<h2>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Capture of the Umm esh Shert Ford.</span></div>
<p>As the date fixed for the great advance of the Army
in Palestine drew near, certain parts of the
Jordan Valley began to look very comical. Here and
there would be seen a battery of artillery parked, or a
cavalry regiment, with its horses tethered in neat and
orderly array, in the most approved army style, but on
closer inspection both horses and guns were found to be
merely dummies! Great camps were pitched, but there
was not a soldier in them; fires were lighted all over the
place at dusk, as if a mighty army were bivouacked round
about, and every conceivable kind of bluff was put up in
order to deceive the Turks and make them think that
the long expected attack was to be made through
Gilead, to effect a junction with the Arab Army of the
Hedjaz. The Jewish Battalion was even ordered to
march and counter march from Jericho to the Dead Sea
by some wight at G.H.Q. who still remembered us, but
General Chaytor scotched this stunt, for of course he
knew it was quite impossible for us to guard our front
throughout the night and march some forty miles by
day as well in that terrific heat.</p>
<p>There were really very few troops in the Valley, if
one considers the enemy force that could have been concentrated<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</SPAN></span>
against us. According to General Allenby's
despatch, there were some 6,000 rifles, 2,000 sabres,
and 74 guns facing us in the Jordan Valley.</p>
<p>General Allenby in his despatch of the 31st October,
1918, writes:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>"By reducing the strength of the troops in the Jordan
Valley to a minimum," etc., and "To prevent the decrease
in strength in the Jordan Valley being discovered
by the enemy I ordered Major General Sir Edward
Chaytor, K.C.M.G., C.B., A.D.C., to carry out with
the Australian and New Zealand Mounted Division, the
20th Indian (Imperial Service) Infantry Brigade, the
38th and 39th Battalions of the Royal Fusiliers, and
the 1st and 2nd Battalions British West Indies Regiment
a series of demonstrations with the object of
inducing the enemy to believe that an attack East of
the Jordan was intended, either in the direction of
Madeba or Amman.</p>
<p>"The enemy was thought to be anticipating an attack
in these directions and every possible step was taken to
strengthen his suspicions."</p>
</blockquote>
<p>On the 15th September the 39th Battalion Royal
Fusiliers, under the command of Colonel Margolin,
D.S.O., arrived in the Jordan Valley, and took up its
position on the Auja in support of the 38th Battalion in
the line.</p>
<p>A couple of days before the big offensive which began
on the 18th September, General Allenby visited my
Headquarters, where I presented to him all the officers
not on duty. He took me a little apart and asked me if I
was sure I could trust the men to fight, and I assured<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</SPAN></span>
him that he need have no anxiety on that score, for the
men were all right and would respond to any call when
it was made.</p>
<p>He then asked me if there was any other point I
should like to bring to his notice: I told him that malaria
was daily becoming more prevalent and I was losing
200 men a week from this cause alone: I also pointed
out that I did not think that the medical arrangements
for the evacuation and care of the men were all that they
should be. The General made a note of this in his
book.</p>
<p>The only result was that I got an irate letter from the
Deputy Adjutant-General asking me for a full report as
to why I had misinformed the Commander-in-Chief
about my sick, and about medical matters generally, so
that on the morning of the 23rd September, the day we
were ordered to pursue the enemy, when I should have
been solely devoted to the leading of my men and all the
problems pertaining thereto, I had to sit down and
smooth the ruffled feathers of the Deputy Adjutant-General.</p>
<p>I not only proved my case to the hilt, but emphasized
it by giving further evidence which I had not troubled
the Commander-in-Chief by recounting.</p>
<p>General Chaytor specially warned us that, during the
offensive on our left, we were to increase our patrols and
harry the enemy as much as possible, to keep him in his
lines and to prevent, if possible, any large force of
Turks crossing from the East of the Jordan to reinforce
their armies holding the line from the Jordan to the sea.</p>
<p>This is how the official report runs:—"Chaytor's<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</SPAN></span>
force in the Jordan Valley had so far confined itself to
vigorous patrolling to insure that the enemy could make
no move without their knowledge. The rôle of this
composite force was to secure the right flank of the army
and the Jordan crossings, to keep in close touch with
the enemy and take advantage of any withdrawal on
their part, but to run no risk of being involved with a
more powerful foe too early in the battle. This difficult
task was admirably carried out."</p>
<p>During the nights of the 18th, 19th, 20th and 21st
September we made demonstrations against the
Turkish positions along our front. Parties would crawl
out into favourable positions, such as a fold in the
ground, and open fire all down the line. This always
made the Turks nervy, and their trenches would be
manned and every individual would blaze away for all
he was worth.</p>
<p>On the 19th and 20th they got so "windy" that they
called on their artillery to put down a barrage to prevent
us from making an assault. Each time the barrage was
put down our men were well clear, and lay snug and
safe until the enemy had uselessly expended hundreds
of rounds, when they quietly returned to camp, not a whit
the worse for all the cannonading. There was very
little sleep on these nights for anyone, and the Jewish
Battalion certainly did all that in it lay to further the intentions
of the Commander-in-Chief by holding every
Turk in the neighbourhood of the Jordan closely to his
lines.</p>
<p>On the 20th we pushed well up against the Turkish
trenches, found them all manned, and again drew heavy<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</SPAN></span>
rifle, machine-gun and artillery fire. We had a few
men wounded in this affair. Why we had not a heavy
casualty list on these occasions is a mystery to me, for
the men had to advance in the open over a stretch of
ground as level as a billiard table.</p>
<p>Number 6 Trench Mortar Battery R.A. was under
my command in the Mellahah, and I ordered this battery
to open fire on the Turkish position round Umm esh
Shert, if we should find difficulty in ousting the enemy
from this important place.</p>
<p>I had arranged to attack this position on the 22nd
September, but at midnight on the 21st my Intelligence
Officer sent me news that the enemy's resistance in the
trenches opposite Umm esh Shert Ford was weakening.</p>
<p>I immediately ordered out my reserve, and sent them
under Lieutenant Cross to reinforce Major Neill, whose
duty it was to push in the Turks and take the Ford at
the earliest possible moment. I got favourable news
by telephone of the steady advance of the men; trench
after trench was occupied, and when I left my Headquarters
at 4 a.m. for the scene of the fight, I was able
to report to General Chaytor's Staff Officer that we were
almost in possession of the crossing.</p>
<p>I galloped off as dawn was breaking, scrambled up the
cliffs and across the ground from which the Turks had
fled, and arrived in time to go down with Major Neill,
Captain Julian, and Lieutenants Jabotinsky and Cross,
to take possession of this coveted passage over the
Jordan. I may mention here that Jabotinsky had been
attached to G.H.Q. for special work, but, as soon as the
battalion went into the line, he requested to be returned<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</SPAN></span>
to duty in order to share in all our dangers and
hardships.</p>
<p>The moment we had secured the Umm esh Shert
Ford I signalled the news to General Chaytor, who immediately
took advantage of our capture by pushing
mounted troops across the Jordan, thus outflanking the
Turks who held the foothills of Shunat Nimrin, which
barred the way to Es Salt.</p>
<p>The 1st Australian Light Horse Brigade crossed
while we covered the Ford with our rifles and machine-guns,
and they never drew rein until Es Salt was reached
that evening, where a large force of the enemy with
guns, etc., was captured by the Anzac Mounted
Division.</p>
<p>That same afternoon, two companies of the 39th Battalion
Royal Fusiliers moved up to our support and took
up position in the posts which we had vacated in the
Mellahah.</p>
<p>It is a curious fact that the whole movement of the
British Army in Palestine, which swept the Turks out
of the country, was actually pivoted on the sons of
Israel, who were once again fighting the enemy, not far
from the spot where their forefathers had crossed the
Jordan under Joshua.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />