<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER I</h2>
<p class="pcn">HOW TROOPER POTTS WON THE V.C. ON BURNT HILL</p>
<p class="pch">[As part of the operations in Gallipoli, it was decided to
bombard and attack a very strongly fortified Turkish position
near Suvla Bay—a sector stretching from Hill 70 to Hill 112.
The frontal attack was a desperate enterprise, as the Turks
had dug themselves in up to the neck in two lines of trenches
of exceptional strength. The attack was made on the afternoon
of August 21st, 1915, after a bombardment by battleships
and heavy land batteries. It was in the course of this
advance that the teller of this story, Trooper Frederick William
Owen Potts, of the 1/1st Berkshire Yeomanry (Territorial
Force), was struck down, and later performed the unparalleled
act for which he was awarded the Victoria Cross. For
nearly fifty hours Trooper Potts remained under the Turkish
trenches with a severely wounded and helpless comrade,
“although he could himself have returned to safety,” says
the official record. Finally the trooper, in the extraordinary
manner which he now describes, saved his comrade’s life.
Trooper Potts is only twenty-two years old, and is the first
Yeoman to win the most coveted of all distinctions.]</p>
<p class="pn"><span class="beg">I saw</span> a good deal of the Turks before we came to
grips with them near Suvla Bay. I had gone out to
Egypt with my regiment, the Berkshire Yeomanry,
and for about four months we were doing garrison work
and escort work for Turks who had been captured in
Gallipoli and the Dardanelles and sent as prisoners of
war to Egypt. Our place was not far from Cairo. I
was greatly struck by the size and physique of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</SPAN></span>
Turks. There were some very fine big men amongst
them—in fact, I should think the average height was
close on six feet.</p>
<p>We had taken our horses out to Egypt with us,
and all our work in that country was done with them;
but as the weeks went by, and no call came to us for
active service, we became disappointed, and got into
the way of singing a song which the poet of the regiment
had specially composed, and of which the finish
of every verse was the line—</p>
<p class="pc1 reduct">“The men that nobody wants,”</p>
<p class="pn1">this meaning that there was no use for us as cavalry
in the fighting area. But when the four months had
gone, the order suddenly came for us to go to Gallipoli.
By that time we had got acclimatised, a point we
appreciated later, as the heat was intense and the flies
were very troublesome.</p>
<p>From Alexandria we sailed in a transport, which
occupied four days in reaching Gallipoli. Here we
were transhipped to trawlers and barges, and immediately
found ourselves in the thick of one of the most
tremendous bombardments the world has ever known.
Battleships were firing their big guns, which made a
terrific noise, and there was other continual firing of
every known sort. We were very lucky in our landing,
because we escaped some of the heaviest of the gun-fire.
The Turks could see us, though we had no sight of
them, and whenever a cluster of us was spotted, a
shell came crashing over. Thus we had our baptism
of fire at the very start.</p>
<p>We were in an extraordinarily difficult country, and
whatever we needed in the way of food and drink we
had to carry with us—even the water. Immense<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</SPAN></span>
numbers of tins had been filled from the Nile and taken
to Gallipoli in barges, and this was the water we used
for drinking purposes, as well as water which was condensed
from the sea, and kept in big tanks on the shore.
Every drop of water we needed had to be fetched from
the shore, and this work proved about the hardest
and most dangerous of any we had to do after landing
and taking up our position on a hill. Several of our
chaps were knocked over in this water-fetching work.</p>
<p>While we were at this place we were employed in
making roads from Suvla Bay to Anzac, and hard work
it was, because the country was all rocks. We had
landed light, without blankets or waterproofs, so that
we felt the intense cold of the nights very much.</p>
<p>We had a week of this sort of thing, under fire all the
time. I think it was on a Sunday we landed, and a
week later we heard that we were to take part in the
attack on Hill 70, or, as we called it, because of its
appearance, Burnt Hill. There were immense quantities
of a horrible sort of scrub on it, and a great deal
of this stuff had been fired and charred by gun-fire.
