Journalscene.com
By David Kennard
dkennard@journalscene.com
Bert Allen Bourne died in 1974 at the age of 82 when I was 11 years old.
By David Kennard
dkennard@journalscene.com
Bert Allen Bourne died in 1974 at the age of 82 when I was 11 years old.
I don’t remember much about my grandfather, but I learned at
an even earlier age that he was well respected in the tiny wheat farming town
in the Midwest where he spent nearly his entire life.
David B. Kennard twitter.com@davidbkennard |
He was drafted into the Army in April 1918, about seven months before the Armistice of 11 November 1918 ended World War I.
I have a small collection of the things that he carried with him as he fought in the trenches of France leading up to the day that we now celebrate as Veterans Day.
His compass, a hand mirror, some uniform insignia. But my
most cherished possessions are the journals that he kept and the letters that
he wrote home to his sister and best friend Louie.
Oct. 9, 1918
“Dear Friend Louie
“Rec'd your letter a few days ago and will try and write a
few lines in reply. Have just been eating hazelnuts and sitting around a fire
trying to keep warm. It is cold enough here this morning to make a fellow want
to hunt a fire but the sun is shining bright outside so I guess it will soon
warm up. I hope it will dry up some of the mud too for while the mud is not so
very deep it is the stickiest stuff that I ever saw anywhere and sticks to
one's shoes so that your feet get so heavy you can't hardly walk….
“Well, I haven't got hit by any whiz bangs or G.I. Cans yet.
A G.I. Can is what they call some of those big shells that come sailing along
singing "Nearer My God to Thee". G.I. stands for galvanized iron you
know and some of those shells sound like a can or something bigger.”
Although Bert’s letters are full of detail, nearly all of
them were censored by the Army to prevent intelligence from getting into enemy
hands.
His handwritten journal that he carried with him helps fill
in the blanks a little.
“On to line, Oct. 18”
“Relieved 1st Btln., Oct. 30”
“Over the top Hallowe’en Night, Nov. 1”
“Eleven days of Hell”
“Along banks of Meuse Canal when armistice news was heard.”
Later, in a letter home he wrote about the end of the war.
“Stenay, France, Nov. 22, 1918: We certainly celebrated
Hallowe'en and raised a little h--- with the Kaiser.
“For several days previous the Hun aviators had been flying
over our lines and dropping propaganda saying ‘Come on over Americans we will
treat you fine’ and the like. Well we come alright. But not the way they meant
and we kept right on until they hollered enough.
“On the day of the armistice we had packed up about 2:00 in
the morning, marched all the rest of the night, crossed the Meuse and the Canal
on pontoon bridges and about 9:00 fell out for a rest along the road. Pretty
soon a car came along and one of the men in it called out ‘The war is finished
at 11:00 o'clock boys.’ Well we didn't know whether to believe it or not as the
guns were still pounding away but we felt a little encouraged. Well we (stayed)
there for a few hours and presently the time drew close to 11:00. For some time
it seemed as though the artillery fire had been slacking up and at 11:00 it
stopped entirely and not a sound could be heard.”
My grandfather stayed in France and Germany for several more
months as part of the occupation force after the war. He returned home in the
summer of 1919, married a local girl and went on with his life.
Having never served in the military, I can only imagine what
it must have been like, not just for my grandfather in World War I, but for all
our men and women who have stepped up to join the cause of freedom.
With the approach of Veterans Day, I urge all Americans to
pause for a moment to mark the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month of
1918.
David Kennard is the executive editor of Summerville
Communications, which publishes the Berkeley Independent, Goose Creek Gazette
and Summerville Journal Scene. Contact him at dkennard@journalscene.com or
843-873-9424. Follow him on Twitter @davidbkennard.
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