Read Hero of the Empire: The Boer War, a Daring Escape, and the Making of Winston Churchill Online
Authors: Candice Millard
Tags: #Military, #History, #Political, #Biography & Autobiography, #General, #Europe, #Great Britain
“down we shot”
: Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 284.
The seam was only about
: Interview with Bird.
“pitchy labyrinth”
: Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 284.
It was, however, surprisingly spacious
: Interview with Bird.
Despite the roominess
: Ibid.
With so many ponies, teams of men
: Ibid.
They had come to a sort of chamber
: Lang,
Power Base
, 46.
The large bundles that McKenna
: Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 284–85.
“whatever happens”
: Ibid., 285.
CHAPTER 23: AN INVISIBLE ENEMY
“The camp was filled”
: Atkins,
Relief of Ladysmith
, 148–49.
“The column at my tent door”
: Ibid., 149.
“Chaffing and smoking”
: Ibid., 155.
Across the river, a few hours earlier
: Davitt,
Boer Fight for Freedom
, 258.
What Botha saw as the sun
: Barnard,
General Botha at the Battle of Colenso
, 6.
“Each man [was] the appointed distance”
: Atkins,
Relief of Ladysmith
, 155.
“sweeping on in majestic motion”
: Davitt,
Boer Fight for Freedom
, 260.
“invocation of Divine help”
: Ibid.
Unlike the British, whose twinkling lights
: Barnard,
General Botha at the Battle of Colenso
, 3.
“Practically no attempt”
: Amery,
Times History of the War in South Africa
, 2:159.
“Buller’s plan of attack”
: Barnard,
General Botha at the Battle of Colenso
, 5.
“The tidings of British reverses”
: Amery,
Times History of the War in South Africa
, 1:15.
“absorbed in interest”
: “Taking Sides in the Boer War,”
American Heritage
, April 1976.
Willem Johannes Leyds
: “Leyds’s Last Card,”
Diamond Field Advertiser
, Oct. 26, 1899.
“I cannot sit on the safety valve”
: Quoted in Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 303.
“Ridge upon ridge, top upon top”
: Atkins,
Relief of Ladysmith
, 150.
At 5
:30 a.m.: Amery,
Times History of the War in South Africa
, 2:165.
“The cry of the shell”
: Atkins,
Relief of Ladysmith
, 155–56.
“No guns opened in reply”
: Amery,
Times History of the War in South Africa
, 2:165.
He had used even more explosives
: Rayne Kruger,
Goodbye Dolly Gray
, 137.
“entirely on Colonel Long”
:
Reports from Commissioners, Inspectors, and Others
, 409.
“The only way to smash”
: Atkins,
Relief of Ladysmith
, 163.
“Men and officers”
: Ibid., 165.
“Abandon be damned!”
: Quoted in Rayne Kruger,
Goodbye Dolly Gray
, 139.
“General Buller sent the message”
: Gandhi,
Autobiography
, 215.
“Anywhere among the shell fire”
: Atkins,
Relief of Ladysmith
, 179.
“To march into a well-defended salient”
: Pakenham,
Boer War
, 276.
“Nothing could have saved them”
: Atkins,
Relief of Ladysmith
, 159.
“drowned like dogs”
: Ibid., 160.
As Atkins looked more closely
: Ibid., 170.
“You oughtn’t be here”
: Ibid., 171.
“He was in the full exhilaration”
: Ibid.
“The aasvogels gathered”
: Ibid., 176.
In the silence, with the full brunt
: Pakenham,
Boer War
, 289.
“only just taken his wind”
: Barnard,
General Botha at the Battle of Colenso
, 9.
“limply and wearily from his horse”
: Atkins,
Relief of Ladysmith
, 169.
“The God of our fathers”
: Davitt,
Boer Fight for Freedom
, 271–72.
CHAPTER 24: THE LIGHT OF HOPE
“in tremendous form”
: Amery,
My Political Life
, 118.
“I regret to report”
: “British Disaster; Battle at Colenso,”
Belfast News-Letter
, Dec. 16, 1899.
“I tried Colenso yesterday”
: Quoted in Pakenham,
Boer War
, 292.
“Overwhelmed by the successive tidings”
: Amery,
My Political Life
, 119.
“I have never seen a man”
: Winston Churchill,
Ian Hamilton’s March
, 281.
“Your gallant son died today”
: National Army Museum,
http://www.nam.ac.uk/exhibitions/online-exhibitions/dads-army/roberts-family/freddy-roberts
.
“It is impossible to describe”
:
Sheffield Daily Telegraph
, Dec. 18, 1899.
“Deep as was the gloom”
: Amery,
Times History of the War in South Africa
, 2:174.
“Only one order, forward!”
: Boer War badges, British Museum.
Parents bought their children books
: National Army Museum.
She not only knit
: National Army Museum.
“For this far-distant war”
: Doyle,
Great Boer War
, 102–3.
“I have no doubt”
: Borthwick to Lady Randolph, Dec. 14, 1899, quoted in Randolph S. Churchill,
Youth
, 497.
“Although Mr. Winston Churchill’s escape”
:
Manchester Courier
, Dec. 18, 1899.
“With reference to the escape”
: Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 290.
“We are on the eve”
:
Gloucester Journal
, Dec. 23, 1899.
When he reached out a hand
: Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 286.
“Life seemed bathed in rosy light”
: Ibid., 285.
“I did not know what pitfalls”
: Ibid., 286.
“Didn’t you put it”
: Ibid.
“He said inquiries”
: Ibid.
In fact, three thousand copies
: Winston Churchill,
London to Ladysmith
, 71.
“absolutely safe”
: Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 287.
He would tell them that the mine was haunted
: Ibid.
“like to take a turn”
: Ibid., 288.
“subterranean galleries”
: Ibid.
CHAPTER 25: THE PLAN
“The patter of little feet”
: Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 287.
“for a long time afterwards”
: “Man Who Befriended Churchill,”
Johannesburg Star
, Dec. 11, 1923.
“I noticed that he was becoming nervy”
: Ibid.
“leap-frog [and] hide-and-seek”
: “Winston Churchill’s Escape,”
Johannesburg Star
, Dec. 22, 1923.
“a fine stroll”
: Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 288.
“The greatest pleasure I had”
: Ibid., 12–13.
“Someone had told me that my father”
: Ibid., 111.
“Those thrilling pages”
: Ibid., 290.
One day, he heard what he thought
: “Man Who Befriended Churchill.”
One morning while talking
: “Winston Churchill’s Escape.”
The more Howard thought
: Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 289.
The only thing left to do
: In a 1921 interview for the
Johannesburg Star
, Burnham says that not only had he known about Churchill’s presence at the mine for some time, but smuggling him in the wool cars had been his idea, not Howard’s. I chose Howard’s version of events because, in
My Early Life
, Churchill backs him up.
Burnham too was of English origin
: “Churchill Rescuer Gives Watch to Museum,” newspaper clipping in the archives of the Killie Campbell Africana Library, Durban;
http://www.superbrands.com/za/pdfs/NATALMERCURY.pdf
.
“I was more worried about this”
: Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 289.
“The idea of having to put myself”
: Ibid.
“I dreaded in every fibre”
: Ibid., 290.
“in open rebellion”
: Ibid., 292.
“The Field Cornet has been here”
: Ibid.
“It’s all fixed up”
: Ibid.
CHAPTER 26: THE RED AND THE BLUE
At 2
:00 on the morning of December 19: Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 292–93.
“I made representation”
: “Winston Churchill’s Escape.”
“This was a moral support”
: Winston Churchill,
My Early Life
, 293.