<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></SPAN>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
<h3>FIERCE FIGHTING AT CHELMSFORD.</h3>
<p>A despatch from Mr. Edgar Hamilton to the "Daily
News," as follows, was published on Saturday, 15th
September:</p>
<p>"At Little Waltham I found myself close to the scene
of action. About a mile ahead of me the hamlet of
Howe Street was in flames and burning furiously. I
could see the shells bursting in and all over it in perfect
coveys. I could not make out where they were
coming from, but an officer I met said he thought the
enemy must have several batteries in action on the high
ground about Littley Green, a mile and a half to the
north on the opposite side of the river. I crossed over
myself, and got up on the knoll where the Leicestershires
and Dorsets had been stationed, together with a number
of the 4·7-inch guns brought from Colchester.</p>
<p>"This piece of elevated ground is about two miles
long, running almost north and south, and at the top
of it I got an extensive view to the eastward right away
to beyond Witham, as the ground fell all the way. The
country was well wooded, and a perfect maze of trees
and hedgerows. If there were any Germans down there
in this plain they were lying very low indeed, for my
glasses did not discover the least indication of their presence.
Due east my view was bounded by the high
wooded ground about Wickham Bishops and Tiptree
Heath, which lay a long blue hummock on the horizon,
while to the south-east Danbury Hill, with our big war-balloon
floating overhead, was plainly discernible.</p>
<p>"While I gazed on the apparently peaceful landscape
I was startled by a nasty, sharp hissing sound, which
came momentarily nearer. It seemed to pass over my
head, and was followed by a loud bang in the air,
where now hung a ring of white smoke. It was a shell<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</SPAN></span>
from the enemy. Just ahead of me was a somewhat
extensive wood; and, urged by some insane impulse of
seeking shelter, I left the car, which I ordered my chauffeur
to take back for a mile and wait, and made for
the close-standing trees. If I had stopped to think I
should have realised that the wood gave me actually
no protection whatever, and I had not gone far when
the crashing of timber and noise of the bursting projectiles
overhead and in the undergrowth around made
me understand clearly that the Germans were making
a special target of the wood, which, I imagine, they
thought might conceal some of our troops. I wished
heartily that I was seated beside my chauffeur in his
fast-receding car.</p>
<p>"However, my first object was to get clear of the wood
again, and after some little time I emerged on the west
side, right in the middle of a dressing station for the
wounded, which had been established in a little hollow.
Two surgeons, with their assistants, were already busily
engaged with a number of wounded men, most of whom
were badly hit by shrapnel bullets about the upper part
of the body. I gathered from one or two of the few most
slightly wounded men that our people had been, and
were, very hardly put to it to hold their own. 'I reckon,'
said one of them, a bombardier of artillery, 'that the
enemy must have got more than a hundred guns firing
at us, and at Howe Street village. If we could only make
out where the foreign devils were,' continued my informant,
'our chaps could have knocked a good many of
them out with our four-point-sevens, especially if we
could have got a go at them before they got within
range themselves. But they must have somehow contrived
to get them into position during the night, for
we saw nothing of them coming up. They are somewhere
about Chatley, Fairstead Lodge, and Little Leighs,
but as we can't locate them exactly, and only have ten
guns up here, it don't give us much chance, does it?'
Later I saw an officer of the Dorsets, who confirmed the
gunner's story, but added that our people were well entrenched
and the guns well concealed, so that none of
the latter had been put out of action, and he thought we
should be able to hold on to the hill all right. I regained
my car without further adventure, bar several narrow
escapes from stray shell, and made my way back as
quickly as possible to Chelmsford.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"The firing went on all day, not only to the northward,
but also away to the southward, where the Saxons,
while not making any determined attack, kept the Vth
Corps continually on the alert, and there was an almost
continuous duel between the heavy pieces. As it appeared
certain that the knoll I had visited in the forenoon
was the main objective of the enemy's attack,
reinforcements had been more than once sent up there,
but the German shell fire was so heavy that they found
it almost impossible to construct the additional cover
required. Several batteries of artillery were despatched
to Pleshy and Rolphy Green to keep down, if possible,
the fire of the Germans, but it seemed to increase rather
than diminish. They must have had more guns in action
than they had at first. Just at dusk their infantry had
made the first openly offensive movement.</p>
<p>"Several lines of skirmishers suddenly appeared in the
valley between Little Leighs and Chatley, and advanced
towards Lyonshall Wood, at the north end of the knoll
east of Little Waltham. They were at first invisible
from the British gun positions on the other side of the
Chelmer, and when they cleared the spur on which
Hyde Hall stands they were hardly discernible in the
gathering darkness. The Dorsetshire and the other
battalions garrisoning the knoll manned their breastworks
as they got within rifle range, and opened fire,
but they were still subjected to the infernal rafale from
the Hanoverian guns on the hills to the northward, and
to make matters worse at this critical moment the Xth
Corps brought a long line of guns into action between
Flacks Green and Great Leighs Wood, in which position
none of the British guns except a few on the knoll itself
could reach them. Under this cross hurricane of projectiles
the British fire was quite beaten down, and the
Germans followed up their skirmishers by almost solid
masses, which advanced with all but impunity save for
the fire of the few British long-range guns at Pleshy
Mount. There they were firing almost at random, as the
gunners could not be certain of the exact whereabouts
of their objectives. There was a searchlight on the knoll,
but at the first sweep of its ray it was absolutely demolished
by a blizzard of shrapnel. Every German gun
was turned upon it. The Hanoverian battalions now
swarmed to the assault, disregarding the gaps made in
their ranks by the magazine fire of the defenders as<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</SPAN></span>
soon as their close advance masked the fire of their own
cannon.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN href="images/i124-hi.png"><ANTIMG src="images/i124.png" width-obs="480" height-obs="500" alt="BATTLE OF CHELMSFORD. Position on the Evening of September 11." title="" /></SPAN> <span class="caption">BATTLE OF CHELMSFORD.<br/> Position on the Evening of September 11.</span></div>
<p>"The British fought desperately. Three several times
they hurled back at the attackers, but, alas! we were
overborne by sheer weight of numbers. Reinforcements
summoned by telephone, as soon as the determined
nature of the attack was apparent, were hurried up from
every available source, but they only arrived in time to
be carried down the hill again in the rush of its defeated
defenders, and to share with them the storm of
projectiles from the quick-firers of General von Kronhelm's
artillery, which had been pushed forward during
the assault. It was with the greatest difficulty that the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</SPAN></span>
shattered and disorganised troops were got over the
river at Little Waltham. As it was, hundreds were
drowned in the little stream, and hundreds of others killed
and wounded by the fire of the Germans. They had won
the first trick. This was indisputable, and as ill news
travels apace, a feeling of gloom fell upon our whole force,
for it was realised that the possession of the captured
knoll would enable the enemy to mass troops almost
within effective rifle range of our river line of defence. I
believe that it was proposed by some officers on the staff
that we should wheel back our left and take up a fresh
position during the night. This was overruled, as it was
recognised that to do so would enable the enemy to push
in between the Dunmow force and our own, and so cut our
general line in half. All that could be done was to get
up every available gun and bombard the hill during the
night in order to hamper the enemy in his preparations for
further forward movement and in his entrenching operations.</p>
<p>"Had we more men at our disposal I suppose there
is little doubt that a strong counter-attack would have
been made on the knoll almost immediately; but in the
face of the enormous numbers opposed to us, I imagine
that General Blennerhasset did not feel justified in denuding
any portion of our position of its defenders. So
all through the dark hours the thunder of the great
guns went on. In spite of the cannonade the Germans
turned on no less than three searchlights from the southern
end of the knoll about midnight. Two were at once
put out by our fire, but the third managed to exist for
over half an hour, and enabled the Germans to see how
hard we were working to improve our defences along
the river bank. I am afraid that they were by this
means able to make themselves acquainted with the
positions of a great number of our trenches. During
the night our patrols reported being unable to penetrate
beyond Pratt's Farm, Mount Maskell, and Porter's Farm
on the Colchester Road. Everywhere they were forced
back by superior numbers. The enemy were fast closing
in upon us. It was a terrible night in Chelmsford.</p>
<p>"There was panic on every hand. A man mounted the
Tindal statue and harangued the crowd, urging the people
to rise and compel the Government to stop the war.
A few young men endeavoured to load the old Crimean
cannon in front of the Shire Hall, but found it clogged
with rust and useless. People fled from the villa residences
in Brentwood Road into the town for safety,
now that the enemy were upon them. The banks in
High Street were being barricaded, and the stores still
remaining in the various grocers' shops, Luckin Smith's,
Martin's, Cramphorn's, and Pearke's, were rapidly being
concealed from the invaders. All the ambulance waggons
entering the town were filled with wounded, although
as many as possible were sent south by train. By
one o'clock in the morning, however, most of the civilian
inhabitants had fled. The streets were empty, but
for the bivouacking troops and the never-ending procession
of wounded men. The General and his staff
were deliberating to a late hour in the Shire Hall, at
which he had established his headquarters. The booming
of the guns waxed and waned till dawn, when a furious
outburst announced that the second act of the tragedy
was about to open.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>DECREE</h2>
<h3>CONCERNING THE POWER OF COUNCILS OF WAR.</h3>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>WE, GOVERNOR-GENERAL OF EAST ANGLIA, in virtue of the powers conferred
upon us by His Imperial Majesty the German Emperor, Commander-in-Chief of
the German Armies, order, for the maintenance of the internal and external security of
the counties of the Government-General:—</p>
<p>ARTICLE I.—Any individual guilty of incendiarism or of wilful inundation, of attack,
or of resistance with violence against the Government-General or the agents of the civil
or military authorities, of sedition, of pillage, of theft with violence, of assisting prisoners
to escape, or of exciting soldiers to treasonable acts, shall be PUNISHED BY DEATH.</p>
<p>In the case of any extenuating circumstances, the culprit may be sent to penal servitude
with hard labour for twenty years.</p>
<p>ARTICLE II.—Any person provoking or inciting an individual to commit the crimes
mentioned in Article I. will be sent to penal servitude with hard labour for ten years.</p>
<p>ARTICLE III.—Any person propagating false reports relative to the operations of war
or political events will be imprisoned for one year, and fined up to £100.</p>
<p>In any case where the affirmation or propagation may cause prejudice against the
German Army, or against any authorities or functionaries established by it, the culprit
will be sent to hard labour for ten years.</p>
<p>ARTICLE IV.—Any person usurping a public office, or who commits any act or issues
any order in the name of a public functionary, will be imprisoned for five years, and
fined £150.</p>
<p>ARTICLE V.—Any person who voluntarily destroys or abstracts any documents,
registers, archives, or public documents deposited in public offices, or passing through
their hands in virtue of their functions as government or civic officials, will be imprisoned
for two years, and fined £150.</p>
<p>ARTICLE VI.—Any person obliterating, damaging, or tearing down official notices,
orders, or proclamations of any sort issued by the German authorities will be imprisoned
for six months, and fined £80.</p>
<p>ARTICLE VII.—Any resistance or disobedience of any order given in the interests of
public security by military commanders and other authorities, or any provocation or
incitement to commit such disobedience, will be punished by one year's imprisonment, or
a fine of not less than £150.</p>
<p>ARTICLE VIII.—All offences enumerated in Articles I.—VII. are within the jurisdiction
of the Councils of War.</p>
<p>ARTICLE IX.—It is within the competence of Councils of War to adjudicate upon all
other crimes and offences against the internal and external security of the English provinces
occupied by the German Army, and also upon all crimes against the military or civil
authorities, or their agents, as well as murder, the fabrication of false money, of blackmail,
and all other serious offences.</p>
<p>Article X.—Independent of the above, the military jurisdiction already proclaimed
will remain in force regarding all actions tending to imperil the security of the German
troops, to damage their interests, or to render assistance to the Army of the British
Government.</p>
<p>Consequently, there will be PUNISHED BY DEATH, and we expressly repeat this,
all persons who are not British soldiers and—</p>
<p>(a) Who serve the British Army or the Government as spies, or receive British spies,
or give them assistance or asylum.</p>
<p>(b) Who serve as guides to British troops, or mislead the German troops when charged
to act as guides.</p>
<p>(c) Who shoot, injure, or assault any German soldier or officer.</p>
<p>(d) Who destroy bridges or canals, interrupt railways or telegraph lines, render roads
impassable, burn munitions of war, provisions, or quarters of the troops.</p>
<p>(e) Who take arms against the German troops.</p>
<p>ARTICLE XI.—The organisation of Councils of War mentioned in Articles VIII. and
IX. of the Law of May 2, 1870, and their procedure are regulated by special laws which
are the same as the summary jurisdiction of military tribunals. In the case of Article X.
