By: John McGuiggan
Barrister at Law
[email protected]
[email protected]
Mobile: 0868544594
For a dead English soldier of the Great
War era it really doesn't matter whether the foreign field in which
you finally rest is in Flanders or in Dublin. At least it shouldn't.
But scattered across Dublin cemeteries lie the forgotten remains
of the young men of the Sherwood Foresters Regiment who were slaughtered
on Dublin's Streets during the 1916 Easter Rising.
Their story, like their scruffy and neglected
graves, remains largely forgotten in the long and embarrassed history
of the English in Ireland. They were volunteers, recruited from
the towns and villages of Nottinghamshire. From Newark and Bingham
from Huthwaite and Hucknall, Robin Hood county, the English folk
hero from which the regiment took it's name. They had responded
to Kitchener's posters, to fight in the trenches of Belgium and
France, but had been caught instead in a smaller cause and had been
pulled out of basic training at Watford to be thrown into street
fighting against the Irish Rebels in Dublin. They were so raw. Most
had less than three months of military service. They were unfamiliar
with their weapons and had not yet had live firing practice.
Young men with guns and little training
are as much of a danger to themselves as they are to anyone else.
On Dublin's dockside their officers issued live ammunition but ensured
that as the men charged their weapons they were pointing their rifles
safely out to sea - just in case of accidents amongst such unskilled
soldiers. The officers, all volunteers from English public schools,
breakfasted at St. George's harbourside Yacht club while the men
opened tins of bully beef and biscuits. Some of the men thought
they had landed in France. They were excited, keen, anxious and
apprehensive.In the panelled rooms of the Yacht club the officers
were briefed on the outbreak of Rebellion and given their orders.
They were to divide their forces. Two of the battalions, Derbyshire
men, would march round the city and enter from the west, making
their way to Kilmainham hospital, now the Irish Museum of Modern
Art, and thence to Dublin castle. They were to be heavily engaged
in the rebellion but would suffer light causalities. Their most
notable presence became known through the use of Guinness Company
boilers mounted on the rear of lorries and deployed around the city
centre as makeshift armoured cars.
The other two battalions, the Nottinghamshire
men, faced a much graver fate. They were to march straight though
the heart of Dublin. Many of the raw young Robin Hoods would never
make it. They would never see Belgium or France and never see again
the forests of their native Sherwood.They marched towards their
destiny armed only with Lee-Enfield rifles and bayonets. There was
not a handgrenade between them. At Watford they had left with Lewis
machine guns, two to each battalion. A fearsome, drum fed weapon,
capable of firing .303 calibre bullets at a rate of upto 600 rounds
per minute. But at Liverpool a zealous and bureaucratic loading
officer insisted they leave the Lewis guns behind. It was to be
a costly error.The Rebels towards which they now advanced were under
the command of Eamon de Valera, the future Taoiseach and President
of Ireland. They had been training for this moment for years. They
were on home ground, better trained and more experienced than the
oncoming Sherwood Foresters, well armed and superbly positioned
in buildings heavily reinforced with sandbags and makeshift Barricades.
Their task was to hold the Mount Street Canal Bridge and prevent
troops entering the city centre to reinforce those already fighting
around the General Post Office. They had to stop the oncoming Sherwood
Foresters. At Clanwilliam house, directly opposite the bridge, De.Valera
deployed some six men armed with a mix of Lee-Enfield's, German
mausers and Italian Martini rifles. The house was a large gracious
three story Georgian end terrace, with long elegant windows which
gave commanding views over the approaches to the Mount Street bridge.
More men were deployed in a school on the south corner of the bridge.
And on the approach road to the bridge, at No. 25 Northumberland
Road, behind barricaded and looped firing positions were deployed
the experienced rebel volunteers Grace and Malone. They were to
inflict the first and the heaviest of the Sherwood's casualties
and the house, which still stands , bears a commemorative plaque
to their efforts. In all some seventeen rebels held the chosen strongpoints
around the Mount St. Bridge.
The Mount Street canal bridge area is
one of the most opulent of Dublin's suburbs. Graced by large substantial
houses. It is the most sought after residential quarter of the city.
But only for the rich for the houses are splendid and today you
would pay more than two millon pounds for a semi-detached house
of the kind in which Grace and Malone now awaited the raw unskilled
soldiers of the Sherwood Foresters. They marched in the fine sunlight
of a Dublin Spring. From Kingstown, where they landed (now known
as Dun Laoghaire) though the wide tree lined streets towards the
Canal bridge. Some harassing fire was directed at them as they neared
the vicinity of the bridge but it was not of any great or determined
effect. It was largely an enjoyable march, for the residents welcomed
them and pressed tea and sandwiches upon the soldiers and offered
gifts, including maps and field glasses. The battalion scouts riding
ahead on bicycles were given detailed intelligence as to the Rebel
positions towards which they now approached. Not all the intelligence
was accurate. The Battalion adjutant Capt. Dietrichsen, a Nottingham
barrister, was surprised and delighted to find his wife and children
amongst those waving and welcoming the marching troops. She had
left their native Nottingham, in fear of German Zeppelin raids,
for the safety of Dublin. They embraced and hugged in the pure joy
of the surprise. Captain Dietrichsen was amongst the first of the
Robin Hoods to die. At the next corner, minutes after embracing
his family, just
300 yards from the canal bridge, he, with the advance guard of the
battalion, came under withering sustained fire from the rebels in
25 Northumberland Road. Ten Sherwood Foresters fell , amongst them
Captain Dietrichsen and his colleague Lt. Hawken. The soldiers fell
back onto the opposite side of the road not yet knowing from where
the shots had come. They deployed along Northumberland Road in the
spring sunshine, returning fire when they could. But streetfighting
with rifles is an ineffective response to a well positioned urban
enemy behind good and organised cover. What you need to get them
out is light artillery, or tanks. The Lewis guns, left behind in
Liverpool, would have kept the rebel heads down and reduced the
now rapidly escalating casualties, but without a heavier and bettor
weaponed response then it was always going to be wasteful slaughter.
