Remember Poem and Last Post

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Nov 112017
 

Remember Poem

by

Yorkshire Prose

ALL GAVE SOME, SOME GAVE ALL.

LEST WE FORGET  

ALL GAVE SOME, SOME GAVE ALL

A cap badge of honours on a beret of green,

One of the best sights, I’ve ever seen.

A rifle and sword, no bayonet in sight,

Weak at drill but strong in the fight.

The command of the bugle, played high on a hill,

Still through my body I feel the chill,

What makes them best? I hear people say,

They gave their tomorrow so you have today.

They are normal men at first glance,

But listen to their stories if given a chance,

As these Riflemen have seen it all

Fighting worldwide and seeing brothers fall.

So on the 11th hour, please have a thought,

For all the brave Riflemen that went and fought.

Lest we Forget

We will remember them all

Swift and Bold.

This picture was painted by Karl Hamilton-Cox who is a retired WO1(ASM)

Sourced from YOU TUBE and Face Book 

 

Treaty of Wallingford

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Oct 292017
 

Ruins of Wallingford Castle where a Truce was agreed

The Treaty of Wallingford, also known as the Treaty of Winchester or the Treaty of Westminster, was an agreement reached in England in the summer of 1153. It effectively ended a civil war known as the Anarchy (1135–54), caused by a dispute between Empress Matilda and her cousin Stephen of Blois over the English crown. The Treaty of Wallingford allowed Stephen to keep the throne until his death (which was to come in October 1154), but ensured that he would be succeeded by Matilda’s son, Henry II.

Prelude to the treaty

In 1153, the civil war had dragged on for nearly 15 years of armed combat, in which neither side could achieve victory. This long period was characterised by a breakdown in law and order and allowed rebel barons to acquire ever greater power in northern England and in East Anglia, with widespread devastation in the regions of major fighting. By the early 1150s the barons and the Church mostly wanted a long-term peace.

King Stephen, however, targeted Matilda’s supporter Brien Fitz Count at Wallingford Castle by building counter castles near Wallingford. Henry launched attacks on those counter castles, and a battle between the forces was expected. However William d’Aubigny, 1st Earl of Arundel successfully argued the futility of further fighting. A temporary truce was reached at Wallingford on the banks of the Thames, but Stephen’s son Eustace opposed settling. However, after Eustace’s sudden death in August 1153, it appears that a more formal agreement was written at Winchester in November 1153, signed later at Westminster.

Fighting continued after Wallingford, but in a rather half-hearted fashion. Stephen lost the towns of Oxford and Stamford to Henry while the king was diverted fighting Hugh Bigod in the east of England, but Nottingham Castle survived an Angevin attempt to capture it. Meanwhile, Stephen’s brother Henry of Blois and Archbishop Theobald of Canterbury were for once unified in an effort to broker a permanent peace between the two sides, putting pressure on Stephen to accept a deal. Stephen and Henry FitzEmpress’s armies met again at Winchester, where the two leaders would ratify the terms of a permanent peace in November.

Terms of the treaty

Stephen announced the Treaty of Winchester in Winchester Cathedral: he recognised Henry FitzEmpress as his adopted son and successor, in return for Henry doing homage to him. Other conditions included:
Stephen promised to listen to Henry’s advice, but retained all his royal powers;
Stephen’s remaining son, William, would do homage to Henry and renounce his claim to the throne, in exchange for promises of the security of his lands;

Key royal castles would be held on Henry’s behalf by guarantors, whilst Stephen would have access to Henry’s castles;

The numerous foreign mercenaries would be demobilised and sent home.

Stephen and Henry sealed the treaty with a kiss of peace in the cathedral. Henry II later rewarded Wallingford for its assistance in the struggle by giving the town its royal charter in 1155.

Sourced from Wikipedia 

The Rout of Winchester

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Oct 292017
 

In the Rout of Winchester (14th September 1141) the army of imprisoned King Stephen of England, led by his wife, Queen Matilda of Boulogne, Stephen’s brother Bishop Henry of Blois, and William of Ypres, faced the army of Stephen’s cousin Empress Matilda, whose forces were commanded by her half-brother Earl Robert of Gloucester. After Empress Matilda’s army besieged a castle on the edge of Winchester, Queen Matilda’s army arrived and blockaded the Angevin army within the city. Cut off from supplies, the Angevin army gave up the siege, then was crushed as it began to retreat. Robert of Gloucester was captured and was subsequently exchanged for Stephen, who was returned to the throne of England. However, the civil war known as The Anarchy dragged on with neither side gaining an advantage.

Stephen usurps the throne

When William Adelin drowned in the White Ship, King Henry I of England was left with no male heirs. A second marriage to 18 year old Adeliza of Louvain would produce no children, leaving the widowed Empress Matilda as his only legitimate surviving child. Henry declared Matilda his heir and the English nobility agreed. The first person to swear fealty to Matilda was Stephen of Blois who was the son of Adela of Normandy, the daughter of William the Conqueror. Henry arranged for Matilda to marry the much younger Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou, and though the marriage was stormy, it finally produced a son, Henry Plantagenet.

When King Henry died in the Duchy of Normandy he reiterated that Empress Matilda was his heir. Nevertheless, Stephen immediately set out for England. He crossed the English Channel from Wissant to Dover and then made his way to London with a few retainers. The people of London acclaimed him king, followed by the nobility and the dead king’s ministers. Stephen was crowned on Christmas Eve 1135. During this time, Empress Matilda was powerless to act because her husband Count Geoffrey was busy trying to put down a rebellion in Anjou. Very soon, Stephen’s poor leadership attracted enemies. A Scottish army under King David I invaded the north but was beaten at the Battle of the Standard in August 1138. Empress Matilda and Robert of Gloucester, an illegitimate son of Henry I, landed at Portsmouth with 140 men.

Civil War

Empress Matilda and her party took refuge at Arundel Castle where they were welcomed by King Henry’s widow Adeliza and her new husband William d’Aubigny. Robert of Gloucester rode to Bristol to rally support for the empress. Stephen quickly assembled an army and surrounded Arundel Castle, demanding that the empress be handed over to him. Though her garrison was weak, Adeliza sent word that she would fight it out. At this point Stephen committed an astonishing blunder by giving Empress Matilda a safe-conduct pass to Bristol and withdrawing his army. When his enemy reached safety, the civil war broke out in full fury. While London and the east remained loyal to Stephen, the west declared for the empress. Stephen hired a body of Flemish mercenaries under William of Ypres, antagonizing his English subjects. The system of justice established under Henry I went to pieces and the common people suffered under the harsh demands of local noblemen and officials.

In December 1140, Stephen began the siege of Lincoln Castle which had been captured by the rebel Earl Ranulf of Chester. Ranulf slipped away and got in contact with Robert of Gloucester, his father-in-law. Robert and Ranulf quickly gathered an army and marched to Lincoln. Until too late Stephen refused to believe that his enemies would make a move in winter. On 2nd February 1141 in the Battle of Lincoln Stephen’s army was defeated and he was captured. Empress Matilda entered London but her arrogant and hostile conduct soon alienated the people. On 24th June, the people of London chased the empress from the city. The forces of Stephen’s queen, also named Matilda (Matilda of Boulogne), soon occupied London. Stephen’s brother, Henry of Blois, the Bishop of Winchester, who had earlier defected to Empress Matilda’s Angevin faction, changed sides again to support Queen Matilda

Siege and Battle

Bishop Henry took a force to Winchester where he laid siege to the royal castle which was garrisoned by Angevins. Winchester’s royal castle was located on the southwest side of the city, while an episcopal castle was on the southeast side. Only two other English cities at the time had more than one castle, London with three and York with two. When she heard of the bishop’s incursion Empress Matilda determined to strike back. She gathered an army of her adherents and sortied from her base at Oxford around 28th July 1141. When the empress appeared before Winchester on 31st July it was a complete surprise. Bishop Henry fled the city while his soldiers retreated to Wolvesey Castle, the one belonging to the church.

While the Angevin host placed Wolvesey Castle under siege, Empress Matilda set up her headquarters in the royal castle and Robert of Gloucester established his command post near Winchester Cathedral (then Saint Swithun’s). On August 2nd, the bishop’s men set fire to Winchester, destroying a large part of the city. Wolvesey was a tough nut to crack. It was erected in 1138 and being in the corner of the city walls, could easily contact the outside world. Nevertheless, the Angevins put strong pressure on its defenders.

Queen Matilda quickly assembled an army of relief that included mercenaries hired by Bishop Henry, a levy of the queen’s feudal tenants from the County of Boulogne, the nearly 1,000-strong London militia, William of Ypres’ Flemish mercenary cavalry and other supporters of Stephen. The queen’s army set up camp on the east side of Winchester and proceeded to blockade Empress Matilda’s forces in the city. While the queen’s army was well-provisioned, the Angevin forces soon began to suffer from lack of food. To weaken the blockade, Robert of Gloucester attempted to fortify Wherwell Abbey, six miles to the north of the city, but William of Ypres defeated the Angevins with heavy losses.

