Name:   Cedric Septimus Ireland 
 Service Branch:   Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve 
 Unit:   Hawke Bn. 
 Rank:   Able Seaman 
 Death Date:   26 Mar 1917 
 Cause of Death:   Died whilst POW from Heart Failure after Rheumatism at Englander Kommando (EK) I, Mitau, Russia. 
 Burial:   Nikolai Cemetery, Latvia, & Brookwood (Russia) UK Memorial (MR 70) 
 Service History:   Enlisted 7/8/14 ; Hawke Bn. D/776 22/8/14-9/10/14 POW at Antwerp 
 Service Number:   London 2/3465 
 Notes:   14/3/19 Reported by London 2/3565 AB H. Beavon as died from Exhaustion ; 28/1/20 Buried in Russian Cemetery, Mitau, at Bunker Chaussee, Russia, west of Chief Road, Grave No.4, Row 11. ; An Electrician & Wireless ; b.5/11/1888 ; Next-of-Kin & home address: Rev. J.H. Ireland, 5 Clarence Rd., (later of Camden House, Bankside), Southend-on-Sea ; 1914 Star issued to father, Rev. J.H. Ireland, 19/3/19.     
 In May 1916 the Germans formed three “Work Battalions”, which were titled Englander Kommando (EK) I, II and III. EKI was formed by approximately 1000 POWs from Doberitz POW camp and were transferred to the German-Russian front line near Jelgava, Latvia.      
 Testimony of German treatment of British Prisoners of War sent to Russia (modern day Latvia) in 1916, as a Reprisal for the Employment of German Prisoners in France.   
 (National Archives' reference WO 161/100/557)     
 Company Sergeant-Major A. Gibb, No. 6826, 2nd  
 Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders, having  
 been duly sworn, states :—    
 I was the senior 2nd class W.O. of a party Of  
 1,000 N.C.O.'s and men (25 per cent. N.C.O.'s) who  
 left Doeberitz Camp on 8th May 1916 for Russia. We  
 knew nothing at that time of our destination, or the  
 reason of the move, and as it was very warm weather  
 we left our warm clothing and half our food to follow  
 us. We arrived at Frankfurt-am-Oder the same day,  
 and by 11th May 1916 another 1.000 N.C.O.'s and  
 men from a number of camps in Germany, had also  
 come into Frankfurt.   
  On 11th May 1916, four parties  
 0f 500 each left for Russia. We had learned by this  
 time that Russia was our destination, but we knew  
 nothing of the reason for the move. I was the senior  
 British prisoner of war Of NO. 4 of these parties, and  
 we reached Libau by train on 13th May 1916. The  
 party commenced work on 14th May 1916 aud con-  
 tinued until February 1917, being employed for the  
 most part in the docks of Libau. At first the men  
 found the work very heavy, under the conditions of  
 short rations and bad accommodation, but on the  
 arrival of our parcels, which were forwarded fairly  
 regularly, we were able to carry out the heavy work  
 in better condition. We were informed on arrival at  
 Libau that we were here as a reprisal for the employ-  
 ment of German prisoners of war in France by the  
 British. On 20th February 1917 my party, which  
 had been brought up to the strength of 500 again, was  
 ordered to be ready to leave Libau for an unknown  
 destination. We were ordered to take with us only  
 such kit and food as we would require on the journey,  
 the rest being packed in separate waggons and carried  
 on the same train. We left Libau about 10 p.m. on  
 23rd February 1917, and arrived at Mitau the following  
 evening, being accommodated in a Russian prisoners'  
 camp. At 5 a.m. on 25th we were paraded and handed  
 over to a squadron Of Uhlans. We were cautioned  
 that we were under active service troops now; that noone  
 was to leave the ranks under any consideration ;  
 all orders must be at once obeyed ; no reports (com-  
 plaints) would be listened to. We marched along  
 the River Aa, in about 6 inches of snow, to the village  
 of Latchen, near Kelzien, which was then 5 or 6  
 kilometres behind the German front lines, where we  
 arrived about 5 p.m. The distance was about 28 kilo-  
 metres. The whole way lances and whips were freely  
 used upon us; anyone falling down was beaten to his  
 feet again, and many of the men abandoned their food  
 or blankets, which were looted by the rear guard or  
 by the German soldiers in the billets we passed. The  
 Uhlan escort gave exhibitions of "cattle driving" as  
 we were passing these billets all along the route,  
 encouraged by the cheers of the German soldiers. On  
 arrival at Latchen we numbered about 80 in the  
 column, the remainder being scattered over several  
 kilometres were being knocked along.   
