Gallipoli VC's
VCs of Gallipoli and The Dardanelles
The meticulously researched work on this subject, highly commended to all students of the campaign, is Stephen Snelling’s ‘VCs of the First World War – Gallipoli’ Publ. Alan Sutton , Stroud, in 1995 and again by Wrens Park Publishing 1999 (ISBN 0-905-778-332) from which much of the material in this section is drawn. Snelling’s book delves into the family backgrounds of the VC winners as well as providing a lively commentary on the campaign.
Ranks are those
held at the time of the deed earning the award. Lack of space
prevents much more than the briefest summary of the acts which
gained the supreme award. As in Snelling's book, these are
presented in chronological order, although dates of gazetting often
differ widely.
13 December 1914 Sari Sighlar Bay, Chanak
Bair. Lt Commander N .Holbrook RN
Holbrook was the commander of the submarine B 11 which made its
way through several minefields to torpedo and sink the elderly
Ottoman battleship Messudieh, anchored as a floating battery and
guard ship off the town of Chanak. He was the first of a
distinguished company of submarine VCs.
26 February 1915 near the Orkanieh
Battery, Kum Kale: Lt Commander E G Robinson RN: Gazetted 16 August
1915
Robinson displayed great bravery and leadership during the
operation to complete the destruction of the Orkanieh battery. He
also played a leading part in the successful operation to destroy
the submarine E 15 which had gone aground near the dardanos battery
near Kephez Point on the night of 18/19 April.
Robinson retired as a Rear Admiral in 1933, returned to service
in 1939 and served as a convoy Commodore until forced to retire
again in 1941 due to ill health. He died in 1965 and is buried in
st John 's churchyard, Langriosh, Hants.
25 April 1915. 'W' Beach,
Helles:
Capt. R.R. Willis
Capt. C. Bromley
Sgt A. Richards,
Sgt. F.E.Stubbs.
Cpl. J.E.Grimshaw.
Pte W.Keneally
Gazetted at various times.
These are the 'Six VCs before breakfast' gained by the 1st
Battalion, Lancashire Fusiliers and recommended (though not by
individual names) by Major General Hunter-Weston to GHQ on 15 May.
Hamilton supported this but there was much bureaucratic bungling at
the War Office before permission was given, under the rules for the
VC, for a ballot to be made. Three of the men were gazetted in
August but it was not until 1917 that the other three were
gazetted, by which time several had been killed in action.
25 April 1915. 'V' Beach,
Helles
Gazetted 16 August 1915, except that of Tisdall (who was
killed in action on 6 May without knowing of the award, which was
not gazetted until 11 March 1916)
Comd. E.Unwin RN, Sub-Lt
A.Tisdall RN
Midshipman G. L. Drewry RNR,
Midshipman W.Malleson RN.
Able Seaman W.C.Williams RN, (posth)
Seaman G.Samson RN.
All were crew members of the River Clyde, the collier converted,
by the addition of ports in her sides and ramps, into an assault
ship for the landings at 'V' beach. Tisdall was not strictly a crew
member but was serving in the Royal Naval Division and in command
of a beach party carried aboard. . All six men displayed sublime
courage when the beaching of the ship went awry and the steam tug,
manned by Greeks, failed to position itself properly to manoeuvre
the towed barges into position to form a pier.
26 April 1915. Sedd-el-Bahr village,
above 'V' beach
Gazetted 23 June 1915
Lt Colonel C.H.M. Doughty-Wylie, Royal Welsh Fusiliers
Capt (temp major) G.N. Walford, Royal Artillery
Doughty-Wylie was detached to the River Clyde from Hamilton's
staff for the landing, as was Walford, who was Brigade Major Royal
Artillery in 29 Division. Having been helpless spectators of the
slaughter during the landing attempt on 25 April, Doughty-Wylie and
the C.O of the Munster's stopped further landings. During the night
more troops were brought ashore and on the morning of the 26th,
these officers led a desperate charge up the village of
Sedd-el-Bahr against fierce resistance, which they and their mixed
body of troops managed to overcome. Walford was killed in the
village but Doughty-Wylie gained the summit of the hill overlooking
the beach where he too fell to a sniper. He remains where he fell,
in the only solitary war grave on the peninsula and the senior
officer to win the VC in the Gallipoli campaign.
