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+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #51163 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/51163)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Australian Victories in France in 1918,
-by Sir John Monash
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: The Australian Victories in France in 1918
-
-
-Author: Sir John Monash
-
-
-
-Release Date: February 10, 2016 [eBook #51163]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE AUSTRALIAN VICTORIES IN FRANCE
-IN 1918***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Brian Coe, Moti Ben-Ari, and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made
-available by Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries
-(https://archive.org/details/toronto)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations and maps.
- See 51163-h.htm or 51163-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/51163/51163-h/51163-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/51163/51163-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries. See
- https://archive.org/details/australianvictor00mona
-
-
-
-
-
-THE AUSTRALIAN VICTORIES IN FRANCE IN 1918
-
-
-[Illustration: Lieut.-General Sir John Monash, G.C.M.G., K.C.B., V.D.,
-D.C.L., LL.D.]
-
-
-THE AUSTRALIAN VICTORIES IN FRANCE IN 1918
-
-by
-
-LIEUTENANT-GENERAL SIR JOHN MONASH,
-G.C.M.G., K.C.B., V.D., D.C.L., LL.D.
-
-With 9 Folding Maps in Colour and 31 Illustrations
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-London: Hutchinson & Co.
-Paternoster Row
-
-
-
-
- DEDICATED
- to the
- AUSTRALIAN SOLDIER
- who by his military virtues, and by his deeds
- in battle, has earned for himself a
- place in history which none
- can challenge
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-The following pages, of which I began the compilation when still
-engaged in the arduous work of Repatriation of the Australian troops
-in all theatres of war, were intended to be something in the nature
-of a consecutive and comprehensive story of the Australian Imperial
-Force in France during the closing phases of the Great War. I soon
-found that the time at my disposal was far too limited to allow me to
-make full use of the very voluminous documentary material which I had
-collected during the campaign. The realization of such a project must
-await a time of greater leisure. So much as I have had the opportunity
-of setting down has, therefore, inevitably taken the form rather of
-an individual memoir of this stirring period. While I feel obliged to
-ask the indulgence of the reader for the personal character of the
-present narrative, this may not be altogether a disadvantage. Having
-regard to the responsibilities which it fell to my lot to bear, it may,
-indeed, be desirable that I should in all candour set down what was
-passing in my mind, and should attempt to describe the ever-changing
-external circumstances which operated to guide and form the judgments
-and decisions which it became my duty to make from day to day. It may
-be that hereafter my exercise of command in the field and the manner in
-which I made use of the opportunities which presented themselves will
-be the subject of criticism. I welcome this, provided that the facts
-and the events of the time are known to and duly weighed by the critic.
-
-My purpose has been to describe in broad outline the part played by
-the Australian Army Corps in the closing months of the war, and I have
-based upon that record somewhat large claims on behalf of the Corps. It
-would have overloaded the story to include in it any larger number of
-extracts from original documents than has been done. I may, however,
-assert with confidence that the statements, statistics and deductions
-made can be verified by reference to authoritative sources.
-
-The photographs have been selected from a very large number taken,
-during the fighting and often under fire, by Captain G. H. Wilkins,
-M.C. The maps have been prepared under my personal supervision, and are
-compiled from the official battle maps in actual use by me during the
-operations.
-
- JOHN MONASH.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAP. PAGE
- PREFACE v
- INTRODUCTION--THE AUSTRALIAN ARMY CORPS 1
- I.--BACK TO THE SOMME 18
- II.--THE DEFENCE OF AMIENS 36
- III.--HAMEL 51
- IV.--TURNING THE TIDE 69
- V.--THE BATTLE PLAN 81
- VI.--THE BATTLE PLAN (_continued_) 97
- VII.--THE CHASE BEGINS 115
- VIII.--EXPLOITATION 133
- IX.--CHUIGNES 148
- X.--PURSUIT 164
- XI.--MONT ST. QUENTIN AND PÉRONNE 182
- XII.--A LULL 198
- XIII.--HARGICOURT 214
- XIV.--AMERICA JOINS IN 235
- XV.--BELLICOURT AND BONY 254
- XVI.--MONTBREHAIN AND AFTER 271
- XVII.--RESULTS 284
- APPENDIX A 299
- APPENDIX B 300
- APPENDIX C 317
- INDEX 345
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF MAPS
-
-
- A--The Advances of the Third Division--March to
- May, 1918 _Facing page_ 32
- B--Battle of Hamel, July 4th, 1918 " 64
- C--Battle of August 8th, 1918 " 144
- D--Battle of Chuignes and Bray, August 23rd, 1918 " 160
- E--Péronne and Mont St. Quentin " 192
- F--Advances of Australian Corps, September 2nd to
- 17th, 1918 " 208
- G--Battle of September 18th, 1918 " 224
- H--Breaching of Hindenburg Defences " 272
- J--Australian Corps Campaign " 288
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF PHOTOGRAPHS
-
-
- Lieut.-General Sir John Monash, G.C.M.G.,
- K.C.B., V.D., D.C.L., LL.D. _Frontispiece_
- 1.--The Australian Corps Commander--with the
- Generals of his Staff _Facing page_ 14
- 2.--The Valley of the Somme--looking east towards
- Bray, which was then still in enemy hands " 15
- 3.--German Prisoners--taken by the Corps at
- Hamel, being marched to the rear " 40
- 4.--Visit of M. Clemenceau--group taken at Bussy,
- July 7th, 1918 " 41
- 5.--Railway Gun, 11.2-inch Bore--captured near
- Rosières on August 8th, 1918 " 66
- 6.--German Depot of Stores--captured on August
- 8th, 1918 " 67
- 7.--Tanks marching into Battle " 96
- 8.--Morcourt Valley--the Australian attack swept
- across this on August 8th, 1918 " 97
- 9.--Dug-outs at Froissy-Beacon--being "mopped
- up" during battle " 112
- 10.--Péronne--barricade in main street " 113
- 11.--Burning Villages--east of Péronne " 128
- 12.--Dummy Tank Manufacture " 129
- 13.--The Canal and Tunnel at Bellicourt--looking
- north " 152
- 14.--The Hindenburg Line--a characteristic belt of
- sunken wire " 153
- 15.--Final Instructions to the Platoon--an incident
- of the battle of August 8th, 1918. The
- platoon is waiting to advance to Phase B of
- the battle " 176
- 16.--An Armoured Car--disabled near Bony, during
- the battle of September 29th, 1918 " 177
- 17.--The Hindenburg Line Wire--near Bony " 198
- 18.--The 15-inch Naval Gun--captured at Chuignes
- August 23rd, 1918 " 199
- 19.--Australian Artillery--going into action at
- Cressaire Wood " 218
- 20.--Battle of August 8th, 1918--German prisoners
- being brought out of the battle under the fire
- of their own Artillery " 219
- 21.--Mont St. Quentin--collecting Australian
- wounded under protection of the Red Cross
- flag, September 1st, 1918 " 240
- 22.--An Ammunition Dump--established in Warfusee
- village on August 8th, 1918, after its
- capture the same morning " 241
- 23.--Australian Light Horse--the 13th A.L.H.
- Regiment riding into action on August 17th, 1918 " 256
- 24.--The Sniper sniped--an enemy sniper disposed
- of by an Australian Sharp-shooter,
- August 22nd, 1918 " 257
- 25.--German Prisoners--captured at the battle of
- Chuignes, August 23rd, 1918 " 274
- 26.--Captured German Guns--Park of Ordnance,
- captured by the Australians during August, 1918 " 275
- 27.--The Toll of Battle--an Australian gun-team
- destroyed by an enemy shell, September 1st, 1918 " 294
- 28.--Inter-Divisional Relief--the 30th American
- and the 3rd Australian Divisions passing each
- other in the "Roo de Kanga," Péronne,
- during the "relief" after the capture of the
- Hindenburg Line, October 4th, 1918 " 295
- 29.--Australian Artillery--moving up to the front,
- through the Hindenburg wire, October 2nd, 1918 " 316
- 30.--Advance during Battle--Third Division Infantry
- and Tanks advancing to the capture of Bony,
- October 1st, 1918 " 317
-
-
-
-
-The Australian Victories in France in 1918
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-THE AUSTRALIAN ARMY CORPS
-
-
-The renown of the Australians as individual fighters, in all theatres
-of the Great War, has loomed large in the minds and imagination of the
-people of the Empire.
-
-Many stories of the work they did have been published in the daily
-Press and in book form. But it is seldom that any appreciation can be
-discovered of the fact that the Australians in France gradually became,
-as the war progressed, moulded into a single, complete and fully
-organized Army Corps.
-
-Seldom has any stress been laid upon the fact that because it thus
-became a formation fixed and stable in composition, fighting under a
-single command, and provided with all accessory arms and services, the
-Corps was able successfully to undertake fighting operations on the
-grandest scale.
-
-There can be little question, however, that it was this development
-which constituted the paramount and precedent condition for the
-brilliant successes achieved by these splendid troops during the summer
-and autumn of 1918--successes which far overshadowed those of any
-earlier period of the war.
-
-For a complete understanding of all the factors which contributed
-to those successes, and for an intelligent grasp of the course of
-events following so dramatically upon the outbreak of the great
-German offensive of March 21st of that year, I propose to trace, very
-briefly, the genesis and ultimate development of the Corps, as it
-became constituted when, on August 8th, it was launched upon its great
-enterprise of opening, in close collaboration with the Army Corps of
-its sister Dominion of Canada, that remarkable counter-offensive, which
-it maintained, without pause, without check, and without reverse, for
-sixty consecutive days--a period full of glorious achievement--which
-contributed, as I shall show in these pages, in the most direct and
-decisive manner, to the final collapse and surrender of the enemy.
-
-In the days before the war, there was in the British Service no
-recognized or authorized organization known as an Army Corps. When
-the Expeditionary Force was launched into the conflict in 1914, the
-Army Corps organization was hastily improvised, and consisted at first
-merely of an Army Corps Staff, with a small allotment of special Corps
-Troops and services, and of a fluctuating number of Divisions.
-
-It was the _Division_[1] and not the _Corps_, which was then the
-strategical unit of the Army. Even when the necessity for the formation
-of Army Corps was recognized, it was still a fundamental conception
-that it was the Division, and not the Army Corps, which constituted the
-fighting unit.
-
-To each Army Corps were allotted at first only two, but later as many
-as four Divisions, according to the needs and circumstances of the
-moment. But the component Divisions never, for long, remained the same.
-The actual composition of every Army Corps was subject to constant
-changes and interchanges, and it was rare for any given Division to
-remain for more than a few weeks in any one Army Corps.
-
-The disadvantages of such an arrangement are sufficiently obvious to
-require no great elaboration; at the same time, it has to be recognized
-that, during the first three years of the war, at any rate, the Army
-was undergoing a process of rapid expansion, and that, on grounds of
-expediency, it was neither possible nor desirable to adopt a policy of
-a fixed and immutable composition for so large a formation as an Army
-Corps.
-
-Moreover, the special conditions of trench warfare made it imperative
-to create, under the respective Armies, and in the respective zones
-of those Armies, a subordinate administrative and tactical authority
-with a more or less fixed geographical jurisdiction. Thus, the frontage
-held by each of the five British Armies became subdivided into a
-series of Corps frontages, and each Corps Commander had allotted to
-him a definite frontage, a definite depth and a definite area, for his
-administrative and executive direction.
-
-It was within this Corps area that he exercised entire control of all
-functions of a purely local and geographical character: such as the
-maintenance of all roads, railways, canals, telegraphs and telephones;
-the control of all traffic; the apportionment of all billeting and
-quartering facilities; the allocation and employment of all means of
-transport; the collection and distribution of all supplies, comprising
-food, forage, munitions and engineering materials; the conservation
-and distribution of all water supply; the sanitation of the area; the
-whole medical administration within, and the evacuation of sick and
-wounded from the area; the establishment and working of shops of all
-descriptions, both for general engineering and for Ordnance purposes;
-also of laundries, bathing establishments and rest camps; the creation
-of facilities for the entertainment and recreation of resting troops,
-and of schools for their military training and for the education of
-their leaders.
-
-The Corps Commander was, in addition, directly responsible to the Army
-Commander for the tactical defence of his whole area, for the creation
-and maintenance of the entire system of field defences covering his
-frontage, comprising trench systems in numerous successive zones and
-field fortifications of all descriptions; for preparations for the
-demolition of railways and bridges to meet the eventuality of an
-enforced withdrawal; and for detailed plans for an advance into the
-enemy's territory whenever the opportune moment should arrive.
-
-The extensive responsibilities thus imposed upon the Corps Commander,
-and upon the whole of his Staff, obviously demanded an intimate study
-and knowledge of the whole of the Corps area, such as could be acquired
-only by continuous occupation of one and the same area for a period
-extending over many months. It would therefore have been in the highest
-degree inconvenient to move such a complex organization as an Army
-Corps Staff from one area to another at short intervals of time. On the
-other hand, the several Divisions allotted to any given Corps for the
-actual occupation and maintenance of the defences could not be called
-upon to carry out without relief or rest, trench duty for continuous
-periods longer than a few weeks at a time.
-
-During the first three years the number of Divisions at the disposal
-of the British High Command was never adequate to provide each Army
-Corps in the front line with sufficient Divisions to permit of a
-regular alternation out of its own resources of periods of trench duty
-and periods of rest. For a Corps holding a two-Division frontage, for
-example, it would have been necessary to provide a permanent strength
-of at least four Divisions in order to permit of such a rotation.
-
-The expedient generally adopted, therefore, was to withdraw altogether
-from the Army Corps, each Division in turn, as it became due for a rest
-behind the line or was required for duty elsewhere, and to substitute
-some other available Division from G.H.Q. or Army Reserve. The broad
-result was that such an deal as that of a fixed composition for an Army
-Corps proved quite unattainable, and there was a constant interchange
-of nearly the whole of the Divisions of the Army, who served in
-succession, for short periods, in many different Corps, and under many
-different Commanders.
-
-To this general rule there was, from the outset of its formation, one
-striking exception, in the case of the Canadian Army Corps, consisting
-of the four Canadian Divisions, which, with rare exceptions, and these
-only for short periods and for quite special purposes, invariably
-fought as a complete Corps of fixed constitution.
-
-It is impossible to overvalue the advantages which accrued to the
-Canadian troops from this close and constant association of all the
-four Divisions with each other, with the Corps Commander and his Staff,
-and with all the accessory Corps services. It meant mutual knowledge
-of each other among all Commanders, all Staffs, all arms and services,
-and the mutual trust and confidence born of that knowledge. It was the
-prime factor in achieving the brilliant conquest of the Vimy Ridge by
-that Corps in the early spring of 1917.
-
-The consummation, so long and so ardently hoped for, of a similar
-welding together of all Australian units in the field in France into a
-single Corps was not achieved in its entirety until a full year later,
-and it will be interesting to trace briefly the steps by which such a
-result, strongly pressed as it was by the Australian Government, was
-finally brought about.
-
-Australia put into the field and maintained until the end, altogether
-five Divisions of Infantry, complete with all requisite Artillery,
-Engineers, Pioneers and all Supply, Medical and Veterinary Services, in
-full conformity with the Imperial War Establishments laid down for such
-Divisions. But the method and time of their formation and organization,
-the manner and circumstances of their war preparation, and their
-employment as part of a Corps varied considerably.
-
-The First Australian Division, together with the Fourth Infantry
-Brigade, which was then under my command and subsequently became the
-nucleus of the Fourth Australian Division, were raised in Australia
-in 1914, immediately after the outbreak of war, were transported to
-Egypt, where they underwent their war training in the winter of 1915,
-and ultimately formed, with the New Zealand Contingent, the body known
-as the "Anzac" Corps, which carried out, on April 25th, the memorable
-landing on the Gallipoli Peninsula.
-
-The Second Australian Division speedily followed, being raised in
-Australia during 1915, and the greater part of this Second Contingent
-joined the Anzac Corps in the later stages of the Dardanelles
-Expedition. Another independent Brigade (the Eighth) was also sent to
-Egypt in that year.
-
-The raising of the Third Australian Division, early in 1916, was the
-magnificent answer which Australia made when public men and the Press
-declared that the Australian people would resent the Evacuation from
-Gallipoli, and the seemingly fruitless sacrifices which it entailed.
-This Division was shipped direct to England, and assembled on Salisbury
-Plain during the summer of 1916, where I assumed the command of
-it. There it underwent its war training under conditions far more
-advantageous than those which confronted the First and Second Divisions
-in the Egyptian desert. The Third Division entered the theatre of war
-in France in November, 1916.
-
-In the meantime, the Evacuation of the Peninsula, in December, 1915,
-led to the assembly in Egypt of the First and Second Australian
-Divisions, the Fourth and Eighth independent Infantry Brigades and some
-thirty thousand reinforcements and convalescents.
-
-Out of this supply of fighting material it was then decided to
-constitute two additional complete Divisions, the Fourth Brigade
-forming the nucleus of the Fourth Australian Division, while the 8th
-Brigade formed that of the Fifth Australian Division; the remaining
-Brigades and the Divisional troops were drawn from reinforcements,
-stiffened by a considerable contribution of veterans taken from the
-four Infantry Brigades who had carried out the landing on Gallipoli.
-
-The Fourth and Fifth Divisions were thus formed in Egypt in February
-and March, 1916, and the conditions of their war training were
-even less satisfactory than those which had confronted the earlier
-Divisions. The hot season speedily arrived; equipment, munitions
-and animals materialized slowly; training equipment and suitable
-training grounds were of the most meagre character; and upon all
-these difficulties supervened the urgent obligation to undertake the
-strenuous toil of organizing and executing, on the Sinai desert, the
-field fortifications required for the defence of the Suez Canal zone.
-
-The method in which the Divisions then available in Egypt were to be
-grouped for the purposes of Corps Command was ripe for decision. It
-was then that the determination was reached to constitute two separate
-Army Corps, to be called respectively "First Anzac" and "Second Anzac."
-The former embodied the First, Second and Fifth Australian Divisions,
-under General Sir William Birdwood; the latter comprised the Fourth
-Australian and the New Zealand Divisions under Lieut.-General Sir
-Alexander Godley.
-
-This was the organization of the Australian troops when the time
-arrived, in May, 1916, for their transfer by sea from Egypt to the
-scene of the titanic conflict which had been for nearly two years
-raging on the soil of France and Belgium.
-
-This grouping did not, however, persist for more than a few weeks. The
-opening of the great Somme offensive in July 1916 found the First,
-Second and Fourth Divisions operating under First Anzac in the valley
-of the Somme, while the Fifth Australian and the New Zealand Division
-constituted the Second Anzac Corps in the Armentières-Fleurbaix sector.
-There followed other interchanges as the campaign developed, and by
-November of 1916, the grouping stood with First Anzac employing the
-First, Second, Fourth and Fifth Divisions, while Second Anzac comprised
-the Third Australian, the New Zealand and the Thirty-Fourth British
-Divisions.
-
-The series of offensive operations opening with the great and
-successful battle of Messines on June 7th, 1917, found the Fourth
-Australian Division once again under the command of General Godley,
-only to be again withdrawn before the concluding phases of the
-Third Battle of Ypres, in September and October, 1917. The autumn
-offensive of 1917, aiming at the capture of the Passchendaele ridge,
-was the first occasion on which the whole of the five Divisions were
-simultaneously engaged in the same locality in a common enterprise;
-but even on that occasion they still remained distributed under two
-different Corps Commands, and had not yet achieved the long-desired
-unity of command and of policy.
-
-This constant interchange of these Divisions, unavoidable as it
-probably was, undoubtedly militated against the attainment of the
-highest standard of efficiency. Uniform in scope and purpose as
-military administration and tactical policy aims to be when considered
-on broad lines, yet in a thousand and one matters of detail, many of
-them of dominating importance, the personality and the individual
-idiosyncrasies of the Corps Commander and of his principal executive
-Staff Officers, are calculated to exercise a powerful influence upon
-the functioning of the whole Corps.
-
-Under each Corps Commander there grew up in course of time a particular
-code of rules, and policies, of technical methods and even of technical
-jargon--most of it in an unwritten form. This nevertheless tended
-towards efficiency so long as the whole of the component personnel of
-the Corps remained stable, but imposed many difficulties upon Divisions
-and other units which joined and remained under the Corps for a short
-period only.
-
-The result was that a Divisional Commander and his Staff, accustomed
-to work in one environment, often found great difficulty, and occupied
-some appreciable period of time, in accommodating themselves to a new
-environment, in which doctrines of attack or defence, counter-attack or
-trench routine, supply or maintenance were, some or all of them, widely
-different from those to which they had formerly become accustomed.
-
-But, in the case of Dominion troops, there was a motive far
-overshadowing the desire for a removal of difficulties of merely a
-technical nature. It was one founded upon a sense of Nationhood, which
-prompted the wish, vaguely formed early in the war, and steadily
-crystallizing in the minds both of the Australian people and of the
-troops themselves, that all the Australian Divisions should be brought
-together under a single leadership.
-
-This ideal was associated with the hope that the Commanders and Staffs
-should to as large an extent as possible, consist solely of Australian
-Officers, as soon as ever men sufficiently qualified became available.
-It is difficult to emphasize such a desire without appearing to display
-ingratitude to a number of brilliant General and other officers of
-the Imperial Regular Service. These men, at a time when Australia was
-still able to produce only few officers with the necessary training and
-experience to justify their appointment to the command of Divisions
-and Brigades, or to the senior Administrative and General Staffs,
-bore these burdens in a manner which reflected upon them the greatest
-credit, and earned for them the gratitude of the Australian people.
-
-I refer, among many others, particularly to General Sir W. Birdwood,
-Major-Generals Sir H. B. Walker, Sir N. M. Smyth, V.C. and Sir H. V.
-Cox and Brigadier-Generals W. B. Lesslie and P. G. M. Skene. But as the
-war went on, this aspect of the national aspiration became steadily
-realized; one by one, the senior commands and staff appointments were
-taken over by Australian Officers who had proved their aptitude and
-suitability for such responsibilities.
-
-The other ideal of unity of command and close association with each
-other of all Australian units, proved slower of realization. All
-concerned thought and hoped that it had been, at last, achieved in
-December, 1917, when it was decided to abolish the two "Anzac" Corps,
-and to constitute a single Australian Army Corps. This was effected
-by the transfer of the Third Australian Division from Second to First
-Anzac Corps, by altering the title of "Second Anzac" to "XXII. Corps,"
-and by substituting for the name "First Anzac" the name "Australian
-Army Corps," which name it bore until the termination of the war.
-
-The only regrettable feature of this development was the dissolution
-of the close comradeship which had existed between the troops from the
-sister Dominions of Australia and New Zealand.
-
-Even then all hopes were doomed to disappointment. For the next four
-months the Corps contained five Divisions in name only. Almost at once,
-the Fourth Australian Division was withdrawn to serve under the VII.
-Corps in connection with the operations before Cambrai. Not many weeks
-later, when the German avalanche was loosed, the whole five Divisions
-became widely scattered, and, for a time, the Third and Fourth
-Divisions served under the VII. British Corps, the Fifth Division under
-the III. Corps, and the First Division under the XV. Corps. It was not
-until April, 1918, that four out of the five Divisions again came
-together under the control of the Australian Corps Commander, at that
-time General Sir William Birdwood.
-
-About the middle of May, 1918, this popular Commander was appointed
-to the leadership of the Fifth British Army. In deference to his long
-association with the Australian Imperial Force, he was asked to retain
-his status as G.O.C., A.I.F. His responsibilities as the Commander of
-an Army, and its removal to quite a different area in the theatre of
-war, made it, however, impossible for him to take any active part in
-the direction of the further operations of the Australian Corps.
-
-Owing to the vacancy thus created, the Commander-in-Chief, with the
-concurrence of the Commonwealth Government, did me the great honour to
-appoint me to the command of the Australian Army Corps, a command which
-I took over during the closing days of May and retained until after the
-Armistice.
-
-At that juncture the First Australian Division was still involved in
-heavy fighting, under the XV. Corps, in the Hazebrouck sector, and no
-amount of pressure which I could bring to bear succeeded in prevailing
-upon G.H.Q. to release this Division. It was not until early in August,
-1918, on the very eve of the opening of the great offensive, that, at
-long last, all the five Australian Divisions became united into one
-Corps, never to be again separated. From that date onwards all five
-Divisions embarked (for the first time in their history) upon a series
-of combined offensive operations, the story of which I have set myself
-the task of unfolding in these pages.
-
-The Australian Army Corps had by that time evolved from a mere
-geographical organization into one which, over and above its component
-Infantry Divisions, had acquired a large number of accessory arms and
-services, called Corps Troops, which formed no part of a Division. It
-is desirable for the complete understanding of the battle plans of the
-offensive period, to consider the extent and nature of the whole of the
-fighting and maintenance resources of the Corps.
-
-These fell theoretically into two categories, comprising on the one
-hand those units properly designated as "Corps Troops," which possessed
-a fixed and unalterable constitution, and, on the other hand, those
-additional units, known as "Army Troops," whose number and character
-fluctuated in accordance with the varying needs of the situation, and
-with the requirements of the various operations.
-
-These Army Troops, whenever detailed to act under the orders of the
-Corps Commander, became an integral part of the Corps, and were
-to all intents and purposes Corps Troops, until such time as they
-had completed the tasks allotted to them. The Corps Troops were
-multifarious in character, and amounted in the aggregate to large
-numbers, occasionally exceeding 50,000, a number as great as that of
-three additional Divisions, whose normal strength in the closing phases
-of the war never exceeded 17,000.
-
-The Headquarters of the Army Corps comprised upwards of 300 Staff
-and assistant Staff Officers, clerks, orderlies, draughtsmen, motor
-drivers, grooms, batmen, cooks and general helpers. The Corps Cavalry
-consisted, in the case of the Australian Army Corps, of the 13th
-Regiment of Australian Light Horse, and was employed, in conjunction
-with the Australian Cyclist Battalion, for reconnaissance, escort and
-dispatch rider duty.
-
-The Corps Signal Troops were an extensive organization, and controlled
-the whole of the Signal communications throughout the Corps area
-(except within the Divisions themselves), being responsible for the
-establishment, upkeep and working of every method of communication,
-whether by telegraph, telephone, wireless, pigeons, messenger dogs,
-aeroplane, or dispatch rider. Apart from telegraphists, mechanics and
-electrical experts in considerable numbers, adequate for the very heavy
-signal traffic during battle, and even during periods of comparative
-quiet, Corps Signals also operated two Motor Air Line and two Cable
-Sections, for the laying out and maintenance of wires. Those within the
-Corps Area, at any one place and time, amounted to several hundreds of
-miles.
-
-The whole of the Mechanical Transport, consisting of hundreds of motor
-lorries, for the collection and distribution of ammunition, food,
-forage and ordnance stores of all descriptions, was also under the
-direct control of Corps Headquarters. So also were some half-dozen
-mobile Ordnance Workshops, for the repair of weapons and vehicles of
-all kinds. All these were permanent Corps Troops, but represented only
-a fraction of those serving under the orders of the Corps Commander.
-
-Among the Administrative Services there was a large contingent of the
-Labour Corps comprising some 20 Companies, for the construction and
-maintenance of all roads, and water supply installations, and for
-the handling, daily, of a formidable bulk and weight of Artillery
-ammunition; also two or more Motor Ambulance Convoys, for the
-evacuation of the sick and wounded out of the Corps area, and a number
-of Army Troops Companies of Engineers, as well as two Companies of
-Australian Tunnellers, who were usually employed upon the construction
-and maintenance of bridges, locks, water transport mechanism, deep
-dug-outs and battle stations.
-
-But the fighting units of the Corps Troops formed by far the
-largest proportion, and comprised Artillery, Heavy Trench Mortars,
-Air Squadrons and Tanks. The Artillery alone merits more detailed
-consideration. It comprised a vast array of many different classes
-of guns for many different purposes, and classified into various
-categories by reference either to their calibres, their mobility or
-their tactical purposes.
-
-Grouped according to calibre, all guns and howitzers of 4½-inch bore
-or less were strictly considered as Field Artillery which, although
-administered by the Divisions, was almost invariably fought under the
-direct orders of the Corps Commander. All guns and howitzers of greater
-bore, up to the giant 15-inch, were known as Heavy and Siege Artillery.
-
-Regarded from the point of view of mobility, all field guns and that
-wonderfully useful weapon, the 60-pounder, were horse-drawn, the larger
-ordnance were tractor-drawn, and the very largest were mounted on
-railway trains and hauled by steam locomotive.
-
-Finally, as regards tactical utilization, some natures of ordnance
-were invariably employed for barrage or harassing fire, others for
-bombardment, others for counter-battery fighting, and yet others for
-anti-aircraft purposes.
-
-The total ordnance under the orders of the Australian Army Corps
-naturally fluctuated according to the daily battle requirements, but
-amounted at times, during the period of the war under consideration, to
-as many as 1,200 guns of all natures and calibres, grouped in Brigades
-each of four to six Batteries, each of four to six guns.
-
-This very formidable Artillery equipment far transcended in quantity
-and dynamic power anything that had been envisaged in the previous
-years of the war, or in any previous war, as possible of administrative
-or tactical control under a single Commander. It undoubtedly became
-a paramount factor in the victories which the Corps achieved. The
-Artillery of the Corps is entitled to the proud boast that it earned
-the confidence and gratitude of the Infantry.
-
-It must be left to the imagination to conceive the complexity of the
-task of keeping this enormous mass of Artillery regularly supplied
-with its ammunition, of multifarious types and in adequate quantities
-of each, of allocating to each Brigade and even to each Battery its
-appropriate task in the general plan, and of advancing the whole
-organization over half-ruined roads and broken bridges, in order to
-keep up with the Infantry as the battle moved forward from day to day.
-It would defy a detailed description intelligible to any but gunnery
-experts.
-
-The Air Force had, by the summer of 1918, also achieved a great
-development. The numerous Air Squadrons had embarked upon a policy of
-specialization in tactical employment, in accordance with the build
-and capacities of the aeroplanes with which they were equipped. Thus
-gradually the whole range of utilization became covered, from the
-small fast single-seater fighting scout, intended to engage and drive
-off enemy 'planes, to the slower two-seater reconnaissance machines,
-employed chiefly for photography and for the direction of Artillery
-fire, and the giant long-distance bombing machines.
-
-The Australian Corps had at its exclusive disposal at all times the
-No. 3 Squadron of the Australian Flying Corps, and employed the
-machines for reconnaissance prior to and after battle, and for contact
-and counter-attack work and Artillery observation during battle.
-But, whenever the scope of the operations rendered it necessary, the
-resources of the Corps in aircraft were enormously increased, and as
-many as a dozen squadrons were on occasions employed, during battle,
-in low flying pursuit of enemy infantry and transport, in production
-of smoke screens, in bombing, in ammunition carrying, and in dispatch
-bearing--over and above usual reconnaissance work designed to keep
-Corps and Divisional Headquarters rapidly and minutely informed, from
-moment to moment, of the situation of the Infantry in actual contact
-with the enemy.
-
-Another branch of the Air Force activities under the direct control
-of the Corps was the Captive Balloon Service. Some five large captive
-or kite balloons, carrying trained Artillery Observers, regularly
-ascended along the Corps front whenever the weather and the conditions
-of visibility permitted, to a height of from 2,000 to 3,000 feet, and
-with the aid of powerful telescopes and of telephone wires woven into
-the anchoring cables, kept the Artillery regularly notified of all
-visible enemy movement, and of the occurrence of all suitable targets
-of opportunity, such as the flashes from enemy guns in action.
-
-During battle one such balloon was invariably sent up well forward
-to observe as closely as possible the progress of the fighting, but
-the results were almost uniformly disappointing, because the smoke
-and dust of the barrage and the general murk of battle usually proved
-impenetrable to the air observer, tied as he was to a fixed position.
-The reports of these observers were usually confined to the laconic
-observation: "Can't see much, but all apparently going well."
-
-The last of the major fighting units of Corps Troops remaining to
-be mentioned are the Tanks. These extraordinary products of the war
-underwent a remarkable evolution during the two years which followed
-their first introduction on the battlefield in the Somme campaign of
-1916. The standard of efficiency which had been reached by the early
-summer of 1918, in the most developed types of these curious monsters,
-as far outclassed that of the earlier types in both mechanical and
-fighting properties as the modern service rifle compared with the old
-Brown Bess of the Peninsular War. The Tank crews had improved in like
-proportion, both in skill, enterprise and adaptability.
-
-[Illustration: The Australian Corps Commander--with the Generals of his
-Staff.]
-
-[Illustration: The Valley of the Somme--looking East towards Bray,
-which was then still in enemy hands.]
-
-Nothing can be more unstinted than the acknowledgment which the
-Australian Corps makes of its obligation to the Tank Corps for its
-powerful assistance throughout the whole of the great offensive.
-Commencing with the battle of Hamel, a large contingent of Tanks
-participated in every important "set-piece" engagement which the Corps
-undertook. The Tanks were organized into Brigades, each of three
-Battalions, each of three Companies, each of twelve Tanks. During the
-opening phases, early in August, the Tank contingent comprised a whole
-Brigade of Mark V. Tanks, a Battalion of Mark V. (Star) Tanks, and
-a Battalion of fast Armoured Cars; in the later phases, during the
-assault on the Hindenburg Line, a second Brigade of Mark V. Tanks and
-a Battalion of Whippets also co-operated.
-
-Such was the formidable array of fighting resources under the direct
-orders of the Australian Corps Commander, and, together with the five
-Australian Divisions, formed a fighting organization of great strength
-and solidarity. It became an instrument for offensive warfare, as has
-been said by a high authority, which for size and power excelled all
-Corps organizations which either this or any previous war had produced.
-It was an instrument which it was a great responsibility, as also a
-great honour, to wield in the task of shattering the still formidable
-military power of the enemy. For in the early summer of 1918, that
-power appeared to be still unimpaired, and still capable of inflicting
-serious reverses upon the Allied cause.
-
-Early in 1918, owing to the depletion of human material, the Imperial
-Divisions were reconstituted by a reduction of their Infantry Brigades
-from a four-battalion to a three-battalion basis, thus reducing the
-available infantry by twenty-five per cent. But in this reduction, the
-Australian Divisions during the fighting period shared only to a very
-small extent. In March the strength of the 15 Brigades of Australian
-Infantry in the field was still 60 Battalions. The heavy fighting of
-March and April compelled the extinction of 3 Battalions, one each
-respectively in the 9th, 12th and 13th Infantry Brigades; but the
-remaining 57 Battalions of Infantry remained intact until after the
-close of the actual fighting operations early in October. The Corps was
-therefore enabled to maintain an additional twelve battalions over and
-above the then prevailing corresponding Imperial organization.
-
-It was thus the largest of all Army Corps ever organized, in this or
-any other war, by any of the combatants--the largest both in point of
-numbers and of military resources of all descriptions, approaching, and
-in one case exceeding, a full Army command.
-
-But even these great resources and responsibilities were added to,
-during the course of the operations, by the allocation, at successive
-times, to the Australian Corps of the 17th Imperial Division, the 32nd
-Imperial Division and the 27th and 30th American Divisions. Thus,
-during the closing days of September, 1918, the Corps numbered a total
-of nearly 200,000 men, exceeding more than fourfold the whole of the
-British troops under the command of the Duke of Wellington at the
-Battle of Waterloo.
-
-Of this total about one-half comprised Australian troops, the Heavy
-Artillery and other Army units attached to the Corps consisting of
-Imperial troops. The Commanders and Staffs from June, 1918, until the
-end consisted almost entirely of Australian officers, among whom the
-following were the senior:
-
- Corps Commander Lieut.-General Sir J. Monash,
- G.C.M.G., K.C.B., V.D.
- Corps Chief-of-Staff Brigadier-General T. A. Blamey,
- C.M.G., D.S.O.
- Corps Artillery Commander Brigadier-General W. A. Coxen,
- C.B., C.M.G., D.S.O.
- Chief Engineer Brigadier-General C. H. Foott,
- C.B., C.M.G.
-
- 1st Div. Commander Major-General Sir T. W. Glasgow,
- K.C.B., D.S.O.
- General Staff Officer Lieut.-Colonel A. M. Ross, C.M.G.,
- D.S.O.
- Chief Admin. Officer Lieut.-Colonel H. G. Viney,
- C.M.G., D.S.O.
-
- 2nd Div. Commander Major-General Sir C. Rosenthal,
- K.C.B., C.M.G., D.S.O.
- General Staff Officer Lieut.-Colonel C. G. N. Miles,
- C.M.G., D.S.O.
- Chief Admin. Officer Lieut.-Colonel J. M. A. Durrant,
- C.M.G., D.S.O.
-
- 3rd Div. Commander Major-General Sir J. Gellibrand,
- K.C.B., D.S.O.
- General Staff Officer Lieut.-Colonel C. H. Jess, C.M.G.,
- D.S.O.
- Chief Admin. Officer Lieut.-Colonel R. E. Jackson,
- D.S.O.
-
- 4th Div. Commander Major-General E. G. Sinclair-Maclagan,
- C.B., D.S.O.
- General Staff Officer Lieut.-Colonel J. D. Lavarack,
- C.M.G., D.S.O.
- Chief Admin. Officer Lieutenant-Colonel R. Dowse,
- D.S.O.
-
- 5th Div. Commander Major-General Sir J. J. T. Hobbs,
- K.C.B., K.C.M.G., V.D.
- General Staff Officer Lieut.-Colonel J. H. Peck, C.M.G.,
- D.S.O.
- and later Lieut.-Colonel J. T. McColl,
- O.B.E., M.C.
- Chief Admin. Officer Colonel J. H. Bruche, C.B., C.M.G.
-
-All the above were Australian Officers, and most of them were of
-Australian birth. There were also two senior staff officers of the
-Regular Army, Brigadier-General R. A. Carruthers, C.B., C.M.G., who
-was Chief of the Administrative Services, and Brigadier-General L.
-D. Fraser, C.B., C.M.G., who was in immediate command of the Heavy
-Artillery of the Corps.[2]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] A _Division_ consists of three Infantry Brigades, Divisional
-Artillery, three Field Companies of Engineers, three Field Ambulances,
-a Pioneer Battalion, a Machine Gun Battalion, together with Supply,
-Sanitary and Veterinary Services. Its nominal strength is 20,000.
-
-An _Infantry Brigade_ consists of four Infantry Battalions, each of
-1,000 men, and a Light Trench Mortar Battery.
-
-Divisional Artillery comprises two Brigades each of four batteries,
-each of six guns or howitzers, also one Heavy and three medium Trench
-Mortar Batteries, and the Divisional Ammunition Column.
-
-This composition of a Division was modified in detail during the course
-of the war.
-
-[2] For grouping of Australian Brigades into Divisions, see Appendix
-"A."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-BACK TO THE SOMME
-
-
-The early days of the year 1918 found the Australian Corps consisting
-of the First, Second, Third and Fifth Australian Divisions, while
-the Fourth had been transferred far south to co-operate in the later
-developments of the Cambrai fighting. The Corps was then holding,
-defensively, a sector of the line in Flanders, which had in the
-previous years of the war become, at various times, familiar to all
-our Divisions, and which extended from the river Lys at Armentières,
-northwards, as far as to include the southern half of the Messines
-Ridge.
-
-It was, indeed, that very stretch of country, which in June, 1917,
-had been captured by our Third Division, in co-operation with the New
-Zealanders. Opposite its centre lay the town of Warneton, still in the
-hands of the enemy. Excepting for a small area of undulating ground in
-the extreme north of the Corps sector, the country was a forbidding
-expanse of devastation, flat and woebegone, with long stretches of
-the front line submerged waist deep after every freshet in the river
-Lys, and with the greater part of our trench system like nothing but a
-series of canals of liquid mud.
-
-This unsavoury region formed, however, the most obvious line of
-approach for an enemy who, debouching from the direction of Warneton,
-aimed at the high land between us and the Channel Ports; so that,
-tactically useless as were these mud flats, it was imperative that
-they should be strongly defended, in order to protect from capture
-the important heights of Messines, Kemmel, Hill 63, Mont des Cats and
-Cassel.
-
-During the fighting of the preceding summer and early autumn, which
-gave the Australian troops possession of this territory, the locality
-was dry, practicable for movement, and reasonably comfortable for the
-front line troops. Now it was water-logged, often ice-bound, bleak
-and inhospitable. The precious months of dry weather, between August
-and October, 1917, had been allowed to pass without any comprehensive
-attempt on the part of those Divisions which had relieved the Second
-Anzac Corps after its capture of this ground to perfect the defences of
-the newly-conquered territory. At any rate, there was little to show
-for any work that may have been attempted.
-
-Now, in the very depth of the worst season of the year, the demand
-came to prepare the region for defence and resistance to the last;
-for the threat of a great German offensive in the opening of the
-1918 campaigning season was already beginning to take shape. It was
-the Australian Corps which was called upon to answer that demand.
-There followed week after week of heart-breaking labour, much of it
-necessarily by night, in draining the flat land, in erecting acre upon
-acre of wire entanglements, in constructing hundreds of strong points,
-and concrete machine gun emplacements. Trenches had to be dug, although
-the sides collapsed unless immediately revetted with fascines or sheet
-iron; roads had to be repaired, and vain attempts were made to provide
-the trench garrisons with dry and bearable underground living quarters.
-
-The monotony of all this labour, which long after--when the Australians
-had disappeared from the scene and were again fighting on the
-Somme--proved to have been undertaken all in vain, was relieved only
-by an occasional raid, undertaken by one or other of our front line
-Divisions, for the purpose of molesting the enemy and gathering
-information. The Corps front was held by two Divisions in line, one in
-support, and one resting in a back area; the rotation of trench duty
-gave each Division about six weeks in the line.
-
-My own command at that juncture still comprised the Third Australian
-Division, which I had organized and trained in England, eighteen
-months before. Although this Division had never been on the Somme,
-it had seen a great deal of fighting in Flanders during 1917. During
-this period, therefore, and until the outbreak of the storm in the
-last days of March, 1918, my interest centred chiefly in the doings of
-the Third Division, although for a very short period I had the honour
-of commanding the Corps during the temporary absence of Sir William
-Birdwood.
-
-The information at our disposal led to the inevitable conclusion that,
-during January and February, the enemy was busy in transferring a great
-mass of military resources from the Russian to the Western Front. No
-one capable of reading the signs entertained the smallest doubt that he
-contemplated taking the offensive, in the spring, on a large scale. The
-only questions were, at what point would he strike? and what tactics
-would he employ?
-
-Every responsible Australian Commander, accordingly, during those
-months, applied himself diligently to these problems, formulated his
-doctrines of obstinate defence, and of the defensive offensive; and saw
-to it that his troops received such precognition in these matters as
-was possible at such a time and in such an environment. The principles
-of defence in successive zones, of the rapid development of Infantry
-and Artillery fire power, of the correct distribution of machine guns,
-of rearguard tactics, and questions of the best equipment for long
-marches and rapid movement were debated and resolved upon, in both
-official and unofficial conferences of officers.
-
-All this discussion bore good fruit. Among the possible rôles which
-the Australian Divisions might be called upon to fill, when the great
-issue was joined, were those which involved these very matters. And so
-the event proved; and the Australians then approached their new and
-unfamiliar tasks, not wholly unprepared by training and study for the
-difficulties involved.
-
-It was on March 8th that the Third Division bade a last but by no
-means a regretful farewell to the mud of Flanders and Belgium--regions
-which it had inhabited almost continuously for the preceding sixteen
-months. The Division moved back for a well-earned rest, to a pleasant
-countryside at Nielles-lez-Blequin, not far from Boulogne. It was lying
-there, enjoying the first signs of dawning spring when, on March 21st,
-the curtain was rung up for a great drama, in which the Australian
-troops were destined to play no subordinate part.
-
-There followed many weeks of crowded and strenuous days, and the
-story of this time must, of necessity, assume the form of a personal
-narrative. Events followed one upon the other so rapidly, and the
-centre of interest changed so quickly from place to place and from hour
-to hour, that no recital except that of the future historian writing
-with a wealth of collected material at his disposal, could take upon
-itself any other guise than that of a record of individual experience.
-
-The Germans attacked the front of the Fifth British Army on March
-21st. The information which was at the disposal of our High Command
-was not of such a nature that the promulgation of it would have been
-calculated to elevate the spirits of the Army; consequently Divisions
-situated as we were, in Reserve, and, for the time being, entirely out
-of the picture, had to depend for our news partly upon rumour, which
-was always unreliable, and partly upon severely censored communiqués,
-framed so as to allay public anxiety. Nothing definite emerged from
-such sources, except that things were going ill and that fighting was
-taking place on ground far behind what had been our front line near
-St. Quentin. This hint was enough to justify the expectation that my
-Division would not be left for long unemployed; and on the same day,
-March 21st, instructions were issued for all units to prepare for a
-move, to dump unessential baggage, to fill up all mobile supplies, and
-to stand by in readiness to march at a few hours' notice.
-
-Orders came to move on March 22nd. The Division was to move _east_,
-that is, back into Flanders, and not south to the Somme Valley, as all
-had hoped. The prescribed move duly started, but by March 24th had
-been arrested, for orders had come to cancel the move and await fresh
-orders. Advanced parties, for billeting duty, were to proceed next
-morning by motor lorry to Doullens, and there await orders. Later came
-detailed instructions that the Division was to be transferred from the
-Australian Corps to the Tenth Corps, which latter was to be G.H.Q.
-Reserve, and that the whole Division was to be moved the next night to
-the Doullens[3] area, the dismounted troops by rail, and the Artillery
-and other mounted units by route-march.
-
-It was evident that the plans of the High Command were the subject
-of rapid changes, in sympathy, probably, with fluctuations in the
-situation, which were not ascertainable by me. There followed a night
-and day of strenuous activity, during which arrangements were completed
-to entrain the three Infantry Brigades and the Pioneers at three
-different railway stations, to start off the whole of the mounted units
-on their long march by road, and to ensure that all fighting troops
-were properly equipped with munitions, food and water, all ready for
-immediate employment. It was well that my Staff responded capably to
-the heavy demands made upon them, and that all this preparatory work
-was efficiently done.
-
-The entrainments commenced at midnight on the 25th and continued all
-night. At break of day on the 26th, after assuring myself that everyone
-was correctly on the move, I proceeded south by motor-car, in the
-endeavour to find the Tenth Corps Headquarters, and to report to them
-for orders. My fruitless search of that forenoon revealed to me the
-first glimpse of the true reason for that far-reaching disorganization
-and confusion which confronted me during the next twenty-four hours.
-
-Over three years of trench warfare had accustomed the whole Army to
-fixed locations for all Headquarters, and to settled routes and lines
-of inter-communication. The powerful German onslaught and the recoil of
-a broad section of our fighting front had suddenly disturbed the whole
-of this complex organization. The Headquarters of Brigades, Divisions,
-and even Corps, ceased to have fixed locations where they could be
-found, or assured lines of telegraph or telephone communications, by
-which they could be reached. Everything was in a state of flux, and the
-process of getting into personal contact with each other suddenly took
-responsible leaders hours where it had previously taken minutes.
-
-In its broad result, this disorganization affected most seriously
-the retiring troops, by depriving them of the advantages of rapidly
-disseminated orders for properly co-ordinated action by a large number
-of Corps and Divisions withdrawing side by side. The consequence
-was, I am convinced, that the recoil--which may have been inevitable
-at first by reason of the intensity of the German attack, and
-because the defensive organization of the Fifth Army had been unduly
-attenuated--was allowed to extend over a much greater distance, and to
-continue for longer, in point of time, than ought to have been the case.
-
-Between Albert and St. Quentin there were in existence several lines
-of defence, which by reason of their topographical features, or the
-existence of trenches and entanglements, were eminently suitable for
-making a stand. Yet no stand was made, at any rate on a broad front,
-because there was no co-ordination in the spasmodic attempts to do so.
-I subsequently learned of more than one instance where Brigades of
-Infantry or of Artillery found themselves perfectly well able to hold
-on, but were compelled to a continued retirement by the melting away of
-the units on their flanks.
-
-I sought the Tenth Corps at Hautcloque, where they were to be. They
-were not there. I proceeded to Frevent, where they were said to have
-been the night before. They had already left. In despair, I proceeded
-to Doullens, resolved at least to ensure the orderly detrainment of my
-Division and their quartering for the following night, and there to
-await further orders. A despatch rider was sent off to G.H.Q. to report
-my whereabouts, and the fact that I was without orders.
-
-Arriving at Doullens, I tumbled into a scene of indescribable
-confusion. The population were preparing to evacuate the town _en
-masse_, and an exhausted and hungry soldiery was pouring into the
-town from the east and south-east, with excited tales that the German
-cavalry was on their heels. Influenced by the persistency of these
-reports, I determined to make, immediately, dispositions to cover the
-detrainment of my troops, so that some show of resistance could be made.
-
-In the midst of all this stress and anxiety, I was favoured by a run
-of good luck. Within half an hour of my reaching Doullens, the first
-of my railway trains arrived, bringing Brigadier-General Rosenthal
-and a battalion of the 9th Brigade, sufficient troops, at any rate,
-to furnish a strong outpost line for covering the eastern approaches
-of Doullens, while the remainder of the Brigade should arrive. These
-arrangements made, I motored to Mondicourt, where almost immediately
-afterwards a train arrived, bringing Brigadier-General McNicoll and the
-first battalion of the 10th Brigade.
-
-There also arrived, almost simultaneously, that rumour with the
-ridiculous _dénouement_, that German armoured motor-cars were
-approaching along the road from Albert and were within three miles of
-that point. Those Armoured Cars proved ultimately to be a train of
-French agricultural implements which a wheezy and rumbling traction
-engine was doing its best to salve. McNicoll likewise received orders
-to put out a line of outposts to cover Mondicourt railway station.
-
-At this point, too, endless streams of dust-begrimed soldiers were
-straggling westwards. McNicoll collected many hundreds of them, and did
-not omit, by very direct methods, to prevail upon all of them who had
-not yet lost their rifles and essential equipment, to call a halt and
-join his own troops in the defensive dispositions which he was making.
-
-My next business was to select a suitable central point at which to
-establish my Headquarters, preferably where I could find a still intact
-telephone service. Again by good luck I found a most suitable location
-in a small château at Couturelle, whose owner hospitably provided a
-much needed meal.
-
-It was there, soon after my arrival, that I learned of the presence
-in the neighbourhood of Major-General Maclagan; this news, implying
-as it did the presence also of some at least of the Fourth Australian
-Division, was a gleam of sunshine in an otherwise gloomy prospect.
-Report said that he was at Basseux, and thither I proceeded, in order
-to arrange, by personal conference with him, some plan for co-ordinated
-action.
-
-Basseux rests on the main road from Doullens to Arras, which lies
-roughly parallel to the line along which, as subsequently transpired,
-the vanguard of the enemy was endeavouring to advance at that part of
-the front. That main road I found packed, for the whole of the length
-which I had to traverse, with a steadily retreating collection of
-heterogeneous units, service vehicles and guns of all imaginable types
-and sizes, intermingled with hundreds of civilian refugees, and farm
-waggons, carts, trollies and barrows packed high with pathetic loads of
-household effects. The retrograde movement was orderly and methodical
-enough, and there was nothing in the nature of a rout, but it was
-nevertheless a determined movement to the rear which evidenced nothing
-but a desire to keep moving.
-
-I found Maclagan at about four o'clock. His Division had already been
-on the move, by bus and route march, for three days without rest. The
-position to the east and south-east of him was obscure, and he also had
-posted a line of outposts in the supposed direction of the enemy, and
-was arranging to despatch his 4th Brigade to Hebuterne (which the enemy
-was reported to have entered), with orders to recapture that town. That
-the enemy was not very far away became evident from the fact that the
-vicinity of the hut in which we were conferring presently came under
-desultory long-range shell-fire.
-
-There was nothing to be done except to arrange jointly to keep up
-an effective and as far as possible continuous line of outposts
-towards the south-east, and to await developments. Having made these
-arrangements I returned along the same crowded road, which was now also
-being leisurely shelled by the enemy, to Couturelle. There I found that
-the principal officers of my Staff had arrived.
-
-Thereupon orders were issued for the concentration, after detrainment,
-of my three Brigades in the following areas, each with due outpost
-precautions, viz.: 9th Brigade at Pas, 10th Brigade at Authie, and 11th
-Brigade at Couin. My Artillery was still distant a full day's march by
-road.
-
-About nine o'clock that evening I received, by telephone, my first
-order from the Tenth Corps. It ran as follows: "A Staff Officer has
-left some time ago on his way to you, carrying instructions for you to
-report personally at once to Corbie for orders. We have since heard
-that you are to go to Montigny instead."
-
-It was nearly an hour before the Staff Officer arrived, having been
-delayed on the road by congestion of traffic. The instructions he
-carried transferred my Division from the Tenth to the Seventh Corps,
-to whom I was to report personally, without delay, at Corbie. It was
-evident from the later telephone message that the Seventh Corps had
-been compelled to withdraw from Corbie, and was proceeding to Montigny.
-
-This was the second stroke of good luck that day; for if the telephone
-message above recited had not overtaken the Staff Officer, it is quite
-probable that I should have already started for a wrong destination,
-and have had to waste valuable time at a most critical juncture. Had
-I failed to find General Congreve, the Seventh Corps Commander, _that
-same night_, it is almost certain that my Division would have arrived
-on the Somme too late to prevent the capture of Amiens.
-
-Setting out from Couturelle shortly after ten o'clock that night,
-accompanied by four of my Staff and two despatch-riders, with two
-motor-cars and two motor cycles, in black darkness, on unfamiliar roads
-congested with refugee traffic, I did not reach Montigny until after
-midnight. I found General Congreve in the corner of a bare salon of
-stately proportions, in a deserted château by the roadside, seated
-with his Chief of Staff at a small table, and examining a map by the
-flickering light of a candle. The rest of the château was in darkness,
-but heaps of hastily dumped Staff baggage impeded all the corridors.
-
-General Congreve was brief and to the point. What he said amounted to
-this: "At four o'clock to-day my Corps was holding a line from Albert
-to Bray, when the line gave way. The enemy is now pushing westwards
-and if not stopped to-morrow will certainly secure all the heights
-overlooking Amiens. What you must try and do is to get your Division
-deployed across his path. The valleys of the Ancre and the Somme offer
-good points for your flanks to rest upon. You must, of course, get as
-far east as you can, but I know of a good line of old trenches, which
-I believe are still in good condition, running from Méricourt-l'Abbé
-towards Sailly-le-Sec. Occupy them, if you can't get further east."
-
-At that juncture General Maclagan arrived and received similar crisp
-orders to bring his Division into a position of support on the high
-land in the bend of the Ancre to the west of Albert. I gleaned further
-that the Seventh Corps was now the south flank Corps of the Third Army,
-and that as the Fifth Army, south of the Somme, had practically melted
-away, while the French were retiring south-westerly and leaving an
-hourly increasing gap between their north flank and the Somme, General
-Byng had resolved to make every effort not only to maintain the flank
-of his Third Army on the Somme, but also to prevent it being turned
-from the south, while the Commander-in-Chief was taking other measures
-to attempt next day to fill the gap above alluded to.
-
-It was already 1 a.m. of March 27th, and I had left my Division twenty
-miles away. Everything depended now on quick decision and faultless
-executive action. It was fortunate that a telephone line to G.H.Q.
-had been found in good working order, and that the services of three
-large motor bus convoys could be arranged for to proceed at once to
-the Doullens area, in order to transport my Infantry during the night
-to the place appointed. I worked with my Staff till nearly break of
-day, considering and settling all detailed arrangements, and we then
-separated in various directions to our appointed tasks.
-
-I proceeded myself a little after dawn, with one Staff Officer, to
-Franvillers, which had been decided upon as the point for leaving the
-buses. There was yet no sign of any Australian troops, and the village
-was being hastily evacuated by the terror-stricken inhabitants. But
-there were ample and visible signs, far away on the high plateau beyond
-the Ancre Valley, that the German line of skirmishers was already on
-the move, slowly driving back the few troops of British Cavalry who
-were, most valiantly, trying to delay their advance.
-
-The next hour was one of intense suspense and expectancy; but my
-anxiety was relieved when there rolled into the village from the
-north, a motor bus convoy of thirty vehicles, crowded with good
-staunch Australian Infantry of the 11th Brigade, and bringing also
-Brigadier-General Cannan and some of his Brigade Staff. It was not the
-first time in the war that the London motor-bus--after abandoning the
-population of the great metropolis to enforced pedestrianism--had
-helped to save a most critical situation.
