The following is an article written by
Ralph Taylor, recalling the impact of War on his family.The Taylor Family
A Story that Covers Both World Wars
These are the facts that started many years before the 1914-1918 War
and the story tells of the suffering of many mothers during these wars.
My family were living in London, and my mother, on the death of her brother's
wife during childbirth left him with boy twins. These my mother brought
up with her own family. These two boys both joined the Navy and went down
with Lord Kitchener on HMS Hampshire at the age of 18. That was the first
tragedy.
I was one of six brothers in the family and William one of the eldest
joined a territorial unit, the Somerset Cyclist Battalion. He was the first
to get killed at Passchendaele, Belgium, on 4 October 1917 at the age of
21 with no known grave.
Walter joined the Warwickshire Regiment and through war service was invalided
from the Service and died at the age of 28.
Richard, the luckiest of all, emigrated to Canada shortly after the Titanic
disaster on SS Alaunia, on which was held a Memorial Service where the Titanic
sank. On the outbreak of War 1914, Richard joined up and came home on the
SS Anglo Colombia with several hundred best horses from the Canadian ranches.
This ship was sunk by a German submarine and many horses, which broke loose
before the ship went down, had to be shot when swimming towards the lifeboats.
After landing at a southern port in Ireland Richard got to England, and
joined the Devonshire Yeomanry. Once more he found himself on a troop ship,
the SS Ivernia bound for the Middle East but this ship was also sunk by
a German submarine in the Mediterranean with the loss of over 300 troops.
Again Richard was a survivor and landed at Alexandria. From there his luck
continued. On joining General Allenby, and although wounded twice against
the Turks, he survived the war.
(there is a page missing from the original manuscript at this point)
and to help with communications moved into Brumana in the hills Lebanon,
until it was over. Spent our first Xmas here 1941. By March 1942 moved into
the Western Desert at Gambut near Tobruk. When Tobruk was captured our unit
just got away in time, and finished up just behind the Alamein line. We
were now attached to the 7th Motor Brigade, 7th Armoured Division. After
the battle which lasted 12 days after we broke out, I saw a solid black
mass as far as the eyes could see across the desert of thousands upon thousands
of Italian prisoners left stranded as the Germans had taken their transport.
It was plain sailing then with the Germans in full retreat.
I had a lucky escape from a German booby trap which I picked up on top
of Halfaya Pass, looking for an insulator to work an open aerial. I threw
it away immediately as it exploded. Many soldiers had kicked around objects
on the ground and had their feet or legs blown off.
With rain falling heavily for 4 days or more, most transport got bogged
down and getting into Tunisia was a sea of mud. The Germans held us up again
at the Mareth Line, but with the New Zealanders taking a left hook into
the desert, and got behind the Germans who were once more in full retreat.
That was practically their last stand before Tunis. My unit getting as far
as Sfax, were pulled out and made our way back to Tripoli.
After a month we were on a landing craft infantry for the invasion of
Sicily, landing at Augusta, and tasting for the first time the red and white
vino. I was now attached to the 15 Infantry Brigade of 5th Brit Infantry
Division the, Y Yorkshire Division. After many stiff fighting engagements,
the Brigade reached the Messina Straits, ready for the crossing into Italy.
After a terrific barrage we crossed without an opposition, until we landed,
when we were strafed by a German fighter but got away with it. It was slow
progress up through Italy with the roads and bridges and railway lines blown
up. We moved across Italy to Lanciano on the Adriatic side and did communications
for an Artillery Regiment. Back across country again for the river crossing
of the Gariliano.
For nearly three months the Brigade got bogged down without success,
and eventually pulled out and relieved by another unit. We found ourselves
at a little harbour near Naples, and were told we were going to invade Anzio
behind the German lines. First on the little boat, went below, and with
many more laid on the open deck. That night with a thunderstorm, and torrents
of rain we just laid there and let the rain belt in our face, and couldn't
care less if the boat sank. In the early hours with just daylight becoming
to show we landed with the Germans shelling the harbour. We made a quick
move up the road, and as the Germans were shelling the woods we were told
to dig in anywhere in the open field. I was with a dispatch rider and we
tried several places, but found everywhere we dug after a foot deep water
began to come up from the earth. We decided with our ground sheet to lay
in it, and with the shelling going on till morning light, we made the best
of it. Afterwards we counted dozens of shell holes quite near, but a truck
left under a tree got a direct hit, but no one was near.
The rear HQ of the Brigade were left just off the beach, and infantry
moved into the fortress area, where the German lines were no further than
80 yards apart from Battalion lines. Manning the telephone exchange working
forward to the Infantry and back to Brigade HQ was a trying time under shell
fire. This went on for 2 moths or more until Cassino was captured and then
with the Germans on the run, the opposition just went, and we were on Highway
Five and into Rome in no time. Just outside Rome we camped for a while to
clean up, and given a day's leave to view Rome.
In no time we were on our way back to Naples, and there boarded ship,
out to sea, and landed at Alexandria. By transport we made our way back
to Cairo, and made camp at Mena near the pyramids. We all had the idea the
division having suffered severe casualties through Sicily, and Italy were
reinforcing and then being shipped to Burma. Well we were all wrong because
our next move was into Palestine, and billeted down at Julius Camp, near
Haifa. Here we spent Xmas 1944. Soon we were on board again leaving Haifa,
and out to sea again, up into the Mediterranean and in the evening pulled
into Naples. Expecting to land, but not so, in the early morning sailed
out again, and landed at Marseilles, South of France. Here we piled 38 to
many cattle trucks, and went through France into Belgium, and finished at
Lede near Ghent where we billeted down. Here we heard the "doodle bugs"
going over on their way to London.