26 April 1915. 'V' beach,
Sedd-el-Bahr
Gazetted 23 August 1915
Cpl W.Cosgrove, R. Munster Fusiliers
As the Fusiliers emerged from the ports in the side of the ship
on the morning of the 25th they came under heavy fire which pinned
the survivors down on the beach until last light. During the night
some re-organisation was possible but at dawn on the 26th it was
clear that most of the Munster's' officers had been killed or
wounded. Even when the village had been cleared of snipers
the centre of the beach was still covered bt Turkish machine guns
and a thick belt of wire. Cosgrove, an enormously strong man (he
was 6ft 6in tall) rushed forward and rooted out the wire pickets,
enabling a gap through which the survivors charged... Despite
numerous wounds he continued to lead the attack after all the
officers and senior ranks had been wounded or killed. He
transferred to the British Army in 1922 and retired in 1934 as a
Staff Sergeant Instructor with the Rangoon University Training
Corps, and died in 1936.
30 April - 2 May, Anzac Sector
Gazetted 22 June 1917
L/Cpl W.R.Parker RM, Portsmouth Brigade, RND
Within a few days of the Anzac landings the Turks were launching
fierce counter attacks and a brigade of the Royal Naval Division
was sent from Helles to augment the still endangered front line,
which as yet was not continuous but no more than a series of
outposts. . Parker was serving as a medical orderly and when a
strong Turkish attack came in on 30 April he went from post top
post carrying medical supplies and tending the wounded under heavy
fire. When, on 2 May, it was decided to evacuate a particularly
exposed position, now held by only a handful of unwounded men,
Parker helped the wounded to safety, being wounded severely himself
in the process. Although no immediate award was made, a number of
senior officers and witnesses testified to Parker's sacrificial
gallantry and he received his Cross from the King in 1917, by which
time he had been invalided. He died in 1936.
27 April -18 May 1915, Sea of
Marmara
Gazetted 21 May 1915
Lt Commander E.C.Boyle RN
Boyle was the commander of the submarine E 14 which entered the
Straits and penetrated the narrows within 48 hours of the Helles
landings, to embark on a sensationally successful series of attacks
on Turkish shipping, including the torpedoing, with huge loss of
life, of the troopship Guj Djemal, and several warships. He retired
as a Rear Admiral in 1932 and died in 1967 having been run over on
a pedestrian crossing.
19 May- 7 June 1915, Sea of
Marmara
Gazetted 25 June 1915
Lt. Commander M.E.Nasnith RN
Nasmith commanded the submarine E 11 which followed Boyle's E 14
into the Sea of Marmara. His final briefing, from Commodore Roger
Keyes, was to the point: 'Go and run amok in the Marmara!'
Quite literally he did just that. In three weeks he sank eleven
ships and penetrated into Constantinople Harbour. He also sank a
ship off the port of Rodosto and another as it lay alongside the
dock there, finally being driven offshore by a troop of cavalry
with their carbines. On a subsequent cruise in the Marmara he sank
the old battleship Heiruddin Barbarossa before re-entering
Constantinople where he sank another ship in full view of the
alarmed population. He retired as Admiral Sir Martin Dunbar-Nasmith
after world War 2 and died in 1965.
19 May 1915, Courtney's Post,
Anzac.
Gazetted 24 July 1915
L/Corporal (acting) A.Jacka
On 19 May, before dawn, the Turks launched their greatest massed
attack on the Anzac front line, advancing in mass formation. They
met with disaster but got within yards of over-running the defence
at several points. Jacka was serving in the garrison of Courtney's,
manned by the 14th Battalion AIF. At one point the Turks, using
hand grenades, got into the post, to be met by Jacka, the only
defender still on his feet, who held out with rifle and bayonet for
15 minutes until help arrived. Obtaining some bombs, he led a
counter attack, shooting and bayoneting every Turk he came across.
Later in the war he was commissioned and gained further awards for
gallantry in France, he died in 1932.
6 June 1915, Krithia sector,
Helles.
Gazetted 24 July 1915
2nd Lt G.R.D.Moor, Hampshire Regiment
The 3rd Battle for Krithia took place on 4 June and although the
42nd East Lancashire Division came close to taking the village, the
bloody repulse of the Royal Naval Division on their right laid bare
their flank. The Hampshire's, to the left of the 42nd
Division's line of attack, initially advanced successfully but at
dawn on the 6th a sudden panic appeared to seize the units in the
front trenches, who began to stream to the rear. By this time,
Moor, who was only 18 years old, was in virtual command of what
remained of his battalion. He took charge of the situation, shot
several men who were running off in terror, and led several charges
to stabilise the line. His recommendation came from officers of a
neighbouring battalion who had witnessed his extraordinary conduct.
Having gained the MC and bar later in France, Moor died of
influenza in November 1918, aged 21.
28 June / 2 July 1915
Gazetted 1 September 1915
2nd Lt H.James, Worcestershire Regiment
During the fighting for the village of Krithia the
attack of the 29th Division, astride Gully Ravine, was initially
successful. However, due to sparse artillery support (partially due
to the shortage of high explosive shell) the attack of the 156th
Brigade of the 52nd Lowland Division, thrown piecemeal into battle
with little chance to familiarise with conditions in the line, had
failed. The newly appointed 29th Division al commander, Major
General Beauvoir de Lisle, ordered the resumption of the attack 'at
all costs' H -hour was to be 0900 hrs on 2 July and the
attack consisted of detachments of the Hampshire and Worcestershire
Regiments. Conditions were appalling; the trenches over which
the battle now raged were clogged with corpses and in the smoke and
dust communication was near impossible. James was in charge of a
bombing party armed with jam tin grenades; the Turks had proper
bombs, far more effective than the jam tins. Soon, James's party
was reduced to a handful and soon he was alone, all his men having
been killed or wounded. Until reinforcements arrived he held the
trench with two rifles and a sack of home-made bombs. He remained
in the Army after the war and retired as a major in 1930 dying as a
virtual recluse in 1958
18/19 June and 1 / 2
July 1915, Area of Gully Ravine, Helles
Gazetted 1 September 1915
Capt. G.O'Sullivan, Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers
Cpl J.Somers, Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers
The fighting at this stage was centred around Gully Ravine, the
nullah running up from Gully Beach towards Krithia and a key
tactical feature of the battlefield throughout the Helles campaign.
The Turks were keen to regain what was known as 'Turkey
Trench' and succeeded in driving the
South Wales Borderers out of it. A counter attack by the
Inniskillings and Borderers led by Capt. O'Sullivan drove the
Turks back. Throughout the fighting, O'Sullivan had been closely
supported by Cpl Somers, who, as an enthusiastic cricketer,
revelled in grenade throwing. He continued the fight after
O'Sullivan had been carried off wounded and held his ground against
all attacks. O'Sullivan spent some weeks in hospital but returned
to the battalion in time to take part in the disastrous attack on
Scimitar Hill on 21 August when he was killed, having led a last
charge up the hills with the words '…one more charge for the honour
of the old Regiment'. Somers died at home in Ireland in may 1918,
almost certainly as the result of gas poisoning sustained on the
western front.
7-9 August 1915, Lone Pine, Anzac
Sector.Gazetted 15 October 1915
Capt. A. Shout (posth)
Lt J.Symons
Lt. F.Tubb, Cpl. A. Burton (posth)
Cpl. W.Dunstan
L/Cpl L.Keysor
Pte J.Hamilton
All these awards arose from the attack on the enormously strong
Turkish positions around the ring contour since known as Lone Pine,
in which, as the result of careful planning by the staff of the 1st
Australian Division (Maj-General Walker) the leading assault troops
burst suddenly from saps that had been dug, unseen by the Turks, to
within fifty yards of their front line. Total surprise was achieved
but matters became fraught when it was found that the Turks had
covered their trenches with beams of timber; these had to be prised
up to permit entry by the attackers into the maze of galleries
below, in which ferocious hand-to-hand fighting raged for 48 hours
before the position was firmly in Australian hands.
8-10 August 1915, Rhododendron Spur,
Anzac Sector
Gazetted 15 October 1915
Cpl. C.R.G.Bassett, NZ Engineers (Signals)
Bassett was in charge of a telephone line-laying party which
accompanied one of the three columns sent round the Turkish
northern flank on the night of 6-7 August as part of the great
attack on the Sari Bair ridge. Commanded by Brig-General Johnston,
the column comprised the New Zealand Brigade, a battery of Indian
mountain guns and the company of field engineers in which Bassett
was serving. Due to Johnston's lack of drive the attack fell behind
schedule and the opposition became intense as the advance was
resumed up the steep slopes. The telephone lines were continually
cut by enemy shellfire and Bassett and his squad were kept busy on
the open slopes of Rhododendron Spur and under continuous fire,
often at ranges below 100 yards. His VC was award, not for an
isolated act but for almost a week of outstanding gallantry and
leadership in the face of the enemy. When he died, in 1983,
he was the last surviving Gallipoli VC.
