ASHBURTON MAN'S LAST LETTER (excerpt)
Private David McKay, of Ashburton, who left with the Canterbury machinegun section (Main Body) and who was s wounded at the Dardanelles on August 14, and died on the following day, j wrote the following letter on July 28 to Major W. E. Dolman, V.D., of Ashburton: —
"I am writing you a line or so to let you know I am still alive and keeping Ashburton's end of the stick up as far as it is possible. I can't tell you just where I am, for it is a secret, but I am sitting in a machinegun pit or dug-out, writing this, and the temperature is about 98deg. — it is frightfully hot, although it gets cool towards evening time. Well, Major Dolnmn, in the volunteers we used to growl about a bit of walking; here we do none, but what a difference! I have seen almost every kind of shell made, bursting within killing range. The day we landed under shrapnel and Maxim gunfire (that was the day George Hayes fell) I shall never forget. I often wonder now how they missed me. But some of us had to get out of it and I was one of the lucky ones, I suppose. -Ashburton Guardian, 14/9/1915.
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