The supply situation convinced Robert of Gloucester that he must quit Winchester so he planned an orderly withdrawal. Earl Reginald of Cornwall and Brian fitz Count led an advance guard composed of crack troops designed to protect Empress Matilda. The main body guarded the baggage while Robert commanded the rearguard. On 14th September, the Angevins exited from the west side of Winchester on the road to Salisbury. Ahead of them, about 8.5 miles (13.7 km) to the northwest, the road crossed the River Test at Stockbridge.

As soon as the Angevin host left the city the queen’s army attacked. They pressed past the rearguard to attack the main body. The advance guard avoided the trap and delivered Empress Matilda safely to Gloucester, but the queen’s army destroyed the Angevin main body as an effective fighting force; only remnants managed to escape. Robert of Gloucester’s soldiers held together, but when his soldiers reached the Test they could go no further. Surrounded by a part of the queen’s troops under William of Surrey and facing a bridge choked with panicked Angevins, Robert surrendered with his men.

Result

Queen Matilda offered to exchange her husband Stephen for Robert of Gloucester but Empress Matilda refused to give up her royal prisoner. She would swap Robert for 12 earls and some gold, but not for the king. Therefore, the queen got into contact with Robert’s wife Amabel, who had custody of Stephen. Behind the empress’ back, the two wives determined to exchange their two husbands, and both Stephen and Robert were released.

The civil war went on with neither side gaining an advantage. Meanwhile, the common people suffered under the oppression of the local barons, who took the law into their own hands. It was said that, “God and all His saints were asleep” during these grim years. Robert of Gloucester died on 31st October 1147. With her best leader gone, Empress Matilda retired to Anjou and there was a lull in the fighting. Queen Matilda died on 3rd May 1151 and was buried at Faversham Abbey. In January 1153, the empress’ son Henry landed in England and began seeking combat with Stephen. At Wallingford another battle was averted when the two parties agreed that Stephen would remain king during his lifetime, but that Henry Plantagenet would succeed him. Stephen died on 25th October 1154.

Sourced from Wikipedia 

Sir David Niven

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Oct 102017
 

Niven wearing his Rifle Brigade uniform

James David Graham Niven (1st March 1910 – 29th July 1983) was an English actor and novelist. His many roles included Squadron Leader Peter Carter in A Matter of Life and Death, Phileas Fogg in Around the World in 80 Days, and Sir Charles Lytton, (“the Phantom”) in The Pink Panther. He won the Academy Award for Best Actor for his performance in Separate Tables (1958).

Born in London, Niven attended Heatherdown Preparatory School and Stowe before gaining a place at the Royal Military College, Sandhurst. After Sandhurst, he joined the British Army and was gazetted a second lieutenant in the Highland Light Infantry. Having developed an interest in acting, he left the Highland Light Infantry, travelled to Hollywood, and had several minor roles in film.

He first appeared as an extra in the British film There Goes the Bride (1932). From there, he hired an agent and had several small parts in films from 1933 to 1935, including a non-speaking part in MGM’s Mutiny on the Bounty. This brought him to wider attention within the film industry and he was spotted by Samuel Goldwyn. Upon the outbreak of the Second World War, Niven returned to Britain and rejoined the army, being recommissioned as a lieutenant.

Niven resumed his acting career after his demobilisation, and was voted the second-most popular British actor in the 1945 Popularity Poll of British film stars. He appeared in A Matter of Life and Death (1946), The Bishop’s Wife (1947), and Enchantment (1948), all of which received critical acclaim. Niven later appeared in The Elusive Pimpernel (1950), The Toast of New Orleans (1950), Happy Go Lovely (1951), Happy Ever After (1954) and Carrington V.C. (1955) before scoring a big success as Phileas Fogg in Michael Todd’s production of Around the World in 80 Days (1956).

Niven appeared in nearly a hundred films, and many shows for television. He also began writing books, with considerable commercial success. In 1982 he appeared in Blake Edwards’ final “Pink Panther” films Trail of the Pink Panther and Curse of the Pink Panther, reprising his role as Sir Charles Lytton.

Early Life 

James David Graham Niven was born in Belgrave Mansions, London, to William Edward Graham Niven (1878–1915) and his wife, Henrietta Julia (née Degacher) Niven. He was named David for his birth on St. David’s Day (1st March). Niven often claimed that he was born in Kirriemuir, in the Scottish county of Angus in 1909, but his birth certificate shows this was not the case.

Henrietta was of French and British ancestry. She was born in Wales, the daughter of army officer William Degacher (1841–1879) by his marriage to Julia Caroline Smith, the daughter of Lieutenant General James Webber Smith. Niven’s grandfather William Degacher was killed in the Battle of Isandlwana (1879), during the Zulu War. Born William Hitchcock, he and his brother Henry had followed the lead of their father, Walter Henry Hitchcock, in assuming their mother’s maiden name of Degacher in 1874.

William Niven, David’s father, was of Scottish descent; his paternal grandfather, David Graham Niven, (1811–1884) was from St. Martin’s, a village in Perthshire. William served in the Berkshire Yeomanry in the First World War and was killed during the Gallipoli Campaign on 21 August 1915. He was buried in Green Hill Cemetery, Turkey, in the Special Memorial Section in Plot F. 10.

Niven’s mother remarried, to Sir Thomas Comyn-Platt, in London in 1917. Graham Lord, in Niv: The Authorised Biography of David Niven, suggested that Comyn-Platt and Mrs. Niven had been having an affair for some time before her husband’s death, and that Sir Thomas may well have been David Niven’s biological father, a supposition which has some support from her children. A reviewer of Lord’s book stated that Lord’s photographic evidence showing a strong physical resemblance between Niven and Comyn-Platt “would appear to confirm these theories, though photographs can often be misleading.”

David Niven had three older siblings:

Margaret Joyce (born in Geneva, Switzerland, 5th January 1900 – 18th November 1981)

Henry Degacher (“Max”; born in Buckland, Berkshire, 29th June 1902 – March 1953)

Grizel Rosemary Graham (born in Belgravia, Middlesex, 28th November 1906 – 28th January 2007).

Education and Army career

English private schools at the time of Niven’s boyhood were noted for their strict and sometimes brutal discipline. Niven suffered many instances of corporal punishment owing to his inclination for pranks, which finally led to his expulsion from Heatherdown Preparatory School at the age of 10½. This ended his chances for Eton College, a significant blow to his family. After failing to pass the naval entrance exam because of his difficulty with maths, Niven attended Stowe School, a newly created public school led by headmaster J.F. Roxburgh, who was unlike any of Niven’s previous headmasters.

Thoughtful and kind, he addressed the boys by their first names, allowed them bicycles, and encouraged and nurtured their personal interests. Niven later wrote, “How he did this, I shall never know, but he made every single boy at that school feel that what he said and what he did were of real importance to the headmaster.” He attended the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, graduating in 1930 with a commission as a second lieutenant in the British Army.

He did well at Sandhurst, which gave him the “officer and gentleman” bearing that was to be his trademark. He requested assignment to the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders or the Black Watch (Royal Highland Regiment), then jokingly wrote on the form, as his third choice, “anything but the Highland Light Infantry” (because the HLI wore tartan trews rather than kilts).

He was assigned to the HLI, and his comment was known in the regiment. Thus, Niven did not enjoy his time in the army. He served with the HLI for two years in Malta and then for a few months in Dover. In Malta, he became friends with Roy Urquhart, future commander of the British 1st Airborne Division.

Niven grew tired of the peacetime army. Though promoted to lieutenant on 1st January 1933, he saw no opportunity for further advancement. His ultimate decision to resign came after a lengthy lecture on machine guns, which was interfering with his plans for dinner with a particularly attractive young lady.

At the end of the lecture, the speaker (a major general) asked if there were any questions. Showing the typical rebelliousness of his early years, Niven asked, “Could you tell me the time, sir? I have to catch a train.”

After being placed under close-arrest for this act of insubordination, Niven finished a bottle of whisky with the officer who was guarding him: Rhoddy Rose (later Colonel R.L.C. Rose, DSO, MC). With Rose’s assistance, Niven was allowed to escape from a first-floor window.

He then headed for America. While crossing the Atlantic, Niven resigned his commission by telegram on 6 September 1933. Niven then moved to New York City, where he began an unsuccessful career in whisky sales, after which he had a stint in horse rodeo promotion in Atlantic City. After detours to Bermuda and Cuba, he arrived in Hollywood in 1934.

Early Film Career 

When Niven presented himself at Central Casting, he learned that he needed a work permit to reside and work in the U.S. This meant that Niven had to leave the US, so he went to Mexico, where he worked as a “gun-man”, cleaning and polishing the rifles of visiting American hunters. He received his resident alien visa from the American consulate when his birth certificate arrived from Britain. He returned to the United States and was accepted by Central Casting as “Anglo-Saxon Type No. 2,008.”

