Gunner Charles Gordon Doig
Rod Martin
Enthusiasm for the First World War was still high in July 1915. In fact, that month saw a record 36,575 enlistments in the Australian Imperial Force. News that the war was going badly, combined with an energetic recruiting campaign and public outrage over the sinking of the British liner Lusitania with the loss of 1,200 lives, caused hundreds of young men to besiege the recruiting offices across the country. One of them was twenty-one year-old Gordon Doig, a tinsmith from Ascot Vale. Gordon was a single man, with grey eyes and brown hair, 168 centimetres tall and weighing approximately sixty-five kilos. He signed up for 31 Battalion on 7 July, trained at Broadmeadows and embarked for the Middle East on A62 HMAT Wandilla on 9 November that year.
The ship arrived at Suez on 7 December, the troops expecting to travel on to Gallipoli. However, the British Cabinet that very day had decided to cut the Allies’ losses and evacuate the peninsula by the end of the month. As a result, Gordon and his compatriots remained in Egypt over the winter period, training in preparation for a move to the Western Front some time in 1916.
While in Egypt, Gordon decided in March to transfer to 5 Division Artillery. He was accordingly assigned to 25 Howitzer Brigade and became a gunner. Because he would require further training, he remained in Egypt until 19 June, when he sailed for Marseilles on HMT Canada.
An Australian eight-inch howitzer in the Ypres area 1917. E01229
Australian War Memorial Collection. http://cas.awm.gov.au/item/E01229
Arriving in Marseilles on 25 June, Gordon travelled north by train to the area of the Somme Valley in the Picardy region of north-western France. The British High Command had decided to stage a major offensive in this area to provide support for their French allies and to draw German troops away from their siege of the French fort at Verdun, further south. The first attack was planned for 1 July. 5 Division’s infantry would not be arriving in France until after that date, so it is unlikely that Gordon’s brigade was involved in the initial bombardments leading up to the start of the battle. However, once 5 Division arrived it was quickly moved into the trenches and prepared for a diversionary attack at Fromelles on 19 July. Gordon was probably involved in the firing of 15 000 shells from 4.5 inch howitzers during the eleven-hour preliminary bombardment before the troops went over the top. As with many bombardments during the Somme Campaign, this one did not achieve its purpose of destroying the Germans in the first defence line, and the Australian troops were slaughtered as they jumped out of the trenches and attempted to cross up to 350 metres of no man’s land. Fromelles resulted in Australia’s largest ever single loss in a twenty-four hour period: 5 533 killed, wounded and captured.
Fromelles devastated 5 Division, and it was not ready to return to combat duties until October 1916. By that time, the Battle of the Somme was almost over. Some territory had been gained, but to no real strategic purpose. The Germans were still solidly entrenched and retained the advantage over their foes. 5 Division spent the winter on the Somme, engaged in sporadic fighting with its opponents. 25 Howitzer Brigade provided support in the form of intermittent bombardments.
In January 1917, field artillery batteries were increased from four to six guns to make more economical use of commanders, and the number of brigades supporting each division was reduced to two. In April, 3 Field Artillery Brigade became an army brigade, not assigned to any particular division, but supporting the Australian Corps in general. Gordon and his compatriots were transferred to this new organization. As such, they would have been involved in supporting attacks such as those at Arras in April and Bullecourt in May.
The reader may have the idea that soldiers in the artillery, particularly the heavy gun sections based behind the front lines, lived more charmed lives than their infantry counterparts. Certainly, they did not have to charge across shell-pocked, barbed wire- covered and machine gun-raked territory. Their guns were embedded in redoubts some distance from the killing fields, and their aims were directed by observers at the front, in aircraft and in observation balloons. However, they were frequently subject to bombardment from opposing guns and aircraft, and the gunners suffered substantial casualties throughout the war.
