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1st July - 18 November 1916
18 Nov 2016 marks the 100th Anniversary of the end of the Battle of the Somme!
~ The 4th most costly battle in History. Over 1,120,000 killed or wounded ! ~
Wow... When I (Geoff) started creating these "Battlefields" pages, this page was my starting-point.
Since then I have created some 20 other pages, yet have made LITTLE progress on "The Somme" ! Why? Because the subject-matter is just so HUGE and, ideally, it should be condensed to a single page !
In the past couple of months or so I've read entire BOOKS on the battle and learned SO much. Concomitantly, I've learned more about my Grandfather, about WWI in general, about the other major battles of THAT war and others... and I find myself reduced to simply not being able to appropriately encapsulate the significance of The Somme.
It is quite likely that my grandfather, Sergeant Fairley Clarke Stewart, fought there after serving time in Egypt. If not, then he almost certainly fought at Passchendaele... or even in BOTH battles ! I have requested information from Archives New Zealand, Wellington... His records are apparently held on very old and fragile microfilm strips and, due to the large number of requests that they receive, it often takes "some time" for them to be "processed", digitised and sent to interested parties... Time passes !
SO... While I gather my wits and data around me, here's a pretty good initial synopsis, paraphrased and tweaked from the The History Learning SITE :
The Battle of the Somme started on 1st July 1916. It lasted until November 1916. For many people, the Battle of the Somme was the battle that symbolised the horrors of warfare in World War One. This one battle had a marked effect on overall casualty figures and seemed to epitomise the futility of trench warfare.
For many years those who led the British campaign have received a lot of criticism for the way the Battle of the Somme was fought – especially Douglas Haig. This criticism was based on the appalling casualty figures suffered by the British and the French. By the end of the battle, the British Army had suffered 420,000 casualties including nearly 60,000 on the first day alone. The French lost 200,000 men and the Germans nearly 500,000.
Ironically, "going over the top" at the Somme was the first taste of battle many of these men had, as many were part of "Kitchener’s Volunteer Army" persuaded to volunteer by posters showing Lord Kitchener himself summoning these men to arms to show their patriotism.
Why was the battle fought?
For a number of months the French had been taking severe losses at Verdun – to the east of Paris. To relieve the French, the Allied High Command decided to attack the Germans to the north of Verdun, therefore requiring the Germans to move some of their men away from the Verdun battlefield, thus relieving the French. After the war, Sir William Robertson, Chief of the Imperial General Staff, explained what this strategy was:
" Remembering the dissatisfaction by ministers at the end of 1915, because the operations had not come up to their expectations, the General Staff took the precaution to make quite clear beforehand the nature of success which the Somme campaign might yield. The necessity of relieving pressure on the French Army at Verdun remains, and is more urgent than ever. This is, therefore, the first objective to be obtained by the combined British and French offensive. The second objective is to inflict as heavy losses as possible upon the German armies. "
Ironically, the head of the French Army, General Foch, believed that the attack in the Somme would achieve little. This view was shared by some leading British commanders such as General Henry Rawlinson. However, orders from the army's political masters in London and Paris ensured that the battle would take place.
Just how backward military thinking was then is shown by the fact that the British put a regiment of cavalry on standby when the attack started to exploit the hole that would be created by a devastating infantry attack. British military faith was still being placed on cavalry attacks in 1916 when the nature of war in the previous two years would have clearly indicated that cavalry was no longer viable. This shows how conservative military thinking was during this war.
The battle at the Somme started with a week-long artillery bombardment of the German lines. 1,738,000 shells were fired at the Germans. The logic behind this was that the artillery guns would destroy the German trenches and the barbed wire that was placed in front of those trenches. The use of artillery was heavily supported by Field Marshall Haig:
" The enemy's position to be attacked was of a very considerable character, situated on a high, undulating tract of ground. (They had) deep trenches... bomb proof shelters... wire entanglements forty yards broad and often as thick as a man's finger. Defences of this nature could only be attacked with the prospect of success after careful artillery preparation. "
In fact, the Germans had deep dugouts for their men and all they had to do when the bombardment started was to move these men into that relative safety. When the bombardment stopped, the Germans would have known that this would have been the signal for an infantry advance. They promptly moved to man their machine guns to face the British and French troops.
The British soldiers advanced across a 25-mile front.
By the end of the battle, in November 1916, the British had lost 420,000, the French lost nearly 200,000 men and the Germans 500,000. In more than four and a half months, the Allied forces had advanced along a thirty-mile strip that was seven miles deep at its maximum.
Lord Kitchener was a supporter of the theory of attrition - that eventually you would grind down your enemy and they would have to yield. He saw the military success of the battle as all-important. However, it did have dire political and social consequences in Britain. Many spoke of the "lost generation". Many people found it difficult to justify the near 88,000 Allied men lost for every one mile gained in the advance.
However, during the battle, media information on the battle was less than accurate. The following was written by John Irvine of the "Daily Express" on July 3rd 1916 - though his report would have been scutinised by the British military and government and he could only have used what information the military gave him:
" A perceptible slackening of our fire soon after seven was the first indication given to us that our gallant soldiers were about to leap from their trenches and advance against the enemy. Non-combatants, of course, were not permitted to witness this spectacle, but I am informed that the vigour and eagerness of the first assault were worthy of the best tradition of the British Army. We had not to wait long for news, and it was wholly satisfactory and encouraging. The message received at ten o'clock ran something like this: "On a front of twenty miles north and south of the Somme, we and our French allies have advanced and taken the German first line of trenches. We are attacking vigourously Fricourt, la Boiselle and Mametz. German prisoners are surrendering freely, and a good many already fallen into our hands." "
"The Daily Chronicle" published a similar report on the battle on July 3rd:
" At about 7.30 o'clock this morning a vigourous attack was launched by the British Army. The front extends over some 20 miles north of the Somme. The assault was preceded by a terrific bombardment, lasting about an hour and a half. It is too early to as yet give anything but the barest particulars, as the fighting is developing in intensity, but the British troops have already occupied the German front line. Many prisoners have already fallen into our hands, and as far as can be ascertained, our casualties have not been heavy. "
However, those who fought there knew what really happened - if they survived:
" The next morning (July 2nd) we gunners surveyed the dreadful scene in front of us... It became clear that the Germans always had a commanding view of No Man's Land. (The British) attack had been brutally repulsed. Hundreds of dead were strung out like wreckage washed up to a high water-mark. Quite as many died on the enemy wire as on the ground, like fish caught in the net. They hung there in grotesque postures. Some looked as if they were praying; they had died on their knees and the wire had prevented their fall. Machine gun fire had done its terrible work. "
- George Coppard, machine gunner at the Battle of the Somme.
In the course of the battle, 51 Victoria Crosses were won by British soldiers. 31 were won by NCO's and 20 by officers. Of these 51 medals, 17 were awarded posthumously - 10 to NCO's and 7 to officers.
Recommended Reading: "The Somme" by Gary SheffieldThis book not only describes the many twists and turns of the battle and suggests that, without it, the Allies would never have won the First World War, but also gives a succinct insight as to WHY The Great War happened in the first place !
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Seen Opposite >>>
The Hawthorn Ridge mine was the northernmost of the ten mines dug by the Royal Engineer tunnelling companies. It was detonated on 1 July, one of the three large mines, the other two being the Lochnagar mine and the Y Sap mine at La Boisselle.
The mine contained about 40,000 pounds (18t) of explosives and was blown ten minutes before ZeroHour, effectively marking the beginning of the Battle of the Somme.
As cinematographer Geoffrey Malins, who filmed the explosion fromk half a mile away, said:
“ The ground where I stood gave a mighty convulsion. It rocked and swayed. I gripped hold of my tripod to steady myself. Then for all the world like a gigantic sponge, the earth rose high in the air to the height of hundreds of feet. Higher and higher it rose, and with a horrible grinding roar the earth settles back upon itself, leaving in its place a mountain of smoke. ”
Once the debris subsided, two platoons of the 2nd Battalion, Royal Fusiliers were sent forward to occupy the crater. However, the German defenders succeeded in holding it's eastern lip. The early detonation alerted all Germans in the vicinity that the attack was imminent. By the time the infantry went over at 7:30am, German machine guns were sweeping No Man's Land and artillery fire was falling on the British trenches. The attack on Hawthorn Ridge redoubt and on the entire VIII Corps front was a costly failure.
By 8:30am, the only ground captured was the western lip of the crater, held by one company, but by the end of the day this was lost to a German counter-attack.
Single frame from famous
Somme film footage. As a 2013
TV documentary revealed, the
men shown remain unidentified
to this day.
Also filmed:
The Hawthorne Mine Explosion
- 7:20am, 1st July 1916
YouTube footage of the Hawthorne Mine Explosion.
Drive-Time (Via Michelin):
Embry to Albert:
2hrs 4 mins (54 miles)
Address: The Somme 1916 Museum
Rue Anicet Godin
80300 Albert
Tel : 03 22 75 16 17
Web: The Somme 1916 Museum
Opening Hours, 2014:
7/7 from 1st Feb - 17th Dec.
9am until 5pm or 6pm.
Admission:
Adults: 6€ Children: 4€
Centenary Medal, 2014 (2€)
Copyright Geoff McIntosh and Annette Dow 2007 - 2024. All rights reserved.
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EMBRY 62990
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ph: 0321 86 76 17
GGMac