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Our Committee is raising funds to create a lasting legacy telling the story of Lemnos' link to Gallipoli and Australia's Anzac story. Our projects include the Lemnos Gallipoli Memorial in Albert Park, the publication of a major new historical and pictorial publication and more. To make a donation you can also deposit directly by direct debit into the Committee's bank account: Account Name: Lemnos Gallipoli Commemorative Committee Inc; Bank: Bendigo Bank; Account No: 188010037; BSB No: 633000; Include your surname in the reference section. For further information on our legacy projects or to make a donation please contact either Lee Tarlamis 0411553009 or Jim Claven 0409402388M

Some Important Visitors to Lemnos

Albert Jacka VC at Mudros c 29 August 1915 Australian War Memorial image P02141

As the major staging post for operations many famous visitors came to Lemnos during the Gallipoli campaign.

As well as the local commanders such as Generals Monash and Birdwood, the Dean of Sydney (Dr. Talbot) presided at a concert for resting Anzac troops. General Monash wrote of the need to improve conditions for the troops and nurses on Lemnos.

One of Australia’s most famous Anzacs and Victoria Cross winner, Albert Jacka, was on Lemnos and was photographed outside his tent. Lance Corporal Jacka was the first member of the AIF to recieve the Victoria Cross, for his bravery in the defence of the trenches at Courtney's Post on the night of 18th-19th May 1915. For further information about Albert Jack VC got to the Australian Department of Veteran's Affairs website here. His enlistment papers can be seen here.

British General Kitchener visited Lemnos on November 1915, where he held a conference with General Birdwood and senior commanders. It was during this conference that the decision to evacuate was made.
 
General Munro speaking to Lord Kitchener - General Alkam, IGC, and General Sir John Maxwell Australian War Memorial image G00566

Captain Leslie Morshead (who would also serve with distinction in the Middle East in the Second World War) arrived at Mudros with his 3rd Infantry Brigade on the 8th April 1915. he wrote that Lemnos reminded him of Australia: "(Mudros) Harbour with the transports and convoys reminds one of Albany” At the peninsula from April, he would take part in the battle of Lone Pine in August and is recorded as leading his men in skirmishes.

A trench at Lone Pine after the battle, showing Australian and Turkish dead on the parapet. In the foreground standing is Major Leslie Morshead (later Lieutenant General Sir Leslie Morshead) of the 2nd Battalion and on his right (standing), is Private 527 Jim Bryant of Stawell. AWM PS1515.

But he would return to Lemnos on 9th September - having contracted  dysentery - as so many of the Anzacs did. He would survive the war and go on to lead the successful Australian defence of Tobruk in 1941.

Rupert Brooke, the British war-poet and officer in the Royal Naval Brigade, was briefly present on Lemnos and wrote about the Island. He wrote in 1915 on his arrival that Lemnos was:
“Softly white, grey, silver-white buildings, some very old, some new, round a great harbour – all very Southern: like an Italian town in silver-paint, liveable and serene, with a sea and sky of opal and pearl and faint gold around.”
Rupert Brooke would never reach Gallipoli. He became sick and died, being buried on the Island of Skyros, where the Royal Naval Division was based prior to its relocation to Gallipoli.

Skyros Island, Greece. 1915. A practice marine landing on the shore of the island by men of the British Royal Naval Division. H16462

Rupert Brooke's Grave, Skyros.

The famous Australian author of A Fortunate Life, Albert (Bert) Facey, was at Lemnos with the AIF's 11th Battalion, taking part in famous battle of Leane's Trench during the Gallipoli campaign. His two brothers - Roy and Joseph - were killed at Gallipoli. His enlistment papers can be viewed here.
His autobiography records the horrors of the campaign on the peninsula as well as his memories of Mudros Harbour, of "... the size and beauty of the place ... It was very calm in the harbour and there was a peaceful kind of feeling..."

Another author who spent time at Lemnos was Sydney Loch, who wrote a critical memoir of the Gallipoli campaign - The Straits Impregnable - that would be banned by the Australian government censor. Like many Australian troops prior to the landing, he remained on board his troopship. but he wrote of Lemnos
"I never quite shook off the glamour of that island in the deep blue of the Aegean. Never was there an early morning when the skies were not blue and waters unruffled. Breezes softer and more scent than human kisses floated perpetually to us from the hills of Lemnos."
Group portrait of Officer Commanding and Officers of No. 1 Squadron Australian Flying Corps in front of a Bristol F2B fighter aircraft. McGuinness is at the back row, second from right. Ramleh, Ottoman Empire, November 1918. AWM B01238.

Another Anzac who came to Lemnos and would become famous was Ballarat’s Paul McGinness. A trooper in the 8th Australian Light Horse he would serve with distinction in the Gallipoli campaign, earning the Distinguished Conduct Medal for his bravery in the terrible charge at the Nek on August 7th 1915 – an attack immortalized in the Australian movie, Gallipoli.

McGinness described his part in the first wave writing that as he left the trench “all hell broke loose”. Hit but not wounded by numerous bullets, he was knocked unconscious in a fall and eventually made it back to the Australian trenches. Only one other member of his troop survived this attack. Out of 705 officers and men of his unit, 345 were killed in this charge (including the squadron’s commander, Major Redford, and the commander of the brigade, Lieutenant Colonel White), with hundreds more wounded. His were also killed.

After the evacuation of the peninsula, McGinness spent time at Mudros on Lemnos.
He would go on to serve in the Middle East, rising to the rank of Sergeant and then joining the fledgling Australian Flying Corps as a Lieutenant. He would survive the war and his skills as a pilot gained during the war would eventually lead him to be one of the co-founders of Australia’s national airline, QANTAS. And of course, John Simpson - famed for his donkey (another Lemnian) - was on Lemnos.

202 Private John Simpson Kirkpatrick, 3rd Field Ambulance Brigade (enlisted as Simpson), assisting an unidentified British soldier, wounded in the leg, being carried by a donkey. Gallipoli Peninsula, May 1915. Australian War Memorial J06392

4 comments:

  1. Winston Churchill was never on Lemnos Island. This is only another of the many Lemnian myths. However Major Jack Churchill, Winston Churchills' brother in early 1915 ( see photo IWM:Q13619 ) served as Camp Commandant, GHQ, on the then Greek island of Imbros, north east of Lemnos and may have also served on Lemnos when GHQ was later relocated there.I believe had Winston Churchill visited Lemnos and the Gallipolie peninsular before invading Turkey the horrific events that took place during most of 1915 may not have taken place and hundreds of thousands of human lives would have been saved.

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    1. http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205196077

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    2. Spiros, thank you. You are of course correct. I was meaning to update the Churchill information. I have now looked through a number of Churchill biographies and other sources and they confirm that he did not visit Lemnos. Thanks again.

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