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Pat Kelleher - The Ironclad Prophecy

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Pat Kelleher The Ironclad Prophecy
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    The Ironclad Prophecy
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    2011
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    978-1-84997-285-7
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The Ironclad Prophecy: summary, description and annotation

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It has been three months since the 13 Battalion of the Pennine Fusiliers vanished from the WW1 battlefield of the Somme and found themselves stranded on an alien world. Since then, their trenches have become the target for vengeful alien attacks. The tank, Ivanhoe, is sent on the trail of Jeffries, the impostor many hold responsible for their plight. Lance Corporal Only Atkins and his Black Hang Gang, along with a captured alien Khungarrii are ordered to find him. While the encampment faces an alien threat, the Black Hand Gang discover an ancient edifice containing a secret that will tear the Battalion apart. As the Pennines fight for their lives against the mounting horrors of No Mans World, their only hopes for survival and a way home lie in the psychotropic fuel-addicted crew of the Ivanhoe and its increasingly insane commander! Pat Kelleher BBC Magazines Egmont Marvel UK Panini No Mans World: Ironclad Prophesy About the Author

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Pat Kelleher

THE IRONCLAD PROPHECY

For Niall and Niamh

When sorrows come, they come not single spies
But in battalions.

Hamlet, Act 4, Scene 5,William Shakespeare

13th BATTALION PENNINE FUSILIERS: COMPANY PERSONNEL

Battalion HQ.

C.O.: 2nd Lieutenant J. C. Everson

2C.O.: Company Sergeant Major Ernest Nelson

Company Quartermaster Sergeant Archibald Slacke

Pte. Henry Half Pint Nicholls (batman)

Royal Army Chaplain: Father Arthur Rand

(CF4) (Captain) War Office Kinematographer Oliver Hepton

C Company

No 1 Platoon

C.O.: Lieutenant Morgan

No. 2 Platoon

C.O.: 2nd Lieutenant Palmer

2C.O.: Platoon Sergeant Herbert Gerald Hobson

1 Section

I.C.: Lance Corporal Thomas Only Atkins

Pte. Harold Gutsy Blood

Pte. Peter Nobby Clark

Pte. Wilfred Joseph Mercy Evans

Pte. Bernard Prof Gates

Pte. George Porgy Hopkiss

Pte. Leonard Pot-Shot Jellicoe

Pte. David Samuel Gazette Otterthwaite

Pte. Eric Chalky White

RAMC

Regimental Aid Post

RMO: Captain Grenville Lippett

Red Cross Nurses

Sister Betty Fenton

Sister Edith Bell

Driver Nellie Abbott (First Aid Nursing Yeomanry)

Orderlies

Pte. Edgar Stanton

Pte. Edward Thompkins

Machine Gun Corps (Heavy Section) I Company: I-5 HMLS Ivanhoe

C.O.: 2nd Lieutenant Arthur Alexander Mathers

Pte. Wally Clegg (Driver)

Pte. Frank Nichols (Gearsman)

Pte. Alfred Perkins (Gearsman)

Pte. Norman Bainbridge (Gunner)

Pte. Jack Tanner (Gunner)

Pte. Reginald Lloyd (Loader / Machine Gunner)

Pte. Cecil Nesbit (Loader / Machine Gunner)

D Flight 70 Squadron: Sopwith 1 Strutter

Lieutenant James Robert Tulliver (Pilot)

Corporal Jack Maddocks (Observer)

The Ironclad Prophecy - image 1

PREFACE

Its a Long, Long Way to Tipperary

THE MYSTERY OF the Harcourt Crater galvanised a generation when, in 1916, nine hundred men of the 13th Battalion of the Pennine Fusiliers vanished from the Somme. Ten years afterwards, a find in a French field revealed silent film footage, letters and journals, describing the Fusiliers existence on another planet, only for it to be declared a hoax and forgotten as time passed.

Almost a hundred years later, the publication of No Mans World: Black Hand Gang revived interest in the case of the missing Pennine Fusiliers. Since then, members of the public have contacted the publisher with claims of new evidence, of unseen documents and letters that have lain in ordinary boxes and in dusty attics for decades, unregarded.

This volume, continuing the account of the Pennine Fusiliers fate, has been able to include this new information, where appropriate, with the permission of the families, in order to shed light on one of the biggest military cover-ups of the last century.

It must be remembered, however, that it was not just the 13th Battalion of the Pennine Fusiliers that vanished that day. The HMLS Ivanhoe, one of Britains secret weapons, the new-fangled tanks, also disappeared, along with its eight-man crew.

While the mystery of the Pennines inspired lurid pulp tales in magazines such as Great War Science Stories, and featured in adventures like The Curse of the 13th Battalion; The Golem of No Mans Land; Zeppelin from Another World and Crater of the Somme-bies, the Ivanhoe appeared in only a small number of tales published during 1928. They were written by Harold G. Cargill who, the publications editors sensationally suggested, was an eyewitness survivor of the Fusiliers, returned from the planet.

While there was no evidence to suggest that Cargill was ever a member of the Pennine Fusiliers, his name not appearing in any official war records, nor indeed in a list of the missing, it is clear from his personal correspondence that he knew more than he was telling, or perhaps was allowed to tell.

The Ivanhoe and its crew were portrayed in those tales as cheery, jingoistic modern day knights-in-armour, riding out across a strange planet on colourful, rip-roaring quests.

The truth, however, is more inauspicious.

Military records show that the Ivanhoe, with five other tanks from I Company, Machine Gun Corp, Heavy Section, was ordered into battle on 1st November 1916 to support an assault on Harcourt Wood by the Pennines. Of those tanks, three broke down before they reached the front line. I4, the female tank Igraine, was mired in mud and abandoned. Wreckage of I3, the Invicta,was found at the bottom of the Harcourt Crater itself. It is assumed that it drove blindly over the edge, moments after the craters appearance, killing all on board.

All of the major events in this account are drawn, where possible, from primary sources, including fragments of the Ivanhoes tank diary. Scribbled in faded pencil and almost indecipherable in places, they were found among the papers of Arthur Cooke, author of The Harcourt Crater: Hoax or Horror? While incomplete, the fragments do give some clues to the apparent fate of the Ivanhoe and its crew, a fate that is firmly entrenched in that of the Pennine Fusiliers.

And it is uplifting to discover from these sources that while the Pennines were fighting for their existence in a place that was, most definitely, a long, long way from Tipperary, throughout the travails and terrors they had to endure their hearts did, indeed, remain right here.

Pat KelleherBroughtonshawDecember, 2010

The Ironclad Prophecy - image 2

PROLOGUE

Here Comes The British Navy,Sailing On The Land

Elveden, Suffolk, May 1916

THE GREAT ARMOURED beast stood passively, like a great destrier waiting to be ridden into battle.

Lieutenant Arthur Mathers tried to hold his nerve in front of his men but, despite his efforts, the muscle beneath his right eye began to twitch uncontrollably. His palms began to sweat and he started to hyperventilate. He could feel his heart pounding in his chest.

To his men beside him, this thing was a magnificent brute. They crowded around it admiringly, patting its flanks and inspecting it like a prize thoroughbred.

Bleedin hell, its a sight, isnt it, sir? Wally Clegg, the small, thin-haired cockney beside Mathers, beamed with a joy the officer couldnt feel.

Yes, Clegg. Yes it is, said Mathers, trying to temper his rising fear.

Reginald Lloyd looked over at the small man with the weary air of one given to correcting those less educated than himself. Its not an it, Wally. Tanks are a he or a she. Reggie had been a butler to minor aristocracy, but had joined up to do his bit, a duty he seemed to interpret as trying to instil some manners into his crewmates.

Well, begging your pardon, Reggie, but I aint no vet. How do you tell them apart?

Most of us, Wally, paid attention on the course, but for your benefit, both types have front and rear machine guns, but females have smaller sponsons either side with two Hotchkiss machine guns in each, while the males, like this one here, have bigger sponsons, each with a six-pounder gun and a Hotchkiss.

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