by the end of the day the nation was in mourning even as multiple city blocks still burned. Much like Texas City the first explosion had atomized the on scene fire companies and fire boats. More companies were beginning to arrive but for much of the day New Army recruits had worked side by side with bankers, lawyers and shop keepers hauling water in anything they could to try and fight the massive blaze.
Earlier the speed of the Telegraph was demonstrated. close to the explosion the sound propagation had out run the telegraph stations. As a result well over 100 people lost all or part of their sight as the shock wave hit windows and blew them into microscopic shards or razor sharp glass. a large proportion of the wounded were housewives looking out of plate glass windows at the rising cloud of smoke. However by the time the now subdued dull rolling boooooom reached Coventry the telegraph messages had sped ahead of the sound propagation.
However fast messages got sent out of the areas near London, no messages were coming in or going out of the city itself. The center of worlds largest Empire, the center of global banking and commerce, the capitol that put other kings on the thrones of other capitols was as silent as the grave as far as the telegraph was concerned. A few motor carriages and motorcylces were doing dispatch duty but mostly locally. Although no members of Parliament, the admiralty or other senior leaders had died, few could yet hear again.
Yet as the sun set bobbies re-appeared on the streets, relief kitchens were set up and a hectic but very proper British calm returned. Yet that calm masked a danger that would ultimately propel two of the worlds leading sea powers into an alliance against the third. As he was wont to do Chief of the Imperial General Staff james Wolfe-Murray was unable to provide Feild Marshal Haig with guidence. Wolfe-Murray was too engaged in the relief efforts in London. He should have delegated but he didn't. As a result the highest ranking army officer in the British Army was commanding company sized units. The person Wolfe-Murray usually deffered to Lord Kitchener had left London the day before for a bit of a breather. This left Sir John French free of any control but Joffres... and he was quick to order a brigade of the 1st Canadian division to counter attack to try and regain a bit of the ground that Plumber had given up on 1 May. French knowing London was quiet quickly (by the standards of the time) approved Alderson's request to send in the highlanders. The hope was that the highlanders with the Royal Montreal and the Canadian Scottish leading could catch a retreating Landshwer regiment that had just failed in a minor probing attack and thus get across the trenches and create a breach.
However, as fast as Alderson and French moved, the hobnailed boots of the Germans moved quicker and the Canadians were barely a third of the way across no mans land when the maxims opened up. Yet the Canadians pressed on and the Seaforth Highlanders made the German lines. However they could not hold alone and were forced back leaving nearly 100 dead and dying British Columbians behind to be taken prisoner. The Germans quickly policed up the wounded and began to interrogate the least seriously injured- which as it turned out were 11 Americans from Bellingham Washington who had volunteered with the Canadians. They had been knocked out by the concussive force of a German 25cm trench mortar shell exploding in the crater next to them. By the time they regained their wits they were prisoners.
The Americans were quickly passed back through the lines, initially just to get them out of the combat zone. But as non of the Americans spoke German and as they bayoneted guard after bayoneted guard the 11 volunteers reached the conclusion that they had been deemed spies and were being marched back to a special execution field- the Germans being efficient like that. By the time the Americans reached the rear areas not far from the Duke of Wuttermburgs forward HQ the sight of increasing numbers of older men in pristine uniforms and thus obviously officers assembled for a special courts martial the Americans broke. They simply sat down..... The German guards didn't know what to do. They worked in shifts and assumed the Americans were simply tired so the guards stopped as well and a few lit pipes filled with Ottoman tobacco. Major-General Ilse the chief of staff for the 4th Army who had been forward noticed the lollygagging and demanded to know why... and was told it was a group of Americans and they had simply sat down. upon hearing they were Americans the general summoned an interpreter. Having recently been back in Germany in consultations with Falkenhyen, Ilse had been briefed and the growing Anglo-American split. Yet here was a group of Americans fighting for King George and St George. By the time an English speaker had been found a number of the generals feidl grade officers had wandered over and the poor Germans guards were as stiff as iron statues. When the general began asking questions Private Harold Erickson blurted out that they had been captured by mounties and impressed into the Canadian Army and that they preferred Germany and they had all played dead to get away from the Canadians. That was of course a lie, but....
to be continued....



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