Tag Archives: German trenches

On this day 7th March 1915

On MARCH 7th at 5.30 p.m. we were under heavy shell and rifle fire.  I was put on snipers duty, at this time I was only 45 yards from the German sniper.  On our return the Germans were shelling the place we came through this place is called Ploegsteert, at this place churches and houses have been burnt down and shelled.

[1415 L/Cpl. Alfred Afford]

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7th March 1915. It is a Sunday. What a Sunday one never to be forgotten. We had the order at 5-00 a.m. to stand bye. We stood for an hour and then we began to fill sand bags to strengthen the trenches. As you passed certain places a bullet would come whizzing past your head into a tree nearby. That place would be marked by a sniper and had you stopped just in that place it would have meant that you would receive that bullet.

Soon after breakfast word came ‘stretcher bearers wanted’; a man had got killed with a sniper just behind us. He had been out since August. Hard lines half an hour after being killed he was buried. All the men worked just as though they were in ordinary times.

After dinner the order came down the line ‘At 3-30 p.m. the artillery on the left will begin to bombard German trenches, be ready for attack if necessary’. Exact to the minute the artillery began. What with the noise of the artillery, maxims and rifles it was something never to be forgotten.

When filling sandbags it was a common occurence to put your shovel into a dead German. In this wood on the 19th of December there were 2,000 casualties when the English drove the Germans out of the wood.

We left the trenches about 4-30. On our way through the wood we passed the English burial ground. It is a piece of ground railed round, full of graves with wooden crosses over the graves, all the graves being well cared far. A sight once seen never forgotten. On our way back to our billet we passed many graves by the road side. In the village of Ploegsteert which is just behind the wood, there were many houses wrecked by shell fire, the Church in particular. The roads here are in an awful state, for where the shells drop it leaves a great hole and you can’t tell there is a hole there because it is full of mud. When you drop up to the knees in mud you feel inclined to swear. We got back to our billets about 6 o’clock for a meal of bully beef and biscuits.

[2381 Pte. George Potter Bagshaw]

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The man killed on this day was 7420 L/Cpl. Henry Miller of the 1st Battalion Somerset Light Infantry.

7420 Henry Miller

Henry was from Chard in Somerset and was a pre War Regular who was stationed at Verne Citadel in Portland Weymouth in the 1911 Census.

On this day 14th December

Lieutenant Cyril George RADFORD was awarded the Military Cross for a trench raid carried out on the 4-5th November 1917.

“For gallantry and devotion to duty when in command go the Right Party in a raid on the German trenches N.W. of Loos during the night 4/5th November 1917, though severely wounded in the stomach at the start, he led his men to the final objective in the enemy second line. After much hard fighting in which several of the enemy were killed, he succeeded in capturing four prisoners. After the recall signal, though suffering severely from his wounds, he remained to see all the wounded safely brought back”.

On this day 4th October 1915

The Battalion was employed converting old German trenches west of Loos. 2549 Pte Albert Smith was killed during this duty, but his grave was not found after the War and he is commemorated on Loos Memorial.

Albert Smith was from Buxton and served with C Company.

smith