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[Page 49]
We were relieved by a regiment of Tommies on that night.
Another 5 miles of hard going and we were comparatively safe again We stayed the night at a camp, known as Wheal Camp. We did look pretty objects the next morning with the slush & mud!
In the afternoon, we had orders to be ready to move off from our camp at 1.30. We embarked in motor buses to a "new home" or billets This was Sept 1st 1917.
Passing through Bailleul again, we passed through more or less large towns, until we finally came to a dead stop; a mile or two from Hazelbroach We were billeted in a farm house, about 50 of us occupying a hay shed.
We had a church parade the next day, the sights of the countryside were all unfamiliar to us (the new ones who had joined up)
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