Maggie/915 Posted February 10, 2013 Report Posted February 10, 2013 My Grandfather was drafted into the army in 1916. Lots of people in the same street went at the same time. Harry Patch, the last Tommy said, 'War is licensed murder'He came home suffering from the effects of mustard gas.Maybe others have local stories of War and the consequences
Maggie/915 Posted February 10, 2013 Author Report Posted February 10, 2013 It was.my grandad who came home suffering not Harry Patch.
Adam Hogg Posted February 10, 2013 Report Posted February 10, 2013 My great Grandad was an ambulance driver during the first world war, can't imagine what he saw (mustard gas victims, Gunshot wounds, Shrapnel wounds, missing body parts, etc). He never talked about it to anyone in the family.
paul mann Posted February 11, 2013 Report Posted February 11, 2013 I remember my grannie on my dad's side saying she and other wives went down to the railway station in Ashington to meet their lads off the train during the First World War. They'd been given a few days' leave from the Front and they'd marched straight from the trenches to the railhead in Flanders, boarded, put on a cross channel steamer, then up home in the same rail cars. She said they arrived in a dreadful state still covered in mud and from the trenches and all of them lousy, exhausted and famished. They had a few days rest and some decent grub while the wives washed their claes and keks so the army saved some money on food and laundry. Then it was down to the railway station and back to the Front. My grandfather had a shiny piece of shrapnel that looked like a lizard. It buggered his leg when the shell went off and wounded him bad enough to be invalided back to Blighty for recuperation. He kept it a souvenir because it saved his life.
Brian Cross Posted February 12, 2013 Report Posted February 12, 2013 My Grandad was killed 6 days before WW1 ended the bloody generals must have known the war was going to end.Why would they send more men to their death ? R.I.P Grandad Albert (Ginger)
Adam Hogg Posted February 12, 2013 Report Posted February 12, 2013 Anyother one from me may grandma's uncle was on leave and fell down the stairs at his home and broke his leg and got told he would be exempt from active duty and would not have to return to the front, however he refused and returned to the front once his leg healed, he returned to the front and then he was killed after stepping on a landmine, his name is among the many on Ashington War Memorial.
Malcolm Robinson Posted February 13, 2013 Report Posted February 13, 2013 My Grandad was killed 6 days before WW1 ended the bloody generals must have known the war was going to end.Why would they send more men to their death ? R.I.P Grandad Albert (Ginger)I think the 'Generals' especailly in that War had a lot to answer for! I wouldn't have been shooting lads with Battle fatigue and handing out medals to people sitting in the warm 100's of miles behind the Front. Even now I would be stripping quite a few 'honours' away. The whole carnage and waste is testament to how cheap human life was considered then and a handful of clueless people playing soldiers with real men and women.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sz0pGOESrBs
Symptoms Posted February 13, 2013 Report Posted February 13, 2013 Whilst Blackadder IV was a satirical/comedy take on what went on, I still reckon it was a very accurate depiction of the uncaring command structure in place and the resignation of the poor sods stuck in the trenches. The British class system at its best.My Grandad was a Corporal in the Northumberland Hussars* during that buns fight with Fritz and was awarded the Military Medal for a series of outstanding actions in Flanders ... there's a whole section on him in Howard Pease's History of the Northumberland Hussars. As my Grandad was in the Regiment as a volunteer part-time trooper before the War he was sent over to France at the beginning and was there for the whole four year duration and survived. I still have his spurs and his jack-knife (one of those knives with a blade and a marlin spike used for cleaning horse hooves); his medals and citations are at Durham Cathedral. My maternal Grandmother lost her first husband and three brothers (she later married the guy above); my paternal Grandmother lost two brothers. This wasn't unusual - thousands and thousands of families had multiple losses.* Yeoman Cavalry - horse-mounted Territorials. I watched the film War Horse on the telly last year and got a bit of a flavour about what it might have been like.
Maggie/915 Posted February 14, 2013 Author Report Posted February 14, 2013 It really was a terrible war.I do not think there is a good war, innocent people die. Even if the cause is good and necessary.I was shocked at the numbers drafted from Millbank Crescent alone.Truly the Pals War. United in War, Death and Injury. Then home to people only interested in the price of bread! So many many thoughts must have been difficult. Bedlington and security to carnage.Long may we live in peace.
Symptoms Posted February 14, 2013 Report Posted February 14, 2013 And home to the Spanish Flu. My maternal Grandma had her first daughter with my Grandad when he returned from France ... but she died of the flu when an infant.
Maggie/915 Posted March 3, 2013 Author Report Posted March 3, 2013 My Uncle George died in Burma on the 17th March 1944. His church magazine ran an article on him in June 1944 price two pence.In the article they quote Rudyard Kipling:-'When you're wounded and dying on Afghanistan plainsAnd the women come out to cut up what remains,Just crawl to your carbine and blow out your brains,And go to your God like a soldier.Different times, different ideas.We have never been involved in a war like this in our life times.People used to talk about suicide pills if you were caught in a war.We need to remember we have lived in a golden age and thanks to others sacrifice,(including Emily Wilding Davis who died 100 years ago in June) we live vote and have freedom.
keith lockey Posted March 4, 2013 Report Posted March 4, 2013 A GOLDEN AGE?World War IRussian Civil WarFinnish Civil WarCristero WarSpanish Civil WarIrish Civil WarWorld War II - Germany vs. PolandWorld War II - Germany vs. FranceWorld War II - Germany vs. RussiaWorld War II - Allies vs. GermanyWorld War II - Allies vs. ItalyWorld War II - Allies vs. Germany in AfricaWorld War II - Allies vs. Italy in AfricaWorld War II - Japan vs. KoreaWorld War II - Japan vs. ChinaWorld War II - Japan vs. PhilippinesWorld War II - Allies vs. JapanWorld War II - Japanese theatreChina Civil WarGreek Civil WarCosta Rican War1948 War of Independence (Israel)Sinai War (Israel)Kasmir War (India/Pakistan)Chinese Occupation of Tibet (whether this is a war is a contested subject)Korean Civil War (involving Russian, China and the U.S., too)Sino-Indian WarIndo-Pakistan War of 1965Indo-Pakistan War of 1971Vietnam Civil War (involving France and then the U.S., too)Cambodian Civil WarGuatamalan Civil WarSix Day War (Israel/Many middle-east countries)War of Attritian (Israel/Egypt)Yom Kippur War (Israel/Egypt/Syria)Nigerian Civil WarLebanese Civil WarAlgerian Civil WarFirst Sudanese Civil WarFirst Lebanon War (Israel)East Timor (Indonesia/East Timor)Russia-Afghanistan WarSalvador Civil WarEthiopian Civil WarFalkan War (Britain/Argentina)Iran-Iraq WarUS-Iraq Kuwait Liberation WarSierra Leone Civil WarSerbian WarRwandan Civil WarKargil WarSecond Sudanese Civil WarUS-Iraq Occupation WarSecond Lebanon War (Israel)US-Afghanistan WarWere Cameron - Clegg voted in?
Maggie/915 Posted March 5, 2013 Author Report Posted March 5, 2013 I personally have not been involved in any war but I appreciate the people who have!They have allowed us to live a peaceful life.We have food shelter and a life is safe!If we are ill we can get help.I do not think Bedlington is a war zone.
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