Writes Michael Hale, Head of History
The annual Fourth Form History trip to the Battlefields was a rip-roaring success.
After a traffic-disrupted journey on Thursday, we arrived in late afternoon at Ieper (if a Flemish speaker). Or Ypres (if a Wallonian). Or Wipers (if you were a First World War British Tommy who struggled with the name and so corrupted it to something more manageable).
One in four of the British and Commonwealth soldiers who died in the war fell on the âSalientâ, the name given to the curve of the Allied front to the east of YpresâŻthatâŻprotruded into German held territory. ItâŻwas alsoâŻwhere sixty-seven Old Âé¶čŽ«Ăœâ made the ultimate sacrifice during the Great War.
On Friday, we visited Essex Farm cemetery, where the Canadian John McCrae composed perhaps the most famous poem of the war âIn Flanders Fieldsâ. Mrs Shockley performed a beautiful rendition of the poem (the first of many), and we paid our respects to Harry Squier OMT and Charles Thompson OMT.
We then proceeded to the German military cemetery of Langemark as so often the Germans are the missing person at the table when we commemorate the Great War. At Langemark, 44,324-war dead lie in an atmosphere that offers a stark contrast to the British and Commonwealth cemeteries. Mr Farrar Bell gave a tremendous account of the German experience in Western Flanders.
Up next was the Hooge Crater Museum. Whilst poking around the excellent museum brim-full of Great War paraphernalia, we encountered a superb exhibition about the German fighter ace, Baron Manfred von Richthofen aka âthe Red Baronâ.
After lunch we headed for Tynecot, theâŻlargest British and Commonwealth War Cemetery in the world. The scale of the cemetery is such that it prompted King George V to remark upon his visit in 1922:
"We can truly say that the whole circuit of the Earth is girdled with the graves of our dead. In the course of my pilgrimage, I have many times asked myself whether there can be more potent advocates of peace upon the Earth through the years to come, than this massed multitude of silent witnesses to the desolation of war."
Whilst at Tynecot, we remembered a number of OMTs, including the 1911 1st XI cricket captain Frederick Greenhill.
As our first full day on the Salient drew to a close, we laid a wreath on the grave of John Barrett OMT in New Irish Farm. Twenty-six former pupils of Âé¶čŽ«Ăœâ School lost their lives during the Third Battle of Ypres and John Barrett was shot dead while leading a successful capture of an enemy machine gun on 31 July 1917, the first day of the battle.
That evening we were privileged to witness the Last Post Ceremony at the Menin Gate, one of the two great Commonwealth monuments to the fallen with no known grave on the Western Front (the other is at Thiepval on the Somme).
On Saturday, we enjoyed a spot of present buying (and impromptu cricket) in and around the vibrant market in the town square. It was then off to the magnificent Passchendaele Museum, before making our way to the south of Ypres to the Messines Ridge. Here the British detonated nineteen enormous mines within thirty seconds of each other in the successful offensive of June 1917. We visited the Lone Tree mine, the largest single mine used on the ridge, that created the Pool of Peace.
Before we broke for lunch, we paid homage to Private Vincent Mulligan, a relative of Thurstan H. (Fourths). Born in Rockhampton, Queensland, he was part of the 11th Australian Light Trench Mortar Battery, who first saw action at the Battle of Messines in June 1917. He was killed in action aged twenty years old on 23 June 1917 and is buried in Messines Ridge British Cemetery alongside nearly 1,500 men from across Britain and the Commonwealth.
We then made our way to Ploegsteert for an alfresco lunch in the glorious sunshine. This was the site of ferocious fighting in late 1914 and early 1915 and from January to May 1916 saw Winston Churchill serve as Commanding Officer (Lieutenant-Colonel) of the 6th Battalion of the Royal Scots Fusiliers. We learned about the adventures of Henry Stephenson OMT and Arthur Bassingham OMT, who wrote a joint letter to school on 17 December 1914 thanking it for parcels of supplies, which they had shared with as many OMTs as possible. They were destined to spend Christmas billeted inâŻa cow-shed loft, but Arthur Bassingham was tragically killed by a sniper on Christmas Eve 1914 and is buried at Ploegsteert. His friend Henry Stephenson was later killed at the Second Battle of Ypres and is remembered on the Menin Gate.
We then finished ourâŻtour by stopping off en route to Calais at Lijssenthoek, where we remembered four OMTs: Arthur Botham, Francis Hewkley, Harold Noakes, and John Raphael. As is customary, we laidâŻa wreath on Raphaelâs grave andâŻobservedâŻa minuteâs silence, which brought our memorable pilgrimage to the Salient to a close.
The thirty boys enjoyed the history of the Great War and learning about the OMTs who served. We were also treated to some sensational war poetry and the heat of a blazing sun. Mrs Shockley, Mrs Hale, and Mr Farrar Bell were of enormous help and wonderful company throughout, and I would like to thank all who made the trip possible.