Bicycle soldiers

Personally, I’ve always liked bicycles.

When I was a lot younger than I am now a bicycle gave me a freedom to explore, as well as providing cheap and reliable transport.

And because I’ve always had a soft spot for bicycles, I’ve also been interested in the history of cycling.

Bicycles were really important at the end of the nineteenth century to both men and women.

To women, because they gave women the freedom to travel without a male chaperone and  allowed them to travel independently. To men, especially working class men, they provided both cheap transport and a way of getting out of industrial towns and their pollution.

But one aspect that had totally escaped my attention was their role in warfare.

Army Cyclist badge, Auckland Museum, Public domain via Wikimedia commons

In fact I only really came across the use of bicycles by the British Army in the first world war when I read Ursula Bloom’s memoir, when she mentions that someone that she knew had joined a cyclist’s battalion.

Image: Imperial War Museum, London

So what were they?

Richard Holmes “Tommy”, his history of British soldiers on the western front in world war one provides a little more detail explaining that cyclist’s battalions were recruited primarily as messengers – radio was in its infancy, and field telephone lines were in continual danger of being broken by shellfire – hence the use of cyclists carrying messages back from the front to the officers behind the lines and also to the artillery.

Indian soldier cyclists during the battle of the Somme, 1916 via the IWM Wikimedia commons image collection

In such a static war as world war one, bicycle soldiers were not used by the British due to their mobility but other armies have used soldiers on bicycles and a cheap and efficient way of moving troops.

In 1940, Danish soldiers used bicycles to ride to war before being overwhelmed by the Wehrmacht, and the Japanese, when they invaded Malaysia confiscated bicycles and gave them to their soldiers as a way of moving their army.

Tellingly, both Sweden and Switzerland maintained bicycle detachments until the last quarter of the twentieth century, with Switzerland ending their use in the 1970s and Sweden in the early 1980s.

Both armies used custom made, easy to maintain bicycles and also bicycle trailers to transport heavier and bulkier items.

Swedish soldiers carrying anti tank missiles on bicycles – Wikimedia commons

And from the Swedish and Swiss perspective their use made perfect sense.

During wartime, even if they were able to maintain their neutrality, fuel would be scarce (Sweden, Finland and the USSR maintained a strategic reserve of steam locomotives during the cold war as a buffer against fuel shortages. Incidentally, despite rumours to the contrary the United Kingdom did not.), and in a country with well maintained roads, bicycles would provide a cheap and effective way of moving soldiers.

By using simple single speed bicycles that need little in the way of specialist maintenance, or indeed any maintenance beyond fixing punctures and keeping the chain clean and lubricated.

In a time when bicycles were still used as transportation, changing a tyre or an inner tube would be a skill most people would already have.

Swedish conscripts fixing their bicycles – Swedish Army museum via Wikimedia commons

And as experience in the Vietnam war showed, bicycles can be incredibly valuable as a means of transporting supplies, especially during a partisan or asymmetric conflict.

And bicycle warfare does not just belong to history, there are unconfirmed reports of Ukrainian soldiers in the current conflict using bicycles to transport attack drones to the front line…

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Queen Victoria died 125 years ago today

Queen Victoria died 125 years ago today, on 22 January 1901. as memorialised by the Vicar of Ingleton, North Yorkshire, in the parish register

Queen Victoria’s reign, was like our own time, a time of great change and innovation with the industrial revolution, the development of a large urban working class, large scale migration to the colonies and the United States, the development of railways and steamships, speeding and simplifying communication and trade, and a cheap and affordable postal service, not to mention a global telegraph network.

She herself was simply the Queen Empress, and after her nervous breakdown following the death of Albert had little or nothing to do with the process of governance.

So how best to remember her? Well I came across this story from New Zealand that seems a fitting mix of modernity, cultural clashes and tradition…

Licking the queen

The Māori name for stamps is pane kuini (‘queen’s head’). Māori initially found the concept confusing, as in Māori culture the head is sacred and licking the head of the most prestigious person in the Empire seemed odd.

And that does seem to typify her reign…

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More Balkan ephemera…

An Albanian 1 Lek coin from 1931.

