Torquay in the Great War
By Alex Potter
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Torquay in the Great War - Alex Potter
Dedicated to the memory of the men of Torquay who fought in and died in the Great War of 1914
First published in Great Britain in 2015 by
PEN & SWORD MILITARY
an imprint of
Pen and Sword Books Ltd
47 Church Street
Barnsley
South Yorkshire S70 2AS
Copyright © Alex Potter 2015
ISBN 978 1 47382 270 2
eISBN 9781473852785
The right of Alex Potter to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission from the Publisher in writing.
Printed and bound in England
by CPI Group (UK) Ltd, Croydon, CR0 4YY
Typeset in Times New Roman
Pen & Sword Books Ltd incorporates the imprints of Pen & Sword Archaeology, Atlas, Aviation, Battleground, Discovery, Family History, History, Maritime, Military, Naval, Politics, Railways, Select, Social History, Transport, True Crime, and Claymore Press, Frontline Books, Leo Cooper, Praetorian Press, Remember When, Seaforth Publishing and Wharncliffe. For a complete list of Pen and Sword titles please contact Pen and Sword Books Limited 47 Church Street, Barnsley, South Yorkshire, S70 2AS, England E-mail: enquiries@pen-and-sword.co.uk Website: www.pen-and-sword.co.uk
Contents
Introduction and Acknowledgements
Chapter 1 1914 – Enthusiasm?
Chapter 2 1915 – Education
Chapter 3 1916 – Escalation
Chapter 4 1917 – Endurance
Chapter 5 1918 – Endgame
Aftermath
Torquay born or resident Casualties
Statistics
Bibliography
Introduction and Acknowledgements
The First World War was the bloodiest war ever fought by the United Kingdom, costing the lives of around 723,000 men, and from mid-1917 onwards represented the only modern occasion when the British Army has taken the lead in a major land-based war. Since the advent of internet based family history, interest in the war has been steadily growing as online records have given people a tantalising glimpse into their ancestors’ experiences of the war. As the historian Adrian Gregory reflected:
‘The British seem to take the First World War personally. It would be difficult to imagine a contemporary British historian of the Napoleonic Wars writing a preface about how their great-great-great-grandfather died of typhoid at Walcheren or lost an arm at Badajoz, but it seems almost instinctive to evoke a grandfather at Loos or a great-uncle on the Somme.’
The author of this book is not immune. My great-great grandfather fought at Gallipoli and on the Western Front. My great-uncle served in the American Expeditionary Force and my great-grandfather enlisted at 15 and was discharged when his age was revealed. Every family has similar stories to tell but despite the growing public interest the war remains poorly understood. A war fought in appalling trench warfare conditions with huge casualty figures is hard to remember with anything but horror and what remains is a feeling of waste and blunder. However, this was not the unanimous view of those who fought; as many soldiers defended the war and their generals as lamented it as a great waste, and they fought it for a cause that many believed in.
The aim of this book is to tell the story of one small English town; to analyse its contribution to the war and its experience of the home front; to follow the social changes unleashed and to see how Torquay remembered the war. By doing so it hopes to present a more nuanced view than the mud and blood of popular imagination, while still acknowledging the horror and respecting the great suffering endured by the generation of 1914.
By featuring letters from serving Torquinians and following the career of Sir Herbert Plumer, commander of Second Army, who spent a substantial amount of his pre-military life growing up in Torquay, it aims to show that the BritishArmy slowly forged the most effective fighting force of its era and ended the threat of Kaiserism to Western Europe.
Taking a cue from the style of Peter Hart et al., extensive first-hand accounts have been used with the vast majority being letters from Torquinians unpublished since their appearance in local newspapers a century ago. Never has there been a better time to tell the story of Torquay’s experience of the war than in the centenary year of its outbreak and I hope this book is up to even half the standards of those that gave their lives from 1914-1918.
A project of this size is never undertaken without the help of many others. My thanks go to the staff of Queen Mary University Library, the British Library, Torquay Library and Torquay Museum. Special thanks go to both Torquay institutions for their permission to reproduce the photographs within this book. Thanks go to Professor Dan Todman who, despite giving me my lowest mark in three years of university (!), fundamentally changed my view of the war, directly leading to this book; to Roni Wilkinson for commissioning this work and being an invaluable source of advice; to Tom Bradshaw, Rob Olford, Cody Strong, Blake Roberts and Ron Espino, without whom I would never have developed the historical ability to write this book; to Paul and Julie Fogarty for all their support; to Ashley Stalzer for offering assistance with data mapping and finally to Sabrina Link, without whom this book wouldn’t exist. Two years ago I told her about my idea to write it and it was her support in the early days that has resulted in this book. She had the confidence in me and likewise I have the confidence that whatever she decides to do in life and wherever she goes she will succeed. Sabrina, consider this your dedication we talked about all those months ago. Not bad for a girl that can’t pronounce Holborn and thinks the Wu Tang Clang terrorised the American South during the nineteenth century… If I have missed anyone my apologies, I’m sure I’ll soon hear about it.
