A large fleet of
warships, transports and trawlers lay off the Gallipoli Peninsula, and
the guns of the warships were continuously in action bombarding various
Turkish forts on both sides of the straits or supporting the Allied
troops on shore.
| The
religion of the Sikhs enjoins its followers to keep five
external symbols of their faith, universally known as the Five
Ks, the Keshas (unshorn hair), Kangha (comb), Kirpan
(sword), Kachhera (breaches) and Kara (iron
bangle). The unshorn hair on the head of a Sikh has to be
covered with a turban. It is mandatory and obligatory for the
Sikh to do so. The apparel of a Sikh is incomplete without the
turban. |
The Dunluce Castle anchored about half
a mile from the beach and the 14th Sikhs disembarked on the 1st of May.
The Battalion was taken ashore in trawlers and landed at "V"
Beach, near Cape Helles: The 29th Indian Brigade went into bivouac in
reserve on the high ground near the beach and immediately found working
parties to unload artillery and stores and construct roads at
"V" and "W" Beaches.
 |
At this time the Anglo-French forces
were holding a line across the peninsula three miles from Cape Helles.
The French were on the right and the British 29th Division on the left,
with three battalions of the Royal Naval Division in reserve. These
troops had suffered heavy casualties and were very exhausted.  |
The first night on the peninsula was a
nerve-racking experience for the 14th Sikhs, for the Turks first broke
through a part of the French line and then through a sector held by the
29th Division. On occasions the situation was critical and the 14th
Sikhs were ordered to "stand to" and be prepared to move at a
moment's notice. However, the situation was restored by local reserves
and the services of the 29th Indian Brigade were not required.
|
Bad blood
set aside as Sikhs join parade in NSW Australia
By Daniel Lewis April 26, 2005
Ninety years after Australian and Sikh
soldiers fought and died together on the beaches of Gallipoli,
the Sikh community in the North Coast town of Woolgoolga New
South Wales has embraced Anzac Day and the local RSL has
embraced the Sikhs.
To the RSL's delight, about 30 Sikh children
took part in the Woolgoolga march for the first time yesterday,
watched by a large crowd of adult Sikhs. At the club, a
ceremonial Sikh sword and the stories of nine Sikh soldiers who
won the Victoria Cross adorn the wall - a recent gift from the
local Sikhs, who began arriving in the area about 100 years ago.
More than 80,000 Sikhs died in the two world wars as part of the
Allied forces.
For the club and the Sikhs, yesterday's Anzac
ceremony was a chance to put previous bad blood behind them. The
RSL had barred those who would not remove their turbans for the
traditional moment of silence observed each evening. In 1993 the
club changed its rules to allow turbans after a Sikh threatened
to take it to the Equal Opportunity Tribunal, but Sikhs and the
RSL have continued to have little to do with each other.
The reconciliation has been brought about by
RSL sub-branch secretary Rayelene Plummer and Vietnam veteran
Angadh Singh, who became a Sikh after visiting Woolgoolga three
years ago. They organised a meeting with Sikh elders and
children to assure them they were welcome at the club and on
Anzac Day. Jorahvar Singh grew up in Woolgoolga, but yesterday
was his first Anzac ceremony and he later took his wife and
children to the RSL club for the first time for a drink.
"It was just a beautiful day," he
said. "Growing up here, as a Sikh, [Anzac Day] was always
seen as not for anyone else but the white Australian people. We
want our children to just feel part of the community." |
The Allies made efforts to advance on
the 2nd of May and the Indian Brigade was ordered to be ready to exploit
success. However, they failed to achieve any success and the Indian
Brigade did not go into action. The following night the Turks again
attacked the French in force and seized several forward positions. The
14th Sikhs were ordered to "stand to," but once again the
situation was restored by local reserves and the Sikhs did not go into
action. General Sir Ian Hamilton considered it essential to gain ground
before the enemy had time to strengthen his defences and bring up
reinforcements. He therefore ordered a general advance on the 6th of
May.
At the beginning of the "Second
Battle of Krithia" the Indian Brigade was in reserve and was not
seriously engaged. The Allies made great efforts to advance on the 6th,
7th and 8th May, but they met with little success and the battle ended
with the Allied line advanced nowhere more than six hundred yards. 
On the 9th of May the Indian Brigade
moved up to relieve the 87th Brigade on the British left and held the
front line for four days. Trench warfare had now begun and all efforts
were directed to consolidating and strengthening the front and to
raiding small sections of the enemy's line. Constant fighting on a small
scale continued, since the Turks were also by no means inactive.
On the night of the 12th of May the
11th Bn of 6th Gurkhas by a skilful and dashing attack gained possession of
Gurkha Bluff, near the sea on the extreme left of the British line. By
this feat the Gurkhas advanced their left by about six hundred yards.
The next morning Nos. 1 and 2 Double
Companies of the 14th Sikhs' moved up to support the 6th Gurkhas and
arrived about 11 a.m. in a ravine behind the Gurkha position. At about
4.30 p.m. orders were received for the 14th Sikhs to take over from the
89th Punjabis and the right half of the 6th Gurkhas in the front line.
Nos. 3 and 4 Double Companies immediately moved out to relieve the
Punjabis, and Nos. 1 and 2 the Gurkhas.
During the day the 89th Punjabis had
gained ground on the right of Gully Ravine. This forward position was
then taken over and occupied by No. 4 Double Company and was entrenched
as rapidly as possible directly it became dark. A weak Turkish
counter-attack was easily repulsed, but unfortunately during most of the
night the Sikhs suffered from the intermittent fire of a battalion in
rear which was apparently unaware of their advanced position.
Captain
Channer was severely wounded in this action. Nos. 1 and 2 Double
Companies had difficulty in taking over the right half of the Gurkha
front. It was a lengthy operation occupying the shallow trenches and
irregular line held by the Gurkhas and Major Swinley was mortally
wounded. However, the Sikhs' machine guns and a company of the Royal
Fusiliers arrived in support and the two double companies successfully
consolidated the position. 
Colonel Palin was a real autocrat and
this is well illustrated by an incident at this time. Some British
officers started to grow beards in order to disguise themselves a little
in action. When Colonel Palin was visiting No. 4 Double Company, just
before they moved forward to take part in a minor attack, he found
Second-Lieutenant Savory with a beard. Although the attack was due to
take place in less than an hour, the Colonel wanted to know why he had
not shaved and ordered him on no account to go into action unshaved.
Savory therefore had to go back to his dugout and shave with a very
shaky hand.
 |
All through the next day the Battalion
dug hard to improve its defences. It was continually harassed by enemy
artillery and snipers, and in the evening Lieutenant Spankie was killed
by a Turkish sniper.
A fortnight had now passed since the 14th Sikhs
landed at Cape Helles.
The Battalion had not yet been seriously engaged;
indeed, it had been in the front line for only two days; nevertheless,
it had suffered seventy-eight casualties in the Indian ranks and had
lost three valuable British officers, two of whom were double-company
commanders.
<<<
Subadar Mul Raj, a Punjabi Hindu of the 69th Punjabis, wears a
scarlet tunic with emerald green facings in 1913.
On the 15th of May the 1st Lancashire
Fusiliers and the 1st Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers were posted
temporarily to the Indian Brigade in place of the 69th and 89th
Punjabis, who left Gallipoli for France.
For the next few days the Sikhs worked
steadily on the improvement of their trenches and the communications in
rear. Major-General Hunter-Weston visited this part of the line on the
17th of May and congratulated Colonel Palin on the way in which his
trenches were kept and on the general appearance of the 14th Sikhs.  |
Now began a period during which the
front was advanced by digging a forward line by night, abandoning it by
day, and eventually occupying it on the second or third night. At first
the Turks did not realize what was happening. But on the night of the
22nd of May, when Captain Engledue, who was attached from the 89th
Punjabis, moved out with "B" Company to occupy trenches
constructed the previous night, he found that a section of trench on
his, right which had been dug by the 2nd Royal Fusiliers was occupied by
Turks.
Captain Engledue attacked at once with the bayonet and drove the
enemy out. It was then found that a gap existed between "B"
Company's right and the left of the Fusiliers. Before this could be
adjusted the Turks launched a vigorous attack against the Royal
Fusiliers and pressed them hard. "A" Company was immediately
ordered forward to fill the gap and take the enemy in flank. The
operation was carried out with great dash and was entirely successful.
For this prompt action the 14th Sikhs received the thanks of the
commander of the Royal Fusiliers. A pleasant sequel followed six years
later, when-both battalions being stationed in the Khyber Pass-the
officers of the 2nd Royal Fusiliers presented the officers of the 14th
Sikhs with a silver grenade inscribed:
"In Memory of Gallipoli, 1915,
and the Khyber Pass"
Up to the end of May the process of
advancing by night and digging in was continued, until the British front
line lay at an average distance of under two hundred yards from that of
the Turks. Digging parties were disturbed only by intermittent and
desultory fire. Lieutenant Meade, with the Battalion scouts, patrolled
nightly up to the enemy's wire, but he never encountered a Turkish
patrol. On the 29th of May Captain Strong, who was attached from the
89th Punjabis, was wounded, and unfortunately he eventually became
completely blind. 
By this date the Allied force at
Helles was organized in two corps-the French Corps and the British VIII
Corps under General Hunter-Weston. The British Corps consisted of the
Royal Naval Division, 42nd Division and 29th Division. The Allied line
had been reorganized in depth in four sectors, the French Corps holding
the extreme right and the three British divisions the other three
sectors. The 29th Division was on the left.
The Indian Brigade occupied a frontage
of about eight hundred yards on the extreme left of the British line.
The 14th Sikhs' trench line lay astride Gully Ravine, the right of the
Battalion being in touch with the left of the 4th Worcestershires, of
the 88th Brigade. The 1st Lancashire Fusiliers, in the centre of the
Indian Brigade, held a line across Gully Spur, while the 6th Gurkhas
were on the left holding the cliffs bordering the Aegean Sea. The 1st
Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers formed the Brigade reserve.
Sir Ian Hamilton had decided to carry out a general attack on the 4th of
June with the object of gaining ground along the whole length of the
Allied front at Helles.
On the front of the Indian Brigade the
open ground on Gully Spur sloped up north-eastwards towards two lines of
Turkish trenches, known as J10 and J11. Gully Ravine was about
seventy-five yards wide and forty to fifty feet deep, the lower portion
being covered with low scrub. Gully Spur fell steeply into the ravine
and was higher than the right edge, from which the ground sloped
gradually upward and eastward to a crest 1iine about two hundred yards
away.
The enemy was known to have several small trenches in Gully
Ravine, and there was also the possibility of machine guns being hidden
in positions on the sides commanding the approaches up the gully.
Further, fire from the trenches J10 and J11 on Gully Spur could sweep
not only the bottom of the ravine but also the flat eastern slope and
the ground beyond as far as the crest line.
The Indian Brigade was to attack in
two waves. The first wave was to capture the Turkish trench line J 11
and consolidate there, while the second wave, starting fifteen minutes
later, was to capture J 13. The first wave consisted of half the 6th
Gurkhas, the whole battalion of Lancashire Fusiliers and half the 14th
Sikhs, while half each of the 6th Gurkhas, Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers
and 14th Sikhs were in the second wave. Half the Inniskillings were to
form Brigade reserve.
It was arranged that on the 4th of
June an artillery bombardment would be carried out from 8 a.m. to 11.20
a.m. all along the Allied front. The guns would then cease firing for
ten minutes, during which the forward troops would cheer and show fixed
bayonets above their trenches to induce the enemy to man his parapets.
From 11.30 to 12 noon the guns would bombard the enemy's front line
heavily. At 12 o'clock the batteries would increase their range and the
first infantry wave would rush out of their trenches to the assault,
followed at 12.15 by the second wave. 
Colonel Palin detailed Nos. 2 and 4
Double Companies for the first wave. No. 2, on the left, working up
Gully Ravine, was first to assist the Lancashire Fusiliers by taking the
trench J10 in flank and then go on with the Fusiliers to the assault of
J 11. No. 4 Double Company, on the right, was to conform to the advance
of the 88th Brigade and ensure that no gaps occurred between the
brigades. Nos. 1 and 3 Double Companies were allotted to the second
wave, No. I on the right and No. 3 in Gully Ravine. The Sikhs' two
machine guns were not to move forward until the trench J I 1 was
captured; their first task was to bring oblique fire to bear on the
trenches J 10 and J 11 so as to assist the Lancashire Fusiliers.
Colonel Palin's written orders were
:issued in the evening of the 3rd of June, but thorough preparations had
by then been completed and everything was ready for the next day's
battle. There was a general feeling of optimism and the morale of the
Battalion was very high.
The Third Battle of Krithia was a
complete failure. Although some initial success was won in the centre,
particularly by the Manchester Brigade, there was a gain of only a few
hundred yards at the end of the battle at the cost of very heavy
casualties.
The 4th of June was a beautiful summer
day. The artillery bombardment took place according to plan, but
unfortunately produced little effect on the enemy in his strong
trenches. The British were badly equipped with artillery and the Turkish
forces entrenched on Gully Spur were quite unshaken at zero hour.
At 12 o'clock the first wave of the
Indian Brigade dashed forward to the attack. The Lancashire Fusiliers
were mown down by fire as they left their trenches; and throughout the
day they were unable to make any progress. The 6th Gurkhas on the left
gained some ground, but were forced eventually to withdraw to their
original line. 
On the right the 14th Sikhs captured
some enemy trenches against very strong opposition, but owing to their
enormous casualties they had to withdraw on the following day.
In Gully Ravine Lieutenant-Colonel
Jacques led No. 2 Double Company forward with great gallantry in face of
very heavy fire. They encountered numerous machine guns in hidden
positions on both sides of the ravine and both officers were killed
almost immediately. The double company pushed on but suffered very heavy
casualties while trying to cut its way through the enemy wire.
Nevertheless, the Sikhs, displaying great resolution, eventually forced
their way across the wire and pushed on. At one place where they were
held up along the wire Havildar Maghar Singh suddenly leapt over the
obstacle, as if it was a hurdle, and, followed by his section, captured
an enemy trench.