His role in Mutiny on the Bounty brought him to the attention of independent film producer Samuel Goldwyn, who signed him to a contract and established his career. Niven appeared in 19 films in the next four years. He had supporting roles in several major films—Rose-Marie (1936), Dodsworth (1936), The Charge of the Light Brigade (1936), The Prisoner of Zenda (1937)—and leading roles in The Dawn Patrol (1938), Three Blind Mice (1938) and Wuthering Heights (1939), playing opposite such stars as Errol Flynn, Loretta Young and Laurence Olivier. In 1939 he co-starred with Ginger Rogers in the RKO comedy Bachelor Mother and starred as the eponymous gentleman safe-cracker in Raffles.

Niven joined what became known as the Hollywood Raj, a group of British actors in Hollywood which included Rex Harrison, Boris Karloff, Stan Laurel, Basil Rathbone, Ronald Colman, Leslie Howard, and C. Aubrey Smith. According to his autobiography, Errol Flynn and he were firm friends and rented Rosalind Russell’s house at 601 North Linden Drive as a bachelor pad.

Second World War 

After Britain declared war on Germany in 1939, Niven returned home and rejoined the British Army. He was alone among British stars in Hollywood in doing so; the British Embassy advised most actors to stay. Niven was recommissioned as a lieutenant into the Rifle Brigade (Prince Consort’s Own) on 25th February 1940, and was assigned to a motor training battalion. He wanted something more exciting, however, and transferred into the Commandos.

He was assigned to a training base at Inverailort House in the Western Highlands. Niven later claimed credit for bringing future Major General Sir Robert E. Laycock to the Commandos. Niven commanded “A” Squadron GHQ Liaison Regiment, better known as “Phantom”. He worked with the Army Film Unit. He acted in two films made during the war, The First of the Few (1942) and The Way Ahead (1944). Both were made with a view to winning support for the British war effort, especially in the United States. Niven’s Film Unit work included a small part in the deception operation that used minor actor M.E. Clifton James to impersonate General Sir Bernard Montgomery.

During his work with the Film Unit, Peter Ustinov, though one of the script-writers, had to pose as Niven’s batman. (Ustinov also acted in The Way Ahead.) Niven explained in his autobiography that there was no military way that he, as a lieutenant-colonel, and Ustinov, who was only a private, could associate, other than as an officer and his subordinate, hence their strange “act”. Ustinov later appeared with Niven in Death on the Nile (1978).

Niven took part in the Allied invasion of Normandy in June 1944, although he was sent to France several days after D-Day. He served in the “Phantom Signals Unit,” which located and reported enemy positions, and kept rear commanders informed on changing battle lines. Niven was posted at one time to Chilham in Kent. He remained close-mouthed about the war, despite public interest in celebrities in combat and a reputation for storytelling. He once said:

I will, however, tell you just one thing about the war, my first story and my last. I was asked by some American friends to search out the grave of their son near Bastogne. I found it where they told me I would, but it was among 27,000 others, and I told myself that here, Niven, were 27,000 reasons why you should keep your mouth shut after the war.

He had particular scorn for those newspaper columnists covering the war who typed out self-glorifying and excessively florid prose about their meagre wartime experiences. Niven stated, “Anyone who says a bullet sings past, hums past, flies, pings, or whines past, has never heard one—they go crack!” He gave a few details of his war experience in his autobiography, The Moon’s a Balloon: his private conversations with Winston Churchill, the bombing of London, and what it was like entering Germany with the occupation forces. Niven first met Churchill at a dinner party in February 1940. Churchill singled him out from the crowd and stated, “Young man, you did a fine thing to give up your film career to fight for your country. Mark you, had you not done so − it would have been despicable.”

A few stories have surfaced. About to lead his men into action, Niven eased their nervousness by telling them, “Look, you chaps only have to do this once. But I’ll have to do it all over again in Hollywood with Errol Flynn!” Asked by suspicious American sentries during the Battle of the Bulge who had won the World Series in 1943, he answered, “Haven’t the foggiest idea … but I did co-star with Ginger Rogers in Bachelor Mother!” On another occasion, asked how he felt about serving with the British Army in Europe, he allegedly said, “Well on the whole, I would rather be tickling Ginger Rogers’ tits.”

Niven ended the war as a lieutenant-colonel. On his return to Hollywood after the war, he received the Legion of Merit, an American military decoration. Presented by Eisenhower himself, it honoured Niven’s work in setting up the BBC Allied Expeditionary Forces Programme, a radio news and entertainment station for the Allied forces.

Post War

Niven resumed his career in 1946, now only in starring roles. His films A Matter of Life and Death (1946), The Bishop’s Wife (1947) with Cary Grant, and Enchantment (1948) are all highly regarded. In 1950, he starred in The Elusive Pimpernel, which was made in Britain and which was to be distributed by Samuel Goldwyn. Goldwyn pulled out, and the film did not appear in the US for three years. Niven had a long, complex relationship with Goldwyn, who gave him his first start, but the dispute over The Elusive Pimpernel and Niven’s demands for more money led to a long estrangement between the two in the 1950s.

During this period, Niven was largely barred from the Hollywood studios. Between 1951 and 1956, he made 11 films, two of which were MGM productions and the rest were low-budget British or independent productions. However, Niven won a Golden Globe Award for his work in The Moon Is Blue (1953), produced and directed by Otto Preminger. In 1955, Cornel Lucas photographed Niven while filming at the Rank Film Studio in Denham, Buckinghamshire. A limited edition of British postage stamps was produced using one of Lucas’s images taken during this portrait sitting. Niven worked in television.

He appeared several times on various short-drama shows, and was one of the “four stars” of the dramatic anthology series Four Star Playhouse, appearing in 33 episodes. The show was produced by Four Star Television, which was co-owned and founded by Niven, Dick Powell, and Charles Boyer. The show ended in 1955, but Four Star TV became a highly successful TV production company.

Niven enjoyed success in 1956, when he starred as Phileas Fogg in producer Michael Todd’s Around the World in 80 Days. He won the 1958 Academy Award for Best Actor for his role as Major Pollock in Separate Tables, his only nomination for an Oscar. Appearing on-screen for only 23 minutes in the film, this was the briefest performance ever to win a Best Actor Oscar, until Anthony Hopkins win for the 1991 film The Silence of the Lambs, which is a little over 16 minutes.

He was also a co-host of the 30th, 31st, and 46th Academy Awards ceremonies. After Niven had won the Academy Award, Goldwyn called with an invitation to his home. In Goldwyn’s drawing room, Niven noticed a picture of himself in uniform which he had sent to Goldwyn from Britain during the Second World War. In happier times with Goldwyn, he had observed this same picture sitting on Goldwyn’s piano. Now years later, the picture was still in exactly the same spot. As he was looking at the picture, Goldwyn’s wife Frances said, “Sam never took it down.”

With an Academy Award to his credit, Niven’s career continued to thrive. In 1959, he became the host of his own TV drama series, The David Niven Show, which ran for 13 episodes that summer. He subsequently appeared in another 30 films, including The Guns of Navarone (1961) The Pink Panther (1963), Murder by Death (1976), Death on the Nile (1978), and The Sea Wolves (1980).

In 1964, Boyer and he appeared in the Four Star series The Rogues. Niven played Alexander ‘Alec’ Fleming, one of a family of retired con-artists who now fleece villains in the interests of justice. This was his only recurring role on television. The Rogues ran for only one season, but won a Golden Globe award. In 1965, he starred in Where the Spies Are. In 1967, he appeared as James Bond 007 in Casino Royale. Niven had been Bond creator Ian Fleming’s first choice to play Bond in Dr. No. Casino Royale co-producer Charles K. Feldman said later that Fleming had written the book with Niven in mind, and therefore had sent a copy to Niven.

Niven was the only James Bond actor mentioned by name in the text of a Fleming novel. In You Only Live Twice (chapter 14), the pearl diver Kissy Suzuki refers to Niven as “the only man she liked in Hollywood”, and the only person who “treated her honourably” there.

While Niven was co-hosting the 46th Annual Oscars ceremony, a naked man appeared behind him, “streaking” across the stage. Niven responded “Isn’t it fascinating to think that probably the only laugh that man will ever get in his life is by stripping off and showing his shortcomings?”

In 1974, he hosted David Niven’s World for London Weekend Television, which profiled contemporary adventurers such as hang gliders, motorcyclists, and mountain climbers: it ran for 21 episodes. In 1975, he narrated The Remarkable Rocket, a short animation based on a story by Oscar Wilde.

In 1979, he appeared in Escape to Athena, which was produced by his son David, Jr. In July 1982, Blake Edwards brought Niven back for cameo appearances in two final “Pink Panther” films (Trail of the Pink Panther and Curse of the Pink Panther), reprising his role as Sir Charles Lytton. By this time, Niven was having serious health problems. When the raw footage was reviewed, his voice was inaudible, and his lines had to be dubbed by Rich Little. Niven only learned of it from a newspaper report. This was his last film appearance.

Writing

Niven wrote four books. The first, Round the Rugged Rocks, (published simultaneously in the US under the title “Once Over Lightly”) was a novel that appeared in 1951 and was forgotten almost at once. In 1971, he published his autobiography, The Moon’s a Balloon, which was well received, selling over five million copies. He followed this with Bring On the Empty Horses in 1975, a collection of entertaining reminiscences from Hollywood’s “Golden Age” in the 1930s and ’40s.