-
-Almost immediately after, there arrived McNicoll, with a battalion of
-his 10th Brigade. Hour after hour a steady stream of omnibus convoys
-came in. No time was lost in assembling the troops, and in directing
-the Infantry--company after company--down the steep, winding road to
-the little village of Heilly, and thence across the Ancre, to deploy on
-the selected line of defence indicated in the orders above recited.
-
-The spectacle of that Infantry will be ever memorable to me, as one
-of the most inspiring sights of the whole war. Here was the Third
-Division--the "new chum" Division, which, in spite of its great
-successes in Belgium and Flanders, had never been able to boast, like
-its sister Divisions, that it had been "down on the Somme"--come into
-its own at last, and called upon to prove its mettle. And then there
-was the thought that they were going to measure themselves, man to man,
-against an enemy who, skulking behind his field works, had for so long
-pounded them to pieces in their trenches, poisoned them with gas, and
-bombed them as they slept in their billets.
-
-That, at any rate, was the point of view of the private soldier, and no
-one who saw those battalions, in spite of the fatigue of two sleepless
-nights, marching on that crisp, clear spring morning, with head erect
-and the swing and precision of a Royal review parade, could doubt
-that not a man of them would flinch from any assault that was likely
-to fall upon them. Nor was there a man who did not fully grasp that
-upon him and his comrades was about to fall the whole responsibility
-of frustrating the German attempt to capture Amiens and separate the
-Allied Armies.
-
-By midday, the situation was already well in hand, and by four o'clock
-I was able to report to the Seventh Corps that no less than six
-Battalions were already deployed, astride of the triangle formed by the
-Ancre and the Somme, on the line Méricourt--Sailly-le-Sec, distributed
-in a series of "localities" defended by rifles and Lewis guns. As yet
-no Artillery was available.
-
-The 11th Brigade occupied this line to the south of the main road from
-Corbie to Bray, the 10th Brigade continued it to the north of the road,
-while the 9th Brigade was leaving the buses and assembling in the
-neighbourhood of Heilly.
-
-So far, the pressure of the enemy upon my front had not been serious.
-It was obvious that he had, as yet, very little Artillery at his
-disposal. We had not, however, found our front totally devoid of
-defenders. During the forenoon, a few troops of our cavalry, and a
-force under Brigadier-General Cummings, comprising about 1,500 mixed
-infantry, the remnants of a large number of different units of the
-Third Army, were slowly withdrawing under pressure from the advancing
-German patrols. These valiant "die-hards," deserving of the greatest
-praise in comparison with the many thousands of their comrades who had
-withdrawn from any further attempt to stem the onflowing tide, were now
-ordered to retire through my outpost line, thus leaving the Australian
-Infantry at last face to face with the enemy.
-
-These dispositions were completed only in the nick of time. All that
-afternoon the enemy appeared over the sky-line in front of us, both in
-lines of skirmishers and in numerous small patrols, endeavouring to
-work forward in the folds of the ground, and to sneak towards us in the
-gullies. But all of them were received with well directed rifle fire
-and the enemy suffered many losses. Towards nightfall the attempts to
-continue his advance died away.
-
-That was, literally, the end of the great German advance in this part
-of the field, and although, as will be told later, the enemy renewed
-the attempt on several subsequent occasions to reach Amiens, he gained
-not a single inch of ground, but, on the contrary, was compelled in
-front of us to undertake a slow but steady retrograde movement.
-
-Our reconnoitring patrols discovered, however, that the enemy already
-had possession of the village of Sailly-Laurette, and of Marett and
-Treux Woods, but that he was not yet in great strength on the crest
-of the plateau. Orders were issued to perfect the organization of our
-defensive line, put out wire entanglements, dig-in machine guns, and
-rest the troops in relays during the coming night, but not to attempt
-any forward movement until the next night.
-
-My Artillery and other mounted units were still half a day's march
-away; but Brigadier-General Grimwade, their Commander, had been
-instructed to push on in advance, with the whole of the Commanders of
-his Brigades and Batteries. They arrived on the scene in sufficient
-time to enable the whole situation to be examined in the daylight, and
-for detailed action to be decided upon. The Artillery kept coming in
-during the whole of the following night, and although men and horses
-were almost exhausted after two days of forced marching, their spirits
-were never higher. Next morning found the guns already in action, and
-engaging all bodies of the enemy who dared to expose themselves to view.
-
-I must now turn to the Fourth Australian Division. They had been less
-fortunate in several respects. Maclagan was directed to leave behind
-his 4th Brigade, which had on the 26th speedily become committed to
-important operations under the 62nd Division in front of Hebuterne,
-from which village this Brigade had driven the enemy. This left him
-with only two Brigades, the 12th and 13th. He was faced with the
-obligation of bringing his already over-tired infantry, by route march,
-down from the Basseux area, to the high ground west and south-west of
-Albert. That town had fallen and the situation there had, by the 26th,
-also become very critical.
-
-This march was, however, accomplished in strict accordance with orders,
-and was a remarkable feat of endurance by the troops of the 12th and
-13th Brigades. There can be no doubt, however, that the effort was more
-than justified, for the mere presence, in a position of readiness,
-of these two Australian Brigades, did much to steady the situation
-opposite Albert, by heartening the line troops and stimulating their
-Commanders to hang on for a little longer. It was this last effort
-which brought to a standstill the German advance north of the Ancre, as
-the entry of the Third Division had stopped that to the south of that
-river.
-
-After his two Brigades had had only four hours' rest, Maclagan
-took over, with them, the control of the fighting front, opposite
-Dernancourt and Albert, which the Seventh Corps had allotted to him.
-
-Thus, by the night of the 27th, as the result of the rapid movements
-which I have described and the ready response of the troops, there was
-already in position the nucleus of a stout defence by five Australian
-Brigades, stretching almost continuously from Hebuterne to the Somme,
-while another Australian Brigade, the 9th, remained still uncommitted.
-
-But the situation south of the Somme gave cause for the gravest
-anxiety. The north flank of the French was hourly retiring in a
-south-westerly direction, and the ever widening gap was filled only by
-a scratch force of odd units supported and assisted by a few elements
-of the First Cavalry Division. The right flank of our Third Army,
-therefore, lay exposed to the danger of being turned, if the enemy
-should succeed in pressing his advantage as far west as Corbie, and in
-crossing the river at or west of that town.
-
-It was for this reason that, after a conference with General Congreve,
-late in the day, I decided to deploy my 9th Brigade along the Somme
-from Sailly-le-Sec westward as far as Aubigny,[4]--far too extended a
-front for one Brigade, but at least an effort to dispute the passage by
-the enemy of the existing bridges and lock-gates over the Somme.
-
-The two following days were full of toil and hard travelling in
-establishing touch with Divisional Headquarters to the north and south
-of me, in arranging for co-ordinated action with them, and in gleaning
-all possible information as to the situation, and as to the number and
-condition of other troops available in an emergency.
-
-It was an especial pleasure for the Australian troops to find
-themselves fighting in these days in close association with famous
-British Cavalry Regiments, and that these feelings were reciprocated
-may be gathered from the following letter from Major-General Mullens,
-who commanded the First Cavalry Division, which was devoting its
-energies to covering the gap between the Somme and the French flank:
-
- "MY DEAR MONASH,
-
- "I was hoping to have come to see you, when the battle allowed, to
- thank you, your Artillery Commander, and your Brigadiers who were
- alongside of my Division, for your most valuable and encouraging
- support and assistance, especially on the 30th March, when we
- had a hard fight to keep the Bosche out of our position. I was
- very much struck by the courtesy of yourself and your officers
- in coming to see me personally, and for your own and their keen
- desire to do everything in their power to help. As you know, we
- had a curious collection of units to deal with, and it was a very
- real relief to know that I had your stout-hearted fellows on my
- left flank and that all worry was therefore eliminated as to the
- safety of my flanks. Your order for the placing of your heavy guns
- and batteries so as to cover my front was of very real assistance,
- and incidentally they killed a lot of Huns, and what they did was
- much appreciated by us all. Will you convey to all concerned my own
- appreciation, and that of all ranks of the 1st Cavalry Division. It
- was a pleasure and an honour to be fighting alongside troops who
- displayed such magnificent _moral_. I only hope we may have the
- chance of co-operating with you again, and under more favourable
- circumstances.
-
- "Yours sincerely,
- (Sgnd.) "R. L. MULLENS."
-
-On the night of March 29th I advanced my line, pivotting on my right,
-until my left rested on the Ancre east of Buire, an extreme advance of
-over 2,000 yards, meeting some opposition and taking a few prisoners.
-This deprived the enemy of over a mile of valuable vantage ground on
-the crest of the plateau along which ran the main road from Corbie to
-Bray.
-
-[Illustration: MAP A.]
-
-By that time it was apparent that the enemy's Artillery resources
-were hourly accumulating, and on the next afternoon he delivered a
-determined attack along my whole front, employing two Divisions. The
-attack was completely repelled, with an estimated loss to the enemy of
-at least 3,000 killed. My Artillery were firing over open sights and
-had never in their previous experience had such tempting targets.
-
-On the previous day, however, the situation between the Somme and
-Villers-Bretonneux, and still further to the south, had become
-desperate; and much to my discomfiture I was ordered to hand over my
-9th Brigade (Rosenthal) for duty with the 61st Division, in order to
-reinforce that dissolving sector. My importunity as to the necessity
-for maintaining the defence of my river flank, however, led the
-Seventh Corps Commander to let me have, in exchange, the 15th Brigade
-(Elliott), which was the first Brigade of the Fifth Australian Division
-to arrive from Flanders on the present scene of operations. This
-interchange of Brigades was completed by the 30th.
-
-That day was further marked by a concentrated bombardment of the
-village of Franvillers, in which I had established my Headquarters.
-Although no serious loss was suffered, the responsible work of my Staff
-was disturbed. On reporting the occurrence to General Congreve, he
-insisted upon my moving my Headquarters back to St. Gratien, which move
-was completed the next day.
-
-On April 4th the enemy attacked, in force, south of the Somme, and the
-village of Hamel was lost to us by the rout of the remnants of a very
-exhausted British Division which had been sent in the night before to
-defend it. This success gave the enemy a footing upon a portion of Hill
-104, and brought him to the eastern outskirts of Villers-Bretonneux.
-Three months later it cost the Australian Corps a concentrated effort
-to compel him to surrender these advantages.
-
-One last and final attempt to break through the Australian phalanx
-north of the Somme was made by the enemy on April 5th. The full weight
-of this blow fell chiefly upon the gallant Fourth Australian Division.
-The battle of Dernancourt will live long in the annals of military
-history as an example of dogged and successful defence. The whole day
-long the enemy expended Division after Division in the vain endeavour
-to compel two weak Australian Brigades to loosen their hold on the
-important high ground lying west of Albert. He well knew that the
-capture by him of these heights involved the inevitable withdrawal of
-the Third Australian Division also, and that thereby the path to Amiens
-would again lie open.
-
-The great German blow against the important railway centre of Amiens
-had been parried, and from this time onwards interest in this sphere
-of operations rapidly waned. It blazed up again for a few hours only
-when, three weeks later, the enemy made his final attempt to reach
-his goal, on this occasion by way of Villers-Bretonneux. North of
-the Somme, his activity quickly died down, and the attitude of both
-combatants gradually assumed the old familiar aspect of trench warfare,
-with its endless digging of trenches, line behind line, its weary
-trench routine, and its elaborate installation of permanent lines of
-communication and of administrative establishments of all descriptions.
-
-South of the Somme, the Fifth Australian Division came into the line on
-April 5th, relieving a Cavalry Division on a frontage of about 5,000
-yards, and thereby obviating any further necessity for the maintenance
-of my flank river defence. This duty had been performed for me in
-succession by the 15th Australian, the 104th Imperial and the 13th
-Australian Brigades (the latter then under Glasgow). My 9th Brigade
-still remained detached from me, operating under both the 18th and 61st
-British Divisions, and performed prodigies of valorous fighting in a
-series of desperate local attacks and counter-attacks, which took place
-between Villers-Bretonneux and Hangard, where the French northern flank
-then lay. In this service the 9th Brigade received gallant co-operation
-from the 5th Australian Brigade (of the 2nd Australian Division), which
-was now also arriving in this area, after having been relieved from
-trench garrison duty in the Messines--Warneton sector in Flanders.
-
-The Fifth Division and these two detached Brigades were, during
-this period, serving under the Third Corps (Butler), which had been
-reconstituted to fill the gap between the Somme and the flank of
-the French Army. The First Australian Division was already well on
-the way to follow the Second Division, when, on April 11th, it was
-hurriedly re-transferred to Flanders to assist in stemming the new
-German flood which was inundating the whole of that region, and which
-was not arrested until it had almost reached Hazebrouck. This task the
-First Australian Division performed most valiantly, thereby upholding
-the reputation already earned by its younger sister Divisions for a
-capacity for rapid, ordered movement and decisive intervention at a
-critical juncture.
-
-For some days there had been rumours that the Australian Corps
-Headquarters would shortly be transferred to the Amiens area, and
-would once again gather under its control the numerous elements of
-the four Australian Divisions which were by now widely scattered, and
-had been fighting under the orders of three different Army Corps.
-There was the still more interesting and pregnant rumour that General
-Lord Rawlinson--relinquishing his post of British representative on
-the Supreme War Council at Versailles--was soon to arrive and to form
-and command a reconstituted Fourth British Army,[5] which was to be
-composed of the Australian and the Third (British) Army Corps.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[3] The majority of the place-names mentioned in the remainder of this
-chapter will be found on Maps A or J.
-
-[4] Two miles west of Corbie.
-
-[5] The Fourth Army had disappeared when, in 1917, General Rawlinson
-went to Versailles. The Fifth Army was not revived until June, 1918.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE DEFENCE OF AMIENS
-
-
-The Australian Corps Headquarters, under General Birdwood, commenced
-its activities at Villers-Bocage on April 7th, but soon after removed
-to the handsome seventeenth-century Château at Bertangles, with its
-pleasant grounds and spacious parks. One by one the detached Australian
-Brigades rejoined their Divisions, and the Divisions themselves came
-back under the orders of their own Corps.
-
-The comparative calm which had supervened upon all the excitement of
-the closing days of March and the first weeks of April was rudely
-broken when, before daybreak on April 24th, the enemy began a furious
-bombardment of the whole region extending from opposite Albert to a
-point as far south as Hangard. It was certain that this demonstration
-was the prelude of an infantry attack in force, but it was not until
-well after midday that the situation clarified, and it became known
-that the attack had been confined to the country south of the Somme,
-that it had struck the southern flank of the Fifth Australian Division,
-which had stood firm and had thereby saved the loss of the remainder of
-the tactically important Hill 104. But the town of Villers-Bretonneux,
-lying beyond the Australian sector, had fallen and the Germans were in
-possession of it.
-
-It was imperative to retrieve this situation, or at least to make an
-attempt to do so. The nearest available reserve Brigades of Infantry
-were Australian, the 13th under Glasgow, and the 15th under Elliott.
-They were placed under the orders of the Third Corps, and by them
-directed to recapture the town.
-
-Both Brigades had to make long marches to reach the battleground. It
-was already dark before they had deployed on the appointed lines of
-departure. The details of this enthralling and wonderful night attack
-form too lengthy a story to find a place in this brief narrative;
-suffice it to say that when the sun rose on the third Anniversary of
-Anzac Day, it looked down upon the Australians in full possession of
-the whole town, and standing upon our original lines of twenty-four
-hours before, with nearly 1,000 German prisoners to their credit.
-
-In this summary fashion, the last German attempt to split in two the
-Allied Armies failed ignominiously, and the attempt was never again
-renewed.
-
-A comprehensive rearrangement of the whole Front in this much-contested
-region then took place. The appointment of Marshal Foch as Supreme
-Commander on the Western Front bore, as one of its first fruits, a
-clear decision as to the final point of junction between the French and
-the British Armies. This was fixed just south of Villers-Bretonneux,
-and not at the Somme Valley, as was thought desirable by some of the
-British Commanders.
-
-The new Fourth Army became the flank British Army in contact with the
-French. The Australian Corps became the south flank of that Army. Its
-sector extended, from the point named, northwards as far as the Ancre.
-The Third Corps was transferred to the north of the Ancre, opposite
-Albert, and those two Corps comprised, for some time to come, the whole
-of the Fourth Army resources.
-
-The Australian Corps now organized its front with three Divisions in
-line and one in reserve. My occupation, with the Third Australian
-Division, of the original sector between the Ancre and the Somme
-remained undisturbed, and my front line remained for a time stationary
-on the alignment gained on March 29th.
-
-But the Third Division had had enough of stationary warfare, and
-the troops were athirst for adventure. They were tired of raids,
-which meant a mere incursion into enemy territory, and a subsequent
-withdrawal, after doing as much damage as possible.
-
-Accordingly, I resolved to embark upon a series of minor battles,
-designed not merely to capture prisoners and machine guns, but also
-to hold on to the ground gained. This would invite counter-attacks
-which I knew could only enhance the balance in our favour, and would
-seriously disorganize the enemy's whole defensive system, while wearing
-out his nerves and lowering the _moral_ of his troops.
-
-Four such miniature battles[6] were fought in rapid succession, on
-April 30th and May 3rd, 6th and 7th, by the 9th and 10th Brigades, who
-were then in line. These yielded most satisfactory results. Not only
-did we capture several hundred prisoners and numerous machine guns, but
-also advanced our whole line an average total distance of a mile. This
-deprived the enemy of valuable observation, and forced back his whole
-Artillery organization.
-
-But these combats, and the numerous offensive patrol operations, which
-were also nightly undertaken along my whole front, did a great deal
-more. They yielded a constant stream of prisoners, who at this stage of
-the war had become sufficiently demoralized by their disappointments to
-talk freely, and impart a mass of valuable information as to movements
-and conditions behind the German lines.
-
-The following list of 41 separate identifications, covering a total
-of over 300 prisoners, represents the fruits of these efforts during
-the period from March 27th to May 11th. From these it will be seen
-that during these six weeks I had been confronted by no less than six
-different German Divisions:
-
- _No._ _Date._ _Identification._
- 1 28.3.18 3 Gren. R. 1st Div.
- 2 " 13 I.R. 13 "
- 3 " 3 Gren. R. 1st "
- 4 " 1 I.R. 1st "
- " 13 I.R. 13 "
- 5 " 86 Fus. R. 18 "
- 6 " 1 I.R. 1st "
- 7 30.3.18 13 I.R. 13 "
- 8 " 31 I.R. 18 "
- 9 31.3.18 18 "
- 10 1.4.18 20 Foot Arty.
- 11 2.4.18 3 " "
- 12 2/3.4.18 1 R.R.Bav. Ft. Arty.
- 13 " 13 I.R. 13 Div.
- 14 4/5.4.18 1 M.W.Coy. 1st Div.
- 15 6/7.4.18 3 Jäger Bn.
- 16 9/10.4.18 31 I.R. 18 "
- 17 11/12.4.18 31 I.R. 18 "
- 18 13/14.4.18 86 Fus. R. 18 "
- 19 " 31 I.R. 18 "
- 20 14/15.4.18 85 I.R. 18 "
- 21 " 31 I.R. 18 "
- 22 17/18.4.18 229 R.I.R. 30 "
- 23 18/19.4.18 231 R.I.R. 50 "
- 24 " 85 I.R. 18 "
- 25 19/20.4.18 85 I.R. 18 "
- 26 25/26.4.18 246 R.I.R. 54 Res. Div.
- 27 27/28.4.18 229 R.I.R. 50 " "
- 28 28/29.4.18 247 R.I.R. 54 " "
- 29 30/1.5.18 247 R.I.R. 54 " "
- 30 3/4.5.18 357 I.R. 199 Div.
- 31 4/5.5.18 114 I.R. 199 "
- 32 " 31 I.R. 18 "
- 33 5/6.5.18 237 R.I.R. 199 "
- 34 " 114 I.R. 199 "
- 35 6/7.5.18 237 R.I.R. 199 "
- 36 7/8.5.18 114 I.R. 199 "
- 37 8/9.5.18 114 I.R. 199 "
- 38 " 237 R.I.R. 199 "
- 39 " 31 I.R. 18 "
- 40 " 357 I.R. 199 "
- 41 " 357 I.R. 199 "
-
- I.R.=Infantry Regiment; R.I.R.=Reserve ditto.
-
-While I was thus exerting a steady pressure on the enemy and gaining
-ground easterly, the Australian Corps line south of the Somme remained
-stationary, and each successive advance north of the river served only
-to accentuate the deep re-entrant which had been formed on the day when
-the loss of Hamel forced the British front line back along the Somme as
-far as Vaire-sous-Corbie.
-
-While this was not very serious from the point of view of observation,
-because I was in possession of much the higher ground, and was able to
-look down, almost as upon a map, on to the enemy in the Hamel basin,
-yet I was beginning to feel very seriously the inconvenience of having,
-square on to my flank, such excellent concealed Artillery positions as
-Vaire and Hamel Woods, which the enemy did not long delay in occupying.
-
-Moreover, the whole of the slopes of the valley on my side of the river
-remained useless to me, because they were exposed to the full view of
-the enemy, so long as he was permitted to occupy the Hamel salient,
-which he had on April 5th driven into the very middle of what was now
-the Corps front. I therefore made more than one attempt to persuade the
-then Corps Commander to undertake an operation for the elimination in
-whole or in part of this inconvenient bend, but, for reasons doubtless
-satisfactory at that time, he declined to accept the suggestion. It
-fell to my lot myself to carry out this operation nearly two months
-later.
-
-The Third Division was, however, relieved in the line by our Second
-Division on May 11th, and was withdrawn for a short but well-earned
-rest after six weeks of trench duty, following its first fateful rush
-into the thick of the battle.
-
-It was on May 12th that I received the first intimation from General
-Sir William Birdwood that he was to be appointed to the command of a
-new Fifth Army, which the British War Council had decided to form, and
-that, upon his taking up these new duties, the task of leading the
-Australian Army Corps would devolve upon me.
-
-In consequence of this and other changes, it was shortly afterwards
-decided, in consultation, that Glasgow should take over the command of
-the First Division, then still fighting at Hazebrouck, that Rosenthal
-should command the Second Division, and that Gellibrand should succeed
-me at the head of the Third Division.
-
-Far, therefore, from being permitted a little respite from the
-strenuous labours of the preceding six weeks, I found myself confronted
-with responsibilities which, in point of numbers alone, exceeded
-sixfold those which I had previously had to bear, but which, in point
-of difficulty, involved an even higher ratio.
-
-There were numerous Arms and Services, under the Corps, with whose
-detailed functions and methods of operation I had not been previously
-concerned. The other Divisional Commanders had hitherto been my
-colleagues, and I was now called upon to consider their personalities
-and temperaments as my subordinates. There was a vastly increased
-territory for whose administration and defence I would become
-responsible. I had to be prepared to enter an atmosphere of policy
-higher and larger than that which surrounded me as the Commander of a
-Division. And finally there was the selection of my new Staff.
-
-[Illustration: German Prisoners--taken by the Corps at Hamel, being
-marched to the rear.]
-
-[Illustration: Visit of Monsieur Clemenceau--group taken at Bussy on
-July 7th, 1918.]
-
-My last executive work with the Third Division was the process
-of putting this Division back into the line, this time in the
-Villers-Bretonneux sector of our front. After handing over the Division
-and all its outstanding current affairs to Major-General Gellibrand,
-I assumed command of the Australian Army Corps on May 30th, with
-Brigadier-General Blamey as my Chief-of-Staff.[7]
-
-I very soon became aware that, as Corps Commander, I was privileged to
-have access to a very large body of interesting secret information,
-which was methodically distributed daily by G.H.Q. Intelligence. This
-comprised detailed information of the true facts of all happenings
-on the fronts of all the Allies, the gist of the reports of our
-Secret Service, and very full particulars from which the nature and
-distribution of the enemy's military resources could be deduced with
-fair accuracy.
-
-The numberings and locations of all his Corps and Divisions actually
-in the front line, on all the Allied fronts, was, of course, quite
-definitely known from day to day. The numberings of all Formations
-lying in Reserve were known with equal certainty, although their actual
-positions on any date were largely a matter of deduction by expert
-investigators. Of particular importance were the further deductions
-which could be drawn as to the condition of readiness or exhaustion
-of such reserve Divisions, from known facts as to their successive
-appearance and experiences on any active battle front.
-
-Our experts were thus able to classify the enemy Divisions, and to
-determine from day to day the probable number, and even the probable
-numberings, of fit Divisions actually available (after one, or after
-two, or after three days) to reinforce any portion of the front which
-was to be the object of an attack by us. They could also compute the
-number of fit Divisions which the enemy had at his disposal at any time
-for launching an offensive against us.
-
-All such data had a very direct bearing, not only on the probable
-course of the campaign in the immediate future, but also upon the
-responsibility which always weighed upon a Corps Commander of keeping
-his own sector in preparedness to meet an attack or to prevent such an
-attack from coming upon him as a surprise. He must therefore be alert
-to watch the signs and astute to read them aright.
-
-One striking feature of the information at our disposal during the
-early part of June was the steady melting away of the enemy reserves
-as the consequence of his resultless, even if locally successful,
-assaults during the preceding two and a half months, against Amiens,
-in Flanders, and on the Chemin des Dames. But it was apparent that he
-still held formidable Reserves of Infantry, and a practically intact
-Artillery, which he was bound to employ for at least one great and
-final effort to gain a decision.
-
-The junction of the French and British Armies still offered a tempting
-point of weakness. As mine was now the flank British Corps, in
-immediate contact with General Toulorge's 31st French Corps, I could
-not afford to relax any of the precautions of vigilance or preparation
-which had been initiated by my predecessor for meeting such an attack.
-Consequently, during June, 1918, I ordered on the part of all my line
-Divisions a maintenance of their energetic efforts to perfect the
-defensive organizations. I also undertook out of other Corps labour
-resources the development of further substantial rear systems of
-defence, so that Amiens need not, in the event of a renewed attack, be
-abandoned to its fate without a prolonged struggle.
-
-The First Australian Division was not yet a part of my new Command,
-its continued presence in the Hazebrouck and Merris area, under the
-Fifteenth Corps, being still considered indispensable. My Corps front
-now extended over a total length of ten miles, and I had but four
-Divisions at my disposal to defend it. Three Divisions held the line,
-one to the north and two to the south of the Somme. Only one Division
-at a time could therefore be permitted a short rest, and this Division
-formed my only tactical reserve.
-
-All this added to the anxieties of the situation, and focussed the
-energies of the whole command on a constant scrutiny of all signs and
-symptoms that the enemy might be preparing to deliver his next blow
-against us. Active patrolling was maintained and continued to yield
-a steady stream of prisoners. A well conceived and planned minor
-enterprise by the Second Division, which was carried out on June 10th,
-and was Rosenthal's first Divisional operation, gave us possession
-of a further slice of the important ridge between Sailly-Laurette
-and Morlancourt. It gained us 330 prisoners and 33 machine guns. But
-no sign of any preparations on the part of the enemy for an attack
-upon us, in this zone, emerged from the careful investigations which
-followed this operation.
-
-The days passed and evidences increased that the enemy was now
-beginning to devote his further attentions to the French front far to
-the south of us. At any rate, he continued to leave us unmolested, and
-the interrogations of our numerous prisoners all confirmed the absence
-of any preparations for an attack.
-
-The defensive attitude which the situation thus forced upon us did
-not for long suit the present temper of the Australian troops, and
-I sought for a promising enterprise on which again to test their
-offensive power, on a scale larger than we had yet attempted in the
-year's campaign. There had been no Allied offensive, of any appreciable
-size, on any of our fronts, in any of the many theatres of war, since
-the close of the Passchendaele fighting in the autumn of 1917.
-
-It was high time that the anxiety and nervousness of the public, at
-the sinister encroachments of the enemy upon regions which he had
-never previously trodden, should be allayed by a demonstration that
-there was still some kick left in the British Army. It was high time,
-too, that some Commanders on our side of No Man's Land should begin to
-"think offensively," and cease to look over their shoulders in order to
-estimate how far it still was to the coast.
-
-I was ambitious that any such kick should be administered, first,
-at any rate, by the Australians. A visit which I was privileged to
-pay to General Elles, Commander of the Tank Corps, when he gave me
-a demonstration of the capacities of the newer types of Tanks, only
-confirmed me in this ambition. Finally, the Hamel re-entrant had for
-two months been, as I have already explained, a source of annoyance and
-anxiety to me. It was for these reasons that I resolved to propose an
-operation for the recapture of Hamel, conditional upon being supplied
-with the assistance of Tanks, a small increase of my Artillery and an
-addition to my air resources.
-
-I thereupon set about preparing a general plan for such a battle,
-which was to be my first Corps operation. Having mentioned the matter
-first verbally to Lord Rawlinson, he requested me to submit a concrete
-proposal in writing. The communication is here reproduced, and will
-serve to convey an idea of the complexities involved in even so
-relatively small an undertaking:
-
- Australian Corps.
- 21st June, 1918.
-
- _Fourth Army._
-
- HAMEL OFFENSIVE
-
-1. With reference to my proposal for an offensive operation on the
-front of the "A" and "B" Divisions of this Corps, with a view to
-the capture of HAMEL Village and VAIRE and HAMEL WOOD, etc., the
-accompanying map shows, in blue, the proposed ultimate objective
-line. This line has been chosen as representing the minimum
-operation that would appear to be worth undertaking, while offering
-a prospect of substantial advantages.
-
-2. These advantages may be briefly summarized thus:
- (a) Straightening of our line.
- (b) Shortening of our line.
- (c) Deepening our forward defensive zone, particularly east of Hill
- 104.
- (d) Improvement of jumping-off position for future operations.
- (e) Advancement of our artillery, south of the SOMME.
- (f) Denial to enemy of observation of ground near VAUX-SUR-SOMME,
- valuable for battery positions.
- (g) Facilitating subsequent further minor advances north of the
- SOMME.
- (h) Disorganization of enemy defences.
- (i) Disorganization of possible enemy offensive preparations.
- (j) Inflicting losses on enemy personnel and material.
- (k) Improvement of our observation.
- (l) Maintenance of our initiative on this Corps front.
-
-3. The disadvantages are those arising from the necessity of bringing
-into rapid existence a new defensive system on a frontage of 7,000
-yards and also the particular incidence, at the present juncture, of
-the inevitable losses, small or large, of such an operation in this
-Corps.
-
-4. In view of the unsatisfactory position of Australian reinforcements,
-any substantial losses would precipitate the time when the question of
-the reduction in the number of Australian Divisions would have to be
-seriously considered. It is for higher authority to decide whether a
-portion of the present resources in Australian man-power in this Corps
-would be more profitably ventured upon such an operation as this, which
-is in itself a very attractive proposition, rather than to conserve
-such resources for employment elsewhere.
-
-5. Detailed plans can only be prepared after I have had conferences
-with representatives of all Arms and Services involved, but the
-following proposals are submitted as the basis of further elaboration:
-
- (a) The operation will be primarily a Tank operation--at least one
- and preferably two Battalions of Tanks to be employed.
- (b) The whole battle front will be placed temporarily under command
- of one Divisional Commander--by a temporary readjustment of
- inter-Divisional boundaries.
- (c) The infantry employed will comprise one Division plus a
- Brigade, _i.e._, 4 Infantry Brigades, totalling, say, 7,500
- bayonets; about one-half of this force to be employed in the
- advance and the other half to hold our present front defensively,
- taking over the captured territory within 48 hours after Zero.[8]
- (d) The action will be designed on lines to permit of the Tanks
- effecting the capture of the ground; the rôles of the Infantry
- following the Tanks will be:
- (i) to assist in reducing strong points and localities.
- (ii) to "mop up."
- (iii) to consolidate the ground captured.
- (e) Apart from neutralizing all enemy artillery likely to engage our
- troops, our artillery will be employed to keep under fire enemy
- centres of resistance and selected targets--in front of the advance
- of the Tanks. Artillery detailed for close targets will work on a
- prearranged and detailed time-table which will be adjusted to the
- time-table of the Tank and Infantry advance. Sufficient "silent"
- field artillery supplied before the battle should be emplaced in
- advanced positions, to ensure an effective protective barrage
- to cover consolidation on the blue line,[9] and to engage all
- localities from which enemy counter-attacks can be launched. It is
- estimated that, in addition to the resources of the Corps, four
- Field Artillery Brigades will be required for, say, four days in
- all.
- (f) Engineer stores in sufficient quantities to provide for the
- complete organization of the new defences will require to be dumped
- beforehand as far forward as practicable.
- (g) No additional machine guns, outside of Corps resources, will be
- required,
- (h) Contact and counter-attack planes and low-flying bombing planes
- prior to and during advance must be arranged for.
- (i) Artillery and mortar smoke to screen the operations from view of
- all ground north of the Somme in the SAILLY-LAURETTE locality are
- required.
-
-6. As to the date of the operations, the necessary preparations will
-occupy at least seven days after authority to proceed has been given.
-As an inter-Divisional relief is planned to occur on June 28th-29th and
-29th-30th, it would seem that this operation cannot take place earlier
-than the first week in July. The postponement of this relief would not
-be desirable for several reasons.
-
-7. Valuable training in the joint action of Tanks and Infantry can be
-arranged, probably in the territory west of the HALLUE Valley--provided
-that one or two Tank Companies can be detached for such a purpose.
-Thorough liaison prior to and during the operation between all Tank
-and all Infantry Commanders would have to be a special feature. For
-this reason only Infantry units not in the line can be considered as
-available to undergo the necessary preparation.
-
- (Sgd.) JOHN MONASH,
- Lieut.-General.
- Cmdg. Australian Corps.
-
-Approval to these proposals was given without delay; the additional
-resources were promised, and preparations for the battle were
-immediately put in hand. As I hope, in a later context, to attempt to
-describe the evolution of a battle plan, and the comprehensive measures
-which are associated with such an enterprise, it will not be necessary
-to do so here.
-
-It was the straightening of the Corps front, as an essential
-preliminary to any offensive operations on a still larger scale, to
-be undertaken when the opportune moment should arrive, that made the
-Hamel proposal tactically attractive; it was the availability of an
-improved type of Tank that gave it promise of success, without pledging
-important resources, or risking serious losses.
-
-The new Mark V. Tank had not previously been employed in battle. It
-marked a great advance upon the earlier types. The epicyclic gearing
-with which it was now furnished, the greater power of its engines,
-the improved balance of its whole design gave it increased mobility,
-facility in turning and immunity from foundering in ground even of the
-most broken and uneven character. It could be driven and steered by one
-man, where it previously took four; and it rarely suffered suspended
-animation from engine trouble.
-
-But, above all, the men of the Tank Corps had, by the training which
-they had undergone, and by the spirited leadership of Generals Elles,
-Courage, Hankey and other Tank Commanders, achieved a higher standard
-of skill, enterprise and moral; they were now, more than ever, on their
-mettle to uphold the prestige of the Tank Corps.
-
-All the same, the Tanks had become anathema to the Australian troops.
-For, at Bullecourt more than a year before, they had failed badly,
-and had "let down" the gallant Infantry, who suffered heavily in
-consequence; a failure due partly to the mechanical defects of the
-Tanks of those days, partly to the inexperience of the crews, and
-partly to indifferent staff arrangements, in the co-ordination of the
-combined action of the Infantry and the Tanks.
-
-It was not an easy problem to restore to the Australian soldier his
-lost confidence, or to teach him the sympathetic dependence upon the
-due performance by the Tanks of the rôles to be allotted to them, which
-was essential to a complete utilization of the possibilities which were
-now opening up. That the Tanks, appropriately utilized, were destined
-to exert a paramount influence upon the course of the war, was apparent
-to those who could envisage the future.
-
-This problem was intensified because the battalions of the Fourth
-Division who were to carry out the Infantry tasks at Hamel were the
-very units who had undergone that unfortunate experience at Bullecourt.
-But, on the principle of restoring the nerves of the unseated rider by
-remounting him to continue the hunt, it was especially important to
-wean the Fourth Division from their prejudices.
-
-Battalion after battalion of the 4th, 6th and 11th Brigades of Infantry
-was brought by bus to Vaux, a little village tucked away in a quiet
-valley, north-west of Amiens, there to spend the day at play with the
-Tanks. The Tanks kept open house, and, in the intervals of more formal
-rehearsals of tactical schemes of attack, the Infantry were taken
-over the field for "joy rides," were allowed to clamber all over the
-monsters, inside and out, and even to help to drive them and put them
-through their paces. Platoon and Company leaders met dozens of Tank
-officers face to face, and they argued each other to a standstill upon
-every aspect that arose.
-
-Set-piece manoeuvre exercises on the scale of a battalion were designed
-and rehearsed over and over again; red flags marked enemy machine-gun
-posts; real wire entanglements were laid out to show how easily the
-Tanks could mow them down; real trenches were dug for the Tanks to
-leap and straddle and search with fire; real rifle grenades were fired
-by the Infantry to indicate to the Tanks the enemy strong points
-which were molesting and impeding their advance. The Tanks would throw
-themselves upon these places, and, pirouetting round and round, would
-blot them out, much as a man's heel would crush a scorpion.
-
-It was invaluable as mere training for battle, but the effect upon the
-spirits of the men was remarkable. The fame of the Tanks, and all the
-wonderful things they could do, spread rapidly throughout the Corps.
-The "digger" took the Tank to his heart, and ever after, each Tank
-was given a pet name by the Company of Infantry which it served in
-battle, a name which was kept chalked on its iron sides, together with
-a panegyric commentary upon its prowess.
-
-There remained, however, much to be arranged, and many difficult
-questions to be settled, as regards the tactical employment of the
-Tanks. I can never be sufficiently grateful to Brigadier-General
-Courage, of the 5th Tank Brigade, for his diligent assistance, and
-for his loyal acceptance of the onerous conditions which the tactical
-methods that I finally decided upon imposed upon the Tanks.
-
-These methods involved two entirely new principles. Firstly, each
-Tank was, for tactical purposes, to be treated as an Infantry weapon;
-from the moment that it entered the battle until the objective had
-been gained it was to be under the exclusive orders of the Infantry
-Commander to whom it had been assigned.
-
-Secondly, the deployed line of Tanks was to advance, _level with the
-Infantry_, and pressing close up to the barrage. This, of course,
-subjected the Tanks, which towered high above the heads of the
-neighbouring infantry, to the danger of being struck by any of our own
-shells which happened to fall a little short. Tank experts, consulted
-beforehand, considered therefore that it was not practicable for Tanks
-to follow close behind an artillery barrage. The battle of Hamel proved
-that it was.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[6] See Map A.
-
-[7] A farewell order to the Third Division was issued in the following
-terms:
-
-"As I am about to take up other duties the time has come when I must
-relinquish the command of the Division.
-
-"Closely associated with you as I have been, since the days of your
-first assembly and War Training in ENGLAND, and, later, throughout all
-your magnificent work during the past nineteen months in the war zone,
-it is naturally a severe wrench for me to part from you.
-
-"I find it quite impossible to give adequate expression to my feelings
-of gratitude towards all ranks for the splendid and loyal support which
-you have, at all times, accorded to me. I am deeply indebted to my
-Staff, to all Commanders and to the officers and troops of all Arms and
-Services for a whole-hearted co-operation upon which, more than upon
-any other factor, the success of the Division has depended.
-
-"It is my earnest hope, and also my sincere conviction, that the fine
-spirit and the high efficiency of the Division will be maintained
-under the leadership of my successor, Brigadier-General Gellibrand;
-and if the men of the Division feel, as I trust they do, an obligation
-to perpetuate for my sake the traditions built up by them during the
-period of my command, they can do so in no better way than by rendering
-to him a service as thorough and a support as loyal as I have been
-privileged to enjoy at their hands.
-
-"In formally wishing the Division good-bye and good luck, I wish
-simply, but none the less sincerely, to thank each and all of you, for
-all that you have done.
-
- "(Signed) JOHN MONASH,
- Major-General."
-
-[8] "Zero" refers to the day and hour, not yet determined, on which the
-battle is to begin.
-
-[9] "Blue Line," arbitrarily so called, because this line was drawn on
-the accompanying map in blue. It was to be the final objective for the
-day.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-HAMEL
-
-
-The larger questions relating to the employment of the Tanks at the
-battle of Hamel having been disposed of, the remaining arrangements
-for the battle presented few novel aspects. Their manner of execution,
-however, brought into prominence some features which became fundamental
-doctrines in the Australian Corps then and thereafter.
-
-Although complete written orders were invariably prepared and issued by
-a General Staff whose skill and industry left nothing to be desired,
-very great importance was attached to the holding of conferences, at
-which were assembled every one of the Senior Commanders and heads of
-Departments concerned in the impending operation. At these I personally
-explained every detail of the plan, and assured myself that all present
-applied an identical interpretation to all orders that had been issued.
-
-Questions were invited; difficulties were cleared up; and the
-conflicting views of the different services on matters of technical
-detail were ventilated. The points brought to an issue were invariably
-decided on the spot. The battle plan having been thus crystallized,
-no subsequent alterations were permissible, under any circumstances,
-no matter how tempting. This fixity of plan engendered a confidence
-throughout the whole command which facilitated the work of every
-Commander and Staff Officer. It obviated the vicious habit of
-postponing action until the last possible moment, lest counter orders
-should necessitate some alternative action. It was a powerful factor
-in the gaining of time, usually all too short for the extensive
-preparations necessary.
-
-The final Corps Conference for the battle of Hamel was held at
-Bertangles on June 30th, and the date of the battle itself was fixed
-for July 4th. This selection was prompted partly by the desire to allow
-ample time for the completion of all arrangements; but there were also
-sentimental grounds, because this was the anniversary of the American
-national holiday, and a considerable contingent of the United States
-Army was to co-operate in the fight.
-
-For some weeks previously the 33rd American Division, under
-Major-General John Bell, had been training in the Fourth Army area,
-and its several regiments had been distributed, for training and
-trench experience, to the Australian and the III. Corps. I had applied
-to the Fourth Army and had received approval to employ in the battle
-a contingent equivalent in strength to two British battalions, or a
-total of about 2,000 men, organized in eight companies. The very proper
-condition was attached, however, that these Americans should not be
-split up and scattered individually among the Australians, but should
-fight at least as complete platoons, under their own platoon leaders.
-
-All went well until three days before the appointed date, when General
-Rawlinson conveyed to me the instruction that, the matter having been
-reconsidered, only 1,000 Americans were to be used. Strongly averse,
-as I was, from embarrassing the Infantry plans of General Maclagan, to
-whom I had entrusted the conduct of the actual assault, it was not then
-too late to rearrange the distribution.
-
-The four companies of United States troops who, under this decision,
-had to be withdrawn were loud in their lamentations, but the remaining
-four companies were distributed by platoons among the troops of the
-three Australian Brigades who were to carry out the attack--each
-American platoon being assigned a definite place in the line of battle.
-The dispositions of the main body of Australian infantry were based
-upon this arrangement.
-
-In the meantime, somewhere in the upper realms of high control, a
-discussion must have been going on as to the propriety of after
-all allowing any American troops at all to participate in the
-forthcoming operations. Whether the objections were founded upon
-policy, or upon an under-estimate of the fitness of these troops for
-offensive fighting, I have never been able to ascertain; but, to my
-consternation, I received about four o'clock on the afternoon of July
-3rd, a telephone message from Lord Rawlinson to the effect that it had
-now been decided that _no_ American troops were to be used the next day.
-
-I was, at the moment, while on my daily round of visits to Divisions
-and Brigades, at the Headquarters of the Third Division, at Glisy, and
-far from my own station. I could only request that the Army Commander
-might be so good as to come at once to the forward area and meet me at
-Bussy-les-Daours, the Headquarters of Maclagan--he being the Commander
-immediately affected by this proposed change of plan. In due course we
-all met at five o'clock, Rawlinson being accompanied by Montgomery, his
-Chief-of-Staff.
-
-It was a meeting full of tense situations--and of grave import. At that
-moment of time, the whole of the Infantry destined for the assault at
-dawn next morning, including those very Americans, was already well
-on its way to its battle stations; the Artillery was in the act of
-dissolving its defensive organization with a view to moving forward
-into its battle emplacements as soon as dusk should fall; I well knew
-that even if orders could still with certainty reach the battalions
-concerned, the withdrawal of those Americans would result in untold
-confusion and in dangerous gaps in our line of battle.
-
-Even had I been ready to risk the success of the battle by going ahead
-without them, I could not afford to take the further risk of the
-occurrence of something in the nature of an "international incident"
-between the troops concerned, whose respective points of view about the
-resulting situation could be readily surmised. So I resolved to take a
-firm stand and press my views as strongly as I dared; for even a Corps
-Commander must use circumspection when presuming to argue with an Army
-Commander.
-
-However, disguised in the best diplomatic language that I was able to
-command, my representations amounted to this: firstly, that it was
-already too late to carry out the order; secondly, that the battle
-would have to go on either with the Americans participating, or not
-at all; thirdly, that unless I were expressly ordered to abandon the
-battle, I intended to go on as originally planned; and lastly, that
-unless I received such a cancellation order before 6.30 p.m. it would
-in any case be too late to stop the battle, the preliminary phases of
-which were just on the point of beginning.
-
-As always, Lord Rawlinson's charming and sympathetic personality made
-it easy to lay my whole case before him. He was good enough to say
-that while he entirely agreed with me, he felt himself bound by the
-terms of a clear order from the Commander-in-Chief. My last resource,
-then, was to urge the argument that I felt perfectly sure that the
-Commander-in-Chief when giving such an order could not have had
-present to his mind the probability that compliance with it meant the
-abandonment of the battle, and that, under the circumstances, it was
-competent for the senior Commander on the spot to act in the light of
-the situation as known to him, even to the extent of disobeying an
-order.
-
-Rawlinson agreed that this view was correct provided the
-Commander-in-Chief was not accessible for reference. Repeated attempts
-to raise General Headquarters from Bussy eventually elicited the
-information that the Field Marshal was then actually on his way from
-Versailles, and expected to arrive in half an hour. Thereupon Rawlinson
-promised a decision by 6.30, and we separated to rejoin our respective
-Headquarters.
-
-In due course, the Army Commander telephoned that he had succeeded
-in speaking to the Field Marshal, who explained that he had directed
-the withdrawal of the Americans in deference to the wish of General
-Pershing, but that, as matters stood, he now wished everything to go on
-as originally planned. And so--the crisis passed as suddenly as it had
-appeared. For, to me it had taken the form of a very serious crisis,
-feeling confident as I did of the success of the forthcoming battle,
-and of the far-reaching consequences which would be certain to follow.
-It appeared to me at the time that great issues had hung for an hour or
-so upon the chance of my being able to carry my point.
-
-An interesting episode, intimately bound up with the story of this
-battle, was the visit to the Corps area on July 2nd of the Prime
-Minister of the Commonwealth, Mr. W. M. Hughes, and Sir Joseph Cook,
-the Minister of the Navy. They arrived all unconscious of the impending
-enterprise, but only by taking them fully into my confidence could I
-justify my evident preoccupation with other business of first-class
-importance. Most readily, however, did they accommodate themselves to
-the exigencies of the situation.
-
-Both Ministers accompanied me that afternoon on a tour of inspection
-of the eight battalions who were then already parading in full battle
-array, and on the point of moving off to the assembly positions from
-which next day they would march into battle. The stirring addresses
-delivered to the men by both Ministers did much to hearten and
-stimulate them. As they were on their way to an Inter-Allied War
-Council at Versailles, the personal contact of the Ministers with the
-actual battle preparations had the subsequent result of focussing upon
-the outcome of the battle a good deal of interest on the part of the
-whole War Council.
-
-The fixing of the exact moment for the opening of a battle has always
-been the subject of much controversy. As in many other matters, it
-becomes in the end the responsibility of one man to make the fatal
-decision. The Australians always favoured the break of day, as this
-gave them the protection of the hours of darkness for the assembly of
-the assaulting troops in battle order in our front trenches. But there
-must be at least sufficient light to see one's way for two hundred
-yards or so, otherwise direction is lost and confusion ensues.
-
-The season of the year, the presence and altitude of the moon, the
-prospect of fog or ground mist, the state of the weather, and the
-nature and condition of the ground are all factors which affect the
-proper choice of the correct moment. To aid a decision, careful
-observations were usually made on three or four mornings preceding the
-chosen day. A new factor on this occasion was the strong appeal by the
-Tanks for an extra five minutes of dawning light, to ensure a true line
-of approach upon the allotted objective, whether a ruined village, or
-a thicket, or a field work.
-
-The decision actually given by me was that "Zero" would be ten minutes
-past three, and every watch had been carefully synchronized to the
-second, to ensure simultaneous action. A perfected modern battle plan
-is like nothing so much as a score for an orchestral composition, where
-the various arms and units are the instruments, and the tasks they
-perform are their respective musical phrases. Every individual unit
-must make its entry precisely at the proper moment, and play its phrase
-in the general harmony. The whole programme is controlled by an exact
-time-table, to which every infantryman, every heavy or light gun, every
-mortar and machine gun, every tank and aeroplane must respond with
-punctuality; otherwise there will be discords which will impair the
-success of the operation, and increase the cost of it.
-
-The morning of July 4th was ushered in with a heavy ground mist.
-This impeded observation and made guidance difficult, but it greatly
-enhanced the surprise. The unexpected occurrence of this fog lessened
-the importance of the elaborate care which had been taken to introduce
-into the Artillery barrage a due percentage of smoke shell, and to form
-smoke screens by the use of mortars on the flanks of the attack. But
-the fog largely accounted for the cheap price at which the victory was
-bought.
-
-No battle within my previous experience, not even Messines, passed off
-so smoothly, so exactly to time-table, or was so free from any kind of
-hitch. It was all over in ninety-three minutes. It was the perfection
-of team work. It attained all its objectives; and it yielded great
-results. The actual assault was delivered, from right to left, by two
-battalions of the 6th Brigade, three battalions of the 4th Brigade,
-and three battalions of the 11th Brigade. It was also part of the plan
-that advantage was taken by a battalion of the 15th Brigade to snatch
-from the enemy another slice of territory far away in the Ancre Valley,
-opposite Dernancourt, and so, by extending the battle front, further to
-distract him.
-
-The attack was a complete surprise, and swept without check across the
-whole of the doomed territory. Vaire and Hamel Woods fell to the 4th
-Brigade, while the 11th Brigade, with its allotted Tanks, speedily
-mastered Hamel Village itself. The selected objective line was reached
-in the times prescribed for its various parts, and was speedily
-consolidated. It gave us possession of the whole of the Hamel Valley,
-and landed us on the forward or eastern slope of the last ridge, from
-which the enemy had been able to overlook any of the country held by us.
-
-Still more important results were that we gathered in no less than
-1,500 prisoners, and killed and disabled at least as many more, besides
-taking a great deal of booty, including two field guns, 26 mortars
-and 171 machine guns--at a cost to us of less than 800 casualties
-of all kinds, the great majority of whom were walking wounded. The
-Tanks fulfilled every expectation, and the suitability of the tactics
-employed was fully demonstrated. Of the 60 Tanks utilized, only 3 were
-disabled, and even these 3 were taken back to their rallying points
-under their own power the very next night. Their moral effect was also
-proved, and, with the exception of a few enemy machine-gun teams,
-who bravely stood their ground to the very last, most of the enemy
-encountered by the Tanks readily surrendered.
-
-Shortly after the battle, G.H.Q. paid the Australian Corps the
-compliment of publishing to the whole British Army a General Staff
-brochure,[10] containing the complete text of the orders, and a
-full and detailed description of the whole of the battle plans and
-preparations, with an official commentary upon them. The last paragraph
-of this document, which follows, expresses tersely the conclusions
-reached by our High Command:
-
- "81. The success of the attack was due:
-
- (a) To the care and skill as regards every detail with which the
- plan was drawn up by the Corps, Division, Brigade and Battalion
- Staffs.
- (b) The excellent co-operation between the infantry, machine
- gunners, artillery, tanks and R.A.F.
- (c) The complete surprise of the enemy, resulting from the manner
- in which the operation had been kept secret up till zero hour.
- (d) The precautions which were taken and successfully carried out
- by which no warning was given to the enemy by any previous activity
- which was not normal.
- (e) The effective counter-battery work and accurate barrage.
- (f) The skill and dash with which the tanks were handled, and the
- care taken over details in bringing them up to the starting line.
- (g) Last, but most important of all, the skill, determination and
- fine fighting spirit of the infantry carrying out the attack."
-
-Of the extent to which the tactical principles, and the methods of
-preparation which had been employed at Hamel, came to be utilized by
-other Corps in the later fighting of 1918 no reliable record is yet
-available to me. But within the Corps itself this comparatively small
-operation became the model for all enterprises of a similar character,
-which it afterwards fell to the lot of the Corps to carry out.
-
-The operation was a small one, however, only by contrast with the
-events which followed, although not in comparison with some of the
-major operations which had preceded it--by reference to the number
-of troops engaged, although not to the extent of territory or booty
-captured. Although only eight Battalions (or the equivalent of less
-than one Division) were committed in the actual assault, the territory
-recovered was more than four times that which was, in the pitched
-battles of 1917, customarily allotted as an objective to a single
-Division. The number of prisoners in relation to our own casualties was
-also far higher than had been the experience of previous years. Both
-of these new standards which had thus been set up may be regarded as
-flowing directly from the employment of the Tanks.
-
-Among other aspects of this battle which are worthy of mention is the
-fact that it was the first occasion in the war that the American
-troops fought in an offensive battle. The contingent of them who joined
-us acquitted themselves most gallantly and were ever after received by
-the Australians as blood brothers--a fraternity which operated to great
-mutual advantage nearly three months later.
-
-This was the first occasion, also, on which the experiment was made of
-using aeroplanes for the purpose of carrying and delivering small-arms
-ammunition. The "consolidation" of a newly-captured territory implies,
-in its broadest sense, its organization for defence against recapture.
-For such a purpose the most rapidly realizable expedient had been
-found to be the placing of a predetermined number of machine guns in
-previously chosen positions, arranged chequer-wise over the captured
-ground. According to such a plan, suitable localities were selected by
-an examination of the map and a specified number of Vickers machine-gun
-crews were specially told off for the duty of making, during the
-battle, by the most direct route, to the selected localities, there
-promptly digging in, and preparing to deal with any attempt on the part
-of the enemy to press a counter-attack.
-
-The main difficulty affecting the use of machine guns is the
-maintenance for them of a regular and adequate supply of ammunition.
-Heretofore this function had to be performed by infantry ammunition
-carrying parties. It required two men to carry one ammunition box,
-holding a thousand rounds, which a machine gun in action could easily
-expend in less than five minutes. Those carrying parties had to travel
-probably not less than two to three miles in the double journey across
-the open, exposed both to view and fire. Casualties among ammunition
-carriers were always substantial.
-
-It was therefore decided to attempt the distribution of this class of
-ammunition by aeroplane. Most of the machines of the Corps Squadron
-were fitted with bomb racks and releasing levers. It required no great
-ingenuity to adapt this gear for the carrying by each plane of two
-boxes of ammunition simultaneously, and to arrange for its release,
-by hand lever, at the appropriate time. It remained to determine, by
-experiment, the correct size and mode of attachment for a parachute for
-each box of ammunition, so that the box would descend from the air
-slowly, and reach the ground without severe impact.
-
-It was Captain Wackett, of the Australian Flying Corps, who perfected
-these ideas, and who trained the pilots to put them into practice. Each
-machine-gun crew, upon reaching its appointed locality, spread upon
-the ground a large V-shaped canvas (V representing the word "Vickers")
-as an intimation to the air of their whereabouts, and that they needed
-ammunition. After a very little training, the air-pilots were able
-to drop this ammunition from a height of at least 1,000 feet to well
-within 100 yards of the appointed spot. In this way, at least 100,000
-rounds of ammunition were successfully distributed during this battle,
-with obvious economy in lives and wounds. The method thus initiated
-became general during later months.
-
-The Corps also put into practice, on this occasion, a stratagem which
-had frequently on a smaller scale been employed in connection with
-trench raids. Our Artillery was supplied with many different types
-of projectile, but among them were both gas shell and smoke shell.
-The latter were designed to create a very palpable smoke cloud, to be
-employed for the purpose of screening an assault, but were otherwise
-harmless. The former burst, on the other hand, with very little
-evolution of smoke, but with a pronounced and easily recognized smell,
-and their gas was very deadly.
-
-My practice was, therefore, during the ordinary harassing fire in
-periods between offensive activities, always to fire both classes of
-shell _together_, so that the enemy became accustomed to the belief
-at the least that our smoke shells were invariably accompanied by gas
-shell, even if he did not believe that it was the smoke shell which
-alone gave out the warning smell. The effect upon him of either belief
-was, however, the same; for it compelled him in any case to put on his
-gas mask in order to protect himself from gas poisoning.
-
-On the actual battle day, however, we fired smoke shell _only_, as we
-dared not vitiate the air through which our own men would shortly pass.
-But the enemy had no rapid means of becoming aware that we were firing
-only harmless smoke shell. He would, therefore, promptly don his gas
-mask, which would obscure his vision, hamper his freedom of action,
-and reduce his powers of resistance. On July 4th both the 4th and 11th
-Brigades accordingly took prisoner large numbers of men who were found
-actually wearing their gas masks. The stratagem had worked out exactly
-as planned.
-
-The battle was over, and when the results were made known there
-followed the inevitable flow of congratulatory messages from superiors,
-and colleagues and friends, from all parts of the Front and from
-England. The following telegrams received from the Commonwealth Prime
-Minister were particularly gratifying:
-
- 1. "On behalf of Prime Minister of Britain, and also of Prime
- Ministers of Canada, New Zealand and Newfoundland, attending
- VERSAILLES Council, I am commissioned to offer you our warmest
- congratulations upon brilliant success of Australian Forces under
- your command, and to say that the victory achieved by your Troops
- is worthy to rank with greatest achievements of Australian Armies."
-
- 2. "My personal congratulations and those of the Government of
- Commonwealth on brilliant success of battle. Please convey to
- Officers and Men participating in attack warmest admiration of
- their valour and dash and manner in which they have maintained
- highest traditions of Australian Army. I am sure that achievement
- will have most considerable military and political effect upon
- Allies and neutrals, and will heighten _moral_ of all Imperial
- Forces."
-
- 3. "In company with Mr. Lloyd George and General Rawlinson to-day
- saw several hundred of prisoners taken by Australian Troops in
- battle before Hamel. Rawlinson expressed to me the opinion that
- the operation was a brilliant piece of work. Please convey this to
- troops."
-
-The following message transmitted to me by the Commander of the Fourth
-Army was also received from the Field Marshal Commanding-in-Chief:
-
- "Will you please convey to Lieutenant-General Sir John Monash and
- all Ranks under his command, including the Tanks and the detachment
- of 33rd American Division, my warm congratulations on the success
- which attended the operation carried out this morning, and on the
- skill and gallantry with which it was conducted.
-
- "D. HAIG."
-
-A steady stream of visitors also set in, including numbers of General
-Staff Officers, who had been sent down from other Corps and Armies to
-gather information as to the methods employed. Everyone, of course,
-recognized that there was only one War, and that it was to the mutual
-benefit of all that all expedients calculated to accelerate the end of
-it should become the common property of all. My Staff were accordingly
-kept busy for many days with maps and diagrams explaining the lines on
-which the enterprise had been carried out.
-
-The most distinguished and most welcome of all our visitors, however,
-was Monsieur Clemenceau, the veteran statesman of France, who, in spite
-of the physical effort, immediately after the sitting of the Versailles
-War Council had closed, made haste to travel to the Amiens area, and
-to visit the Corps for the special purpose of thanking the troops. He
-arrived on July 7th, and a large assemblage of Australian soldiers who
-had participated in the battle, and who were resting from their labours
-near General Maclagan's Headquarters at Bussy, were privileged to hear
-him address them in English in the following terms:
-
- "I am glad to be able to speak at least this small amount of
- English, because it enables me to tell you what all French people
- think of you. They expected a great deal of you, because they have
- heard what you have accomplished in the development of your own
- country. I should not like to say that they are surprised that you
- have fulfilled their expectations. By that high standard they judge
- you, and admire you that you have reached it. We have all been
- fighting the same battle of freedom in these old battlegrounds.
- You have all heard the names of them in history. But it is a great
- wonder, too, in history that you should be here fighting on the old
- battlefields, which you never thought, perhaps, to see. The work of
- our fathers, which we wanted to hand down unharmed to our children,
- the Germans tried to take from us. They tried to rob us of all
- that is dearest in modern human society. But men were the same in
- Australia, England, France, Italy, and all countries proud of being
- the home of free people. That is what made you come; that is what
- made us greet you when you came. We knew you would fight a real
- fight, but we did not know that from the very beginning you would
- astonish the whole Continent with your valour. I have come here
- for the simple purpose of seeing the Australians and telling them
- this. I shall go back to-morrow and say to my countrymen: 'I have
- seen the Australians; I have looked into their eyes. I know that
- they, men who have fought great battles in the cause of freedom,
- will fight on alongside us, till the freedom for which we are all
- fighting is guaranteed for us and our children.'"
-
-The French inhabitants of the Amiens district were also highly elated
-at the victory. The city itself had been, for some weeks, completely
-evacuated, by official order. Not only had it become the object of
-nightly visitations by flights of Gothas; but also, somewhere in the
-east and far beyond the reach of my longest range guns, the enemy had
-succeeded in emplacing a cannon of exceptionally large calibre, range
-and power, which took its daily toll of the buildings of this beautiful
-city.
-
-The anniversary of the French national fête was approaching, and the
-Prefect of the Department of the Somme, Monsieur Morain--appreciating
-the significance of the Hamel victory as a definite step towards the
-ultimate disengagement of the city from the German terror--determined
-to make the celebration of this fête not only a compliment to the
-Australian Corps, but also a proof of the unquenchable fortitude of the
-people of his Department.
-
-Accordingly, in the Hôtel de Ville, in the very heart of the deserted
-city, amidst the crumbling ruins of its upper stories, and of the
-devastation of the surrounding city blocks, he presided at a humble
-but memorable repast, which had been spread in an undamaged apartment,
-inviting to his board a bare twenty representatives of the French and
-British Armies, and of the city of Amiens. While we toasted the King
-and the Republic, and voiced the firm resolve of both Allies to see
-the struggle through to the bitter end, the enemy shells were still
-thundering overhead.
-
-But other matters than rejoicings in a task thus happily accomplished
-compelled my chief attention during the remaining days of this July. I
-had to study and gauge accurately the tactical and strategical results
-of the victory of Hamel, and to lose no time in using the advantage
-gained. The moral results both on the enemy and on ourselves were far
-more important, and deserve far more emphasis than do the material
-gains.
-
-It was, as I have said, the first offensive operation, on any
-substantial scale, that had been fought by any of the Allies since the
-previous autumn. Its effect was electric, and it stimulated many men
-to the realization that the enemy was, after all, not invulnerable, in
-spite of the formidable increase in his resources which he had brought
-from Russia. It marked the termination, once and for all, of the purely
-defensive attitude of the British front. It incited in many quarters an
-examination of the possibilities of offensive action on similar lines
-by similar means--a changed attitude of mind, which bore a rich harvest
-only a very few weeks later.
-
-But its effect on the enemy was even more startling. His whole front
-from the Ancre to Villers-Bretonneux had become unstable, and was
-reeling from the blow. It was only the consideration that I had still
-to defend a ten-mile front, and had still only one Division in reserve
-in case of emergency, that deterred me from embarking at once upon
-another blow on an even larger scale. But I seized every occasion to
-importune the Army Commander either to narrow my front, or to let the
-First Division from Hazebrouck join my command, or both; but so far
-without result.
-
-[Illustration: MAP B.]
-
-The only course that remained open to me was to initiate immediate
-measures for taking the fullest advantage of the enemy's demoralization
-by exploiting the success obtained to the utmost possible extent. No
-later than on the afternoon of the battle of Hamel itself, orders were
-issued to all three line Divisions to commence most vigorous offensive
-patrolling all along the Corps front, with a view not merely to prevent
-the enemy from re-establishing an organized defensive system, but
-also ourselves to penetrate the enemy's ground by the establishment
-therein of isolated posts, as a nucleus for subsequent more effective
-occupation.
-
-Enterprise of such a nature appeals strongly to the sporting instinct
-of the Australian soldier. Divisions, Brigades and Battalions vied
-with each other in predatory expeditions, even in broad daylight, into
-the enemy's ground, and a steady stream of prisoners and machine guns
-flowed in. On the nights of July 5th and 6th, the Fifth Division, now
-in the sector between the Ancre and the Somme, possessed themselves
-with very little effort of a strip of some three hundred acres of
-hostile positions, bringing our front line so near to Morlancourt as to
-make that village no longer tenable by the enemy.
-
-On the same nights, and again on July 8th and 9th, the Second and
-Fourth Divisions advanced their lines by an average of two hundred to
-three hundred yards along their respective fronts, and this advance
-was, in the case of the Second Division, particularly valuable in
-carrying our front line over the crest of the plateau of Hill 104, and
-giving us clear and unbroken observation far into the enemy's country,
-in the directions of Warfusee and Marcelcave.
-
-It was a period replete with instances of individual enterprise and
-daring adventure. One incident, characteristic of the varied efforts
-of these days, was the capture, single-handed, and in broad daylight,
-by Corporal W. Brown, V.C., of the 20th Battalion, Second Division, of
-an officer and eleven men of the German Army, whom he stalked as they
-lay skulking in a trench dug-out not far from his observation post, and
-terrorized into submission by the threat of throwing a bomb at them.
-
-But perhaps the best testimony of the successful activities of my
-troops during this period, and of the serious impression which
-they made upon the enemy, can be gathered by extracts from his own
-documents, a number of which were captured during this and subsequent
-fighting. Of these, the following, issued by the Second German Army
-Headquarters (Von der Marwitz), are among the more interesting:
-
- "The enemy has in his minor enterprises again taken prisoner a
- complete front line battalion and part of a support battalion. The
- reason is our faulty leadership."
-
- "The enemy penetrated the forward zone of the 108th Division
- by means of large patrols at midnight, on July 8th, 1918,
- without any artillery preparation, and again on the same
- night at 11 p.m., with artillery preparation, astride of the
- Marcelcave--Villers-Bretonneux railway. He occupied the trenches
- where our most advanced outposts lay, and took the occupants,
- comprising fifteen men, prisoner. The larger part of the forward
- zone has been lost."
-
- "In the case of the present trench Division, it has often happened
- that _complete_ picquets have disappeared from the forward zone
- without a trace."
-
-All the above refers to the period between July 4th and 12th. We read
-again under date July 13th:
-
- "During the last few days the Australians have succeeded in
- penetrating, or taking prisoner, single posts or picquets. They
- have gradually--sometimes even in daylight--succeeded in getting
- possession of the majority of the forward zone of a whole Division."
-
- "Troops must fight. They must not give way at every opportunity and
- seek to avoid fighting, otherwise they will get the feeling that
- the enemy are superior to them."
-
-[Illustration: Railway Gun, 11.2-inch Bore--captured near Rosières on
-August 8th, 1918.]
-
-[Illustration: German Depot of Stores--captured on August 8th, 1918.]
-
-One last extract from these interesting papers:
-
- "The best way to make the enemy more careful in his attempt to
- drive us bit by bit out of the outpost line and forward zone is to
- do active reconnaissance and carry out patrol encounters oneself.
- In this respect absolutely nothing seems to have been done. If the
- enemy can succeed in scoring a success without any special support
- by artillery or assistance from special troops, we must be in a
- position to do the same."
-
-Our line in front of Villers-Bretonneux had for months run very close
-to the eastern outskirts of that town, a circumstance which cramped and
-embarrassed our defence of it. The enemy could peer into its streets
-and sweep them with machine guns. He had held in strength a locality
-known as Monument Wood, the ruins of a once prosperous orchard, and his
-possession of it had been a source of annoyance both to us and to the
-French, for it lay just opposite the international boundary posts.
-
-The time seemed opportune for a set-piece operation designed to
-advance our line opposite the town by 1,000 yards, on a broad front,
-to dislodge the enemy from Monument Wood, gain valuable elbow room,
-and obtain mastery of the remainder of the plateau on which the town
-was built. I had actually completed the draft of a plan for such an
-operation, and had held a preliminary conference with my Staff to
-discuss it, when it became apparent that the nightly encroachments
-which the Second Division were effecting in this region would, in
-the course of a few days, achieve the capture of the whole of this
-territory without any special organized effort at all.
-
-And so it proved; for before the middle of July, Rosenthal had
-succeeded in possessing himself, by such a process of "peaceful
-penetration," of the whole of the coveted area. It was a further
-evidence of the serious demoralization which our aggressive attitude of
-the preceding months had wrought among the German forces opposed to us.
-
-The era of minor aggression by the Australian Corps was, however, about
-to draw to a close, and the situation was rapidly beginning to shape
-itself for greater events.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[10] Staff-Sheet No. 218: "Operations of the Australian Corps against
-Hamel, etc.," published July, 1918.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-TURNING THE TIDE
-
-
-The course of events during June and July pointed to the conclusions,
-firstly, that the enemy contemplated no further offensive operations in
-the Somme Valley, and, secondly, that the condition of the whole German
-Second Army, astride of the Somme, offered every temptation to us to
-seize the initiative against it.
-
-So far as the Australian Corps was concerned, however, my total
-frontage, which had been increased (as the result of our exploitation)
-to over eleven miles, precluded the possibility, with only four
-Divisions at my disposal, of maintaining, even if I could succeed in
-initiating, an ambitious offensive. The time was nevertheless ripe for
-action on a scale far more decisive than had become orthodox in the
-British Army in the past. Efforts on that method had been confined to a
-thrust, limited in point both of distance and of time, and followed by
-a period of inaction; they had often given the enemy ample leisure to
-recover, and to reorganize his order of battle.
-
-To maintain an offensive, day after day, indefinitely, would require
-sufficient resources, particularly in infantry, to allow Divisions to
-be used alternatingly. Only in such a way, by having rested Divisions
-always available to alternate with tired Divisions, could a continuous
-pressure be maintained.
-
-I took every opportunity of pressing these views upon the Army
-Commander, and expressed the readiness of the Australian Corps to
-undertake and maintain a long sustained offensive, provided that
-arrangements could be made to shorten my frontage from a three to a
-two-Division battle front, and to increase my resources, from the
-present four, to five or even six Divisions. It was further essential
-that in any advances attempted by us, other Corps must co-operate on
-both flanks.
-
-It would be bad tactics to drive into the enemy's front a salient
-with a narrow base, for such a salient would make our situation worse
-instead of better, affording to the enemy the opportunity of artillery
-attack upon it from both its flanks as well as from its front. The
-salient must therefore be broad based in relation to its depth, and the
-base must ever widen as the head of the salient advances.
-
-This principle implied that a large-scale operation of such a nature
-must be begun on a whole Army front, and that, even at its inception,
-at least three Corps must co-operate, to be aided by the entry of
-additional Corps on the outer flanks as the central depth developed. In
-other words, it was a project implying a large commitment of resources,
-and the urgent question was whether the time was yet ripe for taking
-the risks involved.
-
-The matter, however, now became a subject at least worthy of practical
-discussion, and, during the days which followed Hamel, the Staffs of
-both the Corps and Army were kept busy with the investigation of data,
-maps, and information, while the availability of additional resources
-in guns, tanks and aeroplanes became the subject of anxious inquiry.
-
-A circumstance which troubled me sorely was the fact that my Corps
-stood on the flank of the British Army, and that the troops on my right
-belonged to the French Army. The relations between the Australian
-troops and the Tirailleurs and Zouaves of the 31st French Corps
-(General Toulorge) had always been the very friendliest, and the joint
-"international" posts had been the scenes of hearty fraternization and
-of the evolution of a strange common vernacular.
-
-This comradeship of "poilu" with "digger" did not, however, lessen
-the difficulties incidental to the joint conduct of a major Operation
-of War by two Corps of different nationalities, speaking different
-languages, with diverse tactical conceptions, and, above all, of
-substantially divergent temperaments. The French are irresistible in
-attack as they are dogged in defence, but whether they will attack or
-defend depends greatly on their temperament of the moment. In this
-they are totally unlike the British or Australian soldier who will at
-any time philosophically accept either rôle that may be prescribed for
-him.
-
-In short, it was not possible to hope for an effective co-ordination
-of effort, controlled particularly by the minute observance of a
-time-table, on the part of the Australian and its adjacent French
-Corps, and I felt quite unprepared to count upon it. It was for
-this reason that I expressed to the Army Commander the hope that a
-British Corps might be obtainable to operate on my right flank in any
-undertaking that should be decided upon. Understanding that the greater
-part of the Canadian Corps was then unemployed, resting in a back area,
-I ventured to hope that this Corps might be made available, in the
-event of a decision that the proposal should be proceeded with.
-
-My hesitation to accept the French as colleagues in such a battle
-was based not altogether on theoretical or sentimental grounds.
-The steady progress in mopping up enemy territory to the east of
-Villers-Bretonneux, which had been made by my south flank Division
-(the Second) as the aftermath of Hamel, soon produced a contortion of
-the Allied front line at this point which bade fair to prove just as
-troublesome to me as had been the great re-entrant opposite Hamel,
-which that battle had been specially undertaken to eliminate.
-
-No persuasions on my part, or on that of my flank Division, could
-induce the adjacent French Division to extend any co-operation in these
-advances or to adopt any measures to flatten out the re-entrant which,
-growing deeper every day, threatened to expose my right flank. I am
-convinced that such hesitation was based upon no timidity, but was the
-result wholly of an entirely different outlook and policy from those
-which the Australian Corps was doing its best to interpret. But the
-experience of it made the prospect of punctual co-operation on their
-part in much more serious undertakings distinctly less encouraging.
-
-The proposed offensive involved, therefore, far-reaching
-redispositions, comprising a substantial displacement southwards of
-the inter-Allied boundary, a lengthening by several miles of the whole
-British Western front, and an entire rearrangement of the respective
-fronts of the Third and Fourth British Armies. It is not surprising
-that a decision was deferred, while the project was being critically
-investigated from every point of view.
-
-Then, suddenly, a new situation arose. On July 15th, the enemy opened
-a fresh attack against the French in the south. The scale on which
-he undertook it immediately made it patent to all students of the
-situation that he was probably employing his whole remaining reserves
-of fit, rested Divisions; that he meant this to be his decisive blow;
-and that whether he gained a decision or not, it would be his last
-effort on the grand scale.
-
-It did not succeed; for just as he had once again reached the line
-of the Marne and had on July 17th achieved his "furthest south" at
-Château-Thierry, a beautifully timed counter-stroke by the French and
-Americans upon the western face of the salient, extending from Soissons
-to the Marne, resulted on July 18th in the capture by the Allies on
-that day alone, of 15,000 prisoners and 200 guns.
-
-It was the end of German offensive in the war. Their mobile reserves
-were exhausted, and they were compelled slowly to recede from the
-Château-Thierry salient. The appropriate moment, for which Foch and
-Haig had doubtless been waiting for months, had at last arrived to
-begin an Allied counter offensive, and it was only a question of
-deciding at what point along the Franco-British front the effort should
-be made, and on what date it should open.
-
-Doubtless influenced by the reasons already discussed, the choice
-fell upon that portion of the front of the Fourth Army which lay
-south of the Somme; in other words upon the southern portion of the
-Australian Corps front. The date remained undecided, but the requisite
-redisposition of Armies and Corps was so extensive that no time was to
-be lost in making a beginning.
-
-It was on July 21st that General Rawlinson first called together the
-Corps Commanders who were to be entrusted with this portentous task.
-The strictest secrecy was enjoined, and never was a secret better kept;
-with the exception of the Field Marshal and his Army Commanders, none
-outside of the Fourth Army had any inkling of what was afoot until the
-actual moment for action had arrived.
-
-Yet an observant enemy agent, if any such there had been in the
-vicinity, might well have drawn a shrewd conclusion that some
-mischief was brewing, had he happened along the main street of the
-prettily-situated village of Flexicourt, on the Somme, on that
-bright summer afternoon, and had observed in front of a pretentious
-white mansion, over which floated the black and red flag of an Army
-Commander, a quite unusual procession of motor-cars, ostentatiously
-flying the Canadian and Australian flags and the red-and-white pennants
-of two other Corps Commanders.
-
-There were present at that conference, General Currie, the Canadian,
-General Butler, of the Third Corps, General Kavanagh, of the Cavalry
-Corps, and myself, while senior representatives of the Tanks and Air
-Force also attended. Rawlinson unfolded the outline of the whole Army
-plan, and details were discussed at great length in the light of
-the views held by each Corps Commander as to the tasks which he was
-prepared to undertake with the resources in his hands or promised to
-him.
-
-The conditions which I had sought in my previous negotiations with
-the Army Commander were, I found, conceded to me almost to the full
-extent. My battle front was to be reduced from eleven miles to a little
-over 7,000 yards. It would, in fact, extend from the Somme, as the
-northern, to the main Péronne railway, as the southern flank. And--what
-was equally important, and profoundly welcome--the First Australian
-Division was shortly to be relieved in Flanders, and would at last join
-my Corps, thus for the first time in the war bringing all Australian
-field units in France under one command.
-
-The Canadians were to operate on my right, and further south again the
-First French Army (Debenay) was to supply a Corps to form a defensive
-flank for the Canadians. The Third British Corps was to carry out for
-me a similar function on my northern flank. Thus, four Corps in line
-were to operate, the two central Corps carrying out the main advance,
-while the two outer flank Corps would be employed further to broaden
-the base of the great salient which the operation would create.
-
-The Cavalry Corps would appear in the battle area also, with all
-preparations made for a rapid exploitation of any success achieved.
-The utility of the Cavalry in modern war, at any rate in a European
-theatre, has been the subject of endless controversy. It is one into
-which I do not propose to enter. There is no doubt that, given suitable
-ground and an absence of wire entanglements, Cavalry can move rapidly,
-and undertake important turning or enveloping movements. Yet it has
-been argued that the rarity of such suitable conditions negatives any
-justification for superimposing so unwieldy a burden as a large body
-of Cavalry--on the bare chance that it _might_ be useful--upon already
-overpopulated areas, billets, watering places and roads.
-
-I may, however, anticipate the event by saying that the First Cavalry
-Brigade was duly allotted to me, and did its best to prove its utility;
-but I am bound to say that the results achieved, in what proved to be
-very unsuitable country beyond the range of the Infantry advance, did
-not justify the effort expended either by this gallant Brigade or by
-the other arms and services upon whom the very presence of the Cavalry
-proved an added burden.
-
-For the full understanding of subsequent developments both during and
-after the battle it becomes of special importance to consider the
-proposed rôle of the Third Corps in relation to my left flank. It is
-to be remembered that the Fourth Army decided that the River Somme was
-to be the tactical boundary between the two Northern Corps. It was not
-competent for me to criticize this decision at the time, but I am free
-now to say that I believed such a boundary to have been unsuitable, and
-the event speedily proved that it was.
-
-It is always, in my opinion, undesirable to select any bold natural
-or artificial feature--such as a river, ravine, ridge, road or
-railway--as a boundary. It creates, at once, a divided responsibility,
-and necessitates between two independent commanders, and at a critical
-point, a degree of effective co-operation which can rarely be hoped
-for. It is much better boldly to place a unit, however large or small,
-_astride_ of such a feature, so that both sides of it may come under
-the control of one and the same Commander.
-
-This was especially the case in this part of the Somme Valley which
-is broad, and has an ill-defined central line, tortuous, and with
-the slopes on either side tactically interdependent; but most of all
-because, as I have already described, the high plateau on the north
-completely overlooks the relatively lower flats on the south of the
-river. The point I am trying to make should be borne in mind, for I
-believe it has been fully borne out by subsequent events.
-
-The decision standing, however, as it did, it fell to the task of
-the Third Corps to make an assault (concurrently with that of the
-Australian Corps south of the river) for the capture of the whole of
-that reach of the river known as the Chipilly Bend, and of all the high
-ground on the spur which that bend enfolds. The object was to deprive
-the enemy of all ground from which he could look down upon my advancing
-left flank, or from which he could bring rifle or artillery fire to
-bear upon it.
-
-The Third Corps was to operate on the front of one Division, the 58th,
-which, pivoting its left upon the Corbie--Bray road, was to advance
-its right--in sympathy with the advance of the left of the Australian
-Corps--until it rested upon the river about one mile downstream from
-Etinehem. It was a movement the success of which was rendered promising
-by the nature of the ground and the disorganized condition of the enemy
-between the Ancre and the Somme.
-
-As regards my right flank, this was to rest as stated upon the main
-railway. The Canadian Corps, of four Divisions, would take over from
-the French a frontage of about 6,000 yards and deliver a thrust
-parallel to and south of the railway, in the direction of Caix and
-Beaucourt, and would aim at the seizure of the important Hill 102,
-immediately to the west of the latter locality. At no time did any
-question of the security of my right flank furnish me with any cause
-for anxiety; the prowess of the Canadian Corps was well known to all
-Australians, and I knew that, to use his own expressive vernacular, it
-was General Currie's invariable habit to "deliver the goods."
-
-The comprehensive project thus outlined at the conference of July 21st
-involved, as a preliminary step, a far-reaching redisposition of very
-large bodies of troops over a very wide front. With the readjustment of
-the boundaries between the Third and Fourth British Armies we are not
-particularly concerned, because this affected a region, north of the
-Ancre, which lay well outside of the battle area. Nor did the internal
-readjustment of the northern part of the Fourth Army front present
-any difficulty, as it meant nothing more than a routine "relief" by
-the 58th Division of the Fifth Australian Division which was at this
-juncture holding that part of my Corps sector which lay between the
-Somme and the Ancre.
-
-But the southern half was a very different matter. The First French
-Army was to give up to the British a section of about four miles,
-extending from Villers-Bretonneux to Thennes. This was ultimately to
-be taken over by the Canadian Corps as a battle front, but that Corps
-still had two of its Divisions in the line in the neighbourhood of
-Arras.
-
-Moreover, it was of the utmost importance to conceal from the enemy
-until the last possible moment any change in our dispositions. This
-meant concealing them from our own troops also, because the loss by us
-of a single talkative prisoner would have been sufficient to disclose
-to the enemy at least the suspicion, if not the certainty, that an
-attack was in preparation.
-
-After examining the problem and discussing several alternative
-solutions, it was ultimately decided at this conference that, five
-or six days before the date fixed for the attack, the French would
-be relieved in this sector by a Division, not of Canadians, but of
-Australians; that under cover of and behind this Australian Division,
-the Canadian Corps would come in from the north, and would proceed
-to carry out its battle preparations; and finally that the actual
-appearance of Canadian troops in the front line would not ensue until
-three days before the battle.
-
-During the preceding two days, the Australian troops would be gradually
-withdrawn from the sector, leaving only one Brigade in occupation of
-the line, to be backed up by the incoming Canadians in the unexpected
-contingency of an attack by the enemy. This last Brigade would quietly
-melt away, leaving the Canadians in full possession of the field.
-
-It was hoped that, during the days of the temporary Australian
-occupation of the sector, nothing would happen which might disclose
-to the enemy that the French had left it; and even if we were to have
-the misfortune to lose from this sector any Australian prisoners to
-the enemy, it was further hoped that, if kept in total ignorance of
-the inflow of Canadians, such prisoners would be unable to make any
-embarrassing disclosures. The _dénouement_, which will be told later,
-showed that this judgment of possibilities was a shrewd one, and that
-such precautions were not taken in vain.
-
-At this period of the war, large numbers of Americans had already
-arrived in France, but only few of them were yet ready to take their
-places in the line of battle. The time had not yet arrived, therefore,
-when, by taking over large sections of the Western front they could
-help to shorten the French and British frontages. The British front
-was, therefore, still so extended that the mobile reserve Divisions at
-the disposal of the Field Marshal were few.
-
-This consideration made the contemplated reliefs and interchanges
-of Corps and Divisions, and their transference from one part of our
-front to another a matter of great complexity, and one which required
-time to execute. Each stage of the process was contingent upon the
-due completion of a previous stage. It is, moreover, a process which
-cannot be unduly hastened, without serious discomfort and fatigue to
-the troops and animals concerned.
-
-Troops destined for battle must be kept in the highest physical
-condition. This means good feeding, comfortable housing, and adequate
-rest. A couple of weary days and sleepless nights spent in crowded
-railway trains, with cold food and little exercise, are sufficient to
-play havoc with the fighting trim of even a crack battalion. So, the
-daily stages of the journey must be short, and comfortable billets must
-be in readiness for each night's halt. The day's supplies must arrive
-punctually and at the right railhead, to ensure hot, well-cooked meals.
-
-With the very limited number of serviceable railway lines which
-remained available behind the British front--and with the congestion
-of traffic resulting from the daily transportation of many thousands
-of tons of artillery ammunition and other war stores--it was not
-surprising that as the result of the deliberations of the conference
-it was resolved to advise the Commander-in-Chief that it would take
-not less than five days to rearrange our order of battle on the lines
-decided upon, and another five days, after Corps and Divisions had
-taken over their battle fronts, to enable them to complete their
-preparations.
-
-Thus, the Fourth Army could be ready at ten days' notice, and the
-conference broke up, pledged to secrecy and complete inaction, until
-formal approval had been given to the proposals and a date fixed for
-their realization.
-
-The remainder of July passed with no very startling occurrences. In the
-south the German withdrawal from the Soissons salient and the Marne
-continued steadily, with the French and Americans on their heels; but
-it was a methodical retreat, which would bring about a substantial
-shortening of the German line, and so release Divisions to rest and
-refit, which might conceivably become available for a fresh assault
-elsewhere.
-
-But there was still no sign of any such design upon that always tender
-spot, the Allied junction at Villers-Bretonneux. On the contrary, my
-second Division still continued to make free with the enemy's advanced
-patrols, and in a very brilliant little infantry operation by the 7th
-Brigade captured the "Mound," a long spoilbank beside the railway at a
-point about a mile east of the town, which dominated the landscape in
-every direction. The ardour of his troops was only enhanced when they
-heard that General Rosenthal himself, while reconnoitring from the
-Mound, had been sniped at and had received a nasty wound in the arm.
-
-The enemy attempted nothing in the way of infantry retaliation. But
-whenever he had been thoroughly angered, he treated my front to a
-liberal drenching of mustard gas, fired by his artillery. His supplies
-of mustard gas shell seemed inexhaustible, and he would frequently
-expend as many as 10,000 of them in a single night upon the half-ruined
-town of Villers-Bretonneux or on the Bois l'Abbé and other woods which
-he suspected were sheltering my reserve infantry.
-
-These gas attacks were annoying and troublesome, in the extreme. During
-the actual bombardments, troops wore their gas masks as a matter of
-course, but doffed them when the characteristic smell of the gas
-had disappeared. But it was warm weather, and as the sun rose, the
-poisonous liquid, which had spattered the ground over immense areas,
-would volatilize, and rise in sufficient volume still to attack all
-whose business took them to and fro across this ground. In this way
-hundreds of our men became incapacitated; although there were a few
-serious cases, most of the men would be fit to rejoin in two or three
-weeks. But this form of attack, and the constant dread of it, made life
-in the forward areas anything but endurable.
-
-I was beset by quite another trepidation also. Prisoners captured
-during the German withdrawal from the Marne, which was then in
-progress, told tales of contemplated withdrawals on other fronts, and
-some even asserted that a withdrawal opposite my own front was being
-talked of. Judged by subsequent events, it is more than probable that
-these stories were stimulated by the many articles which were at
-that time appearing in the German newspapers from the pens of press
-strategists, who, in order to allay public anxiety, were representing
-these withdrawals as deliberate, and as a masterpiece of strategy,
-compelling the Allies to a costly pursuit over difficult and worthless
-ground.
-
-Opposite Albert, signs that such a withdrawal was actually in progress
-also began to appear, although it subsequently transpired that, in its
-early stages, this procedure was merely prompted by a purely local
-consideration, namely, the desire of the enemy to improve his tactical
-position by abandoning the outposts, which he had been maintaining in
-the valley of the Ancre, and transferring them to the higher and better
-ground on the east of that river.
-
-It was only natural that those of us who knew of the impending attack,
-and of the immense effort which its preparation would involve, felt
-nervous lest the enemy might forestall us by withdrawing his whole
-line to some methodically prepared position of defence in the rear,
-just as he had done once before in 1917 on so large a scale in the
-Bapaume region. It would probably have been a sound measure of
-military policy, but it would assuredly, at that juncture, have had
-as disastrous an effect upon the _moral_ of the German people as his
-enforced withdrawal, which was soon to begin, actually produced not
-long after.
-
-The order to prepare the attack, and fixing the date of it for August
-8th, came in the closing days of July, and at once all was bustle and
-excitement in the Australian Corps. Commanders, Staff Officers, and
-Intelligence Service, the Artillery, the Corps Flying Squadron, the
-map and photography sections spent busy days in reconnaissance, and
-toilsome nights in office work. The vast extent of the detailed work
-involved, particularly upon the administrative services, can only be
-appreciated by a study of the plan for the battle, which it fell to my
-lot, as Corps Commander, first to formulate, and then to expound to a
-series of conferences which were held at Bertangles on July 30th, and
-on August 2nd and 4th.
-
-It is, therefore, perhaps appropriate that I should now attempt to
-repeat, in non-technical language, an exposition of the outlines of
-that plan.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-THE BATTLE PLAN
-
-
-My plan for the impending battle involved the employment of four
-Divisions in the actual assault, with one Division in reserve. The
-Reserve Division was to be available for use in one of two ways; either
-as a reserve of fresh troops to exploit any successes gained upon the
-first day, or else to take over and hold defensively the ground won, if
-the assaulting Divisions should have become too exhausted to be relied
-upon for successful resistance to a counter-attack in force.
-
-The frontage allotted to the Corps was 7,000 yards, and this extent of
-front accommodated itself naturally to the employment of two first-line
-Divisions, each on a 3,500 yard front, each Division having two
-Brigades in the front line, with one Brigade in reserve.
-
-As four Divisions were available to me for immediate use in the
-battle, I decided to undertake, for the first time in the war, on
-so comprehensive a scale, the tactical expedient of a "leapfrog" by
-Divisions over each other.
-
-This term had, long before, passed into the homely phraseology of the
-war, in order to describe a procedure by which one body of troops,
-having reached its objective, was there halted, as at a completed task,
-while a second body of troops, of similar order of importance, but
-under an entirely separate Commander, advanced over the ground won,
-reached the foremost battle line, took over the tactical responsibility
-for the fighting front, and after a prescribed interval of time
-continued the advance to a further and more distant objective.
-
-This conception of an advance by a process of "leapfrog" had been
-evolved early in 1917 in connection with a method of assault on
-successive lines of trenches. It was intended at the outset to be
-applied only to very small bodies of infantry, such as platoons. A
-normal battle plan for a company of infantry of four platoons was for
-the first two platoons to capture and hold the front line trench,
-while the next two following platoons would leap over this trench and
-over the troops who had gained it, and then pass beyond to the capture
-of the second, or support trench. The method was used, for the first
-time, on such a modest scale, at the battle of Messines, in June, 1917,
-and later on in the same year was adopted for bodies as large even
-as Battalions, in the fighting for the Broodseinde and Passchendaele
-heights.
-
-But on no previous occasion had such a principle been applied to whole
-Divisions. It is true that at the battle of Messines, the Fourth
-Australian Division passed through the New Zealand Division after the
-latter had completed the capture of the main Messines ridge, but this
-was really exploitation, undertaken in order to take advantage of the
-temporary confusion of the enemy, and for the purpose of gaining ground
-upon the eastern slopes of the captured ridge. It was not a movement
-which was really part of the main assault, and it was confined to a
-single Division.
-
-On the present occasion my purpose was to carry out a clear and
-definite process of "leapfrogging," not only simultaneously by two
-Divisions side by side, but also as an essential part of the time-table
-programme for the main battle, and before the exploitation stage of
-the fighting was timed to be reached. It was, undeniably, a daring
-proposal, involving very definite risks, enormously increasing the
-labour of preparation and the mass of detailed precautions which had to
-be undertaken in order to obviate the possibility of great confusion.
-
-The preparations necessary for a single Division proposing to advance
-alone, to a prescribed distance, over country much of which was usually
-visible to us from our front line, are sufficiently complex, relating
-as they do, not only to the establishment of numerous protected
-headquarters for Brigades and Battalions, of miles upon miles of buried
-and ground cables, of dumps of all kinds of supplies, and of dressing
-stations and medical aid posts; but also to the disposition, in
-concealed positions, of all the assaulting units, down to the smallest
-of them, of Infantry Engineers and Pioneers. All these preparations
-assume a tenfold complexity when a second Division has to make
-arrangements exactly similar in character, variety and extent, using
-exactly the same territory for the purpose and at the same time, and
-planning to advance over more distant country, entirely beyond visual
-range and preliminary reconnaissance.
-
-The project also involved a much greater crowding of troops into
-the areas immediately behind our line of departure, and, therefore,
-enormously increased the risk of premature detection by the enemy,
-both from ground and from air observation, of unusual movement and of
-other symptoms which presaged the possibility of an attack by us. The
-plan also necessitated the closest possible co-ordination of effort,
-and mutual sympathy and understanding, between the Commanders and
-Staffs of the twin Divisions having a common jurisdiction over one
-and the same area of preparation, and one and the same battle front.
-This was a degree of co-operation which could not have been looked
-for unless the personnel concerned had already established, from long
-and close association with each other, the most cordial personal
-relations. And dominating all other difficulties were those involved
-in the proposal to execute this difficult and untried operation of a
-Divisional leapfrog, not singly but in a duplex manner, necessitating
-the assurance of exactly similar simultaneous action, similarly timed
-in every stage, both before and during battle, by each of two separate
-pairs of Divisions.
-
-These threatening difficulties were surely formidable enough, but I
-knew that I could rely upon the goodwill of the Divisions towards each
-other, and upon the loyal support of them all. This seemed to me to
-justify the attempt, and to minimize the risks; having regard above all
-else to the results which I stood to gain if the operation could be
-executed as planned.
-
-On no previous occasion in the war had an attempt ever been made to
-effect a penetration into the enemy's defences at the first blow, and
-on the first day, greater than a mile or two. Rarely had any previous
-set-piece attack succeeded in reaching the enemy's line of field-guns.
-The result had been that the bulk of his Artillery had been withdrawn
-at his leisure, and his losses had been confined to a few hundred acres
-of shattered territory. But the task I had set myself was not only
-to reach, at the first onslaught, the whole of the enemy's Artillery
-positions, but greatly to overrun them with a view to obliterating, by
-destruction or capture, the whole of his defensive organizations and
-the whole of the fighting resources which they contained, along the
-full extent of my Corps front.
-
-To achieve this object I prepared my plans upon the basis of a total
-advance, on the first day, of not less than 9,000 yards. This was to be
-divided into three separate stages, as follows:
-
- Phase A--Set-piece attack with barrage, 3,000 yards.
- Phase B--Open-warfare advance, 4,500 "
- Phase C--Exploitation, 1,500 "
- -----
- Total distance to final objective, 9,000 yards.
- -----
-
-The opening phase involved no novel or unusual features so far as
-the infantry were concerned, and was conceived on lines with which
-the fighting of 1917 had familiarized me, modified further by the
-accumulated experience gained from earlier mistakes in the technical
-details of such an enterprise. The recent battle of Hamel became
-the model for this phase, the conditions of that battle being now
-reproduced on a much enlarged scale.
-
-But there was one very important feature which distinguished the
-present undertaking from the battles of Messines and Broodseinde, and
-that was in regard to the frontage allotted for attack to a single
-Division. At Messines, the Divisional battle front was 2,000 yards;
-in the third battle of Ypres it differed but little from the same
-standard. For the present battle, I adopted a battle front of two miles
-for each assaulting Division, or a mile for each of the four assaulting
-Brigades.
-
-This innovation seemed to me to be justified by four principal
-factors. The first of these was that the weather, which was dry, and
-the state of the ground, which was hard, made the "going" easy and the
-stress upon the infantry comparatively light. Next, the condition of
-the enemy's defensive works was undeveloped and stagnant, as clearly
-disclosed by the air photographs which the Corps Air Squadron produced
-in great numbers on every fine day. No doubt this was due to the
-encroachments we had made on his forward works during the fighting
-at Hamel and in the remaining weeks of July. Thirdly, the powerful
-assistance anticipated from a contingent of four Battalions of Tanks
-which General Rawlinson had arranged to place under my orders led me
-to estimate that I might greatly reduce the number of men per yard of
-front. Lastly, the plan was justified by the known distribution of the
-enemy's infantry and guns along the frontage under attack. For all
-these reasons, I felt prepared to impose on the infantry a task which,
-computed solely upon the factor of frontage, was more than twice that
-demanded by me on any previous occasion.
-
-At the same time, so extended a frontage involved the employment of a
-much higher ratio of barrage artillery to the number of battalions of
-Infantry actually engaged. Success depended more upon the efficiency of
-the fire power of the barrage than upon any other factor, and I could
-not afford to incur any risk by weakening the density of the barrage.
-For this reason, I adhered to the standard which previous experience
-of several major battles and many minor raids had shown to be adequate
-for covering the assaulting infantry, and for keeping down the enemy's
-fire. This standard never fluctuated widely from one field-gun per
-twenty yards of front, and involved the employment, on this occasion,
-of some 432 field-guns in the barrage alone. This result could not have
-been achieved if the Fourth Army authorities had not seen their way to
-place at my disposal five additional Brigades of Field Artillery over
-and above the thirteen Australian Brigades which formed a permanent
-part of the whole Artillery of the Corps.
-
-Phase A, as already stated, involved a penetration of 3,000 yards,
-and the objective line for this phase, which came to be known as the
-"green" line (from the colour employed to delineate it upon all the
-fighting maps propounded by the Corps), was chosen, after an exhaustive
-study of all aeroplane photographs, and of the results of numerous
-observations, by many diverse means, of the locations of the enemy's
-Artillery, so as to make certain that during this phase the whole mass
-of the enemy's forward Artillery would be overrun, and captured or put
-out of action.
-
-The green line was, in fact, located along the crest of the spur
-running north-easterly from Lamotte-en-Santerre in the direction of
-Cerisy-Gailly, with the object of carrying the battle well to the east
-of the Cerisy valley, in which large numbers of the enemy's guns had
-been definitely located. This would give us, by the capture of this
-valley, suitable concealed positions in which the Infantry destined
-for Phase B could rest for a short "breather;" and would land the
-Infantry of the original assault in a position from which they could
-detect and forestall any attempt on the part of the enemy to launch a
-counter-attack before the time for the opening of Phase B had arrived.
-
-The task of executing Phase A of the battle fell to the Second and
-Third Australian Divisions, in that order from south to north, the
-southern flank of the Second Division resting upon the main railway
-line from Amiens to Péronne, and being there in contact with the
-Canadian Corps, under General Currie. The northern flank of the Third
-Division rested on the River Somme, and was there in contact with the
-Third British Corps under General Butler, while the inter-divisional
-boundary was at the southern edge of the Bois-d'Accroche.
-
-These two Divisions were the line Divisions during the period
-immediately preceding the battle, and had been holding the line each
-with two Brigades in line and one Brigade in support. Three days prior
-to the battle, however, it was arranged that each Division should hold
-its front with only one Brigade, thereby making available two Brigades
-each for the actual carrying out of Phase A of the attack. These
-assaulting Brigades were the 7th, 5th, 9th and 11th, in that order from
-south to north, each Brigade having its due allotment of Tanks and
-machine guns, etc.
-
-The total estimated time for the completion of Phase A was to be 143
-minutes after the opening of the barrage at "zero" hour; and there was
-then to be a pause of 100 minutes to allow time for the advance and
-deployment into battle order of the succeeding two Divisions, who were
-to carry out the process of "leapfrogging" and to execute Phases B and
-C of the battle.
-
-The planning of Phase B, or the advance from the "green" to the "red"
-line, involved a totally different tactical conception and the adoption
-of a type of warfare which had almost entirely disappeared from the
-Western theatre of war since those far-off days in the late autumn of
-1914, when the German Army first dug itself in, in France and Belgium,
-and committed both combatants to the prolonged agony of over three
-years of stationary warfare. I allude to the moving battle, or as it
-is called in text-book language, "open warfare;" a type of fighting in
-which few of the British Forces formed since the original Expeditionary
-Force had any experience except on the manoeuvre ground under peace
-conditions--a disability which applied equally to the Australian
-troops. Confident, however, in their adaptability and in their power
-of initiative under novel conditions, I did not hesitate to prescribe,
-for this second phase of the battle, the adoption of the principles and
-methods of open warfare.
-
-In two very important respects in particular, this type of fighting
-involved conditions to which the troops had not been accustomed,
-and under which they had no previous experience in battle. In
-trench warfare, and in a deliberate attack on entrenched defences,
-the positions of all headquarters, medical aid posts, supply dumps
-and signal stations remained fixed and immovable. The whole of the
-internal communications by telegraph and telephone could, therefore,
-be completely installed beforehand, down to the last detail, and the
-transmission of all messages, reports, orders and instructions, during
-the course of the battle, was rapid and assured. But in a moving
-battle no such comprehensive or stable signalling arrangements are
-possible, and reliance must be placed upon the much slower and much
-more uncertain methods of transmission by flag and lamp signalling, by
-dispatch riders, pigeons and runners.
-
-Divisional Headquarters would, therefore, almost as soon as the battle
-commenced, fall out of touch with Brigades, and they in turn with their
-Battalions; information as to the actual situation at the fighting
-front would travel slowly, and would reach those responsible for making
-consequential decisions often long after an entire alteration in the
-situation had removed the need for action. Thus, a greatly enhanced
-responsibility would come to be imposed upon subordinate leaders to
-decide for themselves, without waiting for guidance or orders from
-higher authority, and to grasp the initiative by taking all possible
-action on the spot in the light of the circumstances and situation of
-the moment.
-
-Again, the nature of the Artillery action is, in the moving battle,
-fundamentally different from that which prevails during trench warfare.
-To begin with, only that portion of the Artillery which is in the
-strictest sense mobile can participate to any extent in open warfare.
-The employment of Artillery is, therefore, confined to a few and to
-the smaller natures of Ordnance, namely, the 18-pounder field-gun, the
-4½-inch field howitzer and the 60-pounder, which are all horse drawn
-and which are capable of being moved off the roads and across all but
-the most broken country. Heavier guns, from 6-inch upwards, are in
-practice confined to roads, and are too slow and cumbersome to keep
-pace with the Infantry. The Artillery fire action is also intrinsically
-different, because the guns can be sighted directly upon their targets,
-while in trench warfare they are always laid by indirect methods, with
-the use of the map and compass, and without observation, at any rate by
-the crew of the gun, of the objects fired at.
-
-The decision which I had to take of carrying out the second phase of
-this great battle on the principles of open warfare was, therefore,
-one which also involved a certain element of risk. But it was a risk
-which I felt justified in taking, in spite of the fact that the German
-High Command had more than once expressed itself in contemptuous
-terms of the capacity of any British troops successfully to undertake
-any operation of open warfare. My justification lay primarily in my
-confidence in the ability of the subordinate commanders and troops to
-work satisfactorily under these novel conditions--a confidence which
-the event abundantly justified. But I was placed in the position of
-having either to accept this risk, or else abandon altogether the
-project of a quite unprecedented penetration of enemy country to be
-completed on the first day. It would have been clearly impossible to
-continue the advance beyond the green line without an interval of at
-least forty-eight hours, which would have been necessary to enable the
-Artillery to be redisposed for barrage fire in forward positions and
-provided with the necessary supplies of ammunition for such a purpose.
-
-The Divisions which were told off to carry out the "leapfrog"
-enterprise and to execute Phase B of the battle were the Fifth
-Australian Division on the south and the Fourth Australian Division on
-the north, the outer flanks of the attack remaining as before, _i.e._,
-the Péronne Railway on the south and the River Somme on the north.
-Each of these Divisions was directed to deploy, on its own frontage,
-two Infantry Brigades. Its third Brigade was to be kept intact and to
-advance during Phase B at some distance behind, as a support to the
-fighting line, and to be employed in the subsequent phase, if it were
-found that Phase B could be completed without calling upon this spare
-Brigade. The actual dispositions of the Brigades finally proposed by
-the respective Divisional Commanders and approved by me brought about
-the arrangement that the four first-line mobile Infantry Brigades were
-successively, from south to north, the 15th, 8th, 12th and 4th, while
-the 14th and 1st Brigades followed as supports in a second line.
-
-To each of these Infantry Brigades I allotted a Brigade of Field
-Artillery, to be employed under the direct orders of the Infantry
-Brigade Commander, and, in addition, three Artillery Brigades as
-well as one Battery of 60-pounders, to each Divisional Commander. As
-my resources in Artillery were not unlimited, the twelve Artillery
-Brigades, so disposed of, were necessarily drawn from the original
-eighteen Brigades which were to fire the covering Artillery barrage
-for Phase A of the battle. The orders to that portion of the Field
-Artillery which was to become mobile in pursuance of this plan,
-accordingly, were that immediately upon the completion of their
-original tasks, by the capture of the green line, they were to "pull
-out of the barrage."
-
-This meant, in effect, that all the teams, limbers, battery wagons,
-and ammunition wagons of these twelve Brigades, waiting in their wagon
-lines far in rear, fully harnessed up and hooked in at the opening of
-the battle, had to advance during the progress of the first phase,
-so as to reach their guns just at the right time, but no earlier,
-to enable these guns to be limbered up, and the batteries to become
-completely mobile in order to join and advance with the Infantry of the
-second phase.
-
-This was an operation which required the greatest nicety in timing,
-and the greatest accuracy in execution. No Australian Artillery had
-ever previously undertaken such an operation, except perhaps on the
-manoeuvre ground, and then only on the very limited scale of a Brigade
-or two at a time. That this rapid transition from the completely
-stationary to the completely mobile battle was carried out, during the
-very crisis of a great engagement, without the slightest hitch, and
-with only the trifling loss of two or three gun horse teams from shell
-fire, reflects the very highest credit upon every officer and man of
-the Australian Field Artillery.
-
-The open warfare Infantry Brigades were also to be provided, out of
-their own divisional resources, each with a Company of Engineers,
-a Company of Machine Guns, a Field Ambulance, and a detachment of
-Pioneers, so that, in the most complete sense, they became a Brigade
-Group of all arms, capable of dealing, out of their own resources
-and on their own ground, with any situation that might arise during
-their advance of nearly three miles from the green to the red line. A
-detachment of nine tanks completed the fighting equipment of each of
-the four front line Brigades destined to capture the red line.
-
-I must now briefly describe the nature of Phase C, the third and last
-stage in this ambitious and complex battle programme. This phase was
-to consist of "exploitation," which implies that it was a provisional
-preparation, which was to be carried out only if complete success
-attended the two preceding phases. The objective of Phase C was the
-"blue" line, which I had located about one mile to the east of the red
-line, along a system of old French trenches extending from the river at
-a point near Méricourt, and running southerly to the railway at a point
-a little to the south-east of Harbonnières. This line gave promise of
-furnishing a good defensive position in which to deal with any possible
-counter-attack. It also gave a good line of departure for subsequent
-operations, and provided ideal artillery positions in a series of
-valleys, running parallel and a little to the west of the line itself.
-
-The troops earmarked for this Exploitation Phase were the two second
-line Brigades of the two Divisions which were to capture the red line,
-namely, the 14th and 1st Brigades, and the orders to the Divisional
-Commanders were that if the red line was reached without mishap,
-without undue loss of time, and without involving the Reserve Brigades,
-but not otherwise, these Reserve Brigades were to push on with the
-utmost determination to secure and hold the blue line until such time
-as they could be reinforced.
-
-Each of these exploitation Brigades was equipped similarly to the red
-line Brigades in all respects except that they were provided with
-a special contingent of 18 Mark V. (Star) Tanks of the very latest
-design. These differed from the Mark V. Tank employed at Hamel and in
-the other stages of the present operation, in that they were longer
-and had sufficient internal space to carry, as passengers, over and
-above their own crews, two complete infantry Lewis gun detachments
-each. It was expected that this infantry fire power, added to the fire
-power from the machine guns carried by these 36 Tanks themselves and
-operated by the Tank crews, would go far to compensate for the somewhat
-attenuated line of probably tired Infantry spread in two Brigades over
-an ultimate frontage of over 10,000 yards.
-
-No definite time-table was laid down for the closing phases of the
-battle, except for the regulation of the times when our Heavy Artillery
-should "lift off" designated targets--such as villages, farms, and
-known gun positions--and lengthen its range so as not to obstruct the
-further advance of our own Infantry. But it was estimated that, from
-the opening of the battle, the green line would be reached in two and
-a half hours, the red line in six hours, and the blue line in eight
-hours. As the battle was to open at the first streak of dawn, it would,
-if all went well, be completed according to plan by about midday.
-
-In every battle plan, whether great or small, it is necessary first of
-all to map out the whole of the intended action of the Infantry, at any
-rate on the general lines indicated above. When that has been done the
-next step is to work backwards, and to test the feasibility of each
-body of infantry being able to reach its allotted point of departure,
-punctually, without undue stress on the troops, and without crossing
-or impeding the line of movement of any other body of infantry. It is
-often necessary to test minutely, by reference to calculations of time
-and space, more than one alternative plan for marshalling the Infantry
-prior to battle, and for the successive movements, day by day, and from
-point to point, of every battalion engaged.
-
-The present case was no exception, and, indeed, presented quite special
-difficulties. The whole of the area for a depth of many thousands of
-yards behind our then front line was open rolling country, devoid of
-any cover, and (except in the actual valley of the Somme) with every
-village, hamlet, farmhouse, factory and wood obliterated. The plan
-involved the assembly, in this confined area, fully exposed by day to
-the view of any inquisitive enemy aircraft, of no less than 45 Infantry
-Battalions, with all their paraphernalia of war; not to speak of our
-600 guns of all calibres, their wagon lines, horse lines and motor
-parks, together with Engineers, Pioneers, Tanks, Medical and Supply
-Units amounting to tens of thousands of men and animals.
-
-A new factor which, however, ultimately controlled the final decision
-which I had to make as to the nature of the dispositions prior to
-battle, lay in the consideration of the maximum distances which would
-have to be covered by the foot soldiers in such a far-flung battle. I
-had little difficulty in coming to the conclusion that the obvious and
-normal arrangement was on this occasion a totally wrong arrangement.
-If the assaulting Brigades had been arranged, from front to rear, in
-their assembly areas prior to battle, in the same order as that in
-which they would have to come into action, this would have involved
-that the individual man, who was to be required to march and fight his
-way furthest into enemy country, and, therefore, was to be the last to
-enter the fight, would also be called upon to march furthest from his
-rearmost position of assembly before even reaching the battle zone. The
-maximum distance to be traversed on the day of battle by infantry would
-have amounted, according to such a plan, to over ten miles. While this
-is an easy day's march on a good road, under tranquil conditions, it
-would have been an altogether unreasonable demand upon any infantryman
-during the stress and nervous excitement of battle. It would have been
-courting a breakdown from over-fatigue, among the very troops upon whom
-I had to rely most to defend the captured territory against any serious
-enemy reaction.
-
-I therefore adopted the not very obvious course of completely reversing
-the normal procedure, and of disposing the Brigades in depth, from
-front to rear, in exactly the _reverse_ of the order in which, in point
-of time, they would enter the battle.
