Anzac - Plugge's Plateau Cemetery

The Gallipoli Houses - the first "hotel de charme" on the peninsula

 

 

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the first "hotel de charme" on the Gallipoli peninsula

 

Plugge's Plateau Cemetery just before sunset

To summarize the reasons for Anzac problems on 25 April, these are actually rather numerous: loss of surprise; an incorrect landing place; the last-minute shift to a right flank orientation after the landing by Sinclair MacLagan; confusion in the difficult scrub country resulting in lack of cohesion, communication, discipline and direction; mediocre leadership in certain areas by some battalion commanders; failure to land field artillery, leaving Anzac troops under demoralizing and continuous shrapnel fire; a stern baptism of fire for mostly untried troops; relative failure of naval supporting fire, the lenghty four-hour halt in landing troops in the afternoon of 25 April; a reasonably quick Turkish response; and very effective Turkish shrapnel and sniper fire.  Of all these reasons, the last seems the most significant. It is hardly surprising that Godley, Bridges and other contemplated evacuation, and really the wonder is that the Anzac troops did as well as they did.

"Gallipoli 1915", (Stroud 2002), Tim Travers, p. 39.

The numbers of those killed, wounded, and missing up to noon on April 30th were found to be :

 

 

Information taken from "The story of Anzac", Volume I, (Sydney 1981), Charles E. W. Bean, p. 536-537

 

the Gallipoli Houses


 

 

 

Beach Cemetery at Anzac

 

PLUGGE'S PLATEAU CEMETERY

CWGC - ANZAC
Last updated : 01/12/2006

 

Turkish Victory Monument at North Beach

Men / officers

Killed

Wounded

Missing

Total

1st Brigade

15 / 138

43 / 711

2 / 476

60 / 1.325

2nd Brigade

10 / 148

45 / 767

2 / 709

57 /1.624

3rd Brigade

18 / 171

41 / 861

3 / 771

62 / 1.803

 

 


 

 

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