- Reaction score
- 6,082
- Points
- 1,160
The Crimea?
LEFT-HAND MAN OF THE LINE: A name sometimes jestingly used for the sentry on the last post westward of the British line in Flanders. It is related that on one occasion, when the British Commander-in-Chief visited the locality, he asked casually of an astonished soldier if he was aware that he was the left hand man of the extreme left of the British line. The information left the man quite unimpressed, and after the officers had gone a sergeant took it on himself to explain. "You 'eard wot ' Aig said ? Well, it means that if 'e gave the order' Right wheel! ' you'd go on runnin' for the rest of yer blinkin' life!" - Edward Fraser and John Gibbons, Soldier and Sailor Words and Phrases, 1925
"... At this juncture Lieut. PENNIMAN, finding himself alone and unable to find any other fit men near him, proceeded to a point about R.29.a.8.5. where the Regimental Bombers, together with the P.P.C.L.I. were bombing up the ZOLLERN GRABEN. Here I understand the machine gun which had done considerable damage to us was put out of action by our bombs. ... - extract from CEF War Diary of The RCR, September 1916
redleafjumper said:Bombers were those soldiers who carried grenades or bombs for assaulting enemy positions. While your reference is a first war one the acitivity is much older. The Grenadiers of the old line regiments were also bombers.
redleafjumper said:What is the difference between a pelisse and a dolman and what are they?
The pelisse and dolman were heavily braided parts of hussar's flamboyant outfit. The pelisse was worn over the dolman in cooler weather, while during a warm day only the dolman was used.
BOMBER: How the term "bomber" came to be officially adopted in the War is curious. When, after the first Battle of Ypres, hand-grenades came into general employment, the parties of men trained to use them--a certain number in each battalion--were given the name of "grenadiers." The Grenadier Guards objected, claiming that they had a prescriptive right exclusively to the name, as having been specially conferred on them after Waterloo to commemorate their part in over-throwing Napoleon's Grenadiers of the Guard. The Guards, says Sir Frederick Ponsonby, in his History of the Grenadiers in the War, were "much perturbed", considering it as "an infringement of their privileges and misleading." The Colonel in command of the First Battalion Grenadier Guards protested to the War Office against the "usurpation". After a protracted controversy a final appeal was made to the King, and in May, 1916, it was officially announced that "at His Majesty's expressed wish the word 'Bomber' should be universally substituted for 'Grenadier' ". - Edward Fraser and John Gibbons, Soldier and Sailor Words and Phrases, 1925