Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada)

 - Class of 1972

Page 14 of 130

 

Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 14 of 130
Page 14 of 130



Loyola College - Review Yearbook (Montreal, Quebec Canada) online collection, 1972 Edition, Page 13
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Page 14 text:

FROM LIEUTENANT HORACE PERODEAU. France, April 12th, 1917. For the first time I had a taste of war to-day, when we went over the lines. To tell you the truth, it was rather disappointing. One could see nothing but miles upon miles of trenches, and as there was no shelling going on at the time, I never would have found out we were over the Hun territory had not my pilot told me. By some extraordinary luck we were not shelled, so it did not make things exciting at all. As a matter of fact, | had nearly forgotten that there was a war on, and was looking serenely over the fuselage, not at all expecting to see any Hun machines, when I received a slap on the back; so I bent over to see what the pilot had to say, and he signalled to look up for Huns, and a good thing he did, too. Although I only learned it later, our Fli ght Commander had been brought down just a few minutes before, over the same spot. I did see some machines, but they were so far that we could not make out whether they were ours or not. After this I shan’t worry with the ground, but will keep a sharp look-out. It’s really extraordinary how quickly a machine will appear in the sky. At first you see just a tiny black spot, then a few minutes later you are miles past it. This is easily explained when you think that the two planes are making a combined speed of about 250 miles per hour. So naturally it does not leave much time to gaze at each other. A curious sensation is when the machine meets an air-pocket. Then we fall from fifty to two hundred feet, and I can tell you that you feel queer. It’s just the same thing as when you are coming down from the top storey of Morgan’s in the elevator. If you haven’t been there, just try it for fun. It’s really a g imitation of the real thing, and hardly as risky. We are quite comfortable in these planes: they are much better than the ones we used in England, and are much stronger, so we get a much better fighting chance. FROM LIEUTENANT VICTOR WALSH. No. 14 General Hospital, imereuse, June 18th, 1916. I will tell you just how I got shell-shock. We were going into a strange part of the line, and C and I were walking through a ruined village at about | a.m., with a platoon behind us. This village was being shelled nowhere near us,, but suddenly we heard a big shell corsing right for us. We dropped flat, and so did two or three men behind us. The shell landed right in the middle of the platoon, and when C and I got up, we found only four men, and a corporal left, out of a platoon of 23 men. Nine were killed and nine wounded. As we had to get on to the trench before daylight, C took the remaining five men of the platoon with him, and I stayed with six men from another platoon to pick up the wounded and take them to a dressing station. We did not finish till dawn, and then started out for the trench, but were stopped by a sentry, who told us no one could go up by day. I tried to telephone the battalion, but as they had only just got into a new line, no one knew where they were, so I sent a wire and received an answer to report that night. Well, we started up for the trench that night, and were caught like rats, ina communication trench, by the Huns shelling. They shelled both ends, and I came as near to a shell as I ever want to be, that night and the night before. They came so close we got out of the trench into the open, but they shelled the open, so we got in again. By this time, we were nearly crazy. So I told the six men with me to each make for the place we started from. So we did, and ene man collapsed, and we had to practically drag him along. He afterwards went to the hospital with severe shell-shock. Another man had his helmet knocked in on one side, but escaped injury, Hers to his steel helmet. One man lost himself, but I found him later, and the rest of us came in O.K. Captain René Redmond is in hospital here wounded. We have had several long chats together. He is an awfully nice chap. 1 met him before | left Montreal. He is an officer of the 3rd Vics. The Catholic Chaplain came around here yesterday. He is a hospital Chaplain, but some years ago used to teach at Loyola, and was delighted to find an old Loyola boy.... FROM LEO SHORTALL. King George Hospital, Stanford St., London, May 2nd, 1917. ....Well, here I am in hospital, in London, with six wounds and a broken leg. Fritz got me pretty hard when he did get me. I have one in my right hip, one in my right groin, one in the right side of my stomach, .......... one in my left thigh, and one in my left arm. My right leg is broken close to my body. We made a charge the [5th of April, and just as we got as far as we were to go-—the German second line—I heard the rattle of a machine gun at close quarters, and then something struck me like a kick from a horse. I got my equipment off and started to crawl back, when a sniper spotted me and got me through the right leg. It turned me right over on my back. I was lying out two days and two nights, before the Red Cross found me. You can guess what | suffered. You don’t know what thirst is yet, and I hope to God you never will.... Remember me to all the boys and Fathers. VRIVATE LEO. M SHORTALL, Ist Newfoundland Batt Died May 30th, 1918, of wounds received at Vimy Ridge. Olt Loyola, 1913.