So it was to prove. Whatever these young raw Robin Hoods lacked
in military experience and skills, they lacked nothing in bravery.
No. 25 was identified as the source of their comrades sudden death
and the remaining officers drew their swords and led the men in
a ferocious bayonet charge across the road and towards the rebel's
house. As they charged towards No. 25 they were caught in a merciless
crossfire as the rebels in Clanwilliam house now opened fire. Terrible
casualties were inflicted and soldiers fell all across Northumberland
Road. From No. 25, Grace and Malone were firing point blank into
the desperate ranks of the Robin Hoods, Grace emptying his Mauser
pistol in an orgy of violence in the quiet and gracious suburb.
Northumberland Road was wet with English
Blood. The British infantry had been trained to advance towards
enemy lines on the sound of a whistle. It was the only tactic they
knew. Now, every twenty minutes or so, on the sound of a British
Army issue whistle, the Robin Hoods again charged their enemy. They
charged No. 25 Northumberland Road. They charged the school at the
corner of the bridge. They charged the bridge. They charged Clanwilliam
House. They charged and charged, and were slaughtered. They were
refused permission to flank the rebels with an attack from the right.
Only frontal attacks were to be allowed. The attacks were to be
pressed home "at all costs". Frontal charges onto the
guns of the rebels.
By late in the day, when the Dublin Military
Garrison provided them with a Lewis gun and with handgrenades, they
had already lost some 230 men in dead and wounded. They lay all
over the quiet suburb, along the grassy canal banks, by the bridge,
around the school, the parochial hall, and across the steps of the
grand houses. It was the handbombs and the machine gun that turned
the battle. No 25 was finally overwhelmed with bombs, and one of
the rebels shot, the other escaping. The school was taken but no
rebels found, only the dead caretaker and his equally dead wife,
the bridge was crossed, Clanwilliam house was bombed and burned
and here, in the words of the regiments historian, at least three
rebels met their death at the hands of the Robin Hoods, the other
rebels getting clean away. From the perspective of the rebels this
had been a magnificent victory. So many English dead at the hands
of so few rebels. It was the Rorke's Drift of the Rebellion. Seventeen
men had held off two battalions of the British Army. For the British
it was a disaster.
Within a twenty minute march of the bridge
there were half a dozen other bridges that could have been crossed
with little difficulty and which would have delayed the soldiers
by no more than half an hour. Instead they had engaged in a full-scale
struggle with untrained troops against an well-entrenched and highly
motivated enemy. It was the classic example of how not to fight
a street battle. Perhaps the first important lesson for the British
Military in street fighting tactics. For the raw dead teenage soldiers
it was a tragedy. They must have known when they volunteered for
the Great War, that death was a possibility, they knew that they
might die in Belgium or in France. But Dublin. Death in Dublin would
never have entered their minds. Had they died in Flanders they would
at least have merited a well-kept grave with a noble military headstone.
They would be visited, and honoured on Remembrance Day. Capt. Dietrichsen,
perhaps because his family were in Dublin, got a private marked
grave, but unlike those of his comrades who lie in the military
cemeteries of Belgium an France, his Dublin corner of a foreign
field lies scruffy, neglected and forgotten, his name worn to nothing
by the passage of time.Some of the dead soldiers' lie in decent
graves well kept and tendered with proper care and respect by Irish
cemetery staff, military graves, listed in the records of the Commonwealth
War Graves Commission, it is the way that military dead should be
treated.Others lie in sad untidy plots, scattered around Dublin
cemeteries, neglected by age, forgotten by history. One or two of
the dead have no graves at all and appear to have been dumped in
a mass grave, along with civilian and rebel dead, at Dublin's Deans
Grange graveyard. Perhaps the military performance of the Robin
Hoods was considered so poor that they were not and are not recalled
with the same degree of honour that we remember the dead from Flanders
or the dead from World War II. That cannot be, for these raw young
soldiers were as brave as lions. Their slaughter was not of their
own making and any military deficiency in the Mount Street bridge
battle came from the poor leadership and direction given by the
Generals of the British High Command in Ireland, not from the performance
or bravery of the Sherwood Foresters, men or officers. These were
young volunteers, as noble as any soldiers who ever died in military
service. In November on Remembrance Day, think of them when you
wear your poppy. They deserve nothing less.
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