there remains in force the Law of July 21, 1867, concerning the military jurisdiction
applicable to foreigners.</p>
<p>ARTICLE XII.—The present order is proclaimed and put into execution on the
morrow of the day upon which it is affixed in the public places of each town and village,
The Governor-General of East Anglia,</p>
<div class="right"><b>COUNT VON SCHONBURG-WALDENBERG,<br/>
Lieutenant-General.</b></div>
<p><span class="smcap">Norwich</span>, <i>September 7th</i>, 1910.</p>
</div>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN href="images/i126-hi.png"><ANTIMG src="images/i126.png" width-obs="452" height-obs="800" alt="DECREE CONCERNING THE POWER OF COUNCILS OF WAR." title="" /></SPAN></div>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>"I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</SPAN></span> had betaken myself at once to the round tower
of the church, next the Stone Bridge, from which I had
an excellent view both east and north. The first thing
that attracted my eye was the myriad flashings of rifle
fire in the dimness of the breaking day. They reached
in a continuous line of coruscations from Boreham Hall,
opposite my right hand, to the knoll by Little Waltham,
a distance of three or four miles, I should say. The enemy
were driving in all our outlying and advanced troops by
sheer weight of numbers. Presently the heavy batteries
at Danbury began pitching shell over in the direction
of the firing, but as the German line still advanced,
it had not apparently any very great effect. The next
thing that happened was a determined attack on the
village of Howe Street made from the direction of Hyde
Hall. This is about two miles north of Little Waltham.
In spite of our incessant fire, the Germans had contrived
to mass a tremendous number of guns and howitzers on
and behind the knoll they captured last night, and
there was any quantity more on the ridge above Hyde
Hall. All these terrible weapons concentrated their
fire for a few moments on the blackened ruins of Howe
Street. Not a mouse could have lived there. The little
place was simply pulverised.</p>
<p>"Our guns at Pleshy Mount and Rolphy Green, aided
by a number of field batteries, in vain endeavoured to
make head against them. They were outnumbered by<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</SPAN></span>
six to one. Under cover of this tornado of iron and
fire, the enemy pushed several battalions over the river,
making use of the ruins of the many bridges about
there which had been hastily destroyed, and which they
repaired with planks and other materials they brought
along with them. They lost a large number of men in
the process, but they persevered, and by ten o'clock
were in complete possession of Howe Street, Langley's
Park, and Great Waltham, and moving in fighting formation
against Pleshy Mount and Rolphy Green, their guns
covering their advance with a perfectly awful discharge
of shrapnel. Our cannon on the ridge at Partridge
Green took the attackers in flank, and for a time checked
their advance, but, drawing upon themselves the attention
of the German artillery, on the south end of the
knoll, were all but silenced.</p>
<p>"As soon as this was effected another strong column
of Germans followed in the footsteps of the first, and
deploying to the left, secured the bridge at Little
Waltham, and advanced against the gun positions on
Partridge Green. This move turned all our river bank
entrenchments right down to Chelmsford. Their defenders
were now treated to the enfilade fire of a number
of Hanoverian batteries that galloped down to Little
Waltham. They stuck to their trenches gallantly, but
presently when the enemy obtained a footing on Partridge
Green they were taken in reverse, and compelled
to fall back, suffering terrible losses as they did so. The
whole of the infantry of the Xth Corps, supported—as
we understand—by a division which had joined them
from Maldon, now moved down on Chelmsford. In
fact, there was a general advance of the three combined
armies stretching from Partridge Green on the
west to the railway line on the east. The defenders of
the trenches facing east were hastily withdrawn, and
thrown back on Writtle. The Germans followed closely
with both infantry and guns, though they were for a
time checked near Scot's Green by a dashing charge
of our cavalry brigade, consisting of the 16th Lancers
and the 7th, 14th, and 20th Hussars, and the Essex
and Middlesex Yeomanry. We saw nothing of their