Albania, in the early part of the twentieth century, had a complex, and at times farcical history.

Emerging from the ruins of the Ottoman Empire after the Balkan wars, at first the European powers attempted to impose a German princeling as king – after all such a move had worked reasonably well in both Bulgaria and Romania a generation earlier.

Needless to say, this time it didn’t.

The would be King of Albania was deposed before he’d ever properly been installed and a republic declared. Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany, shrewder than he is often portrayed as being, said it would probably have been better if an Ottoman prince had been installed.

In the midst of this chaos at the start of world war one, Otto Witte, an Austrian acrobat and fantasist claimed he had been mistaken by one Albanian faction for a nephew of the Ottoman sultan and had been invited to be king.

The story is almost certainly baloney, even if the police in Berlin during the Weimar republic allowed Witte to style himself ex-king of Albania on his id card.

As it was, for a few years it didn’t matter. During world war one the Albanian polity was occupied first by retreating Serb forces, who did not treat the local population well, followed by both Austria-Hungary and Bulgaria occupying the north and east of the country, not to mention other parts of Albania being occupied by Greece, France and Italy, but eventually, at the end of the first world war, Albania finally became a republic in more than name.

Power struggles within the government eventually resulted in the president, Ahmed Zogu, declaring himself Zog I and king of Albania in 1928. During Zog’s reign, Albania increasingly came under the influence of Mussolini’s Italy and was eventually invaded by Italy and made an Italian protectorate at the beginning of the second world war.

Not surprisingly, Zog needed a founding myth for Albania, given that it was little more than a loose confederation of feuding clans, and fastened on Alexander the Great and his Illyrian grandmother, Eurydice, as a better sounding story, and comfortably in the past, than any event in the more recent history of Albania.

Hence the coins of his period have Alexander, modelled after a classical period Greek coin of Alexander the great on the obverse and Alexander charging on his horse Bucephalus on the reverse, the design echoing Italian coins of the period in harking back to a heroic classical past

as in these Italian 50 centesimi of the period – Mussolini’s fascist era coin on the left with the Roman eagle, and the 1920’s version, showing a pride of four lions, celebrating equality, aeqvitas, as in the French ideal of Liberté Egalité Fraternité, on the right.

In Albania the coinage was replaced during the Italian occupation by coins bearing an effigy of Victor Emmanuel III of Italy on the obverse and fascist iconography and the Albanian eagle on the reverse.

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Ursula’s war…

Over the last few days I’ve been reading Ursula Bloom’s memoir of her life as a young woman during the first world war.

It’s not history, it’s very much a personal memoir, but on another level it is an important resource describing how people in Britain on the Home Front felt about the war and a developing sense of cynicism about its progress.

Much of British World War One history focuses on generals, the hell of the Western Front, and very little on how people at home in Britain felt.

Bloom’s memoir helps correct that.

A clergyman’s daughter, living with her slowly dying mother, first in St Albans and then in Walton on the Naze in Essex, Bloom was a member of the genteel poor of the Edwardian era, living on a small fixed income which she supplemented by playing piano to accompany silent films in the cinema, she started the war full of the Edwardian certainties of Britain’s position in the world.

But when the army didn’t perform as well as expected, not to mention the navy, doubts began to creep in as to how well the war was actually going. Even the Daily Mail, Bloom’s newspaper of choice, couldn’t manage to maintain an upbeat tone, especially when Field Postcards ceased to be a novelty and often brought news of a loved one being wounded and in a field hospital.

Bloom habitually refers to the new post-1914 volunteer army as ‘Fred Karno’s Army’ that replaced the British Expeditionary Force due to its disorganisation and the way it consisted of half trained squaddies commanded by officers straight out of public school – Fred Karno was a well known slapstick comedian of the time who had a touring troupe.

Bloom also describes the impact of inflation on the genteel precariat on fixed incomes – things that were affordable became unaffordable, and, coupled with increases in income tax, began to hollow out the bottom end of Edwardian middle class.

Households could no longer afford maids and cooks, and the Aunt Mildreds, who had formerly managed quite well on small fixed incomes found it increasingly hard to manage.

