<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></SPAN>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
<h3>BRITISH SUCCESS AT ROYSTON.</h3>
<p>Arrests of alleged spies were reported from Manchester
and other large towns. Most of the prisoners were, however,
able to prove themselves naturalised British subjects;
but several were detained pending investigation
and examination of correspondence found at their homes.
In Manchester, where there are always a number of
Germans, it is known that many slipped away on Sunday
night after the publication of the news of the
invasion.</p>
<p>In most of the larger Midland towns notices had been
issued by the mayors deprecating hostility towards residents
of foreign origin, and stating that all suspicious
cases were already receiving the attention of the police.</p>
<p>In Stafford the boot factories were idle. In the Potteries
all work was at a standstill. At Stoke-on-Trent,
at Hanley, at Burslem, Tunstall, and Congleton all was
chaos, and thousands upon thousands were already
wanting bread. The silk-thread industry at Leek was
ruined, so was the silk industry at Macclesfield; the
great breweries at Burton were idle, while the hosiery
factories of Leicester and the boot factories of Northampton
were all shut.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>With the German troops threatening Sheffield, Nottingham
was in a state of intense alarm. The lace and
hosiery factories had with one accord closed on Tuesday,
and the great Market Place was now filled day and
night by thousands upon thousands of unemployed
mill-hands of both sexes. On Friday, however, came
the news of how Sheffield had built barricades against
the enemy, and there ensued a frantic attempt at defence
on the part of thousands of terrified and hungry men
and women. In their frenzy they sacked houses in
order to obtain material to construct the barricades,
which were, however, built just where the fancy took
the crowd.</p>
<p>The white, interminable North Road, that runs so
straight from London through York and Berwick to
Edinburgh, was, with its by-roads in the Midlands, now
being patrolled by British cavalry, and here and there
telegraphists around a telegraph post showed that those
many wires at the roadside were being used for military
communication.</p>
<p>At several points along the road between Wansford
Bridge and Retford the wires had been cut and tangled
by the enemy's agents, but by Friday all had been restored
again. In one spot, between Weston and Sutton-on-Trent,
eight miles south of Newark, a trench had
actually been dug during the night, the tube containing
the subterranean telegraph lines discovered, and the
whole system to the North disorganised. Similar damage
had been done by German spies to the line between
London and Birmingham, two miles south of Shipston-on-Stour;
and again the line between Loughborough
and Nottingham had been similarly destroyed.</p>
<p>The Post Office linesmen had, however, quickly made
good the damage everywhere in the country not already
occupied by the enemy, and telegraph and telephone
communication North and South was now practically
again in its normal state.</p>
<p>Through Lincolnshire the enemy's advance patrols had
spread South over every road between the Humber and
the Wash, and in the city of Lincoln itself a tremendous
sensation was caused when on Wednesday, market-day,
several bodies of German motor-cyclists swept into the
Stonebow and dismounted at the Saracen's Head, amid
the crowd of farmers and dealers who had assembled
there, not, alas! to do business, but to discuss the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</SPAN></span>
situation. In a moment the city was panic-stricken.
