Shrewsbury
Forest and so called because it was metalled and
coloured brown on the map – and were thus advancing
round the rear of the 2nd Grenadier Guards.
Colonel Smith posted Lieutenant Tufnell with one
machine-gun to guard a ride across which the enemy would
have to pass and sent Lieutenant Lord Congleton with a
platoon to stop the enemy from getting through.
Apparently Lieutenant Tufnell thought a better position
for the machine-gun would be if he went with Lord
Congleton’s party and took up a position from where he
could command the advancing enemy but had not been there
long before he was mortally wounded and was probably
therefore the first of the 1914 casualties buried in
Zillebeke Churchyard. At about this time the
Household Cavalry was called in to retrieve the
situation. Lord Cavan sent off his Staff Captain
at full gallop to Sanctuary Wood, the place of readiness
for the Regiments, with orders for the Household Cavalry
to come up at once. Captain Norman Neill had been
sent on a similar mission by Brigadier General Kavanagh,
and he was actually shot on his way back just before
reaching Verbranden-molen. Ordered to mount in
Sanctuary Wood, the 1st and 2nd Life Guards and the
Royal Horse Guards galloped round by Maple Copse to
within 500 yards of Brigade H.Q. where they dismounted
and fixed bayonets. The Western edge of Sanctuary
Wood is about 2000 yards North East of Zillebeke and
Maple Copse about 1000 yards East of
Zillebeke. They advanced on foot along and
astride the road from Zillebeke to Zwartelen and
deployed just before reaching that village, 1st Life
Guards on the left were given the task of restoring the
Irish Guards position, while the 2nd Life Guards
attacked the position from which the French had been
driven, the Royal Horse Guards being behind the centre
of the line in support. Within an hour, the 1st
Life Guards had regained the whole of the position which
had been lost. “B” Squadron of the 2nd Life Guards
was sent to connect with the right of 1st Life Guards
and clear the wood on the Klein Zillebeke ridge, “D”
Squadron was to cover the right flank of the whole
movement by advancing along the edge of the Ypres –
Armentieres railway, separated from the wood by about
500 yards of open ground while Major the Hon. Hugh
Dawnay, commanding 2nd Life Guards with “C” Troop
attacked the village of Zwartelen, the Royal Horse
Guards being on their left, led by Colonel Wilson
heading down towards Brown Road. In the course of
this attack, Colonel Wilson was shot through the head,
probably by fire from the houses at the southern end of
Zwarteleen, and 2nd Lieutenant Baron de Gunzberg
was killed at about the same time and probably a little
later in the day 2nd Lieutenant William Petersen by
enemy rifle fire from houses they retained for a while
in Zwartelen itself. The Commanding Officer of the
2nd Life Guards, the Hon. Hugh Dawnay, son of the 8th
Viscount Downe of Wykeham Abbey, North Yorkshire, was
also killed whilst (like Colonel Wilson) leading his
regiment and he was certainly buried somewhere in the
general area, he now being buried in Harlebeke New
British Cemetery north of Courtrai, a cemetery wholly
created after the Armistice from isolated graves from
battlefields in West Flanders. Lieutenant the Honourable
William Wyndham 1st. Life Guards was the only
officer from that Regiment killed in action on the 6th
November whilst leading his troop, with 4 other ranks
also being killed. The total casualties in the 7th
Cavalry Brigade were 17 officers and 78 other ranks.
At dusk on the 6th November 1914 the 7th Cavalry
Brigade was relieved by the 3rd Infantry Brigade but the
Gloucestershire Regiment was too weak than do more than
take over the section of the line held by 2nd Life
Guards, the 1st Life Guards remaining until 2.30 a.m. on
the 7th November when they were relieved by Companies
from the Royal Sussex Regiment and the Royal Munster
Fusiliers.
The 2nd Battalion Grenadier Guards had been
instructed to establish a line between the Brown Road
trench and their original line and at 1 a.m. on the 7th
November the men began to dig, although dead tired and
the trenches were completed by 4 a.m.
The Battalion remained in their trenches at Klein
Zillebeke from the 7th to the 9th November without any
direct attack being made upon them although shelling
went on all day occasionally resulting in a piece of
trench being blown in and burying some of the men.
One of the casualties on the 7th November 1914 was
Private Walter Siewertsen.
