Frank and Percy Talley of the 1st City of London Yeomanry (Rough Riders) were destined to leave England to take part in the last, and most costly, single-day battle of the Gallipoli Campaign, on 21 August 1915. In never-before published letters, the Talley brothers describe their training in England and their move to the East Coast to man the trenches there during the invasion scare of 1914 and the Zeppelin attack at Great Yarmouth. Their letters provide a rare insight into the activities of the yeomen in preparing for war, their transportation to Egypt and Suez and their expectation that they would be used in action at Gallipoli. After walking into a maelstrom of fire on 21 August 1915, the trooper-brothers were separated; each wrote home not knowing whether the other had survived. Both were wounded. Their letters from the Suvla trenches are brief but telling – the last, desperate battle for Gallipoli as seen through the eyes of two brothers from London.
Grasping Gallipoli : Terrain, Maps and Failure at the Dardanelles, 1915
Peter Chasseaud, Peter Doyle
bookDisputed Earth: Geology and Trench Warfare on the Western Front 1914–18
Peter Doyle
bookFritz and Tommy : Across the Barbed Wire
Peter Doyle, Robin Schäfer
bookRough Riders: Two Brothers and the Last Stand at Gallipoli
Peter Doyle
bookFirst World War Leaders and Commanders: 5 Minute History
Peter Doyle
bookThe First World War in 100 Objects
Peter Doyle
bookRemembering Tommy : The British Soldier in the First World War
Peter Doyle, Chris Foster
bookBattle Story: Loos 1915
Peter Doyle
bookTrench Talk: Words of the First World War
Peter Doyle, Julian Walker
bookGallipoli 1915 : The Fight for the Dardanelles Strait
Peter Doyle
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