Backs to the Wall: A Larrikin on the Western Front
By G. D. Mitchell and Robert Macklin
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Backs to the Wall - G. D. Mitchell
BACKS
TO THE WALL
G.D. Mitchell on the Western Front, 1917,
just before he won the Military Cross
G. D. MITCHELL
INTRODUCED BY ROBERT MACKLIN
BACKS
TO THE WALL
A larrikin on the Western Front
First published in 2007
Backs to the Wall copyright © G.D. Mitchell 1937
All other text copyright © Robert Macklin 2007
All attempts have been made to locate the owner of this copyright material. If you have any information in that regard please contact the publisher at the address below.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publisher. The Australian Copyright Act 1968 (the Act) allows a maximum of one chapter or 10 per cent of this book, whichever is the greater, to be photocopied by any educational institution for its educational purposes provided that the educational institution (or body that administers it) has given a remuneration notice to Copyright Agency Limited (CAL) under the Act.
Allen & Unwin
83 Alexander Street
Crows Nest NSW 2065
Australia
Phone: (61 2) 8425 0100
Fax: (61 2) 9906 2218
Email: [email protected]
Web: www.allenandunwin.com
National Library of Australia
Cataloguing-in-Publication entry:
Mitchell, G. D. (George Deane), 1894-61.
Backs to the wall : a larrikin on the Western Front.
ISBN 978 1 74175 205 2.
1. Mitchell, G. D. (George Deane), 1894-61. 2. World War, 1914-1918 - Campaigns - Western Front - Personal narratives, Australian. I. Macklin, Robert, 1941- . II. Title.
940.4144
Text design by Kirby Stalgis
Set in 10.5/13 pt Adobe Garamond by Midland Typesetters, Australia
Printed in Australia by McPherson’s Printing Group
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Contents
Preface
Introduction
1. To sunny France
2. The Somme
3. The mud
4. The great frost
5. Utmost test
6. Rustle of spring
7. Moving up
8. Bullecourt
9. Lull in the storm
10. Back to Flanders
11. Messines
12. Daylight patrol
13. Relieved
14. Joyous interlude
15. Backs to the wall
16. The Vin Blanc sector
17. Monument Wood and an unofficial armistice
18. Slaves of the trenches
19. Last turn in static warfare
20. Front stalls for a battle
21. Proud command
22. The great silence
Afterword
Endnotes
Preface
While researching my biography of Albert Jacka, the quintessential Australian hero of World War I, I found myself continually stumbling upon references to George Deane Mitchell, an Anzac whose words had the power to capture the sweep of history or the horror of combat in a single, indelible phrase. He leapt from the pages of Bill Gammage’s classic work The Broken Years through the diaries he kept at Gallipoli. As the carnage began, with Mitch and his mates in the 10th Battalion preparing to charge into the teeth of the Turkish guns, he wrote: ‘We rejoiced as we gripped our rifles. The long waiting should be terminated in one last glorious dash, for our last we knew it should be, for no man could live erect in that tornado for many seconds.’¹
The order to charge never came. Mitch survived Gallipoli; indeed he survived the war on the Western Front, and all along he kept one of the most remarkable diaries in military history. For many hours at the Australian War Memorial I leafed through the grubby pages with their tens of thousands of rough-hewn words, their big bold letters perfectly legible in pencil, written as he awaited yet another German barrage or slumped in nervous exhaustion behind the lines.
They are a national treasure. They form the basis of the book he wrote many years later and published in 1937 as Backs to the Wall, the title an indicator of the fierceness of the struggle in France and Belgium against the advancing Germans.²
The timing of its publication could hardly have been more inopportune. World War I was history; the struggle for Empire no longer set the colonial pulse racing. On the contrary, in the interim the Great Depression had ravaged the country and many blamed the British for its worst excesses. Besides, the promise of the League of Nations and a mood of accommodation and demilitarisation had swept through the parliaments of the democracies. No one wanted to revisit the horror of the Somme and the Hindenburg Line. The result was that the book quickly faded into obscurity.
