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E-grāmata: At War with the 16th Irish Division, 1914-1918: The Staniforth Letters

  • Formāts: 272 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 19-Dec-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Pen & Sword Military
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781783032099
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  • Cena: 4,25 €*
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  • Formāts: 272 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 19-Dec-2012
  • Izdevniecība: Pen & Sword Military
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781783032099

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The letters of John 'Max' Staniforth are among the most perceptive, graphic and evocative personal records of a soldier's life to have come down to us from the Great War. They cover his entire wartime career with the 16th (Irish) Division, from his enlistment in 1914 till the armistice, and they have never been published before.rnrnFrom his first days in the army, Staniforth wrote fluent, descriptive weekly letters to his parents and, in doing so, he created a fascinating record of his experiences and those of the men around him. When the division arrived on the Western Front in 1915, he related his impressions in detail, and went on to give an unflinching account of the drama and the cruelty - and the gruelling routine - of trench warfare. After he was gassed in 1918, he wrote about his feelings and the treatment he received just as thoroughly as he did about every other aspect of the conflict.rnrnA striking aspect of the letters is that Staniforth enlisted as a private soldier and went through the training of the ordinary recruit before rising through the ranks. The letters also show how the Irish division was influenced by the turmoil of contemporary politics in Ireland.
Editor's Introduction vii
Author's Foreword xi
Abbreviations xiii
List of Illustrations
xv
1 `A fearful mutiny': Training in the Ranks, October to November 1914
1(18)
2 `The time of my life': Order and Orders, November 1914 to March 1915
19(14)
3 `Thrills enough to satisfy the most reckless glory-hunters': Signals Training, April to September 1915
33(19)
4 `The sun slipping west over the snowy fields': England, September to December 1915
52(11)
5 `Greyish ashen squalor of filthy humanity': First Impressions of Trenches, December 1915 to February 1916
63(20)
6 `Covered with fresh blood': Cambrin, February to March 1916
83(11)
7 `I've had miraculous escapes': Puits 14 Bis and Hulluch, March to May 1916
94(16)
8 `We were all quite mad': Raiding, June to August 1916
110(9)
9 `Sitting in pyjamas in the sun': Hospital, August 1916
119(5)
10 `One continuous ear-splitting roar': The Somme, September 1916
124(8)
11 `A nest of Sinn Feinery': Limerick, March to April 1917
132(7)
12 `Worse than the Somme!!': Passchendaele, June to August 1917
139(27)
13 `The milk and whiskey are blocks of ice': Cambrai and Paperwork, August 1917 to January 1918
166(14)
14 `The Division has ceased to exist': Disbandment and the German Spring Offensive, February to April 1918
180(14)
15 `Keeping on keeping on': The 2nd Leinsters, May 1918
194(17)
16 `A "blighty one" at last!' Gassed, May to June 1918
211(11)
17 `A roaring, surging wave of sound': Portsmouth and Peace, August 1918 to April 1919
222(10)
Further Reading 232(2)
Appendix 234(1)
Acknowledgements 235(2)
Notes 237(14)
Index 251