-
-The following represents, diagrammatically, the disposition of all
-twelve Brigades after having been fully _deployed_ in the actual course
-of the battle:
-
- ^ (4th Division) | (5th Division)
- | Direction 4 -- 12 | 8 -- 15
- | of North 1 Inter- 14 South
- | enemy. (3rd Division) Divisional (2nd Division)
- | 11 -- 9 Boundary. 5 -- 7
- | | Our front line
- |----------------------------------+---------------------------------
- | | before battle
- | 10 (in our trenches) | 6 (in our trenches)
-
-The next diagram shows how the twelve Brigades were disposed while
-Phase A of the battle was in progress, and before the second Phase had
-begun:
-
- (3rd Division) | (2nd Division)
- 11 -- 9 | 5 -- 7
- Inter- Our front line
- --------------------------------Divisional---------------------------
- Boundary. before battle
- 10 (in our trenches) | 6 (in our trenches)
- (4th Division) | (5th Division)
- 4 -- 12 | 8 -- 15
- 1 | 14
-
-But the following diagram represents, in a similar manner, the order
-of disposition of the same Brigades, in the territory under our own
-occupation, immediately _prior_ to the battle:
-
- ^ (3rd Division) | (2nd Division)
- | | Our front line
- |-----------------------------------+---------------------------------
- | Direction Inter- before battle
- | of 10 (in our trenches) Divisional 6 (in our trenches)
- | enemy. (4th Division) Boundary. (5th Division)
- | 4 -- 12 | 8 -- 15
- | North 1 | 14 South
- | (3rd Division) | (2nd Division)
- | 11 -- 9 | 5 -- 7
-
-A little consideration will show that this apparently paradoxical
-procedure brought about the desired result of more nearly equalizing
-the stress upon the whole of the Infantry engaged, in point, at least,
-of the maximum distance to be traversed in the day's operations. But it
-produced something else, also, of much greater concern, which was that
-the scheme involved a leapfrogging of Divisions during the approach
-march into the battle, in addition to a second leapfrogging, to which
-I was already committed, to occur at a later stage during the battle
-itself.
-
-Thus I was confronted with the dilemma that the only scheme of
-disposition which promised success for the subsequent battle was
-also that scheme which made the greatest possible demands upon the
-intelligence of the troops and the sympathetic, loyal and efficient
-co-operation of my own Corps Staff, and those of the Commanders acting
-under me. Influenced once again by the confidence which I felt in my
-whole command, I did not hesitate to increase the complexity of the
-plans for the Infantry action by calling upon the four Divisions to
-execute a manoeuvre which is unique in the history of war, namely, a
-"double leapfrog," simultaneously carried out by two separate pairs of
-Divisions, operating side by side. The first leap was to take place
-during the approach to the battle, the second during the progress of
-the battle itself.
-
-This expedient, which I finally decided to adopt, in spite of the
-dangers involved in its complexity and in the absence of any precedent,
-was, however, as logical analysis and the event itself proved, the very
-keynote of the success of the entire project. The whole plan, thanks to
-an intelligent interpretation by all Commanders and Staffs concerned,
-worked like a well-oiled machine, with smoothness, precision and
-punctuality, and achieved to the fullest extent the advantages aimed at.
-
-On the one hand, the stress upon the troops was reduced to a minimum.
-By the reduction of physical fatigue, it conserved the energies
-of whole Divisions in a manner which permitted of their speedy
-re-employment in subsequent decisive operations. And on the other
-hand, by the great depth of penetration which it rendered possible, it
-ensured a victory which amounted to so crushing a blow to the enemy
-that its momentum hurled him into a retrograde movement, not only
-along the whole front under attack, but also for many miles on either
-flank. This recoil he was never able to arrest, as we followed up our
-victory by blow after blow delivered while he was still reeling from
-the effects of the first onslaught of August 8th.
-
-But, so far, I have written of the Infantry plan only; and much remains
-to be told of the simultaneous action designed to be taken by all the
-other arms, which rendered possible and emphasized the success of the
-Infantry. No one can rival me in my admiration for the transcendant
-military virtues of the Australian Infantryman, for his bravery, his
-battle discipline, his absolute reliability, his individual resource,
-his initiative and endurance. But I had formed the theory that the true
-rôle of the Infantry was not to expend itself upon heroic physical
-effort, nor to wither away under merciless machine-gun fire, nor to
-impale itself on hostile bayonets, nor to tear itself to pieces in
-hostile entanglements--(I am thinking of Pozières and Stormy Trench and
-Bullecourt, and other bloody fields)--but, on the contrary, to advance
-under the maximum possible protection of the maximum possible array of
-mechanical resources, in the form of guns, machine guns, tanks, mortars
-and aeroplanes; to advance with as little impediment as possible; to
-be relieved as far as possible of the obligation to _fight_ their
-way forward; to march, resolutely, regardless of the din and tumult
-of battle, to the appointed goal; and there to hold and defend the
-territory gained; and to gather in the form of prisoners, guns and
-stores, the fruits of victory.
-
-It is my purpose, therefore, to emphasize particularly the extent to
-which this theory was realized in the battle under review, by the
-achievement of a great and decisive victory at a trifling cost. That
-result was due primarily to the very ample resources in mechanical
-aids which the foresight and confidence of the Fourth Army Commander,
-General Rawlinson, entrusted to me; but it was due partly, also, to the
-manner in which those resources were employed. And that is why I shall
-attempt to describe the remainder of the Corps plan.
-
-[Illustration: Tanks marching into Battle.]
-
-[Illustration: Morcourt Valley--the Australian attack swept across this
-on August 8th, 1918.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-The battle plan (_continued_)
-
-
-Surprise has been, from time immemorial, one of the most potent weapons
-in the armoury of the tactician. It can be achieved not merely by
-doing that which the enemy least anticipates, but also by acting at
-a time when he least expects any action. It was a weapon which had
-been employed only rarely in the previous greater battles of this war.
-The offensive before Cambrai, planned by General Sir Julian Byng, and
-the battle of Hamel, were rare exceptions to our general procedure of
-heralding the approach of an offensive by feverish and obvious activity
-on our part, and by a long sustained preliminary bombardment of the
-enemy's defences, designed to destroy his works and impair his _moral_.
-
-The situation on the Fourth Army front, early in August, 1918, offered
-a rare opportunity for the employment of surprise tactics on the
-boldest scale. The incessant "nibbling" activities of the Australian
-troops during the preceding three months had been of such a consistent
-nature as to suggest that our resources were not equal to any greater
-effort upon such an extended front as we were then holding, from the
-Ancre down to and beyond Villers-Bretonneux. On the other hand, the
-passivity of the first French Army, to the south of the latter town,
-conveyed no suggestion of any offensive enterprise on the part of our
-Ally in this region.
-
-The problem, therefore, was to convert an extensive front from a state
-of passive defence to a state of complete preparedness for an attack on
-the largest scale, and to keep the enemy--who, as always, was alert and
-observant both from the ground and from the air--in complete ignorance
-of every portion of these extensive preparations, until the very moment
-when the battle was to burst upon him. It was, of course, a question
-not merely of deceiving the enemy troops in their trenches immediately
-opposed to us, but also of arousing in the minds of the German High
-Command no suspicions which might have prompted them to hold in a
-state of readiness, or to put into motion towards the threatened zone,
-any of the reserve Divisions forming part of their still considerable
-resources.
-
-The following memorandum, which was issued to the whole of the senior
-commanders in the Australian Corps on August 1st, gives in outline some
-of the measures adopted to this end:
-
-"SECRECY.
-
-"1. The first essential to success is the maintenance of secrecy.
-The means to be adopted are as follows:
-
- (i) No person is to be told or informed in any part or way until
- such time as the development of the plan demands action from him.
- This is the main principle and will be pursued throughout, down to
- the lowest formation.
-
- (ii) Divisional Commanders will work out their reliefs in such a
- way as will ensure that the troops in the line know nothing of
- the proposed operation until the last possible moment. This will
- apply in particular to any troops who may be employed in the area
- south of the AMIENS--VILLERS-BRETONNEUX railway.
-
-"2. In order to conceal the intention to carry out a large operation on
-this front the following plan has been adopted:
-
-"The Australian Corps has been relieved of one divisional sector by
-the Third Corps, and takes over a divisional sector from the French
-Corps. The object of this is to lead the enemy, and our own people,
-too, to believe that the action of the French in the SOISSONS salient
-has been so costly as to demand that further French troops had to be
-made available, and that this is the apparent cause of the extension of
-the Australian Corps front to the south.
-
-"3. (a) The idea is being circulated that the Canadian Corps is being
-brought to the south to take over the rôle of Reserve Corps at the
-junction of the British and French Armies in replacement of the 22nd
-Corps, which occupied that rôle until it was ordered to the CHAMPAGNE
-front. In order that the enemy may be deceived as to the destination
-of the Canadian Corps in the event of his discovering that it has been
-withdrawn from the ARRAS front, Canadian wireless personnel has been
-sent to the Second Army area,[11] where they have taken over certain
-wireless zones.
-
-"(b) To prevent the enemy from discovering the arrival of the Canadian
-Corps in this region, they will not take over from the 4th Australian
-Division until 'Y' night. This will necessitate a proportion of the
-troops of the Fourth Australian Division remaining in the line in this
-sector until 'Y' night. As the Fourth Australian Division will be
-required to participate in the attack it is proposed to distribute one
-brigade to hold the whole of the line from 'W' night onwards. This will
-enable the remaining two Brigades to be withdrawn, given a day or two's
-rest, and allow of their part in the operation being fully explained to
-them. The place of these two Brigades in rear of the line Brigade will
-be taken over by Canadian Divisions.
-
-"(c) In order to deceive our own troops as to the cause of the coming
-down here of the Canadians, a rumour is going abroad that the Canadian
-Corps is being brought down with the object of relieving the Australian
-Corps in the line. To most of the Australian Corps this would appear to
-be an obvious reason for their coming, as the idea has been mooted on
-former occasions. While it is not intended that this rumour should be
-promulgated, it is not desired that anyone should disclose the actual
-facts. This idea, together with the idea put forth in paragraph 3 (a),
-should do much to prevent the real facts from becoming known."[12]
-
-The references to "W," "X," "Y" and "Z" days and nights in the above
-memo, are to the successive days preceding Zero day--known briefly as
-"Z" day, on which the battle was to open. The actual _date_ of "Z"
-day was kept a close secret by the Army Commander and the three Corps
-Commanders concerned, until a few days before the actual date; while
-the actual moment of assault, or "Zero" hour, was not determined or
-made known until noon on the day preceding the battle, after a close
-study of the conditions of visibility before and after break of day, on
-the three preceding mornings.
-
-But these arrangements were directed only towards the prevention of
-a premature disclosure of our intention to attack to the enemy, to
-our own troops, and through them to the civilian public, and to enemy
-agents, whose presence among us had always to be reckoned with. It
-still remained to carry out our battle preparations in a manner which
-would preclude the possibility of detection by enemy aircraft, either
-through direct observation, or by the help of photography.
-
-Accordingly I issued orders that all movements of troops and of
-transport of all descriptions, should take place only during the
-hours of darkness, whether in the forward or in the rear areas; and
-in order to keep an effective control over the faithful execution of
-these difficult orders, I arranged for relays of "police" aeroplanes,
-furnished by our No. 3 Squadron, to fly continuously, by day, over
-the whole of the Corps area, in order to detect and report upon any
-observed unusual movement.
-
-At the same time, the normal work on the construction of new lines of
-defence, covering Amiens, in my rear areas, which had been continuously
-in progress for many weeks and was still far from complete, was to
-continue, with a full display of activity; so that the enemy should
-be unable to infer, from a stoppage of such works, any change in our
-attitude.
-
-Orders were also given to discourage the usual stream of officers who
-ordinarily visited our front trenches prior to an operation, and who
-often, thoughtlessly, made a great display of unusual activity, under
-the very noses of the enemy front line observers, by the flourishing
-of maps and field-glasses, and by bobbing up above our parapets
-to catch fleeting glimpses of the country to be fought over. Such
-reconnaissance, however desirable, was to be confined to a few senior
-Commanders and Staff Officers. All subordinates were to rely upon
-the very large number of admirable photographs, taken regularly from
-the air, both vertically and obliquely, by the indefatigable Corps
-Air Squadron. These served excellently as a substitute for visual
-observation from the ground.
-
-The prohibition against the movement of any transport in the daylight
-naturally very seriously hampered the freedom of action of the troops
-of all arms and services, but was felt in quite a special degree by the
-whole of the Artillery. Over 600 guns of all natures had to be dragged
-to and emplaced in their battle positions, and there camouflaged,
-each gun involving the concurrent movement of a number of associated
-vehicles. A full supply of ammunition had to be collected from
-railhead, distributed by mechanical transport to great main dumps, and
-thence taken by horsed vehicles for distribution to the numerous actual
-gun-pits.
-
-As the amount of ammunition to be held in readiness for the opening of
-the battle averaged 500 rounds per gun, it became necessary to handle
-a total of about 300,000 rounds of shells and a similar number of
-cartridges of all calibres, from 3½ to 12 inches, not to mention fuses
-and primers, or the immense bulk and weight of infantry and machine-gun
-ammunition, bombs, flares, rockets, and the like, for the supply of all
-of which the artillery was equally responsible.[13] The great amount of
-movement involved in the handling and dumping of all these munitions,
-and the deterrent difficulties of carrying out all such work only
-during the short hours of darkness, must be left to the imagination.
-
-The artillery was, however, confronted, for the first time, with a
-difficulty of quite a different nature. In the previous years of the
-war every gun, _after_ being placed in its fighting pit or position,
-had to be carefully "registered," by firing a series of rounds at
-previously identified reference points, and noting the errors in line
-or range due to the instrumental error of the gun, which error varied
-with the gradual wearing-out of the gun barrel. By these means, battery
-commanders were enabled to compute the necessary corrections to be
-applied to any given gun, at any one time or place, so as to ensure
-that the gun would fire true to the task set.
-
-Such registration naturally involved, for a large number of guns, a
-very considerable volume of Artillery fire, the extent of which would
-speedily disclose to the enemy the presence of a largely increased mass
-of Artillery, and would inevitably lead him to the conclusion that
-some mischief was afoot. Fortunately, however, the rapid evolution
-during the war of scientific methods had by this juncture placed at my
-disposal a means of ascertaining the instrumental error of the guns
-on a testing ground located many miles behind the battle zone. This
-method was known as "calibration," and consisted of the firing of the
-gun through a series of wired screens, placed successively at known
-distances from the muzzle of the gun. The whole elements of the flight
-of the projectile could then be accurately determined by recording the
-intervals of time between its passage through the respective screens.
-From these data could be deduced the muzzle velocity, the jump, the
-droop and the lateral error of each gun.
-
-Simple and obvious as was the principle of such an experiment, the
-merit of the new process of calibration lay in the remarkable rapidity
-and accuracy with which the electric and photographic mechanism
-employed made the necessary delicate time observations, correct to
-small fractions of a second, and automatically deduced the mathematical
-results required. The calibration hut, in which this mechanism was
-housed, became one of the show spots to which visitors to the Corps
-area were taken to be overawed by the scientific methods of our gunners.
-
-In the early days of August the calibration range of the Australian
-Corps was a scene of feverish activity. All day long, battery after
-battery of guns could be seen route-marching to the testing ground,
-going through the performance of firing six rounds per gun, and then
-route-marching back again the same night to its allotted battle
-position. So rapid was the procedure that long before he had reached
-his destination the Battery Commander had received the full error sheet
-of every one of his guns, and by means of it was enabled to go into
-action whenever required without any previous registration whatever.
-This great advance in the art of gunnery contributed in the most direct
-manner to the result that when these 600 guns opened their tornado of
-fire upon the enemy at daybreak on August 8th, the very presence in
-this area of most of them remained totally unsuspected.
-
-The manner of the employment of the ponderous mass of Heavy Artillery
-at my disposal will be referred to later. The action of that portion of
-the Field Artillery which was to become mobile in the concluding phases
-of the battle has already been dealt with. It remains only to describe,
-in outline, the arrangements made for the normal barrage fire of the
-Field Artillery during the first phase.
-
-It has been my invariable practice to reduce the barrage plan to
-the simplest possible elements, avoiding in every direction the
-over-elaboration so frequently encountered. By following these
-principles not only is the actual preparatory work of the Artillery
-greatly reduced in bulk and simplified in quality, but also the
-liability to mistake and to erratic shooting of individual batteries or
-guns, and consequent risks of damage to our own Infantry, are greatly
-diminished. These advantages are bought at the small price of calling
-upon the Infantry to undertake, before the battle, such rectifications
-and adjustments of our front line as would accommodate themselves to
-a straight and simple barrage line. This is in sharp contrast to the
-much more usual procedure which prevailed (and persisted in other
-Corps to the end of the war) of complicating the barrage enormously
-in an attempt to make it conform to the tortuous configuration of our
-Infantry front line.
-
-For the present battle it was accordingly arranged that the barrage
-should open on a line which was _dead straight_ for the whole 7,000
-yards of our front, and the Infantry tape lines,[14] which were to mark
-the alignment of the Infantry at the moment of launching the assault,
-were to be laid exactly 200 yards in rear of this Artillery "start
-line." The barrage was to advance, in exactly parallel lines, 100 yards
-at a time, at equal rates along the whole frontage. These rates were
-100 yards every 3 minutes, for the first 24 minutes, and thereafter 100
-yards every 4 minutes, until the conclusion of the time-table at 143
-minutes after Zero. By such a simple plan every one of the 432 field
-guns engaged was given a task of uniform character.
-
-Great as was the care necessary to conceal all Artillery preparations,
-it required still greater thought and consideration to keep entirely
-secret the presence behind the battle front of some 160 Tanks, and
-particularly to conceal their approach march into the battle. To both
-combatants, the arrival of a Tank, or anything that could be mistaken
-on an air photograph for a Tank, had for long been regarded as a sure
-indication of coming trouble. And, therefore, imputing to the enemy the
-same keenness to detect, in good time, the presence of Tanks, and the
-same nervousness which we had been accustomed to feel when prisoners'
-tales of the coming into the war of enormous hordes of German monsters
-had been crystallized by the reports of some excited observer into a
-definite suspicion that the fateful hour had arrived, I considered
-it wise to repeat on a much elaborated scale all the precautions of
-secrecy first employed for this purpose at Hamel.
-
-It is quite easy to detect from an air photograph the broad, corrugated
-track made by a Tank, if the ground be soft and muddy enough to record
-such an impression. Consequently, Tanks were forbidden to move across
-ploughed fields or marshy land, and were confined to hard surface.
-They moved only in small bodies, and only at night, and were carefully
-stabled, during the daylight, in the midst of village ruins, or under
-the deep shade of woods and thickets. Thus, by daily stages, and by
-cautious bounds, each Tank or group of Tanks ultimately reached its
-appointed assembly ground, from which it was to make its last leap into
-the thick of the battle, where it would arrive precisely at Zero hour.
-
-But that last leap was just the whole difficulty. For the Tank is
-a noisy brute, and it was just as imperative to make him inaudible
-as to make him invisible. By a fortunate chance, the noise and buzz
-made by the powerful petrol engines of a Tank are so similar to
-those of the engines of a large-sized bombing plane, as for example
-of the Handley-Page type, especially if the latter be flying at a
-comparatively low altitude, that from a little distance off it is quite
-impossible to distinguish the one sound from the other.
-
-It was therefore possible to adopt the conjurer's trick of directing
-the special attention of the observer to those things which do not
-particularly matter, in order to distract his attention from other
-things which really do matter very much. In other words, a flight of
-high-power bombing planes was kept flying backwards and forwards over
-the battle front during the whole of that very hour, just before dawn,
-during which our 160 Tanks were loudly and fussily buzzing their way
-forward, along carefully reconnoitred routes, marked by special black
-and white tapes, across that last mile of country which brought them up
-level with the infantry at the precise moment when the great battle was
-ushered in by the belching forth of a volcano of Artillery fire.
-
-The subterfuge succeeded to perfection, as was obvious to observers and
-confirmed by the subsequent narratives of prisoners. The German trench
-garrisons and trench observers were fully occupied in listening to the
-hum of the bombing planes, in watching their threatened visitation for
-their customary "egg" dropping performances, in engaging them with
-rifle fire, and in holding themselves in readiness to duck for cover
-should they come too near. They never suspected for a moment that this
-was merely a new stratagem of "noise camouflage," and that the real
-danger was stalking steadily and relentlessly towards them over the
-whole front, upon the surface of the ground, instead of in the air.
-
-But the trick would not have succeeded so well, or would perhaps have
-failed altogether, if the employment of those planes had been confined
-to the morning of the battle. Such an unusual demonstration might have
-aroused vague suspicions sufficient to justify a "stand to arms" and
-a preparedness for some further activity on our part. And what we had
-most to fear was the danger of "giving the show away" in the last ten
-minutes. For it would have taken much less than that time for nervous
-German trench sentries, by the firing of signal rockets, to bring down
-upon our front line trenches, crowded as they were with expectant
-fighters, a murderous fire from the German Artillery.
-
-Consequently the puzzled enemy was treated to the spectacle of an
-early morning promenade by these same bombing planes on every morning,
-for an hour before dawn, during several mornings preceding the actual
-battle day. Doubtless the first morning's exhibition of such apparently
-aimless air activity in the darkness really startled him. After two
-or three repetitions, it merely earned his contempt. By the time
-the actual date arrived he treated it as negligible. All prisoners
-interrogated subsequently agreed that neither the presence nor the
-noisy approach of so mighty a phalanx of Tanks had been in the least
-suspected up to the very moment when they plunged into view out of the
-darkness, just as day was breaking.
-
-The force of Tanks placed at my disposal for the purposes of this
-battle comprised the 2nd, 8th and 13th Tank Battalions, commanded
-respectively by Lieut.-Colonels Bryce, Bingham and Lyon, all under the
-5th Tank Brigade, commanded by Brigadier-General Courage. All these
-Tanks were of the Mark V. type, as used at Hamel; but there were also
-attached to the same Brigade a Battalion of Mark V. (Star) Tanks, of
-still later design, under Lieut.-Colonel Ramsay-Fairfax, and also
-a full Company of 24 Carrying Tanks, under Major Partington. These
-Carrying Tanks were not employed in fighting, but were of wonderful
-utility in the rapid transport of stores of all descriptions across the
-battle zone; and in carrying the wounded out of the battle on their
-return journey. I am confident that each of these Tanks was capable of
-doing the work of at least 200 men, with an almost complete immunity
-from casualty.
-
-There were thus available to me 168 Tanks in all, and their
-dispositions have been already indicated in sufficient detail in
-Chapter V. It was a definite feature of the whole plan of battle that
-the combined Tank and Infantry tactics which had proved so successful
-in the Hamel operation, and which have been described in Chapter II.,
-were to be employed and exploited to their utmost. Each Tank became
-thereby definitely associated with a specified body of Infantry, and
-acted during the actual battle under the immediate orders of the
-Commander of that body: the working rule was "one Tank, one Company."
-
-To this was added the second working principle of "one Tank, one task,"
-which rules meant, in their practical application, that no individual
-Tank was to be relied upon to serve more than one body of Infantry, nor
-to carry out more than one phase of the battle. Elementary as this may
-sound, it involved this striking advantage that, in the event of any
-one Tank becoming disabled, its loss would impair no portion of the
-battle plan other than that fraction of it to which that Tank had been
-allotted.
-
-Thus, the whole of the Infantry operating in Phases B and C of the
-battle had each their own adequate equipment of Tanks, which would
-be certain to be available to them, even if the whole of the Tanks
-employed during Phase A had been knocked out. At the same time clear
-orders were issued, and due arrangements were made, that all Tanks
-which survived Phase A, and whose crews were not by then too exhausted,
-were to rally (during the 100 minutes' pause on the green line) in
-order to co-operate in the succeeding phases of the fight.
-
-There was still another Unit, coming under the jurisdiction of the Tank
-Corps, which proved of wonderful utility to me, and which deserved
-quite special mention. This was the 17th Armoured Car Battalion,
-organized into two companies of eight cars each. Each car carried one
-forward and one rear Hotchkiss gun. It was heavily armoured, and the
-crew operating the guns, as also the car driver, were protected from
-all except direct hits by Artillery. The cars had a speed of 20 miles
-per hour, either forwards or backwards. The Battalion was under the
-command of Lieut.-Colonel E. J. Carter, an officer of the British
-Cavalry. I allotted 12 cars to the use of the 5th Australian Division,
-under Major-General Hobbs, who would be likely to find specially useful
-employment for them, in scouring the network of roads beyond his final
-objective; and retained four cars in Corps reserve for a special
-reconnaissance enterprise.
-
-Full of promise of usefulness as were the speed and armament of these
-cars, they suffered from one serious disability. Their top hamper was
-so heavy compared to their light chassis that they could not be relied
-upon to travel without premature breakdown across country, or indeed
-on anything but moderately good roads. Now, such roads were certainly
-available, as was evident from aeroplane photographs, in the enemy's
-back country, after a zone for a mile or two immediately behind his
-front line was passed; but all the subsidiary roads in that zone had
-been practically obliterated by shell-craters, and even the great main
-road from Villers-Bretonneux to Saint Quentin, which is a Roman Road
-and substantially constructed throughout, was known to have been cut up
-and traversed by numerous trenches both on our side and on the enemy's
-side of "No Man's Land." There was also every expectation that the few
-remaining trees which flanked this great road would be felled by our
-bombardment, and some of them would surely fall across and obstruct the
-roadway.
-
-That road was, however, the only possible outlet into enemy country for
-the armoured cars, and I resolved upon a special programme, and the
-allotment of a special body of troops for its execution. The object
-was to ensure that the cars could be taken across the impracticable
-and obstructed stretch of roadway already described, and launched at
-the enemy at its eastern extremity, at the earliest possible moment of
-time. Then, before the numerous enemy Corps and Divisional Headquarters
-and all their rear organization had time to get clear intelligence of
-what was happening at the front, or to recover from the first shock of
-surprise, these Armoured Cars would fall upon them, and, travelling
-hither and thither at great speed, would spread death, destruction and
-confusion in all directions.
-
-A whole Battalion of Pioneers, and detachments of other technical
-troops, with an adequate amount of road-repairing material, were got
-ready, under the direct orders of my Chief Engineer, to carry out this
-special task. All trenches in that portion of the road lying within our
-own zone of occupation were bridged or filled in and all obstructions
-cleared away before the day of the battle. But as to the more distant
-stretch of the road, still in the hands of the enemy, elaborate
-preparations were made, by a careful and detailed distribution of tasks
-to small gangs of men, and by a fully worked-out time-table. The plan
-was that from the moment of the opening of the battle, this road repair
-work was to commence, and its advance was to synchronize with the
-advance of the Artillery barrage and Infantry skirmishing line.
-
-A pilot armoured car was to follow the working gangs in order to test
-the sufficiency of the repair work, and arrangements were made for
-sending back signals to the remainder of the cars, lying waiting in
-readiness in the shelter of Villers-Bretonneux. It was planned that the
-first two miles of road would, by these means, be cleared and repaired
-to a sufficient width, within four hours after the opening of the
-battle.
-
-I am tempted to anticipate the narrative of the battle by saying that
-the whole plan worked out with complete success to the last detail. The
-cars got through punctually to time, and the story of their subsequent
-adventures, as told later, reads like a romance. As indicating the
-importance which I attached to this little enterprise, which in
-magnitude was quite a small "side-show," but which in its results had
-the most far-reaching consequence, I reproduce below the full text
-(omitting merely formal portions) of one of the several orders issued
-by me on this subject:
-
- Australian Corps,
- 7th August, 1918.
-
- 1. The detachment of the 17th Armoured Car Battalion held in Corps
- Reserve (2 sections each of 2 cars), will be employed on the
- special duty of long distance reconnaissance on "Z" day.
-
- 2. These sections will be sent forward under the orders of the
- C.O., 17th Armoured Car Battalion, passing the green line as soon
- as practicable after Zero plus four hours, and proceeding eastward,
- following the lifts of our Heavy Artillery bombardment, so as to
- pass the blue line at or after Zero plus five hours.
-
- 3. The area to be reconnoitred lies in the bend of the Somme, north
- of the Villers-Bretonneux--Chaulnes Railway; but the old Somme
- battlefield lying N.E. of Chaulnes need not be entered.
-
- 4. Information is required as to presence, distribution and
- movement of enemy supporting and reserve troops, and his defensive
- organizations within this area.
-
- 5. While the primary function of this detachment is to reconnoitre
- and not to fight, except defensively, advantage should be taken of
- every opportunity to damage the enemy's telephonic and telegraphic
- communications.
-
- 6. The following information as to enemy organizations is thought
- to be reliable:
-
- Vauvillers Billets and Detraining point.
- Proyart Divisional H.Q. and billets.
- Chuignolles Divisional H.Q. and billets.
- Framerville Corps H.Q.
- Rainecourt Billets.
- Cappy Aerodrome and dumps.
- Foucaucourt Corps H.Q., dump, billets.
- Chaulnes Important railway junction.
- Ommiécourt Dumps.
- Fontaine Aerodrome, Div. H.Q. and dump.
-
-The Heavy Artillery of the Corps was divided, for this battle as
-normally, into two distinct groups, of which the one, or Bombardment
-Group, was to devote its energies to destructive attack, throughout the
-course of the battle, upon known enemy centres of resistance, suspected
-Headquarters, and telephone or telegraph exchanges, villages believed
-to be housing support and reserve troops, railway junctions and the
-like. The selection of all such targets depended upon a judicious
-choice of many tempting objectives disclosed by the very comprehensive
-records of the highly efficient Intelligence Officers belonging to my
-Heavy Artillery Headquarters. After that selection was made, all that
-remained was to draw up a time-table for the action of all bombardment
-guns which would ensure that they would lift off any given target just
-before our own Infantry would be likely to reach it, and then to apply
-their fire to a more distant locality.
-
-The second group of Heavy Guns was known as the Counter-battery Group,
-and was at all times under the direction of a special staff, especially
-skilled in all the scientific means at our disposal for determining the
-position and distribution of the enemy's Artillery, and in the methods
-and artifices for silencing or totally destroying it. Just as it was
-the special rôle of the Tanks to deal with the enemy machine guns, so
-it was the special rôle of our Counter-battery Artillery to deal with
-the enemy's field and heavy guns and howitzers. These--the guns and the
-machine guns--were the only things that troubled us; because, for the
-German soldier individually, our Australian infantryman is and always
-has been more than a match.
-
-Very special care was, therefore, devoted to the whole of the
-arrangements, first for carefully ascertaining beforehand the actual or
-probable position of every enemy gun that could be brought to bear on
-our Infantry, and then for allocating as many heavy guns as could be
-spared, each with a task appropriate to its range and hitting-power, to
-the destruction or suppression of the selected target. For it served
-the immediate purpose of eliminating the causes of molestation to our
-advancing Infantry equally well, whether the enemy gun was merely
-silenced by a sustained fire of shrapnel or high explosives which drove
-off the gun detachment, or by a flood of gas which compelled them to
-put on their gas masks, or whether it was actually destroyed by a
-direct hit and rendered permanently useless.
-
-The days before the battle were of supreme interest in this particular
-aspect. Each day I visited the Counter-battery Staff Officer, in his
-modest shanty, hidden away in the interior of a leafy wood, where
-in constant touch, by telephone, with all balloons, observers and
-sound-ranging stations, and surrounded by an imposing array of maps,
-studded with pins of many shapes and colours, he made his daily report
-to me of the enemy gun positions definitely identified or located, or
-found to have been vacated. And here again there was an opportunity for
-the display of a modest little stratagem. Having suspected or verified
-the fact that the enemy had altered the location of any given battery,
-leaving the empty gun pits as a tempting bait to us, fruitlessly to
-expend our energies and ammunition upon them--it would have been the
-worst of folly to prove to him that he had failed to fool us, by
-engaging his battery in its new position.
-
-On the contrary, we deliberately allowed ourselves to be fooled; and
-for several days before the great battle we intentionally committed
-the stupid error of methodically engaging all his empty gun positions.
-No doubt the German gunners laughed consumedly as they watched, from a
-safe distance, our wasted efforts; but they did not, doubtless, laugh
-quite so heartily when at dawn on the great day, the whole weight of
-our attack from over a hundred of my heaviest Counter-battery guns
-fells upon them in the new positions, which they believed that we had
-failed to detect.
-
-The Intelligence Service of the Corps was an extensive and highly
-organized department, whose jurisdiction extended throughout all the
-Divisions, Brigades and Battalions. Its routine work comprised the
-collection and collation of the daily flow of information from a
-large staff of observers in the forward zone, from the interrogation
-of prisoners, from the examination of documents and maps, and from
-neighbouring Corps and Armies. Before and during battle, however, a
-greatly added burden fell upon the shoulders of the Intelligence Staff.
-
-Closely associated with this branch of the Staff work were two
-activities of quite special interest. The Australian Corps organized a
-Topographical Section, manned by expert draftsmen and lithographers,
-who compiled and printed all the maps required throughout the whole
-Corps, and it was their business to keep all battle maps, barrage maps
-and topographical data recorded and corrected up to date. This alone
-proved a heavy task when pace had to be kept with a rapid advance. At
-such times the maps prepared on one day became obsolete two or three
-days later.
-
-[Illustration: Dug-outs at Froissy Beacon--being "mopped up" during
-battle.]
-
-[Illustration: Péronne--barricade in main street.]
-
-The issue of such maps was not confined to Commanders and Staffs. For
-all important operations, large numbers of handy sectional maps were
-struck off, so that they could be placed in the hands even of the
-subordinate officers and non-commissioned officers. These maps not only
-enabled the most junior leaders to study their objectives and tasks
-in detail before every battle, but also became a convenient vehicle
-for sending back reports as to the positions reached or occupied by
-front-line troops or detached parties. On occasions as many as five
-thousand of such maps would be struck off for the use of the troops, in
-a single operation.
-
-There was also a branch of the Intelligence Staff attached to the
-No. 3 Australian Air Squadron. Its special business was to print and
-distribute large numbers of photographs, both vertical and oblique,
-taken from the air over the territory to be captured--showing trenches,
-wire, roads, hedges and many other features of paramount interest to
-the troops. Thousands of such photographs were distributed before every
-battle.
-
-The important considerations, in regard both to maps and photographs,
-were that on the one hand, they were of priceless value to all who
-understood how to read and use them, and on the other hand, the event
-proved that their issue was in no sense labour in vain, for the keen
-interest taken, even by the private soldiers, in these facilities
-contributed powerfully to the success and precision with which all
-battle orders were carried out, and this more than repaid us for the
-additional trouble involved. It was inspiriting to me to see, on the
-eve of every great battle, as I made my round of the troops, numerous
-small groups of men gathered around their sergeant or corporal,
-eagerly discussing these maps and the photographs and the things they
-disclosed, the lie of the land, the wire, the trenches, the probable
-machine-gun posts, the dug-outs and the suspected enemy strong points.
-
-My account of the details prepared for the battle of August 8th is not
-nearly complete; but the demands of space forbid any more informative
-reference to numerous other essential ingredients of the plan than a
-mere recital of some of them. Thus, for example, it was necessary to
-decide the action of all Machine Guns, both those used collectively
-under Corps control, and those left to be handled by the Divisions;
-the employment of Smoke Tactics, by the use of smoke screens created
-both by mortars from the ground and by phosphorus bombs dropped from
-the air; the use to be made of all the technical troops (Engineers
-and Pioneers) in bridging, road and railway repairs and field
-fortifications; the arrangements for the medical evacuation of the
-wounded, and for the collection and safe-keeping of the anticipated
-haul of prisoners, the synchronization of watches throughout the whole
-command, so that action should occur punctually at a common clock time;
-and last, but not least, the establishment of the machinery of liaison
-internally between all the numerous formations of the Australian Corps,
-and also externally with my flank Corps, the Canadians, under Currie,
-on my right, and the British Third Corps, under Butler, on my left.
-
-Such, in outline, were my battle plans and my preparations for what I
-hoped would prove an operation of decisive influence upon the future
-of the campaign. The immediate results, which could be estimated on
-the spot and at the time, and the admissions of Ludendorff, which came
-to light only many months afterwards, combine to show that I was not
-mistaken.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[11] This was in Flanders and Belgium.
-
-[12] The secret was, indeed, so well kept, and the "camouflage" stories
-circulated proved so effective, that the King of the Belgians forwarded
-a strong protest to Marshal Foch because the Canadians were about to
-deliver an attack in his country, without his having been consulted
-or made aware of the plans; and the Canadian Headquarters in London
-complained to the War Office that the Canadian Forces were being
-divided, and were being sent by detachments to different parts of the
-front, instead of being always kept together as the Canadian Government
-desired. It is said that even Mr. Lloyd George knew nothing of the
-intention to attack until late on the day before the battle.
-
-[13] The weight of supplies of all kinds exceeded 10,000 tons.
-
-[14] See Chapter XIII.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE CHASE BEGINS
-
-
-The preliminary movements of Divisions were duly carried out without
-special difficulty. The Fifth Australian Division was relieved on
-August 1st by a Division of the Third Corps, in that part of the Corps
-front which lay north of the Somme, and passed into Corps Reserve, in a
-rear area, there to undergo training with Tanks, and to prepare itself
-for the work which it had to do.
-
-The Fourth Australian Division, from Corps Reserve, took over the
-French front, as far south as the Amiens--Roye road on August 2nd, and
-on the next night took over from the Second Australian Division all
-that part of its front which lay south of the railway, thus disposing
-itself upon what was ultimately to become the battle front of the
-Canadian Corps.
-
-On the same night, the Second and Third Divisions, who had thus been
-left in sole occupation of the sector which was to be the Australian
-Corps battle front, carried out a readjustment of their own mutual
-boundary, which would place each of these two Divisions upon its own
-proper battle front.
-
-On the night of August 4th, the Second and Third Divisions rearranged
-their defensive dispositions so that each of them deployed only a
-single Brigade for the passive defence of its front, and withdrew to
-its rear area its remaining two Brigades, who were thus afforded three
-clear days to complete their internal preparations.
-
-The Canadian Corps commenced to arrive, and on August 4th two Canadian
-Brigades relieved two Brigades of the Fourth Division, thereby
-releasing them so that they also might commence to prepare for the
-battle. It was originally intended that the last Brigade of the Fourth
-Division should also be relieved by Canadians on August 6th, when
-an untoward incident happened, which caused considerable alarm and
-speculation; and it led to a modification of this part of the plan.
-
-The 13th Australian Brigade (of the Fourth Division) was on August 4th
-spread out upon a front of over six thousand yards. It had no option
-but to leave the greater part of the front-line trenches unoccupied,
-and to defend its area with a series of small, but isolated, posts.
-On that night, one of these posts, in the vicinity of the road to
-Roye,[15] was raided by the enemy, and the whole of its occupants,
-comprising a sergeant and four or five men, were surrounded and taken
-prisoner.
-
-It was an unusual display of enterprise on the part of the enemy, at
-this point of time and in this locality. Whether it had been inspired
-by sneering criticisms from behind his line of the nature which have
-been quoted, or whether signs of unusual movement or a changed attitude
-on the part of our trench garrison had instigated a suspicion that
-something was happening which required investigation, could only be
-surmised. But the fact remained that five Australians had been taken,
-at a place several miles south of the southernmost point hitherto
-occupied by "the English."
-
-The side-stepping of the Australian Corps southwards had thereby become
-known to the enemy, and it was necessary to estimate the deductions
-which he would be likely to draw from that discovery. Much depended
-upon the behaviour of these prisoners. Would they talk? and, if so,
-what did they know? That Australian captives would not volunteer
-information likely to imperil the lives of their comrades, might be
-taken for granted, but German Intelligence Officers had means at their
-disposal to draw from prisoners, unwittingly, anything they might know.
-
-We could only hope, under the circumstances, that these men really did
-know nothing of our intention to attack; and that, if they had become
-aware of the presence of Canadian troops in the rear areas, they would
-believe the story which we had sedulously spread, that the Canadians
-were merely coming to relieve the Australian Corps, so that it might
-have a long rest after its heroic labours.
-
-Not many weeks afterwards it was my good fortune to capture a German
-Headquarters, in which were found Intelligence Reports containing a
-narrative of this very incident. The importance of the capture of these
-men had been recognized, and they had been taken far behind the lines
-for an exhaustive examination. But, despite all efforts of the German
-Intelligence Staff, they had refused to disclose anything whatever but
-their names and units--which they were bound to do under the rules
-of war. The report went on to praise their soldierly bearing and
-loyal reticence, and held up these brave Australians as a model to be
-followed by their own men, adding that such a demeanour could only earn
-the respect of an enemy.
-
-The alarm which this untoward happening created on our side of the line
-led to a determination to redouble our precautions. The Army Commander
-proposed, and I agreed, that the relief of the 13th Brigade by
-Canadians, _prior_ to the eve of the battle, was out of the question,
-as being too risky. It was decided that the 13th Brigade must remain in
-the line until the very last.
-
-This decision deprived General Maclagan of one of his three Brigades,
-and as it would be asking too much of the Fourth Division to carry out
-the rôle which had been allotted to it in the battle, with only two
-Brigades, I decided that the only thing to be done was to transfer to
-the Fourth Division, temporarily, one of the Brigades of the First
-Division, which was to arrive from the north in the course of the next
-three days.
-
-Urgent telegrams were therefore despatched to accelerate the arrival
-of one of the Brigades of the First Division. In due course the First
-Australian Brigade (Mackay) arrived by four special trains on the
-night of August 6th, in sufficient time to enable it to take its place
-in General Maclagan's order of battle, in substitution for the 13th
-Brigade. The 13th Brigade was destined to have some further stirring
-adventures before it again joined its own Division.
-
-The day preceding the great battle arrived all too soon. The prospect
-of an advance had sent a thrill through all ranks and expectation
-became tense. The use of the telephone had been ordered to be
-restricted, especially in the forward areas; for it was known that the
-enemy was in possession of listening apparatus, similar to our own, by
-which conversations on the telephone could be tapped, and unguarded
-references to the impending operations could be overheard.
-
-Final inspections had, therefore, to be made, and final injunctions
-administered, by Commanders and Staffs traversing long distances over
-the extensive Corps area by motor car and horse, and even on foot. A
-strange and ominous quiet pervaded the scene; it was only when the
-explosion of a stray enemy shell would cause hundreds of heads to peer
-out from trenches, gun-pits and underground shelters, that one became
-aware that the whole country was really packed thick with a teeming
-population carefully hidden away.
-
-Later in the afternoon of that last day came another note of alarm. To
-the Fourth and Fifth Australian Divisions had been allotted eighteen
-Store and Carrying Tanks. These had been brought the night before,
-into a small plantation lying about half a mile to the north of
-Villers-Bretonneux, loaded to their utmost capacity with battle stores
-of all descriptions: reserves of food and water, rifle ammunition, and
-a large reserve of Stokes Mortar bombs; also considerable supplies of
-petrol, to satisfy the ravenous appetites of the Tanks themselves.
-
-This locality suddenly became the object of the closest attention by
-the enemy's Artillery. He began to deluge it with such a volume of fire
-that in less than half an hour a great conflagration had been started,
-which did not subside until fifteen of the Tanks and all their valuable
-cargo had been reduced to irretrievable ruin.
-
-Had some unusually keen enemy observer perceived the presence of
-Tanks in our area, and would that knowledge have disclosed to him
-our jealously guarded secret? Fortunately, my Artillery Commander,
-Brigadier-General Coxen, making his last rounds of the Battery
-positions, was an eye-witness of the whole occurrence, and was able
-to reassure me. A chance shell--the last of a dozen fired entirely at
-random into our area--fell into the very centre of this group of Tanks,
-and set fire to some of the petrol. The resulting cloud of smoke became
-a signal to the enemy that something was burning which our men would
-probably attempt to salve; and in consonance with an entirely correct
-Artillery procedure, he at once concentrated a heavy fire upon the spot.
-
-That incident is typical of the perturbations through which all
-responsible Commanders have to pass on such occasions. The occurrence
-was explained as accidental, and implied no premature discovery by the
-enemy. Nothing remained but to repair the damage, and make special
-arrangements to replenish the Stores which these Divisions had lost.
-
-On the forenoon of the day before the battle, the following message was
-promulgated to all the troops:
-
- Corps Headquarters,
- August 7th, 1918.
-
- TO THE SOLDIERS OF THE AUSTRALIAN ARMY CORPS.
-
- For the first time in the history of this Corps, all five
- Australian Divisions will to-morrow engage in the largest and most
- important battle operation ever undertaken by the Corps.
-
- They will be supported by an exceptionally powerful Artillery, and
- by Tanks and Aeroplanes on a scale never previously attempted. The
- full resources of our sister Dominion, the Canadian Corps, will
- also operate on our right, while two British Divisions will guard
- our left flank.
-
- The many successful offensives which the Brigades and Battalions
- of this Corps have so brilliantly executed during the past four
- months have been but the prelude to, and the preparation for, this
- greatest and culminating effort.
-
- Because of the completeness of our plans and dispositions, of the
- magnitude of the operations, of the number of troops employed, and
- of the depth to which we intend to overrun the enemy's positions,
- this battle will be one of the most memorable of the whole war;
- and there can be no doubt that, by capturing our objectives, we
- shall inflict blows upon the enemy which will make him stagger, and
- will bring the end appreciably nearer.
-
- I entertain no sort of doubt that every Australian soldier will
- worthily rise to so great an occasion, and that every man, imbued
- with the spirit of victory, will, in spite of every difficulty
- that may confront him, be animated by no other resolve than grim
- determination to see through to a clean finish, whatever his task
- may be.
-
- The work to be done to-morrow will perhaps make heavy demands upon
- the endurance and staying powers of many of you; but I am confident
- that, in spite of excitement, fatigue, and physical strain, every
- man will carry on to the utmost of his powers until his goal is
- won; for the sake of AUSTRALIA, the Empire and our cause.
-
- I earnestly wish every soldier of the Corps the best of good
- fortune, and a glorious and decisive victory, the story of which
- will re-echo throughout the world, and will live for ever in the
- history of our home land.
-
- JOHN MONASH,
- Lieut.-General.
- Cmdg. Australian Corps.
-
-Not many days afterwards a copy of this order fell into the hands
-of the enemy, and the use he tried to make of it, to his own grave
-discomfiture, as the event proved, is an interesting story which will
-be told in due course.
-
-Zero hour was fixed for twenty minutes past four, on the morning
-of August 8th. It needs a pen more facile than I can command to
-describe, and an imagination more vivid to realize the stupendous
-import of the last ten minutes. In black darkness, a hundred thousand
-infantry, deployed over twelve miles of front, are standing grimly,
-silently, expectantly, in readiness to advance, or are already crawling
-stealthily forward to get within eighty yards of the line on which the
-barrage will fall; all feel to make sure that their bayonets are firmly
-locked, or to set their steel helmets firmly on their heads; Company
-and Platoon Commanders, their whistles ready to hand, are nervously
-glancing at their luminous watches, waiting for minute after minute
-to go by--and giving a last look over their commands--ensuring that
-their runners are by their sides, their observers alert, and that the
-officers detailed to control direction have their compasses set and
-ready. Carrying parties shoulder their burdens, and adjust the straps;
-pioneers grasp their picks and shovels; engineers take up their stores
-of explosives and primers and fuses; machine and Lewis gunners whisper
-for the last time to the carriers of their magazines and belt boxes
-to be sure and follow up. The Stokes Mortar carrier slings his heavy
-load, and his loading numbers fumble to see that their haversacks of
-cartridges are handy. Overhead drone the aeroplanes, and from the
-rear, in swelling chorus, the buzzing and clamour of the Tanks grows
-every moment louder and louder. Scores of telegraph operators sit by
-their instruments with their message forms and registers ready to
-hand, bracing themselves for the rush of signal traffic which will set
-in a few moments later; dozens of Staff Officers spread their maps
-in readiness, to record with coloured pencils the stream of expected
-information. In hundreds of pits, the guns are already run up, loaded
-and laid on their opening lines of fire; the sergeant is checking the
-range for the last time; the layer stands silently with the lanyard in
-his hand. The section officer, watch on wrist, counts the last seconds:
-"A minute to go"--"Thirty seconds"--"Ten seconds"--"Fire."
-
-And, suddenly, with a mighty roar, more than a thousand guns begin
-the symphony. A great illumination lights up the Eastern horizon;
-and instantly the whole complex organization, extending far back to
-areas almost beyond earshot of the guns, begins to move forward; every
-man, every unit, every vehicle and every Tank on their appointed
-tasks and to their designated goals; sweeping onward relentlessly and
-irresistibly. Viewed from a high vantage point and in the glimmer of
-the breaking day, a great Artillery barrage surely surpasses in dynamic
-splendour any other manifestation of collective human effort.
-
-The Artillery barrage dominates the battle, and the landscape. The
-field is speedily covered with a cloak of dust, and smoke and spume,
-making impossible any detailed observation, at the time, of the course
-of the battle as a whole. The story can only be indifferently pieced
-together, long after, by an attempted compilation of the reports of
-a hundred different participants, whose narratives are usually much
-impaired by personal bias, by the nervous excitement of the moment, and
-by an all too limited range of vision. That is why no comprehensive
-account yet exists of some of the major battles of the war, and why
-those partial narratives hitherto produced are so often in conflict.
-
-In so great a battle as this, only the broad facts and tangible results
-can be placed on record without danger of controversy. The whole
-immense operation proceeded according to plan in every detail, with a
-single exception, to which I must specially refer later on. The first
-phase, controlled as it was by the barrage time-table, necessarily
-ended punctually, and with the whole of the green line objective in our
-hands. This success gave us possession of nearly all the enemy's guns,
-so that his artillery retaliation speedily died down.
-
-The captures in this phase were considerable, and few of the garrisons
-of the enemy's forward offensive zone escaped destruction or capture.
-The Second and Third Divisions had a comparative "walk over," and they
-had come to a halt, with their tasks completed, before 7 a.m.
-
-The "open warfare" phase commenced at twenty minutes past eight,
-and both the red and the blue lines were captured in succession
-half-an-hour ahead of scheduled time. This capture covered the whole
-length of my front except the extreme left, where a half expected
-difficulty arose, but one which exercised no influence upon the day's
-success.
-
-The Canadians, on my right, had a similar story to tell; they had
-driven far into the enemy's defences, exactly as planned. In spite of
-the difficulties of observation, the recurrence of a ground mist of the
-same nature as we had experienced at Hamel, and the long distances over
-which messages and reports had to travel--the stream of information
-which reached me, by telegraph, telephone, pigeon and aeroplane was so
-full and ample that I was not left for a moment out of touch with the
-situation.
-
-The "inwards" messages are, naturally, far too voluminous for
-reproduction; but a brief selection from the many "outwards" messages
-telegraphed during that day to the Fourth Army Headquarters, and which,
-on a point of responsibility, I made it an invariable rule to draft
-myself, will give some indication of the course of events as they
-became known:
-
- _Sent at 7 a.m._: "Everything going well at 6.45 a.m. Heavy ground
- mist facilitating our advance, but delaying information. Infantry
- and Tanks got away punctually. Our attack was a complete surprise.
- Gailly Village and Accroche Wood captured. Enemy artillery has
- ceased along my whole front. Flanks Corps apparently doing well."
-
- _Sent at 8.30 a.m._: "Although not definitely confirmed, no doubt
- that our first objective green line captured along whole Corps
- front including Gailly, Warfusee, Lamotte and whole Cerisy Valley.
- Many guns and prisoners taken. Infantry and Artillery for second
- phase moving up to green line."
-
- _Sent at 10.55 a.m._: "Fifteenth Battalion has captured Cerisy with
- 300 prisoners. Advance to red line going well."
-
- _Sent at 11.10 a.m._: "Have taken Morcourt and Bayonvillers and
- many additional prisoners and guns. We are nearing our second
- objective and have reached it in places. My Cavalry Brigade has
- passed across our red line. We are now advancing to our final
- objective blue line."
-
- _Sent at 12.15 p.m._: "Hobbs has captured Harbonnières and reached
- blue line final objective on his whole front."
-
- _Sent at 1.15 p.m._: "Australian flag hoisted over Harbonnières
- at midday to-day. Should be glad if Chief would cable this to our
- Governor-General on behalf of Australian Corps."
-
- _Sent at 2.5 p.m._: "Total Australian casualties through dressing
- stations up to 12 noon under 600. Prisoners actually counted exceed
- 4,000. Many more coming in."
-
- _Sent at 4.40 p.m._: "Captured enemy Corps H.Q. near Framerville
- shortly after noon to-day." (This was the 51st German Corps).
-
- _Sent at 8 p.m._: "Corps captures will greatly exceed 6,000
- prisoners, 100 guns, including heavy and railway guns, thousands of
- machine guns, a railway train, and hundreds of vehicles and teams
- of regimental transport. Total casualties for whole Corps will not
- exceed 1,200."
-
-The vital information, which it is imperative for the Corps Commander
-to have accurately and rapidly delivered throughout the course of a
-battle, is that relating to the actual position, at any given moment
-of time, of our front line troops; showing the locations which they
-have reached, and whether they are stationary, advancing or retiring.
-For it has to be remembered that the whole Artillery resources of the
-Corps were pooled and kept under his own hand; and it was imperative
-that any changes in the Artillery action or employment must be quickly
-made, so as to extend the utmost help to any Infantry which might get
-into difficulties.
-
-Thus, for example, the failure of any body of Infantry to enter and
-pass beyond a wood or a village, would be a sure indication that
-such locality was still held in strength by the enemy, and it would
-be appropriate to "switch" Artillery fire upon it, in order to drive
-him out. But such a proceeding would be anything but prudent if the
-information on which such action was to be based were already an hour
-old.
-
-Transmission of messages from the front line troops to the
-nearest telephone terminal is usually slow and uncertain, and the
-retransmission of such messages, in succession, by Battalions,
-Brigades and Divisions only prolongs the delay. The normal process is
-in consequence far too dilatory for the exigencies of actual battle
-control.
-
-A vastly superior method had therefore to be devised, and recourse
-was had to the use of aeroplanes. The No. 3 Australian Squadron soon
-acquired great proficiency in this work. They were equipped with
-two-seater planes, carrying both pilot and observer, and the work was
-called "Contact Patrol."
-
-The "plane" flying quite low, usually at not more than 500 feet, the
-observer would mark down by conventional signs on a map the actual
-positions of our Infantry, of enemy Infantry or other facts of prime
-importance, and he often had time to scribble a few informative notes
-also. The "plane" then flew back at top speed to Corps H.Q., and the
-map, with or without an added report, was dropped in the middle of an
-adjacent field, wrapped in a weighted streamer of many colours. It was
-then brought by cyclists into the Staff Office.
-
-Relays of Contact planes were on such service all day on every battle
-day, and although it was a hazardous duty few planes were lost. The
-total time which elapsed between the making of the observation at the
-front line and the arrival of the information in the hands of the Corps
-Staff was seldom more than ten minutes.
-
-There can be no doubt that the whole operation was a complete surprise
-both to the troops opposed to us and to the German High Command.
-It became abundantly clear, in the following days, that no proper
-arrangements existed for rapidly reinforcing this part of the front in
-the event of an attack by us, but that these had to be extemporized
-after the event. This discovery points to the conclusion that the
-enemy had once again come to regard the British Army as a negligible
-quantity, a mistake for which he paid an even heavier price than when
-he made it in the early days of the war.
-
-As an indication that even the Divisions in the line whose duty it
-primarily was to know, had no suspicions of an impending attack, comes
-the story of a German medical officer who was captured in his pyjamas
-in Warfusee village, and who confessed that being awakened by our
-bombardment and thinking it was merely a raid, he left his dug-out to
-see what was afoot, and thought he must be still dreaming when he saw
-our Pioneers a few hundred feet away, busily at work repairing the main
-road.
-
-There was only one blemish in the whole day's operations. Not serious
-in relation to the whole, it nevertheless gravely hampered the work
-of the left Brigade of the Fourth Division. In short, the Third Corps
-Infantry failed to reach their ultimate objective line, and the enemy
-remained in possession of the Chipilly spur and of all the advantages
-which that possession conferred upon him.
-
-The advance of my left flank, from the green to the red line, along the
-margin of the plateau bordering the Somme, was left exposed to his full
-view, while the river valley itself remained under the domination of
-his rifle fire, at quite moderate ranges. But worse than all, a battery
-of his Field Artillery emplaced just above the village of Chipilly
-remained in action, and one after another, six of the nine Tanks which
-had been allotted to the 4th Brigade were put out of action by direct
-hits from these guns.
-
-The possibility was one which had been considered and measures to meet
-it were promptly taken. Maclagan, whose right Brigade in due course
-reached the blue line according to programme, making in its progress a
-splendid haul of prisoners and guns, took immediate steps to "refuse"
-his left flank, _i.e._, to bend it back towards Morcourt, and to
-establish, with a reserve battalion, a flank defence along the river,
-facing north from Cerisy to Morcourt.
