Volume 1, Issue 4 NEWSLETTER December 2015 subscribe to our free monthly newsletter at www.rclbranch92.com How Festive Spirit Halted Great War by Neil Griffithsm (Edited story) NINETY ONE years ago tonight, a group of bedraggled Scottish soldiers, Cameronians mostly from Lanark, spotted Germans clambering into the open with no sign of hostile intent. They were on the Western Front, near Lille. Baffled, they held their fire but the Germans came right up to the trench and offered cigars. It was 1914 and the near-mythical Christmas truce had begun, when men laid down their weapons, shook hands and embraced the season's message of peace on earth. If it seems incredible to us, to the men themselves it seemed beyond comprehension. The huge armies dug in and watched each other as close neighbours, able to hear one another's chatter and smell their cooking. The final attack by the British, on December 19, at Ploegsteert Wood, ended in a local armistice in which both sides helped each other bury their dead. On Christmas Eve, frost hardened the mud and froze the pools. When night fell, almost simultaneously, the Germans mounted trees on their parapets and lit candles and lanterns. Thousands of British watched in fascination as the wondrous sight was joined by the distant haunting sound of men singing Stille Nacht. Continued on Page 2 SPECIAL EVENT "A BIT OF NOSTALGIA" NEW YEARS PARTY & DANCE 9PM - 1AM get your tickets early - limited seating tickets $15 at bar A Carol from Flanders by Frederick Niven (1878-1944) This poem recounts the story of the spontaneous 1914 Christmas truce along the lines of the Western front. In Flanders on the Christmas morn The trenched foemen lay, the German and the Briton born, And it was Christmas Day. The red sun rose on fields accurst, The gray fog fled away; But neither cared to fire the first, For it was Christmas Day! They called from each to each across The hideous disarray, For terrible has been their loss: "Oh, this is Christmas Day!" Their rifles all they set aside, One impulse to obey; 'Twas just the men on either side, Just men — and Christmas Day. They dug the graves for all their dead And over them did pray: And Englishmen and Germans said: "How strange a Christmas Day!" Between the trenches then they met, Shook hands, and e'en did play At games on which their hearts were set On happy Christmas Day. Not all the emperors and kings, Financiers and they Who rule us could prevent these things — For it was Christmas Day. Oh ye who read this truthful rime From Flanders, kneel and say: God speed the time when every day Shall be as Christmas Day. How Festival Spirit Halted Great War - Continued THERE cannot have been a moment like it in either the history of war or in the performing arts. Every survivor spoke of the abiding impact of that one carol. In many cases the British responded with a carol of their own, applause or calls for more. Almost always the second was Tannenbaum. When the British sang O Come All Ye Faithful the Germans accompanied with the Latin version, Adeste Fideles. Seaforth Highlanders, just to the north of Ploegsteert Wood were, unusually, the first to begin the singing but were "spellbound" with the returned carol. A Corporal Ferguson led most of his company into no man's land for cigarettes and handshakes - accompanied by calls of "Fergie, Fergie?" so that the Germans imagined this to be a Highland greeting and politely repeated it. Argyll & Sutherland Highlanders near Armentieres initially agreed that only two from each side should meet but quickly changed their minds. Christmas Day dawned calm, still and very cold. Services were held but the singing was muted for fear Canadian soldiers enjoying a few drinks on Christmas Day at the front, Ortona, Italy, 25 December 1943. Photo: Lieut. Frederick G. Whitcombe / Canada. Dept. of National Defence / Library and Archives Canada / PA-163936 Remembrance Day Service at Carveth Care Centre November 11th 2015 that the night before's truce was an aberration, but the process quickly repeated itself. Almost all accounts suggest the Germans initiated the moves. The day was spent identifying and burying the dead. The Rev Esselmount Adams, chaplain to the Gordon Highlanders, organised a joint service in no-man's land with prayers in German and English. Both sides wrote home using phrases like "fairytale", "day of fiction" and "extraordinary". Rations and cigarettes were swapped even though the British hated the German tobacco. Buttons and regimental flashes were exchanged, the ultimate souvenir being a pickel-haube (the spiked helmet). By 1917 friendly meetings were unthinkable. By 1918 the Armistice had been signed and the memory of the Christmas truce of 1914 slipped into legend, a moment from the forgotten golden age when even the participants suspected it never happened. But it did happen - when man's fundamental decency surfaced briefly in the midst of hell - and should never be forgotten. • Neil Griffiths is the press officer of the Royal British Legion Scotland. Source: Edinburgh News Annie Poirier and "the boys" at Carveth (Roehl, Parrell, and Richard or (maybe) Wynken, Blynken and Nod) (R.C.A.S.C.), displaying toys which will be presented to Dutch children during a Christmas party, Nijmegen, Netherlands, 20 December 1944. NEW YEARS LEVEE -JAN. 1ST 2016 All Legion Members are invited 10am -Meet and Greet with MP, MPP & Mayor 11am- Ceremony and Naming of Honouree of the Year Noon - 3pm - Light Buffet CALENDAR OF EVENTS December 11 – Billy Bridger Show 7 – 11:00 December 18 - Meat Draw starting at 5:00 December 18 – The Reasons 7 – 11:00 pm December 31 - New Years Party - 9pm-1am For more information go to the Legion Face Book page or our Web Site www.rclbranch92.com Remembrance Day Gananoque November 11th Pictures by Lorraine Payette
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