A Kitchener Man's Bit: An Account of the Great War 1914-18  
Rifleman Gerald Dennis (C/12747), 21st Service Battalion, The King's Royal Rifle Corps (The Yeoman Rifles)
Author(s): Gerald Dennis
Published by Helion and Company
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781912174478
Pages: 0

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ISBN: 9781912174478 Price: INR 1356.99
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Long out of print, this new edition memoir by an intelligent and articulate “other rank", provides fascinating insights into the Great War infantryman's experience. In autumn 1915, twenty-year-old Gerald Dennis enlisted in Kitchener’s Army. Assigned to the 21st (Service) Battalion of the King’s Royal Rifle Corps, affectionately known as the “Yeoman Rifles”, he experienced fierce fighting on the Somme 1916, during Messines Ridge and Third Ypres in 1917 before deployment to Italy in the immediate aftermath of the Caporetto disaster. Re-assigned to a battalion of the Cameron Highlanders in summer 1918, Dennis took part in the advance to victory before demobilisation in 1919. A vivid and engaging record of wartime service and comradeship, his recollections are not those of the archetype disenchanted ex-soldier: “Whatever impressions the readers of this book draw, I would like to emphasise that I bear no resentment or bitterness. As far as I could, I have drawn a true and honest picture of my army life … I realise that I did only the merest little bit for my King and Country, not that we gave either special thought. We had volunteered for them.”

M.S.L. 3.11.2015
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Long out of print, this new edition memoir by an intelligent and articulate “other rank", provides fascinating insights into the Great War infantryman's experience. In autumn 1915, twenty-year-old Gerald Dennis enlisted in Kitchener’s Army. Assigned to the 21st (Service) Battalion of the King’s Royal Rifle Corps, affectionately known as the “Yeoman Rifles”, he experienced fierce fighting on the Somme 1916, during Messines Ridge and Third Ypres in 1917 before deployment to Italy in the immediate aftermath of the Caporetto disaster. Re-assigned to a battalion of the Cameron Highlanders in summer 1918, Dennis took part in the advance to victory before demobilisation in 1919. A vivid and engaging record of wartime service and comradeship, his recollections are not those of the archetype disenchanted ex-soldier: “Whatever impressions the readers of this book draw, I would like to emphasise that I bear no resentment or bitterness. As far as I could, I have drawn a true and honest picture of my army life … I realise that I did only the merest little bit for my King and Country, not that we gave either special thought. We had volunteered for them.”

M.S.L. 3.11.2015
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • List of Photographs
  • List of Maps
  • Foreword
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • 1 Helmsley – Featherbed Soldiers
  • 2 Aldershot – A Dog’s Life
  • 3 Outtersteene and Plugstreet – Preparation and Initiation
  • 4 Plugstreet Wood – the thin edge of the wedge
  • 5 The Somme/Flers – Blood, Mud, Heroes and All
  • 6 The Somme – A Sacrifice Attack?
  • 7 Trench Warfare – The Brasserie Sector (The Salient – Ypres)
  • 8 Messines Ridge – Preparation for, and attack
  • 9 Messines Ridge – Ours now – Consolidation
  • 10 The Third Battle of Ypres – Gas, rain and mud
  • 11 Boeschepe – The Signalling Course
  • 12 Blighty and Leave
  • 13 Italy – Cushy
  • 14 In Dock (Hospital Blues) – Genoa and Marseilles
  • 15 Étaples – Base, Bombs and my new Battalion
  • 16 School again – Meteren – Jerry in Retreat
  • 17 Lannoy – Waiting for my ticket – Demobbed
  • 18 And now – Aprés la Guerre
  • Appendices
    • I “Thank You” printed by Second Army, presented to all ranks leaving the Army
    • II People mentioned in the text
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