But when I found a rare copy of the hardback—at a time when the deadline for my own book was pressing—I was instantly captured and held by the power of the writing and the raw, uncompromising honesty of the author. Jacka VC was put aside until I had finished it. For it is the most powerful account of war in all its obscenity, its futility, its madness and its wild camaraderie that I have read.
Mitch went on to command a company of volunteers in World War II known as ‘Mitchell’s Maniacs’. It was a remarkable group that contained such conservative bastions of later years as Corporal Ninian Stephen, who would become Governor-General of Australia, Captain Nigel Bowen, later Commonwealth Attorney-General and Chief Justice of the Federal Court, and Captain Frank Packer, a media tycoon in the making. The afterword covers Mitch’s remarkable adventures with his units in the Western Australian outback and in New Guinea.
I would particularly like to thank Bill Gammage for his assistance and Anthony Staunton for his guidance in developing the project. Major-General Professor John Pearn, author of Watermen at War (among many other distinguished works) was very generous in granting his permission—albeit to a fellow Brisbane Grammarian—to quote from the book that details Mitch’s World War II military career. He was also most helpful in providing leads for additional research. In this respect, my thanks to former ‘watermen’ Ken Telfer and Don Hacker.
I am indebted, once again, to the staff of the Australian War Memorial, the National Archives of Australia, the National Library, my publisher Ian Bowring, and particularly to my editor Angela Handley, the calm comptroller within the eye of the storm.
Robert Macklin
Canberra, 2007
Introduction
Backs to the Wall was George Deane Mitchell’s first published work, which he began writing in the mid-1930s. It opens only after the disaster of Gallipoli, probably because Mitch spent only three of the eight horrific months on the peninsula with his fellow Anzacs.
By contrast, he fought through the nightmare of the Western Front from 1916, after the AIF was blooded at Pozières until the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month of 1918, and it is these years that form the basis of Backs to the Wall.
However, he chronicled his war from the time his small boat approached Anzac Cove on the morning of 25 April 1915 and the power of his observation and his prose is captured for all time. Until then he had known only the flat horizons of the Australian countryside and the imperial patriotism of its citizenry. The experience he was about to undergo would change him utterly.
Mitch was born in Caltowie, a small town in South Australia’s farmland east of Port Pirie, on 30 August 1894. His father—also George—was a humble railway porter at the town’s station, at the junction of the lines heading north and west from Victoria and New South Wales. Mitch’s early schooldays were spent there and as a teenager he struck out for Adelaide where, at the outbreak of war at the beginning of August 1914 he was a 20-year-old clerk.
On 6 August the Australian Government offered to send an expeditionary force of 20,000 men to Europe in the form of an infantry division and a light horse brigade. The division would be representative of all Australian states and by 10 August recruiting had commenced in Adelaide with Colonel Stanley Price Weir in command of the 10th Battalion.¹
Mitch joined up on 5 September at the Adelaide suburb of Thebarton. The battalion was in full training in a camp at nearby Morphettville, an 80-acre farm beside the famous racetrack. Mitch had enlisted earlier in the 76th Infantry battalion of the local militia so when he joined the AIF he carried with him the rank of corporal.
By now uniforms, rifles and kits were arriving and musketry practice was undertaken in the sandhills north-west of the camp. Regular route marches took them through the suburb of Glenelg, where they swam in the ocean and returned to the applause of the locals. The governor-general, Sir Ronald Munro Ferguson, inspected the troops and addressed the assembly. ‘The whole future of the Empire depends upon the defeat of a strong, arrogant and unscrupulous foe,’ he said. ‘The fate of free institutions is in the balance against military tyranny.’²
However, he declared, prospects were good. ‘You will find when you reach the front a high standard of personal leadership and of efficient organisation,’ he said. ‘You will find that we have got the generals, we have got the troops, and we shall have the victory.’
