icon 0
icon TOP UP
rightIcon
icon Reading History
rightIcon
icon Sign out
rightIcon
icon Get the APP
rightIcon

Trooper Bluegum at the Dardanelles

Chapter 16 AEROPLANES

Word Count: 1350    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

HARD SWEARERS, HARD FIGHTERS-A CURATE'S "LANGUAGE"-GERMAN AEROPLANE

," wrote a gunner of the 6th Battery, Victorian

Claim Your Bonus at the APP

Open
Trooper Bluegum at the Dardanelles
Trooper Bluegum at the Dardanelles
“"Oliver Hogue (1880-1919), journalist and soldier, was born on 29 April 1880 in Sydney ... He enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force in Sep. 1914 as a trooper with the 6th Light Horse Regiment. Commissioned second lieutenant in Nov., he sailed for Egypt with the 2nd L.H. Brigade in the Suevic in Dec.. Hogue served on Gallipoli with the Light Horse (dismounted) for five months, then was invalided to England with enteric fever. In May 1915 he was promoted lieutenant and appointed orderly officer to Colonel Ryrie, the brigade commander. As 'Trooper Bluegum' he wrote articles for the Herald subsequently collected in the books Love Letters of an Anzac and Trooper Bluegum at the Dardanelles. Sometimes representing war as almost a sport, he took pride in seeing 'the way our young Australians played the game of war'. Hogue returned from hospital in England to the 6th L.H. in Sinai and fought in the decisive battle of Romani. Transferred to the Imperial Camel Corps on 1 Nov. 1916, he was promoted captain on 3 July 1917. He fought with the Camel Corps at Magdhaba, Rafa, Gaza, Tel el Khuweilfe, Musallabeh, and was with them in the first trans-Jordan raid to Amman. In 1917 Hogue led the 'Pilgrim's Patrol' of fifty Cameliers and two machine-guns into the Sinai desert to Jebel Mousa, to collect Turkish rifles from the thousands of Bedouins in the desert. After the summer of 1918, spent in the Jordan Valley, camels were no longer required. The Cameliers were given horses and swords and converted into cavalry. Hogue, promoted major on 1 July 1918, was now in Brigadier General George Macarthur-Onslow's 5th L.H. Brigade, commanding a squadron of the 14th L.H. Regiment. At the taking of Damascus by the Desert Mounted Corps in Sep. 1918, the 5th Brigade stopped the Turkish Army escaping through the Barada Gorge. As well as the articles sent to Australia, and some in English magazines, Hogue wrote a third book, The Cameliers,..."-Aust. Dict. of Nat. Bio.”
1 Chapter 1 A SOLDIER OF THE KING2 Chapter 2 WE SAIL AWAY3 Chapter 3 THE FIRST FIGHT4 Chapter 4 IN EGYPT STILL5 Chapter 5 HEROES OF APRIL 256 Chapter 6 LIGHT-HEARTED AUSTRALIANS7 Chapter 7 AT THE DARDANELLES8 Chapter 8 ANZAC9 Chapter 9 STORIES THAT WILL NEVER DIE10 Chapter 10 TO DRIVE BACK THE TURK11 Chapter 11 WAR VIGNETTES12 Chapter 12 GEORGE 13 Chapter 13 ROBBO 14 Chapter 14 COME AND DIE 15 Chapter 15 THE BOMBS16 Chapter 16 AEROPLANES17 Chapter 17 PADRE 18 Chapter 18 STUNTS 19 Chapter 19 LONESOME PINE20 Chapter 20 LUCKY ESCAPES21 Chapter 21 THE CHURCH MILITANT22 Chapter 22 SERGEANTS THREE23 Chapter 23 MAIL DAY24 Chapter 24 REINFORCEMENTS25 Chapter 25 SHELL GREEN26 Chapter 26 THE ANZAC V.C.'S27 Chapter 27 THE FINAL PHASE