Canadian WW1 Military HistoryINTO THE JAWS OF DEATH
BY
PRIVATE JACK O'BRIEN
WITH ILLUSTRATIONS
NEW YORK
DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY
1919

TO LIEUT.-COLONEL J. F. L. EMBURY AND THE
OFFICERS AND MEN OF THE 28TH NORTHWEST
BATTALION, I RESPECTFULLY DEDICATE THIS BOOK
CONTENTS
Foreword
Chapter I
Chapter II
"My comrades, and what became of them, as told to me in letters, by my old
chum Bob Goddard."
The Red, Red Road to Hooge
"The Iron Sixth"
ILLUSTRATIONS
28th Battalion leaving Winnipeg on the 27th of May, 1915
General Ketchen
As I looked when I left Germany; As I looked before I saw Germany

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73194 Private John "Jack" O'Brien was one of
the original members of the 28th Battalion, starting out in No. 10 Platoon. He
transferred to the 250th Tunnelling Company in May 1916 after a call for
volunteers. He was working at Hooge on June 6, 1916 and was captured in the
battle following the mine explosion under the 28th Battalion that day. He
spent some time in a German POW camp before escaping with another man and
wrote this book about his adventures which was published by Dodd, Mead and
Company of New York in 1919.
---o---
The 6th Canadian Infantry Brigade raised and organized from the four
western provinces of Canada has done its share in the field against the common
enemy. The 28th Northwest Battalion, originally under the Command of
Lieut.-Col. J. F. L. Embury, C.M.G., has taken its share in all the
engagements in which the 6th Canadian Infantry Brigade took part, including
St. Éloi, Hooge, three engagements on the Somme, 15th September, 26th
September, and 1st October, 1916, as well as the general engagements of Vimy
Ridge, Fresnoy, Lens on the 21st August, 1917, and Passchendaele, and in each
of these engagements, alongside the remaining Battalions of the
Brigade—namely, the 27th City of Winnipeg Battalion, 29th Vancouver Battalion,
and the 31st Alberta Battalion—never failed in gaining all of the objectives
which had been set for the Brigade to carry. Whenever any special raids to
obtain information and identifications were called for, the 28th Northwest
Battalion invariably volunteered for such duty, and their efforts were always
crowned with success. In fact the record of the Brigade throughout the
campaign has been an outstanding one, and the various matters which Private
Jack O'Brien refers to in his book will be of the greatest interest to all
members of the Brigade, past and present, as well as to the general public in
Western Canada.
The feat accomplished by this young soldier in escaping from the Germans,
whilst held as a prisoner of war, is in itself worthy of special notice and he
was only successful in his third attempt. His conduct and record in the field
is one to be proud of, and I have no hesitation in introducing him to the
readers of his most interesting book. As a soldier he has done his duty and is
deserving of every support in the circulation of his war story.
H. D. B. KETCHEN,
Brig.-Gen. comm'd'g 6th Can. Inf. Brig.
10th April, 1918
Plus.....
THE STORY OF THE TWENTY-EIGHTH (NORTH-WEST) BATTALION 1914 - 1917
By G E. HEWITT.
London : W. Charles & Son, 1918.
The Story of the 28th (North-West) Battalion. SASKATCHEWAN.

Commanded by
Lieut.-CoI. (now Brig.-Gen.) J. F. L. EMBURY, C.M.G.,
(formerly commanding 95th Saskatchewan Rifles, Canadian Militia) from
Mobilization until the battle of Courcelette.
and
Lieut.-Col. ALEX. ROSS, D.S.O.,
(formerly of 95th Saskatchewan Rifles) from the battle of Courcelette.
IMPORTANT ENGAGEMENTS.
St. Eloi Craters, April, 1916
Hooge, June 6th, 1916
Courcelette (Somme) September, 1916
Vimy Ridge, April, 1917
Hill 70, August, 1917
Passehendaele, November. 1917.
The full text of this book is included with
the book
Into the Jaws of Death as a special offer to add
background to Private O'Brien's amazing story.
--o--
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