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The Gallipoli Letter
The Gallipoli Letter | Sir Keith Arthur Murdoch, Michael McKernan
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The vivid, charged and emotional letter that changed the course of the Gallipoli campaign. In September 1915, Keith Murdoch, then a young war journalist, wrote an 8000 word letter to the Prime Minister, Andrew Fisher. The Gallipoli Letter, as it came to be known, changed the course of the Gallipoli campaign. The letter, protesting against the conduct of the campaign and describing conditions at the front, is both intimate and conversational: 'I shall talk to you as if you were by my side ...' It is also at times angry, passionate, vivid and very moving: 'Then in the early hours came the landing, when the life of man is at its lowest.' At times, it is simply heartbreaking: 'The heroic Fourth Brigade was reduced in three days' fighting to little more than 1000 strong. You will be glad to know that the men died well.' The letter changed the course of the campaign: Hamilton, the general in charge of the campaign, was sent home, and the Allies were withdrawn in December of the same year. The Gallipoli Letter is a wholly moving and inspiring document. It speaks directly to us about war, our history and the indomitable Australian spirit. Accessible and compelling, it should be read by everyone: students, historians, military history buffs, school children and readers in general. It is a vital part of our history and the enduring ANZAC legend.
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Teresereading
The Gallipoli Letter | Sir Keith Arthur Murdoch, Michael McKernan
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This has been on my #TBRpile for several years. I think that this is the ideal time to read it, on the eve of ANZAC Day observance.
'Men living in trenches with no movement except when they are digging, and with nothing to look at except a narrow strip of sky.
You would have wept ... two of our finest Light
Horse regiments were wiped out in ten minutes in an attempt to advance a few yards.'
#ANZAC #Gallipoli

CarolynM 💔 5y
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