9 August 1915, Scimitar Hill, Suvla
Sector.
Gazetted 1 October 1915
Capt & Adjutant P.H.Hansen, Lincolnshire Regiment
As the first attack on Scimitar Hill developed, only two days
after the initial Suvla landings, it became apparent that a
great brush fire had broken out and that the wounded lying in its
path were in danger of being burnt alive. The battle
was characterised by total confusion on the British side, where
inexperienced Kitchener battalions, new to active service, became
disorientated and in some cases panic broke out. Earlier on 9
August some of the East Yorkshires had actually gained the summit
of the Tekke Tepe ridge overlooking the Suvla Plain but had been
overwhelmed there. The 6th Lincolns managed to get onto the lower
slopes at Scimitar Hill but no further as the units supposedly on
their left had been driven off. Once it became apparent that the
situation was hopeless, Hansen, an Anglo-Danish officer who had
played a major part in steadying the troops of his own and other
units, gathered a party of volunteers and began to rescue any
wounded left on the hillside before the flames reached them. Later,
he was to say that '…I was in the biggest funk of my life , and I
hardly knew what was happening'. Hansen remained in the army after
1918, attended the Staff College and in 19139 was commanding the
2nd Battalion of his regiment. After more staff appointments he
ended the war as a Brigadier, retiring in 1946. He died in
1946.
7-9 August 1915, The Vineyard,
Helles.
Gazetted 9 September 1915
Lt. (temp Capt and QM) W.T.Forshaw, Manchester
Regiment.
As part of Hamilton's plan for the great attack of 7 August on
the Sari Bair ridge, a diversion was to be made at Helles in hopes
that it would distract Turkish attention from the main thrust. In
the event the Helles diversion proved a costly reverse. The 9th
Manchester's, part of the 42nd East Lancs Division, were ordered to
attack in the area of the Vineyard, about 1000 yards south of
Krithia village and the apex of the British line, at 3.50 pm on 6
August, shortly before the Suvla landings began. After a feeble
artillery bombardment the attack on the left of the Manchester's
began, carried out by the 88th Brigade of 29 Division. It was
thrown back with very heavy loss. The 9th Manchester's' turn came
at 9.40 am on the following day, against strongly entrenched
Turkish positions. Forshaw established himself in a forward post,
armed with a huge pile of about 800 jam-tin bombs and
withstood repeated Turkish attacks which continued all night.
After the war Forshaw transferred to the Indian Army, left in 1922,
then served in the RAF's educational branch for several years.
. Working as a school teacher for some time he
eventually worked for Gaumont British. In the 1939 war he served as
a major in the Home Guard but died in 1943.
13 August 1915, The Vineyard,
Helles.
Gazetted 13 January 1917
Pte D.R.Lauder, Royal Scots Fusiliers
The 9th Manchester's, in which Forshaw had just gained his
recommendation for the VC were relieved in the line by
Territorial's of the 52nd Lowland Division, who were met almost at
once by a fierce Turkish counter attack. Lacking machine guns, the
Scotsmen had to rely on their jam-tin bombs to keep the enemy at
bay. Lauder was a member of a mixed bombing party in the front line
when he saw that a bomb thrown by him had fallen back into the
trench. He immediately placed his foot on it. His foot was blown
off but the lives of his companions were saved. In later years he
remained in contact with his old regiment and at his funeral, in
1972, a piper from the Royal Highland Fusiliers played a
lament.
21-23 August 1915, Scimitar Hill,
Suvla
Gazetted 1 October 1915
Tpr F.Potts, Berkshire Yeomanry
The 2nd Mounted Division, which arrived to serve as infantry at
Suvla shortly before Hailton's great attack of 21 August, included
the Berkshire Yeomanry. The execution of the Suvla attack had been
placed in the hands of General de Lisle whose optimism failed to
achieve success. Instead, the initial assault on Scimitar Hill,
entrusted to regulars of 29 Division, was thrown back with great
loss, as were successive attacks by less well trained
Kitchener troops of the 11th (Northern) Division, whose
commander, Hammersley, had already been taken off following a major
nervous breakdown. As the day developed, so did a dense pall of
smoke and dust, obliterating the high ground which the yeomanry
were supposed to take. When called forward from behind the cover of
the Lala Baba hill the 2nd Mounted Division marched in parade
ground order across the dry Salt Lake and then almost immediately
on into the murk ahead. As darkness fell the men struggled up the
slopes against a stream of wounded men and stragglers from earlier
attacks. Potts was wounded in the leg and had to lie out all night
between the lines where he was joined by Tpr Andrews, also wounded
and incapable of walking. They emptied the water bottles of dead
men lying nearby and lay low all night and through the next
day. . Potts laid Andrews on a shovel and began to propel him back
towards the British lines, which they regained after 48 hours. They
had taken this time to cover about 600 yards. He died in 1943,
having played a prominent part for many years in church and civic
affairs.
