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Bridges volunteered for
service in South Africa in 1899, and from December 1899 to May 1900 he
served on secondment as a major of artillery with Major General John
French's cavalry division. He participated in the cavalry sweep to relieve
Kimberley that began on 13 February 1900 and the last major battle of the
war, the Battle of Paardeberg on 18 February 1900. In May he was evacuated
to England with typhoid, and then returned to Australia in September 1900,
where he resumed his duties as Chief Instructor at Middle Head.
In 1903, Bridges moved to
headquarters in Melbourne as Assistant Quartermaster-General. He became
Chief of Military Intelligence in 1904 and then the first Chief of the
General Staff on 1 January 1909. His work in Melbourne was mostly
concerned with the new Universal Service Scheme, and with Imperial
Cooperation. He travelled to Europe for discussions with the Imperial
Committee on Defence. On 25 April 1909 he relinquished the post of CGS and
travelled to England to become the Australian representative on the
Imperial General Staff.
Bridges returned to
Australia in May 1910 to become the first Commandant of the Royal Military
College at Duntroon, with the rank of Brigadier General, the first
Australian to reach that rank. He personally chose the site, the old
Campbell homestead of "Duntroon", at the foot of Mount Pleasant,
surrounded by countryside that would one day become the new capital city
of Canberra. In line with the recommendations of Lord Kitchener, Bridges
modelled Duntroon on the US Military Academy at West Point, rather than
its counterparts in Europe, as Bridges felt that the West Point model was
far better adapted to the democratic native of Australian society. The
first class of 41 cadets, 31 from Australia and 10 from New Zealand, moved
in and the college was officially opened on 27 June 1911.
In May 1914, Bridges was
appointed Inspector General, the Army's top post. He was in Queensland
when the war crisis began, but arrived in Melbourne on 5 August 1914.
Bridges met with cabinet and was charged with the creation of an
expeditionary force for overseas service of 20,000 men. Bridges determined
that the force -- which Bridges named the Australian Imperial Force
because of its dual Australian and Imperial mission -- should be organised
as an infantry division and a light horse brigade, and should be composed
of men from all states. Bridges was chosen to command the 1st Division,
becoming the first Australian (and the first attendee of Kingston) to be
promoted to Major General, and the first to command a Division. Bridges'
service at the War Office came in handy here; the British Army Council
accepted his appointment without demur.
Bridges had a fairly free
hand to choose his own subordinates and his choices had far reaching
effects. He drew heavily on the few available staff college graduates for
his staff, choosing Majors C. B. B. White, D. J. Glasfurd and C. H. Foott
and Captains T. A. Blamey and J. Gellibrand. Colonel V. C. M. Sellheim was
his choice for his AA & QMG. For his brigade commanders, he chose
Lieutenant Colonel E. G. Sinclair MacLagan, a British officer on exchange
at Duntroon, whom he knew from his experience there, Colonel J. W. McCay,
with whom he had dealt while McCay was Minister of Defence in 1904-5, and
Lieutenant Colonel H. N. MacLaurin. For his artillery commander, he chose
Colonel J. J. T. Hobbs, whom he had met in England in 1907, and for the
light horse brigade, Colonel H. G. Chauvel.
Bridges determined to take
a number of Duntroon graduates with him. The first class and second
classes were graduated early and, curiously, posted to regimental rather
than staff positions, where many of them were killed. Bridges believed
that cadets could learn best about the Army from serving in such
positions. Ironically, Bridges himself had never served in a regimental
position; his own career was entirely staff oriented.
Having his troops scattered
around Australia made training difficult, and Bridges protested the Prime
Minister's September decision to delay sailing for a month due to the
activity of German warships. Bridges saw his command together for the
first time when it sailed from Albany, Western Australia, on 26 October
1914. En route, the destination was changed from England to Egypt at the
instigation of Chauvel, and Bridges arrived there on 30 November 1914.
Once in Egypt, Bridges took
steps to divest himself of the administrative side of his
responsibilities, creating an Australian Intermediate Base Depot under
Sellheim, with whom he had quarrelled. His concentration on commanding the
1st Division rather than on administering the AIF had many unfortunate
consequences, especially in the area of medical administration. Bridges
not only neglected Sellheim's command, starving it of the officers he
needed to staff it, he gave him no support whatsoever in turf battles
against the British, he used it as a dumping ground for men he disliked.
Bridges landed at Anzac
Cove at around 7:30am on 25 April 1915 and immediately conducted a
two-hour reconnaissance before setting up his headquarters at a spot not
far from the beach chosen by the 1st Signal Company, who provided him with
telephone links to McCay and MacLagan. A furious day of battle followed
against the counterattacking Turks. Bridges was forced to commit his units
piecemeal as they arrived on the beach, in response to one crisis after
another.
Given that nowhere had the
day's objectives been achieved, there was practically no chance of
capturing them with the troops available, no substantial reinforcements
could be expected and a major Turkish counterattack was probable, Bridges
recommended a withdrawal to Hamilton. Considering a number of factors,
Hamilton ordered Bridges to hold his Anzac beachhead, which Bridges and
his men managed to do.
Bridges found the situation
at Anzac, particularly the ineffectiveness of his own arm, the artillery,
extremely frustrating, and he clashed with Hobbs over the proper
employment of the guns. This was made all the more galling when the Turks
managed to shell his headquarters on 6 May 1915, ultimately forcing it to
be moved from the beach to Headquarters Gully.
Bridges was not a men to
get the best out of his subordinates. He was known for kicking stragglers
and men found asleep at their posts. He was disliked by most of his staff.
His aide de camp requested a transfer back to his regiment. Bridges
expected his Deputy assistant quartermaster General (DAQMG), Major J.
Gellibrand, to organise a proper officers' mess at Gallipoli and was
annoyed at the poor quality of what Gellibrand had scrounged from ships'
canteen supplies. Yet he did share the hardships of his men, and made a
point of daily excursions about the position on which he routinely ignored
enemy fire and constantly exposed himself to danger.
On the morning of 15 May
1915, he was on such an excursion in Monash Valley when he was shot by a
sniper, severing his femoral artery. A stretcher bearer dragged him to
safety and he received medical attention from the medical officer of the
1st Battalion, Captain Clive Thompson. On 18 May 1915 he was evacuated to
hospital ship Gascon. Unfortunately, infection set in. Amputation
of his leg was considered out of the question as Bridges had lost a great
deal of blood. In those days before blood transfusion, little could be
done and he died on 18 May 1915.
Bridges was made a Knight
Companion of the Bath (KCB) by the King the day before he died, becoming
the first Australian general to earn a knighthood. His body was returned
to Australia, one of only two dead Australian soldiers to return home. He
was given a state funeral at St Paul's Cathedral in Melbourne and buried
on 3 September 1915 on the slopes of Mount Pleasant, in a grave designed
by the architect of Canberra, Walter Burley Griffen.
Bridges legacy was
enormous. The effects of his creation of the AIF and his founding of
Duntroon would be felt for decades to come. An aloof man that many found
difficult to like, he nonetheless won widespread respect.
Sources: Sessional Papers of the Government
of Canada and British Parliamentary Papers; C.C. Coulthard-Clark: A
Heritage of Spirit: A Biography of Major General Sir William Throsby
Bridges; Bean, C. E. W., The Official History of Australia in the War of
1914-1918. Volume I: The Story of Anzac, pp. 485, Volume II: The
Story of Anzac, pp. 129-130
Text by Ross Mallett http://www.unsw.adfa.edu.au/~rmallett/Generals/bridges.html
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