About the middle of July I sent a
corporal and two men over to Heliopolis with a letter
to Lieutenant-Colonel Barrett, asking for some Red
Cross goods. I had already received issue vouchers
for two lots, but these had been intercepted in transit,
so the men were ordered to sit on the cases until
they gave delivery to the Ambulance. Fifty cases
came, filled with pyjamas, socks, shirts, soap and
all sorts of things. The day they arrived was
very, very hot, and our hospital was full of men whose
uniform had not been off since they landed. No
time was lost in getting into the pyjamas, and the
contented look on the men’s faces would have
gratified the ladies who worked so hard for the Red
Cross. Talk about peace and contentment they
simply lolled about in the scrub smoking cigarettes,
and I don’t believe they would have changed places
with a Federal Senator.
Those Red Cross goods saved one man’s
life at least. All the unopened cases were placed
outside the tent. One afternoon a shell came over
into a case of jam, went through it, and then into
another containing socks. A man was lying under
the shelter of this box, but the socks persuaded the
shell to stay with them, and thus his life was saved.
It was on this day that my nephew, Staff-Sergeant
Nickson, was wounded. He had just left his dug-out
to go to the dressing station on the beach when a
shrapnel shell severely wounded him in the leg.
The same shell killed Staff-Sergeant Gordon, a solicitor
from Adelaide, and one of the finest characters I
knew. He was shot through the spine and killed
instantly. Two other men were wounded.
Our Ambulance was ordered to pitch
a hospital up Canterbury Gully to provide for a possible
outbreak of cholera, as almost every writer on the
subject stated that, when European troops occupied
trenches that had been previously held by Turks, an
outbreak of cholera invariably followed. Major
Clayton was detailed for the work, and soon had accommodation
for a hundred men. As there was no cholera, the
sick men were kept here. We had been so long
in this place without a change, and so many troops
were crowded into such a small area, without a possibility
of real rest, that the men began to get very stale.
Sickness was prevalent, and this hospital seemed to
help them a great deal. It was a picture to see
them all lying in their pyjamas reading the Bulletin
and Punch, and swapping lies.
The New Zealanders held a concert
here one night. Major Johnston, the O.C., filled
the position of chairman, the chair being a cask.
One man with a cornet proved a good performer; several
others sang, while some gave recitations. We
all sat round in various places in the gully, and
joined in the choruses. It was very enjoyable
while it lasted; but, as darkness came on, rifle-fire
began on the tops of the surrounding hills also,
occasionally, shell fire. This completely drowned
the sound of the performers’ voices, and the
concert had to be brought to a close; Abdul had counted
us out.