Showing 2 results

Archival Descriptions
Diaries of a World War I (WWI) 13th Rajputs Regiment Officer
Print preview Hierarchy View:

13th Rajputs Regiment Officer's Diaries

1/1: Diary, written from Uganda. December 1, 1914 - March 27, 1915
(9.25-inches x 4.625-inches x 0.25-inches)

1/2: Diary, written from Baghdad.
2 landscape sketches in pencil are located on the last few pages of the notebook.
(7.75-inches x 6-inches x 0.25-inches)

1/3: Diary, written from Europe. Sunday, December 15, 1918 - Tuesday, September 30, 1919
17 pages of writing (9.25-inches x 7.375-inches x 0.875-inches)

Diaries of a World War I (WWI) 13th Rajputs Regiment Officer

  • TxAM-CRS 927
  • Collection
  • 1914-1919

This collection consists of three diaries written by an officer from the 13th Rajputs regiment during World War I from various locations.

Description from the bookseller:

A trio of diaries written during the Great War in various locations by an officer from the 13th Rajputs regiment. Although the entries do not allow us to go as far as deducing the identity of the author (or his precise rank), they do provide some insight into the conditions and challenges faced as the War spread to remote territories: the first diary is written from Uganda, whilst the second begins dramatically with the fall of Kut-al-Amara and capture by the Ottoman forces with a 2-page, unpublished poem "A Prisoner of War in Yozgad (Asia Minor)", followed by a short, incomplete and entirely bleak piece of prose entitled "Regret" at the rear; the third returns him to Europe, the hand a little less sure and frequent reference to his own poor health, with a broad overview of events both personal and public around the continent - the Paris Peace Conference, the deaths and marriages of his close friends (including his attendance at the wedding of Cynthia Hamilton and Lord Althorp).

The writing is frequently amusing, and there is more complaining about food and living conditions than there is description of fighting; itself an elucidative encapsulation of the day-to-day experience of war.