Sunday, 2 February 2014

Captain Edward William Walker, 7th Battalion Royal Welsh Fusiliers

I often say to Dawn on our travels, that if we find ten churches during the day, there will be two in which there will be something that takes one's breath away.

On our tour of Shropshire during the New Year, I decided to turn off the A453 as I saw a sign saying `Knockin'.  This was too good to resist so a random visit there was in order.  Firstly we found the shop which, to, the surprise of neither of us, was called `The Knockin Shop.'  After paying our respects at the war memorial, we were delighted to find the church was open and even more awestruck by a memorial window therein.




 
The inscription underneath reads:
 
To the Glory of GOD and in memory of EDWARD WILLIAM WALKER, D.S.O., Capt in 1/7 Royal Welsh Fusiliers, son of WILLIAM GREAVES WALKER, Rector of the Parish, who fell in action at KHUWEILFEH in the HOLY LAND on Nov 6th 1917, aged 25
 
The second thing that struck me after the commanding nature of the memorial was that a Captain in the Royal Welsh Fusiliers was being commemorated with an image of St. George of England, complete with the red cross and having slayed the dragon.  Presumably in this case the dragon is meant to represent the enemy, rather than Wales!
 
A little bit more research revealed the following information:-
 
 
He was the son of Rev William Greaves Walker of Knockin, Shropshire and Sarah Caroline Walker.  His mother was a native of Shropshire, but his father had been born in Pitsmoor, Sheffield. He appeared to have had a relatively comfortable upbringing, being taught by a Governess according to the 1901 census,
 
Walker had been gazetted into a commission on the 8th August 1914, just a month after the beginning of the war.  He had served with the 53rd Division at Gallipoli in 1915 and survived that disaster.
 
In March 1917 he was awarded the Distinguished Service Order for bravery.  His citation read:
 
During the action near Gaza on the 26th March, 1917, he showed conspicuous gallantry and exceptional capability in handling his men.  On this day he led his Company forward and, with the help of an officer and men of another battalion, captured an important point and held it, in the face of sharp counter attacks, until the remainder of the enemy position was won.
 
He lies buried in Beersheba War Cemetery, in an area mentioned frequently in the Bible, in connection with Abraham and Isaac in Genesis, and as the place where the Prophet Elijah took refuge when fleeing from Queen Jezebel. 
 


 
 
He fell in the Third Battle of Gaza, also known as the Battle of Beersheba.  The website firstworldwar.com gives a brief account of the battle which shows that Walker was killed in the final action:-
 
 
 
With Edmund Allenby's appointment to command of the Egyptian Expeditionary Force in the wake of two failed attacks at Gaza in March and April 1917 - replacing Sir Archibald Murray who was recalled to London - he was tasked by British Prime Minister David Lloyd George with the capture of Jerusalem by Christmas 1917.
In the light of the British army's two recent failures it appeared a tall order in spite of clear British numerical supremacy in the area. Allenby nevertheless delivered Jerusalem to London handily in time for Christmas with over two weeks to spare.
In order to ensure the fall of Jerusalem however Allenby needed first to break the Turkish line at Gaza-Beersheba overseen by recently arrived German commander Erich von Falkenhayn, the former army Chief of Staff.

Allenby opened preparations by first relocating his GHQ from a first-class Cairo hotel to the front line; a symbolic act designed to boost the flagging morale of the British troops. Next he amassed reinforcements of men, artillery, gas shells and tanks, adamant that he would not proceed until certain of victory. Seven infantry divisions plus a Light Horse unit (nicknamed the Desert Mounted Corps and consisting of both horses and camels) were assembled, a total of 88,000 men.

Ranged against him were the Turkish Seventh and Eighth Armies, totalling just 35,000 men stretched out along a 40km line. A key component of Allenby's plan was the securing of Beersheba's water supplies at an early stage during the planned attack - its wells.

Both earlier attacks at Gaza had to some extent foundered on account of water shortages - an ever-present concern in desert warfare - and Allenby understood that establishing command of water supplies would be a key factor in his wider plan of capturing Jerusalem.

Thus the Third Battle of Gaza - also referred to as the Battle of Beersheba - was initiated early on the morning of 31 October 1917. Not for Allenby a frontal attack, as at the Second Battle of Gaza. Instead he resolved to take the Turkish forces by surprise in the relatively lightly defended area of Beersheba (a plan initially proposed by General Chetwode), deploying 40,000 troops in the area.

He nevertheless ensured a hefty British presence directly in front of Gaza. Three divisions, aided by a heavy artillery presence of 218 guns, bombarded the garrison for six days before the attack began in order to fool the Turks into believing that a full frontal attack was imminent.
Allenby's ploy, which demanded the utmost secrecy in planning, succeeded in its entirety. British RFC aircraft - of newly deployed Bristol fighters - ensured British air superiority, crucial in preventing German aircraft from detecting British troop movements.

Allenby deployed infantry forces to take Beersheba from the front while despatching his Light Horse unit far to the east. Following an all-day battle an Australian Light Horse unit finally penetrated the Turkish defences and secured control over the town's wells before the Turks could execute a prepared plan to contaminate them.
The Turkish Seventh Army meanwhile retired to the stronghold of Tel es Sheria commanded by German commander Kress von Kressenstein's Eighth Army. Panicked there by another diversionary attack to the east by a 70-strong camel company, the Turkish defenders began to scatter believing it to be a large-scale flank attack, thus leaving the flank of Seventh Army exposed.

Promptly exploiting this Allenby struck north at Tel es Sheria at dawn on 6 November splitting Seventh and Eighth Armies. Allenby hoped to trap Kressenstein's Eighth Army at Gaza but the Turks retreated in some haste further up the coast, Gaza being abandoned on 6-7 November. Meanwhile Eighth Army established itself in Jerusalem preparatory to a stand against the British.
Having concluded the successful capture of Gaza Allenby next turned his attention to the fall of Jerusalem, which he succeeded in securing the following month.