It now appears that Niven recounted many incidents from a first-person perspective that actually happened to other people, especially Cary Grant, which he borrowed and embroidered. In 1981 Niven published a second and much more successful novel, Go Slowly, Come Back Quickly, which was set during and after the Second World War, and which drew on his experiences during the war and in Hollywood. He was working on a third novel at the time of his death.

Personal life

While on leave in 1940, Niven met Primula “Primmie” Susan Rollo (18th February 1918, London – 21st May 1946), the daughter of London lawyer William H.C. Rollo. After a whirlwind romance, they married on 16th September. A son, David, Jr., was born in December 1942 and a second son, James Graham Niven on 6th November 1945.

Primmie died at age 28, only six weeks after the family moved to the U.S. She fractured her skull after an accidental fall in the Beverly Hills, California home of Tyrone Power, while playing a game of “sardines.” She had walked through a door believing it led to a closet, but instead, it led to a stone staircase to the basement.

In 1948, Niven met Hjördis Paulina Tersmeden (née Genberg, 1919–1997), a divorced Swedish fashion model. He recounted their meeting:

I had never seen anything so beautiful in my life—tall, slim, auburn hair, up-tilted nose, lovely mouth and the most enormous grey eyes I had ever seen. It really happened the way it does when written by the worst lady novelists … I goggled. I had difficulty swallowing and had champagne in my knees.

In New York, Niven and Hjördis were next-door neighbours with Audrey Hepburn, who made her début on Broadway that season. In 1960, while filming Please Don’t Eat the Daisies with Doris Day, Niven and Hjördis separated for a few weeks, but later reconciled.

In 1960, Niven moved to Château-d’Œx near Gstaad in Switzerland for financial reasons, near to close friends in the country including Deborah Kerr, Peter Ustinov, and Noël Coward. Niven’s status as a tax exile in Switzerland is believed to have been one of the reasons why he never received a British honour. Niven divided his time in the 1960s and ’70s between Château-d’Œx and Cap Ferrat on the Côte d’Azur in the south of France.

A 2009 biography of Niven contained assertions, based on information from his widow and a good friend of Niven’s, that he had had an affair with Princess Margaret, twenty years his junior.

Illness and death

In 1980, Niven began experiencing fatigue, muscle weakness, and a warble in his voice. His 1981 interviews on the talk shows of Michael Parkinson and Merv Griffin alarmed family and friends; viewers wondered if Niven had either been drinking or suffered a stroke. He blamed his slightly slurred voice on the shooting schedule on the film he had been making, Better Late Than Never.

He was diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS, or “Lou Gehrig’s disease” in the US and motor neurone disease (MND) in the UK) later that year. His final appearance in Hollywood was hosting the 1981 American Film Institute tribute to Fred Astaire.

In February 1983, using a false name to avoid publicity, Niven was hospitalised for 10 days, ostensibly for a digestive problem. Afterwards, he returned to his chalet at Château-d’Œx. His condition continued to decline, but he refused to return to the hospital, and his family supported his decision.

He died at his chalet from ALS on 29th July 1983 at age 73, the same day as his The Prisoner of Zenda and A Matter of Life and Death co-star Raymond Massey. He was survived by his four children and his second wife. Niven is buried in Château-d’Œx Cemetery in Château-d’ Œx, Switzerland.

Legacy

A Thanksgiving service for Niven was held at St Martin-in-the-Fields, London, on 27th October 1983. The congregation of 1,200 included Prince Michael of Kent, Margaret, Duchess of Argyll, Sir John Mills, Sir Richard Attenborough, Trevor Howard, Sir David Frost, Joanna Lumley, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., and Lord Olivier.

Biographer Graham Lord wrote, “the biggest wreath, worthy of a Mafia Godfather’s funeral, was delivered from the porters at London’s Heathrow Airport, along with a card that read: ‘To the finest gentleman who ever walked through these halls. He made a porter feel like a king.'”

In 1985, Niven was included in a series of British postage stamps, along with Sir Alfred Hitchcock, Sir Charlie Chaplin, Peter Sellers, and Vivien Leigh, to commemorate “British Film Year”.

Filmography and other works

Main article: David Niven on screen, stage, radio, record and in print

Sources
Niven, David (1951). Round the Rugged Rocks. London: The Cresset Press.
Niven, David (1971). The Moon’s a Balloon. London: Hamish Hamilton. ISBN 0-340-15817-4.
Niven, David (1975). Bring on the Empty Horses. Hamish Hamilton. ISBN 0-241-89273-2.
Niven, David (1981). Go Slowly, Come Back Quickly. Hamish Hamilton. ISBN 0-241-10690-7.

Sourced from Wikipedia 

Passchendaele 100 years on

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Sep 232017
 

Passchendaele

100 Years

My grandfather the war hero, killed on the first day of the Battle of Passchendaele

On Friday January 26, 1917, Lieutenant John Ambrose Barrett sat down to write a letter to his young wife, Evelyn, who was at home in Kings Lynn heavily pregnant with their fourth child.

A commanding, moustachioed figure who had represented his alma mater Oxford University at rugby and tennis, Lt Barrett had already conducted himself with distinction during his time on the Western Front. The 36 year-old was among the oldest in the 16th battalion Rifle Brigade, and been nicknamed “Father Barrett” by his younger charges for his stoicism and caring demeanour.

But as German artillery shells pounded into the Allied lines, where his battalion was posted somewhere to the north of Ypres, Lt Barrett revealed something to his wife that fellow soldiers would never dare to admit to one another in the heat of battle: he was scared, and he knew his time was up.

“It is an awful wrench, Evie, to leave you and the children, for I had counted on doing with your help all we possibly could for them,” he wrote. “Kiss them for me, they cannot realise that I shall not see them again, but let them know their Daddy loves them and meant to do his very utmost for them.”

Lt Barrett’s prediction that the “Boche was sending something over with my name and address on it” came to bear just six months later on July 31, 1917, the first day of the third Battle of Ypres.

He was shot dead alongside another lieutenant, while leading the successful capture of an enemy machine gun nest. By November of that year some 320,000 allied troops were wounded or killed during the prolonged massacre that came to be known simply as the Battle of Passchendaele.

He enlisted in the Oxford and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry in King’s Lynn in December 1915, and applied for a commission in March 1916 – but was turned down due to a lack of previous military training. Barrett then joined the Oxford University OTC and was commissioned in the Rifle Brigade in October 1916, being sent to France as a signals officer. 

Evelyn was just 26 years-old when her husband was killed. She and the children were taken in by a succession of relatives, before eventually settling in the sprawling country home of a distant uncle near Cringleford, Norfolk

John Barrett, who was killed aged 37, on 31st July 1917

Sourced from the telegraph.co.uk

Story by Joe Shute

Picture credited too Julian Simmonds

For the full write up http://www.telegraph.co.uk/men/thinking-man/grandfather-war-hero-killed-first-day-battle-passchendaele/?WT.mc_id=tmg_share_fb

A Chosen Woman….almost.

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Sep 122017
 

A female trying to enlist in Liverpool

In Liverpool a few days ago a person apparently a man, Applied to the Sergeant of the 60th Rifles who is on the recruiting service in the town offering to enlist.

The sergeant receiving such an offer from a promising youth, was not likely to reject it, and that once paid the shilling to the applicant, rejoicing, no doubt, at the bargain he had made.

All went well, until the usual course, Young recruit was submitted to a medical examination, and then was discovered to be a woman.

When asked to explain assuming a Male attire, she said that her sweet heart was a soldier in the 60th rifles, and if she wanted to be with him, that in Ireland; where she lived she had, had her haircut, and had donned the breeches and other habiliments particular to mankind, and in this disguise had come over to England, determined enlist in the same regiment in which a sweetheart was.

The discovery of a sex of course frustrated her intentions, and, being desirous to return, a subscription was made among the soldiers, and a sum sufficient to take her back to Ireland was obtained.

Sourced from the literary Gazette dated June 30th 1859.

By Phillip Eyden

Author Name Phil Eyden

Shoot and Scoot Film Collection

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Sep 122017
 

Shoot And Scoot Film Collection

We have built up a selection of mostly UK Industry made films and TV items, our criteria for the collection is to source costume, props and Set parts from productions that are made here in the UK.

We have many Friends that have supplied and worked in the UK film Industry over the last 30 years, prop makers, armourers and costumiers etc.

We our selves are prop and costume suppliers .

We want to save as much of this work made by the UK film industry as possible, later on we,d love to save large set parts, what happened to the church tower in Saving Private Ryan or the basement bar in Inglorious Bastards these are the type of sets we,d love to save from the skips.

Our aim is to save film and TV props, costume and sets, with a long term goal of having our Collection housed in a permanent center-Museum.

AIRSOFT

VISIT THE HILL

The home of the vest best Airsoft skirmishes in Scotland The Hill has been running since March 2000 hosts regular game days every fortnight.
A mix of woodland and urban The Hill provides a variety of areas to cater for any scenario.
Regular themed days, ranging from WWII to Fancy Dress, add a fantastic amount of variety and the friendly patrons that regularly attend make any day here and enjoyable one.

