CHAPTER IX AT both Anzac and Helles the Allies were now faced
Transcription
CHAPTER IX AT both Anzac and Helles the Allies were now faced
C H A P T E R IX HOLDING ON 4T ANZAC AT both Anzac and Helles the Allies were now faced with complete trench lines, strongly held. Until these could be broken through, the possibility of “open warfare” had passed. T h e obvious means of breaking through was artillery bombardment, and Hamilton decided to use this in making step by step advances, partly at night. Relying now on artillery, he naturally still adhered to his plan of attacking at Helles. Birdwood and his corps a t Anzac were ordered to attempt only minor attacks so as to facilitate any advance that might be planned later dnd to keep busy a large force of Turks. There were ample tasks confronting the Anzac troops if their position was even to be held. First, the apex of tlic position, Baby 7 0 0 with T h e Nek leading to it, was held by the Turks. Already, exactly a week after the Landing, when the troops had been reorganised (partly by the loan of four battalions of “marines”-actually raw troops lately raised by Churchill) the Anzac Corps had endeavoured to close this gap by seizing Baby 700 and the extreme upper end of the Second Ridge north of Quinn’s Post. At nightfall on Sunday hiay nnd, after a heavy bombardment of that angle by naval and land . I I !Illci y, hlonash’s 4th Brigade climbed the right branch of the head of hionash Valley, with orders to link with the New Zealand Infantry Brigade, which was to climb the left branch and thence move across Baby 700. T h e Australians attacked with great spirit. Monash and his headquarters, far down the valley, could hear the cheers as the attack topped its edge and with the cheers HOLDIKG A T ANZAC 2nd-3rd May igitj] came the sound of the supports singing ”Tipperary” and “Australia will be there”. But the approach march of the New Zealanders around the crowded Beach and u p Shrapnel and Monash Valleys took twice as long as planned. They attacked nearly two hours late, to be met by a tempest of fire which had already swept the unsupported flank of the Australians. Useless attempts were made during the night to carry out the plan in the face of the now thoroughly awakened Turks-even at dawn some of the hlarines were thrown in; the bodies of some of them crowning the last knuckle in hionash Valley, beyond Pope’s, gave their name to “Dead Man’s” Ridge. T h e ichole effort achieved nothing and cost 1 ooo casualties. With its apex thus firinly in Turkish hands, the Anzac position was difficult to hold; indeed, many tacticians would probably call iL “untenable”. T h e Anzacs clung barely to the inner edge of the Second Ridge-and, at T h e Nek, not even to that-with the ‘Turks on the other edge of it. At Quinn’s the Turhs, only forty yards away, were digging, and perhaps mining, closer. They held the continuation of this spur to Baby 700, and had thrust forward to Dead hlan’s Ridge, ivhich not only conimanded part of the rear of Quinn’s but looked straight down hlonash Valley, u p the stream bed of which-normally dry-came all traffic and supplies for that part of the Anzac line. It was also at Quinn‘s. and on Russell’s T o p (facing T h e Nek on the main riclgej that the Turks had throw~i missiles like black iron cricket balls. T h e Australians a n d New Zealanders had heaid of b o ~ n b sbeing used 0 1 1 Lhe Western Front but had ne\er seen one, and at first had none to reply with. h.ioreoi,er. as trench periscopes were unknown to them until the Xinines broiight a few, the Anzac sentries had to obsen e by watching through loopholes or with heads 01er the parapets; but ns the Turkish positions looked into Qninn’s fro111 three sidcs i t was 127 ANZAC T O AMIENS [gth-15thMay 1915 almost certain death to expose one’s head there by day for three seconds. As already stated, it seems that Quinn’s was twice being abandoned when a junior overcame the decision of his superior and was allowed to hold it. In the following weeks the suspicion that the Turks would tunnel under Quinn’s and blow it u p induced General Godley to order the seizure of the Turkish trenches on the reverse slope. T h e first attempt was made by three parties of the 15th Battalion on the night of May 9th. But though the parties (totalling 1 0 0 men) in furious fighting took the trenches opposite them, and three communication trenches were dug from Quinn’s to the new positions, the Australians, having no bombs, were in the