The commander of the 1st Division, General William Bridges, accompanied the vice-regal party and confided his own assessment to the local press. ‘I am more than pleased with the show put up by the South Australian contingent today,’ he said. ‘I think they will uphold the reputation held by corps from the Mother Country.’
A week later came the first route march through the city of Adelaide by all AIF troops training at Morphettville. Government offices were closed and the governor of South Australia, Sir Henry Galway, took the salute as 2193 men and 725 horses paraded past Parliament House. The crowds cheered and the soldiers responded with military vigour and discipline. The governor handed over the blue and gold regimental flag designed by a committee of prominent Adelaide matrons. ‘I know every man will do his utmost to guard and keep it clean,’ he said. ‘It should be carried high, upholding those traditions which have made the British Empire. I trust you will all return with peace in your helmets [sic] and victory in your eyes.’³
The troops responded dutifully. However, once they reached the outskirts of town they fell upon the free beer supplied by Landlord Tolley at his Half-Way House on Bay Road.
Finally on 19 October the men packed their kitbags and first thing next morning the battalion boarded the train for the Outer Harbour of Port Adelaide. The 10th was ready for the fray. According to Colonel Weir, ‘My men are second to none and my officers are of the first water.’⁴
They embarked on HMAT Ascanius and at 4.30 p.m., after an emotional speech by Sir Henry Galway, the ship pulled away from the docks. According to the battalion war diary, ‘Many of the men of the 10th looked towards the Adelaide Hills for the last time, some with feelings of hope that they would eventually return; but the die in the great game had been cast, and some never returned, and on that occasion viewed their native hills with leave-taking recollections.’⁵
Their destination was Britain, the heart of empire, where they would train for the terrible conflict underway in Europe. The Germans had swept through Belgium and were threatening Paris. The British Expeditionary Force was on the Continent fighting to halt the seemingly implacable advance while the French armies to the south, seeking to drive through Alsace and Lorraine to the heart of Germany, had been stopped in their tracks. The need for new blood was urgent.
Meantime, Mitch and his mates were giving evidence of the larrikin nature that bubbled just beneath the surface of the Australian volunteers. When the Ascanius berthed in Fremantle on 25 October two companies were granted leave and immediately began to take Perth apart. After two days all further shore leave was cancelled. When the Ascanius departed on 2 November two men were still missing.
On board, the officers were issued with textbooks on the French, German and Austro-Hungarian armies, notes on the military geography of France and Belgium, notes on night operations in Europe and a glossary of English, French and German military terms. Soon afterwards they joined a convoy of ships emanating from other Australian ports and for a time were escorted by the allied Japanese cruiser Ibuki.
A few days later they watched as the HMAS Sydney gave chase to the German raider Emden and cheered when the message from the Sydney was relayed: ‘Emden beached and done for.’
Shortly after leaving Colombo (where all shore leave remained cancelled) the Ascanius accidentally rammed another convoy vessel, the Shropshire, and Mitch, along with the other members of his company, was hurled out of his hammock. The hull of the Ascanius was badly torn and the commander of the Hampshire, who inspected the damage, bellowed through his bullhorn to the Ascanius’s captain: ‘In my whole career of navigation I have never seen anything so careless. You are not fit to be in charge of a ferry boat.’⁶ However, the ship was sufficiently watertight to continue and reached Aden for repairs on 26 November.
The colonel of the Australian Light Horse Brigade, Harry Chauvel, had gone ahead to inspect the training facilities in Britain and pronounced them overcrowded and inadequate. So, on his recommendation both the 1st Division under General William Bridges, the former commandant of Duntroon, and his own Light Horse were to be diverted to Egypt, which was under the control of the British Government. The Australians would combine with the New Zealanders to form a corps under the British general, William Riddell Birdwood, and would travel to the Western Front from there.
At 7 a.m. on 5 December the Ascanius arrived at Alexandria and over the next two days the men disembarked and entrained for Cairo and Mena camp, set up in the shadow of the great pyramids. By now Mitch had somehow contrived to lose both stripes and then to be reinstated as a lance corporal. It was a pattern that would be repeated several times over the next few months during a training regime conducted in the shit, sand, sin and syphilis of Egypt, well before he confronted the hellfire of Gallipoli.
