'Christmas 1914' is an excellently researched book that brings to life the troubles and traumas, at home and abroad, of the first festive season of World War I. And the various reports include both mainstream events and lesser known incidents, all taken from contemporary newspaper reports, diaries and first-hand personal reminiscences. Indeed, it is quite amazing to see the activity that was going on in December 1914 when many people believed that the Great War would soon be over and festive peace would be restored … how wrong they all were.
One of the nicest things was the so-called Christmas comfort tin that was issued by Princess Mary to all serving personnel be they fighting on the front line or stationed at home at Aldershot, Wellington Barracks and elsewhere. The gift was organised so late that many of the tins did not get out until January 1915 when, rather than a Christmas card, a 'Victorious New Year' card accompanied them. The tradition continued each Christmas throughout the War and by 1920 it was estimated that more than 2.5 million tins had been issued, with an estimated 400,000 having reached their destination by that first Christmas Day in 1914.
And in the run-up to Christmas 1914, Britain was shaken out of any complacency that it had by the German invasion of three communities on the north east coast, Hartlepool and West Hartlepool, Scarborough and Whitby. It was 16 December when Scarborough and Hartlepool were attacked almost simultaneously and Whitby about an hour later. The Hartlepool bombardment from three German battle cruisers, Seydiltz, Moltke and Blücher, lasted 40 minutes when 112 men, women and children, 86 of them civilians, died and more than 400 were injured as 1,150 shells rained down on the town. At Scarborough the damage was more widespread than in Hartlepool but the casualty toll was far lower, 17 killed and 80 injured as the battle cruisers Derfflinger and Von der Tann fired 500 shells into the town. Meanwhile the light cruiser Kolberg was laying mines a few miles to the south. The two cruisers then sailed south to Whitby where at 9.05am they pumped more than 100 shells into the town, wrecking 30 houses and killing two men. One of the latter, Frederick Randall, a coastguard, 'died as he was putting up the White Ensign - a shell nearby, blowing his head clean off' was how the Scarborough Mercury reported it. The horrors of these and other attacks are recalled in the words of many of those who were present.
But the first English town to have a bomb dropped on it was Dover when, on Christmas Eve 1914, Oberleutnant-zur-See Stephen von Prondzynski, at a height of 5000 feet, 'lifted the bomb from the floor of his cockpit and held it steadily over the side before letting go'. His target was Dover Castle but he missed by 400 yards and the bomb fell in magistrate Thomas Terson's kitchen garden at the end of Leyburne Road, where it made 'a large hole, broke windows up to 200 yards away and, in the garden of St James's Rectory next door, blew Mr James Banks off a ladder from which he had been collecting holly to decorate the church. Mr Banks fell 20 feet but was fortunately unhurt. And ironically Dover, having suffered that first aerial bombing, also suffered the last of the War on Whit Sunday night, 19/20 May 1918, when four bombs were dropped but only one person, a Miss Joad, was injured but with damage to property being quite considerable.
As for life at the front there is plenty of description of trench living and trench fighting, sometimes the latter taking place between opponents less than 60 yards apart. But Christmas did bring a little relief and, although the 'f' word was forbidden - fraternising that was - British and German soldiers did meet in no-man's land and exchange gifts, chat and even play a football match, which the Germans won 3-2! Carols were often sung during the festive season as each camp tried to outsing the other.
There are many stirring episodes in 'Christmas 1914', including German prisoners spending the Christmas holiday in Southend, the minesweeper Night Hawk striking a mine off the east coast and sinking 'in seven or ten seconds after the explosion', the service's first black commissioned infantry officer, former professional footballer Second Lieutenant Mark Tull, being killed at the second Battle of the Somme on 25 March 1918, submariner Lieutenant Norman Douglas Holbrook becoming the first submariner Victoria Cross winner for action on 13 December 1914 when his submarine B11 'dived under five rows of mines in treacherous currents to torpedo and sink the Turkish battleship Mesudiye', and, very tragically (as is all the action) two deserters being 'shot at dawn' at Christmas 1914.
'Christmas 1914' does truly bring to life all the horrific events of the time but it is told with real feeling and does, if it were at all possible, bring to life all the characters involved in a most sympathetic way. It is at least fitting that their names and deeds should be so brought back to the public's attention.