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William Eagleson Gordon

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

William Eagleson Gordon
Lieutenant Colonel W. E. Gordon (1914)
Born4 May 1866
Bridge of Allan, Scotland
Died10 March 1941 (aged 74)
Hindhead, Surrey
Buried
St Alban's Churchyard, Hindhead
AllegianceUnited Kingdom United Kingdom
Service/branch
British Army
RankColonel
UnitThe Gordon Highlanders
Battles/warsChitral Expedition
Tirah Campaign
Second Boer War
World War I
AwardsVictoria Cross
Commander of the Order of the British Empire

Colonel William Eagleson Gordon, VC, CBE (4 May 1866 – 10 March 1941) was a Scottish British Army officer and recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth forces. He is the older brother of Archibald Alexander Gordon, who received the Legion of Honour and Order of Leopold.

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Transcription

(music) ("In The Sky With Diamonds" by Scalding Lucy) Steven: We're in Washington D.C. on the mall at the Vietnam Veteran's Memorial. Beth: With is situated right between the Washington Monument and the Lincolcn Memorial. Maya Lin, the architect of the memorial sought about uniting the memorial to the nation's past, bringing together the past and the present. Steven: It's this very long series of slabs of stone, this highly-reflective black granite that actually points to both of those monuments. Beth: Although the architect didn't like to refer to these as walls, in a way they are walls, but it's very thin, sunk into the ground and inscribed with the names of the servicemen who died in the Vietnam War. Steven: Now there are more than 58,000 names and in fact, more names are being added. It is overwhelming in the density of names. What happens as you walk down this path, you sink into the earth. The earth opens up and reveals these names. Because the surface of the stone is so reflective, it becomes a mirror and really all that seems to have substance is the rougher surface of the names themselves. Beth: Maya Lin's idea was that it was the names that were the reality, the substance of the monument and that the reflectivity of the granite opened up into another world that we could not enter, but which was there for us to see. Steven: She describes when she first visited the site that she wanted to reveal that edge. Beth: In fact, she said, "I had a simple impulse to cut into the earth. I imagined taking a knife and cutting into the earth, opening it up and initial violence and pain that in time would heal." She writes,"That the experience of the monument would help people to come to terms with the death of their loved ones." Steven: There is a real journey involved here. You walk down in, you find the name of your loved one embedded within the chronological sequence of the death of all of these soldiers, and then you walk back out. Beth: That's right. In the center, the chronology begins and goes down toward the right as we're facing the wall and then picks up again on the low edge of the left side and then towards the center again. As we move down the center, the path widens and the granite rises more than 10 feet above us. Steven: The names become a symbol of this person multiplied more than 58,000 times, but even though you've got that abstraction, you also have this very concrete reality. You have this place for family to come, to gather, to reflect on that name. Beth: Maya Lin talks about the name as an abstraction that in fact, means more to family and loved ones than a picture. The picture represents someone at a particular time and a particular place as one moment in their lives whereas a name might recall everything about that person. Steven: There is this powerful accumulation of all of the names. As you descend, as you walk into the densest middle of the monument, it becomes absolutely overwhelming. Beth: It's a very different experience than most previous war memorials. When we think about the history of war memorials, we often think about memorials to military heroes like the monument to Lord Nelson in Trafalgar Square or we might think about the Shaw memorial by Augustus Saint-Gaudens in the National Gallery where you have a hero leading an anonymous army with an allegorical figure representing peace and death, this combination of allegory and heroism that's usually in memorials, it's completely absent here. Steven: How can one create a meaningful monument in the late 20th century? What does it mean to strip away all of the representational form? What does it mean to create something so subconsciously abstract and yet also so powerful and so meaningful? Beth: Evidently the committee that judged this decided that this abstraction would be best. It's interesting to think about how the committee didn't know who was Maya Lin was. There were 1,400 entries, completely anonymous. Maya Lin at that point, was an undergraduate at Yale, she was an architecture student, she's an Asian American. It's interesting to think about what might have happened had they known who this application was from. Steven: Once her identity had been revealed, there was real backlash and racism. There was backlash also about the abstraction. Ultimately that was resolved by a much more naturalistic sculpture adjacent to the main memorial. Beth: One that shows soldiers in a very naturalistic way, three-dimensionally, which is also powerful, but in a way that feels much more public and far less intimate. Steven: Maya Lin was brilliant in creating a public space and yet tremendous intimacy. We can feel those names inscribed. The active reading is to come close, to internalize those names. Maya Lin's Vietnam Memorial is one of the most successful memorials in the nation. Beth: And apparently one of the most visited monuments in Washington D.C. In an article that was published much later, writing about her ideas for the monument, Maya Lin said, "It would be an interface between our world and the quieter, darker, more peaceful world beyond. I chose black granite in order to make the surface reflective and peaceful. I never looked at the memorial as a wall, an object, but as an edge to the earth, an opened side. The mirrored sect would double the size of the park creating two worlds; one we are part of and one we cannot enter." Steven: Even that black granite created controversy. She also talked about how she couldn't expect granite that came from Canada or from Sweden, two countries that had really good quality black granite because there was too much political baggage because draft dodgers had gone to both of those countries. Beth: One opponent of her design said, "One needs no artistic education to see this memorial designed for what it is, a black scar and a hole hidden, as if out of shame." No, I think this is very different than what Maya Lin intended for the wall. She specifically took an apolitical approach and wanted the design to be about those veterans who had sacrificed their lives and not about the political controversy at all; not about whether if the was was something shameful or something honorable. Steven: The country had not only fought the war, but then fought itself over the meaning of the war. Maya Lin was very wise in sidestepping that and putting to the fore simply the names, the numerical power of all those fallen. Beth: And she wrote, "The wall dematerializes of the form and allows the names to become the object. Pure and reflective surfaces that would allow visitors the chance to see themselves with the name." (music) ("In The Sky With Diamonds" by Scalding Lucy)

