Friday 31 May 1918 – Across to France

Today the war gets closer:  Greg sails across from Folkestone to Boulogne in France and then travels on to Berck Plage, where ironically he has a rather lazy day.  He then is a witness to one of the notorious Étaples hospital bombing raids that resulted in many casualties and major damage.

Diary entry Diary entry

Friday May 31st. London. Caught the 7.35am from Victoria for Folkestone, arrived about 9.30. Sailed 11.15 on ‘Arundel’ for Boulogne. Arrived about 1pm. Lunch at the Louvre & then by tender to No 2 ASD at Berck Plage. Passed through Étaples, where the hospital had been bombed by Germans.  Good bathing at Berck – did nothing all day. 

Another raid on Étaples from 10.30 – 12.30pm.

One machine dropped a flare.  Machine gun heard firing in the air.  Probably one of our machines after the raiders. Furious ‘Archie’ bombardment, with no result.

London to Berck Plage

From the perspective of today’s ~30 minute train journey from St Pancras to the Channel Tunnel portal behind Folkestone, the 1918 travel time of almost two hours from Victoria to Folkestone Harbour seems rather slow.  But that’s the way it was, and at Folkestone Greg boarded the SS Arundel for the crossing to Boulogne, the main French port for personnel (Calais was principally used for materiel):

SS Arundel
SS Arundel. Image credit: Grace’s Guide (https://www.gracesguide.co.uk/SS_Arundel)

Lunch at The Louvre didn’t involve a quick dash to Paris’ famous gallery, but rather the Grand Hotel du Louvre et Terminus, conveniently situated where the cross-channel ferries dock:

Advert for the Hotel du Louvre
Advert for the Hotel du Louvre, Boulogne, from Bradshaw’s Continental Railway Guide (1913)

The 27 mile (43 km) journey south by tender from Boulogne to Berck Plage would have crossed the River Canche at Étaples (near Le Touquet):

The 27 mile journey from Boulogne to Berck Plage on a modern map, courtesy Google (click for a larger, zoomable map of the area, opens in new tab)

Étaples Hospital Raids

Étaples, an old fishing port that was a haunt of artists before the war, became home to huge British military presence.  It was a major depot and training camp for the British Expeditionary Force, as well as the site of a complex of hospitals, air raids on which were the subject not only of Greg’s comment but also much wider controversy.

Wikipedia, citing E. J. King in The Knights of St John in the British Empire, says this:

Among the atrocities of that war, the hospitals there were bombed and machine-gunned from the air several times during May 1918. In one hospital alone, it was reported, ‘One ward received a direct hit and was blown to pieces, six wards were reduced to ruins and three others were severely damaged. Sister Baines, four orderlies and eleven patients were killed outright, whilst two doctors, five sisters and many orderlies and patients were wounded. [E.J.King, The Knights of St John in the British Empire, London 1934, pp.200-1.]’ [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89taples]

This view of the Germans deliberately targeting the hospitals is adopted by other commentators, such as the author of the following piece:

The town’s medical prominence did not escape the attention of the German military high command, which duly organised a number of air raids on the town.  Four such attacks in May 1918 were launched using incendiary bombs directed against the various hospital sites.

Given that literally hundreds of patients were suffering from fractured femurs many were unable to move to safety during such raids.  They were thus assisted by hospital orderlies – who themselves came under machine gun fire from low-flying aircraft pilots watching out for just such activity.  [http://www.firstworldwar.com/atoz/etaples.htm]

But some have taken a position that was less critical of the Germans’ intentions:

The Etaples hospitals were destroyed by German air raids which began on 19 May 1918 and continued until 10 August. There were grave doubts as to the wisdom of having sited large military training camps and hospitals so close together but it was generally believed that the enemy’s target was really the railway bridge over the River Canche. This belief was confirmed when a German airman who had been shot down said to his rescuers ‘if you persist in placing hospitals beside railway lines, they will continue to be bombed’. In the first attack of 19 May, in which 10 or 12 German planes took part, more than 300 patients were killed or wounded and incendiary bombs were dropped on the town of Etaples. Further raids occurred on 27 and 31 May, 28, 29 and 31 June, 1, 25 and 31 July, and 10 August. The hospital gardens were dug up for shelters. In the raid of 31 May, the St John Hospital was rendered uninhabitable with serious loss of life. [citations omitted] [Meynell, J R Army Med Corps 142 43-47 (1996)]

Back home at the time, however, The Times was having none of it.  Possibly referring to the same German airman, if this was the man who was brought down in the Étaples hospital raid of 19 May, the paper dismissed his protestations of a railway target in this article on 24 May 1918:

The Times, 24 May 1918
The Times, 24 May 1918. Click for full article (opens in new tab).

