Awarded for Valour_ A History of the Victoria Cross and the Evolution of the British Concept of Heroism

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January 4, 2008 MAC/ARD Page-252 16:12 9780230_547056_14_not01
252 NOTES



  1. Denis Winter,25 April 1915:The Inevitable Tragedy(St Lucia, Queensland: University of
    Queensland Press, 1994), 87–8. Winter reported a variety of estimates for the distance
    between the beach and the big ships, ranging from one to four miles. Winter also reported
    a transit time of 40 minutes for tow vessels ferrying troops ashore at a rate of six knots. This
    means these boats were covering one nautical mile every ten minutes. Thus, a 40-minute
    trip indicates a distance of about four nautical miles, or over 6000 yards. Eyewitness Major
    John Gillam in hisGallipoli Diary(n.p.: n.p., 1918; reprint, Stevenage, Herts.: The Strong Oak
    Press,1989), 31–2, reported that the shore was just barely visible due to mist as the first
    wave embarked from the transportArcadian. Later, at 0830 hours he reported ‘It is quite clear
    now, and I can just see through my glasses the little khaki figures on shore at ‘W’ Beach.’

  2. PRO File WO/32/4994. Unsigned Report dated 13 May 1915.

  3. Moorehouse,Hell’s Foundations, 130–1.

  4. See appendix for full text of all VC Warrants.

  5. PRO file ADM 1/8528/176. Letter from Lieutenant-General Aylmer Hunter-Weston to
    A.M.S., GHQ., 14 July 1915.

  6. PRO file WO/32/4995. Letter from Military Secretary Lieutenant-General Sir Francis
    Davies to D.C.G.I.S., 26 February 1917.

  7. Moorehouse,Hell’s Foundations, 132.

  8. PRO file WO/32/4995. Letter from Military Secretary Lieutenant-General Sir Francis
    Davies to D.C.G.I.S., 26 February 1917.

  9. PRO file ADM 1/8528/176. Memoranda related to the Lancashire Fusiliers’ Victoria
    Cross Claims, February/March 1917; Letter from Lord Derby to King George V,? March
    1917; War Office announcement of Victoria Crosses for Captain Cuthbert Bromley,
    Sergeant Frank Edward Stubbs and Corporal John Grimshaw, 15 March 1917.

  10. Laffin,Dardanelles, 87–91.

  11. Bill Rawling,Surviving Trench Warfare: Technology and the Canadian Corps, 1914–1918(Toronto:
    University of Toronto Press, 1992), 29–35. The Canadians suffered just over 33 percent
    casualties during this, their first major engagement of the Great War.

  12. David F. Burg and L. Edward Purcell,Almanac of World War I(Lexington, KY: The
    University of Kentucky Press, 1998), 62, 67.

  13. Prior and Wilson,Command on the Western Front, 96–9.

  14. Liddle,Soldier’s War, 52–5.

  15. Carver,Seven Ages, 171–4.

  16. Lionel Sotheby,Lionel Sotheby’s Great War: Diaries and Letters from the Western Front, Donald C.
    Richter, ed.(Athens, OH: Ohio University Press, 1997), 7.

  17. Robert Graves,Good-bye to All That(Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1929), 110–11. Letter
    from Captain Robert Graves to his parents, 24 May 1915.

  18. Sotheby,Diaries and Letters, 16.

  19. Chris Cook and John Stevenson,The Longman Handbook of Modern European History, 1763–1985
    (London: Longman, 1987), 133; Beckett, ‘British Army,’ 113. The figure of 78 percent
    was derived by averaging the percentage of the establishment in the combat elements of
    the military on 1 September of each year; Geoffrey Noon, ‘The Treatment of Casualties
    in the Great War,’ in Paddy Griffith, ed.,British Fighting Methods in the Great War(London:
    Frank Cass, 1996), 88.

  20. David A. French, ‘A One-Man Show? Civil-Military Relations in Britain during the First
    World War,’ in Paul Smith, ed.,Government and the Armed Forces in Britain(London: The
    Hambledon Press, 1996), 91–2.

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