24hr Under Attack: Tommy Defends the Frontline
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About this ebook
Andrew Robertshaw
Andrew Robertshaw MA is a museum curator, military historian, author and broadcaster. He has written five books about aspects of military history. He is a subject matter expert for the army for whom he lectures, gives presentations at Staff College and runs battlefield studies. He has appeared as expert and presenter in a large number of television documentaries including The Trench Detectives, Time Team and Finding the Fallen. He is director of The Battlefield Partnerships and is working on a series of international media and archaeological projects.
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24hr Under Attack - Andrew Robertshaw
Find out more at http://andyrobertshaw.com
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
This book is very much a team effort and I could not have completed it without the help, support and advice of a large group of people both in front of and behind the camera. I cannot list them all by name, but will do my best to express my thanks to as many as possible of the team. I have to start with the photographer Phil Erswell and his daughter Georgee, who provided double photographic coverage of the reconstruction sequences. They had to contend with live firing machine guns, pyrotechnics and a range of trench hazards that they would not normally encounter at even the most rowdy family wedding. Richard Knight provided a great deal of the kit in addition to appearing as a ‘storm trooper’. I never thought that we would get that Bergmann sub-machine gun out of his grip once it started firing. I am only sorry that not all of the uniform and equipment came from his business ‘Khaki on Campaign’. The realism of some of the scenes required firing weapons and Ken Garside of Bapty Ltd spent a day on site with an arsenal of stunning machine guns. The majority of the ‘troops’ in the book are members of the 10th Essex, a re-enactment unit who are well known from their events in the United Kingdom and Western Front. Most re-enactors are wedded to ‘their’ regiment, but when I asked them to arrive without their battle insignia and badges, they did so to a man and were then transformed into temporary members of the King’s Liverpool Regiment and in one case as a German. It has to be said that Craig Appleton was able to appear in the studio shots but managed to avoid anything in the trenches where he might have got wet! I think I was never so surprised as when I encouraged some shouting to make a scene more realistic to discover that the ‘German’ could actually speak the language. Other soldiers included Ross Barnwell, Dr Roger Payne and Neil McGurk, who is the only member of the team to appear in both 24hr Trench and 24hr Under Attack.
I needed a lot of support during the setting-up period and I really have to thank Steve Roberts and Mark Khan for all their hard work. As an ex-member of the Metropolitan Police Steve is used to breaking bad news and it was Steve who had to tell me that during the photography Roger had run over one of my original mess tins. I promised not to make a fuss about this, but putting it on paper has made me feel better. The tin was the only casualty of the entire project and I have to acknowledge that many of the participants felt uneasy about being photographed as ‘the dead’. It was in the reason of taste that we decided not to use ‘fake’ blood. The point was made effectively and simply by posture. We all felt that there is a fine line between ‘realism’ and being gratuitous.
Finally, we all needed to be fed and once again, it was Diane Carpenter who produced a range of stews to original recipes.
The team of historians who helped to reconstruct these 24 hours under attack, using original war diaries and manuals.
CONTENTS
Title
Dedication
Acknowledgements
Foreword
Introduction
The British Infantryman in 1918
The Eve of Battle
24 Hours in Action
Conclusion
Bibliography
About the Photographer
Copyright
FOREWORD
The Great War occurred at a time in history in which it was relatively simple to take photographs and even possible to make moving film, leading many people to believe that the events that occurred between 1914 and 1918 are well recorded and the experience of the men who fought on the frontline faithfully passed down to future generations. The reality is that as private cameras were officially forbidden in the British Army, and only a few official cameramen were at the front and even fewer movie cinematographers, the surviving record is, at best, partial. The reasons for this are easy to explain. The War Office restricted the number of officially sanctioned photographs and cameramen to manage cost and retain control. The photographs were taken and film recorded for reasons of propaganda rather than as a historical record of all aspects of the war. Censorship meant that many aspects of the war were not recorded and, in many cases, film and photographs that were deemed ‘unsuitable’ were destroyed. The nature of the fighting and threat from the enemy to the lives of the cameramen further restricted what could be recorded. Additionally those responsible for taking film or photographs of the war were looking for ‘interesting’ images, not the ordinary or mundane. Also, critically the nature of the equipment meant that cameras were heavy and cumbersome, difficult to focus and without the proliferation of lenses available to modern cameramen. Exposure times for still photographs could be long and film cameras were virtually impossible to zoom in and out, and panning shots were technically difficult. Although colour film was available for both still and movie cameras it was rarely used and the result of this is that the Great