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Captain JB Sterndale Bennett
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Captain
JB Sterndale Bennett is another officer in Schweidnitz camp
who took my attention. Born in Derby in 1889 he was the C Company Commander of
the 2nd Sth Wales Borderers and was commissioned on 26th April 1917. He
married an actress, Athene Seylar before the war in February 1914 but the
marriage was short with the pair divorcing in 1922. However, they did have a
daughter. He joined up after having
worked as a journalist.
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JB Sterndale Bennett, film star wife Athene and daughter Jane Anne
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After
a battle where there were 101 fatalities, he was captured in Lys in April 1918,
he ended up in Schweidnitz by 25 July
1918. Prior to that he had been awarded a Military Cross for his actions
in February 1918.
During
his time in Schweidnitz he was the BARB Magazine, Associate Editor for the
October 1918 addition. This was an
in-house production of the POW magazine written and produced with humour and
details of life behind the” Barbed wire”. It contained prose, short stories, humour, satire fake,
advertisements and detailed pen and ink drawings.
Also, as a journalist, he saw the world from that inquisitive viewpoint. He made many
observations about the German thinking and perhaps predictions about post war
life.
I first came across Sterndale Bennett from an article I read in a magazine called “The Great War…. I was
there! in which he tells the tale of the
Schweidnitz POWs from Armistice
to repatriation on Christmas Day 1918.
In
the article he first speaks of the German thoughts at the Armistice. Most of the
locals expected upon Armistice that the blockade which was stopping them
trading would be raised to the Germans. To their complaints about the lack of
food he pointed out their censorship had never allowed their enemies to know of
their plight.
Indeed,
later he recounted that point at a dinner when he returned home and a guest
told him that his comments were “Nonsense. They had plenty of food. You can’t have read the English newspaper”. Mmm
propaganda! In fact, Sterndale Bennett had had
access to German newspapers which they read for practice and to relieve
boredom.
“Nonsense. They had plenty of food. You can’t have read the English newspaper”.
With
three weeks of comparative liberty after Armistice he looked at methods of
German commerce. Also, during his time in Schweidnitz he met with all grades of society and formed
a clear idea of what the Germans at that time were thinking and hoping for the
future. He could see the Germans were believing their own propaganda.
During
the waiting days before Armistice and before going home Germans had said to him
“We have done everything you asked”. ”We have abandoned Kaiserdom, Prussionism and
militarism. Yet you treat us as enemies. You do not send us food yet. You will not be
friends again!”
From
the German perspective it was “our women and children have died from starvation”.
In
all, he had spent nine months in Schweidnitz. His opportunities to observe methods
of German commerce and industry from his limited scope of the POW camp were
supported by the ability to buy newspapers printed in German. This kept him in
contact with the German hopes and thoughts. He also had contact with German businessmen in that they ran the prison.
An
article by Sterndale Bennett popped up in the Casino and Kyogle Courier and
North Coast Advertiser, New South Wales on 9 August 1919. No doubt this was a
reprint from British newspapers. It was
titled “The German Menace of Cheap Jack Goods – Resumption of Former World
Trade”. Sterndale Bennett was using his intelligence gained in his time in
Germany. He dispels the fears the British subjects had that the Germans would
dump cheap goods on the British market. Rather they (the Germans) had the
feeling that they would merely resume trade as before the war. They did not for
one minute think they would be boycotted
or stopped from visiting or immigrating to England.
“The average
Englishman cannot forget. The average German has forgotten”.
In this August 1919 article he says “The average
Englishman cannot forget. The average German has forgotten”. He finishes the article saying that Germany
will be for many years repairing the
damage of war and as such not really a threat for serious competition in world
markets. His main fear was that the most
serious threat was Germans seeking to enter the more plentiful countries,
past enemies or not, and offer their labour cheaply.
For more on Sterndale Bennett’s story see the
future Repatriation story about the Repatriation of Schweidnitz POWs.
Sterndale Bennett was granted the rank of Captain in July 1920.
He worked in London as a journalist and Editor post war. In the 1939 Register
he was also listed as a part of the Army officer Emergency Response. He didn’t
see the Second World War out, dying in London 1941.