-
-Both these villages were, however, successfully captured, and "mopped
-up," which meant that all the enemy and machine guns lurking in them
-were accounted for. But the river valley was not captured, and became,
-until the situation was ultimately cleared up, a kind of No Man's Land
-between the enemy still holding the Chipilly spur on the north, and the
-Fourth Division on the south of the river.
-
-The ultimate conquest of the Chipilly Bend forms no part of that
-day's story. What were the reasons for the failure of the Third Corps
-to complete its allotted task may have been the subject of internal
-inquiry, but the result of any such was not made known. The official
-report for the day was to the effect that the enemy on this front
-had resisted strongly, that fighting had been fierce, and that no
-progress could be made. But one is compelled to recognize that
-such language was often an euphemistic method of describing faulty
-Staff co-ordination, or faulty local leadership. There would be no
-justification, however, for questioning the bravery of the troops
-themselves.
-
-It has already been foreshadowed that the experiences on that day of
-the contingent of sixteen Armoured Motor-cars under Lieutenant-Colonel
-Carter would form sensational reading, and the story of August 8th
-would not be complete without at least a brief reference to their
-exploits.
-
-It was nearly midnight when Carter, with a Staff Officer, got back to
-Corps H.Q. to render their report. They were scarcely recognizable,
-covered as they were from head to feet, with grime and grease. They had
-had a busy time. The substance of what they had to tell was taken down
-at the time almost verbatim, and reads as follows:
-
- "Got Armoured Cars through to Warfusee-Abancourt. When we reached
- the other side of No Man's Land we found that the road was good
- but a number of trees (large and small) had been shot down and
- lay right across it in places. Obstacles removed by chopping up
- the smaller trees and hauling off the big ones by means of a
- Tank. Pioneers helped us to clear the road all the way down. We
- did not come up to our advancing troops until they were almost
- near the Red Line. When we got past our leading Infantry we came
- upon quite a number of Huns and dealt with them. Had then to wait
- a little on account of our barrage, but went through a light
- barrage. When we got to Blue Line we detached three sections to
- run down to Framerville. When they got there they found all the
- Boche horse transport and many lorries drawn up in the main road
- ready to move off. Head of column tried to bolt in one direction
- and other vehicles in another. Complete confusion. Our men killed
- the lot (using 3,000 rounds) and left them there; four Staff
- Officers on horseback shot also. The cars then ran down to the
- east side of Harbonnières, on the south-east road to Vauvillers,
- and met there a number of steam wagons; fired into their boilers
- causing an impassable block. Had a lot of good shooting around
- Vauvillers. Then came back to main road. Two sections of cars went
- on to Foucaucourt and came in contact with a Boche gun in a wood
- north-east of Foucaucourt. This gun blew the wheels off one car and
- also hit three others. However, three of the cars were got away.
- Two other cars went to Proyart and found a lot of troops billeted
- there having lunch in the houses. Our cars shot through the windows
- into the houses, killing quite a lot of the enemy. Another section
- went towards Chuignolles and found it full of German soldiers.
- Our cars shot them. Found rest billets and old trenches also with
- troops in them. Engaged them. Had quite a battle there. Extent of
- damage not known, but considerable. Cars then came back to main
- road. We were then well in advance of Blue Line. Everything was now
- perfectly quiet--no shell-fire of any kind.
-
- "I went a quarter of a mile beyond La Flaque. There was a big dump
- there, and Huns kept continually coming out and surrendering, and
- we brought quite a lot of them back as prisoners. It was then
- about 10.30 a.m. A party of Hun prisoners was detailed to tow back
- my disabled car. I saw no sign of any wired system anywhere. Old
- overgrown trenches but no organized trench system. I proceeded to
- some rising ground near Framerville. Did not go into Framerville,
- but could see that the roofs of the houses were intact. Saw no
- trace of any organized system of defence of any kind and no troops.
- My people saw no formed bodies of troops of any kind during the day
- coming towards us, but very large numbers of fugitives hastening in
- the opposite direction. Engaged as many of them as could be reached
- from the roads. I saw, from the hill, open country with a certain
- amount of vegetation on it."
-
-The consternation and disorganization caused by the sudden onslaught of
-these cars, at places fully ten miles behind the enemy's front line of
-that morning, may be left to the imagination. It was a feat of daring
-and resolute performance, which deserves to be remembered.
-
-[Illustration: The Burning Villages--east of Péronne.]
-
-[Illustration: Dummy Tank Manufacture.]
-
-Throughout the whole day, surrenders by the enemy, particularly of
-troops in rear or reserve positions, were on a wholesale scale. The
-total number of live prisoners actually counted up to nightfall in
-the Divisional and Corps Prisoner-of-War Cages exceeded 8,000 and the
-Canadians had gathered in at least as many more.
-
-The Australian Corps also captured 173 guns capable of being hauled
-away, not counting those which had been blown to pieces. These captures
-included two "railway" guns, one of 9-inch and the other of 11.2-inch
-bore. The latter was an imposing affair. The gun itself rested on
-two great bogie carriages, each on eight axles; it was provided
-with a whole train of railway trucks fitted some to carry its giant
-ammunition, others as workshops, and others as living quarters for the
-gun detachment. The outfit was completed by a locomotive to haul the
-gun forward to its daily task of shelling Amiens, and hauling it back
-to its garage when its ugly work was done.
-
-The captures of machine guns and of trench mortars of all types and
-sizes were on so extensive a scale that no attempt was ever made to
-make even an approximate count of them. They were ultimately collected
-into numerous dumps, and German prisoners were employed for many weeks
-in cleaning and oiling them for transport to Australia as trophies of
-war.
-
-But the booty comprised a large and varied assortment of many other
-kinds of warlike stores. The huge dumps of engineering material at
-Rosières and La Flaque served all the needs of the Corps for the
-remainder of the war. There were horses, wagons, lorries and tractors
-by the hundred, including field searchlights, mobile pharmacies, motor
-ambulances, travelling kitchens, mess carts, limbers, and ammunition
-wagons, and there were literally hundreds of thousands of rounds of
-artillery ammunition scattered all over the captured territory in dumps
-both large and small.
-
-For the next two days all roads leading from the battle area back
-towards the Army Cage at Poulainville, where railway trains were
-waiting to receive them, were congested with column after column of
-German prisoners, roughly organized into companies--tangible evidences
-to the civilians of the district, as to our own troops, that a great
-victory had been won.
-
-The tactical value of the victory was immense, and has never yet been
-fully appreciated by the public of the Empire, perhaps because our
-censorship at the time strove to conceal the intention to follow it up
-immediately with further attacks. But no better testimony is needed
-than that of Ludendorff himself, who calls it Germany's "black day,"
-after which he himself gave up all hope of a German victory.
-
-Ludendorff in his "Memoirs," republished in the _Times_ of August 22nd,
-1919, writes:
-
- "August 8th was the black day of the German Army in the history
- of the war. This was the worst experience I had to go through....
- Early on August 8th, in a dense fog that had been rendered still
- thicker by artificial means, the British, mainly with Australian
- and Canadian Divisions, and French, attacked between Albert and
- Moreuil with strong squadrons of Tanks, but for the rest with
- no great superiority. They broke between the Somme and the Luce
- deep into our front. The Divisions in line allowed themselves
- to be completely overwhelmed. Divisional Staffs were surprised
- in their Headquarters by enemy Tanks" [_sic_, our armoured cars
- were meant].... "The exhausted [_sic_] Divisions that had been
- relieved a few days earlier and that were lying in the region
- south-west of Péronne were immediately alarmed and set in motion
- by the Commander-in-Chief of the Second Army. At the same time
- he brought forward towards the breach all available troops. The
- Rupprecht Army Group dispatched reserves thither by train. The
- 18th Army threw its own reserves directly into the battle from the
- south-east.... On an order from me, the 9th Army too, although
- itself in danger, had to contribute. Days of course elapsed before
- the troops from a further distance could reach the spot.... It
- was a very gloomy situation.... Six or seven Divisions that were
- quite fairly to be described as effective had been completely
- battered.... The situation was uncommonly serious. If they
- continued to attack with even comparative vigour, we should no
- longer be able to maintain ourselves west of the Somme.... The
- wastage of the Second Army had been very great. Heavy toll had
- also been taken of the reserves which had been thrown in.... Owing
- to the deficit created our losses had reached such proportions
- that the Supreme Command was faced with the necessity of having
- to disband a series of Divisions, in order to furnish drafts....
- The enemy had also captured documentary material of inestimable
- value to him.... The General Staff Officer whom I had dispatched to
- the battlefield on August 8th, gave me such an account that I was
- deeply confounded.... August 8th made things clear for both Army
- Commands, both for the German and for that of the enemy."
-
-A hole had been driven on a width of nearly twelve miles, right through
-the German defence, and had blotted out, at one blow, the whole of
-the military resources which it had contained. The obligation which
-was thereby cast upon the enemy to throw into the gap troops and guns
-hastily collected from every part of his front, imposed upon him also
-an increased vulnerability at every other point which had to be so
-denuded.
-
-It was no part of our programme to rest content upon our oars, and
-allow the enemy time to collect himself at leisure. The resources of
-the Australian Corps had suffered scarcely any impairment as the result
-of that glorious day. Such small losses as had been incurred were more
-than counter-balanced by the elation of these volunteer troops at this
-further demonstration of their moral and physical superiority over the
-professional soldiers of a militarist enemy nation.
-
-On that very day all necessary measures were taken to maintain the
-battle without pause. But, in order not to interrupt the continuity of
-the story of subsequent developments, it will be convenient to mention,
-in this place, two events which cannot be dissociated from the great
-battle, and which will be memorable to those who participated in them.
-
-The first was an accidental meeting together of a number of
-the most distinguished figures in the war. On August 11th, the
-Commander-in-Chief was to come to congratulate the Corps and to
-thank the troops through their Commanders. I called the Divisional
-Generals together at the Red Château at Villers-Bretonneux to meet him
-that afternoon. In the meantime General Rawlinson invited his Corps
-Commanders to meet him in the same village for a battle conference,
-and chose the same hour and a spot in the open, under a spreading
-beech, where his Generals sat informally around the maps spread upon
-the grass. At this meeting were Rawlinson, Currie, Kavanagh, Godley,
-myself, Montgomery and Budworth. The Field Marshal, with Laurence,
-the Chief of his General Staff, on their way to the Red Château, soon
-arrived. Shortly after Sir Henry Wilson, happening to pass in his car,
-also joined the party; and not many moments afterwards there arrived,
-again entirely without previous arrangement, Clemenceau and his Finance
-Minister Klotz.
-
-Villers-Bretonneux, only three days before reeking with gas and
-unapproachable, and now delivered from its bondage, was the lodestone
-which had attracted the individual members of this remarkable
-assemblage; and the more serious business in hand was perforce
-postponed while Rawlinson, Currie and I had to listen to the generous
-felicitations of all these great war leaders.
-
-The second event was the visit of His Majesty the King, on August 12th,
-to Bertangles, when he conferred on me the honour of Knighthood, in
-the presence of selected detachments of five hundred of the men who
-had fought in the battle, a hundred from each of my Five Divisions.
-A representative collection of guns and other war trophies had been
-hauled in from the battlefield to line the avenues by which the King
-approached. His Majesty was particularly interested in the German
-transport horses, expressing the hope that they would soon learn the
-Australian language; a pleasantry which he well remembered when I had
-the honour of an audience with him, on the anniversary of that very
-day.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[15] See Map J.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-EXPLOITATION
-
-
-The Fourth British Army had opened the great Allied counter-offensive
-with a brilliant stroke. It remained to see in what fashion the Allied
-High Command would proceed to exploit the victory. Would the Fourth
-Army be called upon, with added resources, at once to thrust due east,
-with the object of drawing upon itself the German reserves, and dealing
-with them as they arrived; or would blows now be delivered on other
-fronts with a view to keeping those reserves dispersed?
-
-The immediate decision, communicated to me by the Army Commander on
-the afternoon of August 8th, was that, while the whole situation was
-being considered, and troop movements were in progress to enable the
-necessary concentrations to be made elsewhere, the Fourth Army would
-continue its advance forthwith; but that, instead of driving due east,
-the thrust was to be made in a south-easterly direction.
-
-The object was to aim at Roye, and either by the capture of that
-important railway centre, or at least by the threat of its capture,
-to precipitate a withdrawal by the enemy from the great salient which
-he had in his April and May advances pressed into the French front
-opposite Moreuil and Montdidier, a salient which could be kept supplied
-by that railway alone.
-
-The Australian Corps front on the evening of August 8th lay roughly
-on a north and south line, just east of Méricourt and just west of
-Vauvillers. But the Canadian Corps front bent back sharply from the
-latter point in a south-westerly direction. The Canadians were,
-therefore, to advance between the railway and the Amiens--Roye road to
-the general line Lihons-Le Quesnoy. The rôle of the Australian Corps
-was to make a defensive flank to this advance, by pivotting its left
-on the Somme in the vicinity of Méricourt, but advancing its right
-along the railway, in the direction of Lihons.
-
-It was a decision which was unpalatable to me, for it condemned me to
-leaving the whole of the great bend of the Somme, on which lay Bray,
-Péronne and Brie, in the undisturbed possession of the enemy; and in
-view of the reports sent in from the front and confirmed later by the
-Armoured Cars, it appeared to me that the resumption of a vigorous
-advance due east next day would give us, without fighting, possession,
-or at least command, of the whole of this bend; while if we allowed the
-enemy to take breath and recover from his shock, he would probably have
-time to rally the fugitives, and turn again to face us.
-
-This same great bend of the river had been the scene of two years
-of sedentary warfare, in 1915 and 1916, when the French and German
-artillery had converted it into a barren wilderness. It was, in
-its eastern part, scored with trenches, and bristled with wire
-entanglements in every direction; it was devoid of villages, woods, or
-any kind of shelter--a forbidding expanse of devastation.
-
-But between our front lines of that day and the western edge of this
-wilderness, there still lay a belt of some six or seven miles of
-practically unharmed country over which the retreat of our Fifth Army
-in March had carried them without much fighting. I should have welcomed
-an order to push on the next morning, in open warfare formation, to
-gain possession of the whole of this belt, and force the enemy to make
-any attempt to reorganize his line on the inhospitable ground which lay
-beyond.
-
-The order stood, however; and instructions were issued for the First
-Australian Division to be drawn into the fight, and to take upon
-themselves the task of conforming to the advance of the Canadians along
-the railway. The first phase of this advance was to have been carried
-out at 11 a.m. on August 9th by the First Division passing through the
-right Brigade of the Fifth Division.
-
-The 1st Brigade of the First Australian Division had, as already
-related, arrived from the North in time to participate in the fighting
-of the day before; but the remaining two Brigades arrived so late,
-and had to perform so long a march from their detraining station near
-Amiens to our now greatly advanced battle front, that it soon became
-evident that they could not arrive at the line of departure in time to
-synchronize with the Canadian advance.
-
-In consequence, the Fifth Division was instructed to detail its right
-line Brigade to begin this duty; and in due course the 15th Brigade
-carried out the first part of the task and advanced our line to
-include the capture of Vauvillers, an operation which was successfully
-completed by midday.
-
-It will be remembered that the Second and Third Divisions had been
-given a task for the previous day which was limited in time, though
-not in difficulty, and that this task had been completed, as it proved
-with very little stress, by 7 a.m. These Divisions had thus had a whole
-day in which to rest and reorganize. The Second Division was therefore
-placed under orders to participate in the advance of August 9th.
-
-In due course, the First Division arrived at our fighting front, and
-that afternoon both the First and Second Divisions advanced in battle
-order, the former passing through the right Brigade of the Fifth
-Division, and the latter through its left Brigade. This operation
-carried our front line in this part of the field to the foot of
-the Lihons hill, and gave us complete possession of the village of
-Framerville. It also incidentally released the Fifth Division from
-further line duty.
-
-The opposition met with during this day's operations varied
-considerably along the battle front, which extended in this part of
-the field over about 6,000 yards. The Lihons ridge was found to be
-strongly held, and much fire both from field guns and machine guns was
-encountered. It was evident that, over-night, the enemy had succeeded
-in organizing sufficient troops for the local defence of this important
-point.
-
-Upon the front of the Second Division, however, there was little
-opposition and the enemy gave up Framerville almost without a
-struggle. Three Battalions of Tanks co-operated in the day's fighting,
-but several of them were disabled by direct fire from Lihons. The task
-assigned to the Corps for that day was, none the less, carried out in
-its entirety, and by nightfall contact had been made with the Second
-Canadian Division on the railway about a mile east of Rosières.
-
-The situation on the left flank of the Australian Corps was, however,
-anything but satisfactory. The Chipilly spur was still in the hands of
-the enemy, all the efforts over-night on the part of the 58th Division
-(Third Corps) to dislodge them having failed. General Butler, the Corps
-Commander, in pursuance of arrangements come to some days before, was
-to proceed on sick leave, as he had for some time been far from well;
-and General Godley (my former chief of the 22nd Corps) was temporarily
-to take his place. I therefore persuaded the Army Commander to avail
-himself of this change to allow me to take in hand the situation at
-Chipilly, and to give me, for this purpose, a limited jurisdiction over
-the north bank of the Somme. This was merely getting in the thin edge
-of the wedge; and not many hours later, I found myself where I had so
-strongly desired to be from the first, namely, astride of the Somme
-valley.
-
-Accordingly, the 13th Australian Brigade, after a day's rest from the
-anxious duty of acting as a screen for the Canadians on the eve of the
-main battle, were told off to deal with the Chipilly spur. Before,
-however, they could reach the locality, and in the late afternoon of
-August 9th, the 131st American Regiment (of Bell's Division), which was
-still under the orders of the Third Corps, very gallantly advanced in
-broad daylight and took possession practically of the whole spur.
-
-In the meantime the 13th Brigade arrived, sending a Battalion across
-the Somme at Cerisy, and, joining the Americans, helped to clear up
-the whole situation. This made my left flank more secure, and enabled
-Maclagan to withdraw the defensive flank which he had deployed along
-the river from Cerisy to Morcourt. That night I took over the 131st
-American Regiment from the Third Corps, attached it, as a temporary
-measure, to the Fourth Division, and placed Maclagan in charge of the
-newly captured front, which extended north of the river as far as the
-Corbie--Bray road.
-
-The day ended with Divisions in the line from south to north in the
-following order, viz.:--First, Second and Fourth, the last named having
-been augmented by an American Regiment, having had its own 13th Brigade
-restored to it, and having in exchange yielded up to the First Division
-the 1st Brigade of the latter.
-
-The Fourth Division had had comparatively much the worst of it, up to
-this stage, of any of my Divisions, and I felt that they were due for
-a short rest. Accordingly, I issued orders that same night for the
-Third Division, which, like the Second, had been resting since the
-previous forenoon, to relieve the Fourth Division on that part of the
-front which lay between the Somme and the main St. Quentin road on the
-following day, but for the time being leaving the newly captured ground
-north of the Somme still in Maclagan's hands.
-
-After an examination of the ground and a study of the situation, the
-opportunity for a further immediate local operation, certain to gain
-valuable tactical ground, and likely also to yield a good number of
-prisoners, presented itself to me. A further attraction was that it
-would permit of a useful advance of my left flank on the south of the
-Somme. This project, being of some tactical interest, demands a short
-explanatory reference to the terrain.
-
-The river Somme, from Cerisy as far east as Péronne, flows in a
-tortuous valley which describes a succession of bends, almost uniform
-in size and regular in disposition. These bends face with their bases
-alternately north and south, and average a depth of two miles, by a
-width across the base of about a mile and a half. Each came to be known
-to us by the name of one of the villages which reposed in its folds,
-such as Chipilly, Etinehem, Bray, Cappy, Feuillères, and Ommiécourt;
-all these have become names to be remembered in the subsequent conquest
-of this part of the Somme valley.
-
-The valley itself is in this region a mile broad; its sides are steep
-and often precipitous, and the adjoining plateaus rise some 200 feet
-above its bed. Through this valley winds, in ordered curves, the canal
-for barge traffic; it is flanked by vast stretches of backwaters and
-heavily grassed morasses, in which the river loses itself. The valley
-can be traversed only by the few bridges and the lock gates of the
-canal, and the causeways leading to them from either bank.
-
-It would be difficult country for a fight on a general scale, but ideal
-for guerilla warfare. The whole succession of villages clinging to
-the sides of the valley were in the hands of the enemy, and in use by
-him for the housing and shelter of his troops. To attack and overcome
-them one by one, by fighting up the winding valley, would have been a
-costly business. But it suggested itself that they might all be won by
-a species of investment.
-
-Taking any one of these U-shaped bends singly, by drawing a cordon
-across its base, the whole of any enemy forces who might be occupying
-the bend would be denied escape from it, except by _crossing_ the river
-into the adjacent bend. But if a semi-cordon had been simultaneously
-drawn across the base of that next bend also, even that loophole would
-be closed, and moreover such troops as inhabited the second bend would
-find themselves surrounded also.
-
-Immediately before my left flank lay the Méricourt bend on the south of
-the river and the Etinehem bend to the north of it. Both were held by
-the enemy, doubtless fugitives from the great battle, who had sought
-food, water and underground shelter in the numerous dug-outs which
-honeycombed the sides of the valley. The design was to capture the
-whole of these with little effort. It was a good plan, and only an
-unforeseen accident prevented its full realization.
-
-Early on the morning of the 10th, I summoned a conference at Maclagan's
-Headquarters in Corbie, which was attended by the Commanders and
-certain Brigadiers of the Third and Fourth Divisions. It was arranged
-that on the north of the river, the 13th Brigade would that night get
-astride of the Etinehem spur on the north, while simultaneously the
-10th Brigade, by making a side sweep skirting Proyart, would advance
-our line till its left rested on the river a mile east of Méricourt.
-
-Columns were to move along defined routes, leaving the objectives
-well to the flanks, and then to encircle the enemy positions. Each
-column was to be accompanied by Tanks and was to move in an easterly
-direction and then wheel in towards the Somme. Although Tanks had never
-previously been used at night, as their utility was uncertain, it was
-thought that the effect of the noise they made would lead to the speedy
-collapse of the defence.
-
-The plan succeeded to perfection on the north of the river, and the
-Etinehem spur and village with all its defenders fell to us almost
-without a blow. Four Tanks amused themselves by racing up and down the
-main Corbie--Bray road at top speed, and the clamour they made cleared
-the path for the marching infantry.
-
-On the south, however, just after nightfall, a sudden onslaught by a
-flight of enemy bombing planes, threw the head of the 10th Brigade
-column into confusion, and its Commander was killed. Two of the
-Tanks were also disabled by direct hits from Artillery. This delayed
-the progress of the operation, and the next day broke with the task
-uncompleted. The 9th and 11th Brigades were, however, at once sent up
-to reinforce, and during the following day all three Brigades completed
-the operation by possessing themselves of the villages of Méricourt and
-Proyart and the woods adjoining the river.
-
-This series of local operations yielded some 300 prisoners, and
-entirely cleared up the confused and unsatisfactory situation which had
-existed on my left flank, as the aftermath of the Chipilly spur failure
-of the first day. It also brought my line up more square to the Somme,
-and so somewhat shortened my already expanding front. But my left flank
-was at last quite secure.
-
-I must now turn to the extreme right flank, which was, on this same
-day, also the scene of very severe fighting. I have related the
-progress of the First Division to the foot of the Lihons ridge the
-night before. On August 10th and 11th the advance was continued by the
-First and Second Divisions in sympathy with the advance of the Canadian
-Corps on the south of the railway. There were only a few Tanks left
-available to assist in this advance; and the resistance of the enemy in
-the neighbourhood of Lihons had stiffened considerably.
-
-The devastated area had already been reached by us in this part of
-the field, and the terrain was a labyrinth of old trenches, and a sea
-of shell-holes; the remains of old wire entanglements spread in every
-direction, and the whole area had been covered by a rank growth of
-thistles and brambles. It furnished numerous harbours for machine-guns,
-and it was country over which it was difficult to preserve the
-semblance of an organized battle formation during an advance.
-
-The enemy fought hard and determinedly to retain Lihons, and in some
-parts of the line the battle swayed to and fro. But before the morning
-was well advanced, we had taken possession of the whole of the Lihons
-Knoll, of Auger Wood, and of the villages of Lihons and Rainecourt,
-while the Canadians had passed through Chilly just south of the
-railway. All that afternoon the enemy made repeated counter-attacks,
-particularly directed against Lihons and Rainecourt; but they were all
-successfully driven off by rifle and machine-gun fire without the loss
-of any ground.
-
-It was a great feat to the credit of the First Australian Division, and
-ranks among its best performances during the war. Some 20 field-guns
-and hundreds of machine-guns were captured. Such a battle, with such
-results, would, in 1917, have been placarded as a victory of the first
-magnitude. Now, with the new standards set up by the great battle of
-August 8th, it was reckoned merely as a local skirmish.
-
-General Currie, operating on my right, had had a similar experience
-of slow, although definite, progress, against hourly stiffening
-opposition, and the fighting by the methods of open warfare was growing
-daily more costly. The enemy had recovered from his first surprise,
-our resources in Tanks had been greatly diminished, and much of our
-heavy Artillery had not yet had time to get into its forward positions.
-In other words, the possibility of further cheap exploitation of the
-success of August 8th had come to an end.
-
-It was decided, therefore, to recommend to the Army Commander that a
-temporary halt should be called on the line thus reached, and that
-rested troops should be brought up to relieve the line Divisions.
-He concurred and decided that we should prepare for the delivery on
-August 15th of another combined "set-piece" blow, which would have the
-probable effect of again putting the enemy on the run, so that the
-moving battle could be resumed.
-
-This plan was never actually carried into effect, for reasons which
-did not at once appear. But it transpired later that General Currie
-had made very strong private representations to the Fourth Army
-against the plan. He questioned the wisdom of expending the resources
-of the Canadian Corps upon an attempt to repeat, over such broken
-country, covered as it was with entanglements and other obstacles,
-the great success of August 8th. He urged that the Canadian Corps
-should be transferred back to the Arras district--which they knew so
-well. It was country lending itself admirably to operations requiring
-careful organization, which none understood better than Currie and his
-admirable Staff.
-
-It was an issue in which I was not greatly concerned, for my share
-in the proposed operation of August 15th was to be quite subsidiary.
-It was to consist merely in once again advancing my right flank, in
-sympathy with the Canadian advance, as far as to include Chaulnes Hill
-and the very important railway junction at that town. In ignorance of
-the fact that the matter was under discussion, I prepared complete
-plans for the co-operation of the Australian Corps, and detailed the
-Fourth and Fifth Australian Divisions to carry them out. Fortunately,
-before any actual executive action had been initiated, orders came that
-the project was to be abandoned.
-
-It soon became known that still larger questions were being discussed.
-The British front, which in July reached south as far only as
-Villers-Bretonneux, had now been extended to the latitude of Roye.
-The Field Marshal was urging reduction, so as to liberate Divisions
-for offensive operations elsewhere, and Marshal Foch agreed that, as
-by the elimination of the Soissons salient the French front had been
-shortened, this could be done. In due course confidential announcements
-were made that, as soon as it could be arranged, the Canadians would be
-withdrawn from the line, and their places taken by French troops. This
-would once again make my Corps the south flank Corps of the British
-Army, and I would junction with the French on the Lihons Hill.
-
-The halt thus called gave me breathing time to consider a thorough
-reorganization of my whole Corps front. This had, by August 12th, again
-grown to a total length of over 16,000 yards. This increase had been
-the result, firstly, of my having, as narrated, taken over ground to
-the north of the Somme, secondly, by reason of the fact that during
-the advances of the last four days my right had hugged the railway,
-while my left had continued to rest on the Somme, two lines which were
-rapidly diverging from each other, and thirdly, because my front line
-now lay sharply oblique to my general line of advance.
-
-Even with a fifth Division, which I now had at my disposal, a front of
-16,000 yards was far too attenuated for Corps operations on the grand
-scale, and even for more localized operations, by one or two Divisions
-at a time, there was little opportunity to provide the troops with
-adequate intervals of rest. I therefore strongly urged upon General
-Rawlinson either a shortening of my front, or a further increase in my
-resources.
-
-He chose the latter alternative, and on August 12th placed under my
-orders, provisionally, the 17th British Division (Major-General P. R.
-Robertson), coupled with the condition that while it might be employed
-as a line Division, it was not to be used for offensive operations. The
-reason, confidentially given, was that it was shortly to be employed in
-a large scale offensive in course of preparation by the Third British
-Army.
-
-It was, for me, a most opportune measure of relief from a difficult
-situation; for the Third Australian Division was now also badly in need
-of a rest. Prior to the great advance, it had been longest of any of
-the Divisions in the line, and had subsequently had a hard time in
-fighting its way forward from Méricourt to Proyart. It was therefore
-relieved in the line on August 13th by the 17th Division and went into
-Corps Reserve.
-
-On the same day I put into effect a project of organization which the
-necessities of the case forced upon me. North of the river stood the
-13th Australian Brigade, and the 131st American Regiment, both still
-under the command of General Maclagan, the remainder of whose Division
-was resting, and this Division might be required at short notice for
-operations at a totally different part of the front. (I had, in fact,
-earmarked it for the proposed attack on August 15th to which I have
-referred.)
-
-To overcome this anomalous position, I decided to constitute, for a
-brief period, an independent force, composed of the two units north
-of the river which I have named, to appoint to the command of it
-Brigadier-General Wisdom (of the 7th Brigade), and to supply him with
-a nucleus Staff, some Artillery, and supply and signal services. It
-became, in fact, to all intents and purposes, an additional Division
-with a Headquarters directly responsible to me.
-
-This force received the name of "Liaison Force" and continued in
-existence for about eight days. Its functions were to keep tactical
-touch and liaison with the Third Corps, to protect my left flank
-by guarding the Etinehem spur from recapture, and to act as a kind
-of loose link between the two Corps, advancing its northern or its
-southern flanks, or both, in sympathy with any forward movement to
-be made by either Corps. While, during its existence as a separate
-force, no operations of first magnitude took place, yet the Liaison
-Force served me well in the very useful function of a custodian of my
-tactical ownership of the Somme valley, an ownership which I succeeded
-in retaining to the immense advantage of the operations of the Corps
-less than three weeks later.
-
-By August 13th, therefore, my responsibilities included the control
-of seven separate Divisions as well as all the Corps Troops, and Army
-Troops attached. The next week was occupied in local operations by
-the front line Divisions to straighten our front, and to dispose of
-a number of strong points, small woods, and village ruins which, so
-long as they were in enemy hands, were a source of annoyance to us. The
-attitude of the enemy was alert but not aggressive, and an important
-point was that he showed every desire to stand his ground, and to
-contest our further advance. There was as yet no indication of any
-comprehensive withdrawal out of the great river bend. Each day brought
-its useful toll of prisoners, all of whom, however, corroborated the
-view that the enemy meant to hold on, and that the troops opposing us
-were more than a mere rearguard intended to delay our advance.
-
-The period from August 13th to 20th was also occupied in carrying
-out a number of inter-divisional reliefs--events of merely technical
-interest to the student of military history, but imposing an immense
-amount of detailed work upon the Staff of the Corps and upon the
-Commanders and Staffs of the Divisions concerned. It was my own special
-responsibility, and one which I could not delegate, to decide the date
-of the relief of each Division and by which other Division it should be
-relieved. Such decisions involved a close inquiry into, and a just and
-humane appreciation of the condition of the troops, almost from hour
-to hour every day, a duty in the discharge of which I was able to rely
-upon the loyal help of the Divisional Commanders and Brigadiers.
-
-The time that had elapsed since last they had rested, the marching
-they had since done, the fighting they had undertaken and its nature,
-the mental and physical stress which they had undergone, and the
-probable nature and date of their future employment were all factors
-which had to be weighed carefully, and set against the advantages or
-disadvantages of cutting short the period of rest of the troops who
-were available to relieve them. It was a function which had to be
-exercised, at all times, with the greatest circumspection, and the
-strictest justice; for troops are very ready to acquire the impression
-that they are being called upon to do more than their fair share.
-
-[Illustration: MAP C.]
-
-An actual inter-divisional relief usually occupied two nights and the
-intervening day. Incoming units, both fighting and technical, had to
-be shown all over the sector, to be taught the dispositions and the
-exact situation in front of us; maps, orders and photographs had to be
-explained and handed over; stores and dumps had to be inventoried and
-receipts passed; while on the other hand the outgoing troops expected
-to find their billets, offices, stables, wagon lines, bathing-places
-and entertainment rooms in the rear area all allocated and ready for
-their occupation.
-
-Each such mutual relief meant the movement of upwards of 20,000 men,
-and separate roads had to be allotted for their use. Frequently in
-so large a Corps as this, two such inter-divisional reliefs would
-synchronize or overlap, and the danger of congestion and the Staff work
-necessary to avoid it would be thereby more than doubled. And all this
-work would have to go on smoothly even if the Corps front were in the
-throes of an actual battle at the time.
-
-Although much of the routine of such reliefs, which had become almost a
-ritual during the preceding years of trench warfare, was now scrapped,
-it is a matter of pride to the Australian Corps and its Divisions, that
-all such relief operations, even amid all the stress of these busy
-fighting months of August and September, were, until the end, carried
-out with precision, freedom from irritating hitches, and a minimum of
-stress on the troops.
-
-The decisions which had to be given regarding the times and
-alternations of these Divisional reliefs became from now on really of
-basic importance, and affected the main framework of the whole of my
-future plans. It was no longer merely a question of earmarking certain
-Divisions for a specified single operation; but of planning, many
-days ahead, the rotation in which the Divisions were to be employed
-in a continuous series of operations. I regarded it as a fundamental
-principle to employ whenever possible absolutely fresh and rested
-troops for an operation of any magnitude or importance. To carry such a
-principle into effect involved the necessity of making the best surmise
-that was possible as to the course of events a week or even two weeks
-ahead.
-
-As I shall endeavour to make clear in the course of the following
-pages, the really outstanding and exceptional features of the work
-of the Corps in its last sixty days were the sustained vigour of its
-fighting, and the unbroken continuity of its collective effort. Those
-results would clearly depend more on the manner in which the resources
-in troops were manipulated than upon any other factor. Each Division
-had to be kept employed until the last ounce of effort, consistent with
-speedy recovery, had been yielded, and each Division had to rest a
-sufficient time to enable it fully to recover its spirit and tone, and
-yet had to be ready by the time it was wanted.
-
-The fulfilment of such conditions involved, as a little reflection
-will show, a great deal more than a mere mechanical rotation of
-employment; for the problem was, always to have available an adequate
-supply of sufficiently rested troops for a prospective demand which,
-although varying always in accordance with the changing situation, had
-nevertheless to be predicted or conjectured.
-
-August 21st found our front line much about the same as that of August
-13th, although generally more advanced and straightened out. The Corps
-frontage was still over 16,000 yards, and upon the completion of the
-series of reliefs to which I have alluded the dispositions of the Corps
-were as follows: The Fourth Australian Division from Lihons to just
-south of Herleville, the 32nd British Division opposite Herleville, the
-Fifth Australian Division in front of Proyart, and the Third Australian
-Division on the north of the river. The First and Second Divisions were
-in Corps Reserve, the former having by then had a good rest from its
-Lihons fighting. The Liaison Force had been broken up; and the 32nd
-British Division (Major-General T. S. Lambert) had joined my command in
-substitution for the 17th Division, which had been withdrawn to join
-the Third Army.
-
-Such was the situation of the Australian Corps, when on August 21st
-the short period of comparative inactivity came to a close, and it
-was destined soon to go forward to further decisive events. On the
-previous day the French opened a great attack in the south, which
-yielded 10,000 prisoners on the first day, and on the day in question
-the Third British Army delivered north of Albert the attack which
-had been expected for some days. Thus the enemy would have his hands
-full in endeavouring to parry those fresh blows; and the time seemed
-appropriate for another stroke on the front of the Fourth Army.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-CHUIGNES
-
-
-Allusion has been made to the great bend which occurs in the course of
-the River Somme. It is indeed a geographical circumstance which must be
-borne in mind, if the phraseology current at this epoch in the war is
-to be clearly comprehended.
-
-The river flows in an almost due northerly direction from the
-neighbourhood of Roye as far as Péronne, and then bends quite sharply,
-at that locality, in a western direction, past Bray, Corbie and Amiens,
-towards the sea, beyond Abbeville. In the story of the fighting of
-the period from March to August we have been concerned only with that
-portion of the river valley which ran parallel to our line of advance;
-but interest will henceforth focus itself largely upon that other reach
-of the Somme which runs on a north and south line, upstream, from the
-town of Péronne.
-
-This latter stretch of the river lies squarely athwart the direction in
-which the Corps had been advancing, and the obstacle to that advance
-which the river would presently constitute was continued in a northerly
-direction from Péronne by an unfinished work of a great canalization
-scheme to be called the "Canal du Nord." This canal was already wide
-and deep, and formed a tactical obstacle of some significance, for the
-excavations incidental to this project had been almost completed before
-the war.
-
-The "line of the Somme," as it was understood in the tactical
-discussions of the period now to be dealt with, meant, in short, the
-line formed by that part of the river which lay upstream (_i.e._, to
-the south of Péronne), and the continuation northwards of that line
-by the Canal du Nord. Both features being military obstacles, they
-and the highlands to the east of them together afforded an eminently
-suitable continuous line on which the enemy might, if he were permitted
-to do so, establish himself in a defensive attitude in order to bar our
-eastward progress.
-
-The autumn was upon us; not more than another eight or nine weeks of
-campaigning weather could be relied upon. A quite definite possibility
-existed that the enemy might be able to put forth so powerful an effort
-to contest our further advance, inch by inch, that he would gain
-sufficient time to prepare the line of the Somme for a stout defence,
-and hold us up until the arrival of winter compelled a suspension of
-large operations.
-
-There were at that time, indeed, some who contended that as we had
-apparently succeeded in putting an end to the German offensive we
-should rest content with the year's work; that our soundest strategy
-would be to permit the enemy to take up such a line of defence;
-and then quietly to wait over the winter until 1919 for the full
-development of the American effort, now only in its inception.
-
-So far, the enemy had given no indication of any readiness to undertake
-a precipitate withdrawal from the great bend west of the Somme. On the
-contrary, his resistance had stiffened to such an extent that little
-further progress was to be hoped for from the methods of open warfare
-which I had employed since August 8th.
-
-If, however, another powerful blow could be delivered, to be followed
-by energetic exploitation, it was quite possible that the enemy might
-be hustled across the Somme, that this might be achieved at such a rate
-that I could gain a firm footing on the east bank, and that thereby the
-value to him of the line of the Somme, as a winter defence, might be
-destroyed.
-
-This was the very project on which I now embarked. The First Division
-was in Corps Reserve, had rested and was fresh. The 32nd Division had
-only just come into the line. By handing over a substantial sector to
-the French, my frontage south of the Somme was about to be shortened
-to 7,000 yards, a very suitable front for a deliberate attack by two
-Divisions.
-
-I held a conference at Fouilloy, near Corbie, in the afternoon of
-August 21st to announce the plan, and to settle all details with the
-Commanders and services concerned. The Infantry assault was to be
-entrusted to Glasgow and Lambert, attacking side by side; but the
-former had allotted to him much the larger share of the battle front,
-at the northern end, the corollary rôle of the 32nd Division being to
-seize Herleville and carry our line just to the east of it.
-
-The date of the attack was fixed for August 23rd, and the Second and
-Fifth Divisions were warned to be in readiness to come into the line
-a day or two after the battle, in order to commence immediately the
-process of keeping the enemy on the run, and hustling him clean out of
-the river bend and across the line of the Somme.
-
-The conference of that day was of special interest, in that I had to
-deal with two Divisions which had not participated in any of those
-Corps Conferences, previously held, which had initiated a fully
-organized Corps operation. The Commanders and Staffs were strangers
-to each other and, some of them, to me and my Staff. Nearly all of
-them were yet unfamiliar with the special methods of the Corps. The
-conference was therefore a lengthy one, for many problems of tactical
-mechanism, which had been settled in connection with the preceding
-battles of Hamel and August 8th, had to be reopened and elucidated.
-
-These regular battle conferences were in the Australian Corps an
-innovation from the time the command of it devolved upon me. They
-proved a powerful instrument for the moulding of a uniformity of
-tactical thought and method throughout the command. They brought
-together men who met face to face but seldom, and they permitted
-of an exhaustive and educative interchange of views. They led to a
-development of "team-work" of a very high order of efficiency.
-
-The work of preparing for, and the actual conduct of, these conferences
-was always a very arduous business; but they more than repaid me for
-the effort they entailed. They served two paramount purposes. They
-enabled me to apply the requisite driving force to all subordinates
-collectively, instead of individually, and thereby created a
-responsive spirit which was competitive. In addition, each Commander or
-Service had the advantage not only of receiving instructions regarding
-his own action, but also of hearing in full detail the instructions
-conveyed to his colleagues. He knew, not merely what his colleagues had
-to do, but also knew that they had been told what to do; and he had an
-opportunity of considering the effect of their action on his own.
-
-The senior representative of the Heavy Artillery, Tank and Air Services
-invariably attended, and listened to all the points discussed with the
-Divisions, and the Divisional Commanders heard all matters arranged
-with these services. In this way, each arm acquired in the most direct
-manner a steadily expanding knowledge of the technology of all the
-other arms.
-
-My reason for emphasizing these matters in the present context is that,
-on this particular occasion, an attempt was to be made to carry out a
-major Corps operation at little more than thirty-six hours' notice; and
-the Division which was to have assigned to it the principal rôle was
-still in Corps Reserve and a day's march from the battle front.
-
-That, in spite of these handicaps, the battle proved brilliantly
-successful is a testimony to the valuable part which these Corps
-conferences played in securing rapid and efficiently co-ordinated
-action; a result which would, I am confident, have been unattainable
-under the stated conditions by the mere issue of formal written orders.
-
-Although only two out of the seven Divisions of the Corps were to
-participate in this operation, it was my intention to employ, for
-the full assistance of the Infantry, the whole resources of the
-Corps in Artillery, Tanks and Aircraft. That was a principle which I
-always regarded as fundamental, and one from which I never permitted
-any exception to be made, although the pressure upon me to rest a
-substantial portion of these ancillary services was always very great.
-
-The general plan for the battle ran briefly as follows. The 32nd
-Division would attack with one Infantry Brigade, under a barrage, on
-a frontage of 1,000 yards; the capture of the village of Herleville,
-which was still strongly held, being its principal objective.
-
-The 1st Australian Division would attack on a frontage of 4,500 yards,
-with two Brigades in line, and one Brigade in reserve. The attack would
-be carried out in three phases.
-
-The first phase was a normal assault, under an Artillery barrage, and
-with the assistance of Tanks, to a predetermined line, which would
-carry us beyond the Chuignes Valley; the second phase was in the nature
-of exploitation by the two line Brigades, but was expressly limited to
-a maximum distance of 1,000 yards beyond the main first objective.
-
-The third phase was to be contingent upon the complete success of
-the preceding phases, and would consist of an advance by the Reserve
-Brigade for a further exploitation of success, by the seizure of the
-whole of the Cappy bend of the river, including the towering hill close
-to the Somme Canal known as Froissy Beacon.
-
-All arrangements for the forthcoming battle having thus been completed,
-the First Division duly relieved the Fifth Division on the night of
-August 21st, and hastened forward its preparations for the attack,
-which had been fixed for 4.45 a.m. on August 23rd.
-
-In the meantime, the first attack which any British Army other than the
-Fourth had made since August 8th was at last launched on August 21st
-along the whole front of the Third British Army, northwards from Albert.
-
-It has come to be an article of faith that the whole of the successive
-stages of the great closing offensive of the war had been the subject
-of most careful timing, and of minute organization on the part of the
-Allied High Command, and of our own G.H.Q. Much eulogistic writing
-has been devoted to an attempted analysis of the comprehensive and
-far-reaching plans which resulted in the delivery of blow upon blow,
-in a prescribed order of time and for the achievement of definite
-strategical or tactical ends.
-
-[Illustration: The Canal and Tunnel at Bellicourt--looking north.]
-
-[Illustration: The Hindenburg Line--a characteristic belt of sunken
-wire.]
-
-All who played any part in these great events well know that it
-was nothing of the kind; that nothing in the nature of a detailed
-time-table to control so vast a field of effort was possible. All
-Commanders, and the most exalted of them in a higher degree even
-than those wielding lesser forces, became opportunists, and bent
-their energies, not to the realization of a great general plan for a
-succession of timed attacks, but upon the problem of hitting whenever
-and wherever an opportunity offered, and the means were ready to hand.
-
-In these matters it was the force of circumstances which controlled
-the sequence of events, and nothing else. An elaborate time-table
-controlled by definite dates and sequences for the successive
-engagement of a series of Armies would have been quite impossible of
-realization. Even a Corps Commander had difficulty in forecasting
-within a day or two when he would be ready to launch an attack on any
-given part of the front. For an Army Commander it was a matter of a
-week or even two.
-
-All attempted time-tables were controlled by our Artillery
-requirements; both the assembling of the necessary guns--often drawn
-from distant fronts--and the accumulating of the requisite "head" of
-ammunition to see a battle through, were processes whose duration could
-only be very roughly forecasted.
-
-The dumping, in the gun pits and in ammunition stores, of the necessary
-500 or 600 rounds per gun meant days of labour in collection and
-distribution on the part of the railways and motor lorries. The
-breakdown of a few motor lorries at a critical time, or the dropping
-of a single bomb upon an important railway junction, were disturbing
-factors quite sufficient to have arrested the flow of ammunition, and
-to have postponed, indefinitely, any programme based upon its prompt
-delivery.
-
-It will be obvious, therefore, that no reliance could be placed, days
-or weeks beforehand, upon a given attack taking place on a given day;
-therefore no plans could be made which depended upon such attacks
-taking place in a predetermined sequence.
-
-Shortly put, therefore, the decisions of the High Command were
-confined to questions such as where an attack should be made, in
-what direction, and by what forces. The date was always a matter of
-uncertainty, and the only control that could be exercised was by
-postponement, and never by acceleration.
-
-For the greater part of the offensive period it was therefore
-necessarily left to the Commanders of the Armies to conform to a
-general policy of attack, the time and method being left to their
-own decision or recommendation. And they, in turn, relied upon their
-Corps Commanders to seize the initiative in the pursuit of such a
-policy. Naturally, the Army at all times made every effort to secure
-co-ordinated action by its several Corps; but it rarely happened that
-more than one Corps at a time carried through the main effort--the
-other Corps performing subsidiary rôles. The great battle of September
-29th to October 1st, which completed the final rupture of the
-Hindenburg line, was, however, a signal exception to this rule.
-
-The attack by the Third British Army on August 21st is a case which
-illustrates the delays inseparable from battle preparations. The
-project of such an attack had already been mooted on August 11th, when
-General Byng (Third Army) paid me a visit to discuss my battle plan
-of August 8th, and I gathered on that occasion that he hoped to begin
-within four or five days. The event showed that the operation actually
-took ten days to materialize. No criticism is suggested. The conditions
-of transport of troops and munitions doubtless made its earlier
-realization quite impossible.
-
-The attack coming when it did, however, considerably eased the
-situation of the Fourth Army, upon whose front Ludendorff had flung all
-his available reserves, drawn from all parts of the German front, in
-his endeavours to bring the Australians and Canadians to a halt.
-
-He was now suddenly confronted with the prospect of another "break
-through" in a different part of his line, and the German people had
-been taught by their press correspondents to believe that a "break
-through" was the one thing most to be resisted by the German Supreme
-Command, and the one thing impossible of achievement by us.
-
-There can be no doubt, therefore, that the success of the Third Army
-on August 21st, although not comparable in its results with the battle
-of August 8th, did materially assist the prospects of my own success in
-the operations upon which I was then embarking.
-
-The immediate effect of it was already felt the very next day. For the
-Third Corps, which was still the left flank Corps of the Fourth Army,
-and which had made very little progress since August 8th, was enabled
-to advance its line a little past Albert and Meaulte.
-
-The Third Australian Division, which, it will be remembered, had
-taken over the front and the rôle of the now disbanded Liaison Force,
-participated, by arrangement, in this attack and, swinging up its left,
-brought my front line, north of the river, square to the Somme Valley,
-and just to the forward slopes of the high plateau overlooking Bray
-and La Neuville. The Third Pioneer Battalion at once got to work on
-restoring the broken crossings over the Somme, to the south of Bray,
-and put out a series of advanced posts upon the left bank of the river,
-which gave us practical control of the great island on which stands La
-Neuville.
-
-Meanwhile, on the left flank of the 9th Brigade, which had carried
-out the Third Divisional attack, there was serious trouble. The enemy
-counter-attacked in the late afternoon. The 9th Brigade stood firm;
-but the 47th Division (of the Third Corps) yielded ground, leaving the
-flank of the 9th Brigade in the air. A chalk pit, which we had seized,
-formed a welcome redoubt which enabled the 33rd Battalion to hang on
-for sufficiently long to permit of the 34th Battalion coming up to form
-a defensive flank, facing north.
-
-In this way the gallant 9th Brigade (Goddard) was able to retain the
-whole of its gains of that day; but the risk of an immediate further
-advance was too great while the situation to the north remained obscure
-and unsatisfactory. The capture of the village of Bray, which was still
-strongly held by the enemy, had, therefore, to be postponed, although
-it had been part of my plan to capture it that same day as a measure of
-precaution, seeing that I calculated upon being able the next day to
-advance my line south of the Somme to a point well to the east of Bray.
-
-The great attack by the First Division supported by the 32nd Division,
-which has come to be known as the battle of Chuignes, was launched at
-dawn on August 23rd, and was an unqualified success.
-
-The main valley of the Somme in this region is flanked by a number of
-tributary valleys, which run generally in a north and south direction,
-extending back from the river four or five miles. They are broad,
-with heavily-wooded sides, and harbour a number of villages, such as
-Proyart, Chuignolles, Herleville and Chuignes, which cluster on their
-slopes.
-
-One such valley, larger and longer than any of those which, in our
-previous advances, we had yet crossed, lay before our front line of
-that morning, and square across our path. It ran from Herleville,
-northwards, past Chuignes, to join the Somme in the Bray bend. It
-was the most easterly of all the tributary valleys to which I have
-referred, and it was also the last piece of habitable country before
-the devastated area of 1916 was reached, just a mile to the east of it.
-
-The valley afforded excellent cover for the enemy's guns, and the
-expectation was that some of them would be overrun by our attack. It
-was also ideal country for machine-gun defence, for the numerous woods,
-hedges and copses afforded excellent cover, and had in all probability
-been amply fortified with barbed wire. It was a formidable proposition
-to attack such a position on such a frontage with only two Brigades.
-
-The 2nd Brigade (Heane) attacked on the right, the 1st Brigade (Mackay)
-on the left, and the first phase was completed to time-table, with the
-green objective line, located on the east side of the long valley,
-in our possession. The only temporary hitch in the advance along the
-whole front was at Robert Wood, where the enemy held out, and had to be
-completely enveloped from both flanks before surrendering.
-
-Then came the second phase, and no difficulty was experienced in
-advancing our line 1,000 yards east of the green line, nor in
-establishing there a firm line of outposts for the night.
-
-The third phase presented a great deal more difficulty than I had
-anticipated. It was to have been undertaken by the 3rd Brigade
-(Bennett) pushing without delay through the 1st Brigade, and advancing
-in open warfare formation north-easterly towards Cappy, for the seizure
-of Hill 90, overlooking that village and on the south-west of it, and
-terminating at its northern extremity in the high bluff of Froissy
-Beacon.
-
-There was, however, some unexplained delay in the initiation of this
-advance, and it was not until about 2 o'clock that the 3rd Brigade
-moved forward to the assault of the long slope of the Chuignes Valley,
-which still lay before them in this part of the field. The enemy, under
-the impression that our attack had spent itself, had occupied the
-plateau in great strength, and at first little progress could be made.
-
-Mobile Artillery was, however, promptly pushed up, and this proved
-of great assistance to the infantry. Garenne Wood, on the top of the
-plateau, into which large numbers of the enemy had withdrawn, proved
-a difficult obstacle, and incapable of capture by frontal attack.
-It, too, was conquered by enveloping tactics, and with its fall the
-resistance of the enemy rapidly subsided, and the 3rd Brigade had the
-satisfaction of hunting the fugitives clean off the plateau into the
-Cappy Valley.
-
-The whole of this phase of the battle was an especially fine piece
-of work on the part of the Regimental Officers. It was open warfare
-of the most complete character, and the victory was won by excellent
-battle control on the part of the Battalion Commanders, by splendid
-co-operation between the four Battalions of the Brigade, and by
-intelligent and gallant leadership on the part of the Company and
-Platoon Commanders.
-
-Beset as I had been by many anxieties during the early afternoon as
-to how the Third Brigade would fare in the difficult task which had
-been given it, rendered more difficult by the delay of which I have
-spoken, I had the satisfaction that night of contemplating a victory
-far greater than I had calculated upon.
-
-For the 32nd Division had successfully captured Herleville, and the
-First Division had seized the whole country for a depth of 1½ miles
-up to a line extending from Herleville to the western edge of Cappy.
-The whole Chuignes Valley was ours. By its capture the enemy had been
-despoiled of all habitable areas, and had been relegated to a waste of
-broken and ruined country between us and the line of the Somme.
-
-We took that day 21 guns and over 3,100 prisoners from ten different
-regiments. The slaughter of the enemy in the tangled valleys was
-considerable, for our Infantry are always vigorous bayonet fighters.
-They received much assistance from the Tanks in disposing of the
-numerous machine gun detachments which held their ground to the last.
-
-It was a smashing blow, and far exceeded in its results any previous
-record in my experience, having regard to the number of troops engaged.
-Its immediate result, the same night, was the capture of Bray by the
-Third Division, north of the river, thus completing the work of that
-Division which the failure of the 47th Division on their left the day
-before had compelled them to leave unfinished. The 40th Battalion took
-200 prisoners, with trifling loss to themselves.
-
-A more remote result, which made itself apparent in the next few days,
-was that it compelled the enemy to abandon all hope of retaining a hold
-of any country west of the line of the Somme; it impelled him at last
-to an evacuation of the great bend of the river, a process which he
-began in a very few days.
-
-Such was the battle of Chuignes. Much of the success of this brilliant
-engagement was due to the personality of the Divisional Commander,
-Major-General Glasgow. He had commenced his career in the war as a
-Major of Light Horse, and had participated in the earliest stages of
-the fighting on the Gallipoli Peninsula.
-
-Speedily gaining promotion during that campaign, his outstanding merits
-as a leader gained him an appointment to the command of the 13th
-Brigade, when the latter was formed in Egypt in the spring of 1916. For
-two years he led that Brigade through all its arduous experiences on
-the Somme, at Messines and in the third battle of Ypres.
-
-This fine record was but the prelude to the history-making
-performances of the 13th Brigade in 1918 at Dernancourt and
-Villers-Bretonneux, and Glasgow seemed easily the most promising, among
-all the Brigadiers of that time, as a prospective Divisional Commander:
-a judgment which fully justified itself.
-
-Of strong though not heavy build and of energetic demeanour, Glasgow
-succeeded not so much by exceptional mental gifts, or by tactical
-skill of any very high order, as by his personal driving force and
-determination, which impressed themselves upon all his subordinates.
-He always got where he wanted to get--was consistently loyal to the
-Australian ideal, and intensely proud of the Australian soldier.
-
-The number of prisoners captured on this day, and the total numbers of
-the enemy encountered in the course of an advance which was relatively
-small, pointed to a disposition of troops which was unusual on the part
-of the enemy.
-
-According to the principles so strongly emphasized by Ludendorff,
-in instructions which he had issued, and copies of which duly fell
-into my hands, there was to be, in his scheme of defensive tactics,
-a "fore-field" relatively lightly held by outposts and machine guns.
-The main line of resistance was to be well in rear, and there the main
-concentration of troops was to be effected.
-
-Why had this dictum been so widely disregarded on this occasion? It was
-a question worthy of close inquiry, and two German Battalion Commanders
-who were captured by us on that day supplied the answer.
-
-Reference has already been made to the message which I issued to the
-Corps on the eve of the great opening battle; and to the fact that a
-copy of this message had fallen into the hands of the enemy, probably
-by the capture of an officer in the close fighting which took place at
-Lihons on August 9th and 10th.