 Lieutenant Prael, the new German commander, was waiting to  
 receive us, and kept us standing in the snow for two  
 hours until all the stragglers had come in. We were  
 then allotted quarters in one large tent, about 70 yards  
 by 7, which was pitched on a frozen swamp. There  
 were 10 small stoves in the camp, but no fuel for  
 them ; no light in the tent. A barbed-wire fence closely  
 encircled this tent. There was no drinking or washing  
 water; we had to do what we could with snow for  
 these purposes, nor were there any buckets or any-  
 thing to store water in. Cooking water was brought  
 from the river daily by a fatigue party in the field  
 cookers. Rations were just enough to keep us alive.  
 Coffee at 5.0 a.m., soup at 6.0 p.m., one-sixth of a.  
 1,500 gramme loaf of bread one day, one-fifth the  
 next day alternately. About one tablespoonful of  
 jam every four days, and two ounces of sausage weekly.  
 The soup was simply hot water with about 7 litres  
 of barley in it for 500 men. The meat in the soup  
 could not have been more than 20 lbs. in a week. The  
 German guard had the remainder. We remained in  
 this camp until 2nd April 1917. Russian shells  
 occasionally fell in the neighbourhood of it, but only  
 one man was hit by a spent splinter. A large number  
 of the men had no blankets. We slept in two layers  
 on wire netting stretched on poles, the lower one  
 about, 1 foot from the ground, and the upper one  
 about 3 feet above that. Loose wood fibre, which  
 had been lying in the snow and was all wet, was spread  
 over the wire netting. I asked for blankets to be  
 supplied to the men who had none, but was told there  
 were none to give us. I also reported the want of  
 boots by many men, and was told that these would be  
 supplied when they arrived from Mitau. They were,  
 however, never issued, and this the cause of most  
 of the frostbite.   
  The day after our arrival orders  
 were read to us. These stated that we had been  
 brought here as a reprisal for the employment by  
 Great Britain of German prisoners of war in the front  
 line in France, where they were being ill-treated,  
 starved, and made to work under fire. We were to  
 be subjected to the same treatment. Smoking was  
 prohibited, the punishment for this being 14 days'  
 arrest which consisted in being tied up with field  
 telegraph wire to a post outside the fence, but inside  
 the wire, from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. after return from work.    
 We were ordered to write to England and tell our  
 people the situation we were in. Orders were issued  
 to the guard, of which we obtained a copy, and which  
 stated that no mercy was to be shown to us ; we were  
 the men who had, every one of us, assisted in stopping  
 the Kaiser's army from going to Paris, and they were  
 to think of their comrades who were being brutally  
 treated in France, and be strong. Any soldier failing  
 to carry out these orders was to be severely punished.  
 If anyone of us tried to escape he and two others would be  
 punished.    
 Hours of work daily, Sundays included, were  
 as follows:- Parade at 5.30 a.m., move off 6 a.m. Return  
 to the camp about 5.30 p.m. No food between these  
 hours. Two pauses of 20 minutes during the day,  
 10 to 10.20 a.m., 1.30 to 1.50 p.m. Any one reporting  
 sick had to do so after return to camp in the evening.    
 The work was felling and carrying timber, which the  
 pioneer troops used for the machine-gun emplace-  
 ments, road making, &c., ice breaking, trench  
 digging. The British N.C.O.'s merely accom-  
 panied the men everywhere ; they were not forced to  
 work. The trench parties were constantly under  
 Russian shell fire, and had to stop work frequently on  
 account of it. There was little rifle or machine-gun  
 fire from the Russian trenches during this period.    
 Our work lay within from 1.5 kilometres to 60 metres  
 distance from the Russian stockade. Everybody who  
 could be made to work had to go out daily.    
 The medical under offcer had a free hand in his  
 treatment of us, and was invariably brutal. If a man  
 could not rise from his bed, this under officer would  
 pull him out, draw his bayonet and strike him, and  
 kick him to his feet. On one occasion he spent about  
 20 minutes trying to get a man awake and out of bed,  
 and finally found that he had died in his bed during  
 the night. He had been dead for some hours. A man  
 fainting away on the march between the camp and  
 work, had to be carried by his comrades, and if a man  
 fainted whilst turning out in the morning, he was left  
 lying in the snow, and no one allowed to go near him.    
 The work as a rule lay from 4 to 5.5 kilometres from  
 the camp. Toward the end of March the party was in  
 a terrible state. The men were so weak from starva-  
 tion that they were simply crawling about, and many  
 were covered with sores, chiefly on the face and hands,  
 from frostbite. Several had died already. The house  
 used as a hospital, a peasant cottage outside the wire,  
 in which the night guard was also housed, with a  
 machine gun, and full of our sick. It only held about  
 20, and little or no medical treatment was given to  
 them. Any sick over this number were left in our  
 tent and treated like the rest of us. About 20th  
 March 1917 the Germans began sending the worst  
 cases to Mitau by sledge, a distance Of 26 or 30 kilo-  
 metres, where they were accommodated in temporary  
 hospitals, under German doctors, the personnel of the  
 hospitals being mostly Russian volunteers, probably  
 either deserters or prisoners. By the end of March  
 parties of from 3 to 10 daily were being moved to  
 Mitau hospital. About 25 per cent of the remainder  
 had to be assisted to their work in the morning, and  
 we had to carry most of them home in the evenings.  
 Seaman Ireland died on 26th while his comrades were  
 carrying him home.      
 On 28th March I had a party of 16 N.C.O.'s and  
 11 men, the last to be hunted out of the tent. We took  
 about three hours to cover the 3 kilometres to our  
 work, which was carrying fascines. After the first  
 pause at 10.20 a.m., 8 of the 16 were absolutely unfit  
 to work and almost incapable of walking. The work   
 feldwebel ordered the sentries to compel them to  
 and two were detailed to lead the  
 worst four or five of the men. I think we made about  
 eight journeys all day, the distance being about a  
 kilometre. Bandsman Smith, Scottish Rifles, and  
 Private Walker, Northumberland Fusiliers, were the  
 worst cases. I assisted to lead Private Walker all day,  
 and to carry him home at night. These two cases are  
 quoted as an example of what was taking place almost  
 daily about this time.    
 The interpreter repeatedly told  
 us to write home. After delaying for a fortnight to  
 see if matters would improve, I did so, and stated the  
 actual circumstances in which we were. The following  
 day I received the letter back with the words "five  
 days strong arrest" written across it. I was tied to  
 the pole daily, on return from work, from 7 to 9 p.m.,  
 in a temperature of many degrees Of frost, for five  
 consecutive evenings.    
 On 2nd April 1917, owing to the melting of the ice  
 on the swamp where our tent was pitched, we moved  
 across the Aa to a new ground about 4 kilometres off,  
 near the village of Pinner. The new tent was pitched  
 on a foot of snow, which had not been cleared away,  
 and the inside of the tent was soon under water, in  
 some places about a foot deep, in the shell holes still  
 deeper. This tent was also surrounded by a barbed-  
 wire fence, the enclosure being about 100 yards by 60.    
 There were German batteries on three sides of us, and  
 several times the Russian shells directed at these  
 batteries fell in and near our enclosure. The Russians  
 apparently knew we were there, as the day after we  
 left (10th June 1917) the whole place was blown to bits  
 by the Russian artillery. I heard this from a reliable  
 German under officer. None of us, however, were hit  
 during the period.    
 Sanitary arrangements were if anything worse than  
 in our old place. For water for cooking and washing  
 we simply removed the turf and dug a hole. When  
 the weather improved towards the end Of April we  
 were able to drain our enclosure into the big shell holes  
 outside.    
 On 6th April 1917 Private Skett, Coldstream  
 Guards, was shot under the following circumstances.  
 About 20 or 25 men, too weak to go to work, were left  
 in camp in the morning. About 10 a.m. some 10 of  
 them were taken outside by the Germans for fatigue.  
 This consisted in moving the guards' and officers'  
 property from the old camp at Latchen to the new one.  
 A hand cart was used for this purpose, and the road  
 was deep in mud. They completed one trip in the   
 forenoon, and while returning for a second in the  
 afternoon Private Skett collapsed several times from  
 weakness. At last he was quite incapable of rising,  
 and one of the German sentries went to him, put the  
 muzzle of his rifle close to his breast, and fired, killing  
 Private Skett where he lay. I was not a witness of  
 this. I heard the shot from our tent, and the case was  
 reported to me when the party came in 20 minutes  
 later, bringing the body on the cart. No. 645, Lance-  
 Corporal M. Purdon, Gordon Highlanders, was with  
 him at the time. The body of Private Skett lay  
 outside the enclosure for two days more.   
  Private Carruthers, 12th London Regiment, who had also been  
 left in that morning, too weak to go out and work, died  
 during the 6th April. His body was placed beside that  
 of Private Skett, and both covered with a sheet of tin.  
 I buried them both on the morning of the 9th about  
 100 yards from the hut. They were both simply  
 human skeletons. I saw the wound in Private Skett's  
 body just by the heart.    
 Men were still being sent away to hospital at Mitau,  
 and about the middle of April our strength was only  
 77 out of tbe original 500 ; 47 of these were marked  
 by the doctor not fit to leave their beds, and only 5  
 men and 11 N.C.O.'s were left available for work.  
 Every man of the party, except perhaps the N.C.O.'s  
 and two men who were always left in camp as cooks,  
 were absolutely at the end of their tether, and I am  
 certain that another 10 days of bad weather would  
 have killed the whole lot. I do not wish to give details  
 of the state that, some of us were reduced to in their  
 craving for food, or of what they picked up to eat.    
 About the end of April an improvement set in in the  
 weather; the ice was breaking up, and we were informed  
 that parcels would be allowed.  
 On 29th April the first consignment of parcels  
 reached us. They were opened by the Germans outside  
 the enclosure and not in our presence, all tins being  
 opened, and about one parcel being issued to each of  
 us every two days, after the contents bad been picked  
 over by the Germans.    
 A new German officer now took command of us and  
 a new medical under officer, and conditions improved  
 greatly. The officer visited our tent daily. I was  
 ordered to remain in camp with three or four men,  
 and we were able to improve the inside of our  
 enclosure. He did what he could for the sick, and  
 all ranks were marked "no work for 10 days."  
 Our men began to return from the hospital at Mitau.    
 On 20th May I was sent to Mitau with two sergeants  
 to sort out our heavy baggage. We had never seen  
 this since leaving Libau on 23rd February ; I found it  
 stowed in rooms of a private house. There had been  
 a German guard over it, and I found that most of  
 the boots and soap and a lot of clothes had been  
 stolen. On return to Pinner after four or five days  
 I reported this verbally to the German offcer, and  
 at his suggestion I sent in also a written report,  
 which he said he would forward to Headquarters  
 of the 8th Army. In these reports I mentioned my  
 reasons for suspecting Landsturmmann Logemann,  
 our interpreter, of being concerned in the thefts. I  
 heard no more about it.    
 While at Mitau, I also saw, I should think, about  
 20,000 parcels stored in two shops. These had arrived  
 from Libau for us during the last three months, and  
 had they been forwarded on and delivered to us  
 they would have saved every one of the lives that  
 were lost. All the deaths were due to starvation and  
 exhaustion and nothing else. In one of the shops  
 hundreds of wrappers showed that large numbers of  
 parcels had been stolen; in the other everything  
 seemed in order. All the perishable articles in these  
 parcels had of course been wasted.    
 The weather was now good, and the good supply  
 of food and clothing enabled us to pick up rapidly  
 and clean ourselves up once more. The arrival of  
 our parcels further had the effect of making the  
 German guard much more lenient with the working  
 parties. The work was much easier all round, and  
 the constant use of rifles on the men to drive them  
 about now ceased.    
