I met and interviewed Christopher Wilton in Great Dunmow, Essex in April 1984. He was born on the Isle of Wight on the 12th December 1897 and enlisted, aged 18, in May 1916. This is what he told me. My comments in square brackets.
"I joined the Gloucesters because my parents, on the male
side, came from Gloucester and we can trace the family back to 1310.
"My first experience as a rookie in the 3rd Gloucesters was
having to peel a whole bag of potatoes and then the next day to cut up a whole
bag of onions and to be yelled at by the local sergeant in charge of recruits.
After that I was sent with a platoon that had about two weeks training, to
Seaford where we were encamped. There I had my first experience of life in a
hut with a sergeant who was very fond of showing how great he was. And it’s
very interesting at this point, because many may not believe this, that I used
to hear some of the older men say, “You wait till you get out to France my
laddie, you’ll have one in your back.” And I understand that this quite often
did happen.
"At college I had been in the Officers’ Training Corps so at
least I did know something about squad drill and how to shoulder arms etc.
Consequently there were a number of privates who had similar experience and we
and they were selected for special training in the evening. Eventually I was
sent to Keble College, Oxford to train as an officer cadet and we lived there
just like the university students, of which there were a number still in
college. I’ve no idea why I was chosen for Keble College; presumably because I
could manipulate my rifle but maybe – and let’s be quite frank about this – maybe
because my father who had been a major in the Isle of Wight Rifles, pulled a
few strings. When the war broke out he was transferred to the Essex Regiment as
a regular officer.
"Anyway, I passed out. I think there must have been a whole
battalion there. There were a thousand of us. I was sent to Colchester where I
joined the 3rd Essex, and then went on to Felixstowe. I know my first
experience was having to go to the sergeants’ mess to taste the beer. I knew
damn well I was looked at by the sergeants in a queer way as much as to say, “what
the hell does he know about beer?” and it was quite true, I’d never had beer in
my life before.
"Eventually I was posted with a draft to France. Mind you,
this was after a total of nine months’ training in the army. We went to
Boulogne and from there my first experience of French railway trucks was “Chevaux
8, Hommes 40”. We were sent up the line to a place called Mazingarbe and went
straight into the trenches as far as I can remember. If you want to know where
Mazingarbe is it’s near La Bassee and Bethune which is in Flanders, the west of
the line. I remember walking from Mazingarbe to Bethune and literally not
meeting a soul. I was allowed a day off to go and have a bath and I went to
Bethune where there was a place which was an officers’ rest house and you could
have a hot bath. I remember sort of living in that hot bath for two hours.
"Now I want to get away from the idea that life was awful. It
wasn’t. As a youngster of eighteen, only recently out of school and some six
months’ training as an apprentice in the Coventry Ordnance Works, I felt
thrilled. This was a completely new life and I’ve often wondered what would
have happened to me if there’d been no war and I’d just carried on with my
apprenticeship. I don’t think I’d have made a very good engineer. Yes, down in
the trenches life was not all that pleasant. Nevertheless, there was a certain
air of expectancy.
"What I hated most was claustrophobia when living down in
dug-outs. I was always scared that a bomb would drop in front of the dug-out
and bury me alive. Now this nearly happened once in the trenches. I was a
second lieutenant and was walking along with another officer and there was a
blast. He had his head blown off and I was partially buried in a mound of dust
and earth. But I recovered out of that.
"Of course one was scared, but not to the extent you might
imagine. The one thing I was really scared of was the midnight patrol in
between the lines in No-Man’s land. Everything’s dead quiet and you suddenly
find this verey light which comes right over you and you’re all exposed unless
you’re down in a shell-hole. Those were
my worst moments: going out on patrol at night time between our front line and
the German front line and just getting into a shell-hole, trying to listen and
see if there was anyone about. That was terrible. Living day in and day out,
sometimes for about ten days before one took one’s boots off, and as a
consequence of that, and later on wearing puttees, I have had osteo arthritis.
It was all mud, thick mud.
"After I don’t know how many months I was eventually
invalided out from the front line. It was called PUO: Pyrexia of Unknown
Origin. What I was I still don’t know today, but I had to go down to Etaples
where the hospital was situated and then I was returned to England to an
officers’ hospital in Wimbledon. All of them had this PUO which was a temperature
which would not come down, and aches and pains all over the body. Anyway, I was
sent on a month’s holiday and then I returned to the Essex Regiment at
Felixstowe and was sent out with a whole platoon to Palestine.
[Palestine account not transcribed here]
"Whilst I was in the trenches in France a brochure came round
saying, “Why not join the Indian Army?” It showed animals and tigers and all
sorts of things and seemed awfully pleasant. I thought, well anything rather
than this, and I put my name down and then forgot all about it. Then, all of a
sudden, one day in March, the adjutant called out, “Wilton, you’re due in Suez
tomorrow. Get cracking, you’re joining the Indian Army.” In those days we were
running a kind of night express to Port Said and on to Suez and so I went and
joined the boat from there.
"In France, on our right, was the Loos offensive. We had the
Portuguese on our right and they suddenly disappeared. All I can remember of
that is one mad rattle which never seemed to stop; machine guns and heavy
artillery fire. It went on, as far as I can remember, for about three days.
This is only hearsay but I’m told the Portuguese disappeared; they retreated.
You can find that out from the archives, it’s well known. [This cannot have been the Battle of Loos as this took place in September 1915 and Christopher Wilton did not arrive overseas until April 1917.]
"I don’t think I was ever in a line that went right over the
top and into the German line. I think at that time the sector was fairly quiet.
We used to watch our planes go over quite a lot. In those days they were small
bi-planes with an open cockpit.
"There was no boredom in the trenches. Nobody could be bored,
there was too much going on all the time. It was very much a war of attrition.
You had to go round inspecting and talking to the fellows. You see, we were
always on the qui vivre. After all, you only had to show your head just a bit
over the trenches and you’d probably get shot straight away.
"... the war made a man of me. I think it did a lot of good to us."
"Our trenches were quite good compared to some I’ve seen.
Obviously if you were there you were continually keeping the trenches in good
form, especially your places of look-out. The people who suffered the most were
the married men who had wives and children, but for young fellas like me it was
an experience. Quite frankly the war made a man of me. I think it did a lot of
good to us to tell you the honest truth because we suddenly realised we were
all the same. If that shell had your name on it, you’d had it, and that shell
could also Tom, Dick and Harry next door.
"We were on parade in India on Armistice Day and General
Rawlinson was inspecting us. Being adjutant I had a horse and I was in front.
He came to me and said, “Well, Wilton, how did you get into the Indian Army?” I
replied, “through the back door sir.” You see, unless you’d been to Sandhurst
you weren’t considered fit for the Indian Army and that’s when things changed
in the India Army. New gentlemen came out."
Christopher Wilton remained in the Indian Army at least until 1923 and possibly a good deal later. He married Marion Cooper in Bengal on the 8th April 1922. Christopher Wilton died in September 1984, just five months after I had recorded his First World War testimony.
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Christopher Wilton remained in the Indian Army at least until 1923 and possibly a good deal later. He married Marion Cooper in Bengal on the 8th April 1922. Christopher Wilton died in September 1984, just five months after I had recorded his First World War testimony.
Need help with your own First World War research? I have been studying the First World War for the past 30-odd years and now offer a fast and cost effective research service.