-
-In due course the substance of this message was published in the German
-wireless news, and in the German press of the time, but cleverly
-mistranslated to convey a colouring desirable for the German public.
-
-It so happened that not long before the opening of our offensive I
-had, at the request of the authorities, sent to Australia a recruiting
-cable, which appealed to the Australian public for a maintenance of
-supplies of fighting men.[16] That the full text of this cable also
-became speedily known to the enemy is a testimony to the far-flung
-alertness of their Intelligence Service. It, also, was published in
-their press.
-
-Basing their editorial comments on this material, the _Berliner
-Tageblatt_ of August 17th, 1918, a copy of which I captured, and
-another journal whose name was not ascertainable, because in the copy
-captured the title had been torn off, both indulged in arguments, which
-were long, and intended to be convincing, to prove to the German people
-that I had promised my troops a "break-through;" that I had failed, and
-that, admittedly, the "proud" Australian Corps had been shattered, had
-come to the end of its resources and was no longer to be taken into
-calculation as an instrument of attack by the "English."
-
-It was perfectly legitimate, if clumsy, propaganda. But it was a
-curious example of a propaganda which recoiled upon the heads of its
-propounders. The Battalion Commanders, who, like all German officers
-whom we captured, were always voluble in excuses for their defeat,
-pleaded that they had been deceived by the utterances of their own
-journals into believing that the Australian offensive effort had come
-to an end, once and for all, and that no further attack by this Corps
-was possible.
-
-[Illustration: MAP D]
-
-It was this belief which, they said, had prompted their respective
-Divisions (for each of them represented a separate one) to disregard
-Ludendorff's prescription; their Divisional Generals had felt justified
-in availing themselves of the very excellent living quarters which
-existed in the Chuignes Valley, near the German front line of August
-22nd, to quarter all their support and reserve Battalions.
-
-It was there that we found them--increasing the population of the front
-zone far beyond that which we had been accustomed to find. Was there
-ever a more diverting example of a propaganda which recoiled upon those
-who uttered it? Intended to deceive the German public, it ended in
-deceiving the German front line troops, to their own lamentable undoing.
-
-Among the captures of the battle of Chuignes, which, as usual,
-comprised a large and varied assortment of warlike stores, including
-another great dump of engineering materials near Froissy Beacon, and
-two complete railway trains, was the monster naval gun of 15-inch bore,
-which had been so systematically bombarding the city of Amiens, and had
-wrought such havoc among its buildings and monuments.
-
-It was first reached by the 3rd Australian Battalion (1st Brigade)
-during a bayonet charge which cleared Arcy Wood, in the shelter of
-which the giant gun had been erected. An imposing amount of labour had
-been expended upon its installation, and the most cursory examination
-of the effort involved was sufficient to make it evident that the enemy
-entertained no expectation of ever being hurled back from the region
-which it dominated.
-
-The gun with its carriage, platform and concrete foundations weighed
-over 500 tons. It was a naval gun, obviously of the type in use on
-the German Dreadnoughts, and never intended by its original designers
-for use on land. It had a range of over twenty-four miles, fired a
-projectile weighing nearly a ton, and the barrel was seventy feet long.
-
-It had been installed with the elaborate completeness of German
-methods. A double railway track, several miles long, had been built
-to the site, for the transport of the gun and its parts. It was
-electrically trained and elevated. Its ammunition was handled and
-loaded by mechanical means. The adjacent hill-side had been tunnelled
-to receive the operating machinery, and the supplies of shells,
-cartridges and fuses.
-
-The gun and its mounting, when captured, were found to have been
-completely disabled. A heavy charge of explosive had burst the chamber
-of the gun, and had torn off the projecting muzzle end, which lay with
-its nose helplessly buried in the mud. The giant carriage had been
-burst asunder, and over acres all around was strewn the debris of the
-explosion.
-
-For some time, some of my gunner experts favoured the theory that the
-gun had burst accidentally, but the view which ultimately prevailed was
-that the demolition had been intentional. Many months afterwards, the
-full story of the gun and its performances was elicited from a prisoner
-who had belonged to the No. 4 (German) Heavy Artillery Regiment, and it
-was circumstantial enough to be credible.
-
-The story is worthy of repetition, not only because no authentic
-account of this wonderful trophy has yet been published, but also
-because the history of this gun curiously illuminates the enemy's
-plans, intentions and expectations between the dates of his onslaught
-in March and his recoil in August.
-
-The substance of the story is as follows: The gun came from Krupp's.
-Work on the position was started early in April, 1918--only a few days
-after the site had fallen into the enemy's hands. It was completed
-and ready for action on the morning of June 2nd. Its maximum firing
-capacity was twenty-eight rounds per day. It fired continuously until
-June 28th. By this time the original gun was worn out, having fired
-over 350 rounds at Amiens. A new piece was ordered from Krupp's. It
-arrived on August 7th, and was ready to fire by 7 p.m. It fired its
-first round on August 8th at 2 a.m. and kept on firing till August
-9th, firing thirty-five rounds in all. At 7 a.m. on August 9th, all
-hands were ordered to remove everything that was portable and of value.
-Demolition charges were laid and fired about 9 a.m. on August 9th. The
-crew returned to Krupp's.
-
-It is to be inferred from this narrative that the enemy's defeat at
-Hamel on July 4th did not deter him from his enterprise of replacing
-the original worn gun, but that after August 8th, he quite definitely
-accepted the certainty that he would be allowed no time to remove the
-gun intact, and so he destroyed it in order that we might not be able
-to use it against him.
-
-This is the largest single trophy of war won by any Commander during
-the war, and it was a matter of great regret to me that the cost of its
-transportation to Australia was prohibitive. The gun, as it stands,
-was, therefore, fenced in, and it has been formally presented to the
-City of Amiens as a souvenir of the Australian Army Corps.
-
-So long as any Australian soldiers remained in France, this spot was
-a Mecca to which thousands of pilgrims wandered; and soon there was,
-over the whole of the immense structure, not one square inch upon which
-the "diggers" had not inscribed their names and sentiments. There, in
-the shade of Arcy Wood, the great ruin rests, a memorial alike of the
-sufferings of Amiens and of the great Australian victory of Chuignes.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[16] The cablegram in question was dated July 13th, and was in the
-following terms:
-
-"Since the opening of the German offensive in March every Division
-of the Australian Army in France has been engaged and always with
-decisive success. The men of Australia, wherever and whenever they
-have entered this mighty conflict, have invariably brought the enemy
-to a standstill, and have made him pay dearly for each futile attempt
-to pass them on the roads to Amiens and to the Channel Ports. Their
-reputation as skilful, disciplined and gallant soldiers has never
-stood higher throughout the Empire than it does to-day. Those who are
-privileged to lead in battle such splendid men are animated with a
-pride and admiration which is tempered only by concern at their waning
-numbers. Already some battalions which have made historic traditions
-have ceased to exist as fighting units, and others must follow unless
-the Australian nation stands by us and sees to it that our ranks are
-kept filled. We refuse to believe that the men and women of Australia
-will suffer their famous Divisions to decay, or that the young manhood
-still remaining in our homeland will not wish to share in the renown
-of their brothers in France. Nothing matters now but to see this job
-through to the end, and we appeal to every man to come, and come
-quickly, to help in our work, and to share in our glorious endeavour.
-
- "MONASH, Lieutenant-General."
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-PURSUIT
-
-
-The design which I had formed after the battle of August 8th of driving
-the enemy completely out of the bend of the Somme--but which I was
-obliged to abandon for the time being because of the decision of the
-Fourth Army to thrust in a south-easterly direction--was now about to
-be realized. The effect of the battle of Chuignes, following so closely
-upon the advance of the Third Army two days before, made it probable
-that the enemy would decide upon a definite withdrawal to the line of
-the Somme.
-
-It now became my object to ensure, if he should attempt to do so,
-firstly, that his withdrawal should be more precipitate than would
-be agreeable to him, and, secondly, that when he reached that line
-he should be accorded no breathing time to establish upon it a firm
-defence from which he could hold us at bay for the remainder of the
-fine weather.
-
-The French Army took over from me on the night of the 23rd August the
-whole of that portion of my front which still extended south of Lihons.
-General Nollet, Commander of the 36th French Corps (34th and 35th
-French Divisions), became my southern neighbour, displacing my Fourth
-Division, and also a Canadian Division, for whose sector I had become
-responsible since the departure of General Currie, a few days before.
-
-During these redispositions, probably induced to do so by evidences
-patent to him that large troop movements were in progress, the enemy
-carried out a very heavy gas bombardment and maintained it for some
-hours over the whole of the front which was being taken over by the
-French.
-
-The wind blowing from the south, the gas, which was unusually dense,
-drifted over the whole areas both of the Fourth Australian and the 32nd
-British Divisions, and caused a large number of gas casualties, which
-weakened the available garrisons of these sectors.
-
-The Second and Fifth Divisions were brought up on the night of August
-26th to relieve the First Division, which had worthily earned a rest,
-and by these redispositions my whole frontage, which, in spite of the
-reduction effected, still exceeded nine miles, was organized to be
-held by four Divisions, counting from south to north as follows: 32nd
-Division, Fifth Division, Second Division and Third Division, the
-latter lying north of the River Somme.
-
-The First and Fourth Divisions were each sent back, the former to
-a pleasant reach of the Somme near Chipilly, and the latter to the
-neighbourhood of Amiens, there to have a long rest and to recuperate
-after their strenuous labours. These two Divisions were, I had
-resolved, to be kept in reserve for any _tour de force_, the need
-for which might arise later. This disposition was based on intuition
-rather than on reasoning; but the event proved that it was a fortunate
-decision; for, at a juncture, three weeks later, when a great
-opportunity presented itself, these two Divisions, then fully rested,
-proved of priceless value.
-
-The Third Division held my front north of the Somme, and their presence
-there ensured my unchallenged tactical control of that important
-river valley. Numerous crossings had been systematically destroyed
-by the enemy, as he was being driven back from bend to bend, and as
-systematically repaired by my indefatigable engineer and pioneer
-services, as fast as the ground passed under our control.
-
-Reconstruction of bridges and culverts is as tedious a business as
-their demolition is expeditious. A charge of gun-cotton, placed in the
-right spot, a primer, a short length of fuse, or an electric lead to
-a press button are all that are needed, and a single sapper standing
-by with a match, to be lighted at the last moment, can do all that is
-necessary to provide three days' work for a whole Company of Engineers.
-
-Nevertheless, the control of the river valley was of inestimable
-advantage, for it enabled me to carry out a policy of continuous and
-rapid repair. Consequently, during the whole of our subsequent advance,
-every means of traversing the valley from south to north, which had
-been tampered with, was soon restored, as fast as my infantry had made
-good their advance beyond the ruined crossing.
-
-This facility was to have an important bearing upon my freedom of
-action, not many days later, when the Corps came head on to the north
-and south stretch of the Somme, and found every bridge gone. That
-circumstance alone would have proved an irretrievable misfortune, if
-I had not had already available numerous restored crossings upon the
-east and west reach of the river. For by that means, my ability to
-pass troops and guns rapidly from one bank of the Somme to the other
-remained unimpaired.
-
-Before leaving the line, the First Division had captured Cappy and
-advanced its line on the right to the western outskirts of Foucaucourt,
-while the Third Division had possessed itself of Suzanne. This was
-the situation when, on the night of August 26th, the Second and Fifth
-Divisions came into the line. Conferences with the four line Divisions
-were held both on the 25th and 26th August, in order to ensure
-co-ordinate action for the process of hustling the enemy across the
-Somme.
-
-I was, at this stage, sorely perplexed by the uncertain attitude of
-the Fourth Army. I was all for pushing on energetically, and received
-General Rawlinson's approval to do so on August 24th; but on the very
-next day he enunciated a diametrically opposite policy, which greatly
-embarrassed me.
-
-The gist of the Army attitude on the 25th may be thus expressed. The
-presence of a new German Division, the 41st, of whom we had taken many
-prisoners in Cappy, pointed to an intention on the part of the enemy
-to reinforce. This negatived any intention to undertake a withdrawal.
-This conclusion justified a revision of the Fourth Army policy. The
-Army had done its fair share; it had drawn in upon its front all the
-loose German reserves. Its resources in Tanks had been depleted, and
-it would take a month to replace them. Other Armies would now take up
-the burden, and the Fourth Army would now mark time, and await events
-elsewhere. There was no object in hastening the enemy's evacuation of
-the bad ground in the bend of the Somme, or in our taking possession
-of it. There was a possibility of the French taking over more frontage
-from us, and the Australian Corps front might in consequence be reduced
-to a three-Division front, with three Divisions in Corps Reserve.
-
-The course of events, in the next seven days, convinced me that the
-results which were then achieved were totally unexpected by the Fourth
-Army, and very vitally influenced the whole subsequent course of the
-campaign. In point of fact, Lord Rawlinson quite frankly conceded to
-me as much in express terms a week later. The appreciation made at
-the time was doubtless an intentionally conservative one, but it did
-not take into account the reserve of striking power which remained in
-the Australian Corps, even after the past eighteen days of continuous
-fighting, and even without the assistance of the Tanks.
-
-There was only one saving clause in the Army attitude, and this
-fortunately gave all the loophole necessary for the continued activity
-which I desired to pursue. It was this: "Touch must be kept with
-the enemy." This was of course a mere formality of tactics, and was
-intended as no more than such. But it was sufficient to justify an
-aggressive policy on my part.
-
-As the result of my redispositions, completed by the night of August
-27th, and of my conferences with the line Divisions, each Division
-stood on that morning on a single Brigade front, with its two remaining
-Brigades arranged in depth behind it. My orders were that in the event
-of the enemy giving way, the line Brigade was to push on energetically,
-and was to be kept in the line until it had reached the limits of its
-endurance. The other two Brigades were to follow up more leisurely, but
-to be prepared, each in turn, to relieve the line Brigade.
-
-I had calculated that, by this method, each Brigade should be able to
-function for at least two days on the frontage allotted; and that,
-therefore, the present line Divisions could continue for at least six
-days; and if the stress upon the troops had not been severe, they could
-carry out a second rotation of Brigades for a second tour of six days.
-The calculation was, in general terms, fully realized; and all of the
-four line Divisions of that day did actually carry on for twelve days,
-and two of them for an additional six days.
-
-The Artillery resources of the Corps were throughout the whole of this
-period fully maintained at the standard of the early days of August.
-I still had at my disposal eighteen Brigades of Field Artillery; and
-so was able to allot four Brigades of Artillery to each line Division,
-while keeping two in Corps Reserve.
-
-Early on the morning of August 27th, a policy of vigorous patrolling
-all along our front was initiated. At several points, enemy posts which
-were known to have been strongly held the night before were found to be
-now unoccupied. Although reports varied along my front, they so fully
-confirmed my anticipations, that without waiting to make any reference
-to the Army, I ordered an immediate general advance along my whole
-front.
-
-There followed a merry and exciting three days of pursuit; for the
-enemy was really on the run, and by nightfall on August 29th, not
-a German who was not a prisoner remained west of the Somme between
-Péronne and Brie.
-
-In previous years, during the enemy's retreat from Bapaume to the
-Hindenburg Line, we had had experience of his methods of withdrawal.
-Then they were deliberate, and his rearguards so methodically and
-resolutely held up the British advance, that the enemy had been able
-not only to remove from the evacuated area every particle of his
-warlike stores, which were of any value, but also to carry out a
-systematic devastation of the whole area, even to the felling of all
-the fruit trees, and the tearing up of all the railways for miles.
-
-The present withdrawal was of a very different character. To begin
-with, it had been forced upon him by the battle of Chuignes, and he
-had to undertake it precipitately and without adequate preparation.
-Secondly, he had an impassable river behind him, which could be crossed
-only at three points, Brie, Eterpigny, and Péronne. Thirdly, he had in
-front of him a Corps flushed with its recent victories, while he had
-been suffering a succession of defeats and heavy losses.
-
-Nevertheless, he put up a good fight, and employed well-considered
-tactics. The German Machine Gun Corps was much the best of all his
-services. The manner in which the machine gunners stood their ground,
-serving their guns to the very last, and defying even the Juggernaut
-menace of the Tanks, won the unstinted admiration of our men. During
-these three days of retreat the enemy used his machine guns to the best
-advantage, and they constituted the only obstacle to our rapid advance.
-
-These tactics were not unexpected by me, and I had an answer ready.
-Defying the whole traditions of Artillery tactics in open warfare, I
-insisted upon two somewhat startling innovations. The first was to
-break up battery control, by detaching even sections (two guns), to
-come under the direct orders of Infantry Commanders for the purpose of
-engaging with direct fire any machine-gun nest which was holding them
-up.
-
-The second was to insist that all batteries should carry 20 per cent.
-of smoke shell. This elicited a storm of protest from the gunners.
-Every shell carried which was not a high explosive or shrapnel shell
-meant a shell less of destructive power, and, therefore, a shell
-wasted. That had been the Gunnery School doctrine. But I imagine that
-the test made at this epoch of the liberal use of smoke shell against
-machine guns will lead to a revision of that doctrine.
-
-Smoke shell proved of inestimable value in blinding the German machine
-gunners. A few rounds judiciously placed screened the approach of our
-Infantry, and many a machine-gun post was thereby rushed by us from
-the flanks or even from the rear. General Hobbs (Fifth Division) and
-General Rosenthal (Second Division), both of whom had formerly been
-gunners, proved the strongest advocates for these smoke tactics.
-
-By such means an energetic and successful pursuit was launched and
-maintained. By the night of August 27th, our line already lay to the
-east of the villages of Vermandovillers, Foucaucourt (on the main road)
-and Fontaine. We also mastered the whole of the Cappy bend, including
-the crossings of the Somme at Eclusier. The Fifth Division had a
-particularly hard fight at Foucaucourt, which did not fall to us until
-we had subjected it to a considerable bombardment. Tivoli Wood was the
-chief obstacle encountered that day by the Second Division. The advance
-of the 32nd Division also progressed smoothly.
-
-During August 28th our advance was continued methodically,
-and by that night the Corps front had reached the line
-Génermont--Berry-en-Santerre--Estrées--Frise.
-
-On August 29th the line of the Somme was reached, and all three
-Divisions south of the Somme stood upon the high ground sloping down to
-the Somme, with the river in sight from opposite Cléry, past Péronne
-and as far south as St. Christ.
-
-In the meantime the Third Division north of the Somme had marched
-forward, in sympathetic step with the southern advance, successively
-seizing Suzanne, Vaux, Curlu, Hem and Cléry. The Third Corps on my left
-had followed up the general advance, though always lagging a little in
-rear, thus keeping my left flank secure; and beyond the Third Corps,
-the Third Army was approaching the line of the Canal du Nord, which
-lay, as explained, in prolongation of the south-north course of the
-Somme.
-
-The war correspondents of this time were given to representing the
-progress of the Australian Corps during these three days as a leisurely
-advance, regulated in its pace by the speed of the retiring enemy. But
-it was nothing of the kind.
-
-On the contrary, it was his withdrawal which was regulated by the speed
-of our advance. There was not a foot of ground which was not contested
-by all the effort which the enemy was able to put forth. It is quite
-true that his withdrawal was intentional; but it is not true that it
-was conducted at the deliberate rate which was necessary to enable him
-to withdraw in good order.
-
-He was compelled to fight all the time and to withdraw in disorder. He
-was forced to abandon guns and huge quantities of stores. The amount
-of derelict artillery ammunition found scattered over the whole of
-this considerable area alone reached hundreds of thousands of rounds,
-distributed in hundreds of dumps and depots, as well as scores of tons
-of empty artillery cartridge-cases, the brass of which had become of
-priceless value to the enemy.
-
-Regimental and even Divisional Headquarters were abandoned as they
-stood, with all their furniture and mess equipment left intact. Signal
-wire and telephone equipment remained installed in all directions,
-hospitals and dressing-stations were left to their fate. The advance
-yielded to us over 600 prisoners, some half-dozen field-guns, and large
-numbers of smaller weapons.
-
-The last two days of the advance led us across a maze of trenches and
-the debris of the 1916 campaign. The weather was unfavourable, there
-was much rain and an entire absence of any kind of shelter. As a result
-the line Brigades had to put forth all their powers of endurance and
-reached the Somme in a very tired condition.
-
-In the meantime my air squadron had an exceptionally busy time. Contact
-patrols were maintained throughout every hour of daylight. Difficult as
-it was to identify the positions reached by our leading troops during
-an organized battle, where their approximate positions and ultimate
-objective lines were known beforehand, it was doubly so when no guide
-whatever existed as to the probable extent of each day's advance, or as
-to the amount of resistance likely to be encountered at different parts
-of the front.
-
-Yet it was just under these circumstances that rapid and reliable
-information as to the progress of the various elements of our front
-line troops was more important than ever, and no means for obtaining
-such information was so expeditious as the Contact Aeroplane.
-
-To assist the air observer in identifying our troops, the latter were
-provided with flares, of colours which were varied from time to time
-in order to minimize the risk of imitation by the enemy. The method of
-their employment, whether singly or in pairs, or three at a time, was
-also frequently varied.
-
-These flares on being lit gave out a dense cloud of coloured smoke,
-easily distinguishable from a moderate height. The contact plane, which
-would carry coloured streamers so that the infantry could identify it
-as flying on that particular duty, would, when ready to observe, blow
-its horn and thereupon the foremost infantry would light their flares.
-
-It was a method of inter-communication between air and ground, which,
-after a little practice, came to be well understood and intelligently
-carried out. By its means a Divisional or Brigade Commander was kept
-accurately informed, with great promptitude, of the progress of each of
-his front line units, in relation to the various woods, ruined mills,
-and other obstacles which lay spread across their path.
-
-But the Air Force had another interesting duty, which was to watch
-the roads leading back from the enemy's front line to his rear areas.
-During tranquil times little movement could ever be seen on the enemy's
-roads in the hours of daylight, for the very good reason that he took
-care to carry out all his transportation to and from his front zone
-under cover of darkness.
-
-Now, however, his needs pressed sorely upon him; and our air reports,
-from this time onwards, became almost monotonous in their iteration of
-the fact that large columns of transport were to be seen moving back in
-an easterly direction. These were his retiring batteries or his convoys
-of wagons carrying such stores as he was able to salve.
-
-Occasionally, too, came reports of convoys, which looked like motor
-lorries or buses, moving hurriedly westward towards the German front.
-These were generally diagnosed by us as reinforcements which were being
-continually hurried forward to replace his human wastage, which was
-considerable both by direct losses from death, wounds and capture and
-by reason of the fatigue of such a strenuous and nerve-racking retreat.
-
-All this movement in the enemy's rearward areas was a legitimate object
-of interest to my Artillery. But, unfortunately, most of it lay well
-beyond the range of my lighter Ordnance. The mobile Field Artillery
-was effective at no greater range than about four miles. The longer
-range 60-pounders found it a formidable task to traverse such broken
-country, while the still heavier tractor-drawn 6-inch guns found it
-quite impossible.
-
-The latter, and all the Heavy and Super-Heavy guns and howitzers were
-tied down to the roads, and it proved a tremendous business to advance
-them in sufficient time and numbers to make their influence felt upon
-the present situation. I have nothing but praise for the admirable
-manner in which Brigadier-General Fraser and his Heavy Artillery
-Headquarters carried out the forward moves of the whole of his
-extensive Artillery equipment and organization from August 8th onwards
-to August 23rd. But the rapid advance of the battle line during the
-last week of August left the great bulk of Heavy Artillery far behind.
-
-This was not entirely or even appreciably a question of the rate of
-movement of the great lumbering steam or motor-drawn heavy guns.
-They could quite easily march their eight or ten miles a day if they
-could have a clear road upon which to do it. But it was this question
-of roads that dominated the whole situation during this period, and
-subsequently until the end of the campaign of the Corps.
-
-The construction and upkeep of roads throughout the Corps area had
-been, even in the days of stationary warfare, a difficult problem. At a
-time like the present, when the battle was moving forward from day to
-day, it became one of the first magnitude.
-
-The rate of our advance was controlled almost as much by the speed with
-which main and secondary roads could be made practicable for traffic
-as by the degree of resistance offered by the enemy. Obstacles had to
-be removed, the debris of war cleared to one side, shell holes solidly
-filled in, craters of mine explosions bridged or circumvented, culverts
-repaired and drains freed of obstructions.
-
-The road surfaces, speedily deteriorating under the strain and wear
-of heavy motor lorry traffic, had to be kept constantly under repair.
-The transportation of the necessary road stone for this purpose alone,
-imposed a heavy burden upon the roads and impeded other urgent traffic.
-The amount of road construction and reconstruction actually in hand
-within the Corps area, at any one time, far exceeded that normally
-required in peace time for any great city district.
-
-The traffic on the roads was always of the most dense and varied
-character. For the proper maintenance and supply of a large Army Corps
-at least three good main roads, leading back to our sources of supply,
-would have been no more than adequate; but I seldom had at my disposal
-more than one such main road, which had often to be shared with an
-adjoining Corps.
-
-There was ever an endless stream of traffic, labouring slowly along
-in both directions. On such a road as that leading east from Amiens
-towards the battle front, the congestion was always extreme. Ammunition
-lorries, regimental horsed transport, motor dispatch riders, marching
-infantry, long strings of horses and mules going to and from water,
-traction engines, convoy after convoy of motor buses, supply wagons,
-mess carts, signal motor tenders, complete batteries of Artillery,
-motor tractors, tanks, Staff motor cars and gangs of coolie labourers
-surged steadily forward, in an amazing jumble, with never a moment's
-pause.
-
-Such were some of the difficulties with which I was beset in the rear
-of my battle line. They were negligible compared with those which now
-loomed in front of it.
-
-The reach of the Somme which runs northerly from Ham past Brie to
-Péronne and there turns westerly, differs entirely in its topographical
-features from that picturesque Somme Valley along both of whose banks
-the Corps had been fighting its way forward. The steep banks have
-disappeared, and for a mile or so on either side the ground slopes
-gently towards the river bed.
-
-The river itself is not less than 1,000 yards wide, being, in fact, a
-broad marsh, studded with islets which are overgrown with rushes, while
-the stream of the river threads its way in numerous channels between
-them. The marsh itself is no more than waist-deep, but the flowing
-water is too deep to be waded.
-
-Along the western side of this marsh runs the canalized river, or, as
-it is here known, the Somme Canal, flowing between masonry-lined banks.
-The construction of a crossing of such a marsh was, even in peace time,
-a troublesome business. It meant, to begin with, a causeway solidly
-founded upon a firm masonry bed sunk deep into the mud of the valley
-bed. The canal itself and each rivulet required its separate bridge, in
-spans varying from thirty to sixty feet.
-
-What, therefore, came to be known as the Brie Bridge, situated on the
-line of the main road from Amiens to St. Quentin, really consisted of
-no less than eight separate bridges disposed at irregular intervals
-along the line of the causeway, between the western and eastern banks
-of the valley. The demolition of even the smallest of these eight
-bridges would render the whole causeway unusable, and would prohibit
-all traffic.
-
-There exists an almost exactly similar arrangement of bridges at St.
-Christ, about two miles to the south of Brie, but no other traffic
-crossing to the north of Brie until Péronne is reached. There, both the
-main road and the railway, which cross side by side, are provided with
-large span lattice girder bridges, over the main canal, while the marsh
-has been reclaimed where the town has encroached upon it. The river
-overflow is led through the town in several smaller canals or drains,
-all of them liberally bridged where crossed by roads and streets.
-
-The Péronne bridges are, therefore, no less indispensable, and no less
-easily rendered useless than those at Brie. Should such crossings be
-denied to me, it would be just possible to pass infantry across the
-valley, by night, by wading and swimming, or by the use of rafts,
-always provided that no opposition were to be met with. But to pass
-tanks or heavy guns, or even vehicles of the lightest description
-across the marsh, would have been quite impossible.
-
-The Somme threatened, therefore, to be a most formidable obstacle to my
-further advance. It was incumbent upon me to assume that at the very
-least one of each series of bridges would be demolished by the enemy in
-his retreat. It would have been criminal folly on his part were it to
-have been otherwise; and I had had previous evidence of the efficiency
-of his engineer services.
-
-Reconnaissances pushed out on the night of August 29th speedily
-verified the assumption that some at least of the bridges had been
-wrecked. It was ultimately ascertained that every single bridge
-in every one of the crossings named had been methodically and
-systematically blown to pieces.
-
-There was only one tactical method by which such an obstacle could be
-forced by a frontal operation. By bringing up sufficient Artillery to
-dominate the enemy's defences on the east bank of the river valley,
-it might have been possible to pass across sufficient infantry to
-establish a wide bridge-head, behind which the ruined crossings could
-be restored, probably under enemy Artillery fire.
-
-But it would have been a costly enterprise, and fraught with every
-prospect of failure, should the enemy be prepared to put up any sort of
-a fight to prevent it.
-
-The value to me of the possession of the whole of the Somme Valley from
-Cléry westwards, and the rapid repair of the bridges therein which I
-had been able to effect, will now become apparent. For it permitted the
-crystallizing into action of a project for dealing with the present
-situation, which had been vaguely forming in my mind ever since the day
-when I took over the Chipilly spur.
-
-This was the plan of turning the line of the Somme from the north,
-instead of forcing it by direct assault from the west.
-
-It may be argued that such a plan would have been equally practicable,
-even if the left flank of the Australian Corps had hitherto remained
-and now still lay south of the Somme, instead of well to the north
-of it. In that case other Corps on the north would have carried out
-that identical plan, which ultimately did achieve this important and
-decisive result.
-
-I very much doubt it.
-
-I had also had some experience of the futility of relying too much upon
-the sympathetic action of flank Corps, who usually had their hands full
-enough with their own problems, and had little time to devote to the
-needs of their neighbours. It would, moreover, have been disagreeable
-and inexpedient in the extreme to seek a right of way through the
-territory over which another Corps held jurisdiction. Corps Commanders
-were inclined to be jealous of any encroachment upon their frontiers,
-or upon the tactical problems in front of them.
-
-Moreover, I wanted, more than anything else, that this should be an
-exclusively Australian achievement.
-
-The situation being as it was, I possessed freedom of action, elbow
-room, and control not only of all the territory which I should require
-to use, but also of all the Somme crossings west of Cléry.
-
-[Illustration: Final Instructions to the Platoon--an incident of the
-battle of August 8th, 1918. The platoon is waiting to advance to Phase
-B of the battle.]
-
-[Illustration: An Armoured Car--disabled near Bony, during the battle
-of September 29th, 1918.]
-
-The strategic object in view was to make the line of the Somme useless
-to the enemy as a defensive line, and thereby render probable his
-immediate further enforced retreat to the Hindenburg line.
-
-The tactical process by which this was to be achieved was to be an
-attack upon and the seizure of the key position of the whole line, the
-dominating hill of Mont St. Quentin.
-
-But the paramount consideration was that the attack must be delivered
-_without delay_ and that the enemy should not be allowed a single hour
-longer than necessary to establish himself upon that hill.
-
-Often since those days, wondering at the success which came to the
-Australian Corps at Mont St. Quentin, I have tried justly to estimate
-the causes which won us that success. And I have always come back
-to the same conclusion, that it was due firstly and chiefly to the
-wonderful gallantry of the men who participated, secondly to the
-rapidity with which our plans were put into action, and thirdly to the
-sheer daring of the attempt.
-
-Mont St. Quentin lies a mile north of Péronne. It stands as a sentinel
-guarding the northern and western approaches to the town, a bastion of
-solid defence against any advance from the west designed to encircle
-it. The paintings and drawings of many artists who have visited the
-historic spot will familiarize the world with its gentle contours.
-
-Viewed from the west, from the vantage point of the high ground near
-Biaches in the very angle of the bend of the river, Mont St. Quentin
-constitutes no striking feature in the landscape. But standing upon the
-hill itself one speedily realizes how fully its possession dominates
-the whole of the approaches to it. So placed that both stretches
-of the river can from it be commanded by fire, and giving full and
-uninterrupted observation over all the country to the west and north
-and south of it, the hill is ringed around with line upon line of wire
-entanglements, and its forward slopes are glacis-like and bare of
-almost any cover.
-
-Estimated by the eye of an expert in tactics, it would surely be
-reckoned as completely impregnable to the assault, unaided by Tanks, of
-any infantry that should attempt it.
-
-It was the seizure, by a sudden attack, of this tactical key that
-was the kernel of the plan which now had to be evolved. The capture
-of the town of Péronne was consequential upon it, though little less
-formidable a task. The effect of both captures would be completely to
-turn the whole line of the Somme to the south, and the line of the
-Canal du Nord; to open a wide gate through which the remainder of the
-Fourth and Third Armies could pour, so as to roll up the enemy's line
-in both directions.
-
-In view of the historical importance of the occasion, and the
-controversies which have already risen regarding the genesis of the
-conception of these plans, I make no apology for reproducing, _in
-extenso_, a literal copy of the notes used at the conference which I
-held in the late afternoon of August 29th at the Headquarters of the
-Fifth Division, then situated in a group of bare sheds--but recently
-vacated by the enemy--on the main east and west road, just south of
-Proyart. The conference was attended by Lambert (32nd Division), Hobbs
-(Fifth Division), Rosenthal (Second Division), and Gellibrand (Third
-Division). Neither "Tanks" nor "Heavy Artillery" attended as they could
-not, in any event, co-operate in the execution of the plan.
-
- 29. 8. 18.
-
- PLAN FOR CROSSING THE SOMME
-
- A. ALTERATION OF FRONTAGES.
-
- _Defensive Front_: 32nd Division to take over on 30th from Fifth
- Division front as far north as Ferme Lamire, total 7,500 yards, to
- hold same defensively, place outposts on river line, demonstrate
- actively as if aiming to cross Somme; if no resistance, endeavour
- establish posts on far bank; otherwise demonstrate only. Use only
- one Brigade; remainder of Division to rest and refit.
-
- _Offensive Frontages_: Fifth Division to extend along canal bank
- from Ferme Lamire to Biaches, frontage 4,000 yards. Second
- Division to extend from Biaches for 4,700 yards to bridge at
- Ommiécourt. Third Division: present front north of river.
-
- B. OBJECTIVES.
-
- All Divisions to continue eastward advance. Each Division to have
- an immediate and an ultimate objective, thus:
-
- Third Division: Immediate: High ground north-east of Cléry.
- Ultimate: Bouchavesnes Spur.
-
- Second Division: Immediate: Bridge Head at Halle. If
- crossing there impossible
- then cross behind front
- of Third Division.
- Ultimate: Mont St. Quentin.
-
- Fifth Division: Immediate: Force crossing at Péronne
- Bridges; if bridges gone,
- follow Second Division
- and aim at high ground
- south of Péronne.
- Ultimate: Wooded spur east of Péronne.
-
- Whichever Division first succeeds in crossing Somme Valley, the
- other Divisions to have right of way over the same crossings.
-
- Each Division to employ only one Brigade until a satisfactory
- footing is established on immediate objective.
-
- Second Division to lead the north-east movement.
-
- Artillery to stand as at present allotted, but liable to
- re-allotment by me as operation develops.
-
-The above brief notes require but little elucidation. It is to
-be remembered that at the time they were prepared, no definite
-information had yet been received as to the condition of any of the
-Somme crossings, because at that hour the river bank had not yet been
-reached, and fighting on the west bank of the Somme was still going on.
-
-It has also to be remembered that these notes were only for my own
-guidance in verbally expounding the plan, and were not actually issued
-as written orders. Naturally many details, left unexpressed by the
-notes, were filled in during the conference. Moreover I anticipated
-that the whole operation would be one of a nature in which I would have
-to intervene as the battle proceeded, in accordance with the varying
-situation from time to time, and this actually proved to be necessary.
-
-It will be noted that on August 29th I had already reached the definite
-decision not to attempt to force the passage of the Somme south of
-Péronne; the 32nd Division was, however, instructed to make every
-demonstration of a desire to attempt it, the object being to divert the
-attention of the enemy from the real point of attack.
-
-This was to be launched from the direction of Cléry. In preparation for
-it, the Second Division sent its reserve Brigade, the 5th (Martin), to
-cross the river at Feuillères, on August 30th, to pass through the area
-and front of the Third Division, and secure a bridge head on the Cléry
-side of the river, opposite to the Ommiécourt bend. The object was to
-exploit the possibility of using the Ommiécourt crossing, and if it
-were found to be intact to use it for the purpose of crossing with the
-remaining two Brigades that same night.
-
-This move was successfully accomplished, although the 5th Brigade found
-portion of the village of Cléry still occupied, and that the trench
-systems to the east of it were still held in strength. After much
-skilful fighting, the Brigade reached its allotted destination, with
-slight casualties, capturing seven machine guns and 120 prisoners.
-
-The bridge at Ommiécourt was found to be damaged, but repairable so
-as to be usable by infantry on foot, and this work was at once put
-in hand. The same night the rearrangement of the fronts of all four
-Divisions in the line was carried out, and all was in readiness for the
-daring attempt to break the line of the Somme.
-
-During the afternoon of August 30th, General Rawlinson came to see me,
-and I unfolded to him the details of the operations contemplated and
-the arrangements made for the next day. I have already referred to the
-pleasant and attractive personality of this distinguished soldier. His
-qualities of broad outlook, searching insight, great sagacity, and
-strong determination, tempered by a wise restraint, never failed to
-impress me deeply. He always listened sympathetically, and responded
-convincingly. On this occasion he was pleased to be pleasantly
-satirical. "And so you think you're going to take Mont St. Quentin with
-three battalions! What presumption! However, I don't think I ought to
-stop you! So, go ahead, and try!--and I wish you luck!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-MONT ST. QUENTIN AND PÉRONNE
-
-
-From early dawn on Saturday, August 31st, until the evening of
-September 3rd, three Divisions of the Australian Corps engaged in a
-heroic combat which will ever be memorable in Australian history.
-
-At its conclusion we emerged complete masters of the situation. Mont
-St. Quentin, the Bouchavesnes spur, the large town of Péronne, and the
-high ground overlooking it from the east and north-east, were in our
-possession. A wide breach had been driven into the line of defence
-which the enemy had endeavoured to establish on the series of heights
-lying to the east of the Somme and of the Canal du Nord.
-
-From the edges of this breach, the flanks of that portion of his line
-which were still intact were being threatened with envelopment. For
-him there was nothing for it, but finally to abandon the line of the
-Somme, and to resume his retreat helter-skelter to the hoped-for secure
-protection of the great Hindenburg Line.
-
-The extraordinary character of this Australian feat of arms can best be
-appreciated by a realization of the supreme efforts which the enemy put
-forward to prevent it.
-
-The shower of blows which he had received on the front of his
-Second Army from August 8th onwards, had wrought upon it a grievous
-disorganization. The battered remnants of his line Divisions had been
-reinforced from day to day by fresh units, scraped up from other parts
-of his front, and thrown into the fight as fast as they could be made
-available.
-
-Sometimes they were complete Divisions from Reserve, often single
-reserve Regiments of Divisions already deeply involved, and
-sometimes even single Battalions torn from other Regiments--Pioneer
-Battalions, units of the Labour Corps, Army Troops, Minenwerfer
-Companies had all been thrown in, indiscriminately.
-
-This brought about a heterogeneous jumble of units, and of German
-nationalities, for Prussians, Bavarians, Saxons and Würtembergers were
-captured side by side. The tactical control of such mixed forces,
-during a hasty and enforced retreat, and their daily maintenance, must
-have presented sore perplexities to the Headquarters of the German
-Second Army in those fateful days.
-
-To meet the crisis with which Ludendorff was now confronted, he
-determined to throw in one of the finest of the reserve Divisions still
-left at his disposal. The Second Prussian Guards Division was sent
-forward to occupy the key position of Mont St. Quentin, and to hold it
-at all costs.
-
-This famous Division comprised among its units, the Kaiserin Augusta
-and the Kaiser Alexander Regiments, almost as famous in history and
-rich in tradition as are our own Grenadiers and Coldstreams. There is
-no doubt that this celebrated Division fought desperately to obey its
-instructions.
-
-For the defence of Péronne, the enemy command went even further, and
-called for volunteers, forming with them a strong garrison of picked
-men drawn from many different line Regiments, to man the ramparts which
-surround the town. Dozens of machine guns were posted in vantage points
-from which the approaches could be swept.
-
-All over the river flats lying in the angle of the Somme between
-Cléry, Mont St. Quentin and Péronne ran line upon line of barbed wire
-entanglements, a legacy from the 1916 fighting, and much of this was
-still intact, although breaches had been made in many places both
-by the French in 1917 and by the Germans themselves, to facilitate
-movement over the ground, during their respective re-occupations of
-this territory.
-
-The terrain, which was in greater part open, and exposed in every
-direction to full view from the heights, sloped gently upwards
-towards the commanding knoll. Cover was scarce, and the few ruins of
-brickfields and sugar refineries which dotted the landscape had also
-been garrisoned by the enemy as centres of resistance, designed to
-break up and dislocate any general attack.
-
-Our infantry was deprived of the assistance of any Tanks, for the heavy
-casualties which had been suffered by this Arm made it imperative to
-allow the Tank Corps time for repairs, renewals and the training of
-fresh crews. Nor was any appreciable quantity of Heavy Artillery yet
-available, since the congested and dilapidated condition of the roads
-prevented the advance of all but a few of the lighter varieties of
-heavy guns.
-
-The fighting of these four days was, therefore, essentially a pure
-infantry combat, assisted only by such mobile Artillery of lesser
-calibres as was available.
-
-Such was the formidable nature of the task, and of the disabilities
-under which the Second, Third and Fifth Divisions approached it.
-That they overcame all obstacles, gained all their objectives, and
-captured nearly 2,000 prisoners, mainly from crack Prussian regiments,
-constitutes an achievement memorable in military annals and standing to
-the everlasting glory of the troops who took part in it.[17]
-
-It is difficult to write a connected and consecutive account of the
-details of the fighting which took place. The most that is possible
-in the brief space available is to indicate on general lines the
-successive stages of the battle. Indeed, a minute account of the action
-of each of the 35 Battalions engaged would only prove wearisome and
-confusing. The best method of presenting a general picture of the
-course of the engagement is to follow the fortunes of each Brigade in
-turn.
-
-First in order of time, and of most importance in relation to its
-immediate results, was the action of the Second Division. It was the
-5th Brigade (Martin) which Major-General Rosenthal had detailed to open
-the attack. The remaining two Brigades of the Divisions (6th and 7th)
-received orders to rest the troops as much as possible, but to be in
-readiness to move at the shortest notice.
-
-A Machine Gun Company (16 guns) was placed at the disposal of
-Brigadier-General Martin, while the Artillery at the disposal of
-the Division, comprising five Brigades of Field Artillery and one
-Brigade of Heavy Artillery, remained under the personal control of the
-Divisional Commander.
-
-The attack opened with three Battalions of the 5th Brigade in the
-first line, and one Battalion in support. The total strength of the
-assaulting Infantry of this whole Brigade was on this day not more than
-70 Officers and 1,250 other ranks. The centre Battalion was directed
-straight at the highest knoll of Mont St. Quentin, while the right
-Battalion prolonged the line to the right. The left Battalion had
-assigned to it as an immediate objective the ruins of the village of
-Feuillaucourt, from which it was hoped that a flank attack upon the
-Mount could be developed.
-
-The advance began at 5 a.m. It was a dull morning and still quite dark.
-The two right Battalions advanced with as much noise as possible, a
-ruse which secured the surrender of numbers of the enemy lying out in
-advanced outpost positions. A nest of seven Machine Guns was rushed and
-captured without any loss to us.
-
-At the appointed hour, our Artillery opened on selected targets, the
-ranges being lengthened from moment to moment in sympathy with the
-advance of the Infantry. Although during the advance a great deal of
-machine gun fire was encountered, all went well. The centre and left
-Battalions gained a footing respectively in Feuillaucourt and on the
-main hill, but the progress of the right Battalion was arrested by
-heavy machine gun fire from St. Denis. This was the site of a ruined
-sugar refinery, and lay on the main road between Péronne and Mont
-St. Quentin. It was a strong point that presented a great deal of
-difficulty and held out to the last.
-
-The centre Battalion had by 7 a.m. passed through the ruins of Mont
-St. Quentin village and had crossed the main road from Péronne to
-Bouchavesnes. It now had to receive the full brunt of a determined
-counter attack, at a moment when it was still disorganized and
-breathless from its difficult assault. The Battalion was therefore
-withdrawn across the road and firmly established itself in an old
-trench system to the west of it.
-
-In this position it beat off five successive counter attacks,
-inflicting most severe losses upon the enemy. The Brigade maintained
-its position until nightfall. Its losses for the day were 380.
-
-In the meantime the 6th Brigade (Robertson) of the Second Division had
-been ordered to cross the Somme and move up behind the 5th Brigade,
-in readiness to carry on the attack, and obtain possession of the
-remainder of the main spur of Mont St. Quentin. As this Brigade only
-entered into the fight at a later hour, I must revert to the events of
-the forenoon of August 31st.
-
-It was about 8 a.m. that I was able to report to General Rawlinson,
-by telephone, that we had obtained a footing on Mont St. Quentin
-itself. He was at first totally incredulous, but soon generously
-congratulatory, proclaiming that the event was calculated to have a
-most important influence upon the immediate future course of the war.
-He expressed the hope that we should be able to hold on to all that we
-had gained.
-
-To this task I now had to bend myself, and I found it necessary to put
-a severe strain upon the endurance and capacity of the troops. Great as
-had always been my concern in the pitched battles of the days recently
-passed to reduce to very definite limits the demands made upon the
-physical powers of the Infantry soldier, a juncture had arrived and
-a situation had been created, which demanded the utmost rapidity in
-decision and action, and a relentless insistence upon prompt response
-by the troops.
-
-The 5th Brigade had been thrust out nearly two miles beyond our
-general line. Its flanks were in the air. It was undoubtedly fatigued.
-Everything must be done and done promptly to render it adequate
-support, to take advantage of its success, and to ensure that its
-effort had not been in vain.
-
-It will be remembered that the Fifth and Second Divisions had both been
-instructed to endeavour to secure a crossing over the river. Whichever
-Division first succeeded was to accord right of way to its neighbour.
-No success had yet attended the efforts of the Fifth Division, the main
-Péronne bridges being still inaccessible from the south. The bridge
-sites were under the enemy's fire, which precluded the possibility of
-repair; and the approaches to them were also swept by Machine Gun fire.
-
-The Second Division, on the other hand, had during the past 48 hours
-succeeded in making the Feuillères bridge traffickable for guns and
-vehicles, and those at Buscourt and Ommiécourt for foot traffic. It
-transpired later that the enemy, rightly suspecting that I would
-attempt to use this latter crossing, kept it under heavy Artillery fire
-all day.
-
-As soon as I had formed a judgment on the situation, about 8.30 a.m.
-(August 31st), I issued instructions to General Hobbs immediately to
-put in motion his reserve Brigade, the 14th (Stewart). He was to direct
-it towards the Ommiécourt crossing, and later in the day to pass it
-across the river and through the ground won that morning by the 5th
-Brigade, with a view to developing at the earliest possible moment an
-attack in a south-easterly direction upon the town of Péronne itself.
-The ultimate objective was still to be the high ground south and east
-of Péronne. His 8th Brigade was also to be held ready to move at the
-shortest notice.
-
-It was a serious performance to demand, and it was fraught with many
-risks. There was no time to assemble responsible Commanders concerned,
-separated as they were by long distances over bad and congested roads.
-In the absence of properly co-ordinated action, there was every chance
-of confusion, and cross-purposes, and even of collision of authority
-arising from the troops of one Division passing over ground under the
-tactical control of another Division.
-
-But the only alternative was to do nothing and attempt nothing. That
-would have been the worst of bad generalship, and it was an occasion
-when risks must be taken.
-
-The course of subsequent events fully demonstrated that the only true
-solution was the one chosen, for the whole of the defences of Péronne
-were thereby taken with a rush, while they were still being organized
-by the enemy. The delay of only a day or two would have meant that
-the capture of Péronne would have been many times more costly than it
-actually proved to be.
-
-The 14th Brigade had before it a march of some seven miles to
-bring it into a position in which it could deploy for an attack on
-Péronne. Working according to text book such a march could have been
-accomplished in something under three hours. It took the Brigade over
-ten hours. For the line of march lay across the very worst of the
-shell-torn, tangled country enclosed in the great bend of the Somme,
-and progress was most difficult and exhausting. Frequent halts were
-necessary to rest the men, and restore order to the struggling columns.
-
-Discovering the impossibility of crossing the river at Ommiécourt, the
-Brigade made a wide detour to cross by the newly established bridge at
-Buscourt. It arrived there just at the same time as the 7th Brigade
-(Wisdom), which Rosenthal had also directed to the same point for the
-same purpose. This occurrence illustrates the nature of the risks of
-a hastily developed tactical plan. However, the good sense of the
-Commanders on the spot obviated any serious confusion and the 7th
-Brigade gave the 14th Brigade the right of way.
-
-The 14th Brigade completed its march during the hours of falling
-darkness and, passing through Cléry, came up on the right of the 6th
-Brigade, in readiness for the combined attack by the two Divisions at
-dawn on September 1st.
-
-The night that followed was a stressful one for all Commanders.
-Divisional Generals had to co-ordinate all action between their
-Brigadiers, and their Artillery. The Brigadiers in turn had afterwards
-to assemble their Battalion Commanders, and decide on detailed plans
-of action for each separate unit. Distances were long, the country was
-strange, roads were few and unfamiliar; so that it is not surprising
-that the last conferences did not break up until well into the small
-hours of September 1st. There was no sleep that night for any senior
-officer in the battle area.
-
-September 1st was a day full of great happenings and bloody hand to
-hand fighting. The assault by the 6th Brigade passing over the line
-won the day before by the 5th Brigade carried it well over the crest
-of Mont St. Quentin, and confirmed for good and all our hold on that
-imperious fortress. Few prisoners were taken, for it was bayonet work
-over every inch of the advance, and the field was strewn all over with
-enemy dead. The impetus of the 6th Brigade assault carried our line 600
-yards to the east of the summit of the knoll.
-
-It is difficult to allocate, in due proportion, the credit for the
-capture of this important stronghold between the two gallant Brigades
-concerned. It is true that the 6th Brigade did on September 1st achieve
-the summit of the Mount; but it is equally true that it only completed
-what the 5th Brigade had so wonderfully begun the day before. No one
-will grudge to either of the two Brigades their share of the honour
-that is due to both.
-
-The action of the Second Division on that day was completed by the
-bringing up of the 7th Brigade into a position of support behind the
-6th Brigade, thereby relieving the 5th Brigade from further line duty.
-
-Although the action of the individual Brigades of all the three battle
-Divisions must necessarily be narrated separately and with some
-attempt at a proper chronological sequence, yet it would be a mistake
-to suppose that their actions were independent of each other. On the
-contrary, they all operated as part of a comprehensive battle plan,
-which necessarily took full account of the interdependence of the
-course of events in different parts of the field.
-
-Thus the advance on this day of the 6th Brigade materially assisted
-the attack on Péronne by the 14th Brigade, while the progress of the
-latter removed much trouble from the southern flank of the 6th Brigade.
-
-The men of the 14th Brigade that day had their mettle up to a degree
-which was astonishing. On the occasion of the great attack of August
-8th, and ever since, it had been the cruel fate of this Brigade to be
-the reserve unit of its Division on every occasion when there was any
-serious fighting in hand. The Brigade felt its position very keenly.
-As one Company Commander, who distinguished himself in that day's
-fighting, afterwards picturesquely put it: "You see! We'd been trying
-to buy a fight off the other fellows for a matter of three weeks. On
-that day we got what we'd been looking for, and we made the most of
-it."[18]
-
-The 14th Brigade advanced to the assault at 6 a.m. concurrently with
-the eastern thrust of the 6th Brigade. One Battalion, with two others
-in support, was directed against St. Denis, while the fourth made
-a direct attack on Péronne. Many belts of wire had to be struggled
-through. There was much machine gun fire, from front and flanks, and
-it looked as if further progress would be impossible. Nevertheless,
-this gallant Brigade, by persistent effort, made itself master of the
-western half of Péronne.
-
-The attack on St. Denis at first made very slow progress, the enemy
-holding out resolutely in the ruins of that hamlet, and in the adjacent
-brickfields. During the day, the 15th Brigade made spirited attempts to
-effect the crossing of the river, and to co-operate from the south.
-
-The records of the events of these three days are confused and
-discontinuous. Many of the men who could have filled in the gaps of the
-story were unfortunately killed or evacuated as casualties. But from
-the mass of reports, the salient facts emerge clearly.
-
-The 15th Brigade succeeded, on September 2nd, in putting a Battalion
-across the river, and this assisted the 14th Brigade to "mop up" the
-remainder of the town of Péronne. Later the rest of the 15th Brigade
-and two Battalions of the 8th Brigade (Tivey) were also drawn into the
-fighting. St. Denis and the brickfields fell to us during this period.
-
-Although the situation, from the point of view of the advance
-eastwards, remained almost stationary, it was a time of fierce local
-fighting. Many deeds of valour and sacrifice adorn the story.
-
-It was late on September 3rd that the effects of this long-sustained
-struggle became apparent. The whole of Péronne and most of the high
-ground in its vicinity were, by then, definitely in our hands, and
-although the little suburb of Flamicourt held out determinedly for
-another day, the further resistance of the enemy began to fade away.
-
-Doubtless the loss of Mont St. Quentin was a controlling factor in the
-decision which was forced upon him to undertake a retreat, for with
-that eminence in our possession, he could not have maintained himself
-for many days in the town, nor would its retention have been of any
-tactical value to him.
-
-As an immediate result, the high ground of the Flamicourt spur just
-south of Péronne fell into our hands on September 3rd, and the enemy
-outposts spread along the banks of the marsh in front of the 32nd
-Division sought safety from complete envelopment by a hasty withdrawal;
-a number of their isolated posts were, however, left unwarned of this
-retreat, so that these were, later on, captured by us from the rear.
-
-I must now briefly turn to the doings of the Third Australian Division
-during these four epic days. Its three Brigades (9th, 10th and 11th)
-daily performed prodigies of valour. The Division carried our line,
-inexorably, up the Bouchavesnes spur in a north-easterly direction. The
-seizure of this very important ground not only powerfully aided but
-also strongly confirmed our seizure of Mont St. Quentin.
-
-The Division, having been given its general rôle, was necessarily left
-to a large extent to decide for itself its detailed action from day to
-day, seeing that it still had to perform the function, inevitable for a
-flank Division, of a link with my neighbouring Corps. Fortunately the
-arrival of a new, fresh Division (the 74th) from the Eastern theatre
-of war, which came into the Third Corps and was promptly thrown in,
-enabled that Corps to keep up fairly well with the general advance.
-
-The British Third Army, too, was now beginning to make its pressure
-felt, and was approaching the line of the Canal du Nord over a wide
-front. The Third Division was therefore free to conform its forward
-movement to that of the rest of the Australian Corps; its energetic
-action gave me elbow room for the manoeuvring of so many Brigades in
-the region of Cléry, and its capture of so much valuable ground east of
-the Canal du Nord served greatly to widen the breach.
-
-By the night of September 3rd, the main tactical purposes on which
-the Corps had been launched on August 29th had been achieved in their
-entirety. Their execution furnishes the finest example in the war
-of spirited and successful Infantry action conducted by three whole
-Divisions operating simultaneously side by side.
-
-Lord Rawlinson has more than once referred to the operation as the
-finest single feat of the war. Inevitably the dramatic and unlooked
-for success of the Second Division in the rapid storming of the Mount
-enthrals the imagination and overshadows all the other noteworthy
-incidents of these pregnant days. But none will begrudge the rain of
-congratulations which fell upon the head of Major-General Rosenthal.
-A massive man, whose build belies his extraordinary physical energy,
-he always was an egregious optimist, incapable of recognizing the
-possibility of failure. That is why he invariably succeeded in all
-that he undertook, and often embarked upon the apparently impossible.
-An architect before the war, he served for the first two years as an
-Artillery officer, both as a Brigade Commander and as a General of
-Divisional Artillery. He gained his Infantry experience as Commander
-of the 9th Brigade, and so was well qualified by versatile service to
-assume the command of the Second Division. His leadership of the latter
-contributed in no small measure to the fame which it has won.
-
-The text of the congratulatory message issued on this occasion by the
-Fourth Army read as follows:
-
- "The capture of Mont St. Quentin by the Second Division is a feat
- of arms worthy of the highest praise. The natural strength of the
- position is immense, and the tactical value of it, in reference
- to Péronne and the whole system of the Somme defences, cannot be
- over-estimated. I am filled with admiration at the gallantry and
- surpassing daring of the Second Division in winning this important
- fortress, and I congratulate them with all my heart.
-
- "RAWLINSON."
-
-[Illustration: MAP E]
-
-I am concerned nevertheless that the fine performance of the Fifth
-Division should not be underrated. The circumstances under which
-General Hobbs was called upon to intervene in the battle, at very short
-notice, imposed upon him, personally, difficulties of no mean order. I
-am prepared to admit quite frankly that the demands which I had to make
-upon him, his Staff and his Division were severe.
-
-Following upon four days of arduous pursuit, his troops were called
-upon to undertake a long and difficult march over a most broken
-country, to be followed by three days of intensive fighting of the most
-severe character.
-
-General Hobbs was, first and foremost, a lover of the Australian
-soldiers, and their devoted servitor. He belonged to that type of
-citizen-soldier who, before the war, had spent long years in preparing
-himself for a day when his country would surely require his military
-services. Like several of the most successful of Australia's generals,
-he had specialized in Artillery, and was, in fact, selected as the
-senior Artillery Commander of Australia's first contingent. That
-fact alone was the stamp of his ability. While he would be the last
-to lay claim to special brilliance, or outstanding military genius,
-he nevertheless succeeded fully as the Commander of a Division, by
-his sound common sense, and his sane attitude towards every problem
-that confronted him. He possessed also the virtue of a large-hearted
-sympathy for all subordinate to him; and that gave him a loyal
-following, which carried him successfully through several great crises
-in the affairs of the Fifth Division.
-
-This period was one of those crises. When, late on the afternoon of
-August 31st, he urged upon me with much earnestness the stress upon his
-troops, and repeated the anxious representations of his Brigadiers--I
-was compelled to harden my heart and to insist that it was imperative
-to recognize a great opportunity and to seize it unflinchingly. His
-response was loyal and whole-hearted. His Division followed the lead
-which he thus gave them, and he led them to imperishable fame.
-
-Considerable redispositions followed upon the transfer of my battle
-front to the country east of the Somme. These, and the reasons which
-governed their nature, chief among which was the resumption of the
-enemy's rearward movement, I shall deal with in due course.
-
-Battle problems on the grand scale were, for the moment, relegated to
-the background, and there now arose a multitude of other problems,
-almost equally burdensome, relating to the supply and maintenance of
-the Corps.
-
-Every Corps must be based upon a thoroughly reliable and efficient line
-of supply, and for this a railway in first-class operating condition is
-a prime essential. Every kind of requisite must be carried by rail to
-some advanced distribution point called a "railhead." Thence supplies
-are distributed by motor lorry to the areas still further forward.
-
-The appropriate distance of the railhead behind the battle front is
-conditioned by the available supply of motor lorries, and their range
-of action. If the distance be too great the stress upon the mechanical
-transport becomes so severe that it rapidly deteriorates, and an undue
-proportion of lorries daily falls out of service. As the facilities
-for repair in the mobile workshops are strictly limited, an excessive
-rate of wastage among these vehicles soon dislocates the whole supply
-arrangements.
-
-The experience hitherto gained had demonstrated that a railhead could
-not conveniently be allowed to fall behind our advance more than ten or
-twelve miles. This limit had already been reached when the Corps front
-arrived on the west bank of the Somme, and the strain upon the lorry
-service was already great.
-
-For a further deep advance of the whole Corps in pursuit of the enemy
-towards the Hindenburg Line, still distant another fifteen miles, it
-became imperative, therefore, that the railway service to Péronne
-and beyond should be speedily reopened, or some equally efficient
-alternative provided. The great lattice girder railway bridge at
-Péronne had been irretrievably demolished. Engineers estimated that it
-would take two months to restore it, and at least a month to provide
-even a temporary deviation and crossing. Nevertheless, the work was put
-in hand without delay.
-
-An alternative possibility was to construct a new line of railway to
-connect the existing military line at Bray to the Péronne railway
-station, a length of new construction amounting to some six miles. It
-was estimated that such a link could be built in a fortnight, and this
-work also was commenced forthwith.
-
-There was a third possibility. This was speedily to repair that
-portion of the railway which lay west of the Somme, and to establish
-a railhead near Péronne, but on the opposite bank of the river. This
-proposal involved only a few days' work, for extensive sidings already
-existed on the west bank, and had been left more or less undamaged by
-the enemy. But it also involved the complete restoration of all road
-traffic bridges, both at Péronne and at Brie, for the service of the
-intense traffic which would ensue across the Somme from such a point of
-departure.
-
-The rebuilding of the crossings was, in any case, a matter of urgent
-necessity. By this time all my heaviest guns had already been brought
-up to the vicinity of the west bank of the Somme, and had there
-perforce to wait; for a long detour, on the densely-crowded roads, to
-cross the Somme, say as far back as Corbie, where bridges were strong
-and grades were easy, was out of the question.
-
-The problem, therefore, involved a stable and comprehensive
-reconstruction; half measures would not meet the case. But half
-measures were an inevitable necessity of the situation, to begin
-with, because troops had to be fed, and their supplies could be
-carried in no lighter way, in adequate quantities, than in the normal
-horse-transport wagons.
-
-The order of procedure had, therefore, to be, firstly, hastily to
-reconstruct some sort of bridging, based generally upon the wreckage
-of the original bridge, and strong enough to carry loads up to those
-of horsed wagons; next to stay, strut and strengthen these temporary
-bridges to fit them for the passage of the lighter guns, and finally to
-reconstruct them in their entirety for the heaviest loads.
-
-At a point such as the southern entrance to Péronne, where the
-approaches could not be conveniently deviated, the difficulties of
-such successive reconstructions, while the flow of traffic had to be
-maintained, can hardly be fully realized.
-
-For many days, in the early part of September, Brie, Eterpigny and
-Péronne were scenes of feverish activity. Every available technical
-unit that could be spared from other urgent duty was concentrated upon
-this vital work. Most of the Engineer Field Companies, three of the
-five Pioneer Battalions, both Tunnelling Companies, and all the Army
-Troops Companies, laboured in relays, night and day.
-
-Hundreds of tons of steel girders, of all lengths and sections, were
-hurried up, by special lorry service. Pile-driving gear was hastily
-improvised. The wreckage of the original bridges was overhauled for
-sound, useful timbers. The torn and twisted steelwork was dragged out
-of the way by horse or steam power, and tumbled in a confused mass into
-the river bed. Hammer, saw and axe were wielded with a zest and vigour
-rarely seen in peace-time construction. The whole work was supervised
-by my Chief Engineer, Brigadier-General Foott, and was later, when the
-advance of the Corps was resumed, completed by the Army authorities.
-The speed and punctuality with which the first temporary viaducts were
-completed and ready for use were exemplary, and reflect every credit
-upon Foott and his helpers. Within forty-eight hours bridges usable for
-ordinary supplies and for field guns became available, and thereafter
-were rapidly strengthened by successive stages.
-
-The whole work of restoration, in which the Australian technical
-services played so prominent a part, won the highest praise from the
-Field Marshal, who expressed his appreciation in a special message of
-thanks to these services.
-
-The congestion of traffic at the Péronne bottleneck was, however,
-serious. Blocks occurred, reminiscent of those which are familiar in
-the heart of London when the dense traffic is temporarily held up by
-a passing procession. Marching troops always had the right of way;
-and a Division on the move up to or back from the line meant a severe
-super-load upon the already overtaxed road capacity.
-
-Sometimes a block of traffic would occur for an hour at a time, and a
-motley collection of vehicles, stretching back for miles, would pile up
-on the roads. The capabilities of a very able road and traffic control
-service, numbering hundreds of officers and men, acting under the
-direction of my Provost Marshal, were often severely tested. More than
-once my own motor car was unavoidably held up at this bottleneck for
-half an hour at a time, on occasions, too, when the situation required
-my urgent presence at some important meeting.
-
-All these minor embarrassments arising from the passage by the
-Australian Corps of a great military obstacle such as the Somme were,
-however, soon dissipated. The Somme had loomed large, for many days, in
-the minds of all of us--first as a problem of tactics, and next as a
-problem of engineering. Before the end of the first week of September
-the Somme had ceased to hold our further interest. It had become a
-thing that was behind us, both in thought and in actuality.
-
-The enemy was once more on the move, and it became our business to
-press relentlessly on his heels.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[17] The following telegram, selected at random from the files of
-September 1st, indicates the extraordinary mixture of units which the
-enemy had collected to defend this vital point:
-
- "To Australian Corps Intelligence from 2nd Division--sent September
- 1st at 7 p.m. Identifications from prisoners examined since noon:
- 28th R.I.R.; 65th I.R.; 161st I.R.; 94th I.R.; 95th I.R.; 96th
- I.R.; Alexander Regt.; Augusta Regt.; 4th Bav. I.R.; 8th Bav. I.R.;
- 25th Bav. I.R.; 447th I.R.; 2nd G. Guard F.A.R.; 221st F.A.R.; 2nd
- Co. M.G. Corps; 67th Pioneer Co.; 3rd Army Troops; 102nd Pioneer
- Bn. of 2nd Guards Div.; 402nd M.W.Co.; 185th R.I.R. A pioneer of
- the 23rd Co. has been retained for 5th Aust. Div. to remove charges
- from bridges not yet blown. Prisoner 96th I.R. says Regt. came
- up for counter-attack night 31-1 to retake Mt. St. Quentin, but
- counter-attack did not come off, owing to attack expected from
- us. All prisoners interrogated agree that line was to be held
- at all costs. Regiments are now considerably intermingled and
- disorganized."
-
-(NOTE.--I.R.--Infanterie Regiment; R.I.R.--Reserve Infanterie Regiment;
-M.W.Co.--Minenwerfer Compagnie; Bav.--Bavarian.)
-
-[18] Mr. Hughes, the Commonwealth Prime Minister, visited the
-battlefield of Mont St. Quentin, with a distinguished company, on
-September 14th. The officer in question, standing near the summit
-of the hill, was about to relate his experiences, and this was his
-preamble.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-A LULL
-
-
-During the closing days of August events had commenced to move rapidly;
-for the offensive activities initiated by the Fourth Army, three weeks
-earlier, began to spread in both directions along the Allied front.
-
-The Third British Army had entered the fray on August 21st; the First
-British Army was ready with its offensive on August 26th, on which
-date the Canadian Corps, restored to its old familiar battleground,
-delivered a great attack opposite Arras.
-
-The French, who, on my right flank, had along their front followed up
-the enemy retirement begun after the battle of Chuignes, reached Roye
-on August 27th, and Noyon on August 28th. Their line, however, still
-bore back south-westerly from the vicinity of the river near Brie and
-St. Christ.
-
-By August 29th the line of the First Army had reached and passed
-Bapaume, and that of the Third Army cut through Combles. The Third
-Corps, on my immediate left, had made good its advance as far as
-Maurepas.
-
-Thus, the thrust of the Australian Corps beyond the Canal du Nord, on
-August 31st to September 3rd, formed the spearhead which pierced the
-Somme line, and the Corps was still leading the advance both of the
-French and the British.
-
-From the morning of September 4th the evidences of the enemy's
-resolution to withdraw to the Hindenburg Line became hourly more
-unmistakable. His Artillery fire died down considerably, particularly
-that from his long range and high velocity guns. These were probably
-already on the move to the rear, in order to clear the roads for his
-lighter traffic.
-
-[Illustration: The Hindenburg Line Wire--near Bony.]
-
-[Illustration: The 15-inch Naval Gun--captured at Chuignes, August
-23rd, 1918.]
-
-The high ground near Biaches (west of Péronne) provided a vantage point
-from which an extensive view of the whole country could be obtained.
-There lay before us, beyond the Somme, a belt about eight miles deep,
-which had scarcely suffered at all from the ravages of the previous
-years of war.
-
-It was gently undulating country, liberally watered, and heavily
-wooded, especially in the minor valleys, in which snuggled numerous
-villages still almost intact and habitable, although, of course,
-entirely deserted by the civilian population.
-
-Beyond this agreeable region there began again an area of devastation,
-which grew in awful thoroughness as the great Hindenburg Line was
-approached some six miles further on. For, through the autumn and
-winter of 1917, and up to the moment of the German offensive in March,
-1918, it was there that the British Fifth Army had faced the enemy in
-intensive trench fighting.
-
-In all directions over this still habitable belt there were now signs
-of unusual life and activity. Columns of smoke began to rise in the
-direction of all the villages. Sounds of great explosions rent the air.
-These were sure indications that the enemy was burning the stores which
-he could not hope to salve, and was destroying his ammunition dumps
-lest they should fall into our hands.
-
-A vigorous pursuit was now the policy most to be desired. But my troops
-in the line were very tired from the exertions of a great struggle,
-and many of the units, by reason of their battle losses, required time
-to reorganize and refit. It was also essential that no rapid advance
-should be attempted until the arrangements for supply, depending upon
-the completion of the Somme crossings, had been assured.
-
-The general line of advance of the Corps had, during August, been in a
-due easterly direction. The operations about Péronne had necessitated
-a drive north-easterly, and the advance of my Third Division up the
-Bouchavesnes spur had carried them square across the line of advance of
-the Third Corps.
-
-The first step was to restore our original Corps boundaries, and to
-resume the original line of advance. By arrangement with General
-Godley, his 74th Division took over the ground captured by my Third
-Division, which was thereby released and enabled to concentrate, for a
-couple of days' rest, in the Cléry region. The Second Division employed
-its 7th Brigade on September 2nd and 3rd to advance our line beyond
-Haut Allaines, another two miles east of Mont St. Quentin, routing from
-the trenches of that spur the strong rearguards which the enemy had
-posted for the purpose of delaying us.
-
-On the night of September 4th the 74th Division took over the Haut
-Allaines spur also, thereby releasing my Second Division, and the
-latter was withdrawn to the Cappy area for a thorough and well-deserved
-rest.
-
-Meanwhile, the 32nd Imperial Division, availing itself of the temporary
-crossings which had hastily been effected over the Somme, brought its
-front up, on the eastern bank of the river, level with the line which
-had by September 4th been reached by the Fifth Australian Division.
-
-On September 5th, therefore, I had, east of the Somme, two Divisions in
-the line, the 32nd on the right or south, the Fifth Australian on the
-left or north, each operating on a frontage of two Brigades, with one
-Brigade in reserve. This was, however, quite a temporary arrangement,
-devised merely to allow time for the Third Division to reorganize and
-resume its place in the front line of the general advance.
-
-The general withdrawal of the enemy, over a very wide front, now began
-to effect a very substantial reduction of the length of frontage which
-he had to defend. The enemy communiqués and wireless propaganda of that
-time busied themselves with the explanation that the withdrawals in
-progress were being deliberately carried out for the very purpose of
-releasing forces from the line to form a great strategic reserve.
-
-These protestations did not deceive us, nor did we on our part fail
-also to take full advantage of the steady shortenings of the Allied
-front. Marshal Foch decided once again to readjust the international
-boundary, and my own front was thereby considerably shortened. The
-French took over from the 32nd Division all ground south of the main
-Amiens--St. Quentin road; and that road henceforth became my southern
-boundary.
-
-This, coupled with the readjustment of the northern boundary with the
-Third Corps, as already narrated, reduced the total frontage for which
-I remained responsible to about ten thousand yards, an extent which
-was never again exceeded. It was still, however, in my judgment, too
-long a frontage for an effective pursuit by only two Divisions, and
-arrangements were initiated on the same day to bring back the Third
-Division into line.
-
-During September 5th I advanced my front to the line Athies--Le
-Mesnil--Doingt--Bussu. Severe fighting took place near Doingt.
-Opposition came mainly from machine guns; but isolated field-guns
-also gave us trouble. We captured that day about a hundred and fifty
-prisoners.
-
-Next day my Third Division came into the line on the north. I divided
-my frontage equally between the three Divisions, placing each on a
-single Brigade front. This was, in fact, a repetition of the order of
-battle which had carried us so successfully and rapidly up to the Somme.
-
-Each front line Brigade took up the rôle of Advanced Guard to its
-Division. The 11th Brigade led the Third Division; the 8th Brigade led
-the Fifth Division, while the 97th Brigade covered the 32nd Imperial
-Division.
-
-For the first time in the war I found an opportunity of employing
-my Corps Cavalry (13th Australian Light Horse) on other than their
-habitual duty of carrying despatches, or providing mounted escorts to
-convoys of prisoners of war. Here at last was a chance for bold mounted
-tactics, as the county was mainly open and free of wire and trenches.
-
-To each Division I therefore allotted a squadron of Light Horse for
-vanguard duty, together with detachments of the Australian Cyclist
-Battalion. These troops more than justified their employment by
-bold, forward reconnaissance, and energetic pressure upon the enemy
-rearguards.
-
-So promising, indeed, was the prospect of the useful employment of
-cavalry, that I prevailed upon the Army Commander to endeavour to
-secure for my use a whole Cavalry Brigade. Brigadier-General Neil Haig
-(cousin of the Field Marshal) was actually sent for and placed under
-my orders. I duly arranged a plan of action with him, but before the
-1st Cavalry Brigade, stationed many miles away, had completed its
-long march into my area, the situation had already changed, and the
-employment of Cavalry on the Fourth Army front had to be postponed
-until a much later date.
-
-A juncture had arrived when it became imperative for me to consider the
-possibility of affording some relief to the three line Divisions; all
-of them had been fighting without respite since August 27th. The troops
-were so tired from want of sleep and physical strain that many of them
-could be seen by the roadside, fast asleep. These three Divisions had
-almost reached the limits of their endurance.
-
-It was essential, however, that they should be called upon to yield
-up the last particle of effort of which they were capable. Every mile
-by which they could approach nearer to the Hindenburg defences meant
-a saving of effort on the part of the fresh waiting Divisions, whom
-I had earmarked for the first stage of our contemplated assault upon
-that formidable system; a system which I knew to be too deep to be
-overwhelmed in a single operation.
-
-It was for this reason that I was compelled to disregard the evident
-signs of overstrain which were brought to my notice by the Divisional
-Generals and their Brigadiers, and which were patent to my own
-observation of the condition of the troops. I arranged, however, two
-measures of immediate relief, the first being to set a definite limit
-of time for the further demands to be made upon the line Divisions.
-This was fixed for September 10th. The second was to issue orders that
-the rate of our further advance was to be controlled by consideration
-for the well-being of our own troops, and not by the rate of the
-enemy's retreat. If, in consequence, any gap should eventuate, touch
-with the enemy was to be kept by the mounted troops and cyclists.
-
-The preliminary steps for effecting the reliefs thus promised for
-September 10th were begun on September 5th. The Corps was, as stated,
-on a three Division front. I had only two fit Divisions in Corps
-Reserve (_i.e._, the First and Fourth), the Second Division being
-not yet rested. My representations to the Army Commander on this
-matter bore immediate fruit; for he placed under my orders the Sixth
-(Imperial) Division (one of the first seven Divisions of the original
-Expeditionary Force). Before, however, I could take advantage of
-this windfall, the constitution of the Fourth Army underwent a vital
-alteration, of which more will be told later.
-
-The First and Fourth Divisions had been resting since August 26th. They
-had had time to reorganize their units, to reclothe and refit their
-troops, to receive and absorb reinforcements, and to fill vacancies
-among leaders. Staffs had been able to deal with a mass of arrears. The
-men had enjoyed a pleasant holiday in the now peaceful Somme Valley,
-far in rear, a holiday devoted to games and aquatic sports. Horse and
-man, alike, were refreshed, and had been inspired by the continued
-successes of the remainder of the Corps.
-
-They were however, by now, far in rear; and it was out of the question
-to tax their restored energies by calling upon them to march back to
-the battle zone. The Fourth Army, as always, extended its sympathetic
-help; two motor bus convoys, each capable of dealing with a Brigade
-group a day, were speedily materialized from the resources of G.H.Q.
-
-The completion of the moves of these two Divisions from the back area
-to within easy marching distance of the battle front therefore occupied
-three days. The use of mechanical transport for the execution of troop
-movements has now entirely passed the experimental stage, and in future
-wars, calculations of time and space will be vitally affected, whenever
-an ample supply of lorries or buses and suitable roads are available
-for the rapid concentration or dispersal of large bodies of troops.
-
-The Australian soldier is individually philosophic and stoical, but
-in the mass he is sensitive to a degree; and he is intelligent enough
-to realize how he is used or misused. It was the subject of complaint
-among the troops during the earlier years of the war, that while they
-were indulgently carried by lorries into the battle at a time when they
-were fresh and fit, they were invariably left to march long distances,
-out of the battle, when they were on the verge of exhaustion. I
-therefore tried, whenever possible, to provide tired troops with the
-means of transport to their rest areas, a facility which was always
-highly appreciated by them.
-
-By the time the First and Fourth Divisions had thus been assembled in
-the forward areas, ready to relieve the Third and Fifth Divisions,
-these latter, together with the 32nd Division, had advanced our front
-approximately to the line Vermand--Vendelles--Hesbecourt, carrying
-it to within three miles of the front line of the Hindenburg defence
-system.
-
-There can be no doubt, however, that the rate of our advance, retarded
-as it had been for the reasons already explained, had proceeded much
-more rapidly than suited the enemy.
-
-A steady stream of prisoners kept pouring in, captured in twos and
-threes, all along my front, by my energetic patrols. Numerous machine
-guns were taken; and in the vicinity of Roisel, fully three hundred
-transport vehicles and much engineering material were captured, which
-the enemy had been compelled to abandon in haste.
-
-At this juncture the British High Command arrived at the important
-decision to enlarge the Fourth Army, by adding another Corps; doubtless
-contemplating the possibility of operations on a large scale against
-the Hindenburg defences in the near future.
-
-A new Corps Headquarters, the Ninth, was to be reconstituted under
-Lieut.-General Braithwaite, and he was to become my neighbour on my
-southern flank, interposed between me and the French. Braithwaite
-had been Chief of Staff to Sir Ian Hamilton during the Dardanelles
-Expedition, and I had seen much of him there. I was to have the
-advantage, therefore, of having old Gallipoli comrades on either flank,
-Braithwaite on the south, and Godley on the north.
-
-The immediate result of this decision, which came into effect early on
-September 12th, was that the 32nd Division, which had been under my
-orders for nearly four weeks, passed over to the Ninth Corps. Lambert,
-his Staff and his Division had served me well and efficiently, and I
-was sorry to lose them out of my Corps.
-
-With the impending further shortening of my front, I had no
-justification for pressing to be permitted to retain this Division. On
-the contrary, my representations to General Rawlinson had always been
-in favour of shortening my frontage to the effective battle standard
-of August 8th, so that the Corps might at any time be in a position to
-embark on a major operation, with its whole resources in Artillery and
-Infantry concentrated, as on that occasion, upon a relatively narrow
-objective. My greatly extended front, and the direct control of the
-affairs of six separate Divisions, had been a heavy burden, involving
-great and manifold responsibilities.
-
-According to my promises to the remaining two line Divisions, the Fifth
-and Third, these were duly relieved on September 10th by the First and
-Fourth Divisions, the former on the north, the latter on the south.
-Each Division had a frontage of about four thousand yards, but this was
-to diminish rapidly, if the advance of the Corps continued, by reason
-of the fact that my southern boundary now became the Omignon River,
-whose course ran obliquely from the north-east.
-
-While all these changes in dispositions were being effected, there
-was breathing time to give attention to a heavy mass of arrears of
-work; for there could be no question of undertaking an attack on the
-Hindenburg defences without most careful and exhaustive preparation.
-
-For this the time was not yet ripe. It would still take some days to
-bring forward the remainder of my heaviest Artillery, to advance the
-railheads, to replenish the ammunition depots and supply dumps, and to
-re-establish telegraph and telephone communications.
-
-Another good reason for a more leisurely policy on the front of the
-Fourth Army lay in the events on other portions of the Allied fronts.
-By September 4th the German withdrawal had become general on all fronts.
-
-It had become clear that the enemy's retirement to his former position
-of March, 1918, was not to be confined to those fronts on which he had
-been receiving such punishment. All evidence pointed to the fact that
-his present strategy was to take up as speedily as possible a strong
-defensive attitude, behind the great system of field works, which had
-already served him so well during 1917, at a time when a considerable
-proportion of his military resources was still involved on the Russian
-and Roumanian fronts.
-
-His retirement before the First and Third British Armies was proceeding
-methodically, and on September 5th the French were crossing the Vesle,
-between Rheims and Soissons. All was going well; and those in the
-confidence of our High Command knew that, on any day now, news might be
-expected of the first great attack to be made by the American Army, to
-be directed against the St. Mihiel Salient on the Alsace front.
-
-This latter attack actually opened on September 11th, and it was
-clearly sound military policy to wait for a few days, in order
-correctly to diagnose the effect of these operations upon the enemy's
-distribution of forces.
-
-Information as to the locations and movements of all the enemy
-Divisions was in these days voluminous, accurate and speedy. Prisoners
-and documents were daily falling into the hands of the Allies over the
-whole length of the Western Front. His Divisions in the front line were
-identified daily by actual contact. As to those resting or refitting
-or in reserve, accurate deductions could be made from the mass of
-information at our disposal.
-
-It was at this time that it began to be made clear to us that the
-enemy's mobile reserves had been almost completely absorbed into the
-front line. One Division after another, particularly among those which
-had been engaged against the Australian Corps in August, was being
-disbanded. Among these were the 109th, 225th, 233rd, 54th Reserve, and
-14th Bavarian Divisions.
-
-The strength of the enemy's remaining Divisions was also rapidly
-diminishing. From prisoners we learned that many Battalions now
-had only three Companies instead of four, many Regiments only two
-Battalions instead of three, and even the Company strengths were at a
-low ebb.
-
-We could well afford to approach the immediate future with greater
-deliberation.
-
-Since August 8th, the Corps front had already advanced twenty-five
-miles, and it was not long before I had to abandon the luxurious
-château of the Marquis de Clermont-Tonnere, at Bertangles, whose
-spacious halls and spreading parks had formed so pleasant a habitation
-for the whole of my Corps Headquarters.
-
-The scale of comfort possible for all senior Commanders and Staffs
-rapidly declined as the advance developed. Generals of Corps, Divisions
-and Brigades had to be content with living and office quarters in a
-steadily descending gradation of convenience. From château to humbler
-dwelling house, and thence into bare wooden huts, and later still into
-mere holes hollowed out in the sides of quarries or railway cuttings,
-were the stages of progress in this downward scale.
-
-My Headquarters moved from Bertangles to a group of village houses at
-Glisy on August 13th; thence on August 31st to Méricourt, where the
-best had to be made of a derelict, much battered and almost roofless
-château, which the Germans had rifled of every stick of furniture, and
-even of all doors and windows, in order to equip a large collection of
-dug-outs in a neighbouring hill-side.
-
-Again on September 8th I moved into the very centre of the devastated
-area lying in the Somme bend, on to a small rise near Assevillers,
-where a number of tiny wooden huts served us as bedrooms by night and
-offices by day. Only one hut, more pretentiously brick-walled and
-evidently built for the use of some German officer of high rank, was
-available to fulfil the duties of hospitality.
-
-In spite of such discomforts, the daily life at Corps Headquarters
-flowed on uninterruptedly in its several quite distinct activities. On
-the one hand, there was the grim business of fighting, the detailed
-conduct of the battle of to-day, the troop and artillery movements
-for that of to-morrow, the planning of the one to be undertaken still
-later; rounds of conferences and consultations; visits to Divisions and
-Brigades, and to Artillery; reconnaissances to the forward zone; and an
-intent and ceaseless study of maps and Intelligence summaries.
-
-Hourly contact with Headquarters of Fourth Army and of flank
-Corps had to be maintained. Then, following the day's strenuous
-activities out of doors, there was at nights a never-diminishing mass
-of administrative work, disciplinary questions, honours, awards,
-appointments, promotions, and a formidable correspondence which must
-not be allowed to fall into arrear.
-
-Again, in the back areas there were the unemployed Divisions of
-the Corps, who must be regularly visited, both at training and at
-play. There were medals and ribbons to be distributed to the gallant
-winners; addresses to be delivered; and the work of reorganizing
-and refitting the resting units to be supervised. Still further in
-rear, demonstrations of new experiments in tactics or in weapons, or
-in mechanical warfare, had frequently to be attended, for study and
-criticism.
-
-And lastly there was the social life of the Corps; for its performances
-were beginning to attract attention beyond the limited, if select,
-circles of the Fourth Army. A steady stream of visitors began to set
-in. It was a necessary burden that suitable arrangements for their
-reception and entertainment had to be maintained.
-
-The duties of hospitality had been simple at a time when Corps
-Headquarters was still housed in palatial châteaux, situated in country
-hitherto untouched by the war, and within easy reach of all supplies.
-It was a very different matter to offer even reasonable comfort to a
-visitor at a time when Government rations constituted the backbone of
-our fare, when there were only bare floors to sleep upon for those who
-were not fortunate enough to possess a camp bed or valise, and when
-even an extra blanket or pillow or towel was at a premium.
-
-Yet we were always most glad to see visitors, and those of them who
-were soldiers had, of course, a full understanding of our limitations.
-It was not always so with others who, in the earlier years of the war,
-when all Corps had a fixed location and had achieved a high standard of
-domestic comfort, had been accustomed to an adequate reception.
-
-Upon the whole, our guests were indulgent, and understood that the
-stress of current events placed a very strict limit upon the amount of
-time that the members of my Staff or I could devote to them.
-
-[Illustration: MAP F]
-
-Among many other distinguished men whom I had the honour to receive
-were members of the War Cabinet, such as Lord Milner, then Secretary of
-State for War, and Mr. Winston Churchill, the Minister of Munitions;
-public men, such as Sir Horace Plunkett and Robert Blatchford; eminent
-authors, such as Sir Conan Doyle, Sir Gilbert Parker and Ian Hay;
-famous artists, such as Louis Raemakers, Streeton and Longstaff;
-celebrated journalists, like Viscount Burnham, Thomas Marlowe and Cope
-Cornford; together with many representatives of the Royal Navy, and of
-the armies of our Allies, and Attachés from all the Allied Embassies.
-
-The Commander-in-Chief, Field Marshal Haig, was a frequent caller, and
-never departed without leaving a stimulating impression of his placid,
-hopeful and undaunted personality, nor without a generous recognition
-of the work which the Corps was doing.
-
-General Birdwood, also, the former Corps Commander, who now commanded
-the Fifth Army, paid several visits to the Corps, travelling long
-distances in order to speak a few encouraging words to the Commanders
-and troops with whom he had formerly been so long and so closely
-associated. He, too, was always a most welcome visitor. Although since
-the previous May he had ceased to control the fighting activities of
-the Corps, this did not lessen the intense pride which he took in its
-daily successes.
-
-Many of our civilian visitors thirsted for the noise and tumult
-of battle, and were most keen to get under fire, even if only of
-long-range artillery fire. This was a constant source of anxiety to
-me, for it was an unwritten law that the responsibility of their safe
-sojourn in the Corps area rested with me. More often than not they
-had to be dissuaded from visiting the forward zone, and induced to
-spend their available time in inspecting some of our show spots in the
-rearward areas, such as the Calibration ranges, or the Corps central
-telegraph station, or the Tank park, or even the Prisoner of War Cages,
-and the numerous depots of captured guns and war trophies.
-
-The Corps prisoners' cage was always, throughout the period of our
-active fighting, a scene both of great interest and much activity.
-Although all prisoners of war had to be evacuated to the rear usually
-within about twenty-four hours of their admission, and every day a
-batch marched out under escort, yet the Corps cage between July and
-October was never empty.
-
-When early in July the stream of prisoners began to flow in, and
-thereafter grew steadily stronger, my Intelligence Service, headed by
-Major S. A. Hunn, rose thoroughly to the occasion. Among our troops
-sufficient numbers of all ranks proficient in the German language
-were speedily found. After a little training they learned to deal
-expeditiously with the lengthy searchings and interrogations which
-followed the arrival of all new-comers.
-
-Documents of every description found upon prisoners excepting their
-pay-books, were seized and examined. The German soldier is an
-inveterate sender and recipient of picture postcards. It was surprising
-how much information of an invaluable character could be gleaned from
-a postcard. A date, a place name, the number of a Unit or Regiment,
-the name of a Commander, reference to a train journey or a fight, are
-often sufficient, when read by an expert in relation to the context,
-to furnish definite information of the whereabouts of a Division, or
-of the fact that it has been or is about to be disbanded, or of its
-intended movement to some other part of the front, or of the losses
-which it has suffered.
-
-All these scraps of information, when compared with similar items
-gathered on other fronts, soon enabled the whole story of all movement
-that was going on behind the enemy's lines to be deduced from day to
-day with wonderful completeness.
-
-So, also, maps, sketches, copies of orders, or of battle instructions,
-and the contents of note-books and of personal diaries always repaid
-the closest scrutiny. Such study produced results which, even if not of
-immediate value to me, were nevertheless passed on to the Army, and by
-them broadly promulgated, in daily summaries, for the benefit of all
-our other Corps.
-
-The oral interrogation of the prisoners, particularly of officers,
-often produced results of first-class importance. Information as
-to dispositions, intentions, new tactical methods or new weapons
-frequently emerged from these inquiries. It was rare that prisoners
-refused to talk, and rarer still for them to attempt to mislead with
-false information. If they did attempt it, the interrogating officer
-was usually sufficiently well-informed upon the subject of inquiry to
-be able to detect the inconsistency.
-
-As the prisoners were invariably examined separately, it was never
-difficult to discriminate between the true, upon which the majority of
-them were in agreement, and the false, upon which the minority never
-agreed.
-
-Should the prisoner prove uncommunicative or deceitful, then if he
-were of sufficient education to make it worth while, the Intelligence
-Officer had yet another method, besides direct questioning, at his
-disposal.
-
-For a certain number of our own men, who could speak German fluently,
-and who had been carefully tutored in their rôle, were provided with
-enemy uniforms, and allowed to grow a three-days' beard, so as to
-impersonate prisoners of war. These men, so equipped, were called
-"pigeons." A pigeon would be ostentatiously brought under escort
-into the prisoners' cage, and would sojourn for a day or more in a
-compartment of it among the specially selected genuine prisoners. He
-would indicate by a secret sign the time when he should himself be led
-to the Intelligence Office for interrogation. It was seldom that he
-came away empty-handed.
-
-The demeanour of our captives, on reaching the cages, varied widely,
-according to the stress which they had undergone. Some wore an air of
-abject misery, and were thoroughly cowed and subservient. Others were
-defiant, sulky and even arrogant.
-
-Our treatment of them was firm, but humane. Physically, they had
-nothing to complain of; they were fed and quartered on the same
-standard as our own men. But they were given to understand from the
-very outset that we would stand no nonsense, and that they must do
-exactly what they were told. Few of them ever gave us any real trouble.
-
-The subsequent employment of prisoners of war did not come under my
-jurisdiction, and it was seldom that any prisoner working parties were
-available to me. My Corps area rarely extended sufficiently far back
-from the front line to carry it beyond the zone in which, by agreement
-between the belligerents, the employment of prisoners of war was
-forbidden.
-
-Australian soldiers are nothing if not sportsmen, and no case ever
-came under my notice of brutality or inhumanity to prisoners. Upon the
-contrary, when once a man's surrender had been accepted, and he had
-been fully disarmed, he was treated with marked kindness. The front
-line troops were always ready to share their water and rations with
-their prisoners, and cigarettes were distributed with a liberal hand.
-
-On the other hand, the souvenir-hunting instinct of the Australian
-led him to help himself freely to such mementos as our orders had not
-forbidden him to touch. Prisoners rarely got as far as the Corps cage
-with a full outfit of regimental buttons, cockades, shoulder-straps,
-or other accoutrements. Personal trinkets, pay-books, money and other
-individual belongings were, however, invariably respected; unless, as
-often happened, the prisoners themselves were anxious to trade them
-away to their captors, or escorts, for tobacco, chocolates, or other
-luxuries.
-
-Before I leave the subject of prisoners I should mention my impression
-of the German officers, particularly of those who were more senior in
-rank. Whenever a Regimental or Battalion Commander was captured, and
-time permitted, he was brought before me for a further interrogation.
-It was an experience which was almost universal that such officers were
-willing to give me little information which might injure their cause;
-on the other hand, they exhibited an altogether exaggerated air of
-wounded pride at their capture, and at the defeat of the troops whom
-they had commanded.
-
-It was that feeling of professional pique which dominated their whole
-demeanour. They were always volubly full of excuses, the weather, the
-fog, the poor _moral_ of their own men, the unexpectedness of our
-attack, the Tanks, errors in their maps--anything at all but a frank
-admission of their own military inferiority.
-
-There were two amusing exceptions to this experience. The day after
-the fighting for Péronne, when a large batch of the prisoners then
-taken was being got ready to march out of the Corps cage, officers in
-one enclosure, other ranks in another, the senior German officer, a
-Regimental Commander, formally requested permission to address some
-eighty other officers present in the cage. This request was granted.
-
-He told them that they had fought a good fight, that their capture was
-not to their discredit, and that he would report favourably upon them
-to his superiors at the first opportunity. He then went on to say that
-on his own and on their behalf he desired to tender to the Australians
-an expression of his admiration for their prowess, and to make a frank
-acknowledgment to them that he fully recognized that on this occasion
-his garrison had been outclassed, out-manoeuvred, and out-fought. The
-whole assembly expressed their acquiescence in these observations by
-collectively bowing gravely to the small group of my Intelligence
-Officers who were amused spectators of the scene.
-
-On another occasion--it was just after the battle of September 18th--I
-was asking a German Battalion Commander whether he could explain why it
-was that his men had that day surrendered in such large numbers without
-much show of resistance. "Well, you see," said he, with a twinkle in
-his eye, "they are dreadfully afraid of the Australians. So they are of
-the Tanks. But when they saw both of them coming at them _together_,
-they thought it was high time to throw up their hands."
-
-But this story is slightly anticipatory. The short breathing-space
-which had been afforded by our more leisurely advance towards the
-Hindenburg system was over. By September 12th I was once again immersed
-in all the perplexities of shaping means to ends. I had to decide, in
-collaboration with the Army Staff and the Corps on my flanks, first,
-the extent of the resources which would be required, and second, the
-successive stages which would offer promise of success in overthrowing
-the last great defensive system of all those which the enemy had
-created upon the tortured soil of France.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-HARGICOURT
-
-
-The great Hindenburg system, by which name it has come to be known
-to English readers, or the "Siegfried Line," as it is called by the
-Germans, was brought into existence during the winter of 1916 and early
-spring of 1917 in order to fulfil a very definite strategic purpose.
-This was to put into effect, on a stupendous scale, a very elementary
-principle of minor tactics, namely, that field works are constructed
-for the purpose of reducing the number of men required to defend a
-given front or locality.
-
-In themselves, field fortifications have, of course, no offensive value
-whatever, but their use permits a reduced number of men to defend one
-place, in order that a greater number of men may be available to attack
-another place.
-
-The German High Command proceeded to make use of this principle on a
-scale previously unknown in history. The whole of the Western front,
-in Belgium and France, was to be held defensively throughout 1917. The
-military resources required to defend that front were to be reduced
-to a minimum, by the provision of a line of defences protected by
-powerful field works, believed to be impregnable. This would liberate
-the greatest possible resources for the Eastern front, where an end
-could be made of the Russians and Roumanians there. As soon as these
-were disposed of, those troops, guns and aeroplanes could again be
-transferred to the West, in order similarly to dispose of the remainder
-of our Alliance.
-
-This great strategic plan was carried out in its entirety until the
-middle of 1918. It was the great Hindenburg line which had been the
-kernel of the whole conception, and, until the days which we are now
-approaching, it had remained, practically over its whole length, an
-impregnable barrier against the assaults of the French and British.
-
-It is to be remembered that the very basis which justified the
-expenditure of such enormous labour on the creation of these defences
-was the saving in man-power. It is an accepted principle of tactics
-that in any given battle the advantage always rests heavily on the side
-of the defence. Where numbers, resources and _moral_ are equal, no
-attack can hope to succeed.
-
-If, in the teachings before the war, it was correct to say that a
-Commander should hesitate to attack unless he had a preponderance
-of men and guns of at least two to one, such a dictum assuredly did
-not take into account field defences of the permanent and elaborate
-character of the Hindenburg Line. I should hardly venture to fix a
-ratio of relative strength appropriate in such circumstances.
-
-But this much is clear. The Germans had once already relied
-successfully upon the impregnability of this great work. They had every
-justification for believing that it would once again serve them to
-keep us at bay for just a few weeks longer. Winter was very near, and
-the Entente peoples might not have been able to hold together to face
-another year of war.
-
-We, on our part also, had as much justification for the resolve that
-every sacrifice must be made to overthrow these defences before the end
-of 1918, and for believing that it would require a great, concerted and
-intense effort to succeed in this.
-
-It is quite necessary, for a due appreciation of the magnitude of the
-effort which was actually made, and of the wonderful success with which
-it was rewarded, that the nature of the defences of the Hindenburg Line
-should be clearly understood. This can best be done, I think, by making
-an endeavour to realize the sense of security which the possession of
-such a line of defence must have afforded to the enemy. We are here
-interested only in that portion of the line which extends from St.
-Quentin northwards towards Cambrai.
-
-Between these two cities the country is higher than that adjoining
-it on the north and the south. It forms, therefore, a watershed,
-dividing the basin of the Somme from that of the Scheldt. Early in
-the nineteenth century, Napoleon realized the ambitious project of
-connecting these two river systems by a great Canal scheme, cutting
-right through this high country from south to north.
-
-The canal is called, in its southern reaches, Canal de St. Quentin.
-Before Cambrai is reached it merges into the Canal de l'Escaut.
-Throughout the whole of that portion which concerns us, it runs in a
-deep cutting, reaching, for great stretches, a depth of 50 to 60 feet.
-In certain places where the ground rises still higher, the canal passes
-through in great tunnels. The southernmost, or Le Tronquoy Tunnel,
-near St. Quentin, is but short; the northern boasts of the imposing
-length of 6,000 yards, and extends from Bellicourt,[19] at its southern
-portal, to Le Catelet at its northern one. From that point northwards
-the canal flows in "open cut" which gradually becomes shallower as
-Cambrai is approached.
-
-The canal excavation--except where the tunnels occur--itself affords
-an excellent military obstacle, the passage of which could be stoutly
-contested by resolute troops well dug in on its eastern banks, for
-the descent and ascent of the slopes could be obstructed by wire
-entanglements, and swept with fire. The water alone, which is too deep
-to be waded, would seriously impede infantry, while the passage of
-tanks, guns and vehicles would be impossible once the few high level
-bridges over the canal had been destroyed.
-
-Such an obstacle would not, however, of itself fulfil the requirements
-of modern war, with its searching and destructive Artillery fire.
-It was to be regarded more as the foundation upon which a complete
-system of defences could be built, and as a last line of resistance _à
-outrance_.
-
-The canal had been, naturally, located by its engineers, in the lowest
-ground available, so that its course closely follows the lines of the
-minor valleys and depressions of the ground. On both sides, therefore,
-the canal is flanked by somewhat higher ground, from which its
-immediate banks can be overlooked. On the western side particularly,
-there is a regular line of such higher plateaux on which the villages
-of Villeret, Hargicourt and Ronssoy once stood.
-
-It was clearly desirable both to deprive a besieger of such vantage
-ground, and also to provide the canal defences with a stout outpost
-defence. For these reasons, the Germans had constructed an elaborate
-system of trenches on a line generally parallel to and on the average
-a full mile west of the canal. These trenches had been perfected with
-dug-outs, concrete machine gun and mortar emplacements, and underground
-shelters. They were protected by belt after belt of barbed wire
-entanglements, in a fashion which no one understood better, or achieved
-more thoroughly, than the Germans.
-
-But much more remained. Deep communication trenches led back to the
-canal banks, in the sides of which tier upon tier of comfortable living
-quarters for the troops had been tunnelled out. Here support and
-reserve troops could live in safety and defy our heaviest bombardments.
-They could be secretly hurried to the front trenches whenever danger
-threatened.
-
-There was, indeed, a perfect tangle of underground shelters and
-passages. Roomy dug-outs were provided with tunnelled ways which led to
-cunningly hidden machine-gun posts, and the best of care was taken to
-provide numerous exits, so that the occupants should not be imprisoned
-by the blocking of one or other of them by our bombardment. But it was
-the barbed wire which formed the groundwork of the defence. It was
-everywhere, and ran in all directions, cleverly disposed so as to herd
-the attackers into the very jaws of the machine guns.
-
-The stretch of 6,000 yards of the canal which had been tunnelled was,
-however, both a hindrance and a benefit to the perfection of the
-scheme. On the one hand, the advantage of the open cut, as a last
-obstacle, was lost. Its place had to be taken by a second complete
-system of trench and wire defences, roughly following the line of the
-tunnel, but of course far above the latter. On the other hand, the
-tunnel itself afforded secure living accommodation for a substantial
-garrison.
-
-The Germans had collected large numbers of canal barges, and had towed
-them into the interior of the tunnel, mooring them end to end. They
-served as living quarters and as depots for stores and munitions. It
-was no great business to provide electric lighting for the tunnel.
-Indeed, the leads for this purpose had been in existence before the
-war. Here, again, underground shafts and ways were cut to enable the
-troops rapidly to man the trenches and machine guns, and as rapidly to
-seek a safe asylum from the heaviest shell fire.
-
-The whole scheme produced, in fact, a veritable fortress--not one,
-in the popular acceptation of the term, consisting of massive walls
-and battlements, which, as was proved in the early days of the war
-at Liége and Namur, can speedily be blown to pieces by modern heavy
-artillery--but one defying destruction by any powers of gunnery, and
-presenting the most formidable difficulties to the bravest of Infantry.
-
-Even this was not all. On the east side of the St. Quentin Canal and
-parallel to it were built still two further trench lines, both fully
-protected by wire entanglements, and capable of determined defence. The
-first of these is the Le Catelet line, about one mile distant from the
-canal. It skirts and embraces the villages of Nauroy and Le Catelet,
-while two miles still further east is the Beaurevoir line, the last or
-most easterly of all the prepared defences which the Germans had in
-France.
-
-Neither of these latter trench systems was nearly so formidably
-prepared as the main systems previously described, but together with
-them they go to make up the whole Hindenburg defensive system. In this
-region that system runs generally due north and south, with many minor
-convolutions in its line. It is altogether some 4½ miles across from
-west to east.
-
-As its overthrow could not be attempted in a single operation, it is
-necessary for clearness of description to give definite names to each
-of the successive lines of trenches which go to form the whole defence
-system. Taking them in the order in which we attacked them, from west
-to east, they will be referred to as:
-
- The Hindenburg Outpost line (known also in this part of
- the field as the Hargicourt
- line).
- The Hindenburg main line (_i.e._, the Canal and Tunnel line).
- The Le Catelet line.
- The Beaurevoir line.
-
-[Illustration: Australian Artillery--going into action at Cressaire
-Wood.]
-
-[Illustration: Battle of August 8th, 1918--German prisoners being
-brought out of the battle under the fire of their own artillery.]
-
-During the winter of 1917-1918 the British Fifth Army and the Germans
-had faced each other in this region for many months. On our side, also,
-a system of field defences had been developed. They fell far short,
-indeed, of the completeness and ingenuity of the German works, because
-the latter had been constructed at leisure, long before, while ours had
-been built under the very fire of the German guns.
-
-For months the opposing Artilleries had pounded the country to pieces,
-effaced every sign of civilization, and churned up the ground in all
-directions over a belt some three miles wide. Heaps of broken bricks
-marked the sites of once prosperous villages. Broken telegraph poles,
-charred tree trunks, twisted rails, a chaos of mangled machinery, were
-the only remains of what had once been gardens, orchards, railways
-and factories. The whole territory presented the aspect of a rolling,
-tumbled desert from which life itself had been banished.
-
-This was the region whose western verge the vanguard of the Australian
-advance approached on September 11th, on a frontage of about 8,000
-yards, the northern extremity directed on Bellicourt, the southern on
-Bellenglise. That is to say, if our further advance had but continued
-unimpeded in the same due easterly direction, it would have brought us
-square upon the open excavation of the canal, and just clear and to the
-south of the Bellicourt--Le Catelet tunnel. Some significance attached
-to this circumstance, as will later appear.
-
-Now, some little time before, an event of peculiar interest had
-occurred. This was the capture, on another front, of a very
-ordinary-looking transport vehicle loaded high with miscellaneous
-baggage. Little escaped the inquisitive eyes of the British
-Intelligence Service, which speedily discovered that among this baggage
-there safely reposed a large collection of maps and documents. On
-examination these proved to be nothing less than the complete Defence
-Scheme of the whole "Siegfried" system, in that very sector which now
-lay before the Australian Corps.
-
-These papers were carefully overhauled and arranged. There were
-dozens of accurately drawn detailed maps, and minute descriptions of
-every tactical feature of the defences. The position of every gun
-emplacement was given; every searchlight, machine-gun pit, observation
-post, telephone exchange, command station and mortar emplacement was
-clearly marked; the topographical and tactical features of the ground
-were discussed in minute detail, and plans for the action of every
-individual unit of the garrisons were fully displayed.
-
-Naturally, an army of translators and copying clerks was set to work
-upon this precious find, and my Intelligence Service was kept busy for
-many days in making for me digests of those items likely to prove of
-special interest. It had, of course, to be remembered that the Defence
-Scheme had been brought into operation for the campaign of 1917, and it
-remained to be seen to what extent it might by now have become obsolete.
-
-It was hardly to be expected that the enemy would adhere to it in its
-entirety, especially if he were aware, as I was bound to assume that
-he was, that all this information had fallen into our hands. But the
-Scheme contained a full exposition of many important topographical
-facts which it was in any case beyond his power to alter, and which it
-was of priceless value for me to know.
-
-Although I had to devote hour upon hour to a concentrated study of
-these papers, it proved to be in greater part labour in vain so far
-as the Australian Corps was concerned, because it ultimately came
-about that although I did carry out the attack upon the Hindenburg
-outpost line in my present sector, the attack upon the Hindenburg
-main line, which I was, later, called upon to make, took place in the
-next adjoining sector to the north, _i.e._, the Bellicourt tunnel
-sector, to which these captured documents only incidentally referred.
-Nevertheless, the Ninth Corps, under Braithwaite, ultimately got the
-full benefit of these discoveries.
-
-The production of these documents on September 10th formed the
-starting point of the discussions which were now initiated in the
-Fourth Army upon the question of the series of operations necessary
-to overthrow the Hindenburg defences. General Rawlinson, on September
-13th, asked his three Corps Commanders (Butler, now restored to
-health and back at duty, Braithwaite and myself) to meet him at my
-newly-installed hutted camp at Assevillers. There, quite informally,
-over a cup of afternoon tea, the great series of operations took birth
-which so directly helped to finish the war.
-
-It was decided that the operation must necessarily be divided into
-two main phases--separated in point of time by an interval of several
-days for further preparation. All of us recognized the impossibility
-of overrunning, in a single day, so deep and formidable a system of
-defences, in such tortured country, and in weather which was already
-becoming unsettled.
-
-The first phase was to be an attempt to capture the Hindenburg outpost
-line, along the whole Army front. The French and the Third British
-Armies were to be asked to make a synchronized attack on the same
-objective. The three Corps of the Fourth Army were to attack upon the
-frontages and in the sectors on which they then stood. The date was
-left undecided, but all were to be ready at three days' notice.
-
-One important consideration was the meagre supply of Tanks available.
-The operations of August had been costly, not to say extravagant, in
-Tanks, and General Elles' repair workshops, manned largely by very
-competent Chinese coolie mechanics, had been working night and day ever
-since to repair the minor damages, and new Tanks were steadily arriving
-from England to replace those damaged beyond repair. But no large
-contingent of Tanks was to be expected until towards the end of the
-month. The upshot was that I was to be content with only eight Tanks
-for use in the contemplated operation.
-
-Late the same afternoon I communicated to Generals Maclagan and Glasgow
-an outline of the probable rôle of their respective Divisions in the
-very near future.
-
-In the meantime, the front-line troops had not been idle. My orders
-were that the First and Fourth Divisions were to carry the line
-forward as far as possible towards the Hindenburg outpost line, without
-committing the Corps to an organized attack. They were to operate by
-vigorous patrol action against enemy points of resistance, for the
-enemy had evidently no intention of quietly giving up the ground which
-lay between us and the Hindenburg outpost line. On the contrary, he
-had posted strong rearguards on every point of tactical value, and did
-his best to keep us as long as possible at arm's length, and beyond
-striking distance of his first great line of defence.
-
-These orders were entirely to the taste of the two Divisions now in the
-line. The First Division had served its apprenticeship to that very
-kind of fighting in the Merris area in the previous spring, and the
-Fourth Division did not mean to be a second best. Each Division stood
-on a one-Brigade front, being ordered to keep its other two Brigades
-well out of harm's way and resting, for any great effort that might be
-required.
-
-The next few days witnessed some daring exploits on the part of the
-13th Brigade of the Fourth Division and the 2nd Brigade of the First
-Division in the capture of tactical points, and in the bloody repulse
-of all attempts by the enemy to recapture them. In this way our line
-was carried up to and a little beyond what had been the old British
-reserve line of trenches of March, 1918, which lay within 5,000
-yards of the final objective of the first phase of the contemplated
-operations.
-
-On September 16th I called together the whole of the Commanders
-who were to participate in the next great battle, Maclagan (Fourth
-Division), Glasgow (First Division), Courage (Tanks), Chamier (Air
-Force), Fraser (Heavy Artillery), and the four Generals of my own
-Staff. The conference took place in a Y.M.C.A. marquee erected near
-Maclagan's Headquarters, and I was able to announce that the date had
-been fixed for September 18th.
-
-The contemplated battle presented only a few novel features. The
-methods of the Corps were becoming stereotyped, and by this time we
-all began to understand each other so well that most of what I had to
-say could almost be taken for granted. Each Commander was ready to
-anticipate the action that would be required of him, almost as soon as
-I had unfolded the general plan.
-
-The shortage of Tanks was a source of much anxiety to me. I felt that
-it would mean a heavier risk to the Infantry, and the contemplation
-of losses among our splendid men, which might be lessened by the
-more liberal use of mechanical aids, always sorely troubled me. I
-endeavoured to meet the situation by adopting two unusual expedients.
-
-The first was to _double_ the machine-gun resources of the two battle
-Divisions. This was effected by bringing up the complete machine-gun
-battalions of the Third and Fifth Divisions, and adding them to those
-of the line Divisions. This gave me a total of 256 Vickers Machine Guns
-on a frontage now reduced to 7,000 yards. It enabled me to deliver
-so dense a machine-gun barrage, advancing 300 yards ahead of the
-infantry, that to quote the words of a German Battalion Commander who
-was captured on September 18th: "The small-arms fire was absolutely too
-terrible for words. There was nothing to be done but to crouch down in
-our trenches and wait for you to come and take us."
-
-The other expedient was amusing, although no less effective. This was
-to make up for the shortage of real Tanks by fabricating a number of
-dummy ones. As soon as the word went round Engineers and Pioneers vied
-with each other in rapid "Tank" manufacture. Dumps and stores were
-clandestinely robbed of hessian, paint, wire nails, and battens, and
-some weird monstrosities were produced. The best and most plausible of
-them were selected, and actually used on the day of the battle. Four
-men dragged out each dummy, before dawn, into a position from which
-it was bound to be seen by the enemy and there abandoned it. There
-is little doubt that this trick contributed its share to the day's
-astonishing success.
-
-Once again, also, I put into practice the principle of an Artillery
-barrage plan reduced to the utmost simplicity. This, as already
-described, consisted in having the line, on which were to fall the
-shells from the whole of the barrage guns employed, perfectly straight
-across the whole front, so as to avoid all complexities in fire
-direction.
-
-The first line on which the barrage fell was called the Artillery
-"Start Line," and from such a line the barrage advanced, by regular
-leaps or "lifts" of 100 yards at a time, in perfectly parallel lines,
-until the final objective was reached. Now, experience had shown that
-such a start line for the Artillery should be at least 200 yards in
-advance of the line on which the Infantry were to form up ready for
-the assault. A liberal margin of space had to be allowed, in order to
-minimize the risks to our own Infantry.
