Walking the Battle of Passchendaele with Mat McLachlan

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  • Опубліковано 31 жов 2022
  • #passchendaele #ww1
    In October 1917, British, Australian, New Zealand, Canadian and German forces fought in one of the First World War's most bloody battles, the Battle of Passchendaele. Join me, historian Mat McLachlan, on a walk across the old battlefield. What remains from the fighting, and can we bring the stories of the men who fought and died here to life?
    Places visited:
    - Tyne Cot Cemetery
    - Frank Hurley's Railway Cutting
    - Canadian Memorial, Passchendaele
    - Brooding Soldier Memorial (where poison gas was first used in the war)
    - Trenches and tunnels at the Passchendaele 1917 Museum
    - Langemarck German Cemetery
    To walk in the footsteps of the Anzacs, join us on a battlefield tour of Gallipoli, the Western Front, Vietnam, Thailand or other famous battlefields around the world. Visit www.battlefields.com.au for more information!

КОМЕНТАРІ • 497

  • @Magibiodoc
    @Magibiodoc Рік тому +93

    "In a foreign field he lay
    Lonely soldier, unknown grave
    On his dying words he prays
    Tell the world of Passchendaele"

    • @thedinobeaver
      @thedinobeaver Рік тому +5

      My favorite Maiden song.

    • @floody8242
      @floody8242 10 місяців тому

      ​@@thedinobeaver111111

    • @Stormbringer50
      @Stormbringer50 9 місяців тому +6

      Great song. Very thrilling lyrics.
      My favorite part:
      "Crucified as if on a cross
      Allied troops they mourn their loss
      German war propaganda machine
      Such before has never been seen
      Swear I heard the angels cry
      Pray to god no more may die
      So that people know the truth
      Tell the tale of Paschendale"
      Greets from the ol' enemy from Germany 🇩🇪.

    • @fus149hammer5
      @fus149hammer5 8 місяців тому +2

      ​@@Stormbringer50Enemy then again later but friends now.😊🫡
      Our only rivalry is on the field of sport and that's how it should be.

    • @stephengreen8206
      @stephengreen8206 3 місяці тому

      Amen

  • @pieterjouretz663
    @pieterjouretz663 10 місяців тому +46

    As a Belgian civilian, we visited the Ypres salient a couple of weeks back (it was my third time). We visited Commonwealth and German cemeteries. It's important to look back at the sad history and learn from it. What gets me is that there are always foreign people visiting our small country to pay respect to their fallen familymembers that they have never known ... That is, for me, a very big sign of respect that we all can learn from. Never forget all the fallen humans from this horrible war ❤

    • @if6was985
      @if6was985 7 місяців тому +2

      I visited the Menine Gate a few years ago, amazing, a wet and miserable October evening and there's about 500 people paying their respects, I asked my brother if this was normal, he's ex military and a fairly regular visitor, quite normal, he replied, the Belgium people always show up for Last Post. The Belgium people have my utmost respect.
      My great great uncle is buried in a field cemetery not far from the German cemetery, he was killed in one of the first gas attacks of that war, aged 19.

    • @woodenseagull1899
      @woodenseagull1899 5 місяців тому

      ​@@if6was985Germany intrinsically is identified in its harshness, death , destruction and its lack of Empathy to humanity; other then its own.!

  • @tonyshortland8812
    @tonyshortland8812 7 місяців тому +8

    I went to Tyne Cot commonwealth war cemetery, this year, along with two of my old RAF palls. We're in our late 60's the first grave I looked at was of an unknown soldier, a young lad, killed here, and doesn't even have his name on his headstone, 'known unto God'. Along with thousands of others. It was a lovely bright sunny day, and we three, had enjoyed a ride here on our motorbikes, and I thought, how many days like this, had this youngster sacrificed, and all the thousands, and thousands of others. Thank you.. RIP...

  • @stevef9530
    @stevef9530 Рік тому +32

    My grandfather was a machine gunner at Passchendaele. I never got close to him, and he died when I was 11, I remember him as a remote figure. It’s hard to say how much the battle caused that but many men came back from the western front damaged even if they were physically intact. Never forget them.

    • @gordoncochrane6325
      @gordoncochrane6325 11 місяців тому +1

      My dad was in this battle )the Gordons) He told me some stories of the horror that soldiers went through and the slaughter fields (For what?)

    • @paulthomas-hh2kv
      @paulthomas-hh2kv 11 місяців тому

      My 2 great grandfathers were there, thankfully survived, but as with most people they never spoke of it. Even my father never knew about it

  • @genwoolfe
    @genwoolfe Рік тому +21

    My granddad was a Kitchener volunteer and was injured here while serving with 11th bn Essex Regt at the age of 19. He survived the War and signed up for the Home Guard in WW2. He died in 1992 at the age of 94.

  • @fus149hammer5
    @fus149hammer5 8 місяців тому +4

    I've walked that lonely windswept hill to the memorial on the summit. It had been raining and the ground was heavy with mud. It weighed me down as if I were wearing those old fashioned deep sea divers lead boots.
    I didn't mind. It was just a taste of what those young men had to face. No bullets aimed in my direction, no shells, no gas.
    No shell holes to fall into and drown. I was going home at the end of my trip back to my family, back to my local and back to my mates.
    I walked through the fields of blood and bone and I felt the chill of sadness that echoed through the decades. I'm glad my generation never faced this we had The Falklands and Northern Ireland where I did wonder 'Will I get through this?' We never saw anything like the Somme or Passchendaele and for that I'm truly grateful.

  • @laurensdegrote4333
    @laurensdegrote4333 Рік тому +5

    I don't understand why this has not million's of views!
    Very well made
    So I say
    Thank you

  • @Rocky-xx2zg
    @Rocky-xx2zg Рік тому +129

    Well Done. Sadly, many today have little interest in what occurred in the 1914 - 1918 time.

    • @orwellboy1958
      @orwellboy1958 Рік тому +21

      And those are the people destined to make the same mistakes.

    • @Rocky-xx2zg
      @Rocky-xx2zg Рік тому +13

      @@orwellboy1958 They already have .

    • @nextube_owner
      @nextube_owner 10 місяців тому +7

      Yeah, I see that in my own country
      Look, in my country everyone talks about Holocaust and 40-45 when Germany occupied us
      So I started to read about D-day, Stalingrad, Market Garden, but I then remembered there was a war before that, even though we were neutral. Now I’ve been to Ieper and I’ve never been as much interested in something as this

    • @allanspindler7927
      @allanspindler7927 9 місяців тому +1

      I do, my grandfather was there with the AIF.

    • @daywalkersarkis3983
      @daywalkersarkis3983 9 місяців тому +5

      But there’s many of us who care what happened during the Great War! As a Armenian I must know it’s my peoples history sadly. Grandma Grandpa told me stories about those days and how your neighbors started changing into monsters!

  • @jamesguest4308
    @jamesguest4308 Рік тому +43

    when i was 16 and in basic training with the british army i was in ypres platoon, we visited all the locations shown in your video. Even at that young age it was a sobering experience for many of us interested in the great war. The last post being played every evening at the menning gate is very emotional. I would love to go back i'm 36 now

    • @MrRugbylane
      @MrRugbylane Рік тому +8

      36? You are only a kid! In 1987 I was in Ypres on a school tour. A tour bus turned up with a couple of dozen veterans of the Somme 1916 and Passchendale 1917. I got to speak to several of the gentlemen.

    • @doctor_alfa
      @doctor_alfa Рік тому +1

      you were 16 and already in the army..?

    • @jamesguest4308
      @jamesguest4308 Рік тому +4

      @@doctor_alfa you can enlist at 15 in the british army,then start training at 16

    • @jva4120
      @jva4120 6 місяців тому

      The Menin Gate is being renovated so best to postpone it a bit.

  • @alisonrandall3039
    @alisonrandall3039 Рік тому +12

    My great grandfather was there he was in the Royal Engineers. He kept a diary. He writes about heavy fighting and shelling. He served the whole of the Ww1 from start to finish.

  • @alinherts5414
    @alinherts5414 Рік тому +92

    The battle started on 31 July 1917. My great grandad, Alfred Jefferies, was killed on this day after going over the top with 1st Herts in the fighting near St Julian (not the local spelling). He is buried in Tyne Cot but the body recovery maps show he was originally buried near where he fell. The adhoc graves you refer to in Tyne Cot, I believe (could be wrong), were of soldiers that died whilst being treated at an aid post located within a block house that stood under what is now the cross of remembrance that is seen just behind you as you are talking about them.

    • @jefftodd621
      @jefftodd621 Рік тому +9

      Any movement in the Ypres salient attracted artillery fire, so the poor souls were buried in the dark, hence the haphazard graves. A very moving place to visit. My great uncle fell during the campaign; his only marker is a name on one of the wall panels.

    • @logotrikes
      @logotrikes Рік тому +6

      I feel for you dude. My paternal grandfather Jeffrey George Arnold was there. He endured the entire war, made it safely back home, and lived till 1974. He could so easily have been a casualty, but got through ok. He never talked much about the war, and I wish he had, I could have learned so much. My dad was born in 1914 while his dad was in France...

    • @TheParkerThirteen
      @TheParkerThirteen Рік тому +7

      Your great grandad's sacrifice will never be forgotten, as its why we are all here today. He is, was and will always be a true hero. "At the going down of the sun and in the morning, we will remember them." Vale Alfred Jefferies

    • @andreballon7362
      @andreballon7362 Рік тому +4

      Hi @AlinHerts it is quite interesting. Your grandad's name derives from the Norwegian, Swedish words fred... ,and german Frieden. Fred, Frieden in english mean Peace. In Norwegian RIP is Hvile i fred. Hvile i fred Alfred !!!

  • @DarthTrader707
    @DarthTrader707 Рік тому +16

    What a great job you did, making this video. As a Canadian, I appreciate the time you spent signaling out Canada's role in this battle. Passchendaele has a special place in the hearts of Canadians. I also found the mention of Hitler's visit very interesting. Hitler actually spent an entire day visiting almost all the large memorials, and was said to have displayed an almost reverence for the allied memorials. The fact that he would order Jewish commemorations destroyed isn't at all surprising, but he never considered destroying the allied memorials, even though they were memorials coinciding with the defeat of Germany...a defeat that disgusted Hitler.

    • @MatMcLachlanHistory
      @MatMcLachlanHistory  Рік тому +2

      Thanks Sebastian. I always have time for our Canadian brothers in arms.

    • @marblackCanada
      @marblackCanada 6 місяців тому

      The monument called the Brooding Solider was never replicated at any of the other Canadian cemeteries.

    • @jonmce1
      @jonmce1 3 місяці тому

      Hitler actually went as far as placing guards on the Canadian memorial at Vimy to prevent any vandalism.

  • @Stanb662000
    @Stanb662000 Рік тому +20

    My great uncle was one of the last Australian casualties in this battle. Like many, he put his age up and enlisted at the beginning of 1917. In late October , he was posted to 2 Bn 1st Anzac Div. On the 5th November 1917, 1 Anzac Corp went into the line to protect the Canadian right flank, with 2 Bn linking up with the Canadians. When the ultimately successful Canadian attack began, German SOS fire fell heavily on both the Canadian and Australian lines, inflicting 30 KIA on 2 Bn. He is one of the many with no known grave.

    • @fus149hammer5
      @fus149hammer5 8 місяців тому

      ​@@CrashAndBurnProductionsit's entirely possible that their bodies were recovered and given proper burials but the cemeteries often just behind the lines were shelled into oblivion along with the graves.

  • @alisterbennett
    @alisterbennett Рік тому +11

    I visited Tyne Cot Cemetery and the Passchendaele Canadian Memorial by bicycle in 2014 - Marking the end of 3 weeks visiting commonwealth cemeteries and battle sites in France (Normandy & Somme), Italy and Belgium). It was almost overwhelming that day.
    I later discovered that my great uncle was buried in a cemetery just north of Ypres. Two weeks later we found his name is on a memorial plaque in the Parish Church of St Mary - Flint, Wales, where we also found my grandfather's name on the role of honour. My Grandfather emigrated to New Zealand in the 1920s.

  • @TheCaptain64
    @TheCaptain64 2 місяці тому +2

    My Great grandad was injured at 3rd Ypres, him n 3 mates they were right under the blast of the shell but all survived, and grt grandad bought part of the shell home which apparently was still warm when he picked it up. Grt grandad was invalided out home due to wounds received and thank God he was, as I believe The Devonshire's were wiped out in a battle not long after . Thanks for posting this . Have been to the Western Front over 20 times will be going again later this year .

  • @kevinn1158
    @kevinn1158 4 місяці тому +2

    The Australians, Canadians and New Zealanders.... Forever together. We study this battle extensively in Canada.

  • @davidsweeney4021
    @davidsweeney4021 Рік тому +17

    A bit off from this video's subject, but my Dad's Dad fought at Gallipoli in a Irish Regiment of the British Army. He was a sergeant and ordered to take a squad of about 5 into No-Mans land to capture a "Johnnie Turk" and bring him back for interrogation. They were issued with pistols and grenades and went out.
    While crawling around out there they heard foreign voices. My grandfather told my Dad he sh1t himself but only a little bit then told his men we're going back.
    Luckily he survived Gallipoli and became Garrison Sergeant Major at Barry Island Fort in South Wales.
    My Mom's Dad fought in Burma in the Royal Artillery in WWII. He never told anyone anything

  • @pavlovshouse77
    @pavlovshouse77 Рік тому +10

    Went to all of these places in April 2017. They do a wonderful job looking after our boys. 🍁

  • @fredwood1490
    @fredwood1490 Рік тому +55

    How can a man walk this green parkland without tears streaming from his eyes, blinding him? How can a man pass by these white stones without touching them, trying to comfort them? To be comforted by them with their solidity, in this place of nightmare? How can a man read the names, read the names, read the names until he curses his own eyes for seeing too much? How can he not feel the earth move with the impacts of mighty guns, even a century on? Can he hear the bullets whine on the breeze, the cries on the breeze, the curses, the death rattles? Why is this place not the only one? Why does it exist at all? Does the answer lie in yesterday, tomorrow, deep in our genes or deep in our spirits? The white stones are silent, the walls block the sun, only the broken bunkers speak about a moment in time, about savagery beyond Human comprehension, done with Human hands to Human things for some Human purpose. God had nothing to do with it. God wept and could do nothing but gather the dead and lay them to sleep, dreamless, until the day of rising. Would courage and honor be enough to make up for the sins of destruction? They may know, bye n bye, bye n bye. We can but walk and weep and ponder.

    • @nallekarhu7994
      @nallekarhu7994 Рік тому +7

      Very beautifully and poignantly written, I feel better that people remember still the wasteful suffering of gallant young men Sent to murder other gallant young men for the invisible honor of men far too clever and cowardly to ever face the same call to arms and nightmarish horror. These horror of this regimented industrial slaughter still echo through time forever till this universe rips itself apart.

    • @davidbrown4140
      @davidbrown4140 Рік тому +4

      Summarised brilliantly, those two comments, I could of not put it better myself...."lest we forget "...

    • @calkinsb0713
      @calkinsb0713 Рік тому +5

      Absolutely beautiful post
      Very well done

    • @jasonnicholasschwarz7788
      @jasonnicholasschwarz7788 11 місяців тому +5

      You can feel them walk right through your heart, your soul. They're not gone. They're here. And some of us are over there.

  • @stuartbridger5177
    @stuartbridger5177 Рік тому +7

    I walked much the same routes on a tour a few years back, you did an excellent job and brought back memories. With the help of the tour guide, we located the grave of a relative of mine. The experience was sobering and poignant enough, seeing my family name on a grave stone was very emotional

  • @garybroad4092
    @garybroad4092 2 місяці тому +1

    Superb video Mat, thanks. God bless the Aussies the Kiwis and the Canucks... and never forget the Indians, Saffas and Gurkhas too. Heroes to this day, every bloody one of 'em!

