CHAPTER ONE
âEngland had indeed been unprepared!â
For the majority, the First World War arrived without any element of surprise. Even the most politically unwitting could detect a measured lurch towards hostilities by the Europeans â and knew that Britain would inevitably be dragged into the fray.
It wasnât necessarily thought to be bad news either. The greatest fear among a sizeable bunch of keen recruits was that the conflict would have drawn to a close before they had a chance to bear arms. Honour, glory, patriotism and valour were watchwords of the day. If the causes of war were hazy in some peopleâs perception, most were pretty certain that Britain was in the right and her defence was now essential. Few dwelt upon the concept of mutual destruction. But how did it come to this?
Thereâs no trim and tidy explanation for its outbreak although the death of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria in Sarajevo on 28 June 1914 is the acknowledged trigger point. At the time the Austro-Hungarian Empire that he was to inherit was on shaky legs, while Serbia, home of assassin Gavrilo Princip, was ambitious and expanding.
Ultimately, after some failed negotiations, the killing prompted the Austro-Hungarian Empire to declare war on Serbia. With that, Tsar Nicholas II of Russia mobilised troops to honour a previously signed Slavic alliance, designed to protect Serbia from just such a threat.
This in turn provoked Germany to come to the aid of its Austro-Hungarian neighbour, and to declare war on Russia. France, being already paired with Russia through diplomatic ties, was then inevitably at war with Germany.
Britain might have sat it out despite an existing three-way agreement with Russia and France. But when Germany invaded Belgium en route to France another treaty was contravened and Britain felt obliged to act, with Lloyd George calling it a war âon behalf of little five-foot-five nationsâ. Thus two rival camps were created.
Initially, with the heads of state of some of the chief protagonists closely related, it looked like an overblown family squabble. Ultimately Italy, Japan, Romania and Greece â and finally America â joined Britain and the Allies while the Ottoman Empire and Bulgaria stood behind Germany and the Central Powers.
Robin reflected on the rise in tensions in his memoirs. He remembered âhow the pot boiled and simmered alternatively all over Europe during that month of July, with mobilizations and threats of mobilizations, moves and counter moves in the political worlds of various countriesâ.
If this domino effect was the immediate cause of war there were numerous nationalistic, anarchistic and militaristic niggles that came before. The downward slide of the Ottoman and Austro-Hungarian Empires attracted the avaricious gaze of other powers. Russia was struggling with internal division. France was looking for ways to avenge its defeat by Germany forty years previously. England had been suspiciously eyeing German naval ambitions â just one of numerous rivalries. Also, there were economic and technological imperatives as well as a need for honour to be satisfied.
So when war was declared on Tuesday, 4 August, it came with more of a thrill than a sense of foreboding.
The day before had been a warm Bank Holiday and many people were still buoyant because of it. Most heard about it in the same way as Robin, by the echo of a newsvendorâs call through an open window. Even the most momentous news was still utterly dependent on the printing presses for its public circulation.
At the beginning there was hope: that it would be a short spat, that Britain would triumph, that its Empire would remain economically unrivalled.
A conversation between Robin and cousin Reggie Sterndale, who apparently possessed some âadvanced democratic ideasâ according to Robin, gave voice to the notion that war was clunky and outdated. Many felt the treaty that protected Belgium, made some seventy-five years previously, was a flimsy excuse. Reggie believed that people would not stand for war and it would not last three weeks, let along three months.
Wiser heads like Robinâs agreed to differ. He perhaps took his lead from Secretary of War Lord Kitchener, who was himself derided by cabinet colleagues when he suggested the war would last years and that millions of men would have to be mobilised.
âIt shook [Reggie] when a little later Kitchener said it would last three years, observed Robin. But Reggie â along with miscellaneous parliamentarians â believed war would not be tolerated by such a vibrant British society.
After all, it was not a case of an acquiescent population being led by the nose. Before war broke out there was Suffragette militancy, unrest in Ireland and a General Strike was planned. There were nearly 1,500 separate industrial stoppages in 1913 as workers began to flex their considerable combined muscle.
Yet war with Germany struck a euphoric chord in a way few could have predicted. It had campaigners for womenâs votes helping to recruit soldiers, trades unionists abandoning their immediate ambitions in order to improve Britainâs military output and a private army ready to fight against proposed Home Rule for Ireland turning their enmity towards the Kaiser. As philosopher and pacifist Betrand Russell noted: âaverage men and women were delighted at the prospect of war.
For its part Germany hoped for a quick victory over France in the west so it could concentrate its efforts on defeating Russia.
