World War 1, South-West Asia, Turkey, Gallipoli, SILAS, "Crusading at Anzac"
Extract from "Crusading at Anzac", "My First Dug-out. – Anzac, April, 1915", Sketch by Ellis Silas
Ellis Luciano Silas (13 July 1885 - 2 May 1972) was a British artist and draughtsman who served as an ANZAC during World War 1. He was .born in London, Silas' grandfather was the Anglo-Dutch composer Edouard Silas and his father, Louis Silas was an artist. Silas studied art from his father and was also a student of the artist Walter Sickert. In 1907, aged 23, Silas moved to Australia where he continued to develop as a painter.He painted in Sydney and Melbourne before settling in Perth.
Silas enlisted in the Australian Imperial Force (AIF) in October 1914.. Silas was never confident that he would make a good soldier even though he had served in the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve and had some experience of military life. Silas embarked with the 16th Infantry Battalion for Egypt in December 1914. Throughout early 1915, Silas continued his training as a signaller outside Cairo, Egypt.
On the evening of 25 April 1915, the battalion was waiting on the deck of a transport to go ashore on Gallipoli The Battle of the Landing on Gallipoli in which the 16th Battalion took part lasted from 25 April to 3 May 1915. Silas told some of the battalion's story after the Gallipoli Campaign in a book called Crusading at Anzac AD 1915. Silas' book is based on extracts from the diary and sketchbook he kept during his time at Anzac. His words and images provide a dramatic insight into the dangers, hardships and loss that accompanied the Anzacs as they tried to establish a foothold on the Gallipoli peninsula.
Silas landed on Gallipoli in the evening of 25 April with the 16th Battalion. In the first weeks on Gallipoli, 16 Battalion was reduced to two companies suffering heavy casualties at Pope’s Hill and Quinn’s Post. By 17 May, Silas had become seriously ill and was taken by hospital ship back to Egypt. From Egypt, he was transferred to England and in August 1916, was discharged from the AIF as being permanently unfit for active service.
His sketches from the front were viewed by King George and Queen Mary in May 1916. His book Crusading at Anzac was published in 1916 with forewords by Sir Ian Hamilton and William Birdwood.
Details
Details
My First Dug-out. – Anzac, April, 1915
This bit of a hole took me four days to dig.I was not strong enough to use a piack so I did whatI could with my trenching,tool, also I was kept so busy signalling as I was the only signaller left out of A and B Companies. As soon as I would commence to work on my dug,out, I would hear the everlasting cry “Signaller !!!” I I" so I had to get with my flags. The thick scrub on the hill the left was "stiff” with snipers ; fn fact, it was safer in the firing line than out of it. The poor fellow lying on top was my only companion for frree days. That silent reminder of what I might any second be myself, was not pleasant. It was impossible to 6ury him. To put one’s head above the bit of earth I had thrown up was to court death. How I escaped being hit is wonderfuI for I had to get out of my hole every few rminutes. It is not with any desire for morbid semsationalism that I introduce the dead in every drawing. They were part of our daily life; they were part of the character of the Peninsula-at least of Anzac.
Signaller Ellis Silas was the only artist to paint and sketch actual battle scenes showing Australian soldiers in action at Gallipoli. He was commissioned in 1919 by the Australian War Records Section to paint images of Gallipoli at the initiative of C. E. W. Bean who wanted ex-servicemen to paint from their experiences.
The Australian Army Museum of Western Australia is planning an exhibition relating to the Gallipoli service of Silas Ellis and his sketches for Anzac Day 2025.
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- World War 1, Australia, Western Australia, 898 SUTTON, 10 Light Horse (0.52km away)
- World War 1, Australia, Western Australia, 962 McLEAN, 10 Light Horse (0.52km away)
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Australian Army Museum of Western Australia
Australian Army Museum of Western Australia
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