After a spell here we made our way into Germany across the Rhine, where
the airborne and paratroops were dropping. The Germans as a fighting force
were almost finished, and bar a few mortar shells we had an easy crossing.
The destruction as we went through the towns was terrible, with just the
roads cleared by bulldozers to let the troop transports through. Wherever
any houses were standing the white flags were hanging out the windows. We
got as far as Celle, North Germany and here we heard the Germans had surrendered.
Listening to the news around my wireless truck were several English boys
who had just been released as prisoners of war and who were buoyant with
joy.
Here at our billet in Celle we had our first tragedy of a young lad from
Manchester, a Lineman who had been collecting German guns that had been
lying about. One had a bullet in the barrel and in pulling it from the jeep
the trigger caught in something and the poor lad was shot in the chest and
died immediately.
From Celle we moved further south to Wolfenbutel 11 kilometres from Brunswick
where our Brigade the 15th made there headquarters. It was here that I heard
my father was seriously ill but not allowed home on leave because having
a wife he was not my next of kin. Later on, after father had died, and after
moving to Division HQ at Brunswick, and made Sergeant I got 5 weeks leave.
Seeing the wife and 3 children was wonderful after nearly 5 years.
On the way back from leave, I sailed from Hull in one of the coldest
winters for years. The remarkable sight was the whole North Sea frozen over
all the way to Hamburg. The ship ploughed through it with great chunks of
ice, one would think we were at the North Pole. On landing at Hamburg, I
had the experience of being pulled into the custom room by two military
police and searched hoping they would find plenty of English currency on
me, which was banned from taking out of the country. They were unlucky and
with their apologies let me go. When I arrived back at Brunswick I was told
I had been posted back to England as a P.S.I. to a Territorial Unit at Leeds.
I had previously signed on for a further 4 years. Being 1946 I had to go.
When I arrived there, I commenced planning how I could arrange a cross-posting
with someone in the south who wanted to move nearer his home in the north.
Getting in touch with my old Territorial Unit the 43 Inf Div Signal Regt
whose HQ were at Taunton, I managed to get to Bridgwater, and eventually
made it to Exeter, back to my old unit I started with before the War. From
here I took on for a further 4 years and eventually after a further fortnight's
camp with them in Germany was discharged in November 1954.
From then on The Royal British Legion Branch at Starcross had my services.
Until now, 1989, I have been a Legion member, served as Branch Secretary
for many years, Legion Journal Secretary, Welfare Officer and Poppy Appeal
Fund Collector. Enjoyed all these and years, attending many Conferences,
Group, County and National, also many Rallies. And feel proud to have been
a member of the Armed Services. My precious treasure was being presented
with the Gold Badge.
The vivid memories of my War Service was, first, stationed in
Whitby, Yorkshire, seeing a convoy steaming through the North Sea with three
German bombers bombing the ships with great splashes of water, and when
the sea had died down the ships ploughing their way along unharmed with
the bombers flying off as soon as some Spitfires appeared.
The second sight was standing near our billet, the Royal Hotel,
Whitby, when a German spy plane came over the town, with two Spitfires just
behind it, and on each side pumping tracers into it. It fell just outside
Whitby.
My third memory now, posted to Putney, London and billeted with
the Home Guard in Putney High School, during the worst bombing ever had,
the Battle of Britain August-September 1940, when at night the East End
of London, was just a huge red glow, and the German bomber plain as daylight
shooting down the barrage balloons, with very little opposition.
My fourth memory, was seeing both crews of the cruisers Cornwall
and Dorsetshire all lined up on the decks in their white uniforms who had
protected the convoy right up to the Red Sea with their Aldis lamps flashing
out the signals, "good luck and good hunting," before leaving.
My fifth memory, was being there and seeing the terrific artillery
barrage with the sky all along the front being lit up with daylight starting
around 9.40 pm. and lasting towards 3 am. zero hour, before the battle of
Alamein started.
My sixth memory was after the battle of Alamein when the Germans
broke, was seeing as far as the eye could see across the desert just as
a black mass of Italian prisoners. Thousand and thousand of them.
My seventh memory was climbing to the top of Cologne Cathedral,
Germany, and looking as far as the eye could see up the River Rhine either
side, the desolation was terrible nothing standing, the work the bombers
had done.
I could not finish without saying a big thank you to the wonderful time
the ladies of the South African A. Forces gave us all the five days we spent
in Cape Town.
I've written this, knowing that several families with many brothers could
give many interesting accounts of their war experiences giving readers very
interesting reading for Postbag. My dear mother brought up 11 of us with
twin boys of her brother's, 13 altogether. My father passed on at 80 and
my mother at 92. I myself am nearing 80, my wife a Legion member of the
Women's Section before me. My two daughters very active members as well.
My eldest son did his National Service and is a Legion member.
I am looking forward to many interesting stories in the Legion Postbag
to come from you many Service members.
Ralph Taylor
Starcross Branch
Devon
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