Esmond. The Lost Idol. 1895-1917: The Life and Death of a Young Officer: Esmond Elliot 1895 - 1917

Esmond. The Lost Idol. 1895-1917: The Life and Death of a Young Officer: Esmond Elliot 1895 - 1917

by Alexandra Campbell (Editor), Alexandra Campbell (Editor), Johnnie Astor (Editor)

Synopsis

Esmond Elliot, younger son of the Earl of Minto, Viceroy of India, was killed while serving with the Scots Guards, aged 22, at the beginning of the Passchendaele Offensive. Compiled from his grieving mother's memorial of his life, together with his letters, diaries and photographs from the front, the story begins with a sweeping panorama of a golden pre-war era, featuring Canada, the splendour of the Raj, Eton and the Royal Family, and ends with sacrifice on the Western Front. After leaving Eton in 1914, Esmond gave up his place at Cambridge and joined the Lothians and Border Horse Yeomanry. He arrived in France in February 1916 as ADC to Geoffrey Feilding who was in charge of the Guards Division. As a staff officer, he was exposed to the complexities and responsibilities of High Command and to senior military figures, but he yearned for action and, six months later, joined the Scots Guards, a regiment which would take him to the frontline. During the bitter winter of 1916/17, he saw fierce fighting on the Somme, when his Battalion suffered terrible losses. In preparation for the Passchendaele Offensive, which began on 31 July 1917, Esmond led a daring raid across the Yser Canal, returning with vital intelligence which helped the Guards Division in their successful seizure of the bank on the enemy side four days before the main assault. A week later, while in command of his Company, he was killed by a single bullet. Esmond's jottings, direct and spontaneous, reveal the rapid transformation and maturing of a young officer exposed to war. His mother's collection of letters shows the extent to which one life, albeit brief, touched so many people and how the memory of it, and the influence of his goodness, left a lasting impression. John Buchan wrote of Esmond: His gallantry was remarkable even among gallant men and in the darkest days his debonair and gentle spirit made a light around him. And in a letter to Esmond's mother, his Platoon Sergeant paid the following tribute: We have lost our idol for we had set him on a pedestal in our hearts. He came to us and claimed our affections so that, now he has gone, we will miss him more than words can tell. Professor Sir Hew Strachan: The account of a young vibrant and privileged life cut short at Ypres in 1917 is at one level a familiar one, not least in its apparent tragic inevitability. But The Lost Idol is much more. It is the story of a mother as well as a son, of a family as much as a regiment. And alongside the words are the pictures. Esmond Elliot, like many soldiers of the First World War, recorded his experiences with a Kodak Vest Pocket Camera: new technology enabled images to give wings to his words.

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More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 248
Publisher: Helion and Company
Published: 15 Sep 2017

ISBN 10: 1912174022
ISBN 13: 9781912174027

Media Reviews
[Esmond's] story, eloquently and lovingly told by Astor and Campbell, leaves the reader with an acute and tragic sense of loss. This moving tribute to Esmond is a fitting tribute to all the dead of this terrible war. * Guards Magazine *
A fascinating biopic of Esmond Elliott, younger son of the Viceroy of India, killed at Passcendaele in 1917. * Books Monthly *
The greatest triumph of this book is that it humanises Esmond, his diaries and letters providing the reader an intimate window into his life. Esmond's eventual death does not feel like the death of a distant historical figure in a dusty book, but rather that of a character to whom the reader feels closely connected. * Eton Chronicle *
Provides insight into the thoughts and emotions of the soldier and his family and close friends, as he goes to war; survives several actions and the conditions of trench warfare; leads a raid across the Ypres canal just before the Third Battle of Ypres begins; and ultimately loses his life in a German counter-attack. A good, absorbing read. * Long Long Trail *
The fact that no one knows the eventual outcomes makes this book all the more moving. * Stand to! *
Author Bio
Alexandra Campbell was among a handful of girls who, in the early 1980s, exchanged a convent education for Eton College, from where she gained an Exhibition to Oxford to read Modern Languages (German and Italian) at St Hilda's College. Upon graduation, Alex pursued a City career on the European Equities desks of two global banks - Kleinwort Benson and the Swiss Bank Corporation - but later moved into financial public relations. Subsequently, she became a parliamentary researcher and editor, and has recently been involved in a number of writing projects: she has contributed to a book on William Waldorf Astor for Flammarion in Paris and is currently researching for further biographies set during the First World War and the early 20th century. In 2015, she delivered the Founder's Day speech at Dryburgh Abbey for the Royal British Legion of Scotland. Coincidentally, her father won an MC in Italy in 1945 while serving with the Lothians and Border Horse Yeomanry - Esmond Elliot's first regiment after Eton. She is married with three children and lives in London.