The Turks, recently defeated by lesser powers, couldn’t resist the combined might of the British and French empires. They would run at the sight of the Allied fleet. Or so some chose to believe.
This book offers an unparalleled collection of first-hand accounts by those who made history and those who lived it, from prime ministers to private soldiers, from the offices of Whitehall to the dusty dugouts of the peninsula. All accounts were written at the time, without the benefit or bias of hindsight.
How did a naval demonstration to aid the Russians lead to the first amphibious landings on a defended shore in modern times? Was it a flash of strategic genius, a worthwhile gamble or did ‘criminal idiots attempt the impossible’?
Gain a new perspective on the Gallipoli Campaign as you watch the story unfold with each passing day.
Jim Grundy hails from Hucknall in Nottinghamshire.
The former civil servant (and partner in a brewery) has long been fascinated by the history of the Great War. A member of the Western Front Association for many years, Jim once chaired the local branch. His research saw more than 100 names added to Hucknall’s war memorial in 2012.
Jim produces the popular Facebook page ‘Gallipoli, 1915’ and is a regular visitor to the Peninsula.