There was something about military discipline that rankled with Mitch, and his adventures in Cairo’s red light area, Haret el Wasser—which the Australians immediately nicknamed ‘the Wozzer’—were fairly typical. After a few drinks, he and his mates hired donkeys from the locals and raced them down the narrow lanes with little regard for the trinket vendors’ displays on either side. They gambled and fought, laughed and sang their raucous ballads. They went out of their way to ignore the British officers, who took umbrage at these uncouth colonial upstarts when they doggedly refused to salute.
But at the same time they trained hard and by the end of January they were routinely handling extended marches across the desert sands in full kit. Mitch was now in C Company and on one such occasion his platoon, under the command of Scottishborn Lieutenant ‘Jock’ Hamilton, was reprimanded for talking too much. As punishment the company commander, Captain Robert Jacob, ordered Hamilton to take the platoon further into the sand dunes. However, neither the platoon commander nor Mitch and his mates were impressed by this and they simply marched till they were out of sight, halted and broke out the rations. Hamilton said, ‘Gentlemen, today you dine with me.’⁷ In due course they marched back to Mena camp where they were dubbed ‘The Lost Platoon’ much to their delight and the chagrin of the company commander.
Then in February came news that instead of proceeding to the Western Front, the Australians and New Zealanders would become part of an assault on the straits of the Dardanelles designed to knock Turkey out of the war. The Gallipoli campaign—the brainchild of Winston Churchill as First Lord of the Admiralty—was initially planned as a naval exercise in which Britain’s Mediterranean fleet would crash through the Turkish defences and sail up the Sea of Marmara to Constantinople. With their capital under British guns the Turks would soon capitulate. The British, Australian and French troops would ‘mop up’ any resistance on their triumphal march to the heart of the tottering Ottoman Empire.
Suitably reinforced, the troops would then surge through the Balkans to overwhelm Germany’s Austro-Hungarian allies. The Germans would be surrounded and victory for the Entente would follow as day followed night.
However, Churchill’s plans went seriously awry when, on 18 March, the fleet under Britain’s Admiral de Robeck was not just repulsed by the Turkish guns and mines, it was seriously crippled. By the end of the day 700 Allied lives were lost and three ships sunk. De Robeck had no stomach for a second assault and the emphasis of the campaign turned towards a massed landing of troops under the command of the British general Ian Hamilton, whose battlefield experience until this point had been confined to Indian and South African skirmishes. Both he and his forces were woefully under-prepared for the mission at hand.
The plan was to attack on a wide front, with the French providing a diversion on the southern side of the Dardanelles, the main British forces striking at the northern tip and the Anzacs under General Birdwood attacking further up the peninsula. It was not a good plan. The front was far too wide and the expedition’s most potent strike force, the Anzacs, were to be landed in an area that could hardly have been more favourable to the defenders. Moreover the Turks, under the German general Liman von Sanders, were waiting for them.
