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AUTHOR: Ponsonby, F
FORMAT: 1,113pp 17 Bw 25 maps Pb
The history of the four active battalions, the Guards Entrenching
Battalion and the Reserve battalion, with Roll of Honour. The Grenadier Guards
began the war with three battalions of which only one, the 2nd, was committed to
the BEF; it was in the 4th Guards Brigade, 2nd Division. As soon as war was
declared the 4th (Reserve) Battalion was formed and within five days 1,700
reservists had reported. In September 1914 the 7th Division was formed and
the1st Battalion was allocated to 20th Brigade of the new division. On 14th July
1915 another Grenadier battalion was formed and numbered the 4th, the Reserve
battalion then became the 5th. A month later the 4th Battalion went to France to
join the newly created Guards Division, and it was at this stage, also, that the
3rd Battalion, which hitherto had been retained in London by Kitchener for some
undefined reason, was sent out to join the new division. Thus, by August 1915
there were four battalions of Grenadiers on the Western front where they
remained for the rest of the war. By the end the Regiment had suffered 11,915
casualties of which 203 Officers and 4,508 Other Ranks were dead, seven VCs had
been won and 34 Battle Honours awarded. This, as might be expected, is a very
good history with detailed descriptions of the fighting and of the conditions
the men endured. One sentence in particular paints a graphic picture of the
state of the trenches in January 1915: The gruesome task of removing the dead
was effected by floating the bodies down the communication trenches. The author
tells the story in chronological order; vol I takes the record of the four
battalions to the end of 1915, vol II to the German offensive of March 1918 and
vol III to the armistice and beyond to the division’s march into Germany. Each
volume is paginated separately with its own contents list though the chapters
run consecutively through all three. Each chapter covers a specific period and
the chapter heading indicates which battalions are involved. There are plenty of
maps to support the narrative, showing tactical details. Among the appendices
are the Roll of Honour, a list of officers wounded with dates, lists of Awards,
Mentions in Despatches and of Divisional Certificates of Gallantry and an
account of the 7th (Guards) Entrenching Battalion. There is a table naming all
other ranks who were commissioned during the war showing the regiment or corps
to which they went. Finally there is an index to the names of officers. Reprint
of the 1920 original edition.
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