British 10th (Irish) Division

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10th (Irish) Division
Image:10th-irish-div-symbol.gif
Active World War I
August 1914 - January 1919
Country United Kingdom
Branch New Army
Type Infantry
Part of K1 Army Group
Battles/wars Battle of Gallipoli
o Battle of Sari Bair
   –  Battle of Chunuk Bair
Third Battle of Gaza

The 10th (Irish) Division, was a New Army division, one of Kitchener's New Army K1 Army Group divisions raised largely in Ireland from the Irish National Volunteers in 1914. It fought at Gallipoli, Salonika and Palestine during the First World War and was the first Irish Division ever to take the field in war.

Contents

[edit] Formation

A church service at the 10th (Irish) Division's Basingstoke camp, 1915.
Enlarge
A church service at the 10th (Irish) Division's Basingstoke camp, 1915.

The division comprised the following brigades:

29th Brigade 
30th Brigade 
31st Brigade 
Pioneers 
  • 5th Battalion, The Royal Irish Regiment [1,15]

[edit] Unit History

The 10th Division was sent to Gallipoli where, as part of General Sir Frederick Stopford's IX Corps, at Suvla Bay on August 7 it participated in the disastrous Landing at Cape Helles and the August offensive. Some battalions of the division were landed at Anzac and fought at Chunuk Bair.

In September, 1915, when the Suvla front became a stalemate, the division was moved to Salonika where it remained for two years.

In September 1917 the division moved to Egypt where it joined General Chetwode's XX Corps. The division fought in the Third Battle of Gaza which succeeded in breaking the resistance of the Turkish defenders in southern Palestine.

Heavy losses on the Western Front encountered after the great German Spring Offensive in 1918, resulted in the transfer of 60,000 men from Palestine to France, their place taken by Indian battalions. Ten battalions of the 10th Division were included, the 6RMF one of them. Embarking at Alexandria for Marseilles they reached Arques on 6. June. With comparatively low losses since Gallipoli they were soon to suffer heavily in fierce combat during the Hundred Days Offensive in the final weeks before the Armistice.

[edit] Battles

The Experiences Of The 10th (Irish) Division

The 10th Division was a Division of the British army. The division mostly fought in the Balkans region between 1915-1917.the Division was part of Kitchener’s new army divisions (a rival volunteer force to Redmond’s and Carson’s). The 10th Division was a combined force of many Irish regiments consisting; The Connaght rangers, Inniskilling Fusiliers, Leinster regiments and the Munster Fusiliers. This combination brought many normal Irishmen together from many different social classes and religions. The men trained in Ireland and saw their first action in Gallipoli

The men’s first encounter with the enemy proved disastrous in Darenells.2, 000 men lost their lives between spring and summer of 1915. The men died mostly on the beaches of Savla. This was an easy killing ground for well-equipped Turkish gunmen. The Turks weren’t the only things going against the 10th Division, the intense heat, poor medical assistance as well as poor military strategy. All these factors combined and the Division was pulled out of Gallipoli in the summer of 1915the men were depleted in numbers and moral, fresh troops were called in and all that remains of their sacrifice is a forgotten cemetery in Greece

     The Division next city was Salonica where they fought against Bulgarian troops. More British and French troops joined and together the allies moved out to Kosturino. This was another costly campaign. 300 men died in mostly low level fighting and spent most of their time outside the front line. These deaths were typical of the waste of life on the Western front
     
     The men also faced a different enemy: the whether. According to men’s diary they claimed that “the weather conditions are worse than the enemy itself”. During the summer months in the central struma valley men could 25 miles in tempters of 114 *F. Things worsened when woolen underwear and sun helmets arrived in winter. The marches were occasionally fatal; in July 1916 men fainted in their scores while marching and one young solider died on the side of the road. Sometimes the rain too would reduce the ground to “a sea of mud”, Thunderstorms also affected the men who weren’t use to them.
      
          In mid winter 1916 the men had to retreat again against superior Bulgarian numbers they lost 300 men and had 800 wounded or captured. The cold would freeze men's jackets. The enemy would use blizzard to attack. On one occasion during a blizzard they shelled a group of Dublin Fusiliers killing 9 of them. The worst attacks according to men's accounts were the bayonet charges; men would bleed to death and would be buried behind the trench line. The ground was rocky and splinters from shells killed many men.
     
          The division then moved out to Greece. When they arrived hardly any artillery came with them. The heat added to this by rendering ammunitions useless. Tents would arrive without any poles, ambulances were often damaged as they were driven by inexperienced drivers. Once the logistical problems had been sorted out the men had to fortify Slaovia. They built trenches; quarried and built roads which men found “tedious and unrewarding” they also faced long hours of guard duty.
    The division participated on the onslaught of three key Macedonian villages held by the Bulgarians in autumn 1916. After the battle the men faced stress and boredom as they had little to do. Some of the soldiers took comfort in the arrival of mail from home. Others watched modern warfare unfold before their eyes; regular dog fights between British and German planes as well as the occasional Zeppelin filled with gas light up the night sky. 
     
      One doctor pondered on the waste of life. (Entries from his diary)- “One man was killed in a bombing practice another man mistaken for a Bulgarian and I have a young soldier who has a 3 inch wound in diameter in his back. What a useless sacrifice of poor young men’s lives”
      For some men the horrors of war were too much and alcohol was an easy escape. One Munster fusilier died of alcohol poisoning and on St. Patrick’s Day 1917 it was said that “not a dozen sober men in the camp could be seen” some of the men also had their first erotic experiences with the local girls 
     There is plenty records of the men’s opinions of the political policy of Europe but far less is known of their opinion of the Easter rising back home in Ireland. The news was often censored in order to keep up moral. Men had no home leave and what little news did come through from home went to officers and correspondents. One correspondent said, “I am far too disgusted to even think about it, never mind write about it”. The one record that did survive from a soldier was a poem called “Home thoughts from abroad”.
       
       In all about half a million Irish men and women fought in World War 1. This figure takes into account men and women from north and south of the border as well as born in Ireland but served in other division in England Scotland ECT. This is about 500 times the amount the people that fought in 1916 rising. The surprising thing is that these men get little mention in history book and this is the very reason why I did this project. When the men returned home they didn’t get a heroes welcome. 20, 000 of them joined the recognized British army but a few hundred joined the IRA in the fight for independence. Some of the former British soldiers were assassinated for “being British spies” but the vast majority just kept their heads down and lead a quiet life.

[edit] Great War Memorials

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. Became Divisional Pioneer battalion in June 1915
  2. Disbanded May 1918
  3. Transferred to 66th Division April 1918
  4. Joined Division March 1915, transferred to 27th Division November 1916
  5. Replaced 10th Battalion November 1916
  6. Amalgamated into 6th Battalion November 1916 transferred and amalgamated into the 2nd Munsters (Regular Army, 1st Division) in April 1918
  7. Transferred to 66th Division May 1918
  8. Transferred and absorbed into 11th Royal Irish Fusiliers, (Regular Army)
  9. Regular Army Battalion, joined Division to replace 7th Battalion The Royal Munsters November 1916
  10. Indian Battalions arrived May 1918 until demobilisation.
  11. Both Battalions left for service in France May 1918. 5th Bn. joined 66th Division and 6th Bn. joined 50th Division.
  12. Amalgamated as 5th Battalion in November 1916. Transferred to 16th (Irish) Division May, 1918
  13. Joined Division in November 1916 as replacement for 6th Bn. Royal Irish Fusiliers.
  14. Indian and Guards Battalions replaced France bound Battalions in May 1918.
  15. Transferred to 50th Division, April 1918.

[edit] External links

[edit] Further reading

  • Nigel Steel and Peter Hart: Defeat at Gallipoli PAN Books (1994)
    ISBN 0-330-49058-3. pp 91-96 slaughter of the Dubliners and Munsters.
  • Myles Dungan: They Shall not Grow Old
    Irish Soldiers in the Great War

    Four Courts Press (1997), ISBN 1-85182-347-6.
  • Keith Jeffery: Ireland and the Great War
    Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge (2000), ISBN 0-521-77323-7.
  • Bryan Cooper (1918): The 10th (Irish) Division in Gallipoli.
    Irish Academic Press (1993), (2003). ISBN 0-7165-2517-8.
  • Desmond & Jean Bowen: Heroic Option: The Irish in the British Army
    Pen & Sword BooKs (2005), ISBN 1-84415-152-2.
  • Steven Moore: The Irish on the Somme (2005). ISBN 0-9549715-1-5.