I little knew then how close and long an acquaintance
I was to make with the scrub on Hill 70.</p>
<p>It was about five o’clock in the evening when the
great news came. We were to be ready at seven, and
ready we were, glad to be in it. We did not know
much, but we understood that we were to take our
places in some reserve trenches. Night comes
quickly in those regions, and when the day had gone
we moved round to Anzac, marching along the roads
which we had partially made. We reached Anzac
at about two o’clock in the morning, in pitch darkness.</p>
<p>We had a pick and two shovels to four men, and
took it in turn to carry them. Each man also carried<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</SPAN></span>
two hundred rounds of ammunition, so that we were
pretty well laden. When we reached Anzac Cove
we moved in right under the cliffs, which go sheer
down to the sea; but there is practically no tide, so
that the beach is safe. The only way to reach the
shore was to go in single file down a narrow, twisting
pathway.</p>
<p>We were on the beach till about two o’clock in the
afternoon, when we were ordered to be ready with
our packs, and we went up the cliff, again in single
file, forming up when we reached the top. Then we
went a mile or so along the road we had marched over
the night before—all part of the scheme of operations,
I take it. Then we cut across to our right and saw
a plain called Salt Lake, where we watched a division
going into action under heavy shrapnel fire.</p>
<p>We were now in the thick of the awful country
which I was to know so well. The surface was all
sand and shrubs, and the great peculiarity of the
shrubs was that they were very much like our holly
trees at home, though the leaves were not so big, but
far more prickly. These shrubs were about three
feet high, and they were everywhere; but they did
not provide any real cover. There were also immense
numbers of long creepers and grass, and a lot of dust
and dirt. The heat was fearful, so that you can
easily understand how hard it was to get along when
we were on the move. These obstacles proved
disastrous to many of our chaps when they got into
the zone of fire, for the shrapnel set the shrubs ablaze.
This meant that many a brave fellow who was hit
during the fighting on Hill 70 fell among the burning
furze and was burned to death where he lay.</p>
<p class="vh"><SPAN name="f4" id="f4">f4</SPAN></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/ill-019.jpg" width-obs="450" height-obs="213" alt="" title="" /> <div class="caption"><p class="prcap">[<i>To face p. 4.</i></p> <p class="pc">CHOCOLATE HILL.</p> </div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>As we were waiting for our turn, we could see the
other chaps picking their way through this burning
stuff, and charging on towards the Turkish trenches.
When our own turn came, the scrub was burning less
fiercely, and to some extent we were able to choose
our way and avoid the blazing patches. We ran
whenever we got the chance, making short rushes;
but when we got into the real zone of fire, we
never stopped until we were under the protection of
Chocolate Hill.</p>
<p>For half an hour we rested at the foot of this hill.
From our position we could not see the Turks, who
were entrenched over the top; but their snipers were
out and bothering us a good deal. It was impossible
to see these snipers, because they hid themselves most
cunningly in the bushes, and had their faces and rifles
painted the same colour as the surrounding objects.
However, we levelled up matters by sending out our
own sniping parties.</p>
<p>We were on the move again as soon as we had got
our breath back. We still understood, as we moved
to the left of Chocolate Hill, that we were going to
occupy reserve trenches. We went through a field
of ripe wheat. About two yards in front of me was
a mate of mine, Reginald West. I saw him struck in
the thigh by a sniper’s bullet, which went in as big
as a pea, and came out the size of a five-shilling piece.
It was an explosive bullet, one of many that were
used against us by the Turks, under their German
masters. In a sense West was lucky, because when
he was struck down he fell right on the edge of a
dug-out, and I heard one of the men shout, “Roll
over, mate! Roll over! You’ll drop right in here!”
And he did.</p>
<p>The rest of us went on, though in the advance we<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</SPAN></span>
lost a number of men. Some were killed outright;
some were killed by shells and bullets after they had
fallen wounded, and some had to lie where they had
fallen and do the best they could. We pushed ahead
till we struck Hill 70 again.</p>
<p>When we got to the reserve trenches I asked a chap
how far away the Turks were, and he answered,
“About a thousand yards,” but I don’t think it was
as much as that.</p>
<p>Now we began to ascend Hill 70 in short spurts,
halting from time to time. We had fairly good
cover, because the scrub was not on fire, though
several parts had been burnt out. During one of
these halts we were ordered to fix bayonets.</p>
<p>We had found shelter in a bit of a gulley, and were
pretty well mixed up with other regiments—the
Borders, Dorsets, and so on. We first got the idea
that we were going to charge from an officer near us;
but he was knocked out—with a broken arm, I
believe—before the charge came off. He was just
giving us the wheeze about the coming charge when
a bullet struck him.</p>
<p>How did the charge begin? Well, an officer
shouted, as far as I can recollect, “Come on, lads!
