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Hill 60 New Zealand Memorial Hill 60 New Zealand Memorial
First Name: Archibald Frank Last Name: MORTIMER
Date of Death: 28/08/1915 Lived/Born In: Chiswick
Rank: Trooper Unit: New Zealand-Canterbury Mounted Rifles
Memorial Site: 1. Sutton Court, St Michael 2. Hill 60 New Zealand Memorial

Current Information:

Age-31

36, Fauconberg Road, Chiswick

 

Gallipoli 1915

On 25 April, British, Australian and New Zealand forces landed on the Gallipoli peninsula. The plan was that these forces would soon defeat a demoralised Turkish army, knock Turkey out of the war, open up the Mediterranean to the Russian navy and threaten Austro-Hungary from the south. None of these things were achieved despite nine months of hard fighting in terrible conditions. It was a heroic failure.

By July, 1915, and after much fierce fighting, stalemate had set in at Gallipoli both at Cape Helles where the British and French had landed and at Anzac Cove where the Australian and New Zealand Corps were unable to break out of their beach head. Fresh troops were needed and they were on their way in the shape of four divisions from Britain and things were put on hold until they arrived.

The plan for August was for a landing at Suvla Bay to the north of Anzac Cove whilst at the same time, the ANZAC Corps, reinforced by some of the new British troops would effect a breakout from Anzac Cove and establish a line across the peninsula. Whilst this was going on the troops in the south at Helles would stage a number of diversionary attacks. But it all went horribly wrong and much of the reason for this can be explained by inadequate planning and leadership. Nobody seemed to know what they were supposed to be doing and Lieutenant-General Stopford, in charge of the Suvla landings was particularly out of his depth. The landings at Suvla failed to link up with the forces at Anzac and the breakout from there did not happen despite valiant efforts by all concerned. The loss of life on all fronts was again enormous. L.A. Carlyon’s excellent book “Gallipoli” gives a superb yet chilling account of the events.

A final effort to break through at Suvla was made on 21st August by 29th Division, which had been brought round from Helles, 11th Division and the recently arrived 2nd Mounted Division when, that afternoon, they attacked the W Hills and Scimitar Hill on the Anfarta Spur, due east of Suvla Bay. At the same time units of the ANZAC Corps attacked Hill 60 just to the south of the Suvla front. The operation failed on all three fronts with heavy casualties inflicted on those taking part. A final attempt to capture Hill 60 was made on the afternoon of 27th August when less than a thousand Australian and New Zealand troops went into action. There followed a day and night of fierce fighting as a result of which a whole new network of Turkish trenches had been captured but come the morning it was discovered that these trenches did  not completely encircle the summit of the hill which remained in enemy hands and the attack was called off. Archibald Mortimer of the New Zealand Canterbury Mounted Rifles was one of the many casualties of this attack.

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