Readings Newsletter
Become a Readings Member to make your shopping experience even easier.
Sign in or sign up for free!
You’re not far away from qualifying for FREE standard shipping within Australia
You’ve qualified for FREE standard shipping within Australia
The cart is loading…
'Deeply regret to inform you that 2/Lt C F B Hodgins 2/Wiltshire Regt is reported killed Sept 25/26. Lord Kitchener desires to express his sympathy. Secretary War Office.' ? Telegram from the War Office dated 29 September 1915 This is the true and previously untold story of one man's war on the Western Front during the First World War. As a young man, still in his teens, Charles Francis Burgoyne Hodgins, known as Charlie, answered the call to 'do his bit' for King and Country. Like so many others, he was never to return. He was killed on 25 September 1915, on the opening day of the Battle of Loos, and is one of many thousands who now lie in cemeteries near the former battlefields of northern France. According to an officer in his battalion, he died 'leading his men with great gallantry, and even when wounded, tried to rise and take them on'. Drawing on the many letters, photographs and telegrams Charlie sent home, along with newspaper articles, war archives and other personal accounts, historian Peter Jacobs has pieced together the final moments of Charlie's short life. This is a compelling and poignant tale of personal courage and one family's loss. But it also tells of the tragedy and suffering experienced by a generation of men during the First World War. AUTHOR: Peter Jacobs is a former RAF Wing Commander and the author of several books. He is the author of an Aviation Heritage Trail series, following Airfields of 11 Group, Airfields of the D-Day Invasion Force; 2nd Tactical Air Force in South-East England in WWII and Southern and West Country Airfields of the D-Day Invasion Air Force; 2nd Tactical Air Force in Southern and South-West England in WWII. His other recent titles for Pen and Sword include Daring Raids of World War Two; Heroic Land, Sea and Air Attacks and Setting France Ablaze; The SOE in France During WWII. 30 b/w illustrations
$9.00 standard shipping within Australia
FREE standard shipping within Australia for orders over $100.00
Express & International shipping calculated at checkout
'Deeply regret to inform you that 2/Lt C F B Hodgins 2/Wiltshire Regt is reported killed Sept 25/26. Lord Kitchener desires to express his sympathy. Secretary War Office.' ? Telegram from the War Office dated 29 September 1915 This is the true and previously untold story of one man's war on the Western Front during the First World War. As a young man, still in his teens, Charles Francis Burgoyne Hodgins, known as Charlie, answered the call to 'do his bit' for King and Country. Like so many others, he was never to return. He was killed on 25 September 1915, on the opening day of the Battle of Loos, and is one of many thousands who now lie in cemeteries near the former battlefields of northern France. According to an officer in his battalion, he died 'leading his men with great gallantry, and even when wounded, tried to rise and take them on'. Drawing on the many letters, photographs and telegrams Charlie sent home, along with newspaper articles, war archives and other personal accounts, historian Peter Jacobs has pieced together the final moments of Charlie's short life. This is a compelling and poignant tale of personal courage and one family's loss. But it also tells of the tragedy and suffering experienced by a generation of men during the First World War. AUTHOR: Peter Jacobs is a former RAF Wing Commander and the author of several books. He is the author of an Aviation Heritage Trail series, following Airfields of 11 Group, Airfields of the D-Day Invasion Force; 2nd Tactical Air Force in South-East England in WWII and Southern and West Country Airfields of the D-Day Invasion Air Force; 2nd Tactical Air Force in Southern and South-West England in WWII. His other recent titles for Pen and Sword include Daring Raids of World War Two; Heroic Land, Sea and Air Attacks and Setting France Ablaze; The SOE in France During WWII. 30 b/w illustrations