We’ll give ‘em beans!” That is not exactly according
to drill-books and regulations as I know them;
but it was enough. It let the boys loose, and they
simply leapt forward and went for the Turkish
trenches. It was not to be my good fortune to get
into them, however; in fact, I did not get very far
after the order to charge was given.</p>
<p>I had gone perhaps twenty or thirty yards when I
was knocked off my feet. I knew I was hit. I had
a sort of burning sensation; but whether I was hit in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</SPAN></span>
the act of jumping, or whether I jumped because I
was hit, I do not know. What I <i>do</i> know is that I
went up in the air, came down again, and lay where
I fell. I knew that I had been shot at the top of the
left thigh, the bullet going clean through and just
missing the artery and the groin by an eighth of an
inch, as the doctor told me later.</p>
<p>Utterly helpless, I lay there for about three-quarters
of an hour, while the boys rushed round me
and scattered in the charge. This happened about
a quarter of a mile from the top of the hill. I
propped myself up on my arm and watched the boys
charging.</p>
<p>I heard later, from a man who was with me in
hospital at Malta—he had been struck deaf and dumb,
for the time being, amongst other things—that the
boys got into the Turkish third trench and that the
Turks bolted. He told me that when they reached
this third trench there were only seventeen Berkshire
boys left to hold it. The enemy seemed to get wind
of this; then it looked as if all the Turkish army was
going for the seventeen, and they had no alternative
but to clear out.</p>
<p>After the charge I saw this handful come back
down the hill, quite close to where I was lying. I
had fallen in a sort of little thicket, a cluster of the
awful scrub which was like holly, but much worse.
I was thankful for it, however, because it gave me a
bit of shelter and hid me from view.</p>
<p>I had been lying there about half an hour when I
heard a noise near me and saw that a poor wounded
chap, a trooper of the Berkshires, was crawling towards
me. I recognised him as a fellow-townsman.</p>
<p>“Is that you, Andrews?” I asked.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>He simply answered “Yes.” That was all he
could get out.</p>
<p>“I’m jolly pleased you’ve come,” I said, and
Andrews crawled as close as he could get, and we lay
there, perfectly still, for about ten minutes. Andrews
had been shot through the groin, a very dangerous
wound, and he was suffering terribly and losing a
great deal of blood.</p>
<p>We had been together for a few minutes when
another trooper—a stranger to me—crawled up to
our hiding-place. He had a wound in the leg. We
were so cramped for space under the thicket, that
Andrews had to shift as best he could, to make room
for the newcomer. That simple act of mercy saved
his life, for the stranger had not been with us more
than ten minutes when a bullet went through both
his legs and mortally wounded him. He kept on
crying for water; but we had not a drop amongst
the three of us, and could not do anything to quench
his awful thirst.</p>
<p>That fearful afternoon passed slowly, with its
grizzling heat and constant fighting, and the night
came quickly. The night hours brought us neither
comfort nor security, for a full moon shone, making
the countryside as light as day. The cold was
intense. The stranger was practically unconscious
and kept moving about, which made our position
worse, because every time he moved the Turks
banged at us.</p>
<p>I was lying absolutely as flat as I could, with my
face buried in the dirt, for the bullets were peppering
the ground all around us, and one of them actually
grazed my left ear—you can see the scar it has made,
just over the top. This wound covered my face with<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</SPAN></span>
blood. Was I scared or frightened? I can honestly
say that I was not. I had got beyond that stage, and
almost as a matter of course I calmly noted the details
of everything that happened.</p>
<p>Throughout the whole of that unspeakable night
this poor Bucks Hussar chap hung on. He kept
muttering, “Water! Water!” But we could not
give him any. When the end came he simply lay
down and died right away, and his dead body stayed
with us, for we could neither get away nor move
him.</p>
<p>During the whole of the next day we lay in our
hiding-place, suffering indescribably. The sun, thirst,
hunger, and our wounds, all added to our pain. In
our desperation we picked bits off the stalks of the
shrubs and tried to suck them; but we got no relief
in that way.</p>
<p>The whole of the day went somehow—with such
slowness that it seemed as if it would never end. It
was impossible to sleep—fighting was going on all
the time, and the noise was terrific. We could not
see anything of our boys, and we knew that it was
impossible for any stretcher-bearers to get through
to us, because we were a long way up the hill and no
stretcher-bearers could venture out under such a
terrible fire.</p>
<p>Night came again at last, and Andrews and myself
decided to shift, if it was humanly possible to do so,
because it was certain death from thirst and hunger to
remain where we were, even if we escaped from bullets.