Rationing in a sense was their salvation, as they had to live on a poorer meaner diet than before, and shortages of meat and potatoes, among other things, helped disguise that they simply couldn’t afford meat every day.

Other things stand out. Living on the Essex coast, Bloom would sit, in the blackout, watching the Zeppelin raids on the Thames estuary.

(As an aside I tried researching some of these raids using Welsh Newspapers Online. It’s quite clear from the reports that the British authorities heavily censored the reports of zeppelin raids, where they occurred and what damage there had been, perhaps for fear of spreading panic among the civilian population, or simply trying to curb war weariness.

On the other hand, perhaps because the Zeppelin raids worried the population so much, they were keen to publicise successes

As in the shooting down of L15, which Bloom witnessed. The Royal Flying Corps officer responsible for shooting down L15 was in fact from New Zealand, something the British papers seem not to mention, although it was headline news in New Zealand.)

As I say, an interesting resource, and a valuable counterweight to the ‘big men’ style of much of military history, especially where World One is concerned.

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Austro Hungarian Field Postcard 1915

I’ve acquired an AustroHungarian field postcard for my little collection of world war one ephemera

Compared to British examples it’s quite simple.

On the front of the card there’s a section on the left – helpfully labelled in the principal languages of the empire – for the sender to write their name and a return address

In this example there’s only a name, the unit name and address is given in the official purple stamp, in other examples I’ve seen there might be a line like ‘Feldpost 306‘ to give the number of the appropriate field post office.

Unlike British examples the rear of the card is blank for a simple message – no restrictive list of pre printed messages or warnings that the card will be destroyed if a personal message is added, as on the British ones.

The card is labelled Feldkorrezpondenzkarte – Field correspondence card- and that’s exactly what it is, a means for soldiers at the front to send short messages home for free.

Here the message is quite short and accompanied by a scrawl in pencil in a different had, presumably by the censor.

If you want to know more about German and AustroHungarian field postcards I’ve come across an informative blogpost with some good example images

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The Stepaniak code…

Recently, I’ve been rereading Death of a Schoolboy by Hans Koning.

Long out of print it’s a novel about Gavrilo Princip, the assassin of Franz Ferdinand and paints a compelling portrait of alienation and radicalisation. It’s also one of the books that sparked my interest in the last days of the Austro Hungarian Empire.

After the assassination of Franz Ferdinand, the heir to the Austro Hungarian throne, Princip and his co conspirators are arrested, beaten up and put in solitary confinement, where they find they can communicate with each other using the ‘Stepaniak Code’ by tapping on the heating pipe.

Given that I’ve been researching Sergei Stepaniak, Constance Garnett and the Friends of Russian Freedom, there is no way that this would not pique my interest.

The code probably has other names, but in Sergei Stepaniak’s book Underground Russia describing the Narondnaya Volya (People’s Will) group of anti tsarist terrorists in the 1880s he mentions the use of the code.

The code is breathtakingly simple and made up of a set of long and short taps, and has the merit that, while clumsier than morse code, there’s no appreciable learning curve, and providing you know how the code works it’s easy enough to make yourself a crib.

The pre-revolutionary Russian alphabet consisted of thirty five characters. Drawn on a 6×6 grid you get something like this

Position 36 is left blank, and each letter is represented by a sequence of long and short taps, for example Б is one short and two long and Ф is four short and four long.

Clumsy, but like texting in 1990s before even T9 predictive text was a thing, and you had to tap through the character options on the keypad, it was possible to get quite quick at it.

And it’s not just a Cyrillic thing. It’s easy enough to adapt to other languages and scripts.

For example, if you decided that you didn’t need to use the letter Z, you could make a 5×5 crib like this for English

If you were using another language, let’s say German or Swedish that uses extra accented characters you might add an extra row to accommodate them.

But the point remains, the code itself is breathtakingly simple, so simple that one can make one’s own crib on a scrap of paper, all you need know is the size of the grid and whether long taps signify a horizontal or vertical position on the grid…

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Stalin in London

Earlier this year I read ‘Young Stalin‘ by Simon Sebag-Montefiore – the book was published nearly twenty years ago but is still an interesting read. (The book is still in print and second hand copies are available online for a few dollars.)

Police mugshot following his arrest in 1908

To an extent the book humanises the monster and shows Stalin to be a more complex individual than the standard caricature – Stalin apparently liked to grow flowers in his garden and to read novels, besides having a string of lovers as a young man.

Not quite what you expect of a man who sent millions to their deaths, at times almost on a whim.

Stalin was not well travelled – unlike some of the other revolutionaries he simply did not have the money or connections to exile himself abroad, although he did live for a time in Vienna, and spent a few weeks in London in the run up and during the 1907 RSDLP congress.

The rest of his time he was either on the run, in prison, or sentenced to internal exile, at one time to a remote indigenous community in the Arctic.

Stalin’s command of English was poor – he may have understood more than he let on, but he certainly was not fluent, and relied on interpreters later in life.

There’s a comment in Sebag-Montefiore’s book that in London, Stalin would often attend Anglican high church services, ostensibly to improve his English by listening to the priest’s homily.

But the question is, why Anglican services, and not some preachy wordy methodist or protestant church?

And I think the answer is simple, and again humanises the monster.

Stalin was alone, with little money and could barely speak English. Maybe he did go to Anglican services to improve his English, but perhaps also as he’d nearly become a priest after several years in the Orthodox seminary in Tblisi, he also missed the colour and spectacle of an Orthodox mass, and settled for the smells and bells of Anglicanism to soothe his homesickness and loneliness, while surrounded by the damp greyness of London.

Strange to think of a strange bearded man standing at the back of a very middle class English event – one wonders what the very middle class church goers of suburban London would have thought if they realised that that strange man would one day be the leader of the Soviet Union…

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Snow on their boots

I’ve been working up at the Athenaeum for one morning a week cataloguing their historic book collection, and last Friday I catalogued some books written by Ursula Bloom.

There seemed to be rather a lot of books by Ms Bloom, she was obviously very popular with the users of the Athenaeum in the 1950s, so out of curiosity, I typed her name into wikipedia, and found a rather more interesting story than I imagined – I’d sort of envisaged her as a 1950s equivalent to Jilly Cooper but with less sex but just as many straining jodhpurs and heaving bosoms.

And that doesn’t seem to be an unfair characterisation of much of her work, but as often happens, if you scratch beneath the surface, you find a much more interesting person.

At the start of world war one she was working as a cinema pianist – her parents had separated and she was living in genteel poverty along with her mother in St Albans. (A cinema pianist was the person who played the musical accompaniment to silent movies – in itself quite interesting as it shows the sort of jobs open to middle class young women, and probably not quite what her piano teacher had envisaged)

She later wrote an autobiography describing life on the home front in world war one, rationing, zeppelin raids and the general atmosphere of paranoia and suspicion.

In her description of the start of world war one, she mentions the rumour that there were secret trains ferrying Russian reinforcements to support the British Expeditionary Force at Mons, where things were not going terribly well for the British – pushed back by the German army after an initial advance into Belgium, the British army attempted to stop the German advance at Mons.

They didn’t. They both suffered and inflicted heavy casualties, but the British army did slow the German advance enough to allow the bulk of the British Expeditionary Force to withdraw towards the French border.

The first Battle of Mons is also significant in that it was the first time in seventy years that a British army had fought anything other than a colonial war.

While the wars in South Africa had shown that there were deficiencies in British tactics in dealing with what were essentially guerilla forces, it was not until Mons that there was any real inkling that things might be different this time around and it might not be the glorious adventure that war was sometimes portrayed as in the popular literature of the time.

In the wake of the near disaster at Mons, there were widespread rumours that Russian reinforcements had been sent all the way from Siberia by way of Archangel in the north of Russia, and then by ship to the north of Scotland, bypassing neutral Norway. They had apparently been seen with snow still in the fur of their hats, and numbered up to ten thousand men.