  • @Shadooe
    @Shadooe Рік тому +8

    Fantastic video once again sir. I got to visit all the places mentioned, in 2016, on a tour from Newfoundland. Really brings back memories. Keep up the good work.

  • @ghendar
    @ghendar Рік тому +7

    I've been waiting a long time for this. So happy battle walks in person are back!

  • @matthewskinner1637
    @matthewskinner1637 Рік тому +6

    My great great uncle John Wallace 1st New Zealand division fought from 22nd June- Sunday 6th October where he was gassed at Spree farm. He was sent back to England to recover. I recently found my great aunts writing of some of his experiences, so it has mention of the dates his mates were wounded and when he first went over the top at. Lest we forget.

  • @TTHBLOX_
    @TTHBLOX_ Рік тому +2

    That captain was as old as i am now. Unimaginable at such a young age to be leading others into what is basically a muddy meat grinder

  • @mrbojangles7577
    @mrbojangles7577 7 місяців тому +2

    My grandfather (South Wales Borderers Regiment) fought and was killed at the battle of Passchendaele in 1917. His name is now on the Menin Gate in Belgium.

  • @Spiderwebsider
    @Spiderwebsider Рік тому +7

    Given the state of Europe and the world today, I'd like to go back in time and tell all those brave young men, on both sides, not to bother.

  • @OfficialSituation
    @OfficialSituation 3 місяці тому +1

    The beauty of these places can't be overstated unless u go there for real. Such heavy emotion in these places and the locals are all so so so kind and welcoming

  • @davidhunt3808
    @davidhunt3808 Рік тому +16

    There is Canadian movie called Passchendaele and it depicted the savagery and the terrible conditions the Canadians had to endure !! Your documentary here tells that story so well !!

  • @mycustomyoutubechannel2539
    @mycustomyoutubechannel2539 Рік тому +3

    Just as I got back into WW1 documentaries this video comes out. What a great timing.

  • @davewilson9738
    @davewilson9738 Рік тому +35

    An amazing film, sadly Europe and the world in general appears ready to fill another field with the bodies of the young. How easily we forget.

    • @gefi9701
      @gefi9701 Рік тому +1

      My thoughts exactly. It's said we oil the jaws of the war machine and feed it with our babies.

    • @Rocky-xx2zg
      @Rocky-xx2zg Рік тому +1

      Dave, Sadly, we can bet on that happening. No one will be left after those nuclear weapons are released in mass. JMO

    • @mamavswild
      @mamavswild 8 місяців тому +1

      What are we supposed to do? Allow the Russians to invade whomever they want?
      Remember one thing: those without swords will forever be hunted by those with them

    • @cuebj
      @cuebj 7 місяців тому +1

      What has forgetting to do with Ukraine and WW1? And who is 'we'?
      Putin's Russian Federation will be well aware of WW1, especially their battles with Germany. They are very happy to use the tactics of meat grinding trenches, mines, artillery because they have a very low competence level of conscripts and officers. Germany lost because they were exhausted, broke, starving - that's Putin strategy for Ukraine

    • @mamavswild
      @mamavswild 7 місяців тому

      @@cuebj Absolutely!

  • @carlbentley80
    @carlbentley80 Рік тому +18

    Very sad but beautiful cemeteries. Nice to see the graves of the Germans are respected and took care of too.

  • @jhvoojh
    @jhvoojh Рік тому +2

    Very good documentary.
    Thanks for your knowledge and tact.

  • @MaritaBird
    @MaritaBird Рік тому +12

    Awesome video Mat, thank you. 😊🙏❤
    R.I.P. Lt. James Donald OLIVER
    KIA 4th October 1917
    In the Battle of Broodseinde Ridge (part of Battle of Passchendaele), Belgium
    10th Light Trench Mortar Battery
    It was his second enlistment, having been among the very first wave of enlisted soldiers in August 1914, who embarked with the 5th Battalion on 21 October 1914 aboard the HMAT Orvieto.
    Unfortunately he contracted a case of Pneumonia shortly after reaching Egypt and was returned home in Feb 1915, and discharged medically unfit on 29 April 1915.
    He recuperated at home and re-enlisted on 15 December 1915.
    He is buried in Tyne Cot cemetery, Passchendaele, West-Vlaanderen, Belgium
    Also listed on Panel 20 in the Commemorative Area at the Australian War Memorial

  • @sampage4715
    @sampage4715 Рік тому +6

    Very well presented. A very brutal battle as was all of WW1.

  • @gryphus64
    @gryphus64 4 місяці тому +2

    My Great Uncle Viktor Spork, was gassed at Passchendaele, a German Soldier, died several months later of pneumonia. His brother, my Grandfather, emigrated to Australia circa 1924.

  • @janverbanck
    @janverbanck Рік тому +22

    I live about 50 km from this spot. Each year,around November 11th we visit the cemetery and its surroundings. Also the German cemetery at Langemark. Effectively much different in style, more gray, more sombre, the opposite of comforting actually... But, I just can't help it: each time, everywhere, my eyes fill up. It's so devastating to the soul... Just FYI: TyneCot (read it as one word) is an Anglicism of the (dialect) Flemish word "t'hennekot" which simply means "the henhouse". This refers to a farm that used to be there.

