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Anecdotes of the Anglo-Boer war - Tales from 'The last of the Gentlemen's wars' (Paperback, 2nd ed)
Price: R386
Discovery Miles 3 860
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Anecdotes of the Anglo-Boer war - Tales from 'The last of the Gentlemen's wars' (Paperback, 2nd ed)
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Price R386
Discovery Miles 3 860
Expected to ship within 2 - 4 working days
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A kaleidoscope of human-interest stories exposing long-kept
secrets, mysteries and heroics for the first time. Wars always
generate stories and everybody loves a story. Rob Milne has
compiled this selection of Anglo-Boer War stories from all over
South Africa and recounts them in a book that saddens, mystifies,
but most of all entertains. There's the devotion of the English
fiancee who for 60 years sent a sprig of heather to the Lake
Chrissie Post Office for her beloved's grave, the tale of the lone
Boer sniper who held off the entire Guards Brigade for more than a
day after the battle of Bergendal, the sighting of UFOs near
Pretoria at the beginning of the war and the story of how an
unfortunate British soldier ended up being buried under a toilet on
a railway station. Read about Sergeant Woodward's two graves in
Heidelberg and the ghosts of the British officers that still haunt
the Elands River Valley. During the past 12 years since the
publication of the first edition, Milne has relentlessly followed
up on his stories; but sometimes the stories have followed him ...
with unexpected results! There's a photo of the ghosts of the
Bergendal farm girl and her British soldier lover who appeared in
broad daylight on the battlefield while Milne was investigating the
story in 2011. There's the unnamed Welshman who found the long-lost
British paymaster's gold 60 years after the military train was
ambushed and looted near Greylingstad. Learn the truth of how
Churchill and his fellow officers received the daily war news in
Morse code while they were prisoners of war at the State Model
School in Pretoria, why Prime Minister Botha was sued after the war
for stealing the `Kruger Millions' when entrusted to his care as
Commandant-General during the retreat to the Mozambican border. And
there's the love story, `The Legend of the Flowers', about Martha,
a Boer girl, and a British soldier, George, which unfolded in
Ventersdorp and how Martha involved the author in her story from
beyond the grave. A unique and delightfully refreshing read.
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