 

GERMAN SAVAGERY AT ITS WORST

HOSPITALS DELIBERATELY BOMBED

The captain of the machine brought down, who was wounded, and is now being cared for in the hospital he bombed, was formerly in the German Diplomatic Service. He tried at first to excuse himself by saying that he saw no Red Cross. When challenged with the fact that he knew that he was attacking hospitals he endeavoured to plead that hospitals should not be placed near railways, or, if they are, that they must take the consequences. Apart from the fact that hospitals must be near railways for the transport of their patients, in this case, as in the others, the raiders were not attacking the railway, but came deliberately to bomb the hospital area, and knew perfectly well what they were doing.

Berck Plage

By the time Greg arrived there on 31 May 1918, Berck Plage was the headquarters of 2 Aeroplane Supply Depot (2 ASD).  It was here he had to wait to find out the squadron to which he would be posted.  Until then, in what must have been an unsettling but anticipatory afternoon, he could note the good bathing and ‘do nothing all day’.

Berck Plage
Berck Plage, from a contemporary postcard

Thursday 30 May 1918 – Orders for Overseas Posting

It can have come as no shock to Greg to be posted overseas by the Air Board.  Possibly more surprising was the fact that he was going the following day:

Diary entry
Diary entry
Thursday May 30th. London. Reported to Air Board around 11.30 & received orders for overseas sailing from Folkestone next day. Went to a show in the evening. Stayed at the Grosvenor.

Hotel Cecil

At the time of Greg’s visit, the Air Board [Air Ministry] was housed in the Hotel Cecil at 80 Strand, prior to its move to Adastral House in Kingsway in 1919. The name of the hotel would have caused him a wry smile: he was not at all keen on his given names of Cecil Edward, hence his preference to be known as Greg. The Hotel Cecil was largely demolished when Shell Mex House was built in the 1930s, but the façade was kept and is still there today.

Hotel Cecil Frontage
The Strand frontage of Shell Mex House, preserved from the Hotel Cecil, in 2018. Click or tap for larger image. Image Credit: Lizzie Sheard

Hitting the West End…

No doubt like many before him before setting out for war, Greg spent his last evening in Blighty in going to a show.  His diary doesn’t record which one, but some recently opened candidates that were then running in the West End were:

  • Yes, Uncle! by Nat D. Ayer and Clifford Grey at the Prince’s Theatre
  • The Lilac Domino by Charles Cuvillier and Robert B. Smith at the Empire
  • Violette by John Ansell and Norman Slee at the Lyric Theatre
  • Very Good, Eddie by Jerome Kern and Schuyler Greene (Herbert Reynolds) at the Palace
  • Going Up by Louis Achille Hirsch and Otto Harbach & James Montgomery at the Gaiety

Information from, and credit to, Vivyan Ellacott’s Over the Footlights website, and specifically his list of London Musicals from 1915-1919.

…and Hitting the Sack

Greg’s mention of staying at “the Grosvenor” was probably a reference to the Officers’ YMCA in Grosvenor Gardens, where he had stayed the previous night. On the whole that seems more likely for a 19-year old 2nd Lieutenant than the Grosvenor House Hotel on Park Lane!

Wednesday 29 May 1918 – Report to Air Board in London

Greg's Diary

With Greg’s training now over, he is deemed ready for active service.  His diary begins today with the receipt of orders to report to the Air Board in London.

Greg's Diary
Greg’s Diary
Wednesday May 29th. Winchester. Received orders to report to Air Board on following morning before 12. Left Winchester by 8.30 train. Stayed at Officers YMCA.

Air Board

Greg refers to the ‘Air Board’, which in different incarnations in 1916 and 1917 had striven to co-ordinate the flying activities of the Army (the Royal Flying Corps) and the Royal Navy (the RNAS), with varying degrees of success.

But in January 1918 the duties of the Air Board had in fact been taken over by the newly formed Air Ministry, which directed the affairs of the nascent Royal Air Force:

The Air Ministry was created in January 1918 to oversee the birth in April 1918 of the Royal Air Force from the amalgamation of the Royal Flying Corps and the Royal Naval Air Service. The organisation was broadly similar to that of the Admiralty and the War Office, with a Secretary of State chairing the Air Council and the senior RAF member holding the post of Chief of the Air Staff.

https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/49053/history_of_mod.pdf

But whatever the formal position, no doubt it was still referred to as the ‘Air Board’ by those summoned to appear before them.