The authorities were sufficiently worried to try to downplay the story, planting articles in the newspapers that what people had seen were Gaelic speaking soldiers from Ross-shire in Scotland – it might even have been more or less true, but looking at the newspapers of the time there was clearly a widespread belief that Russian reinforcements had come to the aid of British forces in Belgium.

It is almost certainly a case of mistaken identity – I doubt if the inhabitants of the south of England at the end of the Edwardian era, were familiar with the sound of spoken Gaelic, but what is interesting is that people quite clearly wanted to believe that the near disaster at Mons would turn out all right, and given that the newspapers of the time were trumpeting Russian successes in the east, particularly against Austria-Hungary, it’s perhaps natural that the Russians would be seen as potential saviours of what Kaiser Wilhelm allegedly described as ‘a contemptible little army‘.

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Edwardian paranoia

The Edwardian era was an unsettling time for Britain.

Queen Victoria had died, and with her the certainties of the late Victorian era. People were unsure of what, exactly, was Britain’s place in the world, and if there would be a war.

And you see this reflected in the popular fiction of the time. One trope was ‘invasion fiction’, such as Erskine Childers’ Riddle in the Sands, a variant on espionage fiction where some dastardly foreign power, usually Germany (after all Britain was locked in a naval arms race with Germany, as expensive and deadly as the later Soviet US arms race), was going to mount a sneaky invasion and overwhelm an incompetent and bumbling British government, and square jawed chaps would have to take it on themselves to do something about it.

And in the Edwardian era Britain, fearing attack, made alliances.

First with France, despite lingering suspicions dating back to the Napoleonic era, not to mention some more recent colonial disputes, but at least they could agree that Germany was a threat to them both.

Britain’s other ally was Imperial Russia, the third member of the triple entente.

Russia was a nasty repressive autocratic state.

People disappeared, people were sent in exile to Siberia, but yet there was money to be made as the Russian economy was beginning to boom, new factories, a new middle class, railways to be built, and so on.

At the same time there were all these escapees from Russia. Some were poor Jews fleeing persecution, some were equally poor political dissidents choosing life in the East End of London over internal exile, or worse a labour camp somewhere in the trackless wastes of Siberia.

Tolerated, Edwardian Britain was quite liberal in allowing dissidents and exiles in, something that was recognised by at least some of the exile groups, including the RSDLP, the forerunner of the Bolsheviks. The RSDLP, who were appreciative of being able to hold their congresses in exile with minimal interference by the authorities actually went out of their way to avoid being involved in any violent activity in Britain.

After all, they might need somewhere to escape to if the revolution didn’t play out the way they expected.

And the Okhrana, the Tsar’s secret police, were in England as well, sometimes co-operating with the British police, sometimes carrying out what the KGB later called мокрые делы – wet jobs – assassinations, and sometimes, especially after Sidney Street and the Houndsditch murders, with the connivance of the authorities.

There were of course other sorts of dissidents, ones like Sergei Stepniak, who was a gentleman, who spoke nicely about literature and art, quite unlike these strange slightly frightening men with strong accents and and their talk of violence and revolution, and who attracted groups of supporters such as the Friends of Russian Freedom. (While its helpful to think of the various factions within the dissident community as separate groupings there was a continuum – Fanny Stepniak, Sergei Stepniak’s widow helped organise Lenin’s 1907 RSDLP congress in London.)

And some of these supporters helped the dissidents by smuggling banned books and pamphlets into Russia.

Constance Garnett did so, and was so frightened by the experience she dumped all the material she was smuggling and escaped back to Britain as quickly as possible.

Russia was a frightening place where frightening, violent, things happened.

And this was reflected in the espionage fiction of the time. Hence novels like Tom Bevan’s Runners of Contraband, a tale of smuggling forbidden books and other material into Russia.

It’s probably not great fiction, but just as during the cold war bookshops always had a shelf or two of espionage fiction, it’s a symptom of how Russia was viewed by the Edwardians…

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Romanian army buttons from world war one

Over ten years ago, before we moved to Beechworth, I became fascinated by the provenance of the old Krupp 75 mm gun outside the RSL.

It didn’t have an Ottoman cipher, or a German or Austro Hungarian crest but instead the cipher of Carol I of Romania

The defining characteristic is the crown, a representation of the Steel crown of Romania.