    • @louisavondart9178
      @louisavondart9178 Рік тому +1

      The name "Tyne Cot" is said to come from the Northumberland Fusiliers, seeing a resemblance between the many German concrete pill boxes on this site and typical Tyneside workers' cottages

    • @janverbanck
      @janverbanck Рік тому +3

      @@louisavondart9178 Doubtful...To my knowledge records on-site and in most expositions tell differently. There are a lot of other examples of twisting local words (which is quite logical given the difficult dialectic pronunciation of most) Other kind of example: the English pronunciation of the town IEPER [ˈipər], which is literally "Wipers" could in principle not be understood by a random contemporary Fleming who has never heard it before. This is because maps were often in French and they call it Ypres [ipʁ] . So, to the British it read "Wipers" which is quite understandable. So you see how easily words get twisted...

    • @bethzolin6046
      @bethzolin6046 Рік тому +2

      Thank you so much for caring and visiting the graves even so long after the battle. My grandfather was there, with the 21st West Yorks,a pioneer battalion. He was badly wounded, sent home to recover, and was too badly injured to ever return. He died in his hometown in 1978, having lived long enough enough to meet his first great grandchild. A piece of shrapnel will still be in his grave, as they were unable to remove it from his shoulder. Like so many others he rarely discussed the war, despite the requests of his son and grandson, though he did mention being at Zonnebeke near Ypres, and at another place close by that I can’t recall that sounded almost the same - Zonnebeek and Zonnebeck? We know he was buried alive by a shell, and only survived due to the prompt reaction of his comrades in digging him out - it was a horror he never forgot. It was a truly horrific war, and I doubt those of us alive today can appreciate the horror it was for all involved, not just the soldiers, but all those civilians so unfortunately caught up in its melee.

    • @janverbanck
      @janverbanck Рік тому +1

      @@bethzolin6046 Hi Beth. My own paternal grandfather was in the trenches (or just behind at times as he was in the telegraph/communication corps) too. This whilst my grandmother fled to England through Milford Haven. She proceeded to live out the war years (+ 3 additional years) in Berkhamstead where my father was born in 1915. My grandfather joined her after the war and they all returned to Belgium around 1921. In 1940, my father's brother was KIA when Germany invaded Belgium.

    • @sugarkane4830
      @sugarkane4830 11 місяців тому

      @@janverbanckYou make a good point. It’s the first time I have come across this explanation. The Northumberland fusiliers being the most excepted one.

  • @martingardener90
    @martingardener90 Рік тому +7

    Thank you for a great video. My Great uncle Eli Gardener was killed during the attack of Raquete Farm on 17th October 1917, hit by an artillery shell so there was no body to recover and is commemorated on the Tyne Cot wall. I understand from a fantastic tour of the battlefields and cemeteries a few years ago that the land for the commonwealth cemeteries is leased forever free by the Belgian and French governments however the German governments has to renew their leases and pay for it.

    • @MatMcLachlanHistory
      @MatMcLachlanHistory  Рік тому +2

      Thanks Martin. The land was given to the Commonwealth countries ‘in perpetuity’. It’s not the case with the German cemeteries.

  • @Goffas_and_gumpys
    @Goffas_and_gumpys Рік тому +8

    GREAT presentation of information, editing and transitioning of now and then. Absolutely great.
    This is a bucket list item for me to pay my respects to all who were caught up in the madness of The Great War.
    Time is racing away from me, so probably won't get to do it, BUT, I am glad people make Living History presentations like this.
    Well done mate, top shelf.
    Lest We Forget

    • @MatMcLachlanHistory
      @MatMcLachlanHistory  Рік тому +1

      Thanks!

    • @keepcalm5026
      @keepcalm5026 Рік тому

      Never too late. I always stop at a cemetery or two when travelling through France and reflect that these men were cut off in their prime and such a waste.

  • @TonyEdwards-un7rc
    @TonyEdwards-un7rc Рік тому +5

    Thank you for such a wonderful virtual tour capturing the sense of awfulness and valour. Great to see so many other family recollections.
    As a Brit I never cease to be amazed by the reach of the the Anzac /Canadian/Indian and other Imperial forces. Extraordinary commitment and bravery from so many.
    My great uncle Capt Trevor died in Paschendale on the 26th Oct 1917. With his parents papers was a letter of thanks from a follow officer who was due to lead the unit but was persuaded by Trevor to swap his home leave so that he could see his wife and child.
    Had he not done this he would not be the very first name of on the Tyne Cot memorial (Panel 1).
    As a Capt in the 'senior' service he has the honour to the first of so many fellow combatants. God bless them all.
    I hope you record a tour of Gallipoli. My great uncle Patrick was a captain with the RNVR and with his brother Trevor ,were some of the last 300 soldiers to leave the beaches . That is the last time they saw one another. Patrick's unpublished memoirs make chilling reading with day to day accounts of the trials and tribulations of those on the front line there and in the Somme.
    He survived which is amazing, not least in that he served in all three services , lost an eye and part of his leg but still volunteered to see out his time fighting with the white Russians.
    A true warrior, since on the declaration of war he was a successful lawyer and tried to sign up, however at 38 rejected by the recruitment office on for being too old so shaved off his moustache and 'shed ten years '. DSO and bar Croix de Guerre the order of Valdimir and the Order of St Anne and four time mentioned in despatches.

  • @stephenbesley3177
    @stephenbesley3177 Рік тому +10

    So many were lost just stepping off of duck boards straight into bottomless mud. This really was an awful slaughter. RIP to all of those lost and respects to their families and decendants.

  • @johnstirling6597
    @johnstirling6597 11 місяців тому +1

    In the early 1980s I did some work for an old English guy that had emigrated to New Zealand. We got to talking and it turned out he was an old soldier who had fought and been wounded at Passchendaele, he told me a bit about his experiences. Him and some mates were sitting around when a shell exploded near to them, everyone else was killed but he survived with his eye blown out but still functioning, he had to walk , unaided to a rear medical facility to get it fixed. When asked why he emigrated his reply was, "to get as far away from that bloody place as possible".

  • @BilltheDoughboy1996
    @BilltheDoughboy1996 Рік тому +2

    Great video as always mate 👏 I'll be re visiting here in February. I was lucky enough to be at Ypres, Zonnebeke and Passchendaele for the 100th Anniversary.

  • @mufflejoy
    @mufflejoy Рік тому +6

    I have visited Ypres several times, including Tyne Cot and the German Langemark location. The latter amazes by each stone not being individual persons but rather "mass graves" which obscures the extent of the losses.
    All of it, the sheer amount of cemetaries around Ypres, Verdun etc never ceases to amaze and horrify by the sheer distruction that was WW1 - a must do visit for anyone just slightly curious about the social dynamics of humanity.

    • @mamavswild
      @mamavswild 8 місяців тому

      It’s sad that those young men were buried without their names

  • @James-zg2nl
    @James-zg2nl Рік тому +4

    This is the first video I have seen by you, I am very glad it came up in my recommended list this morning. I really appreciate your filmmaking approach, especially when you took the time to commemorate the fallen of our former foe.
    Cheers

  • @passchendaelemuseum
    @passchendaelemuseum Рік тому +2

    Hello Mat, very interesting video! Thank you for visiting and mentioning our museum. If you don't mind, we will share your video on our social media channels in the coming days. Kind regards, the Passchendaele Museum

  • @williamkennedy5492
    @williamkennedy5492 Рік тому +1

    At 7 minutes 20 second i was overwhelmed by the shear volume of death, It surely does stagger the imagination, there are no words that can describe the actual horror of what these brave men went through.
    My Great uncle was killed in 1915 aged 19 he lays in France, a 19 year old boy , i have his medals and soon it will be remembrance day, the medal ribbons are worn through with pin holes where his mother my great grandma wore them on remembrance day , looking back it is so pointless and all politicians have a great deal to answer for, curse them to hell for they still play with peoples lives. Thank you for the video it is so moving and of course so thought provoking.
    Cheshire UK.

  • @MrButtonpresser
    @MrButtonpresser 8 місяців тому +1

    My Great Grandfather was killed in the 2nd Battle for Ypres, near St Julien on 26 April 1915. (Sint Juliaan). Order received for the Northumberland Infantry Brigade to attack St Julien in cooperation with the Lahore Division. Orders issued for attack. By 1:50pm the Battalions were on the move, the 4th attacking the Wieltje-St Julien with their left on the road." He is now mentioned on the Menin Gate.
    Thank you for a sensitive and well presented video. I was lucky enough to visit the area in 2007.

  • @elsupremo3651
    @elsupremo3651 Рік тому +1

    Terrific production values. Somber and informative. Love the walking tour videos Matt.

  • @allanburt5250
    @allanburt5250 Рік тому +3

    Thank you sharing with us. I visited a few times in the 90s and it was a very humble experience. You do get an understanding of the ground when walking those fields.

  • @tonysutton6559
    @tonysutton6559 Рік тому +5

    You mentioned a Frank Hurley taking an iconic photograph. He was already famous before going out to the trenches in WWI as he had accompanied Shackleton on his attempt to cross Antarctica. He was also an official photographer in North Africa in WWII.

  • @johno9507
    @johno9507 7 місяців тому +2

    So sad that so many of our boys went for adventure and came home mentally and physically broken.
    My Great Uncle fought in Passchendaele and he came home a very different man.
    Severe alcoholism was a big problem, something he tried to help other Diggers out of by setting up a foundation for them.
    He was so fearful when WW2 came that my father would have to fight and see the horror he did, thankfully my Dad was 2 years too young.
    LEST WE FORGET. 🇦🇺

  • @user-ub3ds5it4o
    @user-ub3ds5it4o 7 місяців тому +3

    My Grandfather was killed on the 31st July 1917 at Passchendaele. Pvt John Brown 4th Battalion Middlesex Regiment. His name is on the Mennin gate Memorial 🎶🪕

  • @DAH55100
    @DAH55100 Рік тому

    Much appreciated. A useful overview of key locations that will add to the visitor experience.

  • @TheSergentChaotix
    @TheSergentChaotix Рік тому +5

    The french were also present at Passchendaelz, 6 divisions fought during the battle. They also had earlier successes that allowed them to support the ANZAC-Canadian offensives.

  • @Nickhilton90
    @Nickhilton90 Рік тому +1

    superb, very moving documentary and well put together. Hope it gets the views it deserves

  • @ColinH1973
    @ColinH1973 11 місяців тому +1

    Excellent work, interesting and informative. I was in Ypres and Passchendaele about 15 years ago, and you have filled in a lot of the blanks for me. Thank you for this.

  • @user-ku2sf2lv2k
    @user-ku2sf2lv2k 4 місяці тому +1

    My grandfather was at pashendeale,he was in the 5th Canadian mounted rifles,Joe Tremblay,he survived the great war

  • @caravaggiosaccomplice7841
    @caravaggiosaccomplice7841 Рік тому +1

    What an insightful and moving tribute and commentary. First class.

  • @christinewesson2046
    @christinewesson2046 6 місяців тому +1

    My grandad survived. Thank God.

  • @jonrinckes
    @jonrinckes 8 місяців тому +1

    Thank you Mat for a stunning doco

  • @cathywithac
    @cathywithac Рік тому +2

    Meet Donald Cameron, my grandmother's brother. Born May 4 1894 in Glasgow Scotland. Died September 25 1917, on my grandmother's birthday, in Flanders Belgium in the battle of Polygon Wood (to be confirmed). The official records say: "Killed in Action (France and Flanders) Regiment: Cameronian (Scottish Rifles) Battalion: 5th/6th Rank: Private Number: 30043 Burial : Tyn Cot Memorial, Panel 68 to 70 and 162 and 162A., West-Vlaanderen, Belgium".
    Family records show a brother on the battlefield who was thinking of home. I have 2 vases that he made out of artillery shells as a gift for her 21st birthday. l. They were his birthday gift to her on what would become the day of his death. They were made on the battlefield from spent artillery shells. Antiques Roadshow calls this trench art. He etched the design for her. It is a wreath of leaves topped with poppies. Yes, there were poppies in the fields of Flanders, just like the poem says. One says "1914 - Royal Artillery Marine". The other says "1917 - Anti-Aircraft Brigade".

  • @phmoffett
    @phmoffett 10 місяців тому +1

    Very well written, edited and narrated. One of the best documentary pieces I've seen. Thank you.

  • @sandywilkie564
    @sandywilkie564 Рік тому +3

    Again Mat, a wonderful, informative presentation.

    • @MatMcLachlanHistory
      @MatMcLachlanHistory  Рік тому

      Thanks Sandy!

    • @DCND06
      @DCND06 Рік тому +1

      I agree. Very moving so thank you. 🇬🇧🇦🇺🇨🇦🇧🇪To all The Fallen.

  • @patobrien6364
    @patobrien6364 9 місяців тому +1

    I visited your own commemorative location outside Albany WA. It stunned me. A fabulous record of those who lost so much, which we gained. Sobering stuff 😎

  • @gregmichael8473
    @gregmichael8473 Рік тому +4

    Mat, Thanks for the video. I've visited Tyne Cot and the Ieper area 4 times now and am still moved by the sight of that Cemetery. Had a distant relative 42 Bn AIF killed on 31 July 1917 in a "stunt" near Warneton which was meant as a diversion for the main offensive. His name's on the Menin Gate.

  • @Dadsterful
    @Dadsterful Рік тому +2

    A very moving piece. Thanks Mat, I'll be visiting this area later this year, much better informed

  • @christinewesson2046
    @christinewesson2046 6 місяців тому +2

    My grandad called it Wipers. There were a pair of china ornaments either side of nans and grandads fireplace that grandad had taken off a wall, that was all that was left of a house in Wipers and squirrelled away to bring home as a souvenir.

  • @cccenturion4480
    @cccenturion4480 8 місяців тому +1

    One of the things that struck me while I visited these sites and villages was the complete lack of old buildings.

  • @thomasbraden8242
    @thomasbraden8242 4 місяці тому +1

    Fascinating. Very well done.

  • @philipdee1415
    @philipdee1415 2 місяці тому +1

    Very important work that you are doing....well done to all the crew

  • @carlosmontero9042
    @carlosmontero9042 9 місяців тому +1

    Great video, thanks for sharing!

  • @johnwalker5366
    @johnwalker5366 Рік тому +2

    well made video , back in 2016 we visited Tyne Cot , to find my grandads brother on the centenary wall, being the first in the family to do so .,didnt know he had lived, until a few years ago ,having been to Tyne Cot many times back in th 80s with 1st ww solders as a helper?sadly they have all passed away , the stories they passed on made me cry...

  • @coreythiel504
    @coreythiel504 Рік тому +7

    Absolute brutality of war. I compare my problems with this and immediately feel better. Unreal.

  • @pmhart
    @pmhart Рік тому +2

    Nice work Mat, really enjoyed it!

  • @anthonylamb3488
    @anthonylamb3488 6 місяців тому +1

    I will always be interested, I have two Great Uncles (brothers) who fell here and in France. I will be visiting them next year to pay my respects, they are my heroes.❤

  • @Herman6507
    @Herman6507 Рік тому +2

    A good and respectful documentary, interestingly covering both sides for a change.

  • @crazyblindguy
    @crazyblindguy 7 місяців тому +1

    Very amazing video well done and keep up the great work and it was very moving

  • @mickdarvell5006
    @mickdarvell5006 8 місяців тому +1

    Very good and informative - popping over there in December so thank you

  • @VilleKuitunen6
    @VilleKuitunen6 Рік тому +5

    See my spirit on the wind
    Across the lines, beyond the hill
    Friend and foe will meet again
    Those who died at Passchendaele… paid a visit once, unbelievable experience. Poor souls, rest in peace.

    • @jessierodriguez7168
      @jessierodriguez7168 Рік тому +1

      Song --(passchendale) by Iron Maiden where that quote came from..if you know you know

  • @barbaraallen435
    @barbaraallen435 11 місяців тому +2

    I've been to the Somme battle and also Passiondale . It was very moving . When i drove up to TyneCott i couldn't believe the amount of graves that were there .

  • @ImWithBigRed
    @ImWithBigRed 7 місяців тому +1

    Sold.. I’m downloading that. Thanks Stephen. Thanks Audible.

  • @miphtan
    @miphtan Рік тому

    Very well done, Mat ... very informative.

  • @derekstocker6661
    @derekstocker6661 Рік тому +1

    Absolutely amazing, what a great salute to all who were there, the heartbreak that this war caused and the dear souls, some forever lost will always be remembered. Fabulous cemetery and wonderfully kept in respect for all interred there.
    Thank you so much for this great video, and to think that in twenty years it was started all over again. RIP to all.

  • @nickspong8265
    @nickspong8265 8 місяців тому +1

    Very good narration and presentation indeed

  • @andyb.1026
    @andyb.1026 Рік тому +2

    My Grandfather went about 4 years all the way thru WW1, from the Dardanelles to the Somme. He was killed a few weeks before the end. I'm the only member of the family to visit his Grave & the Mennin gate ceremony.

  • @SuperDiablo101
    @SuperDiablo101 Рік тому +3

    my grandfather passed away from COVID he had been a marine tank command in Korea after his passing we cleared his house and my mom found a medallion that belonged to my great great grandfather who was part of the Scottish Canadian Highlanders he was wounded in a previous battle but continued to fight and eventually died in the battle of paschendale his name was George agnus macleod from framboise Nova Scotia

  • @julieblundell7421
    @julieblundell7421 Рік тому +2

    Hello Mat, what an excellent video, I really enjoyed it, my niece and her boyfriend are coming to Ypres next week and I have told her plenty on this subject, and now have recommended her to watch this video, stay safe mate, Lee.

  • @soldierski1669
    @soldierski1669 8 місяців тому +1

    This was very good, thank you.

  • @sandinyabumcrack
    @sandinyabumcrack 8 місяців тому +1

    Thanks for this upload and information my plan is to visit in the next 5 years!
    To honour my great uncle whom I’m named after I intend to find exactly where he died and just sit with him! Although they never found him afterward he is named on Tyne cot memorial!
    He deserves my respect and deep thanks for the sacrifice he and his brothers blood and none blood made for without it I may never have been born! 😢
    Every year I drink to him shed many tears and remember him! ❤

  • @probuilder4980
    @probuilder4980 9 місяців тому +1

    Very well made video , thank you for making it.
    A truly dark time in history
    After many years in the song Willie McBride
    "But here in this graveyard it's still no mans land
    The countless white crosses stand mute in the sand
    To man's blind indefference to his fellow man
    To a whole generation that were butchered and dammed"
    Makes me sad

  • @kvdp1805
    @kvdp1805 9 місяців тому +1

    Thank you for this story, well told.

  • @dougm5341
    @dougm5341 Рік тому +1

    Loving the channel. Your work is top notch….

  • @tillposer
    @tillposer 11 місяців тому +1

    My grandfather was at Passchendaele during that time when his division was inserted into the line. At that time the situation was quite dire, his regiment had been badly shot up and most of two of the battalions had been taken prisoner. He manged to extricate the rest of his machine-gun battalion to the rear. He complained bitterly in his remembrances, that's at the Somme, he lay in the line for six weeks there, at least one could entrench to get out of the line of fire while here the same effort would result in drowning in the holes and trenches.

  • @davidcunningham2074
    @davidcunningham2074 9 місяців тому +1

    unnerving. it is such a calm landscape now but what horrors happened there once.

  • @brettcurtis5710
    @brettcurtis5710 9 місяців тому +1

    Sobering viewing indeed - the entire British Empire and Dominion forces fought there! In memory of my friend's grandfather James McKenzie MM 1NZEF stretcher-bearer awarded the Military medal in 1917 - survived WW1 to serve as NZ's Senior Padre (Lt-Col), in Greece, Nth Africa and Italy in WW2.

  • @Schweini_1983
    @Schweini_1983 2 місяці тому +2

    My great great grandfather was killed at Paschendaele after he and his Canadian comrades releived the Australians and New Zealanders. He was killed on October 26 1917 and his body was never found. His name is on Menin Gate. He served with Robert Shankland who was awarded a Victoria Cross for his actions on that same day. Pvt Frederick William Ware. 43rd Highlanders. Manitoba regiment.

    • @MatMcLachlanHistory
      @MatMcLachlanHistory  2 місяці тому +1

      Lest we forget.

    • @MNnytrorider
      @MNnytrorider 3 дні тому

      My great grandfather Canadian from Thunder Bay celebrated his birthday on the front line that day. In his diary he notes they took 6 pill boxes and took 260 prisoners on October 26 1917.

  • @michaelewert8310
    @michaelewert8310 Рік тому +1

    An extraordinary presentation of sacrifice and brutally of a forgotten war. What is striking about many battlefields throughout the world is how destroyed those fields were in the past compared to how beautiful those fields are today.

  • @feliciaking3681
    @feliciaking3681 Рік тому +2

    My two great grandfathers fought in passchendaele William Edwin king and William James stockdale one was badly injured and the other one was killed

  • @brianneale2006
    @brianneale2006 Рік тому +3

    I Live not very far from the Ypres Salient or the First world war celeries around Ypres and Passchendaele and visited them on several occasions I have several books and guide books on the battles as I am very interested in the First world war.