Blockhouse Blues: This post deals with a rather scrappy little notebook of Private Henry (John Henry) Dyson. It contains a short diary about Dyson’s life at Blockhouse “Kilo 122” located near Nylstroom on the railway line from Pretoria to Pietersburg (Refer Neville's map in an earlier post). The notebook is full of scribbles pertaining to rations, cash at hand, calculations, addresses etc. Dyson’s actual diary starts on Tuesday March 18 (1902) and ends with him boarding the RMS Roslin Castle on May 29, 1902, so just two days before Kitchener declared the Boers to be his new best friends. Dyson uses 30-odd pages to recount his life in and around the blockhouse, describes his meals, gives details of the trains that pass by “May 12, 3.45. Long train North with reinforcements for Colenbrander” and describes in stomach-turning detail how he shoots and skins or plucks large apes, snakes, blue jays and a host of other protected wildlife.
Some extracts:
“Easter Saturday: Anniversary of my wedding Day. Heard that Rhodes was dead. Also 21 Northampton killed 30 mules east of Pietersburg. Easter Sunday: Heard that De la Rey S. Burger etc. have gone down to see Milner. Hope they settle it and let us get away. Monday: The enemy are expected to attempt a crossing near here tonight. Have got it up the train that DelaRey has got a smashing.”
Dyson must have been at the Blockhouse before March 1902 as there is a single page pertaining to December (1901). December 13th: Up at 5.30. Brought gang of boys to burn bush about 2 miles up the line. Saw the [really bad word for black people] off 280 which I got off the train last night. The sun at 7.30 is hot enough to melt a chap. December 14th: Orders for Kilo 120 ½. Got there about 11. Wiring all afternoon. Sentry 9 to 10.30. Rained like hell and dark as pitch. Bitter cold. Slept absolutely naked. December 25th, Christmas day. On sentry all day. That’s all. Nothing fresh. Never is now.”
The highlights of Blockhouse life seem to have been meals and receiving mail. Dyson obviously was longing for home as throughout his diary he writes “Roll on Big Ship”
Based on his writings I’m not sure that Dyson coped well with his tenure in the blockhouse. In any case and judging by the Rastrick (West Yorkshire) Cemetery receipt, he didn’t live long after the war.
There are a couple of candidates for “J. Dyson” with a Yorkshire connection mentioned on this website, but I couldn’t locate a John Henry. Based on the info, hopefully one of the medal-men can help me out and perhaps tell me this was the great grandfather of the clever chap who thought sacks in vacuum cleaners were a dumb idea.