Royal Marines in Russia, 1919  
Battling the Bolsheviks During the Intervention
Author(s): Alastair Grant
Published by Pen and Sword
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781399038782
Pages: 0

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ISBN: 9781399038782 Price: INR 1695.99
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At the height of the Russian Civil War in 1919 Britain poured in thousands of troops and vast amounts of munitions to assist the White Russian opponents of Lenin’s Communist forces. This was despite exhaustion following the Great War and the Spanish flu epidemic.

One man involved was 23-year-old Royal Marines officer, Thomas Henry Jameson. His mission took him and his men on a journey of 5,000 miles from Vladivostok to the battlegrounds not far from Moscow. As part of a White Russian Flotilla they steamed down the huge Kama River and fought a series of successful battles against superior Bolshevik gunboats. Later they were forced to retreat and, becoming cut off behind enemy lines, had to fight their way out knowing that, if captured, they faced summary execution. Eventually after a long and hazardous journey they made it back to their parent ship.

Jameson and his Marines faced a multitude of hazards in this cruel civil war including disease which he described as ‘the biggest challenge of all.” In some other British units there were reports of mutiny due to terrible conditions. Yet, as this fascinating book describes, remarkably he succeeded not only to keep his men alive but inflict significant damage on a ruthless enemy.
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At the height of the Russian Civil War in 1919 Britain poured in thousands of troops and vast amounts of munitions to assist the White Russian opponents of Lenin’s Communist forces. This was despite exhaustion following the Great War and the Spanish flu epidemic.

One man involved was 23-year-old Royal Marines officer, Thomas Henry Jameson. His mission took him and his men on a journey of 5,000 miles from Vladivostok to the battlegrounds not far from Moscow. As part of a White Russian Flotilla they steamed down the huge Kama River and fought a series of successful battles against superior Bolshevik gunboats. Later they were forced to retreat and, becoming cut off behind enemy lines, had to fight their way out knowing that, if captured, they faced summary execution. Eventually after a long and hazardous journey they made it back to their parent ship.

Jameson and his Marines faced a multitude of hazards in this cruel civil war including disease which he described as ‘the biggest challenge of all.” In some other British units there were reports of mutiny due to terrible conditions. Yet, as this fascinating book describes, remarkably he succeeded not only to keep his men alive but inflict significant damage on a ruthless enemy.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Dedication
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgements
  • Foreword
  • Dramatis Personae
  • Introduction: Battles on the Kama River, 1919
  • Prologue
  • Part I: 1894–1917
    • Chapter 1 Early Days and the Great War
  • Part II: 1917–1919
    • Chapter 2 Lenin Seizes Power
    • Chapter 3 From Infantry Officer to Ship’s Officer
    • Chapter 4 HMS Suffolk
    • Chapter 5 Early Action
    • Chapter 6 Draft to HMS Kent
  • Part III: 1919
    • Chapter 7 January–March 1919: HMS Kent arrives in Vladivostok. Churchill becomes Minister for War and Air
    • Chapter 8 January–February: Kolchak’s Government
    • Chapter 9 March: Preparations
    • Chapter 10 April: Vladivostok to Omsk by Rail
    • Chapter 11 Omsk to Perm
    • Chapter 12 28 April–7 May: Converting Gunboat Kent
    • Chapter 13 8 May: To the Front Line
    • Chapter 14 14 May: First action – Kama and Viatka junction
    • Chapter 15 15–24 May: Interlude
    • Chapter 16 24 May: Second Action – Holy Spring and Elabouga
    • Chapter 17 25 May–2 June: Withdrawal towards Sarapul
    • Chapter 18 2/3 June: The Hardest Day – Sarapul Gauntlet
    • Chapter 19 4–26 June: Retreat to Perm
    • Chapter 20 27 June: Chaos in Perm – Kent & Suffolk Scuttled
    • Chapter 21 29 June: Escape to Omsk
    • Chapter 22 Omsk to Vladivostok
    • Chapter 23 Arrival in Vladivostok and Journey Home
    • Chapter 24 Conclusion
  • Appendix I: Messages of Congratulation
  • Appendix II: Comparison of Marines 1919/2019
  • Appendix III: Gunnery
  • Appendix IV: Army Forms and Codes
  • Appendix V: Aftermath
  • Appendix VI: Letter from Alfred Taylor to Tom Jameson in 1931
  • Appendix VII: Personnel
  • Appendix VIII: My Journey in 2011
  • Bibliography
  • Glossary
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