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adventure with his very real concern for the suffering of the soldiers. Hill deplored war – he saw no glory in it but never questioned the rightness of it. In some respects, his absolute belief in the duty for all soldiers to fight like men and to die if necessary must have been the result of his family's military background and also because of the nature of the late
Victorian Imperial culture in which he was born.
230:, the Anglican Church approved birth control under limited circumstances. Eustace Hill did not approve of contraception and converted to Catholicism in 1938. He became a monk in 1939, taking the name Brother James. He entered a monastery in Hampshire and remained there until his death on 12 February 1953, three days short of his eightieth birthday. Father Hill never married.
243:. Hill absolutely abhorred any form of cowardice and spent considerable effort exhorting his men to do their Christian duty under fire. He didn't question the purpose or shy away from the danger but rather exhorted the soldiers with words such as "Men, they may kill your bodies, but they cannot destroy your souls".
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By the time he arrived back in South Africa in July 1900, Mafeking had been relieved and
Pretoria had fallen. The Boer War had become a guerilla war. The British forces roamed the countryside trying to pin the Boer forces down by trapping them between two forces and by depriving them of local support
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in 1919 identifying and burying the dead of his
Brigade. After the war he returned to St. John's College and became their headmaster from 1922 to 1930. He was responsible for the extension of the school's buildings and for the chapel which was dedicated as a war memorial, and contains one of the five
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Father Hill was one of the first to volunteer his services as a military chaplain in 1914. He initially saw action at
Luderitz in South West Africa with the SA Expeditionary Force. He was then involved in the Senussi campaign in Egypt the following year. In 1916 he was transferred to Europe where he
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Though Father Hill came from a distinguished military family and had a very rigid approach to the business of soldiering, he had a real vocation for the priesthood and particularly for the pastoral side of ministry. One is puzzled by the contrast between his keenness to participate in any military
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One example of his bravery was when, during the Boer War he received a curt note from Lord
Methuen that "if he was seen in the front line again he would be sent home". On the Western Front, he was legendary for standing up and moving around the battlefield dodging artillery shells and machine gun
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He returned to St. John's
College and became their headmaster from 1922 to 1930. Though somewhat eccentric as a result of his war experiences, his elevation to the post brought a sense of vigour to the school. He was responsible for the extension of the school's buildings and particularly for the
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Hill's bravery, coupled with an unshakeable belief in the rightness of what he was doing, meant that he had little concern for his own personal safety. He did not hesitate to take his very practical ministry to the front line and consequently became well known for his bravery. At Butte de
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During the Boer War, Father Hill established an effective way for military chaplains to function within the military under conflict situations, and it was this experience that made him so much loved and respected by the troops and a national hero in the First World War.
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through the destruction of their farms and houses, and through the internment of their families. Padre Hill was involved in supporting these roving groups though he was not popular by his insistence on preventing any looting or maltreatment of the Boers.
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In April 1901, Eustace Hill was appointed
Assistant Chaplain to the Railway Mission at Naauwpoort in the Eastern Cape, as well as being responsible for ministering to the soldiers of the nearby military camp. In 1904 he joined the
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magnificent chapel which was dedicated in 1926. Fittingly, the chapel was dedicated as a war memorial and contains one of the five crosses made from the remains of the trees at the battle of
Delville Wood.
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where in 1895 he obtained his BA. Thereafter, he studied for the priesthood, being made a deacon in 1896 and being ordained as a priest in 1897. His first posting was as the Curate of
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In July 1899, after less than a year at St Peter's, Eustace Hill volunteered as a chaplain in the event of war breaking out between the Boers and the
British. After the
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in 1938. He became a monk in 1939, taking the name
Brother James. He entered a monastery in Hampshire and remained there until his death on 12 February 1953.
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At Marrieres Wood on 24 March 1918, he was captured and served the remainder of the war as a prisoner of war. He was released in November 1918.
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crosses made from the remains of the trees at the Battle of Delville Wood. Eustace Hill did not approve of contraception and converted to
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in Johannesburg. He took a leave of absence from the school in 1906 to support the colonial forces involved in suppressing the
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was an Anglican priest of the South African Brigade during the First World War. He won the Military Cross for bravery at the
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in North Wales. In 1898, he sailed to South Africa to become the chaplain of St Peter's Home, Grahamstown.
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Hill also campaigned for the establishment of an independent chaplaincy corps within the military.
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was born on 15 February 1873 to Agnes Jane Pennell and James Turner Hill, a Major-General of the
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served on the Western Front. In July 1916 he was intimately involved in the Somme battles of
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column. This column was sent to relieve the siege of Kimberley and later
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Warlencourt, he received the third highest award for bravery, the
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https://www.greatwarforum.org/topic/102924-captain-eustace-hill/
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had broken out in September of that year, Hill was attached to
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Millward, Jenni (2007): In St John's College Newsletter,
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Uys, Ian (1991): Rollcall – The Delville Wood Story,
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Hill, E.StC.: Boer War Diary, cited in Gibbs, D.F..
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300:Gibbs, D.F. (1974): A Chaplain in the Boer War,
365:Anglican priest converts to Roman Catholicism
87:where he lost his right hand. He was back at
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40:Father Eustace Hill painted by Hugh Dent
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77:(15 February 1873 – 12 February 1953)
370:20th-century English Anglican priests
315:Lawson, K. (1968): Venture of Faith,
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247:bullets in pursuit of his ministry.
302:Military History Journal Vol 3 No 2
355:People educated at Lancing College
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400:Recipients of the Military Cross
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190:Chaplain on the Western Front
173:Community of the Resurrection
385:20th-century Christian monks
380:19th-century Christian monks
115:. After attending school at
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360:English military chaplains
251:Hill the Military Chaplain
228:Seventh Lambeth Conference
113:4th Bengal Native Infantry
390:Second Boer War chaplains
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28:Eustace St Clair Hill, CR
375:English Christian monks
119:in Sussex, he went to
109:Eustace St. Clair Hill
75:Eustace St. Clair Hill
395:World War I chaplains
121:Christ Church, Oxford
204:Butte de Warlencourt
85:Butte de Warlencourt
329:Ian Uys Publishers
165:After the Boer War
317:St John's College
306:Great War Forum:
213:St John’s College
179:St John's College
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131:Boer War Service
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64:12 February 1953
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66:(1953-02-12)
23:The Reverend
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350:1953 deaths
345:1873 births
186:rebellion.
98:Catholicism
339:Categories
294:References
222:Later life
104:Early life
52:1873-02-15
287:Gibbs, p3
89:Longueval
278:Uys, p91
147:Mafeking
138:Boer War
234:Bravery
184:Bambata
125:Wrexham
267:Notes
202:. At
153:and
91:and
61:Died
46:Born
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80:MC
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