The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Exchanging the kilt for trousers was step too far

“The 51st Division is more than men – it is Scotland itself” – St Valéry, June 12 1940

- By DR DEREK J. PATRICK, UNIVERSITY OF ST ANDREWS

The 51st (Highland) Division arrived in France in January 1940 commanded by Major General Victor Fortune, a veteran Black Watch soldier, who saw much service in the Great War. Initially a wholly Territoria­l division, Churchill expressed the fear their part-time training had not sufficient­ly prepared them to face an experience­d, well-drilled enemy. It was ordered that each Territoria­l Brigade should include a regular battalion and, as a result of subsequent reorganisa­tion, the 1st Black Watch, serving in France since September 1939, joined the Highland Division. On leaving for France the battalion had been ordered to exchange the kilt for trousers on the pretext that the regiment might be identified. Company Sergeant Major MacGregor expressed the general response to that, when he exclaimed: “But damn it, we want to be identified.” The rapid German advance of May 1940 obliged the hard-pressed British Expedition­ary Force and their French comrades to withdraw to the coast where almost 340,000 were evacuated at Dunkirk between May 27 and June 4. In the meantime, the Highland Division, with the French 31st Division on its right, “with no armour other than the light tanks of the Lothian and Border Horse”, was holding a front of some 25 miles south-west of Abbevile near the mouth of the River Somme. On June 5 the Germans attacked along the entire line, and “the long withdrawal to Saint Valéry began”. The division began to fall back on the River Bresle. By June 8 the Highland Division was six miles from Dieppe with the advancing Germans in Rouen only some 30 miles away. General Fortune asked that his men be allowed to evacuate from Dieppe, but his request was refused. The War Office ruled that “while France still stood, the last of Britain’s troops would support her”. The division fell back on St Valéry. On the morning of June 12 the remnants of the 1st Black Watch took up a position on the high ground above the cemetery, just outside St Valéry. The 51st Division was surrounded, cut off and under increasing pressure as the number of German forces steadily increased. “The (1st Black Watch’s) position was being heavily mortared from every direction, and a tank attack was coming into view, when Major Thomas Rennie of the regiment, who was serving on General Fortune’s staff, arrived. It had fallen to him to bring the saddest news of all. The division had capitulate­d... Many of the men burst into tears and the mortar detachment went on shooting for some minutes”. Some parts of the battalion did not receive the order and were still fighting three hours later. Captain Neill Grant-Duff was killed at the head of his company, oblivious to the surrender. His father, Lieutenant-Colonel

Adrian Grant-Duff had been killed while commanding the 1st Black Watch at the battle of the Aisne on September 14 1914. The German guns commanded St Valéry, its harbour and perimeter. The Navy was powerless to withdraw what was left of the division. Receiving news of the surrender, Major McLeary, Cameron Highlander­s, answered “bunkum”, but there was no alternativ­e and he was forced to order his men to lay down their arms. “It is a very terrible thing to see grown men crying as they cried. You saw one man smashing his rifle against a tree and crying, and another crunching his mess tin under his heel and crying”. “We know now that the fate of these battalions was foreordain­ed from the moment they went into action. They suffered weariness and bewilderme­nt, they knew they were alone, they yielded no ground until they were ordered. Their end was calamitous for their country; but they went into captivity with the same spirit as that with which they had fought.” Some men managed to escape but for most St Valéry spelled captivity. General Fortune was summoned to the town square where General Erwin Rommel formally accepted his surrender. Private Clarke, 1st Black Watch, recalled: “(We) were lined up on the road where we were searched by the Germans. I don’t know about the rest of the lads but I felt about two feet tall as they helped themselves to anything they fancied.” Donald McLean, a bandsman in the same battalion, described how “we were all marched 17 days. We slept in the nearest field and they’d put machine guns in the corner. We were thrown the odd loaf and lived off the

land and scrounged and stole what we could.” It was on the march that Perth man, Private Alexander Sangster, 1st Black Watch, managed to evade his German captors, and disguised as a French peasant eventually made his way to Gibraltar, having crossed the Pyrenees in some 18 hours. More than 10,000 men of the Highland Division were taken prisoner at St Valéry. In the gallant but doomed rearguard action more than 1,000 had been killed and more than 4,000 wounded. George “Dodo” Hope, the popular Berwick Rangers centre-half and club captain, was one of those captured. He joined the Territoria­l Army before the war and was serving with the 7th Northumber­land Fusiliers at St Valéry. During his captivity he captained an English eleven in camp internatio­nals and would participat­e in the infamous “death march” in 1945, as allied PoWs were marched westward away from the advancing Russians. Hope covered more than 400 miles before he was liberated. On his return to civilian life he led Berwick to the East of Scotland League Championsh­ip in 1946-47. The 51st Division was reconstitu­ted in 1940 and would serve with distinctio­n in North Africa, Italy and France. In October 1942 a short editorial described it as “the same 51st that fought and died in the last war and came to life again at the beginning of this one. For the 51st Division is more than men: It is Scotland itself. And Scotland is indestruct­ible”. It was fitting that it was the reconstitu­ted division that would liberate St Valéry in September 1944. “They have avenged, insofar as the winning of battle honours can avenge, their fallen comrades and those others who have been for years imprisoned inside the Reich”. For one Scottish officer “little Scotland (was) free”. He commented on how the graves of those who had fallen in 1940 were “most beautifull­y kept by the local girls throughout the whole of the occupation... a magnificen­t gesture by the people of the town.” The division arranged a memorial service, “the locals congregat(ing) behind and around a mass of khaki to take part in what was for them as well as for us a momentous occasion”. In recognitio­n of the kindness shown by the people of St Valéry to the officers and men of the Highland Division an appeal was launched in the North-East in November 1945 to offer a substantia­l measure of assistance in a “difficult period of reconstruc­tion” for the town. The shared experience of 1940 and 1944 had forged lasting links between Scotland and St Valéry. To mark the 10th anniversar­y of the action ceremonies were staged in June 1950 which culminated in the unveiling of a memorial to the 51st (Highland) Division. Civic representa­tives from Aberdeen, Dundee, Elgin, Inverness, Perth and Stirling, were accompanie­d by a military delegation, and a guard of honour representi­ng each unit of the division. Sergeant David Kirkpatric­k, Kirkcaldy, captured in 1940 while serving as a despatch rider with The Black Watch, was chosen as one of the guard of honour. Also in attendance were two Dundee mothers, Mrs Docherty, 7 Marybank Lane, Lochee, and Mrs Doig, 12 Pitkerro Drive, Linlathen, whose sons Lance-Corporal George Mitchell Coyle and Private David Doig, both 4th Black Watch, are buried in adjoining graves in Embreville Communal Cemetery. Private Coyle had three daughters. He never had an opportunit­y to see the youngest who was only five months old when her father died. The evening before the ceremony a newspaper correspond­ent described how officers and men were searching for the places they had fought “and telling again the story of those final days in June 1940, and looking upon the graves of comrades who fell.” More than one man said: “Ten years ago I just sat down and wept when we were told to surrender.” Officers said it; hard-bitten WOs said it, and privates, too. One sergeant from Aberdeen, belonging to the Signals, added: “And I believe I’ll greet again the morn.” As the memorial was unveiled the Pipes and Drums of the 1st Black Watch played the Flowers o’ the Forest, and buglers on the cliff-tops sounded the Last Post. In his speech, the Mayor of St Valéry, M. Henri Cherfils, reflected on the close relationsh­ip that would forever connect the small French port with Scotland. “The 51st Division is not only Scotland’s division, she is our division, and St Valéry is not only our town, she is also your town, and when you are here you Scots are at home.” Following the unveiling ceremony M. Cherfils received the Croix de Guerre, conferred on the town which, according to the citation, “was the centre of important battles in 1940 made illustriou­s by the heroic resistance of the 51st Scottish Division”. Writing in September 1944 a newspaper columnist recalled: “That original division went down fighting to the bitter end. “It did not surrender until it had left its dead in every Norman field from the Somme to the little river Durdent, from the Cambron Woods to the trees ringing the cemetery where The Black Watch stood at last at bay. The divisional artillery had not a round of ammunition left, and the formation was reduced to a few companies of exhausted riflemen with Bren guns in support, surrounded by a vastly superior enemy force with artillery, armour, and abundance of mortars and machine guns.” In 1942 General de Gaulle spoke of its sacrifice. “I say to you that the (French) soil lovingly envelops the thousands and thousands of Scots whose blood was shed with that of our own soldiers. If the roses of France are today bloodstain­ed, yet they crowd lovingly around the thistle of Scotland.” That shared experience of June 1940, de Gaulle’s “comradeshi­p of arms”, explains why St Valéry, by virtue of its historical connection­s, can, in the words of a Scottish officer who helped liberate the town in 1944, be considered a “little part of Scotland” in France.

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 ?? Pictures: Dr Derek Patrick. ?? Top: Generals Rommel and Fortune. Above: George ‘Dodo’ Hope, captain of Berwick Rangers.
Pictures: Dr Derek Patrick. Top: Generals Rommel and Fortune. Above: George ‘Dodo’ Hope, captain of Berwick Rangers.
 ?? Pictures: Dr Derek Patrick. ?? Top left: The unveiling of the St Valéry memorial; top right: commemorat­ion of The Black Watch in 1950; the Highland Division Memorial, 1950.
Pictures: Dr Derek Patrick. Top left: The unveiling of the St Valéry memorial; top right: commemorat­ion of The Black Watch in 1950; the Highland Division Memorial, 1950.
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