We remember

David Ahern

David Ahern

David is the editor of The Majellan

Friday is Remembrance Day when we honour those Australians who died in the line of duty. It has been celebrated around the Commonwealth and other parts of the world since the end of World War I with many people wearing a red poppy in remembrance.

The following is an edited version of a story that first appeared in The Majellan in 2015 to mark the 100th anniversary of the first landing in World War I by the allies, including British, French, Indian, Australian and New Zealand soldiers, who tried unsuccessfully to overrun Turkish positions on the Gallipoli Peninsula.

Australians and New Zealanders were quick to sign up to defend the British Empire, oblivious to the fate that would befall many of them. Wet behind the ears in terms of life experience, some were too young to legally drink alcohol or to vote, and yet they drew their last breath on a foreign battlefield far from home.

Like the father in The Water Diviner, tragically, many mothers and fathers never saw their sons again: a lasting grief illustrated by the last two verses of the poem, The Soul of the ANZAC by Roderic Quinn.

And yet it t’was your choice to be this thing —

A young man dead on an alien shore,

Where the immemorial surges sing

As once they sang in the days of yore,

When Greeks and Trojan marches their might

And Troy shone down upon the fight

O Man that I was, well done! Well done!

You chose the nobler, the better part;

Though a mother weep for her soldier son,

And a fair, sweet girl be sad at heart,

Yet the soul of your country glows with pride

At the deed you did and the death you died!

RSL Chief Executive Officer (Victorian branch), Brigadier Michael Annett says Gallipoli was a military disaster and therefore appreciation and understanding of the ANZAC spirit among the broader community didn’t happen at once.

“In the post-Vietnam period of the 1970s and early 80s, people were still getting over the divisiveness and impact of the Vietnam war and earlier conflicts,” he said.

“But as time passed there was a re-awakening of interest in military conflicts. For example, in 1995 there was the Australia Remembers campaign, marking the 50th anniversary of the end of World War 2. There was also the 75th anniversary of the Gallipoli campaign which was held when a number of soldiers from World War 1 were still alive. Those two events marked a change in how we saw our veterans.”

From the outset Gallipoli was a tough proposition. The official Australian World War 1 correspondent, journalist and historian, Charles Bean, landed with the Australian troops on April 25, 2015 and in his first report he wrote about the difficulties of the campaign.  

‘It was eighteen minutes past four on the morning of Sunday, 25th April, when the first boat grounded. So far not a shot had been fired by the enemy. Colonel McLagan’s orders to his brigade were that shots, if possible, were not to be fired till daybreak, but the business was to be carried through with the bayonet. The men leapt into the water, and the first of them had just reached the beach when fire was opened on them from the trenches on the foothills which rise immediately from the beach.

The landing place consists of a small bay about half-a-mile from point to point with two much larger bays north and south. The country rather resembles the Hawkesbury River country in New South Wales, the hills rising immediately from the sea to 600 feet. To the north these ridges cluster to a summit nearly 1,000 feet high. Further northward the ranges become even higher. The summit just mentioned sends out a series of long ridges running south-westward, with steep gullies between them, very much like the hills and gullies about the north of Sydney, covered with low scrub very similar to a dwarfed gum tree scrub. The chief difference is that there are no big trees, but many precipices and sheer slopes of gravel.

One ridge comes down to the sea at the small bay above mentioned, and ends in two knolls about 100 feet high, one at each point of the bay. It was from these that fire was first opened on the troops as they landed. Bullets struck fireworks out of the stones along the beach. The men did not wait to be hit, but wherever they landed they simply rushed straight up the steep slopes. Other small boats which had cast off from the warships and steam launches which towed them, were digging for the beach with oars. These occupied the attention of the Turks in the trenches, and almost before the Turks had time to collect their senses, the first boatloads were well up towards the trenches. Few Turks awaited the bayonet.

The Turks in the trenches facing the landing had run, but those on the other flank and on the ridges and gullies still kept up a fire upon the boats coming in shore, and that portion of the covering force which landed last came under a heavy fire before it reached the beach. The Turks had a machine gun in the valley on our left, and this seems to have been turned on to the boats containing part of the Twelfth Battalion. Three of these boats are still lying on the beach some way before they could be rescued. Two stretcher-bearers of the Second Battalion who went along the beach during the day to effect a rescue were both shot by the Turks. Finally, a party waited for dark, and crept along the beach, rescuing nine men who had been in the boats two days, afraid to move for fear of attracting fire. The work of the stretcher-bearers all through a week of hard fighting has been beyond all praise.’

According to official records, 8,079 Australians were killed and 19,441 wounded; 2,779 New Zealanders died and 5,212 wounded; UK and Irish deaths numbered 21,255; and 10,000 French soldiers died. Newfoundland (49) and India (1,358) also recorded casualties at Gallipoli. The number of Turkish dead and wounded numbered more than 250,000.

The Great War took a huge toll on many nations and at the time many believed that hard lessons had been learned and the world would never again experience such carnage. However, as history records Europe was plunged into another world war 21 years later and this time the casualties were far higher.       

For another story on the tragedy of war go to:

The toll on those left behind! – Majellan Media                                              

Additional information

Charles Bean – The first report, Commonwealth of Australia Gazette No.39. Monday 17th May 1915

New Zealand History

Australian War Memorial

RSL Victorian Branch

The Soul of the ANZAC (Roderic Quinn) Australian Poetry Library

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