cavalry, for a reason that will be apparent later. By
one o'clock fierce fighting was going on all round the
town, the German hordes enveloping it on all sides but
one. We had lost a great number of our guns, or at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</SPAN></span>
any rate had been cut off from them by the German
successes around Pleshy Mount, and in all their assaults
on the town they had been careful to keep out of effective
range of the heavy batteries on Danbury Hill. These,
by the way, had their own work cut out for them, as
the Saxon artillery were heavily bombarding the hill
with their howitzers. The British forces were in a critical
situation. Reinforcements—such as could be spared—were
hurried up from the Vth Army Corps, but they were
not very many in numbers, as it was necessary to provide
against an attack by the Saxon Corps. By three o'clock
the greater part of the town was in the hands of the
Germans, despite the gallant way in which our men fought
them from street to street, and house to house. A dozen
fires were spreading in every direction, and fierce fighting
was going on at Writtle. The overpowering numbers
of the Germans, combined with their better organisation,
and the number of properly trained officers at their disposal,
bore the British mixed Regular and Irregular
forces back, and back again.</p>
<p>"Fearful of being cut off from his line of retreat,
General Blennerhasset, on hearing from Writtle soon
after three that the Hanoverians were pressing his left
very hard, and endeavouring to work round it, reluctantly
gave orders for the troops in Chelmsford to
fall back on Widford and Moulsham. There was a lull
in the fighting for about half an hour, though firing
was going on both at Writtle and Danbury. Soon after
four a terrible rumour spread consternation on every
side. According to this, an enormous force of cavalry
and motor infantry was about to attack us in the rear.
What had actually happened was not quite so bad as
this, but quite bad enough. It seems, according to our
latest information, that almost the whole of the cavalry
belonging to the three German Army Corps with whom
we were engaged—something like a dozen regiments,
with a proportion of horse artillery and all available
motorists, having with them several of the new armoured
motors carrying light, quick-firing and machine guns—had
been massed during the last thirty-six hours behind
the Saxon lines extending from Maldon to the River
Crouch. During the day they had worked round to
the southward, and at the time the rumour reached us
were actually attacking Billericay, which was held by a
portion of the reserves of our Vth Corps. By the time<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</SPAN></span>
this news was confirmed the Germans were assaulting
Great Baddow, and moving on Danbury from east,
north, and west, at the same time resuming the offensive
all along the line. The troops at Danbury must
be withdrawn or they would be isolated. This difficult
manœuvre was executed by way of West Hanningfield.
The rest of the Vth Corps conformed
to the movement, the Guards Brigade at East
Hanningfield forming the rearguard, and fighting
fiercely all night through with the Saxon troops, who
moved out on the left flank of our retreat. The wreck
of the first Corps and the Colchester garrison was now
also in full retirement. Ten miles lay between it and
the lines at Brentwood, and had the Germans been
able to employ cavalry in pursuit, this retreat would
have been even more like a rout than it was. Luckily
for us the Billericay troops mauled the German cavalry
pretty severely, and they were beset in the close country
in that neighbourhood by Volunteers, motorists, and
every one that the officer commanding at Brentwood
could get together in this emergency.</p>
<p>"Some of them actually got upon our line of retreat,
but were driven off by our advance guard; others came
across the head of the retiring Vth Corps, but the terrain
was all against cavalry, and after nightfall most of them
had lost their way in the maze of lanes and hedgerows
that covered the countryside. Had it not been for this
we should probably have been absolutely smashed. As
it was, rather more than half our original numbers of
men and guns crawled into Brentwood in the early
morning, worn out and dead-beat."</p>
<p>Reports from Sheffield also showed the position to be
critical.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />