Editor's noteLocal newsNews

Can you help the Museum identify these Delville Wood soldiers?

“Was ever an immolation so belied as these intolerably nameless names?”

Talana Museum needs help in identifying the men in a photo found in the museum archives.

“The sepia coloured image is captioned just captioned Dundee and Newcastle men before Delville Wood – can anyone help identify any of the men?,” Pam Mc Fadden of the Museum has asked.  Anyone able to assist is urged to contact theMusuem at e-mail: info@talana.co.za www.talana.co.za facebook: talanamuseum or tel 034  21 22654.

Delville Wood, the bloodiest battle South African troops have ever been involved in, was part of the Western Front campaign during the Great War, 1914-1918, and this year marked the centenary of the battle.

A special parade was held in Dundee in July to mark the occasion. Johann Hamman, Courier freelancer and historian, had earlier reflected on this bloody battle.

The Somme Offensive and Delville Wood – a century later 
On Passing the new Menin Gate – a poem by Siegfried Sassoon
“Who will remember, passing through this Gate,
the unheroic dead who fed the guns?
Who shall absolve the foulness of their fate,-
Those doomed, conscripted, unvictorious ones?
Crudely renewed, the Salient holds its own.
Paid are its dim defenders by this pomp;
Paid, with a pile of peace-complacent stone,
The armies who endured that sullen swamp.
Here was the world’s worst wound. And here with pride
‘Their name liveth for ever’, the Gateway claims.
Was ever an immolation so belied
as these intolerably nameless names?
Well might the Dead who struggled in the slime
Rise and deride this sepulchre of crime.”
Siegfried Sassoon
“Was ever an immolation so belied as these intolerably nameless names?” Having stood under that “sepulchre of crime” myself, gazing in unreported wonder at those 42 000 plus names of the forever lost dead, I could only agree with this English poet’s silent fury, as I knew he was an infantry officer, one of millions, who was plunged into the immolation of what later became the Western Front. The event was Remembrance Sunday 1998, and I was witnessing a spectacular ceremony.
Two buglers of the Fire Brigade stood underneath the Menin Gate. They gave a stirring rendition of the Last Post, and the ever-shrinking parade of old soldiers, each man over a hundred years old, in their wheel chairs pushed by a nurse, or a favourite niece, paused under the names of the Lost, trapped in memories of fire and blood that will never leave them.

The silent pilgrimage over, their energies spent, they left as unobtrusively as they came, leaving only an uncomprehending West European youth, unfamiliar with war and uncaring shrugs as they continued on their way. The Western Front, 1916. A static cesspool of mud and slime, a veritable human soup, a soldiers’ alphabet brew that indelibly marked the psyches of its survivors. Delville Wood was but one desperate struggle at the bottom end of that Witches’ Cauldron where South African soldiers carved their legacy into the fabric of our Remembrance with their own blood.
Many a South African lad breathed his last under the pounding and merciless fury of the German guns. They are still there, silently witnessing our respect, their descendants who ventured into that awesome place of bloody memory. A local stalwart and fellow military historian,

This year 2016 marks a hundred years which passed since that violent confrontation, and Dundee will mark the splendid courage of local men who paid the ultimate price with the creation of a War Memorial Precinct that honours our fallen soldiers, from the destruction of the troopship SS Mendi to the rigours of the Border War.

 

At Caxton, we employ humans to generate daily fresh news, not AI intervention. Happy reading!

Support local journalism

Add The Citizen as a preferred source to see more from Northern Natal News in Google News and Top Stories.

Terry Worley

Terry Worley has been associated with the Courier for many years and is involved in the community covering a variety of issues affecting residents. He has a passion for local politics and for the history of the area.

Related Articles

Back to top button