The Echo of Bagpipes
by Don Antione
Ninety-one
years ago in the fall of 1916, British Field Marshall F.M. Haig ordered
the Canadian troops to attack the Somme. This defensive position was
heavily fortified with piles upon piles of barbed wire.
The French
and the British had failed to take this position. Our General Currie
felt this mission was impossible, but "ours not to reason why". The
heavy artillery was to destroy the barbed wire, but these guns failed
to hit their target, leaving only a small number of openings though the
wire. Our troops could not attack in line and went through these small
openings, only to be mowed down by machine
gun fire. Thirteen hundred soldiers were killed on the first attack- we withdrew.
The
16th Canadian Scottish Battalion from Chilliwack, B.C. went into the
attack. When all seemed lost, their young piper named James Richardson
stepped up through the shrapnel and bullets, and “with great coolness”
according to the military citation, piped up and down the line outside
the wire to encourage his battalion to fight on. His playing so
inspired the company that they rushed the barbed wire and captured the
position. Richardson laid down his pipes to take a wounded comrade to
safety, but when he returned he could not find his bag pipes and was
killed. He was posthumously awarded the highest award for bravery, the
Victoria Cross.
In 1917, a Scottish chaplain found some bagpipes
buried in the mud at the Somme and took them back to Scotland. The
broken pipes were displayed in a school there for 75 years as a graphic
unidentified reminder of the war.
A parent of students at the
school, who was also a piper, initiated a search for the pipes’ origins
and posted information on the internet. A member of the Canadian
Scottish Regiment recognized this and the pipes were positively
identified as James Richardson’s pipes based on a scrap of tartan found
on them, the tartan of the clan Lennox.
An anonymous donor provided
money to purchase the pipes for the citizens of Canada, and they were
officially repatriated on November 8, 2006. They now lie in a place of
honour in the B.C Legislature.
The battle for The Somme lasted 8
weeks and in early December 1916, Haig called off the attack and
ordered the Canadians to attack Vimy Ridge on April 1,1917. Our total
casualties were 24,000 with 8000 dead, the balance gassed, wounded and
missing.