The 2/4th Oxfordshire & Buckhinghamshire Light Infantry
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Coverage
This is not a war diary but an extract from the spendid history "The story of the 2/4th Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry" by Captain G. K. Rose KC (Oxford: B.H. Blackwell, 1920). It covers the battalion's attack near Pond Farm during the Third Battle of Ypres.

Narrative
On August 18, starting at 4 a.m., the Battalion marched to Goldfish
Chateau, close to Ypres, and the Transport to a disused brickfield
west of Vlamertinghe. We lived in bivouacs and tents and were much
vexed by German aeroplanes, and to a less degree by German shells.
On August 20, while companies were making ready for the line, an
air fight happened just above our camp. Its sequel was alarming.
A German aeroplane fell worsted in the fight, and dived to ground,
a roaring mass of fire, not forty yards from our nearest tents. By
a freak of chance the machine fell in a hole made by a German shell.
The usual rush was made towards the scene-by those, that is, not
already sufficiently close for their curiosity. A crowd, which to
some extent disorganised our preparations for the line, collected
round the spot and watched the R.F.C. extract the pilot and parts
of the machine, which was deeply embedded in the hole. For hours
the wreckage remained the centre of attraction to many visitors.
The General hailed the burnt relics, not inappropriately, as a lucky
omen.
During the night of August 20/21 the Battalion relieved a portion
of the front eastward of Wieltje. Three companies were placed in
trenches bearing the name of 'Capricorn', but B was further back.
During the night a serious misfortune befellthe latter. Three 5.95
fell actually in the trench and caused thirty-five casualties, including
all the sergeants of the company. On the eve of an attack such an
occurrence was calculated to affect the morale of any troops. That
the company afterwards did well was specially creditable in view
of this demoralising prelude.
On the following night Companies assembled for the attack. Neither
the starting place nor the objectives for this are easily described
by reference to surrounding villages. The nearest was St. Julien.
The operation orders for the attack of August 22 assigned as objective
to the Oxfords a road running across the Hanebeck and referred to
as the Winnipeg-Kansas Cross Road. The 48th Division on the left
and the 15th on the right were to co-operate with the 184th Brigade
in the attack.
Shortly before 5 the bombardment started. In the advance behind the
creeping barrage put down by our guns, of which an enormous concentration
was present on the front, C, D and A Companies (from right to left)
provided the first waves, while B Company followed to support the
flanks. The Berks came afterwards as 'moppers up.' Half-an-hour after
the advance started D, B and A Companies were digging-in 150 yards
west of the Winnipeg-Kansas Cross Road. The losses of these companies
in going over had not been heavy, but, as so often happens, casualties
occurred directly the objective had been duly reached. In the case
of C Company, on the right, but little progress had been made. Pond
Farm, a concrete stronghold, to capture which a few nights previously
an unsuccessful sally had been made, had proved too serious an obstacle.
Not till the following night was it reduced, and during the whole
of August 22 it remained a troublesome feature in the situation.
Before the line reached could be consolidated or they could act to
defeat the enemy's tactics, our men found themselves the victims
of sniping and machine-gun fire from Schuler Farm, which was not
taken and to which parties of reinforcements to the enemy now came.
More dangerous still was an old gun-pit which lay behind the left
flank. The capture of this had been assigned to the 48th Division,
but as a measure of abundant caution Colonel Wetherall had detailed
a special Berks platoon to tackle it. This platoon, assisted by some
Oxfords on the scene, captured the gun-pit and nearly seventy prisoners,
but failed to garrison it. A party of the enemy found their way back
and were soon firing into our men from behind.
During the early stages of consolidation, when personal example and
direction were required, John Stockton, Scott, and Gascoyne were
all killed by snipers or machine-gun fire. Scott had been hit already
in the advance and behaved finely in refusing aid until he had despatched
a message to Headquarters. While he was doing so three or four bullets
struck him simultaneously and he died.
Throughout the 22nd no actual counter-attack nor organised bombardment
by the enemy took place, but much sniping and machine-gun fire continued,
making it almost impossible to move about. Our loss in Lewis-gunners
was particularly heavy.
Callender, the acting company commander of A Company, had been killed
before the attack commenced, and Sergeant-Major Cairns was now the
mainstay of that company, whose men were thoroughly mixed up with
B. Upon the left the 48th Division had failed to reach Winnipeg,
with the result that this flank of A and B Companies was quite in
the air. On the Battalion's right the failure of C Company, in which
Brucker had been wounded, to pass Pond Farm left the flank of D Company
exposed and unsupported. But the position won was kept. Ground to
which the advance had been carried with cost would not be lightly
given up. Moberly, Company Sergeant-Major Cairns, and Guest - the
latter by volunteering in daylight to run the gauntlet of the German
snipers back to Headquarters - greatly distinguished themselves in
the task of maintaining this exposed position during the night of
August 22 and throughout August 23.
Some of our men had to remain in shell-holes unsupported and shot
at from several directions for over fifty hours.
Did you know you can download a complete copy of the history of the 2/4th Battalion?
Free of charge, care of Gutenberg: The story of the 2/4th Oxfordshire & Buckinghamshire Light Infantry
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