The British Armyâs top brass were also less convinced about the idea of a short war and for them there was a sense of forging into the unknown. Despite a largely peaceful era since Napoleonâs defeat, Britain had been involved in campaigns in the Victorian era. The Crimean War of 1858 did not prove to be Britainâs finest hour. Lessons learned included the importance of regular supplies and disease control to the fighting man. Happily the spread of a network of railway lines and step changes in the world of medicine would resolve this for future generations.
As for the Boer War, fought against angry but ill-armed farmers in South Africa, Britainâs image was severely dented by its use of concentration camps, some dubious battlefield conduct and an inability to defeat inferior opposition. One of the greatest challenges on the home front proved to be finding sufficient numbers of healthy individuals to join the armyâs rank and file.
Although the Boer War ended little more than a decade before it wouldnât be the same army sent to meet the Kaiserâs men at the Western Front. In 1907 there were wholesale changes made by Richard Haldane, the Liberal Partyâs Secretary of State for War, announced in a 190-minute speech to Parliament. Times were changing and Haldane wanted the army to respond. The days of privately funded militia forces and volunteers raised by county were gone and in their place came a small but professional army capable of defending Britainâs interests overseas numbering 160,000 officers and men.
On the home front there would be a Territorial Army that could advance seamlessly into the front line in times of national need. Men in the Territorials for a four-year term typically spent two weeks every year at a camp where they were brought up to speed in military matters.
Ranged against them at the start of the First World War was a German army that vastly outnumbered that of the British, although all were conscripts. It seemed that Britain might overcome that numerical problem almost immediately when recruiting offices were overwhelmed with volunteers from a booming population. Streets outside the depots where names were being taken became a bobbing sea of flat caps, bowler hats and boaters as young men from all social classes surged forward.
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, who created Sherlock Holmes, tried to enlist at the age of 55, convinced he would be a fine example for other men to follow.
The face and finger of Lord Kitchener, a highly respected old soldier, imploring young men to come and serve their country proved potent. In fact the famous image that galvanised so many, designed by graphic artist Alfred Leete and first published as a magazine cover a month after the outbreak of war, was mainly used in metropolitan areas to rally support. Much of the rest of the country was overwhelmed by a general and genuine fervour for fighting in a mighty citizen army.
The old spectre of ill health among the industrial poor had been all but eliminated. There was sufficient wealth and social care in the country â thanks to legislation that had brought in pension rights, national insurance and labour exchanges â to ensure that few were starving.
Doctors at recruiting offices were paid per recruit and accordingly many passed muster, so the harvest for the army was abundant. But once recruits were signed up there were difficulties arising from the lack of accommodation, uniform and equipment to address, not to mention the paucity of training. Men paraded in their own clothes and wielded broom handles. These men would become Kitchenerâs New Armies, who would be trained in due course while the regular army fought in the field. (Kitchener had little faith in the Territorials whom he dubbed âweekend warriorsâ.) And it was Kitchener who ordered that volunteers like these should be treated well.
Then there was a lack of officers to govern men like these and those in the Territorials who would be next in line to make the journey to the front. Thatâs where men like Robin came in. He had been a sergeant in the Officer Training Corps introduced at public schools across the country as part of the 1907 army reforms. This instilled military values into a large number of middle class boys who would come of age at a time when their country needed them most. With the six-year experience he gained at Bedford School on his CV he was ideal for the army and quickly earmarked for action.
Robin made his first enquiries with the War Office in Whitehall and was sent to the Inns of Court Territorial Battalion where he signed up as a recruit. âThey must have been short of material,â Robin remarked drily, in his memoir.
Within a week of joining he was put at the head of a training squad. On 15 August 1914 he was appointed an officer in the Special Reserve, denoting that he had not been Sandhurst-trained. Although the status of being in the Special Reserve eventually rankled, he was at the time delighted that his wages doubled to two shillings a day.
He had no uniform although he was furnished with luncheon vouchers and enjoyed free travel in London until the perk was withdrawn.
When he was invited to become an officer, Robin had hopes of joining the Royal West Kents like many of his ancestors, but instead he was dispatched as a second lieutenant to the Essex Regiment, unaware at the time that one of his forebears, Colonel Alexander Monypenny, had fought under the Essex insignia in the eighteenth century.
Before he embarked for the continent there was a short spell spent on home soil helping to marshal a force together. When he arrived he was a second lieutenant in the Special Reserve of officers in the 3rd Battalion of the Essex Regiment. The word subaltern translates to subordinate and is a largely colonial term for junior officers ranked below captain.
