ANZAC alphabet IJ

Place Middle East: Ottoman Empire, Turkey, Dardanelles, Gallipoli
Accession Number ART00018
Collection type Art
Measurement Overall: 14.9 x 22.6 cm
Object type Work on paper
Physical description coloured pencil, pencil on paper
Maker Henderson, James Webster Scott
Place made Ottoman Empire: Turkey, Dardanelles, Gallipoli
Date made 1915
Conflict First World War, 1914-1918
Copyright

Item copyright: Copyright unknown

Description

Drawings of a series of alphabet letters I and J. The caption underneath reads: 'I's the intelligence officer who is said to exist at G.H.Q.; [J] Forgive a digression and spare me the time to think of a word that will make a good rhyme, and if the delay is a little provoking, remember it's J and the word maybe Joking'. This work was published in 'The ANZAC Book', which was first printed in 1916 from illustrations, poems, stories and other creative works from the soldiers on the Gallipoli peninsula. In November 1915 CEW Bean, an official war correspondent and eventually official war historian, called for contributions for what was initially to be an ANZAC New Year magazine. Bean edited the work on the island of Imbros and after the Greek publisher fell through, arranged to have the work published in London by Cassell and Company. The book is composed of satirical and sombre pieces about the conditions of life at Gallipoli. It also provides a general outline of the April 25 landing at ANZAC Cove and the military advances, offensives and defensives undertaken in the following months until the eventual evacuation of the Allied forces at the end of December 1915. The introduction was written by General Sir W Birdwood, who explains how he named ANZAC Cove on the Gallipoli peninsula after the ANZAC forces. Bean contributed an editor's note in which he outlined the harsh conditions that the book was produced in, the significance it had taken on, and acknowledged the contributors.