Officers YMCA

It may seem odd that the YMCA makes this appearance in Greg’s diary, but as Emma Hanna of the University of Kent explains:

The Young Men’s Christian Association (YMCA) was established in London in 1844 as a prayer and bible study group. At the outbreak of war the YMCA turned its pastoral experience to providing support for servicemen.  By October 1914, 400 large marquees had been erected in Britain, and public appeals were launched to fund the building of large wooden huts to provide rest and recreational facilities.

…by 1918 over 1,117,000 officers and men could be accommodated in YMCA hostels in London.

Hanna, Emma: Young Men’s Christian Association (YMCA) , in: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War, ed. by Ute Daniel, et al., issued by Freie Universität Berlin, Berlin 2015-01-29. DOI10.15463/ie1418.10544.

Quite possibly the YMCA that Greg stayed in was the hut in Grosvenor Gardens, London SW1:

YMCA, Victoria Hut, Grosvenor Gardens, London
Temporary war buildings used by the YMCA, Victoria Hut, Grosvenor Gardens, London. IWM image Q28734. From ‘YMCA and other British volunteer organisations 1914-1918’ at http://www.longlongtrail.co.uk/army/other-aspects-of-order-of-battle/ymca-british-volunteer-organisations-1914-1918/. Click to go to source website (opens in new tab)

 

Tuesday 28 May 1918 – Three Air Combats for 42 Sqn

Meanwhile in France (again)…

…almost 70 miles (110 km) to the north of the battle at Cantigny, 42 Squadron was having a busy day dealing with enemy aircraft, with three ‘Combats in the Air’ reports being filed about activity over Calonne and Le Sart, either side of the River Lys to the west of Merville, itself 17 miles (30 km) west of Lille:

Calonne and Le Sart
Calonne and Le Sart, near Merville, from 1:40,000 scale map. Click for larger image. Map credit IWM/GreatWarDigital

1. Capt. Davis and Lt Chatterton

This crew had a tough time against 12 aircraft only three days ago on 25 May 1918

Air combat report
Air combat report – click for larger image
Time: 5.15 a.m.  
Locality: CALONNE
Pilot: Capt. A. E. Davis  
Observer: Lieut. J. Chatterton, M.C. 

Three small two-seater Fighters, and one with slight extensions on top plane.  

While doing a shoot 4 E.A. appeared over CALONNE.  I turned West but one machine dived on our tail and fired continuously.

Observer fired about 100 rounds into this E.A. which then turned away.  The second then dived and also fired continuously.  Observer fired another drum at about 200 yards into this E.A. which also turned East.

A third machine then dived on us but after firing about 100 rounds on us the whole formation withdrew East.

Vickers gun fired about 50 rounds at E.A. after they had turned East.

2. Lt. Welsh & 2/Lt. Watkins

Air combat report
Air combat report – click for larger image
Time: 10.30 a.m.  
Locality: LE SART
Pilot: Lieut A. W. Welsh 
Observer: 2/Lieut H. Watkins 

Two seater, possibly Aviatik  

R.E.A. [Reconnaissance Enemy Aircraft] obviously trying to bomb our trenches dropped 3 at LE SART, during which time he was fired at back by back and then front gun.  He immediately flew back over MERVILLE to ESTAIRES.

3. Lts. Puckle and Nicolson

This was another crew that had seen air combat recently: on 19 May 1918 and  22 May 1918.

Air combat report
Air combat report – click for larger image
Time: 4.35 p.m.  
Locality: CALONNE 
Pilot: Lieut H. Puckle 
Observer: Lieut J. F. W. Nicolson 

Four two seaters, one with extensions, type unknown.  Machine which fired on our tail had two guns.  Machines had a blue bottom plane (underneath) and large blue patch under the fuselage.  Very small black crosses.   

While flying over CALONNE 4 E.A. two seaters were sighted.  Pilot fired 25 rounds into 1 E.A., then gun jambed.  E.A. then turned on R.E.8. and got one on the tail.  Observer fired 250 rounds into this E.A. which turned East and flew with the others towards MERVILLE. 

One machine had a kidney-shaped tail (not the one with extensions) thus: [see image]  The extensions on the only E.A. which had them were short and square.

 

Tuesday 28 May 1918 – The Battle of Cantigny

Meanwhile in France…

Among the items of the Greg’s War collection are various photographs from the Somme sector, which as far as we know he never visited.  And since Tuesday 28 May 1918 was Greg’s last full day in Hampshire, he was certainly not there for the Battle of Cantigny – a small village 3½ miles (5.5 km) ENE of Montdidier – which was fought that day.  The battle’s tactical objective – the elimination of a small German salient whose high ground was inconveniently favourable for the enemy’s artillery – was arguably dwarfed by the greater strategic effect of establishing the capabilities of the American Expedition Force as an effective fighting unit, for the encouragement both of the allied Entente Powers and of the enemy.  Michael Seymour’s article sets out the context of the battle:

The Battle of Cantigny

Five striking aerial photographs of that engagement are published here today.  Possibly they were taken by a French squadron[1], as France was responsible for providing air cover to the American troops undertaking operations on the ground in their first major battle of the Great War. 

The Battle of Cantigny Photographs

These aerial photographs of the Battle of Cantigny are all from the Greg’s War Collection, and are reproduced here with their original captions:

Cantigny
[Click on any photograph for a larger image.] 
Attack on Cantigny by Americans May 1918.  
1. The Bombardment
Cantigny
2. Village and wood after bombardment
Cantigny
3. Advance of the tanks
Cantigny
4. The attack by tanks and yanks
Cantigny
5. Yanks encircling the village

Cantigny Then and Now

Cantigny today is still a tiny place, albeit more peaceful, with the poignantly named Rue de 28 Mai 1918.  Compare Photograph 1 above with its contemporary equivalent below:

The same oblique aspect from the north as Photograph 1 today, courtesy Google. Click for a zoomable view in Google Maps (opens in new tab)

The Tanks…

A number of French Schneider CA-1 tanks [2] were active with the US troops, which was a new experience for both.  The Schneiders were fairly small, turret-less boxes (~21 ft/6 m long by ~7 ft/2 m wide), with a characteristic boat-like prow.  This is visible in this magnified detail of the centre portion of Photograph No. 3:

Schneider tanks
Detail of Photograph No. 3, showing Schneider tanks (marked)

(Note, incidentally, how the tracks that the tanks have left behind them in the spring crops curiously foreshadow the ‘tram lines’ made by the large farm implements of modern agriculture.)

One Schneider CA-1 survives today in the Musée des Blindés at Saumur:

Schneider CA-1
Schneider CA-1 on display at the Musée des Blindés in Saumur. Image credit: Wikipedia user ‘Fat yankey’, licensed under CC BY-SA 2.5

The marine-looking prow is seen clearly in this photograph, as is the steel spur above it.  The purpose of this configuration was cut and crush barbed wire.

The US troops gained their objective fairly early in the day, and hung on tenaciously in the face of a brutal counter attack.  Their defence of the newly gained was all the more impressive for it being inadequately supported by artillery as a result of rapid redeployment to resist the Blücher-Yorck offensive.  The Battle of Cantigny was a success for the allies, and particularly for the Americans.


Notes

[1] I’m grateful to Timothy Slater (Twitter: @SlaterTimothy) for this:

“The annotations on the photographs confirm they were taken by the French 42nd Sqn (SPA 42). SPA 42 was the French Sqn attached to the 1st American Division between Apr & Aug 1918.”

[2] A post on the Great War Forum (https://www.greatwarforum.org/topic/176720-cantigny-french-flame-and-tank-support/) has a photograph indicating that the tanks were French-manned. 


Header Image: detail from Photograph 1 (Greg’s War Collection)


Post edited 13 September 2018

Monday 27 May 1918 – Last Day of Training

So this was it. The last day of training in a (relatively) safe environment, with no-one wishing you harm, and no one shooting at you from the ground or the air.

The last day at Hursley Park/Worthy Down was evidently something of a recap, with a shoot (complete with ground strips) and zone calls being rehearsed.  Not a bad thing, either.

Log book entry
Last log book entry during training
Date: 27.5.18 
Hour: – 
Machine type and No.: RE 6650 
Passenger: – 
Time: 1 hr 15 m 
Height: 3000 
Course: Shoot. Gr. Str. & Zonecalls 
Remarks: Successful

More on shoots:

Saturday 4 May 1918 – Shoot, but No Photos

More on ground strips:

Friday 5 April 1918 – Landings and Ground Strips

More on zone calls:

Monday 29 April 1918 – Zone Calls

Farewell to Hursley Park and Worthy Down.  From now on, it was for real.

Sunday 26 May 1918 – Two Shoots

On his penultimate flying day at Hursley Park/Worthy Down, Greg is in intensive training for his work with the artillery on the Western Front.  Two shoots today, one marred by a dodgy engine (a problem that would be recurrent on active service) and the other recorded as successful.

