BX November 10, 1914
Wrote to the Mayor
Mayor Spence has received the following letter from a friend of one of the Brantford boys, who went with the First Contingent, but who is at present confined in the hospital at Tidworth barracks, Andover:
October, 1914
Tidworth barracks,
Andover
Mayor Spence,
Brantford, Ontario,
Dear Sir,
I am writing for my friend who is not able to, and is here with me in the hospital at the base at Tidworth, 12 miles from his regiment. He was taken very sick some days ago and the doctors I heard asked him if he is willing to be operated on, if possible. He says he likes the hospital fine; and the nurses are using him fine here.
He wishes to be remembered to the boys of his town. I myself have already been to the front and got a severe wound in my left hand. The bullet pierced the centre of my hand, taking a large chunk out and breaking my bones, but I wish I was there again to get back at them. I will soon be better and I hope we go with your boys, for they are a fine body of men, and some fierce looking and able to fight.
Well, Ralph is feeling much better tonight, but he is asking the doctors to fix him up to go with the boys to get the Kaiser and take him to Canada.
I wish all our volunteers were like the Canadians. My regiment did away with quite a lot of the Germans. I, myself, was shot from Germans up in the trees, while we were marching. We thought they had retreated; not a sound, but they ran and hid in trees and barns. The cowards won’t come out and fight at all. They even shot women and children in their homes in France and then hid. Oh, such a dirty lot. It is worse than the Boer War in South Africa, but we will be in Berlin before Christmas.
Well, my arm is getting tired, so I close, as I have to thank Ralph for writing. I am a soldier of His Majesty’s Royal Irish Regiment.
Ralph wants me to tell you to address to the camp his address is:
Ralph Whitehead, No. 10557
4th Battalion, 1st Brigade
1st Canadian Contingent,
Base Co.,
Salisbury Plain,
Wiltshire, Eng.