morning bombed and shot out by flank attacks-i o officers being killed and zoo casualties suffered among the attacking parties and their supports who became involved in the effort. T h e situation there was now very difficult. T h e three communication trenches had been left joining Quinn’s and “Turkish Quinn’s” (as it was called); and, using part of these, the Turks in the next week were able to shower bombs day and night into the Australian trenches there. T h e Quinn’s garrison-by then consisting of light horsemen, who had just been brought to =Inzac without their horses-had learnt from the infantry to catch the Turkish bombs before they burst and throw them back, or else to smother them with an overcoat or sandbag. ,41so bombs improvised from jam tins filled with snippets of metal were now being manufaclured 011 ,4ii7ac Bench and a shower of these cliiieteiiecl the T u r b - h t i t not for- long. Accordingly, 011 the night cit R l n y I d t l i . sc\*cr,ilparties of the 2nd Light Horse Regiment chnrged out in a planned atttsnipt to fill in the thi-ee saps and their entrances. T h i s tiiiie the ‘Turks were ready; of the 60 ,4ustraliaiis iie‘irlj 50 weie n t once hit and the attempt failed. I28 15th-19thMay HOLDITU’G AT ANZAC 19151 O n the morning after this attack the fire of Turkish snipers down Monash Valley increased in severity. Losses being high, big sandbag buttresses were built at intervals across the valley bed, but snipers fired a t men inoying horn buttress to buttress, and o n this clay they mortally wounded General Bridges there ’IVishing good-bye to a friend in the hospital ship, “.Anyhow.” he said, “I have commanded an Australian Division.”’ O n hlay 18th the Turkish rifle fire, which had been constant since the Landing, airnost ceased, but the Turkish artillery fire-hitherto mainly light shrapnel, and painful only at certain vulnerable parts of the line and valleys-became constant and included some heavy shells. It had little effect, but a British aviator, who that day happened to make one of the rare flights over that area, detected Turkish troops massed in the valleys behind the Turkish line. A second airman sent out saw other Turks arriving across the straits. A s the Xavy and the Anzac obsen ers also reported unusual movements the garrison was warned to expect attack. In the small hours next morning expectant .%ustralians, peering down the gloomy depth of Wire Gully (north of the 400 Plateau), noticed there the faint reflection of light from sheaves of moving bayonets. Heavy fire was opened on these, and shortly afterwards choruses of “Allah, Allah! ” were heard, first from there, and successively from most other parts of the front, and charging Turks came dimly into view. In some parts they were deliberately allowed to advance until l’er): close and then the Australians opened a terrible fire, shouting tags of slang learnt in Egypt: “Saida! ” “Backsheesh!” “Eggs-acook! ” Everywhere the attacking lines withered under this fusillade. Here and there machine-guns and, on the right, a field-gun added to the effect. T h e assault was 1 G e I’ol I f . p p 1 2 8 - j o Bridges died in the hospital ship but his b o d y was taken to Australia and buried on the hilltop above Australia’s Military College which h e had founded General W a l k was temporarily appointed in his place while General Legge \ \ a s being sent from 4ustraliz In-”, I29 ANZAC T O AMIENS [igth-24th May 1915 exceedingly brave and persistent; a few-a very fewstubborn men reached the parapets and even the trenches. At Courtney’s Post, south of Quinn s, Turkish bombs cleared one bay and nine of the enemy entered it; but, after several deadly attempts to clear them, a Victorian private, Albert Jacka, cleverly taking the necessary risks, leapt into the bay while the enemy’s attention was held by his mates, killed six, and wounded and captured one.2 T h e ill-co-ordinated attacks had been launched from 3.30 onwards, at different times against different sectors. It was after daylight when, at 4.20, an effort was made to rush Quinn’s. Though the trenches there were now, at one point, only fifteen yards apart, no T u r k managed to get through the crossfire of machine-guns protecting the post. Later efforts were equally fruitless. T h e Anzac troops had only 628 men hit-mostly through exposing themselves too eagerly after daylight. But no-man’s-land was strewn with Turks. Of the 42,000 -two old and two fresh divisions-that attacked, I 0,000 were