CHAPTER 2. THE BATTLE OF LOOS. CHAPTER 3. HULLUCH LOOS SECTOR. CHAPTER 4. THE SOMME BATTLE, 1916. CHAPTER 5. BATTLE OF ARRAS, 1917. CHAPTER 7. THE BRITISH WITHDRAWAL AND GERMAN ATTACK, 28th MARCH, 1918. CHAPTER 8. AMALGAMATION OF 6th AND 7th CAMERON HIGHLANDERS. OFFICERS WHO SERVED WITH THE BATTALION. Apparent typographical errors have been corrected. Inconsistencies in hyphenation and in the accenting of French words have been retained. In the appendix listing officers who served with the battalion, some entries are out of alphabetical order; while blank spaces indicate missing dates. THE HISTORY OF THE 7TH BATTALION "Lieutenant-Colonel Sandilands of the 7th Camerons arrived on the hill. Being the senior officer present, he took command and planted the Headquarters flag of his Battalion on the top. It was his business to recall the van of the advance, now lost in the fog and smoke of the eastern slopes, and to entrench himself on the summit. The Redoubt was now out of our hands and the line taken ran just under the crest on the west, and was continued North of Loos by the 46th Brigade. To retire the van was no light task. Two officers whose names deserve to be remembered, Major Chrichton of the 10th Gordons, and Major Barron of the 7th Camerons, volunteered for the desperate mission. They fell in the task, but the order reached the stragglers, and they began to fight their way back. In the midst of encircling fire it was a forlorn hope, and few returned to the British lines on the hill. All down the slopes towards Loos lay the tartans Gordon and Black Watch, Seaforth and Cameron, like the drift left on the shore when the tide has ebbed."—John Buchan, in "Nelson's History of the War." THE HISTORY |