Early military career

Gordon was born at Bridge of Allan in 1866, and joined the militia in 1886 as lieutenant in the Royal Artillery.[1] He was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Gordon Highlanders on 6 June 1888,[2] promoted to lieutenant on 1 September 1891, and took part in the Chitral Expedition with the 1st battalion of his regiment in 1895. Two years later they served in the Tirah Campaign on the North West Frontier of British India 1897–1898, during which he was promoted to captain on 19 October 1897.

He served as adjutant of the 1st battalion from 21 January 1899 and throughout the Second Boer War (1899–1902), when the battalion was posted to South Africa. They were part of the force sent to relieve the siege of Kimberley, and saw action at the Battle of Magersfontein in December 1899, where Gordon was wounded. He then served in the Orange Free State from February to May 1900, and took part in the battles of Paardeberg (February 1900), Poplar Grove, Driefontein (March 1900), Hontnek, Vet River and Hand River. Transferring to Transvaal, the battalion was again in action at Doornkop in May 1900, where they suffered severe losses, then took part in the battles of Belfast and Lydenburg (August 1900).[3] The battalion stayed in South Africa throughout the war, which ended with the Peace of Vereeniging in June 1902. Four months later 475 officers and men of the 1st battalion left Cape Town on the SS Salamis in late September 1902, arriving at Southampton in late October, when the battalion was posted to Glasgow.[4]

Citation

Gordon was 34 years old, and a captain in the 1st Battalion, The Gordon Highlanders during the Second Boer War when the following deed took place near Krugersdorp, South Africa for which he (together with Captain David Reginald Younger) was awarded the VC:

On the 11th July, 1900, during the action near Leehoehoek (or Doornbosch Fontein), near Krugersdorp, a party of men, accompanied by Captains Younger and Allan, having succeeded in dragging an artillery waggon under cover when its horses were unable to do so by reason of the heavy and accurate fire of the enemy, Captain Gordon called for volunteers to go out with him to try to bring in one of the guns. He went out alone to the nearest gun under a heavy fire, and with the greatest coolness fastened a drag-rope to the gun and then beckoned to the men, who immediately doubled out to join him in accordance with his previous instructions. While moving the gun, Captain Younger and three men were hit. Seeing that further attempts would only result in further casualties, Captain Gordon ordered the remainder of the party under cover of the kopje again, and, having seen the wounded safely away, himself retired. Captain Gordon's conduct, under a particularly heavy and most! accurate fire at only 850 yards range, was most admirable, and his manner of handling his men most masterly; his devotion on every occasion that his Battalion has been under fire has been remarkable.[5]

His Victoria Cross is on display at the Gordon Highlanders Museum, Aberdeen, Scotland.[6]

Later military career

Gordon was brevetted lieutenant-colonel in the Gordon Highlanders in 1907.[7] Gordon also served as Aide-de-camp to King George V.[8] On 4 May 1923 Gordon was placed on retired pay having achieved the rank of Major although as previously noted he was a brevet Lieutenant Colonel.[9]

Honours

Display of Gordon's awards
Gordon's medals displayed at the Gordon Highlanders Museum.
Ribbon Description Notes
Victoria Cross (VC)
  • 1900
Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (CBE)
India Medal
Queen's South Africa Medal
  • Clasps: Belfast, Johannesburg, Driefontein, Paardeburg, Cape Colony
King's South Africa Medal
  • Clasps: South Africa 1901 and South Africa 1902
1914 Star
  • Clasp: 5th AUG.–22nd NOV. 1914
British War Medal
Victory Medal
  • With MID Emblem
King George VI Coronation Medal

Arms

Coat of arms of William Eagleson Gordon
Notes
Confirmed 18 October 1901 by Sir Arthur Edward Vicars, Ulster King of Arms[10]
Crest
On a wreath of the colours a dexter cubit arm vested paly Argent and Gules the hand grasping a scimitar Proper.
Escutcheon
Paly Argent and Gules three boars' heads erased Proper.
Motto
Dread God

References

  1. ^ "No. 25558". The London Gazette. 12 February 1886. Page 686
  2. ^ "No. 25824". The London Gazette. 5 June 1888. Page 3128
  3. ^ Hart′s Army list, 1903
  4. ^ "The Army in South Africa – Troops returning Home". The Times. No. 36890. London. 4 October 1902. p. 10.
  5. ^ "No. 27233". The London Gazette. 28 September 1900. p. 5966.
  6. ^ "The Victoria Cross". The Gordon Highlanders Museum. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  7. ^ "No. 27992". The London Gazette. 5 February 1907. Page 826
  8. ^ "No. 30307". The London Gazette. 25 September 1917. Page 9949
  9. ^ "No. 32820". The London Gazette. 4 May 1923. Page 3219
  10. ^ "Grants and Confirmations of Arms, Vol. J". National Library of Ireland. 22 May 1898. p. 217. Retrieved 21 November 2022.

External links

This page was last edited on 22 May 2024, at 02:45
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