Page 13 text:

Field, Sept. 15th, 1916. ‘Things are going beautifully down here at the Somme and we are pushing the Boche back with great regularity, but you have no idea what a gigantic task it is. He has been fortifying his position here for a year and a half, and it is wonderful how difficult it is to dislodge him. I had no idea what dug-outs were till | saw some of the Germans’. Without exaggeration, you have, in most cases, to go down two long flights of stairs to get to the bottom, and one headquarters dug-out I saw contained beautiful furniture, including a piano and billiard table, electric light, wall paper, etc. So you can have some idea how difficult it is to dislodge him from trenches such as these, but we are doing it. The sad part is the loss of so many friends. [ lost my best friend last Friday, when the 2nd took 550 yards of trench and about 125 prisoners. The remainder died the death. FROM FATHER LOCHARY, CHAPLAIN. Ist Canadian Infantry Brigade, Sept. 24th, 1916. ie! time this letter reaches you, you will no doubt have received official notice of your son’s death. , I read the burial services at the grave this morning, and he had a lovely funeral. The band of the 2nd Battalion, accompanied by a large body of soldiers and officers, marched to the grave, where, after the service was read, the “Last Post’ was sounded. Last Saturday afternoon your son met me and asked me if I would hear his confession, and Sunday morning he went toCommunion. He entered the trenches Sunday night and was killed Friday night. So he was well prepared spiritually, and you have a great deal to be thankful for on that point. Your son, I am told, met his death by going over the parapet and rescuing a wounded soldier. On his return with the wounded soldier, a sniper caught him with a bullet, and he died without suffering. ‘Greater love than this no man hath, that a man lay down his life for a friend.” Captain Maguire died in making the supreme act of charity...... FROM MAJOR GEORGE BOYCE. Oct. 2nd, 1916. The last time I saw Frank alive was about five days before his death. I had ridden up behind the Brigade in charge of ambulances. The march had been an early one, starting at five o'clock, and when we reached our destination I saw Frank. He was then in excellent spirits and saluted me with his usual greeting: “Hello, George, deucedly glad to see you. Why are you out so early ?’’ These are the little things that make life worth the living out here—the warm handclasp of a- staunch friend, the hearty welcome of an old associate. All this Frank was to me and more. And now that he is gone, | mourn him as only a most worthy man can be mourned. Thus you will understand how I sympathise with you in your sorrow.... Still the consolation always remains that Frank was brave and generous and a most worthy Christian. He was cut off in the prime of manhood, having the promise of a brilliant future, but it was in doing that noblest of things human, saving helpless wounded. So well did he do that that he is being recommended for the Victoria Cross. This, of course, in no way compensates for his loss, but it shows the appreciation his fellows have of his conduct. —SEeer” 11 FROM COMPANY-SERGEANT-MAJOR GREGORY NAGLE. France, Sept. 23rd I am now sitting in a fish-pond, somewhere in France, writing this. We are just in reach of German machine guns and cannon. Our artillery is pretty active this morning and it is just as if someone was putting in about a million tons of coal in their cellar. This is the way they go: “ whoo-ee-ee-ee . . BANG! “‘whoo-ee-ze-ee. . . BANG “ whoo-ee-ee-ee . . BANG! and so on. And when bits of shell are coming anyway close they are like this ‘‘ ooooceeceee |” just like a ghost noise, and then plunk! they hit. Bullets are just “ whir . . . whir . . . crack;’” you don’t hear them till they're past you. We are going to lick the Germans to a standstill before long, but I guess the people in Canada think that we are not doing much out here. But I would like to see some of them out here, when, as the papers say, “there was a small engagement.” I don't know what they would do in the large ones. . . - All I would like is a good bath and some clean clothes. I got a few little curios that I am going to send home, first chance I get. They are only small ones, a shrapnel bullet, a German bullet-tip and an Irish button I picked up, anda ring made out of a German shell bya Belgian in the trenches. I could have had a lot of good ones, but when you have to march all over the country with your bag and baggage on you, you don’t carry much extra. . . . FROM CAPTAIN GEORGE VANIER., M.C. France, May 16th, 1916. I don’t think I have ever written a letter in such a cramped position. I am in a dug-out 21% feet high. The floor is too muddy to sit on, so I am perched on a small-arm ammunition » which means that my head is continually banging against the corrugated iron roof. Last night, when your letter, dated April 30th, reached me, I was in very much the same position, and prospects for change are not very bright for a few days. Tant pis! c'est la guerre. Yes, quite a few of our officers have returned to take up new commands, but I see by the Gazette that an end is to be put to these transfers. In some cases, it is a splendid thing for an officer to return after eight months from the trenches; it cleans his head of cobwebs, so to speak. I am very glad indeed that these officers have managed to obtain Canadian commands, but I cannot say I envy them exactly. Lately the Germans have got into a very bad habit of chucking over kerosene tins.... these contain three hand grenades, and a good sized trench-mortar, probably thrown in for luck. The noise they make is deafening. If the Censor were not looking, I would tell what effect they have. There are all sorts of little incidents—pleasant and unpleasant—to vary the monotony of trench warfare. ... Mont des Cats, June 10th, 1916. Yesterday morning a large-calibre shell burst at my feét, knocking me out, and giving my Nervous system a bad shock. I am now in a rest hospital, not by any means in the best of condition, but I expect to recuperate shortly. Putney Heath, Sept. 3rd, 1916. .,-+Day before yesterday, I had the honour of being received by the King, to be given the Military Cross. € ceremony was very simple. The King pinned the Cross on us, shook hands, and chatted a few minutes with each one of us. My convalescence leave expires on September 14th. I shall probably be sent to Shorncliffe, to await there my return to the front. Victoria Barracks, Cork, Jan. 31st, 1917. The people of Belfast went quite mad, and we could barely march through the streets. In some places we had to go in single file. The whole city was en fete, and we were most wonderfully entertained. Any number of dinners, lunches, etc.; and the men were given a splendid dinner in Ulster Hall, followed by a concert by the Philarmonic Society. Each man received as a souvenir a half-dozen khaki handkerchiefs and a half-dozen linen hand-embroidered lady’s handkerchiefs, in a souvenir box, to be sent home to Canada. No one could believe the way in which Belfast turned out. It was marvellous.



