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Very Touching Letter to a Soldier's Mother

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    Very Touching Letter to a Soldier's Mother

    This year I will be spending the holidays alone so I thought I would keep myself busy by entertaining you guys with a few things from my collection.

    I have had this for quite a while and almost forgot about it. It is a really touching letter written by a member of Bayerische Minenwefer Kompagnie 205 by the order of his commander to a Mrs. Benjamin in Breslau. Her son, a field artillery observer, had been killed near Vimy Ridge in September 1915 and had evidently written to the unit to request if her son’s body could be returned to Breslau.

    The guy that is writing the first part of the letter said that observer position for Feldartillerie Regiment 6 was near their position in a sunken road, then Bayerische Schwere Minenwerfer Abteilung 9. On the 25th of September the French pushed into the sunken road and pulled back in the night.

    On the 26th of September they had to abandon their (Geschütz) gun and when they returned they found evidence of terrible fight. (I have a little trouble reading this part).

    Evidently they found a dead field artillery observer private and an engineer lying in the sunken road, near them they found a billfold (I assume belonging to the dead observer), At the same place they found another man, still alive, but buried up to his neck (from a shell explosion). This man told them that the two dead soldiers had been trying to dig him out when they were hit with enemy flank fire.

    He goes on to say that one of these dead men was her son. (I am having a little trouble with this part), but he is trying to console the mother by telling her that her son gave his life trying to save another comrade. And that it may comfort her to know that this place flowed again with blood a few days later. He says that the French re-took this place on the 27th of September and it would be impossible to retrieve the body of her son.

    At the bottom is a short note from the unit commander – I am having a real rough time trying to read his handwriting.

    The letter is accompanied by a map with the location of where her son was killed and the place where the wallet was turned in. I assume they sent the wallet to her.

    Several years ago I went to Vimy Ridge to search for the approximate location of where this event took place. I will show a pic or two at the end I took during my visit.

    When I scanned this I broke it up into 5 parts so it will be easier to read.


    If anyone would like to help get the text of this letter typed up or transcribed into something everyone could read I would be grateful.


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    Last edited by Brad Posey; 12-24-2010, 03:26 PM.

    #2
    more of the letter
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      #3
      last of the letter
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        #4
        the map
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          #5
          last map scan
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            #6
            This is very near where this event took place.

            Here you can see my car stuck in a ditch and being pulled out by the a couple very nice and understanding French Gendarmamarie guys.


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              #7
              Hi Brad and thanks for posting this. One can only imagine the hellish seen that place must have been at one time. I wonder how many people stroll thru there enjoying the peace and quet without a hint of what occured.
              pseudo-expert

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                #8
                Here is the peaceful field where it happened. Somewhere in this general vicinity was the sunken road and the field artillery observation post where it all took place......and more than likely where this soldier still remains today resting in French soil with untold numbers of others…..both French and German…...and Canadians from later on in the war.

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                  #9
                  Hi Brad
                  Thanks for sharing.
                  I got to get to Europe soon, I need a battlefield fix bad.

                  Eric
                  ps Iam on me lonesome too. sucks!

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                    #10
                    Yes it does...but we can hang out here and talk about stuff....

                    Let me know when you make the trip...if you go to the Argonne area I can show you some very interesting things.

                    .

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                      #11
                      Very interesting material, Brad. The writer of the letter tells that the mother should be proud her son died trying to save the life of a comrade. BTW I like your white E34, being an old BMW guy myself

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                        #12
                        Originally posted by VtwinVince View Post
                        Very interesting material, Brad. The writer of the letter tells that the mother should be proud her son died trying to save the life of a comrade. BTW I like your white E34, being an old BMW guy myself
                        I had to turn that old horse over to the glue factory......I started putting way too much $$ in repairs into the poor thing, but...it is one of the best driving cars I have ever driven.

                        What I hope is that someone will help me put all of this down, the contents of the letter, into modern German text...... Then I will get an official translation done on it and then we can all appreciate it a little more with a correct understanding in both German and English.

                        My Sütterlin skills are somewhat limited, but I can read and understand most of this letter.

                        .

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                          #13
                          I am curious about that cornfield...the battle site. If you walked the corn rows at the time the pic was taken, could you find bits of metal and other artifacts on the surface? I hunt for Native American artifacts in corn fields that look similar and we find points and tools all the time that the plow brings up. What's it like walking the fields over there? Gary

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                            #14
                            Originally posted by Ammersee View Post
                            I am curious about that cornfield...the battle site. If you walked the corn rows at the time the pic was taken, could you find bits of metal and other artifacts on the surface? I hunt for Native American artifacts in corn fields that look similar and we find points and tools all the time that the plow brings up. What's it like walking the fields over there? Gary
                            I have walked a lot of fields around Verdun and on the Somme and there you can find just about anything from large caliber unexploded shells to personal equipment items like buttons and buckles. Mostly what you find are artillery related things like shrapnel, fuses, fuse parts, pieces of rotating band and lead shrapnel balls as well as the empty shrapnel case (empty projectile)

                            I also used to look for arrowheads. This is sort of like that and a lot of fun too.

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