DUNDEE

THE VERY BEST IN AIRSOFT AND MILITARIA

Shoot and Scoot offer a wide variety of custom airsoft guns, equipment, clothing and 20th century militaria

http://www.shootandscoot.co.uk/

https://www.facebook.com/shootandscootfilmCollection/

A Nottingham Hero

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Sep 102017
 

Though wounded, Sgt. Percy Herbert Kinder, 1st Battalion King’s Royal Rifle Corps, continued to work his machine gun before being killed by shellfire on 10th September 1914. He is buried in Montreuil-aux-Lions British Cemetery.

“A NOTTINGHAM HERO.

“Corporal Pettit, a native of Skegby, who is lying in hospital with a bullet wound in the head, tells how Sergeant Percy Kinder, whose home is at 124, Lenton-boulevard, met his death.

“Sergeant Kinder, who was in charge of a Maxim gun with the King’s Royal Rifles, was wounded not less than three times by bullets. He, however, heroically continued to work his gun until he was struck by a shell and killed. Truly he was a hero, whose name should be inscribed on Nottingham’s roll of honour.”

A former warehouse man, he enlisted in Nottingham on 12th May 1906. He was the son of Herbert Felix and the late Louisa Kinder, 17 Albert Grove, Lenton; husband of Bessie Kinder, South Wales.

“KINDER. – In memory of Sergeant Percy Kinder (K.R.R.), aged 27 years, killed in France, September 10th, 1914.”
L/Cpl. William Pettit, 1st Battalion King’s Royal Rifle Corps, landed in France on 13th August 1914.

He was subsequently discharged as no longer physically fit for service.

Credits to Small Town, Great War. Hucknall 1914-1918

https://www.facebook.com/Small-Town-Great-War-Hucknall-1914-1918-117600881609310/

Sourced From

Nottingham Evening Post 9th October 1914.

Nottingham Evening Post 10th September 1915.

Military Reaction Force (MRF)

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Sep 102017
 

 The army black ops squad ordered to murder IRA’s top ‘players’

The controversy has raged for decades: did the Army operate a covert shoot-to-kill policy during the Troubles, using shadowy military units? Here, for the first time, a former member of the mysterious Military Reaction Force has revealed the chilling extent of its activities – including the state-sponsored killing of at least 20 suspected terrorists. Simon Cursey – not his real name – was a member from 1972 to 1974 and, in a compelling new book, confirms that the MRF was shockingly real… and lethal.

The vehicle check came back crackling over the air. A positive stolen car. I looked at John, we both knew that we probably had an Active Service Unit of the IRA in front of us. Two men – ‘players’ in our parlance – in an old Cortina.

Kev, in the back seat, cocked his SMG 9mm Sterling sub-machine gun, while my hand was under my thigh gripping my 9mm Browning pistol – my ‘nine-millie’.

We had no backup. Normally we’d follow for as long as we could and await instructions. Today we didn’t have that luxury. All we could do was blend in with the Belfast traffic and hope our target would stay away from hard-core Republican areas.

From the back, Kev said: ‘I think they may have twigged us.’
The target accelerated west along the Falls Road – ‘Indian Country’. We were both doing 50mph and it had become a very dodgy situation in a very dodgy area. Suddenly, the car stopped, two men climbed out, glanced in our direction then set off smartly up a side street, each carrying a rifle.

I jumped out in pursuit. Turning the corner, I immediately spotted the players half-running up the middle of the street, holding their M2 Carbines (the standard issue Second World War US assault rifle) across their chests.

They knew I was following them but they didn’t know for certain who I was.
They opened fire – about five or six rounds. I ducked for cover and returned fire with my nine-millie, shooting two or three ‘double taps’ (two-round bursts).

I needed to get a little closer – ideally within 75 to 90ft. They opened up with a few more rounds then WHACK! A terrifying blinding flash in front of my eyes.

I was thrown tumbling and rolling into the street in agonising pain, exactly like having a white-hot steel rod driven through your leg. Almost simultaneously, Kev and John arrived, shielding me like brothers while they ‘eliminated’ the threat with a terrifying burst of gunfire.

Big Kev hefted me over his shoulder in a fireman’s lift and carried me back to the car. As we left, the uniformed troops were arriving to claim the kills and collect the bodies and weapons, but I knew my days hunting terrorists were over.

Ours was a special department born in late 1971 in the early part of the Troubles. Prior to Bloody Sunday on January 30, 1972, Northern Ireland was close to civil war and the IRA seemed beyond control.

The regular Army didn’t have the right weapons, vehicles or training. Above all, they were hamstrung by the law. They couldn’t use the tactics employed by the IRA, and the IRA knew it.

This was no time for gentlemanly conduct. Someone very high up decided an undercover unit was needed to seek out the enemy and confront them head-on. That unit was the MRF, or Military Reaction Force, a group of approximately 30 men and a few women.

I was recruited in March 1972 from the Army, and we were trained to spy on and hunt down ‘hard-core’ killers, which Belfast was crawling with at the time. The aim was to beat them at their own game, striking fear into their hearts with clinical brutality. We were a deadly ghost squad, a nightmare rumour .  .  . a Shadow Troop.

All members of the MRF had to be thoroughly ‘demilitarised’. We dressed informally, grew our hair long had to unlearn our military bearing and giveaway signs such as using the 24-hour clock.
We had fake identities and unmarked, souped-up cars. We were ready for anything.

The walls of the briefing room in our secret base in the heart of the Palace Barracks on the outskirts of Belfast were plastered with hundreds of mug shots of nasty-looking people including the big ‘players’ like Gerry Adams, Martin McGuinness, Martin Meehan, Brendan ‘Darkie’ Hughes, the Price sisters and James Bryson, who were some of the most wanted people at that time.

One night we saw a group of people milling around in the St James’s Estate – a bleak place full of row after row of burned-out houses and rubble in the roads. Most of the street lights had been shot out by the Army to prevent their night-vision scopes being dazzled.

Kev piped up from the back of the car: ‘One of those two guys on the corner is armed.’ We killed our lights and wound down the windows. Kev cocked his SMG as we drove closer. One man started to run away as the other lifted his rifle. We (him and us) opened fire simultaneously. I fired three rounds, Kev fired two short bursts through the car’s back window as we sped away.

We saw both men fall and heard later from the Army that one survived. We took three hits on the car (front wing, rear door and rear wheel arch). The press had a field day with claims such as ‘Army murder gangs are out on the streets murdering innocent people’. We never targeted innocent people – we didn’t need to.

There were more than enough guilty ones. Even the most mundane duties could end in violence. One of our luckiest escapes came after we had been ordered to check the route taken by a senior officer on an official visit to Belfast.
We drove up and down looking for unusual activity, when we spotted some men milling around in the back garden of a house overlooking a dual carriageway – an ideal ambush site.

With my mate Tug, I casually made my way up from the hard shoulder while our two drivers and rear-seat passengers (the SMG men) stood casually chatting with their guns out of sight.

A few yards from the fence, all hell broke loose when the two nearest men scurried away to one side, a man in the garden bolted into a wooden shed and a colossal amount of automatic fire opened up from the bedroom windows.
Our lads by the cars returned fire with SMGs as Tug and I scrambled back down the banking with shots bouncing all around us.

The vehicles were taking lots of hits and most of the windows were out. Kev was lying on the back seat of one firing bursts of three to four rounds every few seconds. I saw the man stumble out of the garden shed and collapse as Kev riddled its thin panel walls. The guy had obviously seen too many movies: a wooden garden shed would never stop machine gun rounds. We were very lucky that day. My car alone took 21 hits and lost all its windows.

When the IRA began attacking the mainland – seven people were killed in the Aldershot bombings of February 1972 – word came from high up that we were to adopt a much more aggressive role. During briefings phrases such as ‘deal with’ and ‘eliminate’ were used. We were given dossiers on the most dangerous people – and yes, we had a ‘shoot on sight’ list, including Gerry Adams among many others. Originally our rules had been to shoot at anyone carrying a weapon. Now we targeted groups manning barricades or vigilantes patrolling late at night. The terrorists had to be stopped.

We shot a man called Patrick McVeigh in May 1972 in south Belfast. He had been standing with a group of ‘vigilantes’ that included some particular IRA bad boys on our list. We got McVeigh and wounded four others in a drive-by, but not the face we wanted.

All the IRA players looked ‘civilian’ of course but there was no such thing as an unarmed group of vigilantes in Belfast in those days.

If we were caught, we knew that the Government would deny all knowledge of us. It was also made clear that if we were ever caught by a terrorist group, our life expectancy would be minutes. Our briefing was simple: ‘If you are cornered, empty your magazines on them first. Don’t let them get hold of your ammo and if possible try to destroy your weapon.’ We were told these new intensified operations had Westminster backing as part of a deeper political game aimed at forcing the terrorists to negotiate.

When we came across an important player, we lifted him and brought him in for interrogation.We weren’t looking for confessions, but information. Call it torture if you wish, we didn’t care then and I don’t care now. These were brutal killers and we had no time to waste – lives depended on us.

