<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IX_II" id="CHAPTER_IX_II">CHAPTER IX.</SPAN></h2>
<h3>REVOLTS IN SHOREDITCH AND ISLINGTON.</h3>
<p>On the night of September 27, a very serious conflict,
entailing much loss of life on both the London civilian
and German side, occurred at the point where Kingsland
Road joins Old Street, Hackney Road, and High Street.
Across both Hackney and Kingsland Roads the barricades
built before the bombardment still remained in
a half-ruined state, any attempt at clearing them away
being repulsed by the angry inhabitants. Dalston,
Kingsland, Bethnal Green, and Shoreditch were notably
antagonistic to the invaders, and several sharp encounters
had taken place. Indeed, those districts were discovered
by the enemy to be very unsafe.</p>
<p>The conflict in question, however, commenced at the
corner of Old Street at about 9.30 in the evening, by
three German tailors from Cambridge Road being insulted
by two men, English labourers. The tailors
appealed in German to four Westphalian infantrymen
who chanced to be passing, and who subsequently fired
and killed one of the Englishmen. This was the signal
for a local uprising. The alarm given, hundreds of men
and women rushed from their houses, many of them<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</SPAN></span>
armed with rifles and knives, and, taking cover behind
the ruined barricades, opened fire upon a body of fifty
Germans, who very quickly ran up. The fire was returned,
when from the neighbouring houses a perfect
hail of lead was suddenly rained upon the Germans, who
were then forced to retire down High Street towards
Liverpool Street Station, leaving many dead.</p>
<p>Very quickly news was sent over the telephone, which
the Germans had now established in many quarters of
London, and large reinforcements were soon upon the
scene. The men of Shoreditch had, however, obtained
two Maxim guns, which had been secreted ever since
the entry of the Germans into the Metropolis, and as the
enemy endeavoured to storm their position they swept
the street with a deadly fire. Quickly the situation became
desperate, but the fight lasted over an hour. The
sound of firing brought hundreds upon hundreds of
Londoners upon the scene. All these took arms against
the Germans, who, after many fruitless attempts to
storm the defences, and being fired upon from every
side, were compelled to fall back again.</p>
<p>They were followed along High Street into Bethnal
Green Road, up Great Eastern Street into Hoxton Square
and Pitfield Street, and there cut up, being given no
quarter at the hands of the furious populace. In those
narrow thoroughfares they were powerless, and were
therefore simply exterminated.</p>
<p>The victory for the men of Shoreditch was complete,
over three hundred and fifty Germans being killed, while
our losses were only about fifty.</p>
<p>The conflict was at once reported to Von Kronhelm,
and the very fact that he did not send exemplary punishment
into that quarter was sufficient to show that he
feared to arouse further the hornets' nest in which he
was living, and more especially that portion of the populace
north of the City.</p>
<p>News of the attack, quickly spreading, inspired courage
in every other part of the oppressed Metropolis.</p>
<p>The successful uprising against the Germans in Shoreditch
incited Londoners to rebel, and in various other
parts of the Metropolis there occurred outbreaks.</p>
<p>Von Kronhelm had found to his cost that London
was not to be so easily cowed after all. The size and
population of the Metropolis had not been sufficiently
calculated upon. It was as a country in itself, while the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</SPAN></span>
intricacies of its by-ways formed a refuge for the conspirators,
who were gradually completing their preparations
to rise <i>en masse</i> and strike down the Germans
wherever found. In the open country his great army
could march, manœuvre, and use strategy, but here in
the maze of narrow London streets it was impossible to
know in one thoroughfare what was taking place in the
next.</p>
<p>Supplies, too, were now running very short. The
distress among our vanquished populace was most severe;
while Von Kronhelm's own army was put on meagre
rations. The increasing price of food and consequent
starvation had not served to improve the relations between
the invaders and the citizens of London, who,
though they were assured by various proclamations that
they would be happier and more prosperous under German
rule, now discovered that they were being slowly starved
to death.</p>
<p>Their only hope, therefore, was in the efforts of that