The situation near the Comines Canal was still the
cause of gravest anxiety to General Haig it being
obvious that if the Germans made a further effort there
the whole of the British line north of Zwarteleen
might have to go back to a north and south line through
Ypres and likewise Lord Cavan realized that the
situation could not wait until a move by the French and
at 4 a.m. on the 7th November he despatched Brigadier
Lawford’s 22nd Brigade towards the junction of 3rd
Brigade and his own group and the attack began at 6.15
a.m. in a heavy mist against the German trenches partly
in the open and partly in the woods. The 2nd
Queen’s led the attack supported by the 1/South
Staffordshire and with 2nd Warwickshire in
reserve. The 1st Battalion Gloucestershire
Regiment from 3rd Brigade was ordered to assist in the
attack by firing into the woods but on account of the
fog that order was cancelled although the Brigade’s
attack was partially successful to the extent that the
first enemy trench was occupied and 3 machine-guns
captured, all further attacks being broken down by
enfilade fire. The Gloucesters having been told
the enemy trenches were empty, pushed forward in two
lines , the first led by Captain Rising and the second
by Major Ingram 50 yards in the rear but in issuing from
Zwarteleen the Battalion was met by intense rifle and
machine-gun fire, the enemy still holding some houses at
the eastern end of the village. Officers and men
were exhausted and could do no more than clear a few of
the houses and only a few could get back to the trenches
they had dug the night before. In crossing the
road Major Ingram was shot in the knee whilst attempting
to point out the line to be held but he managed to crawl
to Captain Rising and discuss the situation with him
before he was carried back to the
dressing-station. A few minutes later
Captain Rising himself was brought into the
dressing-station mortally wounded and died the same day
of his wounds. There were four surviving officers,
Captain Pritchett who had taken over command of the
Battalion, Lieutenant Duncan (acting Adjutant)
Lieutenant Morris (B Company) and the
Quartermaster. Estimated losses for the 6th and
7th November were 43 killed, 47 wounded and 8
missing. In the London Gazette of 18th January
1915, Captain Rising’s promotion to Major was
announced.
On the 10th November 1914 the enemy launched major
attacks against the French front from Langemarck to
Dixmude whilst at Klein Zillebeke 2nd Battalion
Grenadier Guards lost 3 officers and 74 men mainly by
enfilade fire delivered according to German accounts by
three batteries of heavy howitzers, three batteries of
mortars, a battery of 4 inch guns and a battery of 5.9
inch guns. The enemy had the range of the British
trenches accurately and obtained a large number of
direct hits. The wood itself became more and more
difficult to hold, trees cut down by the shells came
crashing to the ground and made communication
impossible. Major Lord Bernard Lennox and Lieutenant
Michael Stocks were both killed by shell fire and
Lieutenant Henry Blight Fortescue Parnell (5th Baron
Congleton) was shot through the heart. That night
the Battalion went into Corps Reserve at Bellewarde Farm
immediately to the north of Hooge but achieved little
rest as at 9 a.m. 11th November the Battalion was sent
out as support against the attack of the Prussian Guards
against the 1st Brigade from Polygon Wood to the
Menin-Ypres road.
Shortly after 4 a.m. on the 31st October 1914 the
London Scottish had paraded along the St. Eloi road
prior to orders to move to Wytschaete to reinforce the
4th Cavalry Brigade then fighting as dismounted troops
and struggling to hold the Wytschaete – Messine
Ridge. In the fighting the Battalion had losses of
394 officers and men and was on the 2nd November moved
to billets in Bailleul when it was expected the
Battalion would remain some time to re-organise with the
help of a large draft of officers and men from England
but on the 4th November there came a sudden order to
return to the Ypres front and were that night at
Bellewaarde Farm to the north of Hooge. On the 5th
November the Battalion was directed to join 1st Guards
Brigade at Gheluvelt but were then transferred to 4th
Guards Brigade under Lord Cavan in the woods near Klein
Zillebeke to take over the defence of a line in what was
then called Brown Road Wood, the trenches being little
more than rifle pits. The line in the woods was so
extensive that with their reduced numbers the London
Scottish could only man it with a rifle to every 6 yards
leaving no reserve. The Battalion was in the woods
therefore from the 6th November when the Germans began a
series of furious attempts to break through near Klein
Zillebeke putting the woods under shell fire for 6 days
and nights. On the 11th November the Battalions
two machine-guns, the latest Vickers pattern, were
knocked out by mortars, the officer in charge 2nd
Lieutenant Reginald Glover Ker-Gulland being mortally
wounded. He is buried in Railway Chateau Cemetery,
Vlamertinghe. The German attack in the Zillebeke
woods culminated with the enemy pouring across a
clearing and nearly enveloping the company of the London
Scottish on the right, the rush being checked by a
counter-attack led by Colonel Malcolm, the Commanding
Officer of the Battalion. After the defeat of this
attack, the Battalion went into close support of the 1st
Guards Brigade in a wood near Gheluvelt but that wood
was itself heavily shelled and there were further
casualties. On the 15th November the London
Scottish were relieved and marched with the 1st Brigade
to Pradelles near Hazebrouck. Private William
Gibson was amongst those killed on the 11th November
1914.
After the actions on the 6th/7th November 1914 the
Household Cavalry Regiments were in billets. On
the 11th November 1914 the 1st and 2nd Life Guards’ and
Royal Horse Guards’ Squadrons belonging to the Composite
Regiment of the Household Cavalry joined their
respective Regiments. (For the Composite Regiment see
the entry for Trooper William Waspe – Monks Kirby
Village War Memorial).
On the 12th November the 1st Life Guards Squadrons
were in trenches in the Hooge area to support an attack
which did not in fact develop and then at 5 p.m on the
14th November 1914 the 1st Life Guards were ordered to
carry out reliefs of Cavalry units in the front trenches
at Zwarteleen.
On the 15th November 1914 the Regiment was in
trenches all day and their position was shelled with
high explosive shells for nearly 2 hours in the morning
although no damage was done. About 3 p.m. 2nd
Lieutenant Howard Bligh St. George came to HQ from the
advanced trenches to report that the enemy seemed to
have evacuated their own advanced trenches at the edge
of the wood near Zwarteleen possibly as a consequence of
the heavy British shell fire directed onto that
area. On setting out to return to the trenches 2nd
Lieutenant St. George was shot dead by a sniper
apparently posted in a house on the Zillebeke-Klein
Zillebeke road. Corporal of Horse Haywood and
Sergeant Roantree were both wounded that day again by
sniper fire. The Regiment was relieved by the 3rd
Dragoon Guards and North Somerset Yeomanry at 7 p.m. and
returned to billets at Verloren Hoek.
On the night of 10th November 1914 the 2nd Battalion
Grenadier Guards went into Corps Reserve and bivouacked
in dugouts but any thoughts of a rest were soon
dispelled. On the 12th November with the 1st
Battalion Irish Guards and the Royal Munster Fusiliers,
the Battalion was to take part in an attack from Polygon
Wood but this was abandoned when Brigadier General
Fitzclarence was shot. It was in the trenches
again on the 13th-14th and then in Sanctuary Wood when
there were further casualties from German shell
fire. After four days “rest” all ranks welcomed an
order sending them back to the Zillebeke trenches to
positions either side of 6th Cavalry Brigade holding a
line across Brown Road, 2 platoons on the left of the
cavalry and two on the right. During the 15th
November and following days the relief of I Corps and
the reorganisation of the British line took place.
The Expeditionary Force evacuated the Ypres area and was
reassembled on the front between the La Bassee Canal and
Kemmel so that its two wings were no longer separated by
a considerable French force. Light snow fell on
the 15th November, followed by a hard frost and heavy
snow on the 19th November. Then on the 20th
November intelligence reported a steady flow of troop
trains heading east and finally on the 25th November
General Erich von Falkenhayn German Army chief of Staff
ordered the armies in the west to take up defensive
positions and make secure their conquests down the whole
length of the Western Front.
The last serious attack on Ypres in 1914 began on the
17th November with the 2nd Battalion Grenadier Guards in
the trench line across Brown Road. The day opened
with a terrific bombardment, the shelling lasting all
morning and about 1 p.m. the infantry attack itself
developed. An early casualty was Captain Cholmeley
Symes-Thompson commanding No. 1 Company shot by a
sniper. 2nd Lieutenant John Lee-Steere from No. 2
Company was called up to take over command and
came up the trench to make sure Captain Symes-Thompson
was dead. John Steere sent back word that
ammunition was very short and then, trying to locate and
deal with the sniper, was himself shot through the head,
command of the Company devolving onto Captain Beaumont
Nesbitt. Colonel Smith, commanding the Battalion,
sent 30 men with some ammunition up and by then the
enemy was entrenching in a spinney about 400 yards to
the Battalions front, numbers estimated at 500.
The enemy then attacked in great force but was quite
unable to make any headway against the Grenadiers rifle
fire. Subsequently Lord Cavan wrote “No words can
ever describe what the devotion of the man and officers
has been under the trials of dirt, squalor, cold,
sleeplessness and perpetual strain of the last three
weeks. Their state of efficiency can, I think, be
gauged by the fact that twelve attacks have been
repulsed and two companies of Grenadiers fired 24 boxes
of ammunition on the 17th, so persistent were the
enemy’s assaults.”
Late on the 15th November 1914 the relief of the 1st
Corps by the French IX and XVI Corps began and on the
night of the 16th – 17th November the French took over
the section of the front near Polygon Wood from the
other two Regiments forming the 4th Guards Brigade with
2nd Battalion Grenadier Guards and 1st Battalion Irish
Guards, namely the 2nd and 3rd Coldstream Guards.
For 23 consecutive days and nights the Coldstream Guards
Battalions had been in open earthworks exposed to bitter
cold winds, rain and snow, without fires or light and
being unable to move on account of the constant sniping
that always went on. The line ran from Black Watch
corner, the south western corner of Polygon Wood, along
the southern edge of the wood and then ran North through
the wood itself. In 1914, Polygon Wood was a thick
wood of pine trees with dense undergrowth of oak, beech
and chestnut. In about the middle of the wood
there was a horse trotting course. No really
serious attack against the Coldstream Guards was made
and unlike the other units in 4th Guards Brigade the
Battalions were not moved from point to point to defend
any other position but for over 3 weeks the Battalion
had been constantly on watch in the front line
On the night of 16th-17th November 1914 as part of
the relief of the British forces by the French, the 2nd
and 3rd Battalions of the Coldstream Guards left Polygon
Wood with orders to move to Zillebeke, the march
beginning long before dawn on the 17th November and it
was slow and tiring. The road was deep in liquid
mud and in many places there were large holes made by
high explosive shells into which the men were constantly
stumbling. Zillebeke was now a heap of ruins and
all hopes of a rest vanished with the 4th Guards Brigade
preparing to resist the enemy attack. The two
Coldstream Battalions were placed in reserve although
Colonel C E Pereira commanding the 2nd Battalion sent
forward No. 2 Company and later No. 3 Company to support
the cavalry. Colonel Feilding commanding either
the 4th Guards Brigade or the 3rd Battalion (his role
changed on the 17th) sent up No. 4 Company to reinforce
the Grenadier Guards and the Irish Guards. This was when
Lance Corporal Whitfield was killed.
In the evening of the 19th November 1914 the 2nd
Battalion Grenadier Guards was relieved by the 3rd
Battalion Coldstream Guards, the Grenadiers marching to
St. Jean. The 3rd Battalion remained in the front
line under the usual heavy artillery fire until the 20th
November and in this period Captain Dawson was
killed.
On the 20th November 1914 the 4th (Guards) Brigade
was relieved when the French took over the sector from
Zonnebeke to the Ypres-Comines Canal.
By the 21st November 1914 the 4th Guards Brigade had
reached Meteren for hot meals, rest and refitting.
Movement of German forces to the East had been detected
on the 20th November and on the 22nd November the
German heavy guns that had shelled the town of Ypres for
more than 3 weeks targeted the Gothic heart of Ypres
leading to the destruction of the Cloth Hall and the
cathedral of St. Martin, immediately to the North of the
Hall. For the BEF the date of 22nd November when
the occupation of the new line was completed became that
on which men ceased to be eligible for the 1914 Star and
marks the end of the First Battle of Ypres.
At the outbreak of the Great War, the 1st Battalion
Cheshire Regiment was in Northern Ireland but landed at
Havre on the 16th August 1914 as part of 15th Brigade
5th Division commanded by Lieut. Colonel
D.C.Boger. The 2nd Battalion was at Jubbulpore in
India commanded by Lieut.Colonel F.H.Finch Pearse and
Major A de C Scott was 2nd in command. That
Battalion landed also at Havre on the 17th January 1915
in 84th Brigade, 28th Division. The 1st Battalion,
by the time of arrival of the 2nd Battalion in France,
was so short of officers because of its losses in the
First Battle of Ypres, that Colonel Arthur de Courcy
Scott, Captain Savage and Lieutenant Mills had been
transferred to the 1st Battalion from the 2nd.