 On 9th June orders reached us that we were to be  
 withdrawn. Smoking was again allowed, and on 10th  
 the party, which had now been made up again to 260  
 N.C.O 's and men moved by boat to Mitau.    
 At Mitau 16 men joined us from hospital, and we  
 left the same evening by train for Libau, arriving there  
 on 11th. The medical officer at once marked us all  
 "no work for 14 days," then "14 days light work," and  
 on 11th July we railed to Alt-Auz and district, where  
 we had light work and good quarters until November,  
 when we returned to Germany.    
 The following N.C.O.'s and men of my party (No. 4  
 Company, Englander Kommando I.) died during the  
 period of reprisals on the Russian front :-   
  Private Wilmot, Border Regiment, 17.3.17.    
  A. B. Rootham, R.N.D., 21.3.17 (on road to Mitau).    
  Seaman Ireland, R.N.D., 26.3.17 (in comrades' arms  
 while being carried back from work).    
  Bandsman Smith, Scottish Rifles, 29.31.7.    
  Private Leeson, South Lancs Regiment, 29.3.17.  
    "     Barlow, West Yorks Regiment, 31.3.17  
    "     Carruthers. 12th London Regiment, 6.4.17.  
    "     Roberts, K. O. (Royal Lancaster) Regiment, 21.3.17    
  Lance-Corporal Mulholland, Manchester Regiment, 23.3.17.    
  Private Sturgeon. Norfolk Regiment, 29.3.17.  
    "    Archer, K.O.Y.L.I., 29.3.17.  
    "    Knill, Wiltshire Regiment, 30.3.17.  
    "    Skett, Coldstream Guards, 6.4.17 (shot)  
    "    Boyington. West Yorks Regiment. 22.4.17.  
 The above all died in the camp at Latchen and  
 Pinner.    
 The following were removed from camp to hospital  
 at Mitau and died there  
 Private Kingston, Norfolk Regiment. 1.4.17.  
 Walker, Northumberland Fusiliers, 13.4.17.  
 Farmer, Coldstream Gumrds. 15.4.17.  
 Bandsman Clarkin. Lincolnshires, 28.4.17.    
 Private Starling, Norfolk Reeiment (after return  
 to Libau. He had been in hospital at Mitau, and  
 rejoined us in camp before we left. Pinner).    
 Lance-Corporal Waterman, Hampshires, 5 4.17.  
 Private Harvey , Warwickshires, 12.4.17.  
     "   McCulloch, Seaforth Highlanders, 17.4.17.  
     "   Crockson, Somerset L.I. (In Shaulin Hopital, date uncertain.)     
 References:    
http://voenspez.ru/index.php?topic=20946.70;wap2    POW Mitau - Great War Forum: 
https://www.greatwarforum.org/topic/39771-made-to-work-in-salt-mines/    British war graves Jelgava Blog: 
https://britishwargravesjelgava.blogspot.com/    Meeting The Enemy by Richard Van Emden   
 Christmas Battles: 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christmas_Battles    CWGC: 
https://www.cwgc.org/find-records/find-war-dead/casualty-details/472445/C%20S%20IRELAND/    Cemetery Entrance: 56.626862,23.7541414  
 Map: 
https://maps.app.goo.gl/9AeXToqgQh6MX1nMA    WW1 front line and Museum: 
https://maps.app.goo.gl/bhNPytepqysjzp1Z9    Route: 
https://www.google.com/maps/dir/R%C4%ABga,+Latvia/Me%C5%BEa+kapi,+Jelgava,+LV-3001,+Latvia/@56.6266354,23.0953857,118945m/am=t/data=!3m1!1e3!4m18!4m17!1m5!1m1!1s0x46eecfb0e5073ded:0x400cfcd68f2fe30!2m2!1d24.1056221!2d56.9676941!1m5!1m1!1s0x46ef301b9cc56d05:0xf5cd13fd7e7b6c6!2m2!1d23.75422!2d56.62685!2m3!6e0!7e2!8j1706954400!5i1?entry=ttu