From mouth to mouth the dread truth spread, that the
Germans were upon them, and people ran indoors
and barricaded themselves within their houses.</p>
<p>A body of Uhlans came galloping proudly through the
Stonebow a quarter of an hour later, and halted in High
Street as though awaiting orders. Then in rapid succession
troops seemed to arrive from all quarters, many
halting in the Cathedral Close and by Exchequer Gate,
and others riding through the streets in order to terrify
the inhabitants.</p>
<p>Von Kronhelm's famous proclamation was posted by
German soldiers upon the police station, upon the
Stonebow, and upon the door of the grand old Cathedral
itself, and before noon a German officer accompanied by
his staff called upon the Mayor, and warned him that
Lincoln was occupied by the German troops, and that
any armed resistance would be punished by death, as
the Generalissimo's proclamation stated. An indemnity
was demanded, and then the powerless people saw upon
the Cathedral and upon several of the public buildings
the German flag rise and float out upon the summer wind.</p>
<p>Boston was full of German infantry, and officers had
taken up temporary quarters in the Peacock and
other hotels in the market-place, while upon the
"Stump" the enemy's colours were flying.</p>
<p>No news came from London. People in Norwich,
Ipswich, Yarmouth, and other places heard vaguely of
the invasion in the North, and of fighting in which the
Germans were careful to report that they were always
successful. They saw the magnificently equipped army
of the Kaiser, and, comparing it with our mere apology
for military force, regarded the issue as hopeless from
the very first. In every town the German colours were
displayed, and all kinds of placards in German and in
English made their appearance.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>The "Daily Chronicle," on September 10, published
the following despatch from one of its war correspondents:</p>
<div class="right">
"<span class="smcap">Royston</span>, <i>September</i> 9.</div>
<p>"Victory at last. A victory due not only to the bravery
and exertion of our troops, regular and auxiliary, but
also to the genius of Field-Marshal Lord Byfield, our
Commander-in-Chief, ably seconded by the energy and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</SPAN></span>
resource with which Sir William Packington, in command
of the IVth Army Corps at Baldock, carried out
that part of the programme entrusted to him.</p>
<p>"But though in this success we may hope that we are
seeing the first glimmerings of dawn—of deliverance from
the nightmare of German invasion that is now oppressing
our dear old England—we must not be led into foolishly
sanguine hopes. The snake has been scotched, and
pretty badly into the bargain, but he is far from being
killed. The German IVth Army Corps, under the famous
General Von Kleppen, their magnificent Garde Corps
commanded by the Duke of Mannheim, and Frölich's
fine Cavalry Division, have been repulsed in their
attack on our positions near Royston and Saffron Walden,
and driven back with great loss and confusion. But we
are too weak to follow up our victory as it should be
followed up.</p>
<p>"The menace of the IXth and Xth Corps on our right
flank ties us to our selected position, and the bulk of
our forces being composed of indifferently trained Volunteers
and Militia, is much more formidable behind
entrenchments than when attempting to manœuvre in
a difficult and intricate country such as it is about
here. But, on the other hand, we have given pause to
the invaders, and have certainly gained a few days'
time, which will be invaluable to us.</p>
<p>"We shall be able to get on with the line of fortifications
that are being constructed to bar the approaches
to London, and behind which it will be necessary for us
to make our final stand. I do not conceive that it is
possible for such an agglomeration of amateur troops
as ours are in the main to defeat in the open field such
formidable and well-trained forces as the Germans have
succeeded in throwing into this country. But when our
Navy has regained command of the sea, we hope that we
may, before very long, place our unwelcome visitors
'between the devil and the deep sea'—the part of the
devil being played by our brave troops finally concentrated
behind the strong defences of the metropolis.
In short, that the Germans may run out of ammunition
and provisions. For if communication with the Fatherland
is effectively cut, they must starve, unless they have
previously compelled our submission; for it is impossible
for an army of the size that has invaded us to live
on the country.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"No doubt hundreds, nay thousands, of our non-militant
countrymen—and, alas! women and children—will
starve before the German troops are conquered by
famine, that most terrible of enemies; but this issue
seems to be the only possible one that will save the
country.</p>
<p>"But enough of these considerations of the future.
It is time that I should relate what I can of the glorious
victory which our gallant defenders have torn from the
enemy. I do not think that I am giving any information
away if I state that the British position lay mainly between
Saffron Walden and Royston, the headquarters
respectively of the IInd and IIIrd Army Corps. The
IVth Corps was at Baldock, thrown back to cover the
left flank and protect our communications by the Great
Northern Railway. A detached force, from what command
supplied it is not necessary or advisable to say,
was strongly entrenched on the high ground north-west
of Helions Bumpstead, serving to strengthen our right.
Our main line of defence—very thinly held in some
parts—began a little to the south-east of Saffron Walden,
and ran westwards along a range of high ground through
Elmdon and Chrishall to Heydon. Here it turned south
through Great Chrishall to Little Chrishall, where it
again turned west, and occupied the high range south
of Royston on which stands the village of Therfield.</p>
<p>"The night before the battle we knew that the greater
portion of the German IVth and Garde Corps were concentrated,
the former at Newmarket, the 1st Division of
the latter at Cambridge, the 2nd on this side of St.
Ives, while Frölich's Cavalry Division had been in constant
contact with our outposts the greater part of the
day previous. The Garde Cavalry Brigade was reported
to be well away to the westward towards Kettering, as
we suppose, on account of the reports which have been
going about of a concentration of Yeomanry and Militia
in the hilly country near Northampton. Our Intelligence
Department, which appears to have been very well
served by its spies, obtained early knowledge of the intention
of the Germans to make an attack on our position.
In fact, they talked openly of it, and stated at
Cambridge and Newmarket that they would not
manœuvre at all, and only hoped that we should hold
on long enough to our position to enable them to smash
up our IInd and IIIrd Corps by a frontal attack, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</SPAN></span>
so clear the road to London. The main roads lent themselves
admirably to such strategy, which rendered the
reports of their intentions the more probable, for they
all converged on our position from their main points of
concentration.</p>
<p>"The letter 'W' will exactly serve to show the positions
of the contending forces. St. Ives is at the top of
the first stroke, Cambridge at the junction of the two
shorter centre ones, Newmarket at the top of the last
stroke, while the British positions at Royston and Saffron
Walden are at the junctions of all four strokes at
the bottom of the letter. The strokes also represent the
roads, except that from Cambridge three good roads
lead towards each of the British positions. The prisoners
taken from the Germans in the various preliminary
skirmishes also made no bones of boasting that a direct
attack was imminent, and our Commander-in-Chief eventually,
and rightly as it proved, determined to take the
risk of all this information having been specially promulgated
by the German Staff to cover totally different
intentions, as was indeed quite probable, and to accept
it as true. Having made up his mind, he lost no time
in taking action. He ordered the IVth Corps under Sir
William Packington to move on Potton, twelve miles to
the north-west, as soon as it was dark. As many cavalry
and mounted infantry as could possibly be spared from
Royston were placed at his disposal.</p>
<p>"It ought to be stated that while the auxiliary troops
had been busily employed ever since their arrival in entrenching
the British position, the greater part of the
regular troops had been occupying an advanced line
two or three miles to the northward on the lower spurs
of the hills, and every possible indication of a determination
to hold this as long as possible was afforded to
the German reconnoitrers. During the night these troops
fell back to the position which had been prepared, the
outposts following just before daylight. About 6 a.m.
the enemy were reported to be advancing in force along
the Icknield Way from Newmarket, and also by the
roads running on either bank of the river Cam. Twenty
minutes later considerable bodies of German troops were
reported at Fowlmere and Melbourn on the two parallel
Royston-Cambridge roads. They must have followed very
close on the heels of our retiring outposts. It was a
very misty morning—down in the low ground over which<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</SPAN></span>
the enemy were advancing especially so—but about
seven a gust of wind from the westward dispelled the
white fog-wreaths that hung about our left front, and
enabled our lookouts to get a glimpse along the famous
Ermine Street, which runs straight as an arrow from
Royston for twenty or thirty miles to the N.N.W.</p>
<p>"Along this ancient Roman way, far as the eye could
reach, poured a steady stream of marching men, horse,
foot, and artillery. The wind dropped, the mists
gathered again, and once more enveloped the invaders
in an impenetrable screen. But by this time the whole
British line was on the <i>qui vive</i>. Regulars, Militia, and
Volunteers were marching down to their chin-deep
trenches, while those who were already there busied
themselves in improving their loopholes and strengthening
their head cover. Behind the ridges of the hills the
gunners stood grouped about their 'Long Toms' and
heavy howitzers, while the field batteries waited, ready
horsed, for orders to gallop under cover of the ridge
to whichever set of emplacements should first require
to be manned and armed. We had not enough to distribute
before the movements of the enemy should, to
a certain extent, show his hand.</p>
<p>"About seven o'clock a series of crackling reports from
the outskirts of Royston announced that the detachment
of Mounted Infantry, who now alone held it,
was exchanging shots with the advancing enemy, and
in a few minutes, as the morning mistiness cleared off,
the General and his staff, who were established at the
northern edge of the village of Therfield, three or four
hundred feet higher up than the German skirmishers,
were able to see the opening of the battle spread like a
panorama before them. A thick firing line of drab-costumed
Germans extended right across from Holland
Hall to the Coach and Horses on the Fowlmere Road.
On their left moved two or three compact masses of
cavalry, while the infantry reserves were easily apparent
in front of the village of Melbourn. Our Mounted Infantry
in the village were indistinguishable, but away
on the spur to the north-east of Royston a couple of
batteries of Horse Artillery were unlimbered and were
pushing their guns up to the brow of the hill by hand.
In two minutes they were in action, and hard at work.</p>
<p>"Through the glasses the shrapnel could be seen bursting,
half a dozen together, in front of the advancing<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</SPAN></span>
Germans, who began to fall fast. But almost at once
came an overwhelming reply from somewhere out of
sight behind Melbourn. The whole hilltop around our
guns was like a spouting volcano. Evidently big high-explosive
shells were being fired from the German field-howitzers.
In accordance with previous orders, our
horse-gunners at once ran down their guns, limbered up,
and started to gallop back towards our main position.
Simultaneously a mass of German cavalry deployed into
attack formation near the Coach and Horses, and swept
down in their direction with the evident intention of
cutting off and capturing them. But they reckoned without
their escort of Mounted Infantry, who had been
lying low behind the long, narrow line of copse north of
Lowerfield Farm. Safely ensconced behind this—to
cavalry—impassable barrier, the company, all good shots,
opened a terrible magazine fire on the charging squadrons
as they passed at close range. A Maxim they had
with them also swept horses and men away in swathes.
The charge was checked, and the guns saved, but we
had not finished with the German reiters. Away to the
north-east a battery of our 4·7 guns opened on the disorganised
cavalry, firing at a range of four thousand
yards. Their big shells turned the momentary check
into a rout, both the attacking cavalry and their supports
galloping towards Fowlmere to get out of range.
We had scored the first trick!</p>
<p>"The attacking lines of German Infantry still pressed
on, however, and after a final discharge the Mounted
Infantry in Royston sprang on their horses and galloped
back over Whitely Hill, leaving the town to be occupied
by the enemy. To the eastward the thunder of heavy
cannon, gradually growing in intensity, proclaimed that
the IInd Corps was heavily attacked. Covered by a
long strip of plantation, the German IVth Corps contrived
to mass an enormous number of guns on a hill
about two miles north of the village of Elmdon, and a
terrific artillery duel began between them and our artillery
entrenched along the Elmdon-Heydon ridge. Under
cover of this the enemy began to work his infantry up
towards Elmdon, obtaining a certain amount of shelter
from the spurs which ran out towards the north-east
of our line. Other German troops with guns put in an
appearance on the high ground to the north-east of
Saffron Walden, near Chesterton Park.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"To describe the fortunes of this fiercely contested
battle, which spread along a front of nearly twenty miles,
counting from the detached garrison of the hill at
Helions Bumpstead—which, by the way, succeeded in
holding its ground all day, despite two or three most
determined assaults by the enemy—to Kelshall on the
left of the British position, would be an impossibility in
the space at my disposal. The whole morning it raged
all along the northern slopes of the upland held by our
gallant troops. The fiercest fighting was, perhaps, in
the neighbourhood of Elmdon, where our trenches were
more than once captured by the Magdeburg battalions,
only to be themselves hurled out again by the rush of
the 1st Coldstream Guards, who had been held in reserve
near the threatened point. By noon the magnificent
old palace at Audley End was in flames. Art treasures
which were of inestimable value and absolutely
unreplaceable perished in this shocking conflagration.
Desperate fighting was going on in the streets of the
little town of Saffron Walden, where a mingled mass of
Volunteers and Militia strove hard to arrest the advance
of a portion of the German Army which was endeavouring
to work round the right of our position.</p>
<p>"On our left the Foot Guards and Fusiliers of the 1st
German Guard Division, after receiving a terrible pounding
from our guns when they poured into Royston at the
heels of our Mounted Infantry, had fought their way up
the heights to within fifteen hundred yards of our
trenches on the upper slopes of the ridge. Farther than
that they had been unable to advance. Their close formations
offered an excellent target to the rifles of the
Volunteers and Militia lining our entrenchments. The
attackers had lost men in thousands, and were now
endeavouring to dig themselves in as best they could
under the hail of projectiles that continually swept the
hillside. About noon, too, the 2nd Division of the Garde
Corps, after some skirmishing with the Mounted Infantry
away on our left front, got into attack formation
along the line of the Hitchin and Cambridge Railway,
and after pouring a deluge of projectiles from field
guns and howitzers upon our position, advanced upon
Therfield with the greatest bravery and determination.
They had succeeded by 2 p.m. in driving our men from
the end of the spur running northward near Therfield
Heath, and managed to get a number of their howitzers<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</SPAN></span>
up there, and at once opened fire from the cover afforded
by several copses out of which our men had been
driven.</p>
<p>"In short, things were beginning to look very bad
for Old England, and the watchers on the Therfield
heights turned their glasses anxiously northward in
search of General Sir William Packington's force from
Potton. They had not long to wait. At 2.15 the winking
flash of a heliograph away near Wendy Place, about
eight miles up Ermine Street, announced that the
advance guard, consisting of the 1st Royal Welsh Fusiliers,
was already at Bassingbourn, and that the main
body was close behind, having escaped detection by all
the enemy's patrols and flank guards. They were now
directly in the rear of the right of the German reserves,
who had been pushed forward into the neighbourhood of
Royston to support the attack of their main body on
the British position. A few minutes later it was evident
that the enemy had also become aware of their advent.
Two or three regiments hurriedly issued from Royston
and deployed to the north-west. But the guns of the
Baldock Corps turned such a 'rafale' fire upon them
that they hesitated and were lost.</p>
<p>"Every long-range gun in the British entrenchments
that would bear was also turned upon them, leaving the
infantry and field guns to deal with the troops assaulting
their position. The three battalions, as well as a fourth
that was sent to their assistance, were simply swept out
of existence by this terrible cross-fire. Their remnants
streamed away, a disorganised crowd of scattered
stragglers, towards Melbourn; while, still holding on to
Bassingbourn, the Baldock force moved down on Royston,
driving everything before it.</p>
<p>"The most advanced German troops made a final effort
to capture our position when they saw what was going on
behind them, but it was half-hearted; they were brought
to a standstill, and our men, fixing bayonets, sprang from
their trenches and charged down upon them with cheers,
which were taken up all along the line for miles. The
Germans here and there made a partial stand, but in half
an hour they were down on the low ground, falling back
towards the north-east in the greatest confusion, losing
men in thousands from the converging fire of our guns.
Their cavalry made a gallant attempt to save the day
by charging our troops to the north of Royston. It was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</SPAN></span>
a magnificent sight to see their enormous masses sweeping
over the ground with an impetus which looked capable
of carrying everything before it, but our men, clustering
behind the hedges of Ermine Street, mowed them
down squadrons at a time. Not one of them reached the
roadway. The magnificent Garde Corps was routed.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN href="images/i112-hi.png"><ANTIMG src="images/i112.png" width-obs="536" height-obs="500" alt="BATTLE OF ROYSTON SUNDAY SEPT. 9TH." title="" /></SPAN> <span class="caption">BATTLE OF ROYSTON<br/> SUNDAY SEPT. 9TH.</span></div>
<p>"The combined IIIrd and IVth Corps now advanced
on the exposed right flank of the German IVth Corps,
which, fighting gallantly, fell back, doing its best to cover
the retreat of its comrades, who, on their part, very much
hampered its movements. By nightfall there was no unwounded
German south of Whittlesford, except as a prisoner.
By this time, too, we were falling back on our
original position."</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />