Forward the Rifles

Regular price €19.99
4th Royal Irish Rifles
5th Connaught Rangers
6th Leinsters|10th Hampshires
6th Royal Irish Rifles
A01=Captain David Campbell
A01=David Campbell
active service
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Armistice
Author_Captain David Campbell
Author_David Campbell
autobiography
automatic-update
Basingstoke
Belfast
Bull Island
Captain David Campbell MC
Carrickfergus
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=BGH
Category=DNBH
Caxton Hall
civil engineer
COP=United Kingdom
Countess of Carnarvon
County Cork
County Louth
Crinstown|Ardee
Curragh
Dardanelles
David Henry Campbell
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diary
Dollymount
Dublin
Dublin United Tramway Company
DUTC
England
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eq_biography-true-stories
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Fermoy
First World War
Gallipoli
Glasgow
Highclere Castle
Holyhead
hospital ship
Ireland
Irish
King George V Hospital
Language_English
leave
local history
Locksley Hall
Lord Kitchener
Medical Board
memoir
military history
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Nathan McGavin
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Price_€10 to €20
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Remembrance Day|Irish War Memorial
Salonica
Shannon Airport
softlaunch
Tennyson
The Great War
The Partridge
Trinity College
West of Ireland
World War I
World War One
WWI

Product details

  • ISBN 9781845889661
  • Dimensions: 124 x 199mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Nov 2011
  • Publisher: The History Press Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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The battlefields of Gallipoli and Salonica were a far cry from life on a small working farm in County Louth, Ireland, and yet, in 1915, Captain David Campbell, M.C., 6th Royal Irish Rifles, found himself in the searing Turkish heat, confronted by a faceless and seemingly tireless enemy. Less than twenty months after joining the Officers' Training Corps in Trinity College Dublin, Campbell led his company over the arid ground to the Front. From the beginning he kept a diary, describing life in these two theatres of war in great detail. Forward the Rifles is that diary. In it, he encapsulates the frightening scale of warfare, and yet he managed to find humour in the simple acts of himself and his men, as they trudge through daily life, trying to keep their bodies nourished and their spirits buoyed. The story of Captain David Campbell is one that will ring true for many, and yet it is an intensely personal one, chronicling his recovery from the physical and mental wounds of battle. Now, more than three decades after his death, the unswerving loyalty, courage and kindness of Captain David Campbell, M.C., are reborn.

As a young man DAVID CAMPBELL lived on a small family farm in Co. Louth, Ireland. Like many Irish soldiers his service took him to Gallipoli. He was wounded and evacuated to England where he recovered. Captain David Campbell worked as an engineer for the Calcutta Port Commissioners during the construction of the King George's Dock, Calcutta. On his return to Ireland he was appointed Resident Architect for the construction of the Irish War Memorial in Dublin. In 1938 he became Resident Engineer for the Construction of Shannon Airport, and later for the construction of concrete runways at Dublin Airport and the Dublin military airport, Baldonnel. He died in 1971 aged eight-three years.