Meanwhile, Mitch’s 10th Battalion arrived at Lemnos Island just out from the Gallipoli peninsula on 12 March and began practising landings and other battle exercises. Lieutenant Colonel Weir was impressed. ‘By Jove, my men are a good lot of fellows,’ he wrote. ‘[They] are just longing to get under fire, although they must know that many of them will fall in the first scrap
, but it is the sporting instinct that leads them on, and I am quite sure they will give a good account of themselves.’⁸
The orders for the 10th Battalion arrived. As part of the 3rd Infantry Brigade of the 1st Division, they would serve as the landing or covering force for the invaders. General Hamilton sent a message to the troops: ‘Before us lies an adventure unprecedented in modern war. Together with our comrades of the Fleet, we are about to force a landing on an open beach, in the face of positions which have been vaunted by our enemy as impregnable. The landing will be made good by help of God and the Navy. The positions will be stormed, and the war will be brought one step nearer to a glorious close. The whole world will be watching our progress. Let us prove ourselves worthy of the great feat of arms entrusted to us.’⁹
Birdwood’s orders were slightly more practical. ‘We are going to have a real hard and rough time of it,’ he said. ‘You must not waste [ammunition] by firing away indiscriminately at no target.’¹⁰
That would not be a problem. There would be plenty of targets—on both sides. Mitch opened his diary, ‘Here goes death or glory,’ he wrote. ‘So long all.’ But then, as he waited in his rowing boat to be towed towards the shore, a more complex response stirred him. ‘I think that every emotion was mixed,’ he wrote, ‘exultation predominating. We had come from the New World for the conquest of the Old.’¹¹
† † †
The landing was hellish. When Mitch and his company hit the narrow shoreline at about 10 a.m. it was under blistering fire. ‘Fierce we expected it to be,’ he wrote, ‘but fierce as it was we never dreamed.’ The dead and dying lay all about. He rushed forward into the low brush at the base of the cliffs that rose through gullies and blind alleys up towards a rim of fire from the Turkish gunners and riflemen.
‘All the time the snipers were at me,’ he wrote. ‘Not knowing where they were, it was impossible to use cover as one did not know on which side of it to get.
‘Then came another shock to the system—there was a weird shrieking note somewhere in the air which increased in volume every fraction of a second. It culminated in a deafening report and a cloud of smoke some 30 yards on my right and 30 feet high. Simultaneously there was a swishing sound as the bullets beat down bushes and swept the earth and a devilish scream as large pieces of the case spun through the air.’
Still he pressed forward. ‘Continually in my progress I came across groups of men all going ahead, but as our opinions differed as to the easiest route we were constantly split up.
‘After climbing a precipice I came upon the real meaning of war. A sturdy Australian lay on his face, congealing blood flowed from a ghastly wound in the head, streaking his face and forming a crimson pool. His flesh was the waxy colour I was to grow so familiar with. Lt Col Hallcombe stood by studying the situation ahead. He gave no heed to the dying soldier. All round our unprotected bodies the bullets thrashed through the barely concealing bushes.’
Mitch found a depression that gave some cover and dug further into the stony ground with his hands and bayonet. ‘We settled down to a musketry duel,’ he wrote later. ‘The men began to get hit. A terrible cry was wrenched from the bravest as the nickel demon ripped through flesh, bone, sinew . . . Alec Gilpin [was] fatally wounded in the stomach. All day he begged to be shot.’
Later, ‘No stretcher bearers could approach our position without being shot down. The wounded and dying had to lie in their own blood and ask for things they could not have. Some begged to be shot. Others asked their mates to load and pass the rifles so they could end themselves.’
The day dragged on endlessly. Colonel Weir described it in detail in the Battalion War Diary. ‘We had desperate fighting all day long, the shrapnel shell being very deadly, but our men were game and dug in for all they were worth with their entrenching tools.’¹²
In the front line, Mitch welcomed a newcomer. ‘One man dropped beside me laughing, ‘You’ve got yourself into the hottest corner you’ll ever strike.’ He fired a few shots and again I heard the sickening thud of a bullet. I looked at him in horror. The bullet had fearfully smashed his face and gone down his throat rendering him dumb. But his eyes were dreadful to behold. And how he squirmed in his agony.
‘There was nothing I could do for him but pray he might die swiftly. It took him about 20 minutes and by then he had tangled his legs in mine and stiffened. I saw the waxy colour creep over his cheeks and breathed freer.
‘I felt thirsty after that but not caring to deplete my water bottle so early in proceedings, I unhitched the dead man’s, had a long drink and passed it on. Between the incidents that occupied my attention I actually dozed.’
There was a brief respite when a British reconnaissance aircraft flew overhead and attracted the Turkish gunners. However, such was the intensity of the fusillade from the heights that the Anzacs realised the massive strength ranged against them. Their only consolation was that from the sea their own naval artillery was similarly alerted. Mitch wrote, ‘Every now and again above the fiendish din of battle came the WOOM-PAH at which ground, sea and sky seemed to get up and sit down again. It was Big Lissie¹³ arguing with her 15-inch toys. And when her shells landed—suffering sinner, they shifted a hill—arms, legs and other curios flying in all directions . . .’
According to the battalion’s war diary, ‘At 4pm the enemy fire died down under ship’s fire and spotting by aeroplane. At 6pm all were ordered to entrench and dig in for the night. All night counter-attacks and sniping by the enemy followed.’
Colonel Weir recorded in his diary, ‘The night was cold and rain fell but we never moved from the positions taken up on Sunday afternoon until Wednesday night and were under fire night and day during the whole of that time.’
By then, Mitch and his mates were utterly exhausted. Casualties included 13 officers and 453 other ranks. However, after two days’ spell on the beach they returned to the trenches.
In May they were transferred to the extreme right flank of the ANZAC position to relieve the 9th Battalion. They joined a raid on Gaba Tepe led by Captain R.L. Leane of the 11th Battalion. It was Mitch’s first association with the soldier who would play a pivotal role in his military career. The Turkish defenders retained the heights. On 5 May the battalion relieved the 11th, which took a well-deserved rest behind the lines.
Then on 19 May came the massive Turkish counter-attack designed to sweep the Anzacs back into the sea. Mitch and his mates in the 10th were in the thick of it. The heaviest fighting was at Quinn’s Post and nearby at Courtney’s Post¹⁴ where acting lance corporal Albert Jacka won the first Victoria Cross to be awarded to an Australian soldier in the war. A dozen Turks had hurled themselves into the Australian trenches and Jacka went in after them, shot five, bayoneted two and sent the remainder fleeing.
At Mitch’s trench to the right, ‘The Turks showered our [position] with bullets and their big guns played havoc. They rushed to within twenty yards but our lads mowed them down like grass.’¹⁵
According to Mitch, one Turk died on his knees about 25 metres from the trench line and remained in an upright position. Colonel Weir noted in his diary, ‘Capt. Nott would not believe it possible until he went up this morning and saw for himself.’
Mitch wrote, ‘All morning one of the heaviest bombardments that I have ever experienced has been raging. A pall of smoke from the bursting shells continuously hangs over this gully . . . there were terrific bursts of rifle fire, so loud was it that one had to yell into a man’s ear to make himself audible.
‘The Turks came up six and seven deep and every time were repulsed by our fire . . . just outside the opening trench were 12 men of the 10th—stark in death. Four of them were pals of mine and one belonged to my section: Glorious war.’
The anger and irony are clear. By now it was obvious that the Gallipoli expedition was not only ill-conceived and badly led, it had all the makings of a military disaster. Mitch’s contempt for ‘the heads’ who had put them in this position was growing. He was torn between his battlefield mateship and a powerful sense that they had been placed in an unwinnable position. According to historian Bill Gammage, Mitch was ‘a vain man, but a good soldier . . . whose outlook [typified] the irreverence and valour of the A.I.F. [He was] commended for bravery and fined or imprisoned for indiscipline with almost equal regularity.’¹⁶
On 25 May 1915 he copped his first combat ‘field punishment’—one day in irons—for being absent from duty. The punishment was ordered by Colonel Weir and once again, it seems, he lost his single lance corporal’s stripe.
By the end of May, dysentery was beginning to strike at the men who had been fighting for weeks in fetid conditions among the clouds of flies attracted by rotting corpses from both sides. Colonel Weir wrote, ‘Since 19 May the enemy has been very quiet—hasn’t made any fresh attacks. They continue to shell us every day, but with very little effect.’
June saw ‘the summer heat becoming oppressive, and flies existed in their countless millions.’¹⁷ The 10th Battalion was given the unenviable task of burrowing tunnels designed to undermine the Turkish trenches and blow them up while others were assigned to ‘digging parties’ to construct ‘Artillery Road’ up Shrapnel Valley.
This was not the kind of soldiering that appealed to Mitch. He was more interested