29 August 1915, Hill 60
Gazetted 15 October 1915
2 /Lt H.V.H.Throssell, 10th Australian Light Horse
hill 60 formed a key point of the Turkish defence; situated
below the northern slopes of the Sari Bair ridge and, at the
junction of the Suvla and Anzac sectors, with commanding views over
the Suvla Plain, it was heavily fortified by concentric rings of
trenches and lavishly equipped with quick-firing artillery and
machine guns. Its capture was essential if further advances were to
be made around the northern flank of the main Turkish positions.
Several attacks by Anzac troops had already failed with great loss
before the assault of 28-29 August. Thrushel was at the forefront
and found himself in a trench jointly claimed by both sides, in
which a vicious close-quarter battle developed. It was possibly the
most prolonged grenade fight on the peninsula, as the Anzacs picked
up the Turkish grenades as they fell and threw them back, together
with their own jam-tin bombs. After his superior officer had been
killed Thrushel assumed command of his section of trench, holding
out against every subsequent Turkish attack. One of his colleagues,
who was reckoned to have thrown some 500 bombs, had his arm blown
off but continued to throw grenades, though now mortally wounded.
Thrushel was himself now badly wounded and was evacuated; in later
life, much affected by his experiences, he became a founder member
of the Australian Communist Party. He fell into debt and, in the
belief that he would help his family financially and secure for
them a war pension, shot himself in 1933.
19 November 1915, near Ferejik Railway
Junction, Bulgaria
Gazetted 1 January 1916
Squadron Comd. R.Bell Davies RNAS
With the entry of Bulgaria into the war on the side of the
Central Powers and the overthrow of Serbia, a rail link across the
Balkans enabled the Germans to send munitions and warlike stores to
Constantinople directly by goods train. Bell Davies had been flying
in the Aegean since the beginning of the Dardanelles campaign as
second-in-command to sqn Commander Charles Samson, already a
legendary figure in his own right. Samson was given
permission to bomb targets on Bulgarian soil and selected a number
of them for treatment. On 19 November three aircraft attacked the
railway station at Ferejik; in the course of the attack Bell Davies
saw that one of his colleagues had been compelled to
force-land. The pilot, seeing a unit of cavalry approaching,
set fire to the aircraft and prepared to escape on foot; but Bell
Davies landed in a dried-up watercourse and picked up his fellow
pilot, who had to cling to the upper wing of the biplane as Bell
Davies took off under heavy fire as his passenger found his way
into the second cockpit, which had been covered with a spare engine
cowl. Bell Davies became one of the pioneers of naval aviation,
retiring in 1941 as a Vice Admiral but immediately returning as a
convoy commodore, finally retiring in 1944. He died in 1966, having
written his memoir, Sailor in the Airing which there is no mention
of the circumstances that gained him the VC.
23 December 1915, Fusilier Bluff,
Helles.
Gazetted January 1916
2/Lt. A.V.Smith , East Lancashire Regiment (posth)
Fusilier Bluff was the foremost British position at Helles and
marked the apex of the line, with its flank resting on the cliffs
overlooking the Aegean. As the evacuation of the Anzac-Suvla sector
went ahead undetected by the Turks until the troops had all left
unscathed, it became necessary to make the enemy believe that the
Helles sector was still held strongly and Smith was prominent in
aggressive patrolling from early on in December. He
made it clear to all that he wanted to make as lively as possible
for the Turks, whose trenches were only yards away, and he ensured
that a continual shower of bombs was thrown into the opposing
trench. However, early on the morning of 23 December, Smith lost
his grip on the grenade he was about to throw and it fell to the
trench floor; at once he saw that his comrades' lives were in
danger and threw himself bodily onto the smoking bomb, dying
instantly as it detonated. His was the last VC awarded for
the Gallipoli campaign.