| The Diary of Henry Peerless
Henry Peerless was a Brighton based timber merchant who
liked to travel round the UK between 1891 and 1920 by motor
car. An entry in his diary for 15th July 1916 reads as follows:
“Feeling much refreshed, we get going again and pave
our way to Shaftesbury. From thence we shape a course for
Salisbury. On the way we ran into a huge camp. I think there
were at least twelve camps in one long line – thousands
of soldiers were about – we drew up, and I asked some
soldiers the name of the place - as far as I can understand,
they said it was Sutton Mandeville, Fovant Camps.
“On our right hand side, behind the camps, was a range
of hills, and we were attracted by a series of regimental
crests on the side of these hills, most beautifully executed
in, I think, white chalk. They varied considerably in size,
and it is difficult to judge at a distance what their dimensions
might be, but some were of enormous proportions and must
have been quite a big job to execute. They were works of
art, and produced a fine effect, and I imagine will be preserved
in the future as a memento of the Great War.”
That is the objective of the Fovant Badges Society, Mr Peerless!
(By permission of Edward Fenton, author of ‘Great
Diaries from Around the World’ , Day Books) |