hit, 3000 (it is said) being killed. One reaction to this immense slaughter-which was mainly the work of the Australian riflemen-was that the attitude of the troops towards this enemy entirely changed; from being bitter and suspicious they became admirers and almost friends of the Turks-“Jacko” or “Abdul”, as they called them-and so they remained to the end of the war. An attempt by Australians on May 20th to rescue some of the Turkish wounded led, first, to a short informal armistice. and later, on May rqth, to a formal truce lasting nearly all day, at which the dead were buried-and incidentally the embarrassing saps between the opposing trenches at Quinn’s were used as graves and conveniently filled in, to the relief, probably, of both sides. This greatest effort, made by order of the Turkish government and Liman von Sanders, to have done once 2 He was the first Australian to win the Victoria Crosq in the details see Yo!. 11, p p . I#’- j o I30 111:if w.tr. Foi HOLDING AT ANZAC 29th May-5th June 19151 and for all with the invaders at Anzac, had thus ended disastrously for the Turks. It is true that the small triangular foothold, with the Turks looking down the valley in its centre, was a difficult one to hold. On May 29th the Turks by tunnelling (which Australian iiiiners had heard but the engineer staff disregarded till too late) blew up and captured part of Quinn’s; but after a furious and tensely exciting fight they were quickly driven out again. O n June 4th-when, down at Cape Helles, General Hamilton continued his effort to “hammer away”, step by step, with bombardment, towards Achi Baba-the Anzacs, being asked to pull their weight, again assaulted the Turkish Quinn’s. This time the New Zealand infantry attacked.‘ T h e enterprise at first went well, but after daybreak the place became a reeking inlerno of bombing, and, though jam-tin bombs were now being made in increasing numbers a t the improvised factory on the Beach, the supply was still insufficient. T h e Ilaiiking fire of Turkish machine-guns from other posts on both flanks was, as always, most deadly. I n an attempt to stop it on the southern flank the Australians now made a swift trench-raid-a party under Lieutenant Longfield Lloyd suddenly dashing to German Officers’ Trench and back. But the trench was found to be partly roofed over and little could be effected. .4t Quinn’s the Turks forced their way towards the new communication trench just dug by the New Zealanders and, by 6.30 a.m., to avoid being cut off, the survivors of the New Zealand attack were withdrawn. T h e brigade lost over 1 0 0 men and the Turks twice as many. This ended for the present all attempts by the Anzacs to make safe the apex of their position by open attack. Instead they safeguarded their posts by mining, while the Turkish sniping that u 3s taking such toll in Monash 3See 1’01 I I , p p 100. 2 0 3 , o n d 106 1 1 T h e final clearing of the crater o n May 30th $bas heroicall\ covered I,) a young ..\tistralian machine-gunner. Pre T. 4molt: see Yol. I I , p a a j . 131 ANZAC T O AMlENS [hlay-June 1915 Valley was met by counter-sniping. In this the Anzac snipers were helped by the invention, by a inan of the 2nd Battalion, of a periscope-rifle, the apparatus was manufactured on the Beach and could be safely fired from shelter in the most dangerous posts. Within a few weeks the tables had been completely turned on the Turkish snipers; RIonash Valley became safe;” even the Indian mule train were able to go u p it by day without a shot being fired at them, the Turkish snipers being prevented from shooting down it until after dark, when they could hit only by chance. For pedestrian traffic a trench was dug along the whole western side of the valley, a little above its bed. In addition the Anzacs obtained on May 2 0 t h four highly effective Japanese trench mortars, which inflicted such loss that the ‘Turks began to roof over their important posts with logs and earth-a practice which is said to have turned their trenches into death-traps when shelled by howitzers later in the campaign. Meanwhile in order to gain ground, as the dAnzacswere still clinging to little more than the edge of the Second Ridge, shallow tunnels were pushed out from niost parts of that front, and ground was safely won by secretly breaking through from these tunnels to the surface closer to the Turkish front line. For low-level mining, deep tunnels also were begtin, heading beneath the Turkish line. Yet in the centre-where the niaiii ridge I 6 1 1 down through Baby 700, T h e Nek, and Russell’s T o p , to end in Plugge’s Plateau 300 feet above Anzac Beach-any advance by the Turks must have been fatal. by driving even 300 yards across Russell’s T o p they would place themselves in direct rear of the vital Anzac posts on the Second Ridge and would look down on North Beach. .I T h e details of this classic contest of marksmen are described 111 I’ol. II, p p 148 and 285-7 T h e snipers were organised first by Lieiit. T h4 P. Grace. N Z Mounted Rifles. later by Sgt F M Mach, Australian I.lght Hone. Periscopes also were no\\ manufactured on Anzac Beach. 132 29th J u n e - 1 z t h J u l y 1915] HOL1)ISG .AT ANZ.-\C Mustafa Kenial, who then cornrnarided this flank OE Essad Pasha’s Corps at Anzac, was not one to miss such a chance-and on the night of June 29th he attacked from T h e Nek, using a well-trained regiment, fresh from Constantinople. It was met by the dismounted 3rd Light Horse Brigade, partly in the new secretly tunnelled defences, and was defeated so disastrously that the attempt was never repeated. Instead the Turks continued to furrow the wide brow of Baby 700 with line after line of trenches barring the way up the main ridge, and fighting went on underground in the deeper tunnels with which each side tried to undermine the other. T h e British and French a t the toe of the Peninsula made little progress in their attempts to push to .\chi Baba by means of artillery support. O n June dth, June 2 ist, June 28th and July 12th major attacks were launched by the British or French or both. I n most of these desperate efforts the attacking troops, after a first success, were left with only one line of Turkish trench, or part of it, in their hands. This fighting had some \slue; the repeated counter-attacks by the T u r k s after June 4th arid 2 1st are said to have cost them 25,000 men, and, at a time when Hamilton had other plans maturing. the Turkish leaders were induced to believe that Helles was the danger point-but at a cost to the British which gl-ie\ously affected the later efforts. During these operations the .Anzac staff tried to tie the local Turkish reserves to .Anzac by numerous “demoii~tratioii~”. These ranged from actual attacks, and difficult. costly sorties against the enemy’s parapet or a crater in no-inan’s-land, down to sham concentrations in which a platoon or two with bayonets showing above the parapets ran like stage soldiers round and round a circuit in the trenches to give the appearance of a battalion assembling to attack; this last method was possibly the most effective. T h e heavy work, monotonous diet, and widespread infection-of which the main carriers, the swarms of flies, ANZAC T O AMIENS Dune-July 1915 were insuficiently recognised-were straining the troops. Undoubtedly immense casualties were averted through the men’s previous inoculation for typhoid, but diarrhoea, dysentery and paratyphoid attacked thousands. Only serious cases were evacuated-or were willing to be evacuated. T h e rest struggled on, gaunt and weakened, infecting others, sometimes even fainting at their posts, but indomitably eager. Their uniform was like no other in the war, any degree of undress being sufficient for the men6 and allowed by their officers. Half-naked, they dug, tunnelled, carried food, water, and ammunition up the dusty, precipitous tracks, swept their trenches free of refuse, or patiently searched their clothes for the vermin that nightly plagued them. Occasionally a visit to the beach gave even men from the front line the chance of a bathe from the piers and the crowded shingle. Men whose duty was on or near the beach bathed daily-and when they had this opportunity intermittent shrapnel could never keep them long out of the water. Life at Anzac-as at Tobruk in the Second World War-differed from experience on the main fronts in that the troops were nowhere away from shellfire and had practically no chance of rest in peaceful conditions. In the gullies where most of them lived, immediately behind the front line, they were plagued, part of the time, by Turkish rocket bombs (sometimes known as broomstick bombs) arriving with a loud hiss and a bang. T h e Turks even used a few spherical iron shells from old-time mortars-the Anzacs had their four good Japanese trench mortars, others improvised in Egypt with metal tubing, and also catapults resembling crossbows. It is true that some battalions were taken, one at a time, to Imbros Island, eleven miles away, but at this stage the rest was only for 3-6 days. Until late in the campaign no regular canteen and no Red Cross stores 5Sce Wallace Anderson’s figure of “Anzac” in the War Memorial. Canberra. 134 Apr.-July 19151 HOLDING A T ANZAC reached Anzac. T h e Australian mail, which came fortnightly, and the more frequent English mail, brought news for which men hungered; the very rare sight of an aeroplane, British or German, or the spectacle of a warship bombarding, were the chieE other excitements. T h e nights were pestilential with fleas and, in the trenches, lice, for which n o delousing apparatus existed at Anzac. A few dentists-mostly unearthed from the fighting ranks -tried to meet the hundreds of dental troubles for most OE which, however, incn were either not treated or were sent to Alexandria, against their will. By the end of July, of 25,000 men a t Anzac, 2 0 0 were being sent away sick each day. In Egypt the Australian hospitals, though immensely expanded since the Landing, were overcrowded and their staffs at Limes worked almost to exhaustion. Anzac Beach was a sight perhaps never before seen in modern war-a crowded, busy base within half a mile of the centre of the front line; and that strongly marked and definite entity, the Anzac tradition, had, from the first morning, been partly created there. From the moment of launching the campaign it was the resolve of those Australian soldiers who would usually be regarded as noncombatants to show themselves not a hairsbreadth behind the combatants in hardihood. Wherever a call went up for “stretcher-bearers” the coinpany bearers would as a matter of course try to reach it. T h e first time the writer heard that call, amid the whine OE bullets on a n exposed slope on April 25th, two men instantly rose, pipe in inouth, stretcher on shoulder, and sauntered casually in the direction of the voice-a doubtless intentional example to the crouching infantry around them. Later one bearer, Private Sinipson-his civil name was K irkpatrick-annexed one of the donkeys (landed to take water u p the hills but never so used) and for three weeks tarried on it down Monash and Shrapnel valleys men [Apr.-July 1915 ANZAC T O AMlENS wounded in the legs. As well as the sniping, the shelling of this route by shrapnel from the south was sometimes severe, and on May 19th a burst of it killed him and his patient. Another bearer,” who was seen to pass, without stopping, under a shrapnel burst, carried his patient to the dressing tent, sat quietly in the waiting ranks for the doctor to come to him, and fell dead without having mentioned his wound. T h e “beach parties” under an old -4nglo-.\merican soldier, Captain C. A . Littler, and the naval men who also helped in the landing of men and stores, carried on under almost any fire. Even the military offenders, set on the open decks of the water barges to pump water into the tanks on the Beach, were too proud to turn their heads when shells burst over them. Part of the tradition set, a t the Landing on Anzac Beach, by all hands, from naval landing officer to private, from Birdwood to the youngest reinforcement, was-to carry on under shellfire completely heedless, as i f the shrapnel was a summer shower. Within a week visitors were arriving a t An7ac to see this sight. Not long afterwards several heavy boinbardments froin Turkish batteries (afterwards known as “Beachy Rill”), eniplacecl a1 the “Olive Grove” on the Hats beyoncl the right flank, I i i d e this procedure too costly to continue, and a battery near Anafarta on the northern flank later added a dangerous crossfire. T h e mule- and horse-lines had hurriedly to be nioved off the Beach into the gullies that opened on to it. T h e Turks had observation posts on both flanks-at Nibrunesi Point and Gaba Tepe-from both of which capes they could see part of the Reach. Yet these batteries never succeeded in stopping work or bathing for more than a short spell. T h e Anzac field-guns fought Homeric duels with the Olive Grove and Gaba T e p e batteries whenever these opened fire. T h e piles of stores and ammunition and the 6 L.-Cpl G . T Hill. captain of P Sydney swimming club. 136 dressing stations remained on the Beach froiii first to last, with Birdwood's and other headquarters 011 the slope close above them. No craft larger than a picket boat co~ilclby dayliglii safely approach Watson's Pier or the c ~ ~ h jetties er built by the Anzacs-shells from the Olive Grove would at once fall on or around theni with unfailing accuracy; and from May 13th the subniarine threat had driven away all craft that used to anchor in the offing except the two destroyers always watching the flanks, a few small craft, and the white hospital ship which, relieved every few days by a sister ship, used to lie there, a beautiful thing ivith her bright motionless lights a t night, and the blazing Aegean sky and sunsets, and clustered mountain tops of Imbros and Samothrace, as her background by day. N o Turkish shot or German torpedo ever threatened her.' From the first, Generals Birdwood and Bridges wished to be rid of the nuisance afforded by the presence of Turkish observers on the projecting capes on either Hank. Accordingly on Ala) 4th an atteinpt was made by about 1 0 0 ineii under Major Kay Leane of the 1 1 th Battalion to seize or raid the promontory of Gaba Tepe. They were landed from desLroyers on its beach, but were at once pinned to the bank there by a whirlwind of fire from its crorvded Nibrunes/ 1 trenches. They wei e iiiosi 2 Miles bravely taken off again b \ the Navy in boats under coier of vicious boiiibaidmeiit 7 It macle !\as on he] dethI [ l i n t \romen-iiirluding onl\ al)pioacIi t o \n7at tlicii 137 a fen 4 i i s r r ~ l 1 . 1 1i1i u r w s - [Apr.-May 1915 ANZAC T O AMIENS from the destroyers’ guns.* This southern flank of the Anzac position was explored in the early days by some Tasmanians, who passed round thc Turkish flank and spent a night and day on the T h i r d Ridge close behind the Turks; but when they tried with Major Blainey to repeat this achievement they ran into a Turkish patrol and sentry line, and after a rough and tumble fight withdrew. T h e southern flank had thus been closed by the Turks; but any danger of their attacking from there was offset by two facts: first, the valleys and ridges there could be raked by naval fire; and though on May 25th the battleship Triumph was torpedoed and sunk off Gaba Tepe in full view of the Anzac lines, warships would always come if urgently required, and daily (and nightly with its searchlight) a destroyer kept watch oif each flank. Second, from mid-June the 2nd Light Horse Brigade, dismounted, under its stout-hearted leader, Brig.-General G. de I,. Rvrie, carried out with the neighbouring infantry an asionishing extension of the defences on to the neighbouring “Holly Ridge”, and from that time, with these troops in such positions, Birdwood never had any anxiety as to this flank. North of Anzac the Turkish observation post at Nibrunesi Point (Suvla Bay) was, as already mentioned, raided and temporarily destroyed. On that flank the spurs of the main range were so steep and sheer that the Turkish Corps Conimnntler, Essad Pasha, hardly troubled to hold them. Here the lowei ends of two spurs north and south of Fisherman’s Hut were occupied by New Zealanders on April jolh, and were named Nos. 1 and 2 Outposts. Scouts of the New Zealand Mounted Rifles found they could work u p the wild gullies north of these. Major 8 About .I t l i i i i l . induiliiig Leane, \\ere hit Four men got back to A n r x along the l ~ ~ . i d iwatliiig , i ~ i i i i d the ‘1 iirkisli \bile. ’l’wo mole, isolated .lid left beliiiid. \ \ e i e gall~ntly irscucll by iiaval lion1 T h e ‘rttrhs (lid not h l c !\lien rlie \\oiiiitIrtl \ \ v i r Iwiiig helped to the I x ~ n t See Y u l . I , p p 558-61. 138 May 19151 HOLDING A T ANZAC Overton crept up part of the main spur, Rhododendron, almost to Chunuk Bair, and Lieut. Blackett, landing from a trawler beyond Suvla Bay watched from the "W" Hills one of the Anafarta batteries while he munched his sandwiches." Also, into No. 2 Post there found their way some Greek villagers from the north who said the couniry was almost empty of Turkish troops. Birdwood's chief ol staff, Brig.-General Skeen, a tall, brave, highly educated Anglo-Indian soldier, leapt at the prospect of a way out of the Gallipoli deadlock-the Anzacs, reinforced by Gurkhas and others, were just the kind of troops who could storm by night u p the valleys north OE Anzac and thus seize the summits of the main range. Possibly through the activity of the New Zealand scouts, the Turks began to place additioxlal or sirongei posts on these ridges. Birdwood and Skceii, herefore. decided to lull their opponents into false security by showing no activity on this northern flank. Unfortunately, without their authority the nearest Turkish post, 400 yards above No. 2, was seized by the New Zealand Mounted Rifles on the night of hlay 28th. It was to be converted into a "No. 3" Post; but from dawn next day Turkish snipers in the wild country around prevented all digging, arid on the following night a body of the eneriry cut off and re-took the post, its garrison being saved by a gallant sortie from No. 2 post. I39 [May-June 1915 ANZAC T O AMIENS Although arter this the Turks placed extra posts 011 Lhe foothills and extended their trenches along part of the crest of the main range, Birdwood and Skeen were convinced that the Anzacs could break out here; they laid their plan before Hamilton on May 30th. He was a leader with the priceless quality of imagination and, after study, he accepted it with enthusiasm. Certain reinforcements, he knew, were coming to him. On May 14tl1, after the Battle of Krithia, the British governtnent had resolved frankly to face the position, and had inquired how many fresh divisions he needed in order to guarantee success. He had then asked for two ai ~ n y corps; each of two divisions, and full reiiiforcenients for the divisions already with him. After this answer a delay had occurred, due to the decision of the Liberal government, under hlr Asquith, t o strengtheii itself by forming a coalition w i t h the Chnscrvatives. At last, o n June 7th, largely through Rlr Churchill’s persuasion of Lord Kitchenel, the governiiient promised him three divisionslo-sorne of the first of the “New Army” raised by K itchener since the outbreak of war. T w o territorial divisions-one English and one Welsh-were afterwards :itltletl to these reinforcements. There was no space for all I hese divisions 011 the Penitisula bridgeheads, but Harniltoil intended LO receive them on neighbouriiig islands, Lmnnos, Imbros, Teneclos, and LO land then1 011 the Peninsula only wlien required, l\.hich now cotild not be before the beginning of August. While the costly attempts to “hamii~el-away” from Helles towards Achi Baba were still going on, the plans for this second great effort to s e i ~ ethe Peninsula and open the way for the fleet were completed. Hamilton decided to make the main effort from Anzac, and would use one New Army division ( 1 3th) and two detached brigades (one of them Indian) to reinforce the troops 10 A Sccillitli territorial ( l i t i \ i o n also. 52nd. h a d alredd\ lreen pronii\ed 140 HOLDlSG A T ANZAC June-July 19151 there; but, as a separate operation which would help the Anzac attempt, the IX Corps (10th and I I th New Army divisions) would be landed at Suvla Bav in the projecting flats four niiles north of Xnzac, and would try to seize the seiiiicircle of hills five miles inland of their landing place. Their chances were good since the whole area was occupied by only three Turkish battalions, and the Anzac attack should draw to itself most of the Turkish reserves. I n order to attract these reserves towards the south and away from the north, a feint attack u - o d d be made by the British at Cape Helles; and the ;lustralians at Anzac would seize the now strong Turkish position at Lone Pine, on the southern and bigger half OE the 400 Plateau. Immense labour was forthwith undertaken a t Anzac in making shelites for extra water tanks, hauling thein to position, installing pump and engine; preparing new ledges, slielters and other facilities to ‘recei1.e twenty battalions, ambulances, and hcadqtiai-ters, and rvidening the long trench to No. z Outpost in order to inahe a hidden road for the nightly convoy of mule carts By July all this work, together with the tunnelling of underground trenches ready for the coming feint a t Lone Pine and elsewhere, had aroused expectation among the Anzacs, arid leakage of information through coininande~s and clerks caused the troops gradtiall\ to ~ealiset h a t n second great attempt was impending On the tried, gaunt men who nine months before had left Australia and New Zealand with such enthusiasni a i d ivitli \,isions ot returning full of experience-as m a n y had done froin South Africa-to march through cheering crowds in their home towns, and regale their families wiih strange tales and “souvenirs”-on these troops this new realisation had a perceptible effect. On, many there dawned for the first tiine the fact that for them the prospect of retiirn \\’a\ vanishing. The vision was now one oE battle after battIe aftei 141 ANZAC T O AMIENS [July 19 15 battle. Men felt themselves to be between two long walls from which there seemed to be no turning except death, or disabling wounds. These feelings were rarely expressed; the tussle in each man’s mind as he faced the grim fact was a silent one. It could be guessed only from a certain quietness of demeanour or from an occasional remark. New battalions had been arriving in Egypt from AusLralia and were just then being formed there into a 2nd Australian Division. T h e men of the older ones at Anzac read in newspapers, brought by the mail, the current comment in Australia-that, whereas they themselves had joined the army largely through love of adventure, these new troops were enlisting from sober conviction. So the old ones, or their friends at home, labelled the new lot “ T h e Dinkum Australians”-the genuine breed. And at Anzac, when someone, referring to a feat of the I i t h Battalion, said: “Western Australia will be proud of this,” the instant answer was: “This! T h e 28th (the battalion last raised in Western Australia) will get the cheering for this!” T h e fond dream of the return home was silently surrendered by many without a word, or a sign in their letters. T h e ambitions of civil life had been given up; men’s keenness now was for the A.1.F.-for their regiinent, bat talion, coinpany-and for the credit of Australia. Not that these or other tried soldiers were at normal times eager for battle-in most men that enthusiasm was more than satisfied by such a fight as that of the Landing; whatever the newspapers might say, few men looked forward to a second such struggle without some underlying dread, varying with the character and experience of each man. Yet, as the hour for this and later offensives approached, there did come over iiiost Australian troopseven over the young infantry officers who knew that their chance of surviving three or four such battles was almost I42 gist July-6th Aug. 19151 HOLDING .4T ANZAC nil-a keenness to make another stroke for the Allies’ success. They had set their hand to this contest; they could see no hope for the future happiness, or perhaps existence, of their nation if they failed. T h e war had to be carried through to victory-that it would end victoriously not one Anzac in a hundred doubted; indeedexcept in the worst days in France-each fresh Allied offensive was approached with glowing hopes of breaking through. A few more days, it seemed, would find the Army pushing through into previously untouched country and a campaign of swift movement would open. So, as the appointed day, August 6th, drew near, and young British troops1’ in their pith helmets and cotton irnifornis began to land by night and camp on the ledges, the Anzac sick parades diminished; men already evacuated tricd to “desert” back from ship, hospital or base; and few of the thin, much-tried garrison doubted that one more hard fight would bring them into control of the Narrows. A week before riiaking this great second attempt General Birdwood had an opportunity of further attracting Turkish attention to his southern flank. T h e Turks tried to establish a position on a subsidiary spur there, Holly Ridge, on to which the Light Horse and Tasiiianians had extended their trenches. On the night of July gist parties oE the I ith Battalion under Major Ray Leane, after a n explosion of mines, seized by a determined attack the trench newly made by the enemy along the other edge of the spur. At dawn on August 6th-the very day on which the great offensive was later to beginthe Turks, counter-attacking by surprise, retook part of the position (now known as Leane’s Trench). But in the following hours by several brave counter-rushes i t waq cleared of them. By this date the German commander, Liman von ANZAC; T O AMIENS [gist July-5th Aug. 1915 Sanders, had heard from Salonica runlours that a new offensive was coming in Gallipoli, but he did not know where. From J d y 3 1st to August 5th he sent out German airmen daily over Anzac, sometimes in the early t l a w i . Scvcixl tiiiies hey dropped bombs on Quinii’s Post and near oilier positioiis. There were then no anti-aircratt guns at Anzac to drive them away but they flew high a i d apparently obscrved no important changes.’? .- Earliei i t ~~ l i ecampaign an cnemv Jeroplane llatl droppcd showers of stnall sIeel d.irts, the siLe of pencil5 ‘rlic) did n o Ii.iiin .IC Anzac At dairn on August 7 t h a Gerninii airinan tried to attack the balloon of the Afatirca, which was off Callipoli that d3y, the German turned back o n the appearance of two Drltlsh marhines. 12 144