[Price-Davies, Llewelyn Alberic Emilius, 1878-1965]. Second Boer War journal, 8 October 1900 - 24 February 1902, contemporary manuscript fair copy, [274] pp., stationer's ink-stamp 'Creswick & Co.' to rear pastedown, contemporary roan-backed pebble-grain cloth, spine worn, front joint cracking, 4to (22.8 x 18 cm), 2 pen-and-ink sketch maps laid in (12.5 x 20 cm and 25 x 20 cm) (Qty: 1) Provenance: Private Collection, Herefordshire. The unpublished Second Boer War journal of VC and DSO recipient Llewelyn Price-Davies, transcribed from his letters probably by a family member or other associate working under his instruction. (The two accompanying sketch-maps, presumably made on the spot by Price-Davies himself, are in a slightly different hand from the journal, and one contains an annotation seeming to address the putative copyist: 'Sorry it is rather messy but I think you will understand it. Also contours don’t end off properly at the Vaal which was put in afterwards when I found my mistake.') Although the manuscript is unsigned it is attributable with certainty to Price-Davies, then a junior officer in the King’s Royal Rifle Corps, on internal evidence including the author’s vivid account of his actions at Blood River Poort on 17 September 1901 and his receipt of the Victoria Cross on the recommendation of Hubert Gough: charging a group of 400 flanking Boers, Price-Davies was shot off his horse having ‘ridden to what seemed to be almost certain death without a moment’s hesitation’ (London Gazette, 29 November 1901). The letters relate in minute detail Price-Davies’s activity during the war’s guerrilla phase, including service in the flying columns of Dartnell and Spens, skirmishes with Boer commandos, camp life and recreation, relationships with brother officers, interactions with burghers and 'kaffirs', and the British army’s scorched earth policy and technological experimentation; there are also candid discussions of the British command including Kitchener, Gough, Buller and Allenby, and a favourable portrait of Louis Botha. Price-Davies’s family papers are now in the Imperial War Museum. The National Army Museum holds a collection of papers including 'diaries [which] relate to Price-Davies's career in the Boer War, in World War I ... and with the Home Guard (1940-44)' (Cook et al., Sources in British Political History, 1900-1951, II p. 63). A selection of his World War I letters was published in 2013 (at The History Press, Stroud).
[Price-Davies, Llewelyn Alberic Emilius, 1878-1965]. Second Boer War journal, 8 October 1900 - 24 February 1902, contemporary manuscript fair copy, [274] pp., stationer's ink-stamp 'Creswick & Co.' to rear pastedown, contemporary roan-backed pebble-grain cloth, spine worn, front joint cracking, 4to (22.8 x 18 cm), 2 pen-and-ink sketch maps laid in (12.5 x 20 cm and 25 x 20 cm) (Qty: 1) Provenance: Private Collection, Herefordshire. The unpublished Second Boer War journal of VC and DSO recipient Llewelyn Price-Davies, transcribed from his letters probably by a family member or other associate working under his instruction. (The two accompanying sketch-maps, presumably made on the spot by Price-Davies himself, are in a slightly different hand from the journal, and one contains an annotation seeming to address the putative copyist: 'Sorry it is rather messy but I think you will understand it. Also contours don’t end off properly at the Vaal which was put in afterwards when I found my mistake.') Although the manuscript is unsigned it is attributable with certainty to Price-Davies, then a junior officer in the King’s Royal Rifle Corps, on internal evidence including the author’s vivid account of his actions at Blood River Poort on 17 September 1901 and his receipt of the Victoria Cross on the recommendation of Hubert Gough: charging a group of 400 flanking Boers, Price-Davies was shot off his horse having ‘ridden to what seemed to be almost certain death without a moment’s hesitation’ (London Gazette, 29 November 1901). The letters relate in minute detail Price-Davies’s activity during the war’s guerrilla phase, including service in the flying columns of Dartnell and Spens, skirmishes with Boer commandos, camp life and recreation, relationships with brother officers, interactions with burghers and 'kaffirs', and the British army’s scorched earth policy and technological experimentation; there are also candid discussions of the British command including Kitchener, Gough, Buller and Allenby, and a favourable portrait of Louis Botha. Price-Davies’s family papers are now in the Imperial War Museum. The National Army Museum holds a collection of papers including 'diaries [which] relate to Price-Davies's career in the Boer War, in World War I ... and with the Home Guard (1940-44)' (Cook et al., Sources in British Political History, 1900-1951, II p. 63). A selection of his World War I letters was published in 2013 (at The History Press, Stroud).
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