German prisoners resting with a wounded comrade at one of the access entrances to the St Quentin ...

Accession Number E03476
Collection type Photograph
Object type Black & white - Glass original half plate negative
Maker Unknown Australian Official Photographer
Unknown Australian Official Photographer
Place made France: Picardie, Aisne, Bellicourt
Date made 1 October 1918
Conflict First World War, 1914-1918
Copyright

Item copyright: Copyright expired - public domain

Public Domain Mark This item is in the Public Domain

Description

German prisoners resting with a wounded comrade at one of the access entrances to the St Quentin Canal Tunnel, in the captured Hindenburg Defence System. Identified, left to right: American Stretcher Bearer; German prisoner; 3417 Private (Pte) G. Jones; 4966 Pte J. Gilbert (partially obscured by Jones); American Stretcher Bearer (behind Gilbert); 2646 Pte C. W. Cheverly, (partially obscured beside American); Despatch Rider, 13th Australian Light Horse; wounded German (on stretcher); 1222 Sergeant J. J. Blair, (giving the wounded German a drink); German prisoner; German prisoner; 250 Pte A. H. Chenhall, (partially obscured by German prisoner). Group of four men on the right are unidentified American Stretcher Bearers. This entrance was captured from the Germans by the Americans and Australians on 29 September 1918, when they broke through the Hindenburg Line. The Australians in this photograph are members of the 60th Battalion whose duty it was to guard the entrance to prevent any Germans who may be concealed in the tunnel from coming out and firing on our troops from the rear.

Related information