Page 15 text:

BAY. LIEUT, GUY PALARDY, 62nd Squadron RAF. Died of wounds. May 6th, 1918, Ol Loyola, 1917, FROM LIEUT. PALARDY R.F.C. Rendcomb, Cirencester, Feb. 25, 1918. I had a bad crash the other day; luckily I fell into atree. Ismashed the machine to pieces. The engine flew out of its bearings but I didn't get hurt. There was something really funny about it; I was perched in the top of a tree and they had to get a ladder to get me down. It happened that another macaine was just going to hit me, so I tried a dangerous turn and side-slipped into the trees. When it happened, the mechanics rushed around to get my bones. They kept staring at me thinking I was dead while I was yelling from the top of a tree to get a ladder and let me down. They kept looking at me without moving until they finally got a ladder. for me. It was later discovered that the controls caught in my flying coat thus preventing my straight- ening out the machine. In the distance about one mile to the East FROM CAPTAIN THE REV. W. H. HINGSTON, S.J. France, January 16th, 1918 Last Sunday I said Mass at X ; I had to pass through a place which Fritz had been shelling that morning. There were two roads I could take, the main road or the path through the fields. I chose the path, and on the way, saw the effects of the morning's shelling, a dozen new shell-holes in the field to right and left of the foot-path. At the village I heard about twenty confessions; I finished earlier than usual and started for home. Meanwhile Fritz had begun shelling again. On returning I took the road instead of the path, which would be decidedly unhealthy if Fritzie continued firing short. As I got into the village, I heard the distant boom of a departing shell. After about seven seconds, I caught the beginning of the whine, and knew that that shell was not for me in any case. Hundreds of people heard the boom and the whine, and stood white-faced at their doorsteps, looking up the street in terror and waiting for the crash. Some soldiers going up the road took to the fields to give the road a wide berth. I would have done likewise but it would not have been easy. Bob (my horse) could have climbed the bank, but there was a oJ BNF ae wn my BAL barb-wire fence beyond. Besides, Bob is mortally afraid of shells, and at the rate at which he was travelling, I would soon be out of the danger zone. Just then I caught another boom, followed by the whine and the crash. The shell cleaved the road and I saw it demolish a house on the opposite. side. Bob was now travelling at an unheard-of rate and I arrived at the spot only a few seconds after the shell. A little cloud of dust was blowing from the ruins across our path. Somewhat further back in the road, a house had been struck for the second time and beams and other debris lay in the road. A few seconds more and I was beyond the danger zone; and I soon arrived at the presbytery door, with Bob trembling with fright. In all, thirty-seven shells were dropped with only one casualty. A man fleeing from the shelling was struck while going down the very road I had come up. A splinter of a shell had burst two hundred yards away and a piece about two inches long had gone through his right shoulder from behind, took a strange course and came out in front without damag- ing his lung. In the evening I had beads and Benediction for the soldiers. TOU. 2, Be JIL Nosed eo levenracllt LOYOLA COLLEGE CAMPUS. -THE LARGEST IN CANADA 13 is seen the Montreal Mountain and to the right the College Buildings

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