Yorkshire Post

STUDENTS OF THE SOMME

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MORE THAN a century ago, a group of Yorkshire students were the driving force in forming a battalion of ‘profession­al men’ to volunteer to fight in the First World War. Now their successors at the same university are uncovering the secrets of how the Sheffield Pals spent months training for their ill-fated mission to the Somme – only to be slaughtere­d in their hundreds in minutes.

Archaeolog­ists from the University of Sheffield have been conducting a week of fieldwork at a First World War training camp at Redmires – an area in the Peak District that was used to train volunteers who had enlisted in the Sheffield City Battalion.

Helen Ullathorne, from the University’s Department of Lifelong Learning, who initiated the study, says the site of the training camp was discovered accidental­ly as students doing land surveys came across what turned out to be practice trenches.

“We first came up here in 1999. We were trying to find a landscape we could use to investigat­e how to do certain types of land survey. We did a bit of background research but didn’t know what was here really.

“Only after we had started recording some of the features, we realised we had something rather extraordin­ary.

“Students did an amazing amount of research to find out what those features represente­d. We learnt they were practice trenches for the First World War.

“As far as I understand it, the knowledge of where they had trained was lost. It was students from the University of Sheffield who helped form that Pals battalion and it was students who found where they trained all those years later. It is lovely and circular.

“Over the years we have learnt it wasn’t just a First World War site, it was also used in the Second World War by the Home Guard, so Dad’s Army was up here as well.”

The battalion, which became known as the Sheffield Pals was formed in September 1914 after a group of students approached Herbert Fisher, the vice-chancellor of Sheffield University about the idea of raising a unit.

Those who ended up enlisting were engineers, businessme­n, stockbroke­rs, teachers, journalist­s and clerks. More than 1,000 men signed up, training initially began at Bramall Lane, the home of Sheffield United. But after complaints about damage to the pitch from the military exercises, they were instead sent out to the Redmires camp on the outskirts of the city in the Peak District.

Ullathorne says there were good reasons that the battalion had fewer working-class members than many other similar ‘Pals’ units in other parts of the country.

“With Pals battalions, you tend to think of them as working class lads all from the same street. But the Sheffield City Battalion was slightly different in the way it was formed. They promoted themselves to profession­al men and were clerks, teachers and university students. Some of them were from working-class background­s but in Sheffield you had the steel industry and miners which were reserved occupation­s. They were workers who were very much needed at home for the war effort – that is why the take-up of the Sheffield Pals is different.”

After identifyin­g the practice trenches, documents, newspaper reports and diaries from the time were all examined which proved the battalion had trained at Redmires. One student volunteer for the Pals, Alphaeus Abbot Casey, wrote of how the battalion trained at the site until May 1915 before being sent on to Cannock Chase.

They eventually left the UK in December 2015, initially to head to Egypt where the battalion was assigned to protect the Suez Canal from a potential attack by the Turkish army. But when that did not materialis­e, they were reassigned to France to the planned summer offensive of the Somme.

On July 1, 1916, the battalion was given the task of the capturing the village of Serre as part of the Somme offensive.

But as the battalion advanced on German lines, the men walked into a hail of bullets and shellfire, while long stretches of the barbed wire that it had been planned would be cut through remained undamaged, leaving the soldiers trapped in No Man’s Land and firing vainly at the German trenches.

As one survivor, John Harris, later wrote “Two years in the making. Ten minutes in the destroying. That was our history.” By July 3, when the remnants of the battalion were taken out of the line, 513 officers and men had been killed, wounded or gone missing.

Surveying the Redmires site where the men who died had trained so hard the year before they died at the Somme, Ullathorne says the training camp shows it wasn’t a lack of preparatio­n that was fatal for the battalion but instead the ill-planned offensive.

“When you come up here and see the training, they must have worked hard and diaries talk of intensive training. I don’t think it was a lack of training, it was walking into industrial warfare.”

The study by Sheffield archaeolog­ists has already led Historic England to designate the site as a Scheduled Ancient Monument – a place of national historic importance. Many such camps sprung up all over Britain at the start of the First World War, but few are now so well preserved as Redmires.

In addition to fighting skills, drill and general fitness, the men learned how to construct different types of trench systems, some stretching for hundreds of metres. These earthworks survive as slight humps and bumps visible to the naked eye, and the university has been carefully mapping them all.

Not all are easy to interpret and more sophistica­ted techniques have therefore been used, including drones and geophysica­l survey.

Ullathorne says technologi­cal advances in mapping equipment mean it is possible for new informatio­n to be uncovered, even after almost 20 years of visits to the site. She says the week of fieldwork also allows people with an interest in archaeolog­y to get a taste of the subject while exploring a fascinatin­g part of Sheffield’s landscape. The archaeolog­y tutor says investigat­ing and mapping the military landscape at Redmire has been one of the most poignant pieces of research she has ever conducted in the course of her career.

“It has been an amazing experience for me, a lot of people have visited the site. I have been honoured to take people around the site. We had one guy who took out a photograph of his grandfathe­r, who was part of the Sheffield Pals.

“There is a real connection with the not-too-distant past and the experience­s of grandparen­ts and maybe great-grandparen­ts now. People are able to come to a place where they can walk in the footsteps of people who went through trauma by serving their country in the First World War.”

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 ??  ?? Sheffield University archaeolog­ists have been mapping the training camp used by the ill-fated Sheffield Pals.
Sheffield University archaeolog­ists have been mapping the training camp used by the ill-fated Sheffield Pals.
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