Log book entry
Log book entry
Date: 26.5.18 
Hour: 9.45 
Machine type and No.: RE 4479 
Passenger: – 
Time: 35 m 
Height: 2000 
Course: Shoot 
Remarks: Engine missing badly
Date: 26.5.18 
Hour: 10.45 
Machine type and No.: RE 4529 
Passenger: – 
Time: 1 hr 15 m 
Height: 3000 
Course: Shoot 
Remarks: Successful

More on shoots here:

Saturday 4 May 1918 – Shoot, but No Photos

Saturday 25 May 1918 – 42 Sqn in Air Combat

Meanwhile in France…

…it was another day of aerial combat for an RE8 of 42 Squadron, which was – alarmingly – outnumbered 12 to 1 but survived:

Air combat report
Air combat report – click for larger image
Time: 12.10 p.m.  
Locality: K.28 
Pilot: Capt. A. E. Davis 
Observer: Lieut. J. Chatterton, M.C. 

12 single seater machines, type unknown.
Machines had extension on top planes and slight
dihedral.

 
At 12.10pm two formations of six machines each 
appeared over MERVILLE.  One machine dived on us and
fired about 50 rounds.  Observer fired a burst of 25
rounds with Lewis into this machine which then 
turned away.  A second E.A. then dived and followed 
us down to 4000 feet, firing all the time.  Observer
fired another 70 rounds into this machine which did
a sharp "Immelmann" and turned East. Vickers [the 
pilot's gun] fired about 50 rounds at machines 
retreating.

K.28

“K.28” refers to a 1,000 yd x 1,000 yd square just west of Merville, itself 17 miles (30 km) west of Lille:

K.28, near Merville map.
K.28, near Merville, from 1:10,000 scale map. Click for larger image. Map credit IWM/GreatWarDigital

The centre of K.28 was a mile or so behind, i.e. to the east of, the German front line at the time.

“Immelmann”

The “Immelmann Turn” is associated with and was possibly devised by the German Pilot Max Immelmann.

According to Wikipedia:

In World War I aerial combat, an Immelmann turn was a maneuver used after an attack on another aircraft to reposition the attacking aircraft for another attack.

After making a high-speed diving attack on an enemy, the attacker would then climb back up past the enemy aircraft, and just short of the stall, apply full rudder to yaw his aircraft around. This put his aircraft facing down at the enemy aircraft, making another high-speed diving pass possible. This is a difficult maneuver to perform properly, as it involves precise control of the aircraft at low speed. With practice and proper use of all of the fighter’s controls, the maneuver could be used to reposition the attacking aircraft to dive back down in any direction desired.

The manoeuvre is illustrated in a 1918 RNAS handbook as follows:

Immelmann Turn
The Immelmann Turn, illustrated by E. L. Ford, from ‘Practical Flying’, RNAS, 1918

Immelmann famously flew Fokker Eindeckers, including the E.III as pictured (probably at Upavon in Wiltshire) in this post:

Wednesday 1 May 1918 – The Enemy Close at Hand

 

Saturday 25 May 1918 – Another Shoot

In his last three days of flying from Worthy Down while training at Hursley Park, Greg has another shoot:

Log book entry
Log book entry
Date: 25.5.18 
Hour: 4.15 
Machine type and No.: RE 6650 
Passenger: – 
Time: 1 hr 0 m 
Height: 3000 
Course: Shoot 
Remarks: Successful

The timing, although late in the day at 4:15 pm, was early enough to avoid the murky weather moving in from the west by evening:

Weather map for 25 May 191
Met Office weather charts for morning and evening of 25 May 1918. Click for larger image. Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v1.0

More on shoots here:

Saturday 4 May 1918 – Shoot, but No Photos

Wednesday 22 May 1918 – 42 Sqn in Air Combat Again

Meanwhile in France…

Lts Puckle (Pilot) and Nicolson (Observer) of 42 Sqn RAF again saw aerial combat, only three days after their last encounter.  This time they were on photographic duty, and were incidentally attacking enemy kite balloons near Estaires when they became entangled with a couple of Albatros scouts.  Presumably the job of the scouts was to defend the kite balloons.

Time: 11.35am  
Locality: ESTAIRES 
Pilot: Lt H. Puckle Observer: Lt J. F. W. Nicolson

Two Albatros Scouts. 

While attacking 4 E.K.B. at R.4, R.11, R.17, G.20, two Albatross Scouts were seen by Observer to be climbing up to machine about 1500 feet below. Observer fired a drum of Lewis into nearest E.A. which spun down, flattened out and flew away East. The other Scout also flew away.

Estaires

The map squares R.4, R.11, R.17 and G.20 (1:40,000 sheets 36A and 36) are either side of Estaires, which is in the Département du Nord on the River Lys, about 15 miles (24 km) west of Lille:

Estaires and its environs map
Estaires and its environs. Scale: 1:40,000 on original print; each numbered square is 1,000 yds (914 m). Map credit: IWM/TNA/RGS/GreatWarDigital
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