On the 6th April 1915 the 5th Division had taken over
a sector in the Ypres Salient which ran from East of St.
Eloi by the Bluff, “Hill 60”, and Zwartelen to Armagh
Wood to the west of the Zillebeke – Zwartelen
road. Running parallel to this road is the
Ypres-Comines railway and in the course of construction
of the railway in the 19th century the earth from a
cutting was deposited, on the west side two small
hillocks The Caterpillar and the Dump and on the east,
on the highest point of the ridge, Hill 60 which gave
excellent observation of the ground around Zillebeke and
Ypres. It had been held by the Germans since 10th
December 1914. Following the explosion of mines,
on the 17th April 1915 Hill 60 was captured by British
forces and there followed periods of intense
fighting. On the 1st May 1915 the Germans opened
fire on the Hill with a heavy bombardment followed by
the release of gas which caused considerable casualties
– nearly 150 from gas alone – but the German infantry
was thwarted. By then Hill 60 was like a rubbish heap of
shell and mine, torn earth, timber and dead bodies – the
fighting had churned up and pulverised the scene of
desolation – the British trenches were shapeless
cavities, there was no other kind of shelter and the
enemy was less than 100 yards away. At 8.35 a.m.
on the 5th May 1915 the Germans released gas again
against part of the line held by the 2nd Battalion Duke
of Wellington’s (West Riding Regiment), the
half-suffocated remnants of the Battalion being
overwhelmed by the Infantry attack which followed.
The Germans then obtained possession of the front-line
positions from Hill 60 to Zwartelen and orders
were then sent to the 1st Battalion Cheshire Regiment in
reserve in and around Ypres to move up and
counter-attack the Hill. The Battalion had been
out all night digging trenches near Hooge and had only
arrived back in billets in the ramparts at Ypres at
dawn. It was broad daylight when the Battalion set
off passing many groups of men dead or dying, some
wounded and all badly gassed. One Company was
detached to take up a position covering Zillebeke and
the Lake, as there were no troops between the Germans
and that village. The other three companies
proceeded to Larch Wood, which abuts the Ypres-Comines
railway at the beginning of the cutting. The gas
clouds had disappeared but the British line was
completely broken from the cutting to the
Zillebeke-Zwartelen road, from where the 1st Battalion
Bedfordshire Regiment held on to Armagh Wood exposed to
heavy fire from the flank and rear. The whole area
was being shelled by both British and German
artillery. Two companies then deployed between the
railway and Zwartelen and commenced an advance
with the object of re-capturing the position but
suffered considerably from rifle and machine-gun
fire. Lieutenant Colonel Scott, the Commanding
Officer, was killed but his body was recovered and taken
back to Zillebeke Churchyard. The Battalion
continued its advance and by 1.30 p.m. had driven the
Germans back and were occupying the old support
trenches. When the fighting at Hill 60 ended, the
combination of the shelling and the effect of the mines
meant that little of the original hill remained.
The British held the lower trenches, while the Germans
occupied the summit of Hill 60 such as it was.
Hill 60 remained in German hands until the Battle of
Messines in 1917 although mine warfare continued on both
sides so that by 1916 No Man’s Land directly below the
hill was one long line of mine craters.
The next burials in the Churchyard were not until
December 1915 and the casualties were both serving with
the 11th Battalion, the Royal Scots (Lothian Regiment).
This Service Battalion was formed at Edinburgh in August
1914 and formed part of 27th Brigade, 9th (Scottish)
Division. Advance parties from the Division
left for France on the 8th May 1915 the infantry
brigades leaving from the 10th May and the troops
travelled from Folkestone to Boulogne. By the 15th
May the Division was concentrated around St. Omer.
The Battalion played a part on the 25th September 1915
in the Battle of Loos and then on the 29th September
1915 the 9th (Scottish) Division was ordered north to
join V Corps in the Salient. On the 3rd October
Divisional H.Q. was established at Hooggraaf, 2 miles
South of Poperinghe, and on the morning of the 5th, the
26th and 27th Brigades relieved the 17th Division in the
trenches near Hill 60. The line taken over by the
9th Division lay south of Zillebeke and extended from
North of Hill 60 to a point south of the Ypres-Comines
canal near Oosthoek and Triangular Wood. The
enemy’s line ran along the higher ground and the
distance between the British and German trenches varied
from 25 to 400 yards. The salient feature on the
British front was the Bluff which rose steeply from the
ground on the North side of the Ypres-Comines Canal,
south west of Battle Wood, and completely dominated the
sector. It is on a ridge and was probably created
out of spoil from the excavation of a cutting for the
canal. The 11th and 12th Royal Scots after being
withdrawn from Loos, sampled the miseries of the Salient
for three months. “The perpetual rain, the leaky
shelters, the ubiquitous mud, the unsightly ruins, and
the general gloom of the Flemish landscape, even if
there had been no shelling, would have predisposed the
mind to melancholy. It was possibly a blessing in
disguise that the sodden ditches which passed for
trenches necessitated unflagging labour on the part of
the Royal Scots to prevent them tumbling in.
Systematic training was impossible on account of the mud
and the men kept themselves fit by the daily exercise
which they derived from the wielding of pick and
shovel.” In this period Lance Corporal Thomson and
Private Stewart were both killed. The Division was
relieved on the 20th December 1915, the day after the
enemy had bombarded the whole of the Divisional front
line and let loose clouds of gas.
The final burials were in 1916, all being of
soldiers serving with the Canadian Expeditionary Force.
The first was on the 23rd March 1916 but the remaining
five were all involved directly or indirectly in the
Battle of Mount Sorrel (known by the Canadians as the
Battle of Sanctuary Wood) and Hooge between 2nd and 13th
June 1916.
On the 4th April 1916 the Canadian Corps was holding
a front which extended from south-west of St. Eloi,
through St. Eloi, the Bluff and Hill 60 (in German
possession) to a point 500 yards north-west of
Hooge (that is across the Ypres-Menin road). The
total length of front line trench was just over 5
miles. The German line followed the crest of the
Ypres ridge and overlooked the British line except for a
portion of about 1000 yards in length where the Canadian
trenches commanded observation over the enemy’s
line. This was where the front line between
Zwarteleen (near The Dump and Hill 60) and the low
ground near Sanctuary Wood mounted the crest of Ypres
ridge skirting the edge of Armagh Wood and over a flat
knoll with farm buildings called Mount Sorrel
climbing to Hill 61 and Hill 62 (the site of the
Canadian Memorial) and then passing through Sanctuary
Wood down to Hooge and the Ypres-Menin road. At
Hill 62, also called Tor Top, a prominent spur,
Observatory Ridge, runs west towards Ypres. From
the area of Hill 62 and the Ridge there was extensive
views over the ground on either side of them, the woods
now composed of bare tree trunks and stumps.
At least one Field Company of Engineers of the
Canadian Expeditionary Force were in the Zillebeke area
earlier, however, and this was the 6th Field Company
which moved from the Kemmel sector as Engineers to the
2nd Canadian Division in March 1916.
On the 31st May and 1st June 1915 enemy artillery and
air activity was distinctly above the normal and on the
1st June 8 enemy observation balloons were up indicating
an offensive operation but the enemy artillery did not
fire on the Canadian trenches from 8 p.m. on the 1st
June until 3 a.m. on the 2nd. At 6 a.m. on the 2nd
June Major-General Malcolm Smith Mercer C.B. commanding
the 3rd Canadian Division with Brigadier General
Williams of 8th Brigade set out to make a reconnaissance
of the front when at 8.30 a.m. the firing increased and
at 9 a.m. a veritable storm of artillery fire was
bursting on the 3rd Canadian Division’s positions, steel
and iron fragments pierced the flesh and cascades of
earth were thrown over bodies, trenches melted away and
mounds and craters appeared where none existed
before. A litter of broken wood, burst sandbags
and human remains encumbered the earth and then the
German artillery lifted to the Canadian second line and
groups of the survivors crept out, wild-eyed and
stupefied, like men just risen from the tomb to see the
solid lines of the enemy advancing at a walk or
jog-trot. At just after 1 p.m. the Germans
exploded three mines at Mount Sorrel, just short of the
British position. Major General Mercer was amongst
the casualties and died the next day and is buried
at Lijssenthoek Military Cemetery,
Poperinge. The result of the German advance was
that the British line which, before the attack ran
around the Southern and Eastern edge of Armagh Wood and
the Eastern edge of Sanctuary Wood, was pushed back to
the Western edge of Armagh Wood and ran through the
middle of Sanctuary Wood.
At 4.25 p.m. on the 2nd June, preliminary orders were
issued to the 3rd Canadian Division for a counter-attack
to take place either that night or in the early morning,
about 2 a.m., of the 3rd June. This proposal was
changed so that the 1st Canadian Division would counter
attack in the southern sector and the 3rd
Canadian Division in the north but again this was
changed so that finally only two Brigades from the 1st
Canadian Division would attack. These changes
caused delays and the attack actually started at 7.10
a.m. on the 3rd June after half an hour’s intense
artillery bombardment, so the Canadians were attacking
in broad daylight over bare ground.
The 15th Battalion, part of 3rd Brigade, was to
attack in the centre in a day which had dawned dull and
stormy with dashes of driving rain which drenched the
troops many of whom had been marching all night.
All the chilled soldiers of the 7th, 14th and 15th
Battalions could see in front of them was some hundred
yards of open ground and behind a tangled irregular
piece of woodland, sloping up to a low crest.
Somewhere in that thicket lay the enemy’s trenches but
the precise spot was largely a matter of guesswork, not
of certainty. The 15th Battalion attacked at 8.35
a.m., they were already astride the end of Observatory
Ridge but the ground in front of them had absolutely no
cover, they were attacking towards Maple Copse and were
hit by German artillery and machine-gun fire, and
after pushing just beyond Rudkin House (on the Western
edge of Armagh Wood) they were compelled to stop and dig
themselves in under a withering fire. The Battalion lost
11 officers and 297 other ranks, killed, wounded or
missing.
The position gained by the Germans was not only
highly important from the point of view of observation,
but lay little more than two miles from the gates of
Ypres and the British and her allies were naturally
anxious to recover it. However Sir Douglas Haig
was averse to any large scale operation which would
interfere with his plans for the offensive on the Somme
in the Summer of 1916 but it was agreed that a
substantial number of heavy guns and an Infantry Brigade
would be provided to support the Canadian Corps in its
attempt to recover the loss ground. Fighting
continued in the interim period and in particular on the
6th June 1916 the enemy exploded four mines at Hooge,
across the Menin Road and to the West of Chateau
Wood. German Infantry then attacked and obtained
possession of the front and support trenches manned by
the 28th Battalion, one entire company of the Battalion
perishing almost to the last man. The result of
the fighting on that day was the Germans could be
imagined as sitting on the rim of a saucer around Ypres
and that were on the threshold of conquering the
salient.
The plan was to mass the Canadian battalions in great
strength for the night of the 12th – 13th June.
The 52nd Battalion of the Canadian Infantry was part
of the 9th Brigade 3rd Division of the Canadian
Expeditionary Force and on the afternoon of the 6th June
was ordered to relieve the 43rd Battalion in the Maple
Copse trenches. The relief was completed at
1.30 a.m. on the 7th June.
On the evening of the 7th June 1916 the 24th
Battalion had moved to Vlamertinghe and was marching to
the front line Maple Copse trenches. On the way to
the front line the Battalion had been harassed severely
by German shell fire.
The 43rd Battalion was part of 9th Brigade Canadian
Infantry which was in Divisional Reserve on the 2nd June
1916. On the 3rd June neither the 58th nor the
43rd Battalions were called forward. Despite the
planned 12th – 13th June counter-attack in strength it
was necessary to carry out the usual system of relief of
units holding the front lines and on the 10th June 1916
the 43rd Battalion came forward to relieve the 52nd
Battalion with Battalion H.Q. at Dormy House. This
is a position about 500 yards East of Zillebeke
with Maple Copse a further 500 yards away to the
East. There was heavy artillery fire by both the
enemy and the Canadian artillery all evening and there
were 33 casualties.
At 8 a.m. on the 11th June orders were issued for the
recapture of Mount Sorrel and Tor Top, zero hour being
fixed for 1.30 a.m. on the 13th June. During the
12th June a deliberate 10 hour bombardment of the German
positions between Hill 60 and Sanctuary Wood was carried
out and the result of the attack on the 13th June was to
re-establish the front line in broadly speaking the same
position that it had been before 2nd June 1916 but the
Canadian Corps in the period 2nd to 14th June 1916 had
73 officers killed, 257 wounded and 57 missing with
1,053 other ranks killed, 5,010 wounded and 1,980
missing, a total of
8,430.
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