For Love and Courage: The Letters of Lieutenant Colonel E.W. Hermon from the Western Front 1914 - 1917: The Letters of Lieutentant Colonel E.W. Hermon from the Western Front 1914-1917

For Love and Courage: The Letters of Lieutenant Colonel E.W. Hermon from the Western Front 1914 - 1917: The Letters of Lieutentant Colonel E.W. Hermon from the Western Front 1914-1917

by LieutenantColonelE.W.Hermon (Author)

Synopsis

Lt Colonel E.W. Hermon died in a hail of bullets on the 9th April 1917, the first day of the Battle of Arras, leading his men of the 24th Battalion Northumberland Fusiliers into the attack. Like hundreds of thousands of others in the Great War, he gave his life for his King and country. He was shot through the heart, one bullet slicing through the papers in his top pocket, including the four-leaf clover his wife had given him for good luck. His final words to his Adjutant were 'Go on!' before he sank to his knees and died almost instantaneously. He was carried from the battlefield by his faithful soldier servant, Buxton, and now lies buried in the Commonwealth War Graves Cemetery at Roclincourt, three miles from Arras. This could have been the end of the story but he left a testament of his life and ideals in a unique and hitherto unknown and unpublished collection of long and detailed letters he wrote to his darling wife and his children, 'the Chugs'. Now, nearly a century after his death, he speaks to us of a past, less cynical life, where selflessness, honour, duty and courage were admired above all else.His own courage was officially recognised as he was mentioned in despatches three times and posthumously awarded the D. S.O. The letters have been transcribed and edited by Hermon's granddaughter Anne Nason with the guidance and historical advice of James Holland, the distinguished historian and writer. Peter Caddick-Adams, who works alongside Richard Holmes at Cranfield University, believes the letters to be unique in their candour and context since Hermon was Battalion Commander and thus his letters were not censored.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 384
Publisher: Preface Publishing
Published: 04 Sep 2008

ISBN 10: 1848090390
ISBN 13: 9781848090392
Book Overview: Extracts from a unique collection of 700 First World War letters

Media Reviews
This is easily one of the best First World War books I have read, and paints a poignant picture of a vanished age.
-- Richard Holmes

Wonderful: brave, funny, deeply loving, full of human detail of life at the Front and of the family life from which he was separated.
-- Daily Mail


From the Trade Paperback edition.
Author Bio
E.W. Hermon had a privileged education at Eton and Christ Church, Oxford, but it was while he was up at Oxford that he answered the appeal to 'defend the Empire' and joined the 7th Queen's Own Hussars in 1900 in order to fight in the Boer War in South Africa. After this conflict ended, he returned to England with the regiment. The editor, Anne Nason, is the granddaughter of Lt. Colonel E.W. Hermon and the daughter of 'Mairky' (Mary), who bequeathed her the letters. Emigrating with her family to New Zealand in 1935 she was educated in that country, graduating with a BA degree from Canterbury University College in 1955. Returning to England in 1956 she worked in MI6 prior to her marriage to an Army officer and has travelled the world 'following the drum', whilst bringing up a family of two sons and two daughters. Her interest in ornithology led to her publishing a book in 1991 for the Nigerian Conservation Foundation about the birds of Nigeria, illustrated with her husband Ian's photographs, and she was one of the authors of the revised BOU 'Checklist of the Birds of Nigeria' published in 1994. She lives with her husband in Wiltshire and currently has nine grandchildren.