Main Body arrives in Egypt

"The New Zealand Expeditionary Force had now reached the end of its long journey by sea. Orders for disembarkation were issued, the transports disgorged their freights of men and horses, and on the evening of December 3rd the first troop train left Alexandria for Zeitoun station, about four miles beyond Cairo. Distant about a mile and a-half from the detraining point, and on the edge of the sun-smitten desert, was the site of the camp selected for the New Zealand troops."  [Byrne, AE, “Official History of the Otago Regiment, N.Z.E.F. in the Great War 1914-1918”,  J.

Main Body departs

“On October 14th H.M.S. Minotaur and H.I.J.M.S. Ibuki arrived in Wellington Harbour, and on the following day the Auckland transports, escorted by H.M.S. Philomel, arrived at Wellington. At 6 a.m. on October 16th the whole convoy, escorted by Minotaur, Psyche, Philomel and Ibuki, weighed anchor and proceeded out of Wellington Harbour to sea, cheered by large numbers of the people of Wellington and farewelled by His Excellency the Governor, the Military Headquarters Staff and Ministers of the Cabinet.

First official war casualty dies in Auckland Hospital

"Robert Hislop, the Territorial who fell through, the Parnell railway bridge on Thursday night last, fracturing both his thighs, died in the hospital today. The death of Private Robert Hislop, a member of the New Zealand Railway Engineers Corps, is the first serious casualty that has befallen the mobilisation of the Territorials. Deceased, who was a member of the first company of the local railway corps formed here, was on guard duty at the Parnell railway bridge in Auckland, and had only recently been transferred to the northern city from Darfield.

German ships at Samoa, Scharnhorst and Gneisenau

"A lookout had been established on the summit of the wireless mast, where some 400 feet above his less fortunate fellows, and away from the mosquitoes and flies, the centipedes and ants, he swung his improvised hammock and watched. From this point in the early hours of 14th September, lights of two ships were reported, and daylight disclosed two large war vessels making for the port. The Signallers at the Pilot Station soon identified them as the long-expected "Scharnhorst" and "Gneisenau. ...

Daily Notes: Sunday

"I could hardly struggle ashore and when I did the first thing I saw was Beck sitting on a stone, roaring with laughter at us. Billy Beck was the first New Zealander to get on to Gallipoli.”

[Fenwick p8] [It is thought that Lieutenant-Colonel Edmund Robert Bowler was the first New Zealander to land at Anzac Cove in Gallipoli, having landed with the Australians at 4.30 am]

Daily Notes: Wednesday

“We moved up to a fresh position nearer the firing line at dawn. Canterbury men who had been fighting with the Australians since the landing are still coming and rejoining their units. Shortly after 10 a.m. the Turks attempted to retake our position left of Walker’s Ridge. They made a fierce attack on our front line, but we pushed up reinforcements and repulsed them, with heavy losses. Our machine guns did terrible slaughter.”

[Chamberlain p11]

Germany declares war on Russia

“The Imperial German Government have used every effort since the beginning of the crisis to bring about a peaceful settlement.  In compliance with a wish expressed to him by His Majesty the Emperor of Russia, the German Emperor had undertaken, in concert with Great Britain, the part of mediator between the Cabinets of Vienna and St. Petersburg; but Russia, without waiting for any result, proceeded to a general mobilisation of her forces both on land and sea.  …

Britain at war – Public announcement

Britain is at war. The last elements of uncertainty were dispelled by yesterday's cablegram from the Secretary of State for the Colonies, and by the momentous public announcement which was made by His Excellency the Governor (Lord Liverpool), outside Parliament House at 3 o'clock in the afternoon to an assemblage visibly moved by the gravity of the occasion. News from the theatres of war is meagre, but the indications given of the movements of the fleets and armies of the combatant nations is significant of momentous events. [Dominion, Volume 7, Issue 2221, 6 August 1914, Page 5]