finding my father in mesopotamia

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FINDING MY FATHER IN MESOPOTAMIA Jenny Lewis Presentation © Jenny Lewis 2014

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Page 1: Finding my father in Mesopotamia

FINDING MY FATHER IN MESOPOTAMIA

Jenny Lewis Presentation © Jenny Lewis 2014

Page 2: Finding my father in Mesopotamia

Where does the story start?

i. Family archives

ii. Local history societies

iii. Books & special interest magazines

iv. National Archives

v. Internet

vi. Media – news reports, documentaries

vii. Museums – Imperial War Museum, British Museum, South Wales Borderer’s Museum

Page 3: Finding my father in Mesopotamia

2nd Lt. T.C. Lewis, 1915

Page 4: Finding my father in Mesopotamia

National Archives - War Diaries of the South Wales Borderers

Page 5: Finding my father in Mesopotamia

Mesopotamia – The Land Between Two Rivers

Page 6: Finding my father in Mesopotamia

Maps showing battle strategy

Page 7: Finding my father in Mesopotamia

UK interests in Iraq in 1909

The Anglo-Persian Oil Company was set up in 1909 after oil fields had been discovered in Iraq, then known as Mesopotamia (the ‘Land Between Two Rivers’)

Two years later, Winston Churchill, then First Sea Lord, bought a controlling stake in the company for Britain for £2.2 million.

Page 8: Finding my father in Mesopotamia

The start of the 1914-18 Mesopotamian Campaign

On 6 November 1914, the British offensive began with the naval force bombarding the old fort at Fao, which was located at the point where the Shatt-al-Arab river meets the Persian Gulf. D Force was made up of mainly Indian troops from the Poona Regiment.

Page 9: Finding my father in Mesopotamia

Basra and Qurna

On 22 November 1914, the British occupied Basra at the Battle of Qurna they were able to gain back control of their stake in the oilfields

…BUT the decision was taken to send a hopelessly underfunded and underequipped force to try to take Baghdad which led to four years of appalling suffering and over a million deaths

Page 10: Finding my father in Mesopotamia

Army camp at Kut

Page 11: Finding my father in Mesopotamia

Bridge of Boats at Qurna

Page 12: Finding my father in Mesopotamia

River Tigris above Amara

Page 13: Finding my father in Mesopotamia

Traders on the Tigris

Page 14: Finding my father in Mesopotamia

Hospital boat on the Tigris

Page 15: Finding my father in Mesopotamia

Halting place near Sheikh-Saad

Page 16: Finding my father in Mesopotamia

Basra

Page 17: Finding my father in Mesopotamia

Buying from Arab traders

Page 18: Finding my father in Mesopotamia

Tigris stern-paddler

Page 19: Finding my father in Mesopotamia

Arab well

Page 20: Finding my father in Mesopotamia

Sikh soldier

Page 21: Finding my father in Mesopotamia

Taking Mesopotamia…

“The best thing would be if we could say we had taken and gained nothing. Taking Mesopotamia…means spending millions on irrigation and development with no immediate or early return and keeping up a large army in an unfamiliar country with a perpetual menace on our flank in Kurdistan.”

Memories and Reflections, Lord Grey of Falloden, 1919

Page 22: Finding my father in Mesopotamia

90 years after the start of ‘the war to end all wars’…the second Battle of Falujah, November 7-16

2004 .

Page 23: Finding my father in Mesopotamia

END Jenny Lewis Oxford 2014 © Jenny Lewis 2014