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Henry Cox 84 Pages |
over 30 b/w illustrations 9781897887228
Mesopotamia - The First World War The stark numbers in the log leave the suffering of the wounded to the reader's imagination, but on the few occasions when my father told me of his Tigris experiences, I realised he had been deeply affected by what he had seen. It is no wonder that he seldom spoke about it during his lifetime and I was unaware that he had kept this record. Reading the diary raised many questions that I would have liked to have asked my father. Writing a log at the end of his long days, he used many abbreviations, which I have done my best to interpret. I have left the day's total of men carried by the Wessex in the margin and reproduced his comments verbatim as the horror of the enormous number of casualties unfolded. To make the log easier to read the abbreviations have been written in full in this book. Besides carrying soldiers wounded in fighting the Turks, the Wessex carried others delirious from tropical diseases, including the dreaded cholera. Wessex plied between field hospitals set up on the riverbanks, depots, supply piers and the numerous steamers converted into hospital ships, which anchored in the river. My mother, Florence May Cox was a nursing sister on the hospital ship Erinpura that sailed between the Tigris and Bombay. © Henry Cox 2002
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