Full Record

Main Title: Thunder of the hooves : a history of 12 Light Horse Regiment 1915-1919 / Kenneth Hollis. Book Cover
Author: Hollis, Kenneth
Imprint: Australian Military History, 2008.
Collation: x, 214 p. : ill., portraits, maps, notes, bib., index, hbk ; 26 cm.
Subject: Light Horse Regiment, 12th
Australian Army
Regiments
World War, 1914-1918
Military history
Beersheba (Israel)
Middle East
ISBN: 9780980379655
Notes:
Includes index.
It was 1915 when 12 Australian Light Horse Regiment was formed at Holsworthy (NSW) and many of the recruits were 'natural soldiers' - good shots, horsemen and well acquainted with living in the open. By June they were ready to sail to Egypt, where they received extra training, before going into action without horses (as infantry) at Gallipoli. By February 1916, the regiment had been reinforced and remounted in Egypt, before joining the main Australian Light Horse force to help eject the Turks and their German support from the Sinai, Palestine and Arabia. The men endured intense heat, frequent thirst, limited shelter and lack of success against the stubborn Turkish defences at Gaza, then played the leading role in an action that turned the tide of the campaign and secured one of Australia's greatest Battle Honour - the charge on Beersheba.
In one of the greatest Australian feat of arms, the 12th and 4th regiments, did a 'Charge of the Light Brigade' and rode into the mouths of the Turkish guns. The wild, almost reckless charge swept into the town and overwhelmed the defences and the greater part of the enemy immediately surrendered. After Beersheba, the regiment took part in actions during the advance through Palestine and on to Damascus. The regiment returned to Australia in August 1919 and passed into the annals of Australian military history.
Realising that the 12th Battalion did not have a written history, the author researched and wrote this account of their proud battle experience. In creating this record Ken Hollis has drawn upon official histories, war diaries and the personal reflections of those who served in the regiment during the war of who were witnesses to its great achievements.
Sergeant Ken Hollis is a currently-serving soldier in the Australian Army and for some time, was assigned to 12/16 Hunter River Lancers, the successor regiment to 12 Light Horse and the inheritor of its history and Battle Honours. Realising that the 12th did not have a written history, the author researched and wrote this account of their proud battle experience. In creating this record Ken Hollis has drawn upon official histories, war diaries and the personal reflections of those who served in the regiment during the war or who were witnesses to its great achievements. --(Book jacket)
Result Collection Location Shelf No Status Notes
Non-Fiction Main Library 940.412 LHR HOL Available