| Lieut.-Colonel M. E. Makgill-Crichton-Maitland, D.S.O. | Commanding Officer. |
| Capt. L. G. Fisher-Rowe, M.C. | Second in Command. |
| Lieut. W. H. Lovell, M.C. | Acting Adjutant. |
| Lieut. L. de J. Harvard | King’s Company. |
| Lieut. J. A. Lloyd | ” ” |
| 2nd Lieut. J. H. Frere | ” ” |
| Capt. A. T. G. Rhodes | No. 2 Company. |
| 2nd Lieut. L. G. Byng | ” ” |
| 2nd Lieut. E. G. Hawkesworth | ” ” |
| 2nd Lieut. W. U. Timmis | ” ” |
| Capt. P. M. Spence, M.C. | No. 3 Company. |
| Lieut. H. G. Wiggins | ” ” |
| Lieut. S. J. Hargreaves | ” ” |
| 2nd Lieut. C. Cruttenden | ” ” |
| Capt. R. D. Lawford | No. 4 Company. |
| Lieut. the Hon. P. P. Cary | ” ” |
| 2nd Lieut. C. C. Mays | ” ” |
| Lieut. N. G. Chamberlain | ” ” |
| Capt. H. H. Castle, R.A.M.C. | Medical Officer. |
Conditions were favourable for carrying out the relief, and the next day passed without incident, although the enemy continued to shell the valley south of Bourlon Wood. On the evening of the 28th the 3rd Guards Brigade, having been relieved by the Fifty-ninth Division, marched to the reserve trenches south-west of Ribecourt. Next day it proceeded to Havrincourt Wood. A camp was pitched, and to make way for the tents it was necessary to clear away the undergrowth, which so delayed matters that it was not till 10 P.M. that every one had settled down.
Nov. 30.
Barely had the officers finished breakfast on
the morning of the 30th, when rumours reached them that the Germans had broken through the line. At first no one believed this possible, and, as the camp was quite five miles from our front line, a further report that the Germans were not far off was received with incredulity. But soon small parties of men were seen coming over the hill, as well as gunners and horses without guns. By degrees these isolated parties became a mob, and the road was blocked by a torrent of transport and men. A few shells pitched not far from the camp, and confirmed the news of the approach of the Germans. At the same time there arrived a warning order to be ready to move at a moment’s notice, and soon the whole camp was filled with bustle and excitement.
The first warning said that Seymour’s Brigade was to be ready to take up a defensive position on the ridge of Havrincourt Wood. This was cancelled later, and the Brigade was told to concentrate at a point near Metz. As soon as the order was confirmed, the 1st Battalion moved off to join the rest of the Brigade on the Trescault—Metz road. The march was trying, as the road was blocked with traffic, all moving in the opposite direction. At some points the Brigade encountered as many as three limbers abreast. Sometimes, therefore, the troops had to go in single file through a mass of vehicles and men, and then to double so as to keep touch with those in front. Being on a hill, the road was clearly visible for miles, and the Germans soon started hammering it with high-explosive shells, which added to the general confusion. It requires a
very highly disciplined force to move quickly against such a stream as this was, but the men never checked their pace for a moment. Spades and shovels were drawn in Metz, and the whole Brigade was soon ready to advance in artillery formation. The 1st Battalion followed the Welsh Guards across country in the direction of Gouzeaucourt and Villers Plouich. Brigadier-General Lord Henry Seymour rode on in front with his Staff.
Attack on Gonnelieu
The position taken up by the Brigade was just under the crest of the ridge, running north from Gouzeaucourt Wood, and the 1st Battalion bivouacked for the night within half a mile of the camp in Havrincourt Wood, where the stores and transport had remained. As the night was bitterly cold, one blanket per man and the officers’ trench kits were fetched, and eventually, when the cookers came up, tea and porridge was given out to the men.
Dec. 1.