now gigantic organisation, the League of Defenders.</p>
<p>A revolt occurred in Pentonville Road, opposite King's
Cross Underground Station, which ended in a fierce and
terrible fray. A company of the Bremen Infantry Regiment
No. 75, belonging to the IXth Corps, were marching
from the City Road towards Regent's Park, when several
shots were fired at them from windows of shops almost
opposite the station. Five Germans fell dead, including
one lieutenant, a very gorgeous person who wore a
monocle. Another volley rang out before the infantrymen
could realise what was happening, and then it was
seen that the half-ruined shops had been placed in such
a state of defence as to constitute a veritable fortress.</p>
<p>The fire was returned, but a few moments later a
Maxim spat its deadly fire from a small hole in a wall,
and a couple of dozen of the enemy fell upon the granite
setts of the thoroughfare. The rattle of musketry quickly
brought forth the whole of that populous neighbourhood—or
all, indeed, that remained of them—the working-class
district between Pentonville Road and Copenhagen
Street.</p>
<p>Quickly the fight became general. The men of Bremen
endeavoured to take the place by assault, but found
that it was impossible. The strength of the defences
was amazing, and showed only too plainly that Londoners
were in secret preparing for the great uprising that was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</SPAN></span>
being planned. In such a position were the houses
held by the Londoners, that their fire commanded
both the Pentonville and King's Cross Roads; but very
soon the Germans were reinforced by another company of
the same regiment, and these being attacked in the rear
from Rodney Street, Cumming Street, Weston Street,
York Street, Winchester Street, and other narrow turnings
leading into the Pentonville Road, the fighting
quickly became general.</p>
<p>The populace came forth in swarms, men and women,
armed with any weapon or article upon which they could
lay their hands, and all fired with the same desire.</p>
<p>Hundreds of men who came forth were armed with
rifles which had been carefully secreted on the entry of
the enemy into the Metropolis. The greater part of
those men, indeed, had fought at the barricades in North
London, and had subsequently taken part in the street
fighting as the enemy advanced. Some of the arms had
come from the League of Defenders, smuggled into the
Metropolis nobody exactly knew how.</p>
<p>Up and down the King's Cross, Pentonville, and Caledonian
Roads the crowd swayed and fought. The Germans
against that overwhelming mass of angry civilians
seemed powerless. Small bodies of the troops were
cornered in the narrow by-streets, and then given no
quarter. Brave-hearted Londoners, though they knew
well what dire punishment they must inevitably draw
upon themselves, had taken the law into their own hands,
and were shooting or stabbing every German who fell
into their hands.</p>
<p>The scene of carnage in that hour of fighting was
awful. The "Daily Chronicle" described it as one of the
most fiercely contested encounters in the whole history
of the siege. Shoreditch had given courage to King's
Cross, for, unknown to Von Kronhelm, houses in all
quarters were being put in a state of defence, their position
being carefully chosen by those directing the secret
operations of the League of Defenders.</p>
<p>For over an hour the houses in question gallantly held
out, sweeping the streets constantly with their Maxim.
Presently, however, on further reinforcements arriving,
the German colonel directed his men to enter the houses
opposite. In an instant a door was broken in, and presently
glass came tumbling down as muzzles of rifles
were poked through the panes, and soon sharp crackling<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</SPAN></span>
showed that the Germans had settled down to their
work.</p>
<p>The defence of the Londoners was most obstinate. In
the streets, Londoners attacked the enemy with utter
disregard for the risks they ran. Women, among them
many young girls, joined in the fray, armed with pistols
and knives.</p>
<p>After a while a great body of reinforcements appeared
in the Euston Road, having been sent hurriedly along
from Regent's Park. Then the option was given to
those occupying the fortified house to surrender, the
colonel promising to spare their lives. The Londoners
peremptorily refused. Everywhere the fighting became
more desperate and spread all through the streets leading
out of St. Pancras, York, and Caledonian Roads,
until the whole of that great neighbourhood became the
scene of a fierce conflict, in which both sides lost heavily.
Right across Islington the street fighting spread, and
many were the fatal traps set for the unwary German
who found himself cut off in that maze of narrow streets
between York Road and the Angel. The enemy, on the
other hand, were shooting down women and girls as well
as the men, even the non-combatants—those who came
out of their homes to ascertain what was going on—being
promptly fired at and killed.</p>
<p>In the midst of all this somebody ignited some petrol
in a house a few doors from the chapel in Pentonville
Road, and in a few moments the whole row of buildings
were blazing furiously, belching forth black smoke and
adding to the terror and confusion of those exciting
moments. Even that large body of Germans now upon
the scene were experiencing great difficulty in defending
themselves. A perfect rain of bullets seemed directed
upon them on every hand, and to-day's experience certainly
proves that Londoners are patriotic and brave, and in
their own districts they possess a superiority over the
trained troops of the Kaiser.</p>
<p>At length, after a most sanguinary struggle, the
Londoners' position was carried, the houses were entered,
and twenty-two brave patriots, mostly of the working-class,
taken prisoners. The populace now realising that
the Germans had, after all, overpowered their comrades,
in their fortress, fell back; but being pursued northward
towards the railway line between Highbury and Barnsbury
stations, many of them were despatched on the spot.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>What followed was indeed terrible. The anger of the
Germans now became uncontrollable. Having in view
Von Kronhelm's proclamation—which sentenced to death
all who, not being in uniform, fired upon German troops—they
decided to teach the unfortunate populace a
lesson. As a matter of fact, they feared that such revolts
might be repeated in other quarters.</p>
<p>So they seized dozens of prisoners, men and women,
and shot them down. Many of these summary executions
took place against the wall of the St. Pancras Station at
the corner of Euston Road. Men and women were
pitilessly sent to death. Wives, daughters, fathers, sons
were ranged up against that wall, and, at signal from the
colonel, fell forward with bullets through them.</p>
<p>Of the men who so gallantly held the fortified house
not a single one escaped. Strings of men and women
were hurried to their doom in one day, for the troops were
savage with the lust of blood, and Von Kronhelm, though
he was aware of it by telephone, lifted not a finger to
stop those arbitrary executions.</p>
<p>But enough of such details. Suffice it to say that the
stones of Islington were stained with the blood of innocent
Londoners, and that those who survived took a fierce
vow of vengeance. Von Kronhelm's legions had the
upper hand for the moment, yet the conflict and its
bloody sequel had the effect of arousing the fiercest anger
within the heart of every Briton in the metropolis.</p>
<p>What was in store for us none could tell. We were
conquered, oppressed, starved; yet hope was still within
us. The League of Defenders were not idle, while South
London was hourly completing her strength.</p>
<p>It seems that after quelling the revolt at King's Cross
wholesale arrests were made in Islington. The guilt or
innocence of the prisoners did not seem to matter. Von
Kronhelm dealing out to them summary punishment.</p>
<p>Terror reigns in London. One newspaper correspondent—whose
account is published this morning in South
London, having been sent across the Thames by carrier
pigeon, many of which were now being employed by the
newspapers—had an opportunity of witnessing the wholesale
executions which took place yesterday afternoon
outside Dorchester House, where Von Kleppen has established
his quarters. Von Kleppen seems to be the most
pitiless of the superior officers. The prisoners, ranged
up for inspection in front of the big mansion, were mostly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</SPAN></span>
men from Islington, all of whom knew only too well
the fate in store for them. Walking slowly along and
eyeing the ranks of these unfortunate wretches, the
German General stopped here and there, tapping a man
on the shoulder or beckoning him out of the rear ranks.
In most cases, without further word, the individual
thus selected was marched into the Park at Stanhope
Gate, where a small supplementary column was soon
formed.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h2>LEAGUE OF DEFENDERS</h2>
<h3>DAILY BULLETIN</h3>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>The League of Defenders of the British Empire publicly
announce to Englishmen, although the North of London is
held by the enemy:</p>
<p>(1) That England will soon entirely regain command of the
sea, and that a rigorous blockade of the German ports will
be established.</p>
<p>(2) That three of the vessels of the North German Lloyd
Transatlantic passenger service have been captured, together
with a number of minor German ships in the
Channel and Mediterranean.</p>
<p>(3) That four German cruisers and two destroyers have
fallen into the hands of the British.</p>
<p>(4) That</p>
<div class="center">
ENGLAND'S MILLIONS ARE READY<br/>
TO RISE!<br/>
Therefore<br/>
WE ARE NOT YET BEATEN!<br/>
BE PREPARED, AND WAIT.</div>
<p>League of Defenders.</p>
<div class="right">Central Office: Bristol.</div>
</div>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN href="images/i231-hi.png"><ANTIMG src="images/i231.png" width-obs="453" height-obs="300" alt="COPY OF THE "DAILY BULLETIN" OF THE LEAGUE OF DEFENDERS." title="" /></SPAN> <span class="caption">COPY OF THE "DAILY BULLETIN" OF THE LEAGUE OF DEFENDERS.</span></div>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>Those chosen knew that their last hour had come.
