
The Grimsby Chums ( 10th Lincolns )

1914 - The origins of Pals Battalions - Origins of the Chums - The Men
1915 - The 34th Division
1916 - Moving to France - The Battle of the Somme - After the Battle
1917 - Arras - Ypres Salient
1918 - The German Spring Offensive - Armistice - Battle Honours - List of Grimsby War Dead - Links
The Story of The Grimsby Chums
The First World War started on a sunny
August Bank Holiday in 1914. Few people knew then, that the war would drag on
for four years, leaving many dead and forever shape the future of the 20th
Century. This is a brief story of a group of men from Grimsby who joined together to form their own Pals
Battalion, known for posterity as ' The Grimsby Chums '.
1914 - Origins of Kitcheners Army, the Pals Battalions
At the outbreak of war, the British Army was
450,000 strong and required a large expansion of manpower to bring it up to the
strength of the other European Armies. A Territorial Force of 250,000 men
existed as a semi-trained reserve, but the newly appointed Secretary of War,
Lord Kitchener of Khartoum, had the thought in his head of 1 million men in
khaki. He appealed for his first 100,000 on August 7th 1914.
His idea was to organise the civilians that
enlisted into an army of Service Battalions named after the areas they were
raised. These were then to be attached to local regular units. The response was
overwhelming. By August 9th, 3,000 men a day were enlisting. 30,000 men a day were
enlisting before the month was out and by the end of the year Kitchener had his 1 million in uniform. Although a success,
the rapid recruitment brought problems of shortages. Of uniforms, rifles,
officers and drill instructors. Local dignatries and magistrates were allowed
to act in the name of Kitchener
and organise, drill and feed the men until the chaos could be sorted out.
Kitchener agreed to the creation of Battalions formed from men
of a common background. The men were of common occupations, professions,
sporting associations or even youth groups such as the Boy's Brigade or Public
Schools. The collective term for these Battalions became the 'Pals'. Of around
304 such Battalions, only one chose to become know as the 'Chums'. These were
the 'Grimsby Chums'.
Origins of
the Chums
Grimsby already had it's own Territorial Battalion, the 5th
(Territorial) Battalion Lincolnshire Regiment, principly raised in Grimsby, but also in Gainsborough, Scunthorpe, Louth and Barton-on-Humber. It did not take long for them to be up to
strength and away from the town having turned down many offers to join their
ranks. However, agreements were reached to harness this enthusiasm of the men
of the town. Alderman John Herbert Tate, 50, received a telegram from the War
Office to form a new Battalion. Posters went up around the town appealing for
men to join up. As in many other towns, Grimsby men believed in England and the Empire and although not from military stock,
knew their duty and enlisted.
Alderman Tate appointed George Bennet, a
local merchant and retired Capt. of 1st Lincolnshire R.G.A Volunteers, as
temporary CO. In turn, Bennet brought with him old colleagues Capt. T.Maudsley
and Lieut W. Vignoles ( both local men ) to help. A permanent CO was needed
though, and it was not long before the war Office 'sort out' experienced
officers (retired) to bring order to the new units. It was more for the name (
local dignatry ) than his actual experience of commanding men that George
Heanage was appointed CO 10th Lincolns.
The Men
In the early days, there were no uniforms or
drill equipment except for the odd rifle fron the OTC stores. Some of the men
found soldiering restrictive, and required to be brought into line by Lieut
Vignoles. The ever present anxiety among the men was that the war would be over
before they were trained and ready, but things were gradually brought together
through drilling, church parades and the focusing of minds as the first
casualty lists of the war were published. More officers were appointed
including J. Kennington, C. Branfoot and E. Cordeaux. Cordeaux had retired but
was once commander of the 4th Battalion Lincolnshire Regiment.
The next requirement for the 1000 strong
Battalion was to find a a permanent camp to carry out training away from the
distractions of the town. Alderman Tate approached Earl of Yarborough at
Brocklesby, an estate about 10 miles outside Grimsby, to allow a camp in his grounds. Permission was
granted and along with surplus post office uniforms the Battalion made itself
at home. Winter 1914 through to the spring of 1915 was spent in training and
sporting pursuits in preparation for the passing out parade. By May 1915 the
Chums had uniforms, rifles and looked like a proper Battalion. Their passing
out parade took them from Cleethorpes through the whole town to end up at Peoples Park
where a short service was held and the salute taken.
1915 - 34th Division
Now part of an army, the 10th Lincolns moved to Ripon for musketry training and more
importantly to join up with other units to form their Brigade. It was here that
they also absorbed 150 men from Wakefield who were volunteers looking for a unit.
Another move was made, this time to Sutton
Veny, Wiltshire, where the whole 34th Division came together from the
constituent Brigades. It was here that the Chums met their Divisional Commander
Major General Ingouville Williams CB, DSO. Further training was undertaken, and
it was here that a false alarm was raised that the Division was going to the
Dardenelles. They didn't go, but were issued with tropical kit all the same.
The 34th Division was an archetypal "New Army" unit. It comprised the
Royal Scots, Northumberland Fusiliers and a Battalion of the Suffolks, all Kitcheners men.
1916 - France
The Chums embarked for France on January 4th 1916. They reformed at Le Harvre and set off for rest
camp before deployment in the Armentiers sector. It was standard practice to
give new units a taste of the trenches in quiet areas. The duty of introducing
them to the trench system fell to the regular unit currently there, old soldier
to new soldier. The chums were also part of an inspection by Kitchener himself
during February. These early months were a prelude to a much greater event to
take place in July.
The Battle of the Somme
Like most of the rest of the British Army,
the Chums got wind of a "big push". Their involvement in working
parties increased, fetching supplies, gas and ammonal explosive up to the front
lines. The Somme area had been chosen as the battleground for the
push, and the softening up shelling of the enemy line began in earnest a week
before zero hour. The Lincolns
could hear the bombardment and could see the damage inflicted on the enemy
trenches. They believed what they were told by the officers, that the enemy
would not survive and that the attack would be over within hours.
The Battle of the Somme was to be the
first use, in mass, of the New Kitchener Army and was designed to relieve
pressure on Verdun where the French were locked in a fight to the
death. Faith in the ability of the the New Army was not high among the regular
Staff Officers of the British Command. They did not believe an attack would be
successful if it relied solely on an infantry attack. In order to help, a
bombardment was which turned out to be one week long and up to that point the
largest ever seen. The word was sent round that nothing would remain of the
German front line at zero hour, 1st July, allowing the New Army to walk at a
steady pace, in line, so chaos did not occur.
The section of the line held by the Chums
and their 101st Brigade comrades was at La Boiselle. Prior to attack, at 7.28 am a large mine was exploded beneath the German line,
the Chums were then to attack at 7.30 am. Unknown to the Battalion, the mine fell short of the German positions
and during the 2min gap between the explosion and the "whistle" the
enemy had the chance to set the machine guns.
The Chums were drawn up with A Company on
the right, B Company on the left and C Company, opposite the crater, in the
centre. D Company were in reserve for phase two. They advanced in four straight
lines with no hesitation. It was a matter of moments when the first men fell,
as the German mortars and machine guns opened up. Officers and men alike
dropped to the ground as if the move was planned in training, in fact they were
killed or wounded. Only a few men reached the German trenches, bombing for all
they were worth, but in too few numbers they had to retreat.
By 9am
D Company were sent to attack led by Major Vignoles, who was soon hit in the
hand. Again, the attack broke up and the 10th Lincolns were left powerless to attack, laying in shell holes
in no mans land in the baking sun. All were waiting for nightfall to be able to
craw back to their own lines for treatment. Several attempts to attack were
made with the remnants of the Battalion on the 2nd and 3rd July, but as the
roll was called when they were finally withdrawn it read 15 Officers and 487
men ( out of 1000 ) killed, missing or wounded.
Aftermath
- Breaking the News
News travelled slowly in 1916 and it wasn't
until the 10th July that the casualty lists began to trickle back to the town.
Over the next few days the size of the disaster was apparent. Letters from
survivors, now in rest camps, spoke of the gallantry of their dead comrades.
Letters were written by surviving Officers to the families of the dead. La
Boiselle was eventually taken on 6th July.
New Drafts
March 1916 saw conscription enforced in Britain, but these men were not from the same mould of the New
Army men. New reinforcements arrived unannounced from the North and East Midlands, but very few from the Chums official reserve, the
11th Battalion. Some of these new men had only been enlisted for four months.
After a period of rest and training the Chums were sent to the line at
Bazentin-le-Petit for 6 days where the conditions were appalling. This again
was not a good time for the Lincolns
as they lost a further 200 casualties. This action was the final action the
Chums were involved in on the Somme before the battle was officially ended in November.
Of the Battle of the Somme's Armies, the
Fourth Army had the highest losses. In this Army it was the 34th Division that
had the highest casualties, 80% of the strength on the 1st July alone, probably
most within the first 15 mins of the attack.
1917 - Arras
The Chums, now part of the Third Army, were
not the same fighting force they were in 1916. Their ranks of Grimsby men had been diluted by new drafts. They were now to
attack in the Arras sector in support of the diversion for the French
Army attack on the Aisne. A small bombardment of four days was arranged for
this battle. It was 9th April 1917.
The first wave set off at 5.30 am with great success. The enemy lines were reached and
occupied. A creeping barrage then allowed the Chums to make further
attacks,1500 yards forward of their start positions. This attack was no repeat
of the Somme, and although there were casualties, the objectives
were reached and the Chums could "dig in" on captured territory. The
Chums were now on the forward slopes of Vimy Ridge, and were able to look down
on the enemy across the Doui plain in front of them. The Chums had played their
part in the most successful day of the war so far.
After a brief period of rest out of the line,
the Lincolns carried on with the offensive. The target was not an
open countryside target of the previous week, but a heavily fortified town
position at Reoux, and its Chemical Works. The Chums Brigade were to attack on
April 28th. The attack was started at 4.15 am but was not destined to be a success. Forming up in the open alerted
the Germans who opened up with mortar and machine guns. The Chums set off
already fragmented. The attack was soon broken up, with small groups of
isolated men unable to continue. A German counter attack at 8.00 am led to a retreat and was effectively the end of the
Chums attack. The losses were high, 420 dead, missing and wounded. The
Battalion was withdrawn from the line on 30th April, shattered.
May and June 1917 saw the Lincolns again in the Arras sector, not far from Perrone. In August they were to
attack the Hindenburg line taking the Germans by surprise, before being
withdrawn again.
October 1917 - Ypres Salient
After rest and training, the Battalion were
put to work as a works Battalion repairing roads, fixing tracks and carrying
supplies in the Ypres salient. They went on to take part in operations
near Languemarck, as part of the Passchaendaele battles. The rest of October ,
November and December were spent in rest and training camps.
1918 - Ludendorf's Spring Offensive
On a 54 mile front, mainly facing Gough's
under strength Fifth Army, the Germans made a bold, last ditch attack to break
the British lines. The chums position bordered the Fifth Army and although not
directly attacked, were quickly in danger of being outflanked. Only by the
skill of the CO did they manage to fall back and prevent a major disaster for
themselves. Again moved the 34th Division ended up next to the 2nd Portuguese
Division against whom the Germans launched an attack on the 9th April. The
Portuguese gave way and the Chums were forced to fall back on themselves to
save their flanks. It was around this time that the Chums spent their last days
in the front lines.
The Battle of the Lys finished and it
was decided throughout the British Army to re-organise units and draft under
strength Battalions into other units, thus disbanding many. May 11th, the Chums
were ordered to follow the 4th and 2/5th Battalions Lincolnshire Regiment and
disband. Their Brigade was also broken up. Officers went off to serve with
other Regiments and the Chums ended up in the reserve lines as a training unit.
The end of
the war
The war ended 11th November 1918. On July 6th 1919, the colours of the 10th Battalion Lincolnshire
Regiment was formally handed over to St. James Church in the town for safe
keeping. Parades were held with the remaining men of the Battalion.
In 1923 two memorials to the 34th Division
were unveiled. One at La Boiselle and the other at Mont Noir, Armentiers. Follow this link to see the memorial at La Boiselle.
It is a tribute to the men of Grimsby and it's surrounding areas, who joined up in 1914,
that their enthusiasm and sense of duty played a part in the greatest conflict
known up to that date. Times have changed since those days, but so long as we
have memories of those men, their sacrifice is not in vain.
Battle Honours
Somme 1916. Albert. Poziers Ridge. Ypres 1917. Poelcapelle. Arras 1917. First Battle of the Scarpe. Arleux. Lys 1918. St. Quentin. Bailleul.
Estairs. Kemmel Ridge
The information ( not direct text )
contained in this brief summary of "The Grimsby Chums" was taken from
the book "Grimsby's Own , The Story of the Chums" written by
Peter Chapman 1991 ISBN 1 872167 25 X
I have not intended to breach any Copyright.
However, if it is felt that it has done so, please contact me at eebo@eebo.freeserve.co.uk .
Further information about Grimsby during the
First World War, more information about the 'Chums' (including the original
call to arms) and general research info, follow this link to ' The Grimsby Roll of Honour 1914-19'. This is an excellent link !!!!!
There is
also an excellent web site
containing an alphabetical listing of Grimsby's First World War Servicemen,
which can be found by following
this link. The explanation of it's origin is contained on the home page, as
are the limitations to it's accuracy. I am sure you will agree that it is
certainly a very good start for research.
For further help in searching for military
histories, you might find some hints and tips here.
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