We were told to enter the room, break one of the suspects’ arms and then grab the other one. With that kind of shock treatment, prisoners soon begin to talk. Our section lifted ten or 15 men, dealt with them and dropped them off on the roadside. We never discussed these incidents and nobody asked us.

The information we gained allowed us to compromise terrorist attacks. My unit saved hundreds, perhaps thousands, of innocent lives. We lived and worked on a knife edge. There was one evening when we were ordered to provide security for an Army major meeting his IRA informer. We didn’t like the location, a bar off the Crumlin Road and four of us got there early.

Inside there were five or six other drinkers and a blonde woman sitting alone at a table, dressed in jeans and an off-white blouse. The major arrived at about 9.30pm. He went over to join her, looking out of place in his shirt and tie, brown sports jacket and slacks – an outfit that screamed British public school and military.

All went well until two men entered the lounge and exchanged whispers at the bar. We all knew the signal: if one of us, a bloke called Mike, stood up, we would all draw our nine-millies. Mike would go for the major, Tug would cover our exit while Kev and I would confront the threat.

Suddenly, one of the two men moved, his hand shot to his waistline and we glimpsed the handle of a pistol. It was them or us. From a range of about 5ft, we fired two rounds each into the chests of the two men and they just dropped like stones, wide-eyed. Arresting armed terrorists was never a option.

After I checked them and picked up their two pistols, in a split second Kev and I were out of the door. No one in that bar had any idea who we were. That was just the way we liked it. Only the IRA would know that they were suddenly missing two volunteers, and they would be scared. That was also the way we liked it.

When I recovered from my bullet wound in 1974, I was sent back to my original unit, but regimental duties and ‘Yes, Sir! No, Sir’ seemed totally alien after spending more than two years undercover in what was basically a unit without rank. It was doubly difficult because I had been left way behind on the promotional ladder, so I left the Army to pursue other interests.

As a civilian I suffered a short spell of post-traumatic stress. My training, too, was hard to shake: I couldn’t sit in a pub with my back to the door. I also used to get panicky caught up in heavy traffic. For the first year or so, I drank heavily so I could relax enough to drop off.

But if I was approached and asked to go back and do it all again, I would be tempted. We were effectively licensed to kill terrorists for that short time. We were a totally new concept, a prototype unit. We developed techniques which were, over the years, fine-tuned and streamlined, and improved with the help of modern technology.

I have no regrets. The MRF was one of the original counter-terrorism units of modern times.

Story by SIMON CURSEY  from the Mail On line

This Narrated DVD was made by Memorial At Peninsula Ltd

Sourced from

An Original Article By Ed Maloney and James Kinchin-White

Pictures are from Getty Images, Google and Facebook

Snipers Voice from The BBC Families at War Program

Narrated by Natural Reader

DVD Assembled by Memorial At Peninsula Ltd©

The Old East End DVD

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Sep 082017
 

Kelvin Crumplin

Presents

The Old East End Tonight Video

Staring Gary Driscoll

Director KELVIN CRUMPLIN of MULTIVISION ENTERTAINMENT is proud to introduce GARY DRISCOLL singing “THE OLD EAST END TONIGHT” a song written about the 60’s Eastend

The Making of The Old East End DVD

Kelvin say`s

We had a whole heap of fun making this video with Gary Driscoll the Singer and 2nd Royal Green Jacket, Peter Panoa the DOP, Giovanna Maddalena Co Producer and Sue Dorning Production Manager. Again Sam Siegel, I can’t thank you enough for putting this great video together for us, well done.
A big thank you goes out to Peter and Alan at The Circus Tavern. Andy, Roger and Paul at Cinelab London. Sam Clarke from Eastman Kodak, Mark Leen the songs writer, Del and Mike.
ENJOY!!

PLEASE GO TO YOUTUBE AND LIKE. Let’s take Gary to stardom where he belongs. SWIFT AND BOLD
SHARE ON YOUR PAGES AND ASK EVERYONE TO DO THE SAME. THANK YOU.

COMING SOON ….THE RELEASE OF THE CD AND MUSIC VIDEO.

The Shot at Dawn DVD

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Aug 172017
 

THE SHOT AT DAWN DVD

By Memorial At Peninsula Ltd©

Picture sourced from Facebook source unknown

©Shot at Dawn Poem

YOU TIED MY HANDS, BLIND FOLDED ME.

BOUND ME TIGHT, AS I TREMBLED WITH FRIGHT.

IT WAS THEN THAT I HEARD, A COMFORTING WORD,

FROM THE PADRE, WHO KNELT BY MY SIDE.

HE BID ME FAREWELL ON MY JOURNEY THROUGH HELL.

THE LAST WORD I HEARD WAS AMEN.

YOU DIDN’T HEAR, YOU DIDN’T SEE.

ALL YOU DID WAS PUT BULLET’S IN ME.

2017©Memorial At Peninsula Ltd

http://www.facebook.com/philipfrancispickford

Shot at Dawn Poem and Painting by Philip Pickford 

Shot at Dawn DVD ( ALL GAVE SOME – SOME GAVE ALL )

This DVD was made by Memorial At Peninsula Ltd

ALL GAVE SOME – SOME GAVE ALL

Shot at Dawn Poem by Philip Pickford

SHOT AT DAWN Between the years of 1914 and 1920, more than 3,000 British Soldiers were sentenced to death by courts martial for desertion, cowardice, striking an officer, disobedience, falling asleep on duty or casting away arms. Saying that, only 11 per cent of the sentences were carried out.

In total 346 where shot at dawn and 1 hung = 347 including some who committed murder, 306 where pardoned by the Government many many years later. ( yet there are 307 posts at The NMA) ?

Roughly 90% of cases, the sentence was commuted to hard labour or penal servitude.

Medical evidence apparently showing that many were suffering from shell-shock, this was also submitted to the courts, but was not recognized and misinterpreted. Most hearings lasting no more than 20 minutes.

Transcripts made public 75 years on after the events suggest that some of the men were underage. Others appeared to have wandered away from the battlefield in states of extreme distress and confusion, yet they were charged with desertion. When the suppressed documents relating to these courts martial were released, they showed that these men were demonstrably shell-shocked.”

Contrary to popular belief, they were not all denied natural justice….’Rough justice’ it may have been, but justice nevertheless. They were given access to legal representation but not the right of appeal, as the Field Marshal’s decision was absolute. Because ‘Shell- Shock was not recognized back then, most of them were not given proper medical examinations and so their conditions were over-looked.

The function of the threat of executions was to a intimidate and frighten soldiers in the battlefield….Risk the possibility of a bullet in battle or certain death if you don’t do your duty.

The standard soldier in the trenches would be suffering from chronic insomnia and anxiety attacks. He would be wet and cold in wind-chill factors that dragged temperatures as low as minus -18. This alone was enough to drive anyone crazy.

To say that all these men who were shot were bad and deserved their punishment is to ignore all these factors. Most just couldn’t take any more.

By 1930, Parliament had introduced legislation banning the death sentence for the offences for which the 306 were shot. None would be shot today.

Remarkably, most of those shot in the 1914-18 war were volunteer soldiers rather than conscripts and, perhaps unsurprisingly considering what was happening in their homeland, Irish soldiers were shot with proportionately more frequency than those of other regiments.

Among other principles of justice, the presumption of innocence was paid no more than lip service by many British courts martial. Some believe that the British Army was far more likely to shoot a working class man than an officer, and broadly speaking, this was true.

They were finally ‘pardoned’ in the August of 2006 under section 359 of the British Army Act.

In it is shown a list of the ‘original offences’ that soldiers could be tried and executed for :-

359 – Pardons for servicemen executed for disciplinary offences: recognition as victims of First World War

(1)This section applies in relation to any person who was executed for a relevant offence committed during the period beginning on the 4th August 1914 and ending with the 11th November 1918.

(2)Each such person is to be taken to be pardoned under this section in respect of the relevant offence (or relevant offences) for which he was executed.

(3) In this section “relevant offence” means any of the following– (a) an offence under any of the following provisions of the Army Act 1881 (c. 58)– (i) section 4(2) (casting away arms etc); (ii) section 4(7) (cowardice); (iii) section 6(1)(b) (leaving post etc without orders); (iv) section 6(1)(k) (sentinel sleeping etc on post or leaving post); (v) section 7 (mutiny and sedition); (vi) section 8(1) (striking etc superior officer); (vii) section 9(1) (disobedience in defiance of authority); (viii) section 12(1) (desertion or attempt etc to desert); (b)an offence under any of the following provisions of the Indian Army Act 1911 (Indian Act, No 8 of 1911) (i) section 25(b) (casting away arms, cowardice, etc); (ii) section 25(g) (sentry sleeping on post or quitting post); (iii) section 25(i) (quitting guard etc); (iv) section 27 (mutiny, disobedience, etc); (v) section 29 (desertion or attempt to desert).

(4)This section does not (a) affect any conviction or sentence; (b) give rise to any right, entitlement or liability; or (c) affect the prerogative of mercy.

(5) Any reference in this section to a provision of the Army Act 1881 (c. 58) includes a reference to that provision as applied by any enactment, wherever enacted.

The first soldier to be Shot at Dawn was Thomas Highgate

(Information obtained from www.tommy1418.com)

Good books too read are

Blindfolded and Alone

by Cathryn Corns and John Huges Wilson

and also

Shot at Dawn

By Julian Putkowski and Julian Sykes

Please follow the link below to see the posts of the soldiers executed

by firing squads in WWI

“A Post for each one Pardoned”

The posts are in the Nation Memorial Arboretum at Alrewas

https://www.memorialatpeninsula.org/?p=12178

4th KRRC at Dover 1894 – 1896

 Articles  Comments Off on 4th KRRC at Dover 1894 – 1896
Aug 162017
 

4th KRRC at Dover 1894- 6

Western Heights Garrison Church

Baptism records of Sergeants Pinkney and Norton

About dawn on the 31st May 1894 the black-coated 4th Battalion of the King’s Royal Rifle Corps arrived at Dover on the Troopship Tyne, having sailed from Gosport. For some reason only known to the Captain, he refused to berth at the Admiralty Pier and they had to endure the inconvenience and indignity of being landed by tug that plied back and forth across the harbour.  The battalion assembled on the pier before breakfast, and headed by the band of the West Surrey Regiment marched up the hill to The Citadel at the Western Heights. There they replaced the 27th Fusiliers who marched out on a posting elsewhere. The married men were posted to the Married Men’s Quarters at South Front Barracks.

The Citadel was a large and imposing old moated Napoleonic-era fortress that squatted low and hidden on the chalk hills protecting the western approach to Dover from the Folkestone direction.  It could only be described as an unpleasant, unpopular and damp billet, separated from the town by a long fifteen minute march up a very steep hill. On their arrival the men had only straw to sleep on and it was a good couple of weeks before mattresses arrived. They shared it with a permanent detachment of Royal Artillery who manned the heavy defensive guns pointing up the old Folkestone Road. South Front Barracks were constructed in the early 1860s and were casemated and set into a hill between the slopes of The Citadel and the cliff overlooking the shore. Capable of holding 600 men at a push, it had its own set of Married Men’s Quarters and was a couple of minutes march from the gates of The Citadel. Dover, having no regiment of its own, had two or three battalions moving in and out of these barracks, and others, every couple of years.

The 4th KRRC was at that point 801-strong and was commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Reginald Chalmer who had been appointed as Chief of the Corps in 1890. His second in command was 42-year old Major Horatio Reginald Mends with Captains Markham, Prendergast, Henniker, Pakenham, Ryder, Clark, Oxley (Adjutant) and Hon. St. L. Jervis. The Lieutenants were Hon. J. Brownlow, Vernon, Eustace, Sackville, and Second Lieutenants Long, Hordern, Hon. R. Cathcart, Wyndham and Blundell-Hollinshead-Blundell with Quartermaster Lieutenant O’Shea.

It was not the first time the battalion had been to Dover, they had been stationed there in 1858, the year after they had been raised in Winchester. After a couple of years they had been despatched to Canada, then in 1875 had gone to Dublin and then on to India in 1877 where they stayed until 1891. The battalion then moved to Burma, serving there until for one year when in 1892 it was finally returned to the UK and posted to Gosport. This was the first time the KRRC had been stationed in the South East District since 1887 when the 2nd battalion was posted to Shorncliffe under the command of Colonel William Lewis Kinlock Ogilvy.

Shortly after they arrived and on the 20th June, the battalion lost a man. At about 11.30pm on the 14th, Private John King, 22, ‘D’ Company’s storesman, was on his way to his billet at No.1 Hut at the Western Outworks attached to the Citadel by a small bridge. It was a dark, wet and windy night and because he was unfamiliar with the site, prior to walking across the parade square he asked Private Wingfield of ‘O’ Company how to get to his block. Unfortunately King somehow lost his way, failed to find his way through a lighted archway guiding the path on the bridge, lost his footing and fell 40 foot into the moat. The next morning Private J. Doyle was working in the ramparts when two boys pointed out King’s body lying in the grass. Doyle summoned assistance and quickly arrived with a stretcher and rapidly rushed him to the Military Hospital where Surgeon-Captain Dennis Reckitt performed an examination. King stated he had fallen in the previous night but was found to have serious internal injuries, inflammation of the right lung and multiple fractures. Despite his best efforts, Reckitt was unable to save him and he passed away on the 20th. At the Inquest at the Hotel de Paris under Coroner Sydenham Payn, the verdict was ‘Accidental Death’, and a letter was written to the Military Authorities to improve lighting at the archway. King was buried at St. Mary’s Cemetery in Dover with a Rifles Cross topped headstone inscribed “Erected by the officers, non-commissioned officers and men of ‘D’ Company.”

The grave of John King (KRRC)

On the 13th August the band played at the Cricket ground to mark the start of Dover Cricket Week, the first day commencing with a match between The Queen’s Regiment and the Royal Marines from Deal. Ten days later, the band performed at an afternoon and evening fete and concert on the band stand on the Promenade Pier along with the bands of the Duke of Wellington’s (West Riding) Regiment and the Queen’s Regiment, assisted by the Dover Choral Union.  It was a spectacular day of swimming races, and fancy dress swimming tournaments, with the admission price of a sixpence donated to funds for the Western Heights Garrison Church Improvement Fund.

The band played again on September 6th at Dover College grounds during another spectacular, this being the Grand Assault-at-Arms again to raise money for the church. Organised by the Gymnastic Staff of the South Eastern District, the college grounds had displays of sword play, gymnastic displays on the bars, dismounted combats, boxing and horseback lance exercises. That week also saw the battalion engage in annual rifle training at the range at North Fall Meadow close to the Castle. The public attended the Ropewalk at Aycliffe on the 20th September for the battalion sports event, this included running races, tent pitching, tug of wars, and bayonet fighting. Skirmishing races were a particular highlight with soldiers in full dress leaping over hurdles and firing volleys in between.

On the 15th October Major Mends was promoted to Lieutenant Colonel and assumed command from Chalmers who had completed four years’ service as Chief of the Corps. His place was taken by Major Robert Henry Gunning on transfer from the depot at Winchester. (Later promoted to Lieutenant Colonel, Gunning was killed in action against the Boers on the 20th October 1899 at Talana Hill).

Friday 19th October saw the KRRC and other troops engage in a mock invasion exercise. The Dover and Shorncliffe troops were the ‘invaders’ who had made it a few miles ashore and established defensive outposts on the main Dover-Folkestone and Dover-Canterbury roads.  These invading troops consisted of the Royal West Surreys holding Swingfield, the West Ridings around the village of Coldred, the KRRC at Lydden Hill and a detachment of the East Kent Volunteers. Signalling parties were deployed defending the connecting lines. The defenders were to be cavalry from Canterbury, but somewhat bizarrely the cavalry failed to find the defenders and when ‘Cease Fire!’ was sounded at 13.30 barely a shot had been fired. 

During the exercise, an Officer of the Rifles holding a strongpoint on the Canterbury Road saw three cavalry trotting towards him. He ordered the men to open fire and they blazed away merrily. However, the horsemen ignored it until they were just twenty yards away. A burly sergeant then shouted:

“Are you firing at us?”

“Who are you?” replied the officer.

“Oh” replied the amused sergeant. “We are Lord William Seymour’s body guard”, referring to the General Officer Commanding the South-Eastern District.

“Why don’t you paint your faces green then, to show what you are.” The officer replied. The troopers rode off, confused. It seems the Rifles had been firing at baffled horsemen who had nothing to do with the battle.

The day was marred by a rather idiotic practical joke played on a Rifleman. His colleague decided it was a good idea to empty the content of his blank powder cartridge into his unsuspecting friend’s pipe and covered it in tobacco so he wouldn’t notice. When he lit his pipe up, it exploded on him with a huge jet of flame. The poor soldier suffered bad powder burns to his face and was rushed to hospital and the soldier who had played the prank was promptly arrested.

On November 30th a draft of one sergeant, one corporal and one hundred privates left Dover for Portsmouth en-route for Gibraltar. On the 7th December and in the run-up to Christmas a large party organised by the sergeants was held in the Gymnasium of the Heights for 150 invited guests, both military and civilian, the evening lasting until 4am. The band played again on the 28th December at the Town Hall for the Annual County Ball and played eighteen dances to 200 guests. Football season commenced in early 1895 and the KRRC fielded their own team, regularly playing other units at the Danes football ground. One private, Reynolds, even joined the main local Dover football club to permanently replace one of their own members. A battalion cricket team was also formed.

The spring saw annual musketry training at the Dymchurch ranges with the first batch of 100 new recruits undergoing practice from 28th March to the 11th April, with the rest of the battalion following on from the 10th June to the 15th July.

On Tuesday 16th April, Private James Carrah was brought before Dover Police Court, charged with breaking a glass window and the panel of a door at The Park Inn public house in Ladywell. The Landlady, Mrs Louise Sexton, testified that on the previous night Carrah and a colleague had come into the pub demanding a drink, but she refused as he was already obviously quite drunk. Carrah became abusive and used filthy language, threatening to smash the pub up, and had to be removed by the landlady’s husband. Outside he then smashed a glass pane in the door and kicked it, the police constable was called for, and he was promptly arrested. The Magistrates fined him £2 10s for damage repairs.

