Day 16: Saturday 12 April 2014
Another event today nearly as exciting as finding the unexploded shell yesterday, I finally arrived in French Flanders and guess what........prawn croquettes are on the menu. Dinner tonight was an entrée of prawn croquettes and they were delicious, I also had a veal thing with mustard sauce and that was nice as well.
Today I drove from St Quentin to Bailleul via Fromelles. You may recall that Fromelles is the battlefield where the Australians who died there were buried in a unknown mass grave by the Germans. A couple of years ago the mass grave was located and the bodies recovered and re-interred at a new cemetery in Fromelles. I have been there a couple of times before and didn't really need to go again however the Australian government is building an information centre there and I was interested in whether it was finished or not.......its not! Anyway as I was there I had a wander around the cemetery and came across two graves side by side of brothers, Sam Wilson and Eric Wilson of the 53rd battalion who both died on the same day, 19 July 1916.
| The Wilson brothers |
| Battalion commander died leading his men at Frommelles |
After leaving the cemetery I drove to the Australian Memorial Park just out of Fromelles. I met an Australian couple there from Warrnambool who were travelling around Europe for 3 months in a camper van.
| "Cobbers" statue - Australian Memorial Park - Fromelles |
Anyway the town has been rebuilt and serves delicious prawn croquettes.
Oh thats so sad about sam and eric :(
ReplyDeleteWell an exciting couple of days, Major. You know that the Wilson brothers were the uncles of George Mansford;s second wife, Helen Mansford (nee Wilson). I met Helen before she died about 8 years ago and the missing brothers were always talked about. Prawn croquettes eh? I think you need to have them at least four times to decide if they are truly delicious. Cheers Flashy
ReplyDeleteIt is very sad about the brothers, there were lots of cases of brothers serving and dying, but I don't know how many cases there are of brothers dying on the same day in the same battle. Imagine their poor old mum getting not one but two telegrams.
ReplyDeleteRoger, when Helen Mansford was alive her uncles would still have been listed as missing. These bodies were all recovered from the mass grave at Pheasant Wood. I wonder if they were identified from information on the bodies or from DNA testing. (I am determined to continue testing the croquettes).