Monday, July 13, 2015

From Cairo to Ngatimoti, or Around the World in a Hundred Years - the WWI postcard that lost its way.


Some years ago, a colourful postcard at a market stall in his hometown of Barnstaple caught the eye of Trevor Jennings, from Devon, England. Trevor has in-laws in Waimea West and has visited the Tasman area several times, so the New Zealand link also aroused his interest. The card, signed "Hector", had been written at Zeitoun Camp, Cairo, Egypt, to Mrs T. Strachan of Ngatimoti, New Zealand, on 16 May, 1915, and clearly had a First World War connection. Zeitoun was on the outskirts of Cairo and served as a base for ANZAC troops during WWI. NZ soldiers underwent training in the desert there before being shipped off to Gallipoli, the Middle East and the Western Front.

The rediscovery of the postcard recently while Trevor was moving house prompted him to see if he could find out more about it and perhaps send it to someone appropriate in New Zealand. An online search brought up an article I'd written for the NZ History website about the Ngatimoti War Memorial and my blog post about Frank Strachan, giving him a clue as to the identity of the postcard's author -  Frank's cousin, Hector Guy. Trevor then contacted me and I was able to identify the intended recipient, one of Hector's aunts. Soon after, the postcard was winging its way to my home on Waiwhero Road, a stone’s throw away from where the Guy family once lived. Thanks to Trevor's generosity, Hector's message finally made it to Ngatimoti, New Zealand, just a little over a hundred years after he penned it.


How Hector Guy's postcard lost its way is a mystery that's unlikely to ever be solved after all this time. It doesn't appear to have ever been postmarked - perhaps, as was reasonably common, it was handed to a friend going on leave with a request to post it in England, and somehow got mislaid there? 


Transcript of Hector Guy’s postcard, written at Zeitoun Camp, Cairo, Egypt, to his Aunt Ida (Mrs Thomas Strachan) of Ngatimoti, NZ. 

"Zeitoun Camp, 16-5-1915. So pleased to receive your letter two days ago. Time does fly – it doesn’t seem like a year ago I was with you – fancy little David remembering me. He has grown a lot in the photo you sent me of the children. I sent a P.C. [postcard] in answer to that a fortnight ago and hope it will arrive all right.  I have made inquiries about Frank Waghorn but so far have not been able to find any trace of him, he is not in our regiment. I will continue to make inquiries and will let you know if I hear anything of him. I had [a] letter from home on Sunday night and was surprised to hear you knew about the fighting so soon. This is a street scene in the best of the native qtrs [quarters] -  the worst are too dirty to remain in long. You would be very amused here at first to see a man with a moustache wearing a long dress like a woman – someplaces one can’t distinguish the sex. Sorry Uncle Tom hadn’t a better crop of raspberries. Much love to you all. Hector."


Postcard People


Company Sergeant-Major Hector Guy (1890-1917)  
WWI service no 6/244

Albert Hector Guy (always known as Hector, or “Hec” to his mates), was born 11 October, 1890, the second child of John Arliss and Elizabeth “Lily” (nee Strachan) Guy, whose farm ran from Waiwhero Road, Ngatimoti, into the Orinoco Valley. Their homestead, “Sunny Brae”, sat on the knoll of a hill looking down to St James Church and the Mt Arthur Range behind. Hector had four siblings – Walter, the eldest, Margaret (Daisy), Arthur and Ruth. John Guy served as Ngatimoti's Postmaster from 1892 to 1924, with the post office and telegraph service operating from "Sunny Brae". The post office's official telephone line was for many years the only one in the Motueka Valley, and because John Guy was the first to be notified, in August 1914, he and his son Hector took turns ringing the St James Church bell to let people in the area know the anticipated news that war with Germany had been declared.

The Guy family at "Sunny Brae", Ngatimoti, pre-War.
L-R: Back row (standing): Arthur, Margaret (Daisy), Hector
Front row (seated): John A. Guy, Ruth, Elizabeth (Lily) Guy, Walter.

Lily Strachan had been the girl next door and married John Guy at St James Church, Ngatimoti, on 21 October, 1886. The Strachan family were farming neighbours - their Strachan Road property, “Manawatane”, shared a common boundary with the Guys’. Lily’s brothers Gavin, Alexander, John (Jack) and Thomas (Tom) all had farms in proximity to “Sunny Brae”, with Alex Strachan taking over the "Manawatane" home farm after the deaths of parents Benjamin and Jean. Guy and Strachan children grew up surrounded by a close and affectionate network of aunts, uncles and cousins, and at busy times all shared tasks like haymaking, shearing and fruit harvesting on the farms of various relatives. Before the war Hector and his brother Walter both worked as farmers, Hector for his father, and Walter on his own farm nearby. They were involved in local social life, which included church activities, canoeing on the river, excursions to the beach, the Tablelands and Nelson Lakes, tennis and cricket games and informal concerts and picnics. They also trained regularly with the Territorials, formed in 1911.

Gathering of the Strachan clan at "Manawatane", Orinoco, 
New Year's Day, 1909.

Hector enlisted with the NZ Expeditionary Force immediately after war with Germany was declared on 4 August, 1914. He had been a sergeant in the 12th (Nelson & Marlborough) Regiment of the NZ Territorial Force and was assigned the same rank in the 12th (Nelson) Company of the newly formed Canterbury Infantry Battalion. He embarked from Wellington for Egypt on the troopship “Athenic” with the Main Body of the NZEF on 16 October, 1914,  and  took part in the Battle of the Suez Canal in early February 1915, and at Gallipoli, where he was wounded at Quinn’s Post. Being on recuperation leave in England at the time, on 5 August, 1915, Hector was able to stand as best man at the London wedding of his sister Daisy to his good friend Major (later Lt-Col.) Cyprian Bridge Brereton of Ngatimoti, commanding officer of the 12th (Nelson) Company. Cyprian and Daisy Brereton would go on to have four children and called their first child William Hector. Like the uncle he was named for, he was always known as Hector.


London wedding of Cyprian Brereton and Margaret (Daisy) Guy, 5 August, 1915
L-R: Standing: Major Cyprian Brereton (groom) and Hector Guy, brother of the bride and best man. 
Seated: Mrs Kitty Wheater and her daughter Nancy with the bride, Daisy Brereton (nee Guy), 
in the middle.

After rejoining his unit at the NZ Division's camp at El Moascar in Egypt, Hector Guy was redeployed to the Western Front where he went on to fight with distinction, being posthumously awarded the Military Service Medal and a Mention in Despatches, in both cases "for conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty". He held the rank of Company Sergeant-Major by the time he was killed below Bellevue Spur at Passchendaele on what is known as NZ’s “blackest day” of WWI, 12 October, 1917. He was 27. Hector Guy’s comrade Sergeant Cecil Malthus later recalled, "He was found with a bullet through the brain, but still on his feet and gazing out over the parapet - a fitting and symbolic end." Like so many others, his body was lost and he is commemorated at the Tyne Cot New Zealand Memorial to the Missing at Zonnebeke in Belgium.
        
Malthus said of his friend, “ He [Hector] was great fun, really solid in his fundamental qualities, but liable to go off the deep end just for devilment. He had an amazing courage that looked like sheer recklessness, but I believe he was deeply stirred and stimulated by danger, and that made him a grand leader.”

Tyne Cot NZ Memorial to the Missing, Zonnebeke, Belgium.
"This massed multitude of silent witneses to the desolation of war."

All three of John and Lily Guy’s sons – Walter, Hector and Arthur – served during WWI. After both Hector and Walter were killed, under the exemptions permitted by the Military Service Act of 1916, John Guy was able to have Arthur, as his sole surviving son, recalled home from active duty in July 1918. Arthur, a sergeant with the NZ Cyclist Corps at the time of his early release from service, grew up helping out on the family farm but had plans to follow a different career path which were thwarted by the war. He was working as a clerk at the Otaki Railways branch of the Bank of New Zealand when he joined up, but the changed family circumstances meant he spent the rest of his life as a farmer, running both his father's and brother Walter's farms as a single property. In 1923 he married Helen Friesen, a Canadian school teacher who came to Ngatimoti one summer on a raspberry picking holiday, and one of their grandchildren still farms the remaining Guy land at Ngatimoti today. 

Walter, Hector and their cousin Frank Strachan, only son of Alexander and Mary (nee Bowden) Strachan of "Manawatane", are commemorated at the Ngatimoti War Memorial, erected in front of St James Church on land donated by the Guy family, and unveiled on Anzac Day, 25 April, 1921. The War Memorial project was spearheaded by Walter and Hector's sister, Daisy Brereton (nee Guy). 

Brothers-in-law 
 CSM Hector Guy (seated) and Major Cyprian Bridge Brereton in France, 1916.
Major Brereton paid tribute to Hector in his wartime memoir, "Tales of Three Campaigns",
praising his fearlessness, and the "serene temper and unselfish good nature which gave him 
a host of friends".

The intended recipient of Hector’s postcard was his Aunt Ida, wife of his mother's youngest brother, Thomas Pringle Strachan. Ida Helena (nee Beatson) was the oldest daughter of David Guthrie Beatson, one of three sons of Nelson architect William Beatson who settled in the Orinoco Valley  - David, Arthur Henry and Charles Edward (an architect like his father). Her mother, Helen (nee Griffin), was a member of the family who established the Griffins biscuit factory in Nelson. Their connection to Ngatimoti dated back to the early 1860s, when Helen's father, John Griffin, had a farm called "'Lawrencedale" in the Waiwhero area, where they were part of a idealistic community of like-minded friends including charismatic Plymouth Brethren preacher James George Deck. Due to poor land and lack of  practical farming experience this proved a short-lived and disastrous venture, soon abandoned for a return to the city.

David & Helen Beatson (centre)
with their ten children at their Orinoco home, "Woodland Terrace".
L-R: Standing at back: William (Willie) Ida, Walter, J.Guthrie, George
Middle: Cecil, Helen (nee Griffin) Beatson, David Guthrie Beatson.
Front: Charles, Ethelind (Ethie), Helen (Nellie), Henry (Harry).

 Ida was related by marriage to nearly all of the players in this story. Another of her father's brothers, John James Beatson, married her husband Tom's oldest sister, Mary Sclanders Strachan (the Strachans were related to Nelson banker and merchant, David Sclanders), her uncle Charles Beatson married John Guy's sister, Mary Alice, her brother John Guthrie Beatson married Cyprian Brereton's sister Helen and her sister Ethelind (Ethie) married Cyprian's brother, Allen Brereton. Just to add to the matrimonial tangle, before he married Mary Strachan, Ida's uncle John Beatson had previously been engaged to her mother's older sister, Alice Griffin, who died young.

Tom and Ida married in 1902 and had three children, Vida, Douglas and the David (b. 1912) mentioned in the postcard. Their farm on Greenhill Road was near that of Frank and Catherine "Kate" (nee Perham) Waghorn, whose property was on the flats between the Motueka Valley Highway and the Motueka River, opposite the Ngatimoti School on the corner of Greenhill Road. Frank Waghorn Snr was involved in many construction and roading projects in the Motueka district and was foreman on the Ngatimoti Peninsula Bridge build. The subject of Ida Strachan's query was their oldest son, Frank Waghorn Jnr, who grew up at Ngatimoti and attended the local school. Formerly a seaman working on Blackball Coal Company colliers out of Westport, he was serving as a private at Gallipoli with the 3rd Reinforcements, Canterbury Infantry Battalion. Unfortunately Frank Jnr, who was wounded in action at Gallipoli on 6 June, 1915, died as a result two days later on 8 June, 1915, while being transported to Malta on the Hospital Ship “Sicilia”. He is also commemorated at the Ngatimoti War Memorial. As it happens, Frank Jnr's death and Hector's progress after being wounded at Gallipoli were reported in the "Nelson Evening Mail" on the same day, 23 June 1915.

Hector Guy's Aunt Ida (Mrs Thomas Strachan) at her Ngatimoti home, 
"Glenburnie", with Greenhill in the background.


Hector Guy's postcard now has a new home - it is safe in the archives of the Nelson Provincial Museum, where researchers and descendants of the families connected to it will be able to access it should they wish to do so.


See article at the Prow website for an extended version of this story, along with more photos.

Note

The action of which news had, to Hector's surprise, already reached home was probably the Second Battle of Krithia, 5-8 May, 1915, a fruitless operation which cost the Allies 6,500 men, 800 of them New Zealanders. The 12th (Nelson) Company was in the vanguard of a charge on 8 May, and suffered several losses. Its commanding officer, Major Cyprian Brereton, received serious head injuries during this action and was evacuated from Gallipoli, first to Alexandria and then to the Royal Free Hospital in London, England. He was still recovering there when he married Daisy Guy in August, 1915.

"I watched the 12th Nelson Company make an advance over open country called the Daisy Patch. There was absolutely no cover for them. They lost their commanding officer and several men were casualties. Our turn to go across came next and we went over the top in good order. At once we were greeted with a terrible fusillade of rifle and machine gun fire, which was deadly".

Eye witness account, Walter (Bill) Leadley, Canterbury Infantry Battalion.
In "Penguin Book of New Zealanders at War" (2009) pg.136


References

Albert Hector Guy,  (1890-1917) WWI, service no 6/244
Auckland War Memorial Museum Cenotaph Database record

Nelson Provincial Museum WW100, Their Stories

Nelson Provincial Museum WW100, Their Stories

Frank George Waghorn, (1893-1915) WWI, service no 6/1744
Auckland War Memorial Museum Cenotaph Database record

Cyclopedia of New Zealand (1906) Nelson, Marlborough & Westland Provincial Districts: Ngatimoti See entries for John Guy and the Strachan brothers.

Brereton, C.B., "Tales of Three Campaigns", first published in 1926. Second enlarged edition published 2015 by John Gray Publishing, Christchurch, NZ, to coincide with the 100th anniversary of the landing on Gallipoli. Copies of this 2nd ed. are available from the Nelson Provincial Museum.

Malthus, C., "Armentières and the Somme" (2002), pub. Reed Books, Auckland, NZ.

Tyne Cot NZ Memorial to the Missing at Zonnebeke, Belgium
NZ History online, NZ Ministry for Heritage and Culture.

During a tour of the battlefields and war graves of Europe after the war, known as the "King's Pilgrimage", King George V of England was inspired by his visit on 11 May, 1922 to the Tyne Cot Commonwealth War Graves Cemetery in Flanders to make an acclaimed speech which includes the famous and, in light of future events, sadly ironic quote: "In the course of my pilgrimage I have many times asked myself whether there can be more potent advocates of peace upon Earth through the years to come, than this massed multitude of silent witnesses to the desolation of war."  

Woodley, Mary, "The Moravian Settlement". Unpblished ms.
"There is no Christianity without community." The ill-fated Waiwhero community was based on the ideals and teachings espoused by 18th century Protestant reformer, Count Nicholas Ludwig von Zinzendorf.

Photo credits

Postcard written by Hector Guy to his aunt, Ida Strachan, and gifted by Trevor Jennings, front and reverse.

Portrait of Company Sergeant-Major Hector Guy
Courtesy Lincoln College: Living Heritage, WWI collection. 
Pre-WWI Hector attended this nstitution for a time
 back when it was known as the Canterbury College of Agriculture.

The Guy family at their Ngatimoti home,"Sunny Brae", pre-War, likely c. 1913-4
Guy Collection/Nelson Provincial Museum Collection, ref. 315235

Strachan family gathering at "Manawatane", New Year's Day, 1909.
Guy Collection/Nelson Provincial Museum Collection, ref. 315175

Brereton-Guy Wedding Party, London, 5 August, 1915
Nelson Provincial Museum, ref. 2014.72.7

Tyne Cot NZ Memorial to the Missing
NZ History Online, NZ Ministry of Culture and Heritage.

Brothers-in-law - CSM Hector Guy and Major Cyprian Bridge Brereton in France, 1916.
Nelson Provincial Museum Copy Collection, ref. C3722

David & Helen ( Beatson with their ten children at their Orinoco home. "Woodland Terrace".
Beatson, C.B. (Pat) (1992) "The River, Stump and Raspberry Garden: Ngatimoti as I Remember." Nelson, NZ: Nikau Press, pg. 32
Pat Beatson was another of Ida Strachan's nephews - his parents were Ida's brother George Beatson and Constance nee Whelan (Cyprian Brereton's cousin).

Ida Helena nee Beatson, Mrs Thomas Stachan, (1872-1953) at "Glenbirnie", her Greenhill Road home in Ngatimoti.
Guy Collection/Nelson Provincial Museum, ref. 315198
The photographer was her nephew Walter Guy, Hector's older brother.

A keen amateur photographer, Walter, who was born 20 August, 1887, enlisted on 29 May, 1916, and served as a private with the 19th Reinforcements, C Company, Canterbury Infantry Battalion. He was killed in the field while trying to rescue a wounded man at Colincamps, the Somme, France,  on 27 March, 1918.

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

McCALLUM, John Gordon (1890-1917)



Born on 24 February 1890 at Halkett on the north-western outskirts of Christchurch, Canterbury, John Gordon McCallum was the second son of the Reverend Neil McCallum and his second wife, Janet Anderson (nee Dods). An older brother, Neil Brodie McCallum (known as Brodie), had been born two years earlier, in 1888. Gordon had two younger siblings as well - Kenneth Stuart, b. 1894, and Margaret (Maggie), b. 1897. [1]

The Reverend McCallum was a Presbyterian minister, born in Campbelltown, Argyllshire, Scotland, in 1840. After studying at Glasgow University and Heidelberg University in Germany, he commenced his ministry in 1869. In June, 1872, he was appointed to New Zealand as a probationer by the Colonial Committee of the Free Church of Scotland. Accompanied by his new wife, Janet Scott (nee Moffatt), he took ship from Greenock two months later on the "Helen Burns", arriving at Port Chalmers, New Zealand,  2 December, 1872. He was ordained on March 5, 1873, at St James Presbyterian Church, Wellington Street, Auckland, then served as an itinerant Minister in the Whanganui/South Taranaki area. It was demanding work, requiring both fortitude and faith as he travelled by foot or horseback through difficult country, without roads or bridges, to do the rounds of his widely scattered flock. His ministry in New Zealand ranged from Patea, Waverley and Hawera to Cust and Oxford. On 30 August 1874, just seventeen months after their arrival, his wife Janet died at the age of 28 in Patea, South Taranaki. 

In April, 1877, Reverend McCallum transferred to Canterbury. He began holding regular services at Oxford and Cust and also preached to small congregations at View Hill, Carleton, West Eyreton and Stoke. His parishioners initially gathered together in schoolrooms, Road Board offices and private homes, but Presbyterian churches at Oxford and Cust and a manse for the minister had been built by 1886 [2] when Reverend McCallum took a two year break and travelled back to Scotland, first stopping in London where he remarried at the Regent Square Presbyterian Church on 3 June, 1886, to Janet Anderson Dods. Eldest daughter of Scottish pharmacist John Thomas Dods and his wife, Margaret (nee Black), Janet was born at Anderson's Bay, Dunedin, in 1864. After his return to New Zealand in 1888, Rev. McCallum held the Halkett Presbyterian Charge (Kirwee, Kimberley and Darfield) until his retirement in 1897. [3] 


Reverend Neil MCallum and his first wife, Janet Scott Moffatt
Taken around July, 1872, just before the newly-weds set out for New Zealand

Gordon McCallum was educated at Addington Public School School, Christchurch Boys’ High School and at Canterbury College, where he studied law. His family lived for much of that time at 38 Jerrold Street in the Christchurch suburb of Spreydon, quite close to the Adddington School. Tall and athletic, Gordon was an all-rounder who took a keen interest in sport, especially rugby. The boy named "Gordon" for the hero of Khartoum thrived on tales of adventure and military derring-do at exotic, far-flung outposts of Empire, and was a dedicated member of first the Junior and then the Senior Cadets, being captain of the Christchurch Boys’ High School cadets in his final year there. While at university he obtained a commission as a lieutenant in the Christchurch City Rifles Volunteers. He held this commission for four years, resigning when he left Christchurch for Motueka.[4]  

Motueka Mounted Rifles outside the Nelson Provincial Buildings

Upon becoming articled as a law clerk with Motueka law firm Easton & Nicholson  in 1911, [5] Gordon joined the Motueka Mounted Rifles, again holding a commission as lieutenant and being later promoted to captain. [6] The Motueka Mounted Rifles comprised “D” Squadron of the 10th (Nelson) Mounted Rifles Regiment of the NZ Territorial Defence Force as formed in March, 1911, and was commanded by Motueka’s hard-working medical practitioner Dr Henry Deck, a Boer War veteran. Gordon McCallum was described as ”a general favourite with all” and was noted at the time by his superiors in the Territorial Defence Force as being “a promising young officer”. 

When war broke out, Gordon’s brother Brodie, an accounting clerk with Dalgety & Co, joined up straightaway as a trooper with the Canterbury Mounted Rifles and sailed from Wellington with the Main Body of the NZ Expeditionary Force on 16 October, 1914. [7] So did Gordon's soon-to-be brother-in-law, Arthur Lake Batchelor. 


Arthur Lake Batchelor, Gordon McCallum's brother-in-law.

Gordon McCallum delayed a bit, so he could sit the final examination required for him to qualify as a  practising solicitor, which he duly passed. He then enlisted on 11 December, 1914, trained at Trentham, and along with Dr Deck's son, Robin (Bob) Deck, was commissioned as a lieutenant with the 10th (Nelson) Squadron of the Canterbury Mounted Rifles on 11 February, 1915. They embarked for Alexandria on the “Maunganui”  on 14 February, 1915, with the Third Reinforcements of the NZ Expeditionary Force. The Auckland, Wellington, Otago and Canterbury Mounted Rifles were all incorporated into the NZ Mounted Rifles BrigadeGordon was farewelled at the wharf by his mother and his bride of just three days' standing.

 On 11 February, 1915, the same day as he received his commission and while still based at Trentham, Gordon had married Lorrie (sic) Maud Batchelor at the Kent Terrace Presbyterian Church in Wellington. The witnesses were a Lieutenant Bell from Trentham Camp and Mary Hobhouse Chatfield, second wife of Wellington architect, William Charles Chatfield. [8] 


Lorrie McCallum nee Batchelor (1887-1958)
Believed to have been taken on the occasion of her wedding to Gordon McCallum.

Lorrie, born on Christmas Day 1887, was the only daughter in a family of six, having five brothers - Ray, Arthur, (known as Lake), Clarence, Jack and Athol (known as Roto). Her father was Lower Moutere farmer and carrier Frederick Craven (Fred) Batchelor. As part of his operations he bought the 26 ton twin-screw steamer "Lily", which he used between 1893 and 1905 to transport passengers and freight to and from Nelson and Motueka. Lorrie's mother was Elizabeth (Lizzie) nee Kerr. Elizabeth and her sister Margaret were the twin daughters of Upper Buller pioneer and run-holder, John Kerr of "Lake Station" on the shores of Lake Rotoiti. The twins had married brothers Fred Batchelor and Henry Harold (Sam) Batchelor, sons of entrepreneurial settler Thomas Charles Batchelor, who arrived in Nelson in 1848 on the ship "Bernicia". Lorrie, who was named "Maud" for her aunt Maud Rankin (nee Kerr), grew up on the family farm at Lower Moutere and attended Lower Moutere School. At that time it was under the stewardship of headmaster, Lockhart Easton, who later qualified as a lawyer, set up a law firm in Motueka, and became Gordon McCallum's employer. Horses were always part of her life - her father ran up to 32  on his property as part of his extensive cartage business -  and Lorrie was an accomplished horsewoman, winning the Ladies' and Gentlemen's jumping competition at the Nelson Show in October 1912. It's very likely that Lorrie and John McCallum met through her brothers, Arthur Lake Batchelor, who was a mate and fellow member of the Motueka Mounted Rifles, and Clarence, who played rugby for Motueka's Whakarewa rugby team with Gordon. [9] Clarence and younger brother, Athol Rotoiti (Roto) Batchelor, were both on the NZEF Reserve List, but weren't called upon to serve. Robin Deck also married just before leaving New Zealand, to local girl Mabel Skinner. He would be killed at Gallipoli on August 28, 1915.

"Dominion", 16 February, 1915: Social & Personal
Note: "Lorrie" was the bride's proper name and not short for "Laura".

O n 26 March, 1915, the Third Reinforcements arrived at Zeitoun camp near Cairo. Gordon McCallum was put in charge of the Canterbury Mounted Rifles' Depot Squadron [10] and managed to catch up with his brother Brodie and brother-in-law, Arthur. The rugged terrain at Gallipoli not being suited to horses, they were left behind in Egypt, and the men of the 10th (Nelson) Squadron fought on foot as part of the Canterbury Machine Gun Section.They landed at Anzac Cove on the 12th of May and Gordon was soon involved in fighting at Walker’s Ridge and elsewhere at Gallipoli. In a letter sent home to his wife Lorrie, Gordon McCallum described the successful capture by the 10th (Nelson) Squadron of a Turkish machine gun creating havoc among the Allied troops at Bauchop’s Hill, early in August, 1915, during the Sari Bair offensive The 10th incurred several losses, including popular member, Alan de Castro. Around the same time Gordon McCallum’s brother Brodie, who was also at Bauchop's Hill, received a crippling wound to his ankle which put him out of the war for good. He was evacuated to hospital at Heliopolis, Cairo, on 14 August, 1915, and invalided to New Zealand on the "Willochra" in September. Once back home he was discharged from active service on 20 January, 1916. [11] The desperate struggle to take the commanding heights of Gallipoli cost the Canterbury Mounted Rifles dearly - in just four months they suffered more than half of the total casualties they incurred throughout the duration of WWI.

"The Battle of Chunuk Bair, 8 August, 1915", by Ion B. Brown

Gordon McCallum’s account of the 10th (Nelson) Squadron’s action at Gallipoli was published firstly in the “Motueka Star” and then the Nelson “Colonist” and can be read here:

On Gallipoli Hills
“Colonist”, 19 October, 1915

McCallum was himself wounded at Gallipoli on August 21, 1915, and evacuated via Mudros on the island of Lemnos to the Royal Free Hospital in London, England. He was granted furlough while he recovered and made full use of this time for a spot of tourism, travelling all over England and the British Isles and no doubt visiting ancestral grounds in Scotland along the way. Meanwhile, back home, Lorrie was playing her part for the war effort. At the end of July 1915 she could be found manning the Mounted Rifles stall at a Motueka fund-raiser for Sick and Wounded Soldiers and in June 1916 serving as Assistant Secretary for Motueka's Red Cross Branch, which was busy making up care packages for men at the Front. [12]

In December, 1915, Gordon McCallum returned to service with the NZ Mounted Rifles in Egypt. The NZMR became part of a new Anzac Mounted Division, whose brief was to prevent any Turkish access to the Suez Canal. In April 1917 the ANZAC Mounted Divison came under the overall command of Major General Edward Walter Clervaux Chaytor. Born in Motueka, he was the only New Zealander to ever exercise command of an ANZAC force at a divisional level. For much of the time in the earlier part of 1916 the new Division was mostly engaged in desert patrols, enlivened by odd skirmishes with an elusive enemy, but things heated up as the year went on, beginning with the Battle of Romani on 4-5 August, 1916. [13]

Officers of the 15th (NZ) Company of the Imperial Camel Corps
Captain Gordon McCallum (seated) centre.


Formed in January, 1916, the Imperial Camel Corps began by trialing long-range patrols conducted by small camel-mounted units around the Suez Canal and the Sinai Desert, and grew organically as its usefulness became more apparent. Six British Yeomanry companies were added in March and four companies of Australian Light Horsemen in June. By mid-year, the decision had been made to use the ICC as camel-mounted infantry in a combat role as part of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force - although they travelled by camelback, the men of the ICC fought on foot. Two companies of New Zealanders seconded from the NZ Mounted Rifles Brigade reinforcements were among men from all over the British Empire who joined the expanded Imperial Camel Corps. Gordon McCallum was gazetted a captain in July 1916 (his commission being confirmed in November 1916) and in August he was transferred as O.C. to the newly-formed 15th (NZ) Company of the Imperial Camel Corps. [14] "Sorry as the Regiment was to lose him, it was a well-earned promotion", remarked Colonel C.G. Powles later. "McCallum led his company with conspicuous success until he fell, mortally wounded, at Rafah, six months later". Powles clearly held Gordon McCallum in high regard, describing him elsewhere as "a very keen and efficient young officer" and "a brilliant commander". [15] A second NZ company, the 16th, was added to the ICC in November, 1916.

Captain Gordon McCallum
outside the Mustapha Pasha Barracks
in Alexandria.
During his time with the 15th Company Gordon McCallum kept his camera at hand, and a selection of the photographs he took in Egypt and the Sinai can be seen through the link below to the website set up by his grand-nephew, Wayne McCallum. These show that when off-duty, Gordon McCallum and hs fellow officers went sight-seeing and enjoyed a civilized social life in Cairo and Alexandria. They took tea at the Piazza of the opulent Grand Continental Hotel in Cairo and patronised the NZ Canteen at the Diggers' Tel el Kebir training camp "run by Miss Ettie Rout of Christchurch and some NZ ladies - it is a great success". McCallum had a good deal of admiration for Ettie Rout and her efforts to improve life for the Anzac soldiery.

Captain John Gordon McCallum, photographs taken with the Imperial Cameliers in Egypt & the Sinai.

In December, 1916, the ICC became the Imperial Camel Corps Brigade, which comprised four rotating battalions, with one always back at base in Abbassia on the outskirts of Cairo, resting the animals and repairing equipment. Although Captain McCallum's military record places him with the 4th (Anzac) Battalion, in practice the 15th (NZ) Company shifted around between the 1st, 3rd and 4th Battalions of the ICCB as required. After completing its intensive training at Abbassia, the 15th Company trekked across country to Kantara, and then over the Sinai Desert to link up with the main body of the Camel Corps at Mazar in December, the day before the army advanced on El Arish. The fort of El Arish was taken without a fight, but they were soon in the thick of it on 21 December, 1916, during the Battle of Magdahaba [16]. Gordon Mc Callum's family later received a letter containing his personal account of events at El Arish and Magdahaba, which was published in the "Sun" on  6 March 1917 under the heading "Looking for Abdul"Although several men of the 15th Company were left wounded, Magdahaba was successfully won with a relative ease that left the Imperial troops unprepared for the ferocity of the Turkish defence during the Battle of Rafah which followed in January, 1917,  a brutal affair eventually won after a last ditch attack by the NZ Mounted Rifles' Brigade saved the day for the Allied forces.


"Camel Corps at the Battle of Magdhaba", by H. Septimus Power

Gordon McCallum was fatally wounded at Rafah on the afternoon of January the 9th, and died two days later on the 11th of January, 1917. 

“The 15th (NZ) Camel Company was transferred from the 4th Battalion to the 1st Battalion in January 1917 and took part in this action as a unit of that body. The men dismounted under shell fire some three and a half miles from the enemy position, and the 15th Company advanced as the first wave of the Battalion's attack. The whole of the Camel Brigade present had been thrown into the attack, and the troops, during the day, attempted to work their way forward by crawling or by making short rushes over the bare level ground. By 2 p.m. the advance was held up by severe rifle and machine-gun fire, and the position was being enfiladed from concealed positions on the right. During this advance, the 15th Company lost its popular O.C. [Officer Commanding], Captain J.G. McCallum, who had been in command of the Company since its formation." [17]

His popularity as an officer is attested by the grief with which the news of his death was greeted by the Cameliers.

"We passed questions along the line to find out how other companies were faring. We were told that Captain McCallum of No. 15 (New Zealand) Company had been wounded some hours earlier while leading his men forward. There were many willing hands prepared to risk the whining bullets to get him back to the rear where the Red Cross men could attend to him. Tenderly he was placed on a stretcher; but the Angel of Death hovered over it. He lingered for two days. There were tear-dimmed eyes in No.15 Company when the New Zealanders heard he was dead." [18]

Gordon McCallum was buried at the El Arish Military Cemetery, his  committal service being conducted by Army chaplain, Rev. Edwin B. Rawcliffe, a Presbyterian minister. Today he lies beneath a headstone at the Kantara War Memorial Cemetery in Egypt. He is commemorated at the Motueka War Memorial and at the Imperial Camel Corps Memorial in London, England. He is also recorded on the Nelson/Tasman WWI Roll of Honour, the Christchurch Boys' High School WWI Roll of Honour. and the NZ Lawyers Roll of Honour, WWI.

The Imperial Camel Corps Memorial in London.

Lake Batchelor, Gordon McCallum's brother-in-law, didn't make it either - he died of wounds received in Palestine on 27th November, 1917, while fighting with the NZ Mounted Rifles at Ramleh, site of several 12th century battles between the Crusader Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Fatamid Egyptians[19] Lake's war mirrored Gordon's to some extent. He left New Zealand on 16 October, 1914, travelling on the "Athenic" with the 10th (Nelson) Squadron of the Canterbury Mounted Rifles Brigade, as part of  the Main Body of the NZ Expeditionary Force. He was promoted to Corporal, and fought during the campaign on Gallipoli where he was wounded. Evacuated to England, he spent time in hospital, followed by recuperation leave. He became ill and was readmitted to hospital, but was eventually posted back to Egypt, where he took part in the NZ Mounted Rifles Sinai-Palestine campaign.[20] During this time he would probably have been in regular contact with Gordon McCallum, as the Anzac Mounted Division and the Imperial Camel Corps frequently supported each other during various engagements. It was the NZ Mounted Rifles who made the pivotal breakthrough at Rafah, just as the Allied forces were about to retreat. Arthur Lake Batchelor's headstone is at the Ramleh War Cemetery, today in Israel, and he is commemorated at the Motueka War Memorial along with Gordon McCallum.

Captured in action.
The NZ Mounted Rifles' charge that won the day at Rafah.

Upon his return to Christchurch, Gordon’s brother Brodie McCallum became a founding member of the  Christchurch Returned Servicemen’s Association, and served for a time as its Secretary. He took up his old position as an accountant for Dalgety & Co in Christchurch, later moving to Greymouth and Blenheim while continuing to work for the same company. He settled in Blenheim, where he lived for many years, dying there in 1972. He lies in the RSA section at the Omaka Cemetery. The Reverend McCallum continued to work as a locum for the Presbyterian Church for some years after his retirement, until finally brought to a halt by ill-heath. He died in 1927, followed by his wife Janet in 1936.

Gordon McCallum’s bride, Lorrie, for such a short time a wife, was for a long time a widow. There were no children born of her brief marriage. Always independent, she had her own home on the family farm at Lower Moutere, where she bred angora rabbits and grew tobacco. In later years she moved into town, where she had a house opposite the RSA rooms.in High Street. Lorrie also served for many years as Motueka's Public Trustee and as the local Registrar between 1930 and 1941.[21] She never remarried, but lived in Motueka, close to her family, until her death in August, 1958, at the age of 70.


The Memorial Window in the Great Hall
at the Canterbury University College (now the Arts Centre)
 Commemorative bronze plaques listing the names of 235 staff and students
who lost their lives during WWI were  placed beneath the window during 

restoration work following the Christchurch earthquakes of 2010 and 2011.
The Great Hall reopened in June 2016.


References

1) Births, Deaths & Marriages, Historical records: John Gordon McCallum ref. 1890/3530

2) Hawkins, D.N. (1957) "Beyond the Waimakariri; A Regional History". Christchurch, NZ: Whitcomb & Tombes Ltd. Pp. 337-338.

3) Register of the Presbyterian Church: Ministers, Deaconesses & Missionaries from 1840:
    McAdam-McDowell: Reverend Neil McCallum
    Presbyterian Archives Research Centre

4) Roll of Honour: The Fallen & Wounded. Personal Notes. See: Captain John Gordon McCallum.
    "Christchurch Press", 25 January 1917.

5) Territorials: Motueka Mounted Rifles.
    "Colonist" 16 December, 1910.
An account of the last training camp held by the Motueka Mounted Rifles as a volunteer unit   shows that John McCallum was established in Motueka by December, 1910. The Miss Batchelor contributing to the public concert held as part of the proceedings was almost certainly Lorrie.

6) Personal: Obituary, Captain J.C. McCallum
    “Colonist”, Nelson, 22 January, 1917
See also: For King and Empire. Died of Wounds: Captain J.G. McCallum
     "Sun", 24 January, 1917

7) Archway Archives NZ. Military Personnel Record: Neil Brodie McCallum, service no. 7/446,

8) Marriage of John Gordon McCallum and Lorrie Maud Batchelor, 11 February, 1915.
    BDM Online: registration no. 1915/8361
Lorrie was staying with the McCallum family in Christchurch prior to her wedding. Accompanied by John's mother, Janet McCallum, she travelled from Lyttleton on the coastal steamer "Pateena", arriving in Wellington on February 6, 1915. 
Shipping, Port of Wellington: Arrivals "Pateena"
"Evening Post", 6 February, 1915.

9) Motueka Rugby Sub-Union. Saturday's Matches: Whakarewa v. Wanderers
    "Nelson Evening Mail", 27 June, 1913

10) Personal Items: Captain McCallum wounded at the Dardanelles
    Marlborough Express, 4 September, 1915, p 8

11) New Zealand’s Roll of Honour.
    Casualties Canterbury Mounted Rifles: Neil Brodie McCallum
     "NZ Herald", 19 August, 1915

12) Motueka Carnival: Sick and Wounded Soldiers' Fund.
    "Nelson Evening Mail", 3 August, 1915. District News.
    See also: Motueka: St John Ambulance Association: Red Cross Branch
    "Nelson Evening Mail", 27 July, 1916.

13) Archway Archives NZ. Military Personnel record: John Gordon McCallum, serial no. 7/796

14) The Imperial Camel Corps Brigade at Wikipedia

15) Powles, Colonel C.G.,"The History of the Canterbury Mounted Rifles, 1914-19i9"
     Ch. VII. Of the Crossing of the Canal and the Advance into the Sinai Desert, pg 103
     See also: Powles, "The New Zealanders in the Sinai and Palestine", Ch III, pp 48 & 78.

Colonel Powles' horse "Bess" was famous in her own right as one of the very few horses that  went with the NZ Expeditionary Force to return to New Zealand. She has her own monument near "Flock House" in the Manawatu.

16) The Battle of Magdahaba, Sinai
      NZ History website, NZ Ministry for Heritage and Culture
See also Gordon McCallum's personal account of the battle, written in a letter to his family which   was received after his death.
"Looking for Abdul"
"Sun", 6 March 1917, p 9

17) "With the Cameliers in Palestine", by John Robertson (4th NZ Battalion, I.C.C.),
 pg 75 

18) The Fighting Cameliers, by Frank Reid (1st Australian Battalion, I.C.C.), pg 69.

19) The Palestine Campaign: The Anzacs at Er-Ramleh 
      "Christchurch Press" 26 November, 1917

20) The Fallen and Wounded: Personal Notes. 
       Obituary: Corporal Arthur Lake Batchelor
       "Christchurch Press", 13 December, 1917

21)  Notes supplied by Mr B. Batchelor.


Acknowledgements: Mr Wayne S. McCallum & Mr Brian Batchelor

 See also: 
 Adlam, Geoff (January, 2016) NZ Law Society
John Gordon McCallum 1890-1917

 
Notes:

1) Those who had trained with the 10th (Nelson) Mounted Rifles Regiment of the Territorial Force   before war broke out generally chose to enlist with its equivalent within the NZ Expeditionary Force - the 10th (Nelson) Squadron of the Canterbury Mounted Rifles Brigade.

2) The newspaper article reprising Gordon McCallum's account of the 10th (Nelson) Squadron's activities at Gallipoli calls him "Captain McCallum." This is a reference to his former rank in the Territorials. Until he joined the Imperial Camel Corps he held the rank of lieutenant in the Canterbury Mounted Rifles Brigade. Representations to have him made up to captain much earlier, before he even left New Zealand with the NZEF, appear to have been stymied by military bureaucracy - it was unusual for the commanding officer of a squadron not to hold a rank higher than lieutenant.

3) There seemed to be some confusion in newspaper reports about the actual date of Captain McCallum's death, but contemporary accounts are clear that he was wounded on the 9th and died on the 11th of January, 1917.

4) It was standard practice for cavalry regiments while in the field to set up a Depot Squadron which stayed behind to take charge of munitions, supplies and remounts and maintain a base where men and animals could be rested and treated, equipment repaired etc.

5) Lockhart D. Easton, founder of Motueka law firm, Easton & Nicholson, (see entry in the 'Cyclopedia of NZ: Motueka") was also a Scotsman and son of well-known Presbyterian preacher and writer Matthew George Easton. The McCallums and Eastons knew each other from the days when Lockhart Easton had been headmaster of Sydenham Public School in Christchurch and possibly a member of Reverend McCallum's congregation.

Two of Lockhart Easton's sons by his second marriage to Elizabeth (nee Boult), William and Matthew, served during the First World War and both returned. William, who served with the Sixth Reinforcements, Canterbury Mounted Rifles, was probably a fellow member of the Motueka Mounted Rifles. Matthew, who served with the Engineers of the Eighth Reinforcements, attended Canterbury College at the same time as Gordon McCallum. In 1917, brothers William and Matthew Easton were each awarded the Military Medal for gallantry in the field. An older son from Lockhart Easton's first marriage to Catharine (nee Hill), Lockhart Jnr, served with the Australian Imperial Army and also survived the war.

Further Sources

Bauchop's Hill
Waite, Fred (1919) The New Zealanders at Gallipoli. Christchurch, NZ: Whitcombe & Tombes

Robertson, John (1938) With the Cameliers in PalestineDunedin NZ: Reed Publishing
Ltd. Text courtesy of NZ Electronic Text Centre,

The Imperial Camel Corps
NZ History website, NZ Ministry of Heritage and Culture. 

The NZ Mounted Rifles 
The NZMR Association

Canterbury Mounted Rifles
WWI Timeline   


Photo credits

Captain John Gordon McCallum
"Auckland Weekly News Supplement", 1 February, 1917.
Sir George Grey Special Collection, Auckland Libraries, ref. AWNS-1917-0201-39-3
(Note that Captain McCallum is wearing the cap and collar badges of the 10th (Nelson) Squadron of the Canterbury Mounted Rifles.)

Reverend Neil McCallum and his first wife, Janet Scott Moffatt. Possibly taken on the occasion of their wedding at Edinburgh on 30 July, 1872.
Moffat family collection - Ancestry.com

Men of the Motueka Mounted Rifles outside the Nelson Provincial Buildings
Tyree Studio Collection/Nelson Provincial Museum Permanent Collection, ref. 180644

Corporal Arthur Lake Batchelor (1889-1917)
Tyree Studio Collection/ Nelson Provincial Museum Permanent Collection, ref. 84475

Lorrie Batchelor (1887-1958), believed to have been taken on her wedding day.
Courtesy Mr W.S. McCallum

The Battle of Chunuk Bair, 8 August,1915. Painting by Ion G. Brown, official artist of the NZ Defence Force from 1987-1997
NZ History website - NZ Ministry for Heritage and Culture.

Officers of the 15th (NZ) Company of the Imperial Camel Corps 
Captain John Gordon McCallum seated at centre.
Photographer: Colonel C.G. Powles (NZETC)

Capt. Gordon McCallum outside the Mustapha Pasha Barracks in Alexandria
Courtesy Wayne McCallum.

Imperial Camel Corps at the Battle of Magdhaba. Painting by Harold Septimus Power, a NZ-born artist appointed official war artist for the Australian Imperial Force during WWI
NZ History website - NZ Ministry for Heritage and Culture.

Camel Corps Memorial in London
NZ History website - NZ Ministry for Heritage and Culture.

The charge by the NZ Mounted Rifles which won the day at the Battle of Rafah.
Photographer: Colonel C.G. Powles
NZ Mounted Rifles Association website.