The band performed again the 8th May 1895 at Dover Town Hall with Dover Choral Union in a performance of Gilbert and Sullivan’s ‘The Martyr of Antioch’ and other selections. In late May Private Gibbons was arrested for theft from a shop, at his trial he stated that he had stolen the items with the express intention of getting caught as he had hoped that if he was convicted he would be discharged from service! Unfortunately no records survive as to whether he was successful. During these months the rest of the battalion would have been engaged in drill at The Citadel, route marches and rifle practice at the many ranges around Dover.

The Annual Kent Manoeuvres began on Monday the 3rd June, the regulars, militia, yeomanry and volunteers, assembling on the banks of the Royal Military Canal and in the fields between Hythe and Ashford. The 4th KRRC along with the West Riding Regiment left Dover on the previous Saturday on a long route march to the location. With the aid of a dozen traction engines, vast camps stretching across entire fields were set up for both the ‘invading’ and ‘defending’ armies.

During the first mock battle on the Monday the 3rd and 4th KRRC, the Royal Irish Rifles and Kent Yeomanry acted defensively against the aggressors of the West Surreys, West Ridings, Sussex Volunteers, Royal Engineers, Dragoons and Field Artillery, a total of about 4,000 men. Following the commencement of hostilities in the late afternoon, the Yeomanry first defended the Canal by ‘destroying’ bridges, in reality this was by planting signs on them marked ‘Bridge Destroyed’. In the evening the attacking force successfully crossed a bridge over the River Rother that the defenders had missed. The Irish Rifles scouted ahead and engaged the Sussex Volunteers. The invading Royal Engineers then prepared a specially constructed pontoon bridge they had made to cross the river slightly north of Iden. Nonetheless, the attackers managed to cross one of the ‘destroyed’ bridges and force the heavily outnumbered Irishmen to retreat. ‘Cease Fire!’ was called at 1am Tuesday morning and the troops returned to their camps.

Fighting recommenced at 9am with a barrage of defending artillery. Despite this, battalion after battalion crossed the bridge at Iden and quickly the regular infantry, after a feint at the canal at Appledore, managed to outflank the guns which were forced to limber-up and retreat.  Fighting ceased at midday. On Wednesday the scenario was that the invaders had crossed successfully but now had to halt for stores and reinforcements and that the defenders, now supplemented by Volunteers from Ashford, could mount a counter-attack. At 10am the battle started, after an hour the Rifles had been successful and managed to begin the drive the enemy back. The invaders then brought up artillery and began to pound the Rifles who were exposed and caught in the open. Infantry followed and out-manoeuvred them, forcing the Rifles to retreat back to the village of Warehorne. When the final ‘Cease Fire’ was sounded the attacking force was certainly in the superior position although the result was never seriously in doubt as the defenders had been seriously outnumbered from the start. Following the end of the exercise, the 4th KRRC proceeded to Lydd to undertake musketry instruction. They returned to Dover on the 29th June.

Saturday the 6th July saw another loss of a man by the battalion. Private Thomas William Sears, 22, had been in the town drinking but on his way back to barracks had fallen into the Wellington Dock opposite the Commercial Quay and drowned. Private Charles Walker, who shared the same room as Sears at the Citadel, had seen Sears in the Lord Wolseley public house at about 22.45 talking to a soldier of the East Surreys, but he did not seem particularly worse for drink. Charles Everitt of the barge ‘Benjamin Little’ stated at the inquest that he had heard a splash at about 23.20, heard a groan and saw a man submerge under the water. He was unable to do anything as he could not see the body. Wallace Brown, of the ‘Diving Cutter’ saw a crowd gather on the dockside and ran to retrieve a grapnel, he managed snare Sears and pull his body up onto the deck of the ‘Benjamin Little’. Police Constable Vincent and others desperately tried to resuscitate Sears but it was to no avail. The inquest returned a verdict of ‘Accidental Death’ and it was concluded that Sears had probably tripped over a loose chain fence at the edge of the dock where grapnels were tied up. A letter was written to Dover Harbour Board recommending the tightening up the chains in the area.  

On the 10th August the second battalion sports day was held at the Ropewalk at Aycliffe and was very well attended by the public. August 28th saw another event at Dover College grounds again to raise funds for the Church. This was another fete and concert with stalls, displays and a tea tent as the battalion band, and others, played on. At about the same time the officers clubbed together and donated £3 3 shillings to the Dover Regatta Fund.  On the 3rd September the battalion formed a guard of about 100 men on the Admiralty Pier when Nusrullah Khan, the Shahzada of Afghanistan, departed for the continent on a yacht to a resounding artillery salute from the Castle.

The 12th September 1895 saw the battalion engage on a night attack on Fort Burgoyne. The battalion formed part of the attacking force along with the Royal West Surreys, a detachment of Royal Engineers and a battery of Field Artillery from Shorncliffe, the force under the command of Lieutenant Colonel Nourse of the Surreys. The defenders consisted of the Royal Artillery and the Duke of Wellington’s Regiment under the command of Colonel Ditmas, R.A..

The attack began at 21.30 when the heavy guns at the fort opened fire at the assembled attacking force on the plain opposite, about a mile away.  The Field Artillery returned fire whilst a party of infantry managed to sneak up to the fort and attempt to advance with pick axes and grappling irons. Spotted by the defenders, they were subjected to hail of fire and forced to retreat. A second sortie was made by the Rifles and Surreys using scaling ladders and managed to enter the trenches protecting the fort and begin to climb the walls. Ditmas ordered a sortie by the Duke of Wellingtons’ who managed to surprise the attackers from the rear. When ‘Cease Fire’ was called, the two parties were firing a point-blank range at each other. A similar such exercise took place at the end of September.

On Friday 1st November Private Chatfield demonstrated his prowess on the piano by playing at a Smoking Concert at the Soldier’s Institution. Attended by many of the senior officers of the garrison, the concert had been arranged to say farewell to a draft of the 4th KRRC who were about to embark for Malta, and as a welcome to the East Surrey Regiment who had recently arrived. KRRC men provided much of the entertainment, Private Cooper sung ‘I’m one of the jays’, ‘Father do come home’ and ‘Nonsense up to date’ to the demands of encores, Private Walsh sang ‘He felt a draft’, Lance-Corporal Smith gave a mandolin solo and Corporal Pope played the banjo.

On the 18th November Colonel Mends presented the annual prizes to the men of the 1st Volunteer Battalion of the East Kent Regiment at Maison Dieu Hall in front of a large group of the public and inspected the company which had been drawn up in parade order by Captain Vernon Knocker. In late November the KRRC provided three men to attend the Soldier’s Institute to give instruction in trades to ex-soldiers, the first classes being that of book-binding over two days a week. The East Surreys also provided three men and the Royal Artillery a further two.

Further concerts followed, including the band performing at a production of Rossini’s ‘Stabat Mater’ on the 4th December in the Town Hall accompanied by the Dover Choral Union and conducted by Mr. H.J. Taylor FRCO. January was marked with a series of 15 mile route marches that were dictated by the War Office, the marches taking place every Thursday and Friday, with the East Surreys doing the same on Monday and Tuesdays. The regiment that remained behind adopted the garrison duties of the other for those particular days. These winter route marches were an adoption of a system that had been utilised by the German army for many years and was deemed to be a successful one, assisting greatly in manoeuvres.

The band were again utilised on the 23rd February at the Soldier’s Institute following the arrival at the Admiralty Pier of a detachment of the 3rd KRRC at Shorncliffe on board the paddle-steamer Lady Vita. There was a rare unfortunate incident in late March when Private John Greyless was sentenced at the Borough Police Court and sent to prison for 21 days for knocking down and kicking Mary Ann Johnstone in Snargate Street. 

Another concert was played on Sunday 5th April on the Promenade Pier and two further on the 22nd and 23rd April at the Town Hall to raise money for the Gordon Boys’ Orphanage. The battalion left Dover for Lydd on the 28th April for a couple of days training in conjunction with the 3rd battalion at Shorncliffe. On the night of the 1st May the battalion carried out manoeuvres around the area of Fort Burgoyne in conjunction with the 2nd West Yorkshires. No blank cartridges were utilised, the exercise being to practice navigation at night using compass bearings.

On the 8th May 1896 the battalion was piped down from the Citadel to the railway station by the band of the West Yorkshires whereupon they departed for Aldershot at 9 o’clock. Aside from the two deaths, it can be said that their stay in Dover had been quiet and, unlike their first period at Dover, remarkably petty crime and incident-free. They had truly marked themselves as a popular regiment by becoming heavily involved in local community life.

The Barracks, Dover  

KRRC Baptisms 1984 to 1896

Credited to Phillip Eyden

Author Name Phil Eyden

Sources:

Dover Express archives.

Grave Picture credited to Jeff Howe

The King’s Royal Rifle Corps Chronicle, 1904.