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RAILWAY SURVEY

OPERATIONS IN ERITREA. NEW ZEALAND COMPANY. (N.Z.E.F, Official News Service.) CAIRO, May 3. Travelling by train, river boat and desert convoy, men of a New Zealand Railway Survey Company penetrated far into Eritrea in order to survey a new railroad for British forces operating in East Africa. Captain Halley and Lieutenant J. Mackay, two West Coast P.W.D. engineers, led a survey party into country which was far different from the green hills of Westland. From Kassala on the Sudanese frontier they penetrated through desert and thick thorny scrub into the highlands of Eritrea, working among great dome-like mountains of granite. In Eritrea they struck an autostrada and in the stone bungalow of an Italian road engineer they ’established their headquarters half way between Kassala and Keren. Receiving rations from an Indian Division and supplied with fresh meat from the great herds of gazelle which roam at large in these regions, they lived well. The hard physical work was done by a gang of thirty fuzzy wuzzies whom they employed. These natives have great crops of fuzzy black hair which hangs in ringlets down their shoulders. They keep a long wooden fork stuck into their hair so that they can have a scratch every now and again. Eritrea is a land of great mountains with fertile, cultivated pockets of soil in the valleys. Game is abundant, and at night a watch has to be kept for wild animals.

The boys can tell an amusing story about the fall of Asmara. The British troops entered the town in the evening, and as it had been declared an open town, the Italians at Massawa had to provide Asmara with power to light up the roads for the incoming British troops. Power and water was supplied to the British by the Italians in Massawa as it was the source of Asmara's supply. The survey job is done and the party is back at base ready for adventures in some other part of the Middle East.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WAITA19410614.2.19

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Wairarapa Times-Age, 14 June 1941, Page 4

Word count
Tapeke kupu
333

RAILWAY SURVEY Wairarapa Times-Age, 14 June 1941, Page 4

RAILWAY SURVEY Wairarapa Times-Age, 14 June 1941, Page 4

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