The question is of course, how did a 75mm gun made by Krupp in 1905 for Romania end up Beechworth as a war trophy, as after all, Romania was on the side of the Entente in World War I.

The story is both simple and complex, so we’ll go for the simple version, but even that requires a recap on the history of the Balkans prior to World War One.

After participating in the Balkan wars that led to the Ottoman presence in Europe being reduced to a rump around Edirne, Romania initially stayed neutral in the First World War, unlike Bulgaria which sided with the Central Powers and Serbia, who sided with the Entente.

Bulgaria had been unhappy with the division of Ottoman territory between itself and Serbia as a result of the first Balkan war, and had then fought Serbia in the second Balkan war in the hope of gaining more of what is now Northern Macedonia.

Bulgarian participation in the First World war was really an attempt to ensure that if Austria Hungary defeated Serbia, it would be able to claim more of Macedonia.

And this is where the story gets tricky. Bear with me, people have written PhD theses on this, but we also need to discuss the Eastern Front and the Russian army in World War I.

There’s a view that during the First World War the Imperial Russian army simply wasn’t very good, and that Russia was too underdeveloped to produce the sheer amount of ammunition required by the army, and that eventually the rank and file got pissed off and went home to spread revolution and anarchy.

That’s not actually true.

It’s true that in the north against the German forces the Russian army was unsuccessful, but against Austria Hungary it was a different story, advancing to the edge of the Carpathians, and occupying Austro Hungarian cities such as Lemberg (now Lviv in the west of the Ukraine).

It’s also the case that in the early stages of the war all sides found they had underestimated the amount of ammunition required and had problems with supply. While the Gallipoli landings are sometimes presented as an attempt to seize the Dardanelles and Constantinople, to allow the resupply of the Russian army via Odessa (now Odesa), in truth, it was just as much about allowing Russian wheat exports via the Black Sea to help feed Britain and France.

By the time of the Brusilov offensive in 1916 the Russian army had all the military supplies they needed and it looked very much like they were about to break the Austro Hungarian army, so much so that Germany panicked and diverted scarce troops from the Western front to the Carpathian front to stiffen the Austro Hungarian forces.

At the same time Romania saw this as an opportunity to reclaim Transylvania from Austria Hungary and sided with the Entente and attempted to seize Transylvania from the Hungarians.

With Bulgarian attacks in the south and German forces advancing through Transylvania, the war didn’t go Romania’s way, and not even the Kerensky offensive of 1917 when post February Revolution Russia managed to assemble an army and push back against the combined German and Austro Hungarian forces, saved them and they were forced to sue for peace.

The Krupp gun, along with others, were seized by the occupying German forces, and passed to the Ottomans who had previously bought a lot of the same artillery piece from Germany, and was captured by Australia forces somewhere in what was then Palestine.

Quite a story.

It’s not the only Romanian gun on display in Australia – there are a few others, along with some Ottoman Krupp 75mm guns including the one nearby on the war memorial in Chiltern.

But there’s always been something that puzzled me. Romanian coins from the period used a different crown

Romania 1905 5 Bani

And then I came across an online antique dealer in Bulgaria who had some Romanian uniform buttons from the period of the Balkan wars and World War I. I checked out the dealer on line and they appeared to have a good reputation.

The buttons came with a partial provenance, suggesting that they were legitimately acquired – I’m guessing from a metal detectorist or field walker.

And there they were – any gilding has long gone and the buttons look to have been cleaned – and again the Romanian Steel crown is used, and not the other crown which was used on coins of the period suggesting that the Steel Crown was used as the Romanian army logo. If I was more anally retentive than I am I would search for other examples of its use by the Romanian military, but I’m happy with the army buttons as confirmation. (Just to confuse matters, some German regiments used buttons in a very similar design with the Prussian crown – it would be possible to go slightly mad comparing images on ebay and etsy)

So, there we have it, the crown used on the Krupp cannon is the same as that used on Romanian army uniforms of the period and something that to me, at least, closes the mystery of the provenance of the Beechworth gun and the crown used in the cipher…

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