Western Front: The New Zealand Division in the First World War, 1916-18The New Zealanders surged up the scaling ladders and over the top into the dawn mist. In November 2004, a soldier from the Western Front was chosen to symbolise all New Zealand's military heritage, underlining the way that our experience in Belgium and France between 1916 and 1918 speaks to us over the years and generations. Why did so many New Zealanders sail from the 'uttermost ends of the Earth' to die in muddy foreign soil? and were the tactics really as mindless as climbing out of a trench and walking very slowly towards the Germans until everyone was dead? |
From inside the book
11 pages matching Auckland Battalion in this book
Page 199
Where's the rest of this book?
Results 1-3 of 11
Contents
New Zealand and the unknown warrior 7 ང | 11 |
Trench culture | 35 |
The Somme | 65 |
Copyright | |
7 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
action advance Alexander Turnbull Library Allen Allied amid Anzac Army arrived artillery assault attack August Australian Battalion battle began Birdwood Brigade British called casualties Colonels commanders Corps Correspondence dead Defence early effort Evans Expeditionary Force experience face February fell field fighting finally fire forces forward four France German ground guns Haig hands Henry Armitage Sanders Heseltine Ibid Italy Jesse John July June killed Kiwis land late later letter machine-gun March Matthew Wright Memories Messines miles military move night notes November objective October offensive officers Operations ordered Passchendaele positions pushed reached remained ridge Rifle road RSA Collection Russell diary Russell Family Saga Second September shell soldiers Somme Stayte Stewart tactical tanks thought took trench units weeks Western Front wire Wood World World War wounded Ypres Ypres salient Zealand Division