In 1915, news of the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps landing and
the slaughter at Gallipoli stirred tens of thousands of young men to go
to war.
They answered the call and formed battalions of the Australian Imperial
Force. By the time the new recruits were combat ready, the campaign at
Gallipoli had ended. Their battlefields became the muddy paddocks of
France and Belgium.
Based on eyewitness account, Eyewitnesses at the Somme traces the story
of one of these battalions, the 55th, from its birth in the dusty camps
of Egypt through three years of brutal, bloody conflict on the bitter
western front.
When the Great War ended in 1918, over 500 of the 3,000 men who served
in the 55th had been slain and another 1,000 wounded. Eyewitnesses at
the Somme, shares personal stories of Australian men as they stared down
the horrors of war with determination, courage and comradeship. With
chapters devoted to the significant battles at Fromelles, Doignies,
Polygon Wood, Péronne and Bellicourt, this book tells the story of one
battalion, but in doing so it encapsulates the experiences of many
Australians on the Western Front.