Tag Archives: World War One

Stories of the First World War: John and Donald Jessen

As an intern with the History Department at Te Papa, I have been given the challenging task of researching the sitters who appear in a number of photographic portraits held in the collection. 

Looking closely at some of the pictures, it seems that the images contained on the museum’s glass plate negatives are not all original photographs.  Some were taken in their frames by family members to the premises of Berry & Co. in Wellington for copies to be made.  This would often have happened if the picture had been sent from family members abroad, or if the soldiers pictured had died.

Read more about the Berry & Co. collection

Two of the images which seem to have produced this way were each marked with the handwritten name ‘Jessen’, and although there are sometimes two or three images among the collection with the same sitter, these two were certainly not the same man.

Through using database records and military personnel files, I believe I have identified these two men as brothers John and Donald Jessen.  Both were members of the New Zealand Field Artillery who died while away at war in Europe.

Black and white glass negative (Jessen);1914-1920; Berry & Co; Wellington

Black and white glass negative (Jessen);1914-1920; Berry & Co; Wellington

Elder brother John Jessen was born in Mauriceville to parents William August and Christine in the same year as their marriage, 1890.  The family had moved to Wellington by 1908, when John joined the D Battery of the New Zealand Field Artillery Volunteers.  In 1914 he joined the New Zealand Expeditionary Force who departed for Samoa on the 8th August.  Returning from Samoa on the 22nd March 1915 he was discharged on his own request and went to work as a clerk in the New Zealand Government Thorndon Railway Station.  On discharge he held the rank of Battery Sergeant Major.

At the end of 1915 John Jessen was among a number of non-commissioned officers called up to join the 14th reinforcements for the Western Front.  He was killed in action in France during the Battle of Bapaume on the 24th August 1918, aged 28.  By this point he held the rank of Bombardier and was part of the 9th Battery.  He is buried in Achiet-le-Grand Communal Cemetery Extension in grave IV.P.3. 

Black and white glass negative (Jessen); 1914-1920; Berry & Co; Wellington

Black and white glass negative (Jessen); 1914-1920; Berry & Co; Wellington

 

Younger brother Donald Jessen worked as a warehouseman in Wellington and also served in the D Battery volunteer force until 1915 when he joined the New Zealand Field Artillery as part of the 10th reinforcements.  He went into Trentham Camp on the 16th November 1915 and embarked on the Willochra or Tofua to Egypt on 4th March 1916.  His unit on embarkation was the No. 5 Field Battery (2nd Field Artillery Brigade).

Although he survived the war, Donald contracted a bout of influenza in 1919 which became pneumonia, and he died at Endell Street Military Hospital in London on the 23rd February 1919.  He is buried at Brookwood Military Cemetery, grave reference II.J.4. 

Both soldiers were commemorated by their parents and sisters in adverts placed in the Evening Post.  They are just two casualties of an estimated 14,000–17,000 New Zealand citizens who were killed in action or died as a result of their wounds. New Zealand had one of the highest casualty rates as a proportion of the total population of all the countries involved in the war.

Read another ‘Story of the First World War’ here – Sergeant-Major Vandersluys

Read about Herman Rolfes, also killed during the Battle of Bapaume on the same day as John Jessen, 24th August 1918, whose personal effects are held in Te Papa’s collection

Stories from the First World War: Sergeant-Major Vandersluys

As an intern with the History Department at Te Papa, I have been given the challenging task of researching the sitters who appear in a number of photographic portraits held in the collection. 

Read more about the Berry & Co. collection 

My task is to try to identify the soldiers who appear in these photographs, using military personnel files, reference books relating to uniform and badges of military regiments, and online databases and resources.  Unfortunately, apart from an image of the person, the only other information I have to go on is the person’s family name, which is handwritten on the top of each negative.

So far, this is a slow process, but I have had some success.  Following an existing tentative identification, I have managed to bring to light quite a lot of information about this striking gentleman, who I believe to be Charles Vandersluys, a British national who became a Sergeant Major serving in the New Zealand Expeditionary Force at home at Trentham Camp, but making some enemies along the way!  I am currently working on more research which includes the life of Vandersluys along with many of his contemporaries who were photographed by Berry & Co. in Wellington.