On the right of Gully Ravine No. 4
Double Company advanced on the left of the Worcestershire Regiment of
the 88th Brigade. Although No. 4 Double Company did not encounter
serious opposition, they sustained very severe casualties from machine
guns located on Gully Spur. Lieutenant Fowle was killed and
Second-Lieutenant Savory wounded in the first few minutes. The remnants
continued on and eventually captured and held the enemy's front trench
alongside the Worcesters.
At 12.15 p.m. the second wave of the
attack dashed forward according to plan. No. 3 Double Company,
accompanied by Colonel Palin and Battalion Headquarters, advanced up
Gully Ravine and joined the remnants of No. 2 Double Company. Colonel
Palin, seeing that further progress up Gully Ravine was impossible until
the enemy trenches J10 and J 11 were captured, immediately seized a
small spur just south of J 10. Here the Sikhs suffered further losses
and Captain McRae, Lieutenant Cremen, the Adjutant, and Lieutenant
Meade, the Quartermaster, were all killed. Nevertheless, the Sikhs held
on and entrenched the position, while later in the afternoon the
Battalion's two machine guns, as well as two machine guns from a Royal
Navy unit, joined Colonel Palin and helped to strengthen the position. 
Meanwhile, over on the right Captain
Engledue led No. 1 Double Company forward behind No. 4 Double Company
and captured the second and third lines of enemy trenches. This double
company also sustained heavy casualties in its determined advance on the
enemy, and by the afternoon it consisted only of Captain Engledue,
Jemadar Narain Singh and some thirty men. This small party held on to
the captured trench in spite of continuous efforts by the enemy to bomb
their way back from Gully Ravine.
During the afternoon efforts were made
to continue the attack along the whole Brigade front by sending up
reinforcements from the reserves, but all attempts failed.
Although the Turks made no
counter-attack on No. 1 Double Company on the right during the night,
Colonel Palin and his men were attacked time and time again from Gully
Spur and subjected to almost continuous fire. This party suffered
further casualties during these attacks and the two naval machine guns
and one of the Sikhs' guns were knocked out by enemy bombs, but it held
on stubbornly to its trenches. At daybreak on the 5th of June 'there
were only Lieutenant Cursetjee and forty-seven men unwounded remaining
with Colonel Palin, and since the Turks were working round to the rear
of the position it was decided to withdraw.
In the meantime the Turks renewed
their attacks on Captain Engledue, whose party by this time was reduced
to twelve men. He was therefore ordered to withdraw. 
By midday on the 5th of June the
remnants of the 14th Sikhs collected in their original trenches and were
then sent back into reserve to rest and reorganize. When Lieutenant
Mathew, the Battalion Machine Gun Officer, who had been kept back when
his guns went forward, heard that one gun had been left undamaged on the
position, he insisted on leading out a party to recover it. Lieutenant
Mathew and his men succeeded in reaching the gun, but they could not
bring it in. As each man carrying the gun was hit, another took his
place until finally Mathew alone was left unhurt and he too tried to
bring the gun back, but he was almost immediately hit in seven places.
He was eventually brought in, but he died of his wounds in hospital.
During one of these attacks on Colonel
Palin's party on the evening of the 4th of June a man firing in the
trench next to Lieutenant Cursetjee suddenly fell back and said he was
hit in the head. There was no mark on his turban and no sign of any
bleeding, so Lieutenant Cursetjee told him to go on firing and the man
continued to do so. The next afternoon, when the Sikhs were all washing
in the stream that flowed through the gully, the man ran up to
Lieutenant Cursetjee, who was shaving near by, and said: "Look; you
said I was not hit last evening," and he held up his "kangi"
with a bullet embedded in it.
In this battle the 14th Sikhs lost
three hundred and seventy-one officers and men killed or wounded. Out of
fifteen British officers only Colonel Palin, Captain Engledue and
Lieutenant Cursetjee were left unwounded. Never has any battalion
displayed such courage and devotion to duty as were displayed by the
14th Sikhs in the Third Battle of Krithia.
Writing to the Commander-in-Chief in
India a few weeks after the event, General Sir Ian Hamilton paid noble
tribute to the heroism of all ranks. The following are some of the
passages from his letter
" In the highest sense of the word extreme gallantry has been shown
by this fine Battalion. . . . In spite of these tremendous losses there
was not a sign of wavering all day. Not an inch of ground gained was
given up and not a single straggler came back. The ends of the enemy's
trenches leading into the ravine were found to be blocked with the
bodies of Sikhs and of the enemy who died fighting at close: quarters,
and the glacis slope is thickly dotted with the bodies of these fine
soldiers all lying on their faces as they fell in their steady advance
on the enemy. 
The history of the Sikhs affords many instances of their
value as soldiers, but it may be safely asserted that nothing finer than
the grim valour and steady discipline displayed by them on the 4th June
has ever been done by soldiers of the Khalsa. Their devotion to duty and
their splendid loyalty to their orders and to their leaders make a
record their nation should look back upon with pride for many
generations."
The gallantry of the Regiment was also
referred to by the Secretary of State for India (Mr. Austen Chamberlain)
in a moving speech in the House of Commons, and Mr. Chamberlain
personally attended a memorial service held in a London church for the
fallen officers of the 14th Sikhs.
For a short time after the 5th of June
the remnants of the 14th Sikhs remained in reserve. Colonel Palin was
transferred temporarily to command the 126th Brigade, and Captain
Engledue took: over command of the Battalion. The 1st Bn 5th and 2nd Bn
10th Gurkhas, who had recently arrived in Gallipoli, now replaced the
two British battalions in the Indian Brigade, which thus once more
comprised solely Indian troops.
On the 14th of June the 14th Sikhs
moved into the front-line trenches on the right of the Brigade line.
This was a comparatively quiet period and only eight casualties were
incurred.
On the 23rd the Battalion, reinforced
by a welcome draft of one hundred men from India, went back into
reserve. The next day Colonel Palin rejoined. It was now very hot at
Helles. There was very little shade, the water supply was limited and
there were nearly always clouds of dust blowing across the peninsula.
There were a plague of flies and an epidemic of diarrhoea.
Since the attack on the 4th of June no
general offensive took place and all attempts to gain ground were
confined to attacks on narrow fronts supported by all available
artillery.
Towards the end of the month it was decided to carry out an attack on a
narrow front on Gully Spur. The 29th Division and a brigade of the 52nd
Division advanced on the 28th of June and captured five lines of enemy
trenches. The 14th Sikhs, who were still very weak, were in reserve and
did not take part in the attack. However, the Battalion suffered
casualties from enemy artillery fire when constructing communication
trenches to the newly won forward line and Captain Engledue, Lieutenant
Cursetjee and Second-Lieutenant Savory, the last-named for the second
time, were wounded.
The Sikhs remained in reserve behind
the left of the line, near the sea coast, for the next few days. Colonel
Palin was again taken away from the Battalion temporarily to command a
brigade, and Second-Lieutenant Savory, who had not been wounded badly
and was the only officer left in the Battalion, took over command.
Although the Sikhs were not actively engaged, they suffered many
casualties from enemy artillery fire. 
During the fighting around Gurkha
Bluff in the middle of the month, Second-Lieutenant Savory was sitting
at Battalion Headquarters when he received a letter in his father's
handwriting, with thick black around the edge of the envelope, addressed
to the Officer Commanding 14th Sikhs.
He opened it and found that his father had heard that he had been killed
in action and was asking for details as to how he had met his untimely
death, and also requesting the Officer Commanding to send him his sword
and field-glasses.
This was too good a chance to miss, so he went back
to Brigade Headquarters and had an official letter typed to his father
saying that he had been reliably informed that his son,
Second-Lieutenant Savory, was still alive and was, in fact, in command
of his regiment. He then signed the letter
" I have the honour to be, Sir, Your obedient servant, R. A.
Savory, 2nd Lt., O.C. 14th K.G.O. Sikhs."
In the recent advance the 29th
Division had made a salient in the Turkish defences by capturing
Fusilier Bluff. The Turks, however, were still holding the eastern end
of J13 and The Nullah, so the British front line ran, back along J11a.
At 4 o'clock in the evening the enemy
commenced shelling this sector of the front and after two hours'
bombardment launched a determined attack from the dead ground in The
Nullah. The main weight of the attack was launched against the front
held by the 14th Sikhs and the 6th Gurkhas. The Turks charged forward
with great determination, but they were repulsed with heavy losses all
along the front. Shortly after 9 p.m. the enemy again launched an attack
on the Sikhs and Gurkhas after an artillery concentration of fifteen
minutes. As soon as the artillery fire ceased the supports of the Sikhs
and Gurkhas dashed forward from a depression fifty yards behind the
front line and the Turks were thrown back with further losses.
On the 3rd of July orders were
received to capture the whole of trench J13 and at 7 p.m. a party of the
14th Sikhs with three bombers from the 5th and 6th Gurkhas assembled
behind the British barricade under Major Wilmer, who had rejoined the
Battalion from Brigade Headquarters. Five gallant attempts were made to
rush the Turkish barricade across J13, but the resistance was too strong
and the party was forced back with a number of casualties. 
|
Sikhs
commemorate ANZAC day in NZ
by
a Staff Reporter
The
New Zealand Sikh Society in Wellington was among the
participants in the Anzac Day celebrations held in the capital
on April 25, 2005.
The
event, which included a parade, was held to commemorate New
Zealanders killed during World War I and to honour servicemen
and women who returned from the engagement. |
The 14th Sikhs spent a quiet day on
the 4th of July, but at dawn on the next day the Turks launched a strong
attack against the trenches held by the Gurkhas and Sikhs. The greatest
pressure was against the right flank' of the Sikhs and wave after wave
of Turks surged forward from the dead ground in The Nullah. The Turks
were thrown back by rifle and machine-gun fire and in spite of many
gallant attempts to get forward they could make no progress and suffered
very heavy casualties. Major Wilmer was unfortunately killed in this
action.
Later in the day the Indian Brigade
was relieved in the front-line trenches and went into bivouac on the
coast. All battalions in the Brigade had been suffering casualties and
the battalions were all very weak. The 14th Sikhs during the recent
fighting -officially known as the Action of Gully Ravine- had lost fifteen
men killed and seventy-seven wounded. Second-Lieutenant Savory was again
the only officer and he had with him only Subadar-Major Sham Singh and a
hundred and seventeen men. However, the Turks had been heavily defeated
in this sector and had suffered enormous losses. It was most unfortunate
that there were no British reserves available to exploit the situation.
The Indian Brigade remained in bivouac
on the coast until the 10th of July and then embarked for the island of
Imbros, where they arrived after a few days' voyage.
At Imbros the Brigade camped in a field about half a mile from the
seashore. The men benefited both mentally and physically from the rest
and change to peaceful and uncramped conditions. It was the first time
for ten weeks that they had lived safely above ground and walked about
in the open. There was excellent bathing close by and' this was greatly
enjoyed by both officers and men.
A certain amount of field training was carried out, but the Sikhs
chiefly concentrated on "smartening-up" parades. The officers
enjoyed Imbros and were able to go into the interior of the island and
visit Panaghyr, the pretty little capital. On the 12th of July the 14th
Sikhs were reinforced by a double company of the Patiala Imperial
Service Infantry, which was attached to the Regiment. On the 18th of
July Colonel Palin returned to the island and was given a great
reception.
Sir Ian Hamilton's great offensive on
the Gallipoli Peninsula was now about to take place. The main attack was
to be delivered at Anzac while attacks were also to be launched at
Helles and Suvla simultaneously. The 14th Sikhs, although they did not
know it at the time, were to take part in the main attack.
During the latter part of July
training and parades were increased and the Indian Brigade was busy
carrying out battalion and brigade night exercises and practising
embarkation and disembarkation.
During the month reinforcements had
been received and many wounded and sick rejoined from hospital, so the
Sikhs were once again nearly up to strength and after three weeks' rest
were again ready for action.
The 14th Sikhs embarked in trawlers on the 5th of August and arrived off
Anzac at about 9 o'clock in the evening. The Regiment commenced to
disembark at daybreak, but when about half of it was ashore the enemy
shelled the beaches heavily and disembarkation of the remainder was
delayed until after dark.
General Birdwood was commanding at
Anzac and he planned to capture Sari Bair Ridge in order to outflank the
Turks opposing the bridgehead. The Indian Brigade was placed under
General Godley, commanding the New Zealand and Australian Division, for
the attack. The plan was to hold the enemy in front of the beaches and
for two columns to move round his flanks-one round the left flank and
capture Koja Chemen Tepe and Hill Q from the north, and the other round
the right flank and capture Chunuk Bair from the south.
The 14th Sikhs were allotted to the
northern column, which consisted of the 4th Australian Brigade and 29th
Indian Brigade. The advance was to take place during the night of the
6th of August, and it was estimated that Sari Bair would be reached by 3
a.m. The column had to advance only three miles, but the country was
very rugged and covered with thick scrub.
The 4th Australian Brigade, with a
double company of the 14th Sikhs, escorting their mountain guns, set out
at 9.45 p.m. on the 6th of August. They were able to make only
exceptionally slow progress and there were numerous delays owing to the
difficult country, the pitch-black night and enemy snipers, who harassed
the column from both flanks. The Australians had only reached Damakjelik
Bair by 4.30 a.m. In addition, they were utterly exhausted and could not
go any farther. They were ordered to dig in where they were, and the
Gurkha battalions of the Indian Brigade set off over very difficult
country towards Hill Q. 
They found it very difficult to maintain
direction in the mass of scrub-covered hills and got very scattered. The
6th Gurkhas reached a hill just west of Hill Q, which was then
unoccupied by the enemy. The Battalion, however, was somewhat isolated
and was therefore ordered to dig in and delay the attack until the next
day. The 14th Sikhs were in reserve and were in rear of the 1st Bn 5th
Gurkhas on the left of the Indian Brigade. The 1st Bn 5th Gurkhas were
in touch with the enemy and had suffered a number of casualties, and
Captain Daniell, with a party of Sikhs, was sent to reinforce one of
their double companies which was isolated on the extreme left.
At 10.30 a.m. the 14th Sikhs were
ordered to advance and capture Koja Chemen Tepe with the 39th Brigade,
which was due to arrive shortly. However, the orders were cancelled and
no further advance was made that day. The party under Captain Daniell
suffered casualties throughout the day and was reinforced by the
remainder of his double company in the afternoon. At 7 p.m. the Patiala
double company was also sent forward and Captain McClean took over
command of the left flank.
On the southern flank the right column advancing on Sari Bair had also
failed to reach their objective, so all surprise had been lost. 
However,
hope of ultimate success was not abandoned and orders were issued to
continue the general assault at dawn on the 8th of August. In this
attack the 14th Sikhs and the 1st Bn 5th Gurkhas were ordered to capture
Hill Q. Although the attack was fixed to start at 4.15 a.m. orders did
not reach Captain McClean on the left flank until 3.30 a.m. The 1st Bn
5th
Gurkhas were to advance straight to their front while Captain McClean's
two double companies were to attempt to outflank the Turks from the
north. The remainder of the 14th Sikhs was in reserve.
The Sikhs and Gurkhas set off
according to plan at 4.15 a.m., but they were immediately opposed in
strength and the Gurkhas were unable to gain any ground. On the left the
Sikhs succeeded in getting forward some three hundred yards to the edge
of a ravine where they were held up by machine guns in some precipitous
country. Before long the Australians on the right had moved up on the
left of the Sikhs, but were driven back in confusion by a strong Turkish
counter-attack. Shortly afterwards the Sikhs were also forced back and
sustained heavy casualties. Captain McClean, Second-Lieutenant Whitfield
and fourteen other ranks were killed, and Captains Daniell and Saunders,
Major Hardam Singh, of the Patialas, and one hundred and thirty-four men
were wounded. Second-Lieutenant Savory was awarded the Military Cross
for carrying ammunition up to the forward troops under heavy fire when
all others were killed in the attempt, and the Commanding Officer's
orderly, Lance-Naik Hazara Singh, was awarded the Indian Order of Merit
for carrying messages under heavy fire with no regard for his own
safety.
Operations on the 8th of August were
therefore unsuccessful, but it was decided to have one more attempt to
gain Sari Bair Ridge on the 9th of August. This attempt was also in
vain, but the 14th Sikhs did not take part in the attack and were
withdrawn into reserve. However, the next morning the Battalion was sent
forward again to reinforce the 5th Gurkhas and it took up a position on
their right. Although there was very heavy fighting farther south, the
14th Sikhs were not seriously engaged.
After the 10th of August the Indian Brigade held the northern part of
the Anzac position and dug a strong defence line on the Damakjelik Spur.
Here there was another episode which
was an example of Colonel Palin's autocracy. The 14th Sikhs were worried
by a block made of sandbags which had been put across a sunken road and
occupied by enemy snipers. Colonel Palin ordered Second-Lieutenant Maer
to take out a party of men and demolish the block. Second-Lieutenant
Maer, who had just joined the Regiment from the Australian Imperial
Forces, promptly took out two men in broad daylight down to the road
block, pulled it down, emptied the sandbags and brought them back and
then reported that he had done this to Colonel Palin, who was sitting in
the mess dugout. It was one of the coolest pieces of cold-blooded
gallantry known and it just happened that the Turks were not there at
the time. Colonel Palin, however, regarded it as a gross breach of
discipline, as he had imagined that he had ordered Maer to go out and do
this at night as a tactical operation. All the thanks that Maer got was:
"You bloody fool! I told you to go out and do this at night. What
the devil do you mean by doing it by day?" Poor Maer was so
flabbergasted that all he did was to salute, say "Sorry, sir,"
and walk out.
After the desperate attacks on Hill 60
at the end of August, in which the Indian Brigade did not take part,
operations settled down to the regular routine of trench warfare and
there were no further attacks on a large scale. After this battle the
Indian Brigade moved forward and held a front on the extreme left of the
Anzac defences, extending north from Hill 60 and joining up with the XI
Corps at Suvla.
Throughout the fighting Sub-Assistant
Surgeon Bhagwan Singh did excellent work looking after the wounded.
After Lieutenant Cursetjee had been wounded he carried on single-handed
and was awarded the Indian Order of Merit for distinguished services
during this campaign.
As a result of the Sari Bair battles
the 14th Sikhs were reduced to six British officers, one Viceroy's
commissioned officer and two hundred and twenty-three other ranks.
However, during the next few weeks several large drafts arrived, one under
Major Earle, one from the 87th Punjabis, one from the Burma Military
Police, and a second double company of Patiala Imperial Service
Infantry.
Colonel Palin was evacuated sick on
the 29th of August and Major Earle took over command of the Regiment. On
his return from sick leave the following month Colonel Palin took over
command of the Indian Brigade. 
On the 19th of September the transport
Ramzan, carrying Indian drafts, was torpedoed by a submarine and sunk in
the Mediterranean. Second-Lieutenant Unger and eighty men of the 14th
Sikhs were drowned, but Second-Lieutenant Reeves and thirty-four men
were rescued and taken by ship to Malta.
Throughout October and November the
14th Sikhs carried out routine defence duties at Anzac and the weather
was delightful until the end of November, when a heavy blizzard burst
over the Gallipoli Peninsula. On the 26th of November a bitter gale blew
all day, and in the afternoon there were thunder and a violent
rain-storm and in a few minutes the trenches were all flooded. At dusk
the rain changed to sleet and the mud froze and many men were
frostbitten. The gale increased during the night and at dawn it started
to snow. The bitterly cold wind blew for three days and water did not
fall until the 29th of November, when the weather once again became fine
and warm. The men had to stand waist-deep in water and it was impossible
to light fires or cook for four days and all rations were ruined. In the
front-line trenches the frost caused many casualties and many men were
drowned or frozen to death. Fortunately the 14th Sikhs were in the
reserve trenches and did not suffer as badly as most units, but even so
the men endured considerable hardship.
The orders for the evacuation of the
Peninsula reached the 14th Sikhs on the 12th of December and two days
later they were relieved in the front line by the 4th Gurkhas. The same
evening the Regiment marched to the beaches and the men were taken out
to two small steamers in lighters. The 14th Sikhs sailed for Mudros at
midnight and arrived in the early morning. The Regiment was transhipped
on to a transport and sailed for Alexandria four days later.
The Regiment left Gallipoli with a
great reputation and their gallantry and devotion to duty had added
further laurels to its good name. Thirty-five men were awarded the
Indian Distinguished Service Medal for gallantry in operations in
Gallipoli. These awards were all approved by His Majesty The King in the
Gazette of India dated the 28th of July, 1916. The award of thirty-five
decorations in one gazette is understood to be a unique record.
Brigadier H. M. Burrows, Commanding the Ferozepore Brigade Area, who was
Staff Captain to Brigadier-General H. V. Cox in the 29th Indian Brigade
in Gallipoli, organized a scheme for a Gallipoli War Memorial in
Ferozepore. This had been General Cox's wish, but up to this time
Brigadier Burrows had not had an opportunity to arrange a War Memorial
for Gallipoli. He collected funds from the Maharajah of Patiala, other
Sikh leaders and those connected with the Regiment. The Rajah of
Faridkot gave a plot of land adjacent to the Ferozepore Cantonment
Hospital and an extension to this hospital was built as a memorial to
the Indian officers and Indian other ranks of the 14th Sikhs and Patiala
State Infantry who were killed or died of wounds in Gallipoli in 1915.
The extension of the hospital was for
wives of Indian soldiers and consisted of wards, an operating theatre
and other offices, so that the Regiment had a useful and lasting
memorial of which it can be justly proud.
The opening ceremony took place on the
afternoon of the 26th of February, 1937, and was attended by the
District Commander, Major-General Moberly, Brigadier Burrows, officers
of the various units in Ferozepore and their wives, civil officials, and
an assembly of some three hundred pensioned Indian officers and men,
besides many others. The guard of honour was found by Sikhs from the
10th Battalion 14th Punjab Regiment, with the Regimental Colour and
commanded by a Sikh subadar. The Gallipoli survivors of the 14th Sikhs
who were still serving were drawn up in review order on either side of
the tablet, and the one follower who was present sat down just below the
tablet. The group consisted of Subadar-Major Jaswant Singh, Sardar
Bahadur, O.B.I. Subadar Kartar Singh. Subadar Thakur Singh, Subadar Prem
Singh. Havildar Dharm Singh. Sweeper Channi.
The proceedings were opened by Brigadier Burrows, who gave a summary of
the events leading up to the erection of the memorial and thanked all
those who had helped. He was followed by a member of the Cantonment
Board, Captain Narain Singh and Captain Hira Singh. The latter brought
with him a poet who recited a poem extolling the bravery of the 14th
Sikhs in particular and the Sikhs in general. The officers and Colour of
the guard of honour then took post, and the guard sloped arms.
Lieutenant-Colonel Savory then made a short speech, after which the
guard presented arms and the massed buglers sounded the "Last
Post."
Lieutenant-Colonel Savory then unveiled the memorial tablet
and the bugles sounded "Reveille." The formal proceedings then
terminated, and the spectators, led by General Moberly, inspected the
hospital buildings. After this was over the whole assembly were
entertained to tea in the club by Syed Wazir Ali, a leading merchant of
the cantonment. The pensioned Indian officers did full justice to the
fare and seemed to enjoy themselves immensely. The place was crammed,
and after one or two other speeches, including a song by the assembled
pensioners, the meeting broke up.
Source:The Sikh Regiment - Lieutenant-Colonel
P.G. Bamford, D.S.O
|