Chapter 1
1914 – Enthusiasm?
‘England was at war. It had come. I can hardly express the difference between our feelings then and now. Now we might be horrified, perhaps surprised, but not really astonished that war should come, because we are all conscious that war does come; that it has come in the past and that, at any moment, it might come again. But in 1914 there had been no war for – how long? Fifty years – more?’
Agatha Christie
On 4 August 1914 Britain declared war upon Germany following its violation of Belgian neutrality. The myth of the war states that this news was met with a spontaneous outburst of jingoism but this was not the case; the reaction in Torquay is best summed up in Agatha Christie’s quote above, a deep unease about the future.
In its first edition since the declaration, the Torquay Times published an editorial comparing what lay ahead to the effort required to win the Boer War, showing that the population were firmly aware of the facts rather than possessing a naive idea of war. On the same day a letter was published evoking the feelings of many, speaking of ‘untold misery to the people concerned’ and asking ‘What does the present generation know of war?’ Colonel Charles R. Burn, the town’s Conservative MP, wrote to the Mayor, Charles Towell, preparing him:
‘The die is cast and we must take our part in this terrible war. God knows it is not of our seeking; it has been forced upon us by Germany. That nation has flagrantly violated the rights of Belgium….The call of honour and our own self-interest binds us to stand for the integrity of France, and thus we find ourselves drawn into this European Armageddon.’
These were not the reactions of a jingoistic population but of a concerned people thrust into the unknown. Anti-war sentiment was muted; while the Church of England immediately supported the war, the dissenting churches reacted with more reticence. Those in Torquay formed a group named the ‘Free Churches of Torquay’ (Belgrave Congregational Church, Upton Vale Baptist Church and Zion United Methodist Church) and sent a telegram to Prime Minister Asquith urging him to continue his efforts on behalf of peace, representing the most prominent anti-war action of the opening months.
Another documented incidence of anti-war sentiment occurred when someone circulated leaflets calling the declaration of war ‘The Great Bluff!’ stating, ‘There will be no war’ and signed by ‘one who knows’. Aside from these events, there appears to have been a distinct lack of pacifism within Torquay despite the general anxiousness. Norman Cliff, a pre-war employee of the Torquay Times and the Torquinian that left the best record of service in the war reflected:
‘As a small town youth nurtured in a puritan and conventional atmosphere, I had not encountered pacifist ideas or movements, and accepted without question the general attitude towards the armed forces, uniforms, patriotism, and the duty to defend one’s country by fighting, and if necessary, by killing other young men who may seek to destroy it.’
Cliff’s reaction was typical of the town, not an outpouring of belligerence but a more nuanced belief that one must do one’s duty come what may, combined with a stoic appreciation of what lay ahead. The vicar of Upton Vale, the Reverend L.J. Roderick, summed this up stating that Britain was ‘launching into a storm not to destroy but to save’. There was also little evidence of the ‘over before Christmas’ syndrome with an article in the Torquay Times citing the unknown duration of the coming war and attempting to analyse how long it might last, but concluding it was impossible to judge.
As Torquay came to terms with the idea of war, Mayor Towell was greatly concerned about the town’s food supplies, keen to prevent any kind of profiteering. Despite his concern, the price of bread rose from 5½d the Saturday before the declaration to 6½d on 5 August. Towell was also worried about the impact upon Torquay’s summer season and there was a heated discussion about whether to proceed with the Torquay Regatta, which, after great debate, was eventually cancelled due to a feeling that it was inappropriate. As the matter was under discussion, a great number of tourists scrambled to leave the town, increasing the feeling of anxiousness. Despite this general attitude, there were some spontaneous outbursts of patriotism. Visiting Breton ‘Onion Lads’ joined forces with local boys and marched along the Torbay Road singing the French and English anthems and there was a performance of the French and English national anthems at the Pavilion with the Torquay Times suggesting ‘such a scene of enthusiasm has never been witnessed in the building’.
In the following days several hundred naval reservists left the town, witnessed by large numbers of residents who came out to wish them farewell, although the Torquay Directory (henceforth referred to as the ‘Directory’) reported that the march lacked the ‘display of enthusiasm’ on show across the bay at Brixham. With only the Boer War to compare with, some members of society also underestimated the situation while others were grasping the true reality. Both the Torbay News and the Directory argued:
‘Something of the loss which has been inflicted upon Torquay’s holiday season by the war will be recouped if there are efforts to boom the winter season. The chance is one which ought not to be missed. Traffic on the continent will be dislocated, if not impossible to any but combatants; and it is certain that few, if any, English people will be disposed to visit the usual Continental resorts… When France and Germany were at war in 1870 Torquay experienced what perhaps, was its most successful winter season… There must also be borne in mind the fact that in all probability many French people will visit England in the winter.’
While the potential for an increase in English tourists was debatable, reading this now it seems ridiculous anyone would even suggest that French tourists would visit while their country was being invaded.
The opening salvos of the war were now being fired and Torquay suffered its first casualty after only two days. Edwin Coombes, of Park Hill Road, married with two children, drowned on board HMS Amphion when she hit a mine on 6 August. Amphion was the first Royal Navy ship to be sunk and it was not surprising, given Torbay’s naval tradition, that a Torquinian was amongst the casualties. It was seventeen days before the BEF’s first major battle of the war but Torquay had already experienced its first death.
Attitudes towards the enemy in the first month were mixed. The Torquay Times proudly displayed an advert for ‘Anglo-Bavarian Ale’ below its masthead, apparently seeing little need to remove references to Germany. It also saw it fit to include a small article stating that a number of German waiters in the town had joined the GermanArmy. The presence of those soldiers and that of Pierre Brottin, of the Torquay Municipal Orchestra, who left to join the French Army, emphasises how Torquay’s experience of war wasn’t limited to only those in the British forces.
Controversial stories about German conduct during the invasion of Belgium began to appear in the media within a few weeks and this started to change opinions. Twenty un-naturalised Germans were arrested and taken to Exeter, amongst them a man on his wedding day and a gentlemen who had lived in England for twenty years, married an English woman and ‘was an Englishman by all his instincts’. As a sign of how unprepared the country was for war there was no provision for them and they were soon released back to Torquay on parole. At the same time Mr Basil Hindenburg, conductor of the orchestra, sensitive to the change in atmosphere, changed his surname to Cameron in an attempt prevent any confusion over his nationality. The Reverend J. T. Jacob, vicar of Torre, summed up the developing atmosphere:
‘I am afraid of possible trouble that our own almost criminal leniency may bring upon us in England. No German can be looked upon as a friend, but ought to be looked upon as an enemy.’
The harmlessness of Torquay’s German community was shown in the views of one of those arrested. The unnamed man had lived in Torquay for a number of years and was no fan of the war:
‘The conditions are entirely different to 1870, which was to some extent at any rate aggressive on the part of France… In the present case Germany is, or rather the Kaiser, the aggressor. **** the Kaiser!’
The mass arrest failed to halt fears and a yacht was boarded as it sailed into the harbour due to concern that it was German; it turned out to be Spanish. A contributory factor to this outbreak of anti-German sentiment were rumours swirling around the town that an innocent meeting of the German Waiters’ Association was a front for something suspicious. Tabloid newspapers had frequently printed invasion scare stories in the past such as William Le Queux’s The Invasion of 1910 featuring a fifth column of German spies infiltrating Britain and posing as waiters, clerks, barbers, bakers and servants. The parallels with Torquay’s German community are obvious. Yet despite these events general attitudes towards Germany were fairly subdued during the opening weeks.
The declaration of war was quickly followed by Lord Kitchener’s famous call for volunteers to enlist in the ‘New Armies’ which would expand the BEF from its small professional core. The first months saw the people of Torquay volunteering in disproportionately large numbers. The pre-war population of Devon numbered 669,550 of whom 38,771 lived in Torquay, but by mid-October 220 of the 1,200 men who had volunteered in Devon came from Torquay. Thus despite having only 5.15 per cent of Devon’s population, Torquay contributed 18.3 per cent of its volunteers during the first two months. In part this can be attributed to socio-economics. Devon was a heavily agricultural county where many men did not enlist in order to bring in the harvest. In contrast Torquay’s employment structure was based around transient service sector jobs and included a larger number of wealthy families. Despite this Torquay also had a strange demographic structure, including unusually large numbers of women and the retired. As such it can be confidently stated that during the opening stages of the war Torquay was contributing to the war effort far in excess of what was expected.
Kitchener believed that the war would be long and bloody and rejected proposals to distribute volunteers piecemeal throughout existing battalions. Instead he proposed the creation of New Armies, consisting of battalions of well-trained volunteers ready to be sent across the Channel in force the following year. Volunteers were organised into ‘Service’ battalions allocated to existing regiments, the Devonshire Regiment establishing the 8th, 9th, 10th and 11th battalions.
Regiments based in counties with small populations were always going to struggle to fill their ranks and thus it was quite common to see men from the larger industrial cities serving in regiments far from home. Although the 8th Devons were formed from a majority of Devonians, 9th Devons were far less Devonian in character with only about eighty Devonians in October. Despite this the newcomers were quickly taught the tradition of their new regiment and joined the natives in forming a strong espirit