Black and white glass negative (Vandersluys); 1914-1920; Berry & Co; Wellington

Black and white glass negative (Vandersluys); 1914-1920; Berry & Co; Wellington

Charles Calab Vandersluys was born on the 22ndAugust 1871 in Hanwell, Middlesex, England.  Despite his Dutch name, Vandersluys was British for at least two generations, and throughout his life often travelled under the name of ‘Berrold’ as he hated being referred to as a ‘Dutchman’.  His father was a soldier in the British Army, and later worked as a clerk in the Pension Office.

On 4th September 1893, Vandersluys married Letitia Ayres in Dublin, before returning to England where he was employed as a Private in the Gordon Highlanders, a British Army infantry regiment drawn mainly from Scotland and the north of England.  Vandersluys served twelve years and 120 days with this regiment, including service during the second Boer War in South Africa.  See the image below for an example of what his Gordon Highlanders dress uniform would have looked like.  After peace was declared he was discharged on the 15th September 1902.  He then joined section D of the Gordon Highlanders Reserve in January 1903.  Four years later, he completed his service but remained living in London where he was employed driving meat vans and buses.

Gordon Highlanders uniform; 1880s - 1950s; Hebbert & Co. Ltd.; wool; London

Gordon Highlanders uniform; 1880s – 1950s; Hebbert & Co. Ltd.; wool; London

In 1910, Vandersluys and his wife travelled to Buenos Aires, where, apart from occasional trips to England, they lived for around three years.  After returning to England in July 1914, they continued almost immediately on a voyage to Australia, taking a 3rd class passage on the SS Ruahine, departing on the 10th August 1914, under the name of Berrold.   Their son and three daughters remained in England.  Spending only six months in Australia, the couple moved on once again to New Zealand, where, within a few days, Vandersluys enlisted with the New Zealand Expeditionary Force. 

Due to an attack of rheumatic fever, Vandersluys was judged to be unfit for active service.  However he was fit to serve at home, and worked at Trentham Camp, as a member of the Army and of the Military Police.  He was promoted during his service, earning the rank of Sergeant Major and a large amount of respect amongst his colleagues. 

However, a case was brought against him in August 1918 by two recently discharged Privates, Fisher and Boosey.  Private Fisher had recently been arrested for assaulting Vandersluys, although the man’s statement maintained that the Sergeant had in fact started a fight with him, and enlisted the help of two corporals to give false witness statements.  He had then, along with his friend Private Boosey, been discharged as medically unfit to serve, in Fisher’s case due to shell-shock and mental disturbance. 

The two men decided to report that on the occasion of Fisher bringing Boosey to the military office to enlist, Vandersluys had made a disloyal remark, saying “The Germans are going to give the British all they asked for”.  After investigation, the detective in charge of the case recommended that no action be taken, as Vandersluys argued that his words had been misquoted and taken out of context, and there was no further evidence to suggest a disloyalty to the Allied forces. 

While the two men responsible for the accusation may well have held a grudge against the Sergeant, this demonstrates the level of paranoia and suspicion which was present during the war years, which was particularly high towards ‘aliens’ or those with foreign sounding names!   Many of these people spent the war years on an island in Wellington harbour - click on the object below to read more about their story.

Box; 1914-1918; Hansen, Hans; inlay of kohekohe, rewa rewa, and paua shell; kauri; marquetry; New Zealand

Box; 1914-1918; Hansen, Hans; inlay of kohekohe, rewa rewa, and paua shell; kauri; marquetry; New Zealand

Look out for more blog posts as I uncover more stories related to the soldiers who appear in the Berry & Co. collection photographs.

Wanted: loved ones

B.044616

Berry & Co portraits of World War I soldiers 1914-1920 Te Papa

All we know about him is a name written on a glass negative: ‘Hart’.  Ever since I first saw him I have kept his photograph on my wall.  He has been the inspiration for many hours of image research for the World War I film that screens in Te Papa’s C20th history exhibition, Slice of Heaven.   Using silent archive footage and stills the film tells the story of the journey of New Zealanders who served on the Western Front.   More than 12,000 New Zealanders died on the Western Front.   More than 800 men died in a single day at Passchendaele in Belgium.Hart was just one of thousands of New Zealanders who had their portrait taken for loved ones before they departed for the war.  Te Papa has a large collection of them, mostly unidentified apart from a surname.   You can search them here at Collections Online.  Sons, brothers, husbands, lovers, fathers, uncles, grandfathers…who loved them? Who kept their photographs?

November 1918: This month last century

92 years ago – an armistice (truce) between Germany and the Allies was signed in a railway carriage in Compiègne Forest in France (11 November 1918).

The armistice marked the end of fighting in World War One on the Western Front in France and Belgium. This occurred on the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month. Back home, New Zealanders took to the streets to celebrate the event.

The armistice marked the end of fighting in World War One on the Western Front in France and Belgium. This occurred on the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month. Back home, New Zealanders took to the streets to celebrate the event.

Mr W G Vickers dressed up as John Bull at Levin's Armistice Celebrations, 13 November 1918, Leslie Adkin (1888–1964), Levin. Gift of Adkin Family, 1997. Te Papa

However, the joyful moment was diminished by the influenza pandemic sweeping through the country and the loss of over 12,000 lives during the war.

Peace with Germany was not officially settled until the Treaty of Versailles was signed on 28 June 1919. New Zealand photographer Bert Green was in London at the time at and took photos of the celebrations.

Untitled (women dancing), 1919, Bert Green, Green and Hahn. Purchased 1999 with New Zealand Lottery Grants Board funds. Te Papa

Two women celebrating the signing of the Treaty of Versailles, 28 June 1919, Bert Green. Purchased 1999 with New Zealand Lottery Grants Board funds. Te Papa

See a pressure sprayer that was used to fight the flu in 1918

See a poster that celebrated the Peace in 1919

Read more about events and objects from November 1918 in Collections Online

Slice of Heaven: 20th century Aotearoa – points of remembrance

Only one day to go until the exhibition Slice of Heaven: 20th century Aotearoa opens. Just the last tweaks to do now and blessing of the exhibition space on Friday morning.

But even before the public gets in to see it, the exhibition is stopping people in their tracks.

An imposing, sombre, dark slice protrudes outwards from the exhibition, across the floor on level 4.  It’s hard not to stop and take notice – and not to feel moved.

Memorial to New Zealanders who lost their lives during World War One.

Memorial to New Zealanders who lost their lives during World War One. Copyright Te Papa, 2010.

This is an eloquent memorial to New Zealanders who lost their lives during World War One. Red poppies and crosses – symbols of remembrance - complement the words from a song composed by Apirana Ngata in 1919 for the return of the Māori Pioneer Battalion from World War One:

Ngā toki heke!
Maringi kino e toha mai rā
i te whenua pāmamao

Blood was shed!
Spilt and scattered
in a distant land

This is just one of the exhibition features in Slice of Heaven which we hope visitors will take a moment to reflect on – and share their memories of 20th century New Zealand.

War memorials for Anzac Day

St Marys Church war memorial, Nelson, February 2009

St Marys Church war memorial, Nelson, February 2009

To the left is a war memorial that I discovered in Nelson. It is on the grounds of St Marys Catholic Church in Manuka Street.

St marys Church, February 2009

St Marys Church, February 2009

I don’t know anything about this memorial and it’s not listed on the register of war memorials on NZHistory.net.nz. Any information about it would be gratefully recieved.

It would also be great to receive your photos of local war memorials, to post on the OurSpace map to help illustrate a talk I am giving on Sunday. On the top of my wish list is a photo of the Kaitaia memorial, the first one to be unveiled in New Zealand in March 1916.

My talk is the day after Anzac Day, which is a day of remembrance that acknowledges the sacrifice of New Zealand’s servicemen and women.  My previous blog mentioned how important war memorials have been to this annual event, so the more images of memorials the better. If you get to a Anzac Day service on Saturday, try to take some photos and that way you can be part of Te Papa’s Anzac Day events too.

The End of World War I: 11 November 1918

Almost 250 objects and images related to World War I held by Te Papa can now be viewed on online. Curators have chosen items with sentimental value or connected to the home front and the war’s aftermath in New Zealand, as well as those associated directly with the conflict and overseas theatres of war. Find out more about these items and their significance at
http://collections.tepapa.govt.nz/Theme.aspx?irn=647
.

This work commemorates the anniversary of the end of World War I when, ninety years ago on 11 November 1918, the Armistice was signed between the Allies and Germany. You will also find some of Te Papa’s World War I collection items amongst similar content from other institutions around the country by searching Coming Home / Te Hokinga Mai.

 

World War One Memorial Project Update


We’re very impressed and gratified by the response so far to our World War One Memorial Project. Since its launch last month, we’ve had 95 images of New Zealand memorials contributed from all over the country.

The towns and cities so far represented are: Akaroa, Alexandra, Auckland, Cambridge, Eastbourne, Glenorchy, Hawera, Hokianga, Hunterville, Levin, Makara, Mangaweka, Matamata, Maxwell, Nelson, Opunaki, Pahiatua, Palmerston North, Patea, Picton, Pihana, Pirongia, Porirua, Portage, Rotorua, Shannon, Taihape, Te Aroha, Waverley, Wellington (National War Memorial, Brooklyn, Ataturk Memorial), and Woodville.

Have a look at the images on our Flickr site.

Many thanks to everyone who has participated to date. This is a long-term project, so we hope you’ll keep photographing New Zealand’s war memorials and posting them on Flickr, particularly if you live in an area that hasn’t been represented yet.

EDIT: This project is now closed.

Trees as war memorials

Not all war memorials are monumental or made from marble. While I was reading Ann Beaglehole’s Eastbourne: A History of the Eastern Bays of Wellington Harbour, I discovered details of trees planted by the community to remember World War One (WWI) and those who lost their lives.

In July 1916 two pohutukawa trees were planted on the corner of Oroua and Rata Streets to mark the landing of Anzac troops at Gallipoli. The one tree that survived became known as Eastbourne’s Anzac Memorial Tree, and is regarded as the oldest Gallipoli memorial in New Zealand.

Eastbourne Anzac Memorial Tree 

Eastbourne’s Anzac Memorial Tree on the corner of Rata and Oroua Streets. Photograph by Michael Fitzgerald, 13 April 2008.

Two other memorial trees – kauri – were planted in private gardens in nearby Nikau Street, to mark the deaths of local men. One was for Second Lieutenant Harry Oswald Furlong Marsden, killed in action in October 1917 during the Battle of Broodsiende, in Belgium, part of the Passchendaele offensive.

The other memorial kauri tree was planted for Sergeant Hubert Earle Girdlestone. He lost his life in August 1918 during the Battle of Bapaume, in France. The battle was part of the successful initiative that broke through the German trench system.

If anyone has photos of these memorial trees, we’d love you to add them to our WWI memorial project at:
http://www.flickr.com/groups/ww1memorialsproject/

EDIT: This project is now closed.

The World War One Memorial Project


Brooklyn War Memorial, Wellington

One of the topics we’ll be exploring in the upcoming 20th Century History exhibition will be the impact of First World War deaths on New Zealand society.

More than 18,000 New Zealand soldiers died overseas during the war, but very few of their bodies came back, so the way in which their sacrifice was memorialised was very important for their family and friends back home. All over New Zealand, communities responded by building memorials to their local dead: more than 500 statues, obelisks, arches, civic buildings, and other monuments were dedicated to their memory.

We’d like to commemorate the spirit behind these memorials by asking communities of today to photograph their local World War One memorials. We will then present these photos – as a large-scale slideshow – in the 20th Century History exhibition.

If you’d like to contribute a photograph of your local World War One memorial to the exhibition, it’s easy.

To make the memorials look their best, the images need to be high-resolution (the minimum is 1024×768 pixels; more would be even better), in portrait format, preferably on their own, without people (though you’re welcome to send us lots of other kinds of shots as well). The photo above is an example of what we’re looking for. You can find your local memorials listed on nzhistory.net’s Memorials Register. And if you know of a World War One memorial that’s not on the register, please let us know.

We’ve created a group dedicated to the World War One Memorial Project on the photo website Flickr. More information about the Project can be found there, along with other examples of the kind of images we’re looking for. You can post your photos on the site and tell us about your experience of taking them. The forums attached to this Flickr group can be used to organise your photo session with other people in the area. You can also get in touch with your local RSA for information about local memorials and Anzac Day activities.

Although Anzac Day is a great time to memorialise your memorial, you can take your photo any time. At the end of April, we’ll let you know how it’s gone and what memorials (if any!) we would still like photographed.

If you have any questions about this project, post a response here, or contact us at: nzhistory@tepapa.govt.nz

EDIT: The World War One Memorial Project is now closed.

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