So I began to move away by crawling, and Andrews
followed as best he could. I would crawl a little way
and wait till Andrews, poor fellow, could crawl up
to me again. We wriggled like snakes, absolutely<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</SPAN></span>
flat on the ground and with our faces buried in the
stifling dirt.</p>
<p>We managed to wriggle about three hundred yards
that night—as near as I can judge. Starting at
about a quarter past six, as soon as the day was done,
it was about three in the morning when we decided
to rest, so that if we had really done three hundred
yards we had crawled at the rate of only thirty-three
yards an hour!</p>
<p>A great number of rifles were lying about—weapons
which had been cast aside in the charge, or had belonged
to fallen soldiers; but most of them were
quite out of working order, because they were clogged
up with dust and dirt. I tried many of them, and
at last found one that seemed to be in good working
order, and to my joy I came across about fifty rounds
of ammunition. Another serviceable rifle was found,
so that Andrews and myself were filled with a new
hope.</p>
<p>“We’ll die like Britons, at any rate!” said Andrews.
“We’ll give a good account of ourselves before we
go!” And I agreed with him.</p>
<p>We were now some distance from the Turks, and
I was terribly anxious to shoot at them; but Andrews
was more cautious. “If you fire they’ll discover us,
and we shall be done for!” he said. Then we shook
hands fervently, because we both believed that this
was the last of us, and I know that in thought we
both went back to our very early days and offered
up our silent prayers to God.</p>
<p>We had managed to crawl to a bit of shelter which
was given by some burnt-out scrub, and here we tried
to snatch some sleep, for we were both worn out.
We went to sleep, for the simple reason that we<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</SPAN></span>
could not keep awake; but I suddenly awoke, because
the cold was intense and I was nearly frozen. Luckily
there were a lot of empty sandbags lying about, and
I got two or three of these and put them on top of us;
but they were really no protection from the bitter air.</p>
<p>When the morning came we made a move, and for
the first time we were able to get some water; but
only by taking the water-bottles from the poor chaps
who had been knocked out.</p>
<p>Then we crept back to our shelter, finding immense
relief from drinking the water we had got, though it
was quite warm and was, I fancy, from the Nile.</p>
<p>We slept, or tried to sleep, there for the rest of that
night, and stayed in the place till next morning. We
must have been in what is called “dead ground,”
a region which cannot be seen or touched by either
side, and so it proved to be, for in the early morning
there was a real battle and the bullets were singing
right over our heads.</p>
<p>“There’s more lead flying about than there was
yesterday,” said Andrews; and really some of the
bullets were splashing quite close to us—within six
feet, I think, though there were not many that came
so near.</p>
<p>Andrews was bleeding terribly—every time he
moved he bled; but I did the best I could for him with
my iodine—I dressed him with mine, and he dressed
me with his, and splendid stuff it is. Though we
had nothing to eat we did not really feel hungry now—we
were past the eating stage. I was very lucky in
having four cigarettes and some matches and I risked
a smoke, the sweetest I ever had in my life.</p>
<p>Again we stuck the awful day through.</p>
<p>I was terribly anxious to move and get out of it<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</SPAN></span>
all at any cost; but still Andrews was very cautious.
“No, we won’t try till it gets dark,” he said. I felt
that he was right, and so we waited, as patiently as
we could, for the night. Three or four yards from us
was an inviting-looking bush, and we crawled towards
it, thinking it would help us to get away and give us
shelter; but at the end of our adventure we discovered
that we had done no more than crawl to the bush,
crawl round it, and get back to our original hiding-place;
so we decided to give up the attempt to get
away just then.</p>
<p>When the third night on the hill came we were
fairly desperate, knowing that something would have
to be done if we meant to live, and that certain death
awaited us where we were. We had nothing to eat,
and the only drink was the water, which was frightful
stuff—I believe it was Nile water which had been
brought. But though it was, we were thankful to
have it. The water was warm, because of the heat,
and was about the colour of wine.</p>
<p>We did not for a moment suppose that we
should live to reach the British lines, which we
believed to be not far away; but we risked
everything on the effort, and in the moonlight we
began to wriggle off. We had managed to get no
more than half a dozen yards when Andrews had to
give it up. I myself, though I was the stronger and
better of the two, could scarcely crawl. Every
movement was a torture and a misery, because of
the thorns that stuck into us from the horrible
scrub.</p>
<p>We had kept the sandbags, and with my help
Andrews managed to get them over his arms and up
to his shoulders. I fastened them with the pieces
of string they have, and these gave him a good deal
of protection, though the thorns got through and
punished us cruelly. I was picking them out of my
hands for three weeks afterwards.</p>
<p class="vh"><SPAN name="f12" id="f12">f12</SPAN></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/ill-029.jpg" width-obs="450" height-obs="353" alt="" title="" /> <div class="caption"><p class="prcap">[<i>To face p. 12.</i></p> <p class="pc">THE WONDERFUL WATER SUPPLY AT THE DARDANELLES.</p> </div>
</div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Having crawled these half-dozen yards, we gave
up the attempt altogether, and did not know what to
do. We could see a cluster of trees not far away,
about a hundred yards, and there was one that looked
fairly tall.</p>
<p>“If we can get to that tree,” said Andrews, “I
could lie there, if I had some water, and perhaps
you could strike some of our chaps and bring help.”
I had little hope from such an effort as that. Then
Andrews unselfishly urged me to look after myself;
but, of course, I would not dream of leaving him. I
offered to carry him, and I tried, but I was far too
weak.</p>
<p>What in the world was to be done? How were
we to get out of this deadly place? There seemed
no earthly hope of escape, when, literally like an
inspiration, we thought we saw a way out.</p>
<p>Just near us was an ordinary entrenching shovel,
which had been dropped, or had belonged to some
poor chap who had fallen—I can’t say which, but
there it was. I crawled up and got hold of it, and
before we quite knew what was happening, Andrews
was resting on it, and I was doing my best to drag
him out of danger.</p>
<p>I cannot say whose idea this was, but it is quite
likely that Andrews thought of it first. He sat on
the shovel as best he could—he was not fastened to
it—with his legs crossed, the wounded leg over the
sound one, and he put his hands back and clasped
my wrists as I sat on the ground behind and hauled<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</SPAN></span>
away at the handle. Several times he came off, or
the shovel fetched away, and I soon saw that it would
be impossible to get him away in this fashion.</p>
<p>When we began to move the Turks opened fire
on us; but I hardly cared now about the risk of being
shot, and for the first time since I had been wounded
I stood up and dragged desperately at the shovel,
with Andrews on it. I managed to get over half a
dozen yards, then I was forced to lie down and rest.
Andrews needed a rest just as badly as I did, for he
was utterly shaken and suffered greatly.</p>
<p>We started again at about a quarter past six, as
soon as the night came, and for more than three
mortal hours we made this strange journey down the
hillside; and at last, with real thankfulness, we
reached the bottom and came to a bit of a wood.
Sweet beyond expression it was to feel that I could
walk upright, and that I was near the British lines.
This knowledge came to me suddenly when there
rang through the night the command: “Halt!”</p>
<p>I obeyed—glorious it was to hear that challenge in
my native tongue, after what we had gone through.
Then this good English sentry said, “Come up and
be recognised!” not quite according to the regulation
challenge, but good enough—and he had seen
us quite clearly in the moonshine.</p>
<p>Up I went, and found myself face to face with the
sentry, whose rifle was presented ready for use, and
whose bayonet gleamed in the cold light.</p>
<p>“What are you doing?” said the sentry. “Are
you burying the dead?”</p>
<p>I saw that he was sentry over a trench, and I went
to the top of it and leaned over the parapet and said,
“Can you give me a hand?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“What’s up?” said the sentry, who did not seem
to realise what had actually happened—and how
could he, in such a strange affair?</p>
<p>“I’ve got a chap out here wounded,” I told him,
“and I’ve dragged him down the hill on a shovel.”</p>
<p>The sentry seemed to understand like a flash. He
walked up to the trench, and when I had made myself
clear, three or four chaps bustled round and got a
blanket, and I led them to the spot where I had left
Andrews lying on the ground. We lifted him off
the shovel, put him on the blanket, and carried him
to the trench. These men were, I think, Inniskilling
Fusiliers, and they did everything for us that human
kindness could suggest. They gave me some rum
and bully beef and biscuit, and it was about the most
delightful meal I ever had in my life, because I was
famishing and I was safe, with Andrews, after those
dreadful hours on the hillside, which seemed as if
they would never end.</p>
<p>When we had rested and pulled round a bit, we
were put on stretchers and carried to the nearest
dressing-station. Afterwards we were sent to Malta,
where Andrews is, I believe, still in hospital.</p>
<p>The granting of the Victoria Cross for what I had
done came as a complete surprise to me, because it
never struck me that I had done more than any
other British soldier would have done for a comrade.</p>
<p>I never lost heart during the time I was lying on
Hill 70. All the old things came clearly up in my
mind, and many an old prayer was uttered, Andrews
joining in. We never lost hope that some way out
of our peril would be found—and it seemed as if our
prayers had been answered by giving us this inspiration
of the shovel.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />