In
March this year, before we left home we booked
two
tours of Flanders Fields. Today we took the first of them.
The
Ypres Salient was the curved Front Line which formed
around
the city of Ypres in the First World war.
The grave of Valentine Strudwick.
Our
first stop was Essex Farm Cemetery,
to
the north of Ypres, not far from the Yser Canal,
which
actually formed the front line
in
this part of the salient between April 1915 and August 1917.
We
visited the concrete buildings used as dressing stations,
(the
most forward of the army's medical facilities)
this
station was just behind the front line for a long period of time.
Many
soldiers could not be saved and the haphazard burial patterns in the
cemetery, made under the constant threat of shellfire,
brought
home the extremely difficult and
dangerous
conditions in which the medical services worked.
It
was here that John McCrae wrote his poem
In
Flanders Fields
while
serving with the Canadian Medical Corps.
In
Flanders Fields the poppies blow
Between
the crosses, row on row.
That
mark our place; and in the sky
The
larks, still singing, fly
Scarce
hid among the guns below.
We
are the dead. Short days ago
We
lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow.
Loved
and were loved. And now we lie
In
Flanders Fields.
Take
up our quarrel with the foe
To
you from failing hands we throw
The
torch, be yours to hold in high
If
ye break faith with us who die
We
shall not sleep, though poppies grow
In
Flanders Fields
The
grave in the first photo today
is
the most visited in the cemetery.
The
soldiers first name was Valentine,
he
was born on Valentine's day,
and
was only 15 years old when he died,
2
days before his 16th birthday.
…..............................................................................................
Langemarck
German Cemetery
44,000
soldiers are buried there.
25,000
soldiers are buried in a mass grave in this area.
Their
bodies were exhumed from
other
cemeteries in Belgium.
Adolf
Hitler visited in June 1940.
A
new addition to the cemetery is this group of poppies
made
by the people of Ypres. There is one white poppy
to
remind us of the soldiers who were killed as a result of friendly
fire.
…..........................................................................................................
Tyne
Cot Cemetery – Zonnebeke, Belgium
With
nearly 12,000 graves it is now the largest Commonwealth
war
cemetery in the world in terms of burials.
More
than 8,000 are unidentified.
At
the suggestion of King George V,
who
visited the cemetery in 1922,
the
cross of sacrifice was placed on the original blockhouse.
You
can see the blockhouse wall behind this wreath.
The
inscription relates the fact that the bunker and surrounding area was
captured by the 3rd Australian Division on 4 October 1917.
In
the countryside surrounding Tyne Cot the battle of Passchendaele was
fought. In the mud of Passchendaele, in the month of October 1917
alone, 6673 AIF soldiers were killed.
…...........................................................................................
Last
stop for the day was Hill 62.
The
hill is 62 metres above sea level and the
museum
houses an amazing array of
artifacts
found in the area and
features
a large area of reconstructed trenches.
…...........................................................................................
Some
other things we learnt today...
The
road the soldiers walked along from Ypres to the Salient
was
often under enemy fire. In particular one section
where
there was a bend in the road, was very dangerous
and
named Hellfire Corner by the soldiers.
German artillery was always aimed at this spot.
Today
there is a roundabout there.
…........................................................................
Rudyard
Kipling's son, John, was very keen to join the British
war
effort in 1914. Barred from the navy because of his poor eyesight,
John
used his father's connections to get a commission in the infantry,
in
the 2nd Battalion, Irish Guards.
He
arrived in France on 17 August 1915 - his 18th birthday
-
and six weeks later was sent to the Battle of Loos.
On
27 September, John's battalion was ordered
to
cross open ground and head towards Chalk Pit Wood.
They
dug in opposite the Germans and faced brutal machine gun fire.
Sometime in the next hour John disappeared.
John
Kipling's body was not found.
Rudyard
Kipling spent four years searching for his lost son.
He
tracked down men from John's battalion and quizzed them.
He
wrote to the most senior military figures he knew,
and
asked the Red Cross to investigate.
In
June 1919 Kipling wrote a letter to the Army,
accepting
that his son was most probably dead.
"It
is one of the great ironies that Kipling should have been
the
person to select the phrase 'known unto God'
for
all unknown soldiers,
and
then not know what happened to his own son,"
says
Phillip Mallett, author of Kipling: A Literary Life.
Kipling
worked with Winston Churchill
to
ensure that all gravestones were the same shape and size,
regardless
of military rank.
The
long lines of matching gravestones lining war cemeteries
are
their legacy.
…..................................................................................
We
went for a walk after dinner and Andrew took
these
photos.












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