In mid-1917, the focus of the war on the Western Front shifted from France to Belgium, specifically to the area around the town of Ypres. Two earlier battles had been fought there, one in 1914, the other in the following year. They had achieved little apart from the heavy guns of both sides destroying the delicate drainage system developed over centuries in that naturally swampy area. Having failed at the Somme, British supreme commander Sir Douglas Haig decided to concentrate again on the Ypres area, hoping to break through to the Belgian coast, capturing the German submarine pens located there, taking pressure off the beleaguered French army further south, and severely damaging or destroying German morale. Those were his ostensible reasons anyway. Whether he really believed that he could be successful in this endeavour when lesser ambitions went unachieved in 1914-15 is another matter. As it turned out, rain – and lots of it – put paid to any hopes the Allies may have had of a significant breakthrough. The Third Battle of Ypres (often erroneously called ‘Passchendaele’) quickly became bogged down and reverted into a murderous war of attrition like the Somme and others before it. By the time it ended with the capture of the tiny, blasted village of Passchendaele in mid-November, Third Ypres had claimed 500 000 Allied casualties. It had gained less than eight kilometres of strategically unimportant territory: a cost of 62 500 casualties per kilometre of thick, gluey mud.
One of the few successes of the 1917 campaign occurred with the Battle of Menin Road.
Third Ypres 1917: the battlefield
(Source: From Bapaume to Passchendaele, by Philip Gibbs.)
It took place in heavy mud on 20 September, preceded by a bombardment from Gordon’s group and others, firing heavy howitzers.
Australian eight-inch howitzers near the Menin Road 1917. Note the mud in the foreground.
Australian War Memorial Collection. P05380.007 http://cas.awm.gov.au/item/P05380.007
An advance of about 1 200 metres at Menin Road (but at a cost of 5 000 casualties) was deemed a success, and inspired Haig to move on and try to take the nearby Polygon Wood and Westhoek Ridge, using 5 Division. The howitzer batteries were based along Menin Road, bombarding the area to their north and east.
Menin Road, near Hooge, looking towards the Birr Cross Roads, 20 September
1917. Shortly after the photo was taken, a German shell killed most of those
lying on stretchers. Australian War Memorial Collection E00711.
http://cas.awm.gov.au/item/E00711
On 25 September, the day before the attack on Polygon Wood was to be launched, the wary Germans staged a surprise attack of their own, and shelled a number of the batteries early in the morning, hoping to knock them out of the action. Gordon was in a gunpit when a shell came in and exploded almost of top of the crew. He was hit in the leg (one report said that his foot was blown off) and possibly in the head as well. He was taken to a field dressing station nearby, and probably died there from shock and loss of blood.
Frank Hurley’s photo of eight inch howitzers at Birr Cross Roads (Menin Road)
preparing to support the attack on Polygon Wood on 26 September 1917. The
position had been heavily shelled early in themorning. Gordon was mortally wounded
in this area at this time. http://cas.awm.gov.au/item/E02076 (AWM E02076)
Gordon was buried in the nearby Menin Road South Military Cemetery. A temporary cross was erected above his grave. After the war, it was replaced by a permanent headstone.
Menin Road South Military Cemetery (Commonwealth War Graves Commission)
998 Gunner C G Doig, Aust Field Artillery, 25th September
1917, age 23. (Courtesy of Greg Manderson, 2011).
Gordon left a large, extended family to grieve for him. They had already lost another, his cousin Will Manderson, at Bullecourt the previous May. He also left a contact in Britain. Gordon was in France for more than a year, and he had at least one session of leave, in August 1917. It is a good bet that he visited Great Britain during that break and met or was reunited with a young Scottish lady there by the name of Alice Rogers, from Partick near Glasgow. Gordon returned from his August leave two days late (and suffered the loss of eight days’ pay as a result), so they obviously got on well and probably communicated after he returned to France. She heard in October 1917 that he had been wounded and wrote to the Red Cross, enquiring about the condition of her ‘very intimate friend’. She must have been devastated to receive the news that he had died of his wounds. So many budding romances would have ended this way during the First World War.
Sources
Australian War Memorial: war service records, Red Cross reports of wounded and missing, war history, photographic collection
Bean, C.E.W: The official history of Australia in the war of 1914-1918, Sydney, Angus and Robertson, 12 volumes, 1941
Carlyon, Les: The Great War, Sydney, Macmillan, 2006
Commonwealth War Graves Commission
Gibbs, Philip: From Bapaume to Passchendaele 1917, London, William Heinemann, 1918
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/5th-division
Lindsay, Patrick: Fromelles, Prahran, Hardie Grant Books, 2008
National Archives of Australia
Travers, Richard: Diggers in France: Australian soldiers on the Western Front, Sydney, ABC Books, 2008
http://static.awm.gov.au/images/collection/pdf/RCDIG1035159--1-.PDF
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