Some clasped their hands and fell upon their knees,
imploring pity, while others remained silent and stubborn
patriots. One man, his face covered with blood
and his arm broken, sat down and howled in anguish,
and others wept in silence. Some women—wives and
daughters of the condemned men—tried to get within
the Park to bid them adieu and to urge courage, but
the soldiers beat them back with their rifles. Some of
the men laughed defiantly, others met death with a stony
stare. The eye-witness saw the newly-dug pit that
served as common grave, and he stood by and saw them
shot and their corpses afterwards flung into it.</p>
<p>One young fair-haired woman, condemned by Von
Kleppen, rushed forward to that officer, threw herself<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</SPAN></span>
upon her knees, imploring mercy, and protested her
innocence wildly. But the officer, callous and pitiless,
simply motioned to a couple of soldiers to take her within
the Park, where she shared the same fate as the men.</p>
<p>How long will this awful state of affairs last? We
must die, or conquer. London is in the hands of a legion
of assassins—Bavarians, Saxons, Würtembergers, Hessians,
Badeners—all now bent upon prolonging the reign of
terror, and thus preventing the uprising that they know
is, sooner or later, inevitable.</p>
<p>Terrible accounts are reaching us of how the Germans
are treating their prisoners on Hounslow Heath, at
Enfield, and other places; of the awful sufferings of the
poor unfortunate fellows, of hunger, of thirst, and of
inhuman disregard for either their comfort or their lives.</p>
<p>At present we are powerless, hemmed in by our barricades.
Behind us, upon Sydenham Hill, General Bamford
is in a strong position, and his great batteries are
already defending any attack upon London from the
south. From the terrace in front of the Crystal Palace
his guns can sweep the whole range of southern suburbs.
Through Dulwich, Herne Hill, Champion Hill, and Denmark
Hill are riding British cavalry, all of whom show
evident traces of the hard and fierce campaign. We see
from Sydenham constant messages being heliographed,
for General Bamford and Lord Byfield are in hourly
communication by wireless telegraphy or by other means.</p>
<p>What is transpiring at Windsor is not known, save
that every night there are affairs of outposts with the
Saxons, who on several occasions have attempted to cross
the river by pontoons, and have on each occasion been
driven back.</p>
<p>It was reported to Parliament at its sitting at Bristol
yesterday that the Cabinet had refused to entertain any
idea of paying the indemnity demanded by Germany, and
that their reply to Von Kronhelm is one of open defiance.
The brief summary of the speeches published shows that
the Government are hopeful, notwithstanding the present
black outlook. They believe that when the hour comes
for the revenge, London will rise as a man, and that
Socialists, Nonconformists, Labour agitators, Anarchists,
and demagogues will unite with us in one great national
patriotic effort to exterminate our conquerors as we would
exterminate vermin.</p>
<p>Mr. Gerald Graham has made another great speech<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</SPAN></span>
in the House, in which he reported the progress of the
League of Defenders and its wide-spread ramifications.
He told the Government that there were over seven
millions of able-bodied men in the country ready to
revolt the instant the word went forth. That there would
be terrible bloodshed he warned them, but that the
British would eventually prove the victors he was assured.
He gave no details of the organisation, for to a great
measure it was a secret one, and Von Kronhelm was already
taking active steps to combat its intentions; but he
declared that there was still a strong spirit of patriotism
in the country, and explained how sturdy Scots were
daily making their way south, and how men from Wales
were already massing in Oxford.</p>
<p>The speech was received on both sides of the House
with ringing cheers when, in conclusion, he promised
them that, within a few days, the fiat would go forth,
and the enemy would find himself crushed and powerless.</p>
<p>"South London," he declared, "is our stronghold, our
fortress. To-day it is impregnable, defended by a million
British patriots, and I defy Von Kronhelm—indeed, I
dare him to attack it!"</p>
<p>Von Kronhelm was, of course, well aware of the formation
of the Defenders, but treated the League with contempt.
If there was any attempt at a rising, he would shoot down
the people like dogs. He declared this openly and
publicly, and he also issued a warning to the English
people in the German official "Gazette," a daily periodical
printed in one of the newspaper offices in Fleet Street
in both German and English.</p>
<p>The German commander fully believed that England
was crushed; yet, as the days went on, he was puzzled
that he received no response to his demand for indemnity.
Twice he had sent special despatch-bearers to Bristol,
but on both occasions the result was the same.</p>
<p>Diplomatic representations had been made in Berlin
through the Russian Ambassador, who was now in charge
of British interests in Germany, but all to no purpose.
Our Foreign Minister simply acknowledged receipt of
the various despatches. On the Continent the keenest
interest was manifested at what was apparently a deadlock.
The British had, it was known, regained command
of the sea. Von Kronhelm's supplies were already cut
off. The cables in direct communication between England
and Germany had been severed, and the Continental<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</SPAN></span>
Press, especially the Paris journals, gleefully recounted
how two large Hamburg-American liners attempting to
reach Hamburg by passing north of Scotland had been
captured by British cruisers.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<h2>ENGLISHMEN!</h2>
<div class="center">
Your Homes are Desecrated!<br/>
Your Children are Starving!<br/>
Your Loved Ones are Dead!<br/>
<br/>
WILL YOU REMAIN IN COWARDLY INACTIVITY?</div>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>The German Eagle flies over London. Hull, Newcastle and
Birmingham are in ruins. Manchester is a German
City. Norfolk, Essex, and Suffolk form a German colony.</p>
<p>The Kaiser's troops have brought death, ruin, and starvation
upon you.</p>
</div>
<div class="center"><b>WILL YOU BECOME GERMANS?</b></div>
<h2>NO!</h2>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>Join THE DEFENDERS and fight for England.</p>
<p>You have England's Millions beside you.</p>
</div>
<h2>LET US RISE!</h2>
<div class="blockquot">
<p>Let us drive back the Kaiser's men.</p>
<p>Let us shoot them at sight.</p>
<p>Let us exterminate every single man who has desecrated
English soil.</p>
<p>Join the New League of Defenders.</p>
<p>Fight for your homes. Fight for your wives. Fight for
England.</p>
</div>
<div class="center">
<b>FIGHT FOR YOUR KING!</b><br/>
<br/>
The National League of Defenders' Head Offices.<br/>
Bristol, September 21st, 1910.<br/></div>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN href="images/i234-hi.png"><ANTIMG src="images/i234.png" width-obs="426" height-obs="400" alt="A COPY OF THE MANIFESTO OF THE LEAGUE OF DEFENDERS ISSUED ON SEPTEMBER 21, 1910." title="" /></SPAN> <span class="caption">A COPY OF THE MANIFESTO OF THE LEAGUE OF DEFENDERS ISSUED ON SEPTEMBER 21, 1910.</span></div>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>In the Channel, too, a number of German vessels had
been seized, and one that showed fight off the North
Foreland was fired upon and sunk. The public at home,
however, were more interested in supremacy on land.
It was all very well to have command of the sea, they
argued, but it did not appear to alleviate perceptibly
the hunger and privations on land. The Germans occupied
London, and while they did so all freedom in England was
at an end.</p>
<p>A great poster headed "Englishmen," here reproduced,
was seen everywhere. The whole country was flooded
with it, and thousands upon thousands of heroic Britons,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</SPAN></span>
from the poorest to the wealthiest, clamoured to enrol
themselves. The movement was an absolutely national
one in every sense of the word. The name of Gerald
Graham, the new champion of England's power, was
upon every one's tongue. Daily he spoke in the various
towns in the West of England, in Plymouth, Taunton,
Cardiff, Portsmouth, and Southampton, and, assisted
by the influential committee among whom were many
brilliant speakers and men whose names were as household
words, he aroused the country to the highest pitch
of hatred against the enemy. The defenders, as they
drilled in various centres through the whole of the West
of England, were a strange and incongruous body. Grey-bearded
Army pensioners ranged side by side with
keen, enthusiastic youths, advised them and gave them
the benefit of their expert knowledge. Volunteer officers
in many cases assumed command, together with retired
drill sergeants. The digging of trenches and the making
of fortifications were assigned to navvies, bricklayers,
platelayers, and agricultural labourers, large bodies of
whom were under railway gangers, and were ready to
perform any excavation work.</p>
<p>The Maxims and other machine guns were mostly
manned by Volunteer artillery; but instruction in the
working of the Maxim was given to select classes in
Plymouth, Bristol, Portsmouth, and Cardiff. Time was
of utmost value, therefore the drilling was pushed forward
day and night. It was known that Von Kronhelm
was already watchful of the movements of the League,
and was aware daily of its growth.</p>
<p>In London, with the greatest secrecy, the defenders
were banding together. In face of the German proclamation
posted upon the walls, Londoners were holding meetings
in secret and enrolling themselves.</p>
<p>Though the German eagle flew in Whitehall and from
the summit of St. Stephen's Tower, and though the
heavy tramp of German sentries echoed in Trafalgar
Square, in the quiet, trafficless streets in the vicinity,
England was not yet vanquished.</p>
<p>The valiant men of London were still determined to
sell their liberty dearly, and to lay down their lives for
the freedom of their country and honour of their King.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />