If you think the British get little credit, what about the French? Not many people could tell you the French were even involved, but their casualties were quite heavy as well, exceeding the Anzac losses. -- AlNot sure I agree with that at all.If you study the conflict, most serious work gives great credit indeed to Australian and Canadian forces, in fact I find it quite the reverse of your statement, the British get very little credit for their sacrifice in Gallipoli even though they lost more men than the ANZAC's.
Rob
Rob...
Well said saved me having to mention it
Mitch
......and all of that was a propaganda measure.........Brit's took credit for everything....Take Monty...asked to evaluate the Normandy defenses and later took credit for planning the whole invasion at DDAY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
No offense!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The 2 Tyneside Scottish battalions were part of the 34th Division. I think they were part of the 102nd Brigade. The whole division was shot to pieces that day. The Tyneside Irish Brigade of the same division took heavy casualties as well with the 1st Tyneside Irish losing 620 men. The 1st Newfoundland lost 684 men. What slaughter. -- AlThe Sheffield battalion lost 513 men killed and wounded. Two Tyneside Scottish battalions lost 584 and 629 men on 1st July. Many battalions paid a high price that day, from all over Britain and her Empire.
Rob
Pretty sure you mean William "Billy" Barker, VC. Credited with 50 victories, all but 4 in Italy, he claimed 9 balloons in his total. He was remarkable. -- Al....also how about Canadian ace Billy Baker shooting down German balloons on my office ceiling.....I cant stand it....too much to hope for!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The finest Balloon Buster of all.......Billy Baker!!!
That has to do with shear amount of forces...French lots...Canadians few....
Well my view on the French is as of such. They seem to have been degraded by many due to the huge amounts of deserters and malcontents in late war trench warfare. More than all other contingents on either side. Not to mention WWII being so soon after seeing...the immediate collapse of the Maginot line; capitulation of Dardier and the Vichy Government fiasco's' stayed any support for them in after 1930 style historical depictions.
Hence became the shame and lack of involvement in WWII of De Gaul...
Just my opinion from what I have studied if my memory serves me right....and it may not!!!!!
....also how about Canadian ace Billy Baker shooting down German balloons on my office ceiling.....I cant stand it....too much to hope for!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The finest Balloon Buster of all.......Billy Baker!!!
William Barker, VC., survived the war. Any number of other aces disappeared under mysterious circumstances but Barker was not one of them. He was killed in a post-war flying accident in 1930. -- AlYes my typing and eye sight is not that great....but let us face it..the man was a stud!
I cannot remember, but I think he disappeared and was never recovered?