WW1 letter from LC Murdoch Munro to Mary Munro dated 3rd March 1915
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Title
                WW1 letter from LC Murdoch Munro to Mary Munro dated 3rd March 1915                            
            Creator
                Munro, Murdoch (1895-1961)                            
            Publisher
                Lodgepunk.com/MMC                            
            Language
                en-GB                            
            Coverage
                France                            
            Description
                Murdoch has just come back from the trenches. He mentions being shelled and lucky to escape. He mentions Hugh going to hospital with an injured hand. Murdoch mentions receiving scones, and requests  cocoa. item (2 pages). Discolored, some stains and foxing.                            
            Worktype
                Letter                            
            ID
                LET_19150303BEF                            
            Cultural Context
                Scottish                            
            Date
                1915-03-03                            
            Subject
                Chocolate drinks;
Great Britain. Army. Seaforth Highlanders;
Hugh;
Munro, Alexander, 1859-1930;
Munro, Murdoch, 1895-1961;
Organ music;
Personal correspondence;
Trench mortars;
Ross, Mrs.;
Scones;
Tea;
World War, 1914-1918--Artillery operations;
World War, 1914-1918--France
            Great Britain. Army. Seaforth Highlanders;
Hugh;
Munro, Alexander, 1859-1930;
Munro, Murdoch, 1895-1961;
Organ music;
Personal correspondence;
Trench mortars;
Ross, Mrs.;
Scones;
Tea;
World War, 1914-1918--Artillery operations;
World War, 1914-1918--France
Measurements
                25.3 cm (height) x 20 cm (width)                            
            Material
                Graphite on paper                            
            Technique
                Handwriting                            
            Style Period
                Twentieth century                            
            Rights
                Murdoch Munro Collection (1914-1919) by Erika Nygard and Lodgepunk.com/MMC is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 CC                              
            Transcription
                B E F
France 3/3/15
Dear Mary,
I received your letter of 25th, I think also parcel which was very acceptable, as we were just after coming down from the trenches & the scones were very good with tea. It was impossible to get a letter or P C away so you will have to excuse me. We were not in the same trenches this time much better ones but we got any amount of shells. The broken house in which our Coy were billeted, was separate from the rest and was shelled every day we were there and not one of us was hit. The first shell always fell short & whenever we heard it we scooted & took shelter behind a big house next door. Altogether there were about 80 shells dropped jolly close to so I think we were lucky to escape. We are down in reserve just now & are just enjoying some [illegible] songs from an organ for a penny. By jove [illegible] was lucky to get home but the [illegible] away is [illegible]. Hugh is in hospital with a cut he got on his hand & some dirt got in it. I have just received Isa's p c also journal. Give mother my congratulations. I hope they are not too late How is Mrs Ross getting on [illegible] tell them I was asking for them. How is father keeping just now. We had very little snow here it seems you had a regular snow storm Could you send me a small can of cocoa it is a change from Black tea I must now close. You need not send more socks just now.
Love to all from Dodo
            France 3/3/15
Dear Mary,
I received your letter of 25th, I think also parcel which was very acceptable, as we were just after coming down from the trenches & the scones were very good with tea. It was impossible to get a letter or P C away so you will have to excuse me. We were not in the same trenches this time much better ones but we got any amount of shells. The broken house in which our Coy were billeted, was separate from the rest and was shelled every day we were there and not one of us was hit. The first shell always fell short & whenever we heard it we scooted & took shelter behind a big house next door. Altogether there were about 80 shells dropped jolly close to so I think we were lucky to escape. We are down in reserve just now & are just enjoying some [illegible] songs from an organ for a penny. By jove [illegible] was lucky to get home but the [illegible] away is [illegible]. Hugh is in hospital with a cut he got on his hand & some dirt got in it. I have just received Isa's p c also journal. Give mother my congratulations. I hope they are not too late How is Mrs Ross getting on [illegible] tell them I was asking for them. How is father keeping just now. We had very little snow here it seems you had a regular snow storm Could you send me a small can of cocoa it is a change from Black tea I must now close. You need not send more socks just now.
Love to all from Dodo
Citation
Munro, Murdoch (1895-1961), “WW1 letter from LC Murdoch Munro to Mary Munro dated 3rd March 1915,” Murdoch Munro Collection (1914-1919), accessed October 31, 2025, http://www.lodgepunk.com/MMC/items/show/44.