ROBIN
In the middle of October, a large number of volunteers who had answered Lord Kitchenerâs call for his first hundred thousand, had been gathered together in Aldershot, Hampshire, and were drafted gradually to various depots. Five hundred were sent to our battalion; a canvas camp was prepared for them in a meadow just off the high road on the outskirts of Dovercourt. A Special Reserve captain was to take charge with four subalterns and some experienced NCOs to help him train these recruits. I happened to be one of these four subalterns.
We went to the station to meet these men off the train. They were of course all of them in mufti. They had very little in the way of their own kit with them and had apparently had rather a wretched time at Aldershot where everything had been done in a hurry. The staff had been insufficient to cope with them, they had been over-crowded in their tents and had not had enough blankets or food â and were therefore not in the best of spirits. But they were mighty glad for a change of scene.
We fell them into fours and marched them towards camp. They did look a motley crew, all sorts, sizes and shapes; some wearing what had been smart clothes, others in rags with a mix of cloth caps, bowler hats and homburgs on their heads. They hardly knew how to keep step or anything but a ragged column.
Just before reaching camp there was a large orchard on the side of the road belonging to a local farmer and, all of a sudden, there was a concerted rush with most of the 500 over the orchard wall, filling their pockets with apples. We had the time of our lives trying to round them up. Eventually we arrived in camp about an hour late, the men with pockets bulging with apples and all biting apples as hard as they could. I remember the sergeant major saying that we had some work ahead of us to make soldiers of them. But soldiers never were at their best on empty stomachs and these poor creatures were pretty hungry. England had indeed been unprepared!
We managed to provide them with a plain but hot meal, some blankets, and shared them out amongst the tents. The next morning they were turned out not too early and given a good, hearty breakfast. After this the real job of getting order out of confusion started.
They were divided into four companies of 125 men each, with names, addresses and particulars of each man taken. I was put in charge of one such company (one subaltern to each company). I remember sharing with a sergeant the job of taking particulars. One individual amused me: when asked about his occupation in civil life he replied, âtheatrical barberâ. Not having heard of this before I satisfied my curiosity by asking whether he cut the hair of actors. He said he not only shaved actors but âchorus girlsâ armpitsâ!
Most of these were London Cockneys; tradespeople, busmen, farmhands and so on with a sprinkling of better class business men and one or two university students, though most of the latter type had probably gone to corps that especially catered for them such as the Honourable Artillery Company, Artists Rifles, Public Schools Battalions and so forth.
They were a fine crowd generally speaking, and once they saw that things were being done in earnest for them, such as good and regular food, they became exceedingly keen and quick to pick up their work. After that there were regular camp routines and arrangements and not chaos, and the serious business of military training was taken in hand.
It is no exaggeration to say that in the evenings after all parades were finished, little squads of men were seen in odd corners practising drilling each other and arguing on the right or wrong way, and sometimes calling on some NCO to enlighten them.
I discovered that my batman â one of the new recruits â was a bit of a boxer and in order to have some exercise and keep my own hand in he and I donned some gloves on an occasional evening. We soon had some of the rest of the recruits as an interested audience with the result that I had to run the boxing and physical training of the camp, later getting up quite a successful boxing tournament.
I remember one afternoon a great big saloon car waiting at the camp gate with a chauffeur and as I walked out of the gate, an agitated lady stepped out of the car to address me. She wished to know why her husband, Private âXâ, could not go home on short leave as some of the men had. The said Private âXâ happened to be in my company. Though an unobtrusive sort of man, he was obviously a cut above most of them, financially at any rate. A few men in each company had been allowed away on weekends and I presumed that âXâs turn had not arrived and, being unobtrusive by nature, had not pushed himself forward, or maybe he had joined up as one way of escaping from a bossy wife and was in no hurry to go back home. However, I arranged for him to have his leave the following weekend.
It was a real pleasure training these men whose sole aim seemed to be learning all there was to be learnt as quickly as possible before heading out to the scene of the action â just splendid fighting material. But red tape and officialdom would for a while stand in their way.
Suddenly we four subalterns heard that we were to rejoin our old companies prior to going out to the line battalions as reinforcements and new subalterns lately gazetted would replace us. How these new ones were to instruct men already considerably trained was a mystery. Perhaps the men were intended to instruct the new subalterns in the art of handling them. Anyway, a strange and, to us four subalterns, rather gratifying thing happened.
The new subalterns had arrived the day before we left. That morning, not a man would move on parade. The sergeant major shouted himself hoarse, but the men stood perfectly still and at ease with their hands behind their backs, although the SM had made several attempts to call them to attention. The captain called the NCOs up and told them to find the cause of the trouble. It appeared that the men were so keen on getting on with their training and getting out to the front that they did not wish to lose the officers they had gro...