Walter Draycott’s Great War Chronicle

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You are here: Home / Archives for Diary Entries

Wednesday 3 January 1917

January 3, 2017 by Sarah McLennan

Damn the Hun. He has spoiled our dinner with his blasted shelling.
Have to run the gauntlet between here and Neuville St. Vaast. By jerky running I outwit him with his shells.
Get ‘ell for running risks. The old General MacDonnel very fatherly over my escapades.
Get valuable nose-caps.


*”Hun” is a derogatory term for German used particularly during the First and Second World Wars.
*The expression “running the gauntlet” is derived from a form of physical punishment where a captive is to run between two rows – a gauntlet – of soldiers who repeatedly strike them.
*Nosecap is that part of a shell which unscrews and contains the device and scale for setting the time fuse.

Filed Under: 1917 Entries, Diary Entries Tagged With: General McDonnell, Neuville St Vaast

Tuesday 2 January 1917

January 2, 2017 by Sarah McLennan

Having a devil of a time with the damn rats in our dugout and round about La Targette and Neuville St. Vaast.
Enemy shells our area.
A few more inches and he would have got our dugout. However he makes the walls shake and parts fall in.


*Trench conditions were ideal for rats. Empty food cans were piled in their thousands throughout No Man’s Land, heaved over the top on a daily basis. Most soldiers who served on the Western Front would later recall how rats grew in boldness, stealing food that had been lain down for just a few moments. Rats would also crawl across the face of sleeping men. Although shooting at rats was strictly prohibited – it being regarded as a pointless waste of ammunition – many soldiers nevertheless took pot shots at nearby rats in this manner. (www.firstworldwar.com)

Filed Under: 1917 Entries, Diary Entries Tagged With: Neuville St Vaast

Monday 1 January 1917

January 1, 2017 by Sarah McLennan

https://greatwarchronicle.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/Monday_January_1_1917.mp3

Stay up till midnight with Lieut. Gleam of the 1st Div. pioneers. Drink in the New Year. No artillery fire of any description. We awaken at 9 am very late.
I go to Mt. St. Eloy and have dinner with the Transport staff and Brigade staff in a private house. I also visit 4 Co. PPCLI. The Pats get reinforcement of 50 men. Major Adamson makes a speech to them. Fog all day. I travel overland. Not observed by enemy. Our guns are active.


*PPCLI – Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry
*On a hill overlooking Arras stand the remains of two towers which bear testament not only to the once-powerful Mont-Saint-Eloi Abbey but also to the savage fighting that took place in the area during the Great War….From the beginning of the Great War the towers were used by French troops to observe German positions on Lorette Spur and Vimy Ridge. The suspicions of the French soldiers were aroused when Germans fired upon their every movement until it was realized that what was giving them away was not a spy but the birds nesting on the towers which took flight when troops disturbed them. (www.remembrancetrails-northernfrance.com) (www.greatwarphotos.com/tag/mont-st-eloi)

Filed Under: 1917 Entries, Diary Entries Tagged With: Germans, PPCLI, Vimy Ridge

Sunday 31 December 1916

December 31, 2016 by Sarah McLennan

My assistant & one of the observers go to Mont St Eloy. I’m busy making maps.

Filed Under: 1916, Diary Entries

Saturday 30 December 1916

December 30, 2016 by Sarah McLennan

Very busy map making for blue prints. A young fellow of the pioneer was shot thro’ the heart & liver near our dugout. Poor young Bradford dies of wounds at Mont St Eloy Hosp, shot by a sniper same time as Sergt Michaud.

Filed Under: 1916, Diary Entries

Friday 29 December 1916

December 29, 2016 by Sarah McLennan

I lay in bed till’ 1 PM then down to my office. General MacDonnel arrives back from leave & greats me with a handshake & asks several questions. I give him a late map of trenches on tracing lines. The assembly consists of the General, Col Griesbay, the Bde Major & the aide de camp. (Mr[?] Wallis).
Enemy shell our batteries. We have been shelling him all day with heavy shells.

Filed Under: 1916, Diary Entries Tagged With: General Macdonnel;

Thursday 28 December 1916

December 28, 2016 by Sarah McLennan

Enemy busy with r.g. fire & trench mortars. We name a heavy trench mortar of their’s – “Anania” and another one “Josephine II.” In the night we blow up a mine. I watched it go up, a fierce looking affair with a huge column of fire & smoke. Machine guns open fire & we are active. The whole affair is a success & the 49th occupy the crater lip. It is a bitterly cold, wet night with biting wind. I have neuralgia curse it.

Filed Under: 1916, Diary Entries

Wednesday 27 December 1916

December 27, 2016 by Sarah McLennan

No Entry

Filed Under: Diary Entries

Tuesday 26 December 1916

December 26, 2016 by Sarah McLennan

Heavy retaliation by our guns for yesterday’s affair.

Filed Under: 1916, Diary Entries

Monday 25 December 1916

December 25, 2016 by Sarah McLennan

https://greatwarchronicle.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Monday_December_25_1916.mp3

Christmas day, weather fine. High wind. Reported that enemy is moderately quiet along front. L/c T.J. White & I travel across country to the front line trenches clad in steel helmet and long thigh-boots, revolver, etc. in full view of the enemy. For over a mile we travel thus. If he wanted to he could have blown us to pieces. We pass many decomposed bodies lying all over the fields & in the trenches also rifles, ammunition & equipment.
We arrive at the front line trenches. After wallowing thro’ mud thigh deep we visit the craters. A man has just been wounded by Fritz & his bloodstained coat lay there as evidence others had been wounded earlier in the day. He had sent over two heavy minenwerfer shells.
About 8 to 9 am a white flag is seen and no man’s land is full of Germans. They were identified as Pomeranians. 16th, 23rd, 198th & another one. They desired to fraternize & some exchanged souvenirs. A message was sent then “they must either surrender or they would be shot at if they did not return to their trenches.” We visited the new crater named Patricia. After wishing the boys “all the best” we returned to Bde Hdqr & a good dinner of turkey and roast beef. The plum pudding had not arrived. During the whole day the enemy were pounding our trenches on the right & left of our Brigade area.


*Pomeranians – Pomerania is a small historical region on the south shore of the Baltic Sea. The region joined the German Empire in 1871.

Filed Under: 1916, Diary Entries Tagged With: Germans, mp3, Pomeranians

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