-
-The Artillery "Start Line" was defined on our fighting maps. The guns
-were laid upon it by methods which depended upon accurate surveys,
-on the ground, of the exact position of every gun. When that had
-been determined, the map and compass helped to decide the range and
-alignment upon which the gun should open fire.
-
-On the map, also, was drawn another line 200 yards short of, or on our
-side of the Artillery "Start Line," and this was called the Infantry
-"Start Line." It then became necessary to determine, upon the actual
-ground, the position of this Infantry Start Line, and to mark it in
-such a way that the Infantry would be enabled to take up their correct
-positions. This would ensure that the Infantry would know that the fall
-of our opening barrage would be 200 yards in advance of the line so
-marked.
-
-This delicate work of marking out of the Infantry Start Line on the
-ground was invariably entrusted to the Engineers attached to the
-Brigades co-operating in the attack. The marking was done by laying out
-and pegging down broad tapes of white linen, which could be recognized
-in the dim light of early dawn. The whole work, had, of course, to be
-done unobserved by the enemy, and it was always a dangerous task.
-
-Only the fact that we were in possession of reliable large scale
-maps, recording every feature of the ground, made it possible for
-the Engineers, resourceful as they were, to do this delicate work
-with reasonable accuracy. The battered condition of the country was
-always a difficulty; for it was never easy to recognize, on the
-ground, reference points, such as a road intersection, or the corner
-of a field, or a crucifix or similar land mark, which might aid the
-surveyors in getting their bearings.
-
-[Illustration: MAP G]
-
-The Infantry Start Line had, naturally, to be located so that the
-ground upon which the tapes were to be pegged down was ground which
-was already within our possession, or accessible to us without coming
-dangerously near the enemy. It was a necessary consequence that
-portions of our always irregular front line of posts or trenches would
-lie beyond or on the enemy's side of the tape line.
-
-It was always a rule of our practice, therefore, that any Infantry
-posted in advance of the taped line should be withdrawn, behind the
-tapes, an hour before the time of Zero. It was also customary to order
-that all assaulting troops should be spread, in their appropriate
-dispositions, along the tape line, also one hour before Zero.
-
-The result of these arrangements was that for the last hour before the
-actual opening of the battle, all Infantry intended to take part in
-the assault was deployed along the tapes in a perfectly straight line,
-all along the battle front, while no troops previously in occupation
-of posts or trenches in advance of the tapes were left out in front,
-exposed to the risk of either being hit by our own Artillery, or
-mistaken, in the half light of dawn, for enemies by our own Infantry.
-
-Complex and difficult as these arrangements may appear from this
-description, they worked out in actual practice with the utmost
-smoothness. The resulting simplification of the Artillery plans, in
-this as in similar previous battles, more than justified their adoption.
-
-A liberal use was also made of direction boards, which marked the
-routes by which each separate body of assaulting Infantry should,
-during the last night, march from its place of assembly to the taped
-line or "jumping off" line, and also to mark the position which it was
-to take up upon that line. Each board had painted upon it the name of
-the unit to which it referred. Such preparatory measures, troublesome
-as they were, greatly reduced the risk of any confusion or mistake, and
-lessened the fatigue of the assaulting troops.
-
-The moon would set, on the morning of the battle, at 3.37 a.m., and the
-sun would rise at 6.27 a.m. Zero hour, for the opening of the attack,
-was therefore fixed for twenty minutes past five.
-
-Operations began inauspiciously. A soaking rain set in some two hours
-before, and made movement over the broken, clayey surface anything but
-pleasant. Although the troops were soon drenched to the skin, this did
-not in any way damp their spirits. It probably added much to the misery
-of the enemy, who could hardly fail to realize that, on any morning, a
-fresh attack might break upon him.
-
-Modern war is in many ways unlike the wars of previous days, but in
-nothing so much as in the employment of what I have more than once
-referred to as "set-piece" operations. The term is one which should
-convey its own meaning. It is the direct result of the great extension,
-which this war has introduced, of mechanical warfare. It is a
-"set-piece" because the stage is elaborately set, parts are written for
-all the performers, and carefully rehearsed by many of them. The whole
-performance is controlled by a time-table, and, so long as all goes
-according to plan, there is no likelihood of unexpected happenings, or
-of interesting developments.
-
-The Artillery barrage advances from line to line, in regular leaps, at
-regulated intervals of time, determined beforehand, and incapable of
-alteration once the battle has begun. Should the rate prove too slow
-and the Infantry could have advanced more quickly, it cannot be helped,
-and no great harm is done. On the other hand, if there be any risk of
-the barrage rate being too fast, one or two halts of ten or fifteen
-minutes are often introduced into the time-table to allow the infantry
-line, or any part of it which may be hung up for any reason, to catch
-up.
-
-Following the barrage, comes line upon line of infantry in skirmishing
-order, together with the line of Tanks when such are used. The foremost
-lines advance to capture and hold the ground, the lines in rear to "mop
-up" and deal with the enemy either showing fight or hiding underground,
-the rearmost lines collect prisoners or our own wounded, or carry
-supplies, tools and ammunition.
-
-In a well-planned battle of this nature, fully organized, powerfully
-covered by Artillery and Machine Gun barrages, given a resolute
-Infantry and that the enemy's guns are kept successfully silenced by
-our own counter-battery Artillery, nothing happens, nothing can happen,
-except the regular progress of the advance according to the plan
-arranged. The whole battle sweeps relentlessly and methodically across
-the ground until it reaches the line laid down as the final objective.
-
-Such a set-piece battle lasts usually, from first to last, for 80 to
-100 minutes; seldom for more. When the Artillery programme is ended
-the battle is either completely won, or to all intents and purposes
-completely lost. If the barrage for any reason gets away from our
-Infantry, and they are relegated to hand to hand fighting in order
-to complete their advance, the battle immediately assumes a totally
-different character, and is no longer a set-piece affair.
-
-It will be obvious, therefore, that the more nearly such a battle
-proceeds according to plan, the more free it is from any incidents
-awakening any human interest. Only the externals and only the large
-aspects of such battles can be successfully recorded. It is for this
-reason that no stirring accounts exist of the more intimate details of
-such great set-pieces as Messines, Vimy, Hamel and many others. They
-will never be written, for there is no material upon which to base
-them. The story of what did take place on the day of battle would be a
-mere paraphrase of the battle orders prescribing all that was to take
-place.
-
-On the other hand battles such as the second phase of August 8th,
-the battle for Mont St. Quentin, and the later battles of Bony and
-Beaurevoir were not set-piece operations. Therefore the developments
-from hour to hour, and even from moment to moment, are full of intense
-human interest, and replete with tales of individual courage and
-initiative. Some day, when all the material has been gathered, an abler
-pen than mine will write their story.
-
-If the reader will bear in mind all these considerations, with special
-reference to the battle of Hargicourt on September 18th he will
-realize that, in describing the dispositions, the objectives, the
-time-table and the preparations for the battle, I have told practically
-all that there is to tell of the course it took, except only as regards
-the results actually achieved, in ground won and prisoners taken.
-
-It has been difficult, nevertheless, to refrain from dwelling in detail
-upon the performances and experiences in battle of the individual
-fighting men. Any attempt to do so would, however, prove hopelessly
-inadequate. The numbers engaged were always so large, their activities
-so varied, the conditions of each battle so different in detail, that
-to do adequate justice and avoid unfair discrimination would make
-impossible demands upon the space available to me.
-
-Popular interest naturally centres upon the Infantry, not only because
-they are the most numerous, but also because they are invariably in
-the forefront of the battle and often in immediate contact with the
-enemy. Without the slightest disparagement to the important rôle of the
-Infantryman and to the valour which its performance demands, it must
-never be forgotten that the work of the Artillery, Engineers, Pioneers,
-Machine Gunners, Trench Mortars, Air Service and Tanks is in every way
-equally important and essential to the success of any battle operation.
-Yet it is equally true that no battle can be won without the Infantry.
-
-In a deliberately prepared battle it is not too much to say that the
-rôle of the Infantry is not, as a rule, the paramount one, provided
-that all goes well and that there is no breakdown in any part of the
-battle plan. That does not, however, imply that the Infantry task makes
-no high demand upon courage and resolution. On the contrary, these
-are the essentials upon which the success of the Infantry rôle and
-therefore of the whole battle depends.
-
-The primary duty of the Infantry, in an assault covered by an Artillery
-barrage, is to follow up the barrage closely. The barrage is nothing
-more nor less than a steady shower of shells, bursting over the very
-heads of the leading lines of Infantry, and striking the ground some 80
-to 120 yards in front of them. This shower is usually so dense that
-three to four shells per minute fall on every twenty yards of frontage.
-It is so intense a fire that no enemy, however courageous, could remain
-exposed to it. It falls on one line for three or four minutes, while
-the Infantry lie down flat. Suddenly, the barrage "lifts" or advances
-100 yards. At a signal from the platoon or company commander the whole
-line rises and rushes at top speed to catch up to the barrage, again to
-throw itself flat upon the ground.
-
-So long as no enemy are encountered, these successive rushes may go
-on without check for hundreds of yards. If during the course of any
-rush, trenches or strong points are met with and they contain enemy
-who do not immediately surrender, prompt use must be made of rifle and
-bayonet. But it is the primary business of the leading line of Infantry
-to push on and not to delay by engaging in close combat. The second and
-third lines of Infantry are there to "mop up," that is, to dispose, by
-destruction or capture, of any enemy overrun or ignored by the leading
-line. Where Tanks co-operate that is also their special business, and
-when it has been attended to they go forward at top speed to rejoin the
-leading line.
-
-In such a methodical way the advance continues until the final
-objective is reached. This event can be recognized by the Infantry
-in any of three ways, firstly by reference to the clock time; for
-the arrival of the barrage at any line on the map or ground occurs
-in pursuance of a definite time-table; secondly by the topographical
-features, and thirdly by the expedient of maintaining the barrage
-stationary at the final objective for fifteen to thirty minutes. In
-some battles, I also adopted the device of firing from every gun in the
-barrage, three rounds of smoke shell in rapid succession, as a signal
-to the Commanders of the leading line of Infantry to call the final
-halt, to select a good line for trenches, and to dig-in rapidly, a
-process technically called "consolidation."
-
-It would be too much to hope that in an attack covering a front of four
-or five miles, every part of the line should be able to advance without
-any check whatever up to the final halting place. But the expectation
-always is that by far the greater part of the whole line will be able
-to do so. If, here and there along the front, platoons or even whole
-companies were to be held up or delayed by special difficulties or
-obstacles such as thickets, or copses strongly manned by the enemy, or
-by belts of wire, or village ruins, such breaks in the general line of
-advance would matter but little to the success of the operations as a
-whole. The gaps discovered in the leading line of Infantry, when it
-had come to a halt at the final objective, would be speedily filled by
-supporting troops from both flanks of the gap, and thereby the enemy
-holding out further back, would be completely enveloped. His surrender
-would follow as soon as he realized his position, and that he had been
-cut off from any contact with his friends in his rear.
-
-Such is the normal course of the Infantry action in a pitched battle.
-It makes great demands upon the iron resolution of the Infantryman to
-push on vigorously against all obstacles, and to put forth his utmost
-physical powers to keep up with the barrage, especially when the ground
-is wet and sticky, or when uncut wire has to be crawled through. All
-this he must do, utterly regardless of the enemy fire which may be
-directed against him, whether from Artillery or machine guns. His best
-hope of immunity is always to make his rush rapidly and determinedly,
-and to get to ground immediately that he reaches the halting place,
-close up to the barrage, when signalled by his officer.
-
-Very different from such a stereotyped procedure is the action of the
-Infantry in any operation or any part of an operation which partakes
-of the character of open warfare. The main tactical purpose is still,
-as before, to advance to the seizure of an appointed objective, but
-there is no barrage, no time-table, no fixity of route, no prescribed
-formation or procedure. Everything must be left to the judgment,
-initiative and enterprise of the leader on the spot.
-
-The tactical unit of Infantry is the platoon. The action of a whole
-battalion is compounded merely of the separate actions of its sixteen
-platoons, each performing the separate rôle, in a general plan, that
-may be laid down by the Battalion Commanders, some to advance and
-fight, some to act in support, some to lie in reserve, some to engage
-in a flank attack, others to fetch and carry food, water and munitions.
-
-The platoon is commanded by a Lieutenant and comprises four sections,
-each under a Sergeant or Corporal. There are two sections of riflemen,
-a Lewis gun section and a section of rifle grenadiers. Each section may
-consist of from five to eight men. Let it be supposed that it is the
-business of the platoon to capture a small farmhouse which the enemy
-has fortified and in which he is holding out. Always supposing that the
-enemy garrison is not of a strength requiring more than one platoon
-for its capture the normal action of the attacking platoon would be
-somewhat as follows. The Lewis gun section would, from a concealed
-position, on one flank, keep the place under steady fire. The rifle
-grenadiers from the same or another flank would fire smoke grenades to
-make a smoke screen. One section of riflemen would endeavour to sneak
-up depressions and ditches or along hedges, so as to get well behind
-the farm and threaten it by fire from the rear. The other section of
-riflemen would choose some direct line of attack, over ground which
-offered concealment to them until they were close enough to take the
-objective with a rush.
-
-Such in very bare outline is merely an imaginary example, but it is
-sufficient to show the amount of skill, resource and energy required on
-the part not only of the leader, but also of every man in the platoon.
-The secret of success of the Australian open fighting lay in the
-extraordinary vigour, judgment and team-work which characterized the
-many hundreds of little platoon battles which were fought on just such
-lines as I have tried to suggest in this example.
-
-It will be readily seen that no comprehensive description is possible
-which would present an adequate picture of the widely varying
-activities of the Australian Infantryman in this campaign. There is
-only one source from which reliable narratives of individual fighting
-can be gathered, and that source is so voluminous that space forbids
-any but a meagre attempt to supply extracts from it. I refer to
-the recommendations made by Commanders for honours and rewards for
-individual acts of gallantry. A very small selection of these has been
-made and is presented in an appendix to this book.[20]
-
-But to return to my narrative of September 18th. On that day each
-Division attacked on a frontage of two Brigades. No serious opposition
-was encountered except at La Verguier, which was not far from our
-start line. Nevertheless, the whole of the "red" line, which was the
-objective of the "set-piece" phase of the day's battle, was in our
-possession, throughout the whole length of the Corps front, well before
-10 o'clock.
-
-This gave us complete possession of the old British front line of
-March, 1918; but the Hindenburg outpost line yet lay before us, still
-distant another 1,500 to 2,000 yards. This latter line was to be the
-ultimate or exploitation objective of the day's operations, and I could
-hardly have dared to hope that a trench system of such considerable
-strength, which had defied the Fifth Army for so long, would fall into
-our hands so easily as it did.
-
-Glasgow's Division pushed on without pause, and before nightfall had
-overwhelmed the garrison of the Hindenburg outpost line along its
-front. Maclagan's Division also fought its way forward to within
-500 yards of that line. But the troops were by then very exhausted;
-all movement was in full view of the enemy; and the ground was very
-difficult. After a consultation with Maclagan I decided to rest the
-troops, and to make an attempt to reach the final objective (blue line)
-that same night.
-
-Advantage was taken of this pause to advance the Artillery, so that
-the enemy's defences could be thoroughly bombarded before the final
-assault. At 11 o'clock the same night, the Fourth Division again
-attacked, and after severe fighting also captured the whole of the
-objective trench system.
-
-It was a great victory. The Hindenburg outpost line had been
-vanquished. From it we could now look down upon the St. Quentin Canal,
-and sweep with fire the whole of the sloping ground which lay between
-us and the Canal, denying the use of that ground to the enemy, and
-making it impossible for him to withdraw the guns and stores which
-littered the area.
-
-The overwhelming nature of the success can best be realized by the
-following almost incredible analysis of the material results of the
-day's fighting. The First Division attacked with a total strength of
-2,854 Infantry. They suffered only 490 casualties (killed and wounded).
-They captured 1,700 prisoners, apart from the large numbers who were
-killed, and the wounded enemy who made good their escape.
-
-The Fourth Division had a total assaulting strength of 3,048 of all
-ranks, of whom 532 became casualties. Their captures of live prisoners
-amounted to 2,543.
-
-In addition, the Corps gathered in upwards of 80 guns, which had been
-overrun, and had to be abandoned by the enemy.
-
-There is no record in this war of any previous success on such a scale,
-won with so little loss.
-
-The Corps on either flank of me had successes of varying quality. The
-Ninth Corps on the south had reached the red line, but the exploitation
-phase of the operation was not pressed until a later day. The Third
-Corps, on my left, however, made indifferent progress. Their line still
-bent back sharply from my left flank, and none of the enemy's outpost
-system had been gained. This portion of the Army front was that which
-lay square opposite the Bellicourt tunnel, and the fact that in this
-part of the field the Fourth Army had not yet mastered the Hindenburg
-outpost system was to be fraught with very serious difficulties for me,
-not many days later.
-
-The general plan propounded by General Rawlinson on September 13th had
-been realized in part, although not in its entirety. The successes
-gained on September 18th were nevertheless sufficiently important and
-decisive to justify immediate preparations for working out the plan
-for a great, combined and final effort to sweep the enemy out of the
-remainder of the last lines of defence which he had established in
-France.
-
-The First and Fourth Australian Divisions had, however, as it turned
-out, fought their last fight in the war. Their long and brilliant
-fighting career, which had been opened three and a half years before,
-the one on the cliffs of Gallipoli, and the other in the desert of
-Egypt, thus ended in a blaze of glory. Although a number of the
-officers and non-commissioned officers of both these Divisions were
-called upon, very shortly after, to render one more valuable service to
-the Australian Corps, the Divisions themselves were destined, because
-of the termination of hostilities, not again to make their appearance
-on any battle front. Their labours ended, the troops were taken by
-motor bus and railway to a coastal district lying to the south-west of
-Amiens, there to rest and recuperate in the contemplation of a noble
-past devoted to the service of the Empire.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[19] See Map H.
-
-[20] See Appendix B.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-AMERICA JOINS IN
-
-
-I had foreseen that the battle to be fought on September 18th was the
-last in which the First and Fourth Divisions could be called upon
-to participate during the remainder of the 1918 campaigning season.
-The wastage of their Battalions had gone on faster than the inflow
-of fresh drafts, or the return of convalescent sick and wounded.
-These two Divisions contained the original sixteen Battalions who had
-immortalized themselves, in 1915, in the landing on Gallipoli. I was
-strongly averse from disbanding any one of them to furnish drafts for
-the remainder. My hope then was that, if these Divisions could be
-allowed to rest over the winter, they could be sufficiently replenished
-by the spring of 1919 to be able to maintain all sixteen Battalions at
-a satisfactory fighting strength.
-
-Of the remaining three Divisions, the Third and Fifth required at least
-another week's rest; and I had promised the Second Division that after
-their heroic efforts at Mont St. Quentin, they would not be again
-called upon until towards the end of September. I would thus be left
-with insufficient resources to maintain an immediate continuance of the
-pressure upon the enemy.
-
-On explaining the situation to General Rawlinson, he suggested the
-interesting possibility of being able to obtain, very shortly, the
-services of the Second American Corps of two Divisions, and asked me
-whether I would be prepared to accept the responsibility of taking this
-large force under my command for the continuance of the operations.
-
-I had no reason to hesitate. My experience of the quality of the
-American troops, both at the battle of Hamel and on the Chipilly spur,
-had been eminently satisfactory. It was true that this new American
-Corps had no previous battle service, but measures were possible to
-supply them with any technical guidance which they might lack.
-
-I therefore accepted the suggestion, and Rawlinson then asked me
-to submit a proposal for a joint operation to take place towards
-the end of the month by these two American and the remaining three
-Australian Divisions, with the object of completing the task, so well
-begun, of breaking through the Hindenburg defences. I was to propose
-my objectives, to show how I intended to employ each of the five
-Divisions, and also to set out my requirements in Artillery, Tanks and
-other services.
-
-It was anything but an easy task, and it had to be undertaken at a time
-when the preparations for the battle of Hargicourt were uppermost in
-my mind. Much time also had to be devoted to numerous distinguished
-visitors.
-
-The outcome was a letter to the Fourth Army which foreshadowed, almost
-in its entirety, the battle plan which subsequently was actually
-employed. The substance of this letter is here reproduced. The text has
-been modified only by the omission of the reference letters to a large
-coloured map which accompanied it:
-
- Corps Headquarters,
- 18th September, 1918.
-
- _Fourth Army._
-
-1. I beg to submit the outlines of a plan for a series of
-operations for the capture of the Hindenburg Line in the Sector
-Bellicourt-Vendhuille, based upon the expectation that two American
-Divisions will be available immediately to supplement this Corps.
-
-2. The resources of the Corps in Infantry, which will be available,
-are exclusive of the First and Fourth Australian Divisions,
-although the Artillery, Technical Troops and Machine Gun Battalions
-of those Divisions will continue to be available.
-
-3. The plan is based upon the assumption that the objective Blue
-Line of the operations of September 18th is in our possession all
-along the Army Front, or can be seized in the very near future.
-
-4. The accompanying Map shows the coloured lines referred to in the
-following description, as also the reference letters in blue.
-
-5. This plan is in outline only, and the various objective lines
-and boundaries suggested are merely tentative, to form the basis
-for a general plan.
-
-6. The Blue Line is the line of eventual exploitation for the
-operations of September 18th.
-
-7. The present Corps front on the Blue Line extends a distance of
-6,000 yards. It is suggested, either that the Corps front should be
-extended to a total frontage of 10,000 yards, or that it should be
-side-slipped northwards to a frontage of 6,000 yards. The latter
-would obviously be preferable, so far as the Corps is concerned,
-as enabling all its resources to be concentrated upon a smaller
-frontage.
-
-8. The major outlines of the plan are as follows:
-
- (a) An attack by two American Divisions for the capture of the
- Green Line.
-
- (b) A subsequent attack by two Australian Divisions for the capture
- of the Red Line.
-
- (c) Exploitation by the Cavalry from the Red Line, in an Easterly
- and north-easterly direction.
-
- (d) A turning movement by the Ninth Corps, through Bellicourt
- and Nauroy to turn the Canal defences, operating from north to
- south--or alternatively.
-
- (e) A turning movement by the Third Corps, operating through Le
- Catelet northwards.
-
-9. The details of the above plan will run on the following lines:
-
- (a) The new Corps front to be taken over at the earliest possible
- moment by two American Divisions, each Division deploying for this
- purpose only one Regiment of one Brigade. This will place in Line
- six Battalions on the Corps front, giving each Battalion about
- 1,000 yards. These troops will hold the line defensively, and
- will, with the assistance of technical troops, prepare the battle
- front.
-
- (b) The battle troops of the two American Divisions will thus
- comprise three Regiments or nine Battalions for each Division. The
- allocation of objectives to these troops will be as follows:
-
- (i) One Brigade (two Regiments) of the right Division to advance
- 4,500 yards on a frontage of 3,000 yards. This Brigade (six
- Battalions) would attack with four Battalions in Line (750 yards
- frontage each) and two Battalions in support for "mopping up"
- duties. Its principal objective, apart from the main trench
- systems, is Bellicourt.
-
- (ii) Similarly, one Brigade (two Regiments) of the left Division,
- with similar dispositions. Its principal objective, apart from the
- main trench systems, is Catelet.
-
- (iii) The odd Regiment of the right Division to be responsible for
- forming the south defensive flank.
-
- (iv) The odd Regiment of the left Division to be responsible for
- forming the north defensive flank.
-
- (c) It will be noted that the Green Line has been drawn so as to
- include all ground giving good observation northward, eastward and
- southwards, and to deny observation to the enemy. It is probable that
- the Field Artillery barrage will not be able to penetrate to the
- extreme limits of this proposed objective along the whole battle front
- without moving forward some of the batteries, particularly in the
- Northern Divisional Sector. This will probably necessitate a halt of
- an hour or an hour and a half, to enable Artillery to be advanced.
-
- (d) Assuming that the battle opens about 6 a.m., the Green Line should
- be reached by 10 a.m. or earlier. By mobilizing ample resources in
- technical troops, both American and Australian, and ample tools and
- engineering material, it should be easily possible to construct not
- less than four roads, sufficiently developed for horse transport, from
- the Blue Line to the Green Line, by 2 p.m. These roads would be
- located so as to make use of existing roads, and trench crossings
- would be made by filling in with earth and not by bridging. It is
- estimated, therefore, that Mobile Artillery could move forward not
- later than 2 p.m. on Zero day.
-
- (e) The Australian Infantry of two Divisions would move at such an hour
- as would enable them to reach and be deployed upon the Green Line by 2
- p.m., shortly after which hour they would be joined by the necessary
- Mobile Artillery. This phase of the operation would also involve the
- capture of the Beaurevoir Line. It is assumed that Tanks would be
- available to deal with the crossing of the wire entanglements covering
- this line.
-
- (f) The completion of the defensive flanks would be allocated to
- American troops.
-
- (g) As soon as the Australian Infantry had passed the Green Line, the
- four American Regiments who had participated in the capture of the
- Green Line, would be concentrated, refitted and rested for operations
- eastwards.
-
-10. The following considerations should be kept in view, in connection
-with this plan.
-
- (a) There should be sufficient Field Artillery, not merely to
- provide an effective barrage for the time-table advance to the
- Green Line and its flanks, but also, in addition, sufficient
- Mobile Field Artillery, not employed in the barrage, to enable the
- Australian Infantry to be provided with at least six Artillery
- Brigades for the exploitation phase of the operation.
-
- (b) There should be at least 60 Tanks available for the first
- phase, in order absolutely to guarantee the breaching of the main
- Hindenburg trench systems. There should, in addition, be available
- not less than 30 Tanks to assist the Australian Infantry through
- the Beaurevoir Line.
-
-11. There should be a systematic destructive bombardment of the
-whole of the Hindenburg trench system on the battle front, lasting
-at least four days, in order not merely to destroy the defensive
-organization, but also to demoralize and starve the trench garrisons.
-This destructive bombardment should extend a considerable distance to
-the north and south of the battle front.
-
-12. The rapid construction of usable roads, both for horse transport
-and mechanical transport, across the Canal tunnel, would have to be a
-special feature of the organization, so that the whole of our battle
-organization could be rapidly carried forward to maintain the battle
-eastward of the Red Line. This would involve the mobilization of a
-large amount of mechanical transport, ready loaded with road-stone,
-so that road-making can commence after Zero hour without any delay.
-For these works, there would be available the greater part of the
-Australian and American technical troops of seven Divisions, as well as
-Army Troops Companies.
-
- JOHN MONASH,
- Lieut.-General.
- Commanding Australian Corps.
-
-Some comment is necessary upon this proposal. The composition of the
-American Divisions, following the French and not the British precedent,
-differed materially from my own Divisions. The American Division
-consisted of two Brigades, each of two Regiments, each of three
-Battalions. Its total strength was nearly double that of an English
-Division.
-
-It will be noted that my proposal involved a concentrated attack, not
-upon the canal, but upon that sector of 6,000 yards which lay over the
-Bellicourt-Catelet tunnel. This zone at that time lay clear of and to
-the north of my Corps area, and that is what involved the necessity of
-"side-slipping" the Corps front to the north.
-
-[Illustration: Mont St. Quentin--Collecting Australian wounded under
-the protection of the Red Cross flag, September 1st, 1918.]
-
-[Illustration: An Ammunition Dump--established in Warfusee village on
-August 8th, 1918, after its capture the same morning.]
-
-Moreover, I put forward no suggestion that the Canal sector, then in
-front of me, should be the subject of a frontal attack at all. My
-proposal was that it should be taken by envelopment, through the breach
-to be made over the tunnel. At the time I regarded it as unlikely that
-the deep canal itself could be stormed except at great cost. I was not
-prepared to commit any Australian troops under my command to such an
-enterprise, and therefore naturally hesitated to propose that any other
-Corps should attempt it. For this reason I submitted an alternative
-plan of envelopment.
-
-This was, however, a matter for the Army Commander to decide. My
-business was merely to show that the proposed action of my own Corps
-permitted of the co-operation of the other Corps of the Army in a
-specified way.
-
-General Rawlinson's decisions were given on September 19th, at a
-conference which he assembled at my Headquarters. My plan for the
-action of the Australian and American Corps was to be adopted in its
-entirety, with the sole exception that the capture of the Beaurevoir
-line, on the first day of battle, was not to be included in the plan.
-It was to be left to await the results of the prior stages. In this
-modification I could readily concur.
-
-As regards the action of the flank Corps, General Rawlinson held the
-view that a direct assault on the canal itself ought to be attempted,
-and that this should be entrusted to the Ninth Corps. He was doubtless
-influenced, in this view, by the knowledge, disclosed to us for the
-first time on that day, that he intended to propose that the attack on
-the Hindenburg Line would, if undertaken, extend over the front of at
-least three Armies, the French on the south, and the Fourth and Third
-British Armies. Such a simultaneous attack, over a very wide front,
-would naturally increase the prospects of success for every Corps
-participating.
-
-As to the Third Corps, it was to take part only in the preliminaries of
-the battle, and not in the battle itself. Another Corps, the Thirteenth
-(Lieut.-General Sir T. L. N. Morland) was to join the Fourth Army.
-If the Australian Corps succeeded in effecting the breach of the
-Hindenburg Line as I had proposed to do, it was to be the Thirteenth
-Corps, and not the Third Corps, which, pouring through the breach, was
-to envelop the flank of the Hindenburg Line towards the north.
-
-The main consideration that affected me was the approval of my plan for
-the action of the two American and three Australian Divisions. I was
-able to begin immediately the development in detail of that plan, a
-task which proved at once the most arduous, the most responsible, and
-the most difficult of any that I have had to undertake throughout the
-whole of the war.
-
-The first step was to get the American Divisions into the line opposite
-their prospective battle fronts, and the next was to hand over what had
-hitherto been the Australian Corps front to the Ninth Corps.
-
-The Ninth Corps battle front was to extend from Bellenglise to
-Bellicourt, mine from opposite Bellicourt to opposite Le Catelet.
-
-The necessary troop movements and inter-divisional reliefs required
-nearly a week for their completion. By the evening of September 23rd,
-the last of the two Australian Divisions had been relieved by the
-Americans and the Ninth Corps, and on that night these stood on their
-respective battle frontages. I took over command of this new front,
-thus manned by Americans, in the forenoon of September 25th.
-
-It is a somewhat noteworthy circumstance, but one which attracted no
-attention at the time, that between September 25th and September 29th,
-there was a period of five days during which _no_ Australian troops
-were in the front line in any part of the French theatre of war. This
-was a situation which had never arisen since the first contingent of
-Australians arrived from Egypt in April, 1916. For nearly two and
-a half years, there had never previously been a moment when some
-Australians had not been confronting the enemy, somewhere or other in
-the long battle front in France.
-
-I have said that I had been called upon to undertake the responsibility
-of directing in a great battle two Divisions (the 27th and 30th) of
-United States troops, numbering altogether some 50,000 men. These had
-been organized into a Corps, called the Second American Corps, and
-commanded by Major-General G. W. Read. It was certainly anomalous
-that a whole organized Corps should pass under the orders of a Corps
-Headquarters of another nationality, but in authorizing such an
-arrangement, General Rawlinson relied upon the good sense and mutual
-forbearance of the Corps Commanders concerned.
-
-I am bound to say that the arrangement caused me no anxiety or
-difficulty. General Read and his Staff most readily adapted themselves
-to the situation. He established his Headquarters quite close to my
-own, and gave me perfect freedom of action in dealing direct with his
-two Divisional Commanders, so far as I found it necessary to do so.
-Read was a man of sound common sense and clear judgment, a reserved but
-agreeable and courteous personality. His only desire was the success of
-his Divisions, and he very generously took upon himself the role of an
-interested spectator, so that I might not be hampered in issuing orders
-or instructions to his troops. At the same time, I am sure that in his
-quiet, forceful way he did much to ensure on the part of his Divisional
-Commanders and Brigadiers a sympathetic attitude towards me and the
-demands I had to make upon them.
-
-The Australian Corps had specialized in comprehensive and careful
-preparations for battle. Its methods had been reduced to a quite
-definite code of practice, with which every Staff Officer and Battalion
-Adjutant had, by experience, become intimately familiar. All this
-procedure was a closed book to the American troops, and they were
-severely handicapped accordingly.
-
-I therefore proposed to General Read, and he gratefully accepted, the
-creation of an "Australian Mission" to his Corps, whose rôle would
-be to act as a body of expert advisers on all questions of tactical
-technique, and of supply and maintenance. This idea once accepted was
-worked out on a fully elaborated scale.
-
-To the head of this Mission I appointed Major-General Maclagan, not
-only to command the personnel of the Mission itself, but also to live
-with and act as adviser to General Read's own Staff. The Mission
-comprised a total of 217 men, chosen from the First and Fourth
-Australian Divisions, and consisted of specially selected and very
-experienced officers and N.C.O.'s. The American Corps Headquarters
-was provided with a Major-General, assisted by one General Staff, one
-Administrative, one Signal, one Intelligence, and one Machine Gun
-Staff Officer. Each American Division had assigned to it an Australian
-Brigadier-General, assisted by several Staff Officers; each American
-Brigade had an Australian Battalion Commander and Signal Officer; and
-so on down the chain. Each American Battalion, even, had four highly
-expert Warrant or Non-commissioned officers to advise on every detail
-of supply, equipment and tactical employment of the troops.
-
-By such an arrangement it became possible to talk to the whole American
-Corps in our own technical language. This saved me and my Staff a vast
-amount of time and energy, because the members of this Mission acted
-as interpreters of the technical terms and usages customary in the
-orders and maps of the Australian Corps, which were necessarily quite
-unfamiliar to the American troops.
-
-Maclagan was a man eminently fitted for this task. In appearance and in
-temperament he is every inch a soldier. Of all my Divisional Commanders
-he was the only one who, immediately before the war, was a professional
-soldier of the Imperial Army. Although not Australian born, he was
-whole-heartedly Australian, for he had spent some years as Director of
-Military Training at the Royal Military College at Duntroon. On the
-outbreak of war he received the command of the 3rd Australian Brigade,
-and with it carried out the most difficult preliminary phase of the
-landing on the Gallipoli peninsula. He commanded the Fourth Australian
-Division from the autumn of 1917 until the conclusion of hostilities.
-His characteristic attitude of mind, so strongly in contrast to that
-of Rosenthal, was pessimistic. But that was not because he looked for
-difficulties, but because he preferred squarely to recognize and face
-all the difficulties there were. Yet he never failed in performance,
-and invariably contrived to do what he had urged could not be done. One
-could not afford to take him at his own modest estimate of himself.
-Both he and his Division always bettered any promise they gave.
-
-I entertain no kind of doubt that it was only because of the creation
-of this Australian Mission to the Americans, and of Maclagan's tact,
-industry and judgment in controlling it, that the combined action of
-the two Corps in the great battle of the closing days of September
-proved as successful as it did. Under no other conditions would it have
-been possible to bring about any reasonable degree of co-operation
-between two forces whose war experiences, outlook, attitude towards
-their problems, training and temperament were so fundamentally
-different.
-
-It is not necessary to indulge in either a panegyric or a condemnation
-of these American Divisions. Neither would be deserved or appropriate.
-They showed a fine spirit, a keen desire to learn, magnificent
-individual bravery, and splendid comradeship. But they were lacking in
-war experience, in training, and in knowledge of technique. They had
-not yet learned the virtues of unquestioning obedience, of punctuality,
-of quick initiative, of anticipating the next action. They were, many
-of them, unfamiliar with the weapons and instruments of fighting, with
-the numerous kinds of explosive materials, or with the routine of
-preparing and promulgating clear orders. They seriously underrated the
-necessity for a well-organized system of supply, particularly of food
-and water, to the battle troops. They hardly, as yet, appreciated the
-tactical expedients available for reducing losses in battle.
-
-Yet all these shortcomings were the results only of inexperience,
-and it is perhaps unfair to contrast them with the Australian troops
-who had seen front-line service in France for two and a half years
-continuously, and whose leaders, high and low, had served a long and
-graduated apprenticeship in every branch of their duties.
-
-The Australian Mission assisted greatly to minimize these difficulties.
-Although its members were vested with no executive powers, their advice
-and help were eagerly sought, and zealously adopted. In many ways,
-large and small, their assistance must have proved invaluable. How to
-interpret orders from above and how to issue them to those below, how
-to draw stores and how to distribute them, how to organize the signal
-service and how to ensure a flow of information--these ranked among the
-greater matters. In quite small things also, help was needed, such as
-the way to detonate mortar bombs, to equip the infantryman for battle,
-to organize and use the messenger (_i.e._, runner) service, and to keep
-battle stations clear of people who had no urgent business there.
-
-It is not, of course, intended to convey that all these defects were
-present in every regiment. Some, however, were met with, by the
-officers of the Australian Mission, in all of them.
-
-It greatly added to the burden cast upon the American Divisions that
-they were called upon to fight almost as soon as they had taken up duty
-in the line. The necessity for this was really a legacy from the Third
-Corps, whom they had relieved, and it is essential for an understanding
-of the course of events during these days to narrate them in proper
-chronological order.
-
-I have explained that as the result of the battle of Hargicourt, the
-Australian Corps had succeeded in mastering the whole of the Hindenburg
-outpost line opposite its front, as far as a point a little north of
-and opposite to Bellicourt. The advance of the Third Corps, however,
-had failed to reach the same line, and had stopped short of it by an
-average distance of nearly a thousand yards. On my pointing out that
-the front I had taken over did not comply with the stipulations which I
-had made in my battle plan,[21] the Army Commander decided that prior
-to the main attack, the northern of the two American Divisions should
-make good this shortage, by an attack aiming at the capture of the
-remainder of the Hindenburg outpost line opposite the tunnel sector.
-
-I must now anticipate an explanation of the main outlines of the plan
-which I had prepared for the great battle, by a brief reference to the
-situation and disposition of troops on September 25th. The two American
-Divisions were respectively the 30th, commanded by Major-General Lewis,
-on the right or south, and the 27th, commanded by Major-General O'Ryan,
-on the left or north, each lying on a frontage of three thousand yards.
-These two Divisions comprised, in all, eight regiments, each of three
-battalions. I had instructed each of them to place one regiment in the
-line, and to keep the remaining three, _i.e._, six in all, in reserve,
-for the main operation.
-
-My first Corps conference dealing with the forthcoming operations
-was held at my Headquarters at Assevillers, on September 23rd. The
-American Generals Read, Lewis and O'Ryan, with their respective Staffs,
-attended, as also did the Australian Generals Maclagan, Brand and
-Mackay, who were members of the Australian Mission to the American
-Corps. None of the Australian Commanders destined to take part in the
-operations attended on this day, for two reasons, firstly, because I
-intended to confine myself entirely to that portion of the operation
-which concerned the American troops only, and secondly, because the
-date of the battle had not then been decided, and I wished to run no
-risk of confusing executive action by any premature announcements to
-the Australians, which subsequent events might modify.
-
-The American rôle, had, however, sufficiently crystallized to enable
-me to explain it to the assembled Generals in great detail. As
-will subsequently appear, it was a plan which had, intentionally,
-been reduced to the simplest possible elements. It was to be a
-straightforward trench to trench attack, from a perfectly straight
-"jumping off" line to a perfectly straight objective line, under a
-dense Artillery and Machine-Gun barrage, and with the assistance of a
-large contingent of Tanks.
-
-The advance was to be at a deliberate pace, and if due regard were had
-to a few elementary precautions, should prove a simple task for the
-American Infantry. It was, indeed, on quite stereotyped lines, such as
-had so often carried the Australian Infantry to victory in set-piece
-battles such as Messines, Broodseinde, Hamel and the first phase of
-August 8th.
-
-It was, however, borne in upon me, very soon after this Conference
-opened, that I was now confronted with quite a different proposition
-from that to which I had been accustomed in the conferences attended by
-my own Divisional Generals. The exposition of the plan itself was brief
-and simple, but it elicited such a rain of questions, that in the end
-I found myself compelled to embark upon a very detailed exposition of
-the fundamental principles of my battle practice.
-
-With blackboard and chalk, maps and diagrams, I had to speak for more
-than three hours in an endeavour to explain methods and reasons,
-mistakes and remedies, dangers and precautions, procedures and
-expedients. The proceedings left me with no doubt that the American
-Generals became fully informed as to the tasks and duties allotted to
-them, and fully understood them.
-
-In the light of after events, I am not so sure that they succeeded in
-passing on the information to their subordinates--not by reason of any
-shortcomings on their own part, for they impressed me as able, strong
-men--but because their Divisions had not yet learned the methods and
-machinery of effectively and rapidly conveying instructions to large
-bodies of troops.
-
-In one particular, subordinate though vital, there certainly was a
-serious failure to reach the troops. The enemy had, during 1916, met
-our assault tactics with an answer which proved disastrously effective
-against us until we had learned how to meet it. He provided his trench
-systems with many and roomy shell-proof dug-outs. Whenever our barrage
-fell upon his trenches, his garrisons promptly took cover in these
-dug-outs. When our assaulting infantry reached the enemy trenches they
-found but few of the enemy there, and they rushed headlong forward to
-the next objective trenches. From out of their dug-outs streamed the
-enemy, faced about, attacked our assaulting lines in rear and withered
-them with fire. Many an attack by the British on the Somme failed for
-just such reasons.
-
-In 1917 we evolved, and applied for the first time at the battle of
-Messines, an effective answer to such tactics. Close on the heels of
-our first line of assaulting troops came a second line, whose rôle
-was to occupy the captured trench immediately, and to "mop it up."
-This meant the killing or disarming of all enemy found in hiding, the
-picketing of the entrances and exits of all dug-outs, and laying siege
-to them until their occupants surrendered, a course to which they were
-encouraged by a liberal use of phosphorus bombs or Mills's grenades.
-
-This process of "mopping up" became an integral part of our attack
-procedure. Australian infantry soon learned its importance, and
-practised the method with a thoroughness and efficiency to which I
-remember no exception. Even a junior sergeant commanding a dozen men
-could be relied on to take all measures necessary to ensure that no
-enemy was ever left in hiding and unguarded behind his little party as
-they advanced.
-
-In the forthcoming attack upon the Hindenburg defences, the process of
-"mopping up" became of supreme importance, because of the very fact,
-of which we had become well aware, that the whole defensive system
-had been provided, on quite an exceptional scale, with underground
-shelters, galleries, passages and dug-outs. I made the most of this
-knowledge in my talks to the Americans, emphasized the dangers as
-strongly as I was able, insisted that the "mopping up" organization of
-their infantry must be absolutely perfected, and ordered that of the
-total Infantry participating in the assault, not less than one-half
-should have the special role of safeguarding all underground exits and
-entrances.
-
-The great fear was, of course, that these new troops, eager to show
-their mettle, would be carried away in the excitement of the moment,
-and would rush headlong forward, regardless of the dangers that
-lurked behind them. It is, after all, no small demand to make upon
-the discipline of an Infantry soldier, to expect him patiently and
-obediently to stand guard over some dug-out entrance, allowing the
-battle to sweep on, and his comrades to go forward to the excitement
-and glory of achieving the final objectives.
-
-So indeed it happened. The American Infantry had either not been
-sufficiently tutored in this important matter, or the need of it had
-not penetrated their understanding. In the attacks carried out by these
-troops, while under my command, the "mopping up" was always badly done,
-even in the few cases where it was attempted. The result was failure
-to achieve a clean success, and a great addition to their own casualty
-list. This criticism will be fully borne out by the narrative of the
-great battle itself.
-
-A second and much larger conference was held at my Headquarters on
-September 26th, for the really complete and final co-ordination of the
-whole of the procedure for the forthcoming battle. It was attended not
-only by the American Divisional Generals and Brigadiers, but also by
-the Commanders of the Second, Third and Fifth Australian Divisions,
-their Staffs, the Tanks, Air Force and Cavalry.
-
-It was much the largest and was also destined to be the last of any
-assemblage of Commanders that it had been my privilege to call together
-in the course of this memorable campaign.
-
-No one present will soon forget the tense interest and confident
-expectancy which characterized that meeting. America, a great
-English-speaking democracy on one shore of the Pacific, was to
-co-operate with Australia, its younger sister democracy on the opposite
-shore, in what was the greatest and what might be the most decisive
-battle of the great European War. Few present doubted that, if we were
-successful, the war could not last much longer--because the loss of
-the Hindenburg system would inevitably mean for the enemy his final
-enforced withdrawal from France.
-
-While the conference was in full swing, the Field Marshal himself paid
-me a call. He had come to wish me success in the task before me. He was
-interested to find so many Divisional Commanders assembled, and was
-persuaded to address a few words to the gathering.
-
-The conduct of the proceedings of this conference was a heavy strain.
-The main battle was to take place on September 29th, or within
-seventy-two hours, and part of my front line still stood a thousand
-yards west of the Hindenburg outpost lines. General Rawlinson had
-decided that this defect was to be made good prior to the main
-operation, and the attempt to do so had been timed to take place on
-September 27th, the day after the conference.
-
-I had, therefore, to complete my organization upon the basis of a set
-of precedent conditions which had not yet been entirely realized.
-It was a new and a difficult situation. The whole of the powerful
-Artillery at my disposal for the battle, amounting now to over a
-thousand guns, was naturally clamouring for final decisions, so that
-final barrage maps could be submitted for my approval, printed by my
-very diligent and competent body of lithographic draughtsmen, and
-circulated to all the batteries and Infantry.
-
-To await the result of the operation of the next day would have allowed
-insufficient time to complete the necessary maps and to distribute them
-before nightfall on September 28th. There was no option but to assume
-that General O'Ryan (27th American Division) would succeed in capturing
-the northern section of the outpost line still in enemy hands, and upon
-that assumption to fix the Artillery "start line" as falling to the
-east of that objective. For the first time I had to gamble on a chance.
-It was contrary to the policy which had governed all my previous battle
-plans, in which _nothing_ had been left to chance.
-
-At 5.30 a.m. next morning the 27th American Division carried out the
-attack, under a barrage, and assisted by Tanks. The principal objective
-points in the trench system under attack were Quennemont Farm and
-Gillemont Farm. Every trace of these once prosperous homesteads and
-plantations had, of course, long since disappeared. The names alone
-remained as memories of the fighting there of 1917.
-
-What happened on that day will never be accurately known. For once,
-the information from the air did not harmonize with the claims made
-on behalf of the assaulting troops, perhaps because the troops, being
-untrained in the use of flares, or having been left unsupplied with
-them, failed to assist the aeroplanes in identifying their correct
-positions. However that may be, it became sufficiently clear, as the
-day proceeded, that no proper success for the operation could be
-claimed.
-
-There remained no doubt that some enemy were still left in occupation
-of trenches on our side of the objective for that day, and such
-American troops as may have gained their objective could not therefore
-be reached. It appeared afterwards that small parties of Americans
-had reached the vicinity of their objectives and had very gallantly
-maintained themselves there, although surrounded on all sides, until
-relieved by the Australians on September 29th.
-
-The non-success of this operation of September 27th appeared
-undoubtedly to be due to a failure to carry out "mopping up" duties
-satisfactorily. It considerably embarrassed the preparations for the
-main attack on the 29th. The knowledge that a number of American
-wounded were still lying out in front, and the suspicion that some of
-the American troops had succeeded in reaching Gillemont Farm, precluded
-any alteration of the Artillery plans for September 29th, even if there
-had still been time to do so without creating untold confusion. To have
-brought the Artillery start line, proposed for September 29th, back to
-the start line of September 27th would have brought our own barrage
-down upon these forward troops of ours.
-
-I hastened to the Army Commander to put the position before him,
-stating that I felt grave concern for the success of the main
-operation, in view of the fact that my Artillery barrage would have to
-come down fully a thousand yards in front of what was still the front
-of the 27th Division. I suggested a postponement for a day to give this
-Division, which had ample resources in troops, another opportunity
-of retrieving the position. He explained, however, that it was now
-too late to alter the programme, because three whole Armies were
-committed to the date first appointed. He said that he was, under the
-circumstances, quite prepared for a partial failure at this point, and
-requested me to do my best to pursue the original plan, in spite of
-this difficult situation.
-
-He agreed, however, to my further request, that additional Tanks, out
-of Army reserves, should be placed at my disposal, so that I might
-allot them to the 27th Division, to assist them in passing over the
-thousand yards which would bring them up level with the Artillery
-barrage. I hoped that this would enable the Division to catch up with
-the southern half of the battle line.
-
-It was an unsatisfactory expedient, and gave no promise of certain
-success. It proved futile, and gravely affected the actual course,
-although not the ultimate success, of the battle still to come. It
-was the only occasion in the campaign on which I was compelled to
-accept preliminary arrangements which were not such as would absolutely
-guarantee success.
-
-The genesis of the difficulty thus created had, however, been the
-failure of the Third Corps to complete their programme of September
-18th. It had been confirmed by the subsequent failure of the 27th
-American Division to make up the deficiency on September 27th. I still
-think, as I then urged, that I should have been allowed to accept the
-situation as I found it on taking over this front on September 25th,
-and that the 27th Division should not have been called upon, at the
-eleventh hour, to endeavour to establish that new situation which had
-been originally assumed as the basis for the battle plan of September
-29th. My original proposal of September 18th, in my letter of that
-date, paragraph 3 (see above), had, of course, been made before I could
-foresee that the Third Corps would fail to capture the start line
-contemplated in my first plan.
-
-Of course, all is well that ends well. But, for an anxious and
-turbulent period of twenty-four hours on September 29th and 30th,
-the issue of the battle hung in grave doubt. The operation, although
-successful, did _not_ proceed "according to plan" in its entirety, and
-it was due to the wonderful gallantry and skilful leading of the Third
-Australian Division that a very ugly situation was retrieved, a result
-to which the Fifth Australian Division also contributed in no small
-degree.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[21] See paragraph 3 of same.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-BELLICOURT AND BONY
-
-
-A full account of the battle plan for the forcing of the main
-Hindenburg Line, on the front of the Australian Corps, would alone fill
-a volume. Nothing but brief references to the main outlines of the plan
-can be attempted here.
-
-The forces now at my disposal, for immediate use, were greater than I
-had ever before committed to a single operation. They comprised, in
-all, five Divisions, of which two were American and three Australian,
-besides the whole of the Corps troops. The total personnel employed
-on that occasion, under my orders in one capacity or another, almost
-reached 200,000 men.
-
-Besides 58 Battalions of Infantry, there were over 20,000 technical
-troops, including Engineers, Pioneers and Signallers, upwards of 1,000
-guns of all calibres, more than 500 Machine Guns, over 200 Tanks, a
-Brigade of Cavalry, a Battalion of Armoured Cars, and numerous Air
-Squadrons. The subsidiary services made an imposing array, comprising
-observation balloons, supply trains, ammunition columns, auxiliary
-horse transport, ambulances, motor convoys and mechanical transport,
-together with railway, veterinary, sanitary and labour units.
-
-It was no small task correctly to apportion to each fighting unit and
-to each service its appropriate place in the general scheme, so that
-these great resources should be employed to the best advantage, without
-overtaxing the capacity of any one of them. I had also to secure the
-greatest measure of co-operation between them all, and the punctual
-performance by each of the work prescribed.
-
-In contrast with the great battle of August 8th, there was on this
-occasion no possibility of securing any advantage from surprise.
-The enemy command was bound to know quite as well as we did that we
-intended to deliver an attack on a gigantic scale, and there is no
-doubt that they put forth their utmost efforts, and marshalled their
-fullest resources in men and guns, to meet it.
-
-There was, therefore, no object to be served by any measures of
-concealment, and our task could not be made any the harder through
-heralding the approach of the actual attack by adequate Artillery
-preparation.
-
-The programme, therefore, began on the night of September 26th. There
-was an intense Artillery action, extending over some sixty hours, with
-every gun that could be brought to bear. This does not, of course,
-imply that every individual gun or battery remained in action during
-the whole of this period; ammunition supplies were not inexhaustible,
-and gun detachments required periods of rest. But the programme of
-times and targets was so arranged, and the tasks were so distributed
-over the available batteries, that throughout this period there was no
-respite for the enemy in any part of the field.
-
-For some days prior to the opening of this bombardment, railway trains
-and motor lorries had been working at the highest possible pressure, to
-enable gunners to accumulate at their gun pits and in all their dumps
-a sufficient supply of Artillery ammunition for this purpose. In the
-short period which had elapsed since the forcing of the Somme, in the
-early days of September, the railway diversion from Bray to Péronne had
-been completed. The railway from Péronne to Roisel, although seriously
-damaged by the enemy in many places, had been restored, and Roisel had
-become the railhead for the delivery of ammunition. It was a noteworthy
-performance, for all the Corps services concerned, to carry out the
-whole supply of this battle in so smooth and expeditious a manner.
-
-The first phase of this bombardment was of a novel character. For over
-two years the enemy had been using a shell containing an irritant
-and poisonous gas known to us as "mustard" gas. It was so called
-only because of the smell. For a long time we had been promised that
-the British Artillery service would shortly be supplied with a gas
-shell, of similar character, but even more potent. It was, moreover,
-anticipated that the German gas mask would prove no adequate protection
-against this kind of gas.
-
-At last the new shell was forthcoming, and the first shipment from
-England, amounting to some fifty thousand rounds, was placed at the
-disposal of the Australian Corps. My Artillery action, therefore,
-opened with a concentrated gas bombardment for twelve hours, attacking
-probable living quarters, occupied defences, and all known or suspected
-approaches to them. Apart from being the first occasion, I believe that
-it was also the only occasion during the war when our "mustard" gas
-shell was used. No suitable opportunity for further use occurred before
-the close of hostilities.
-
-The gas bombardment was followed by forty-eight hours' destructive
-bombardment with high explosive shell. This was directed partly against
-the enemy's Artillery, as far as the short time available had permitted
-us to locate his batteries.
-
-Another part of the bombardment was devoted to the approaches from
-the enemy's rear to his forward defences. The object was to render
-his roads and tracks unusable, and thereby to prevent the delivery
-of rations, or, at any rate, of hot food to his garrisons, or of
-ammunition to his guns. By these means we expected, by partially
-starving him out, to impair the enemy's _moral_.
-
-The main weight of the bombardment was, however, devoted to the
-destruction of the enemy's defences, of which his barbed wire
-entanglements were for us the most formidable feature. Much of this
-wire was disposed in concealed positions, either in depressions of the
-ground, or in sunken moats, artificially prepared. It was, therefore,
-difficult to locate, and still more difficult for my gunners to direct
-their fire upon it. Nevertheless, there was a considerable quantity of
-wire which was plainly visible, and every band of entanglements through
-which breaches could be blown was so much to the good, in clearing the
-path for the Infantry assault.
-
-[Illustration: Australian Light Horse--the 13th A.L.H. Regiment riding
-into action on August 17th, 1918.]
-
-[Illustration: The Sniper sniped--an enemy sniper disposed of by an
-Australian Sharp-shooter, August 22nd, 1918.]
-
-In earlier years it had been the custom to attack barbed wire with our
-lighter guns, using shrapnel shell. This shell is, however, essentially
-a "man-killing" projectile, and has no great destructive power against
-field works. On the other hand, our heavier guns were scarcely more
-useful for wire cutting, because the great craters which were made by
-the explosion of their shells destroyed the wire only very locally,
-and, by upheaving the ground, increased rather than reduced the
-difficulties of the Infantry.
-
-This was due to the employment of fuses, which permitted the
-projectile, after striking, to bury itself in the ground for a small
-fraction of time before igniting the explosive charge which it
-contained. Hence the great shell craters. It was a very proper fuse to
-use for destroying trenches, dug-outs, gun-pits and emplacements, but
-of little use for cutting wire.
-
-In due course the British service evolved an "instantaneous" fuse,
-which became known to the gunners as the "106 Fuse." This had the merit
-of being perfectly safe to handle, up to the moment of firing the gun,
-but by means of a most ingenious mechanism it became highly sensitive
-while the projectile was in flight between the gun and the target. The
-result was that the very slightest obstacle met with, even a strand of
-wire, was sufficient to set off the fuse and explode the shell. Even
-if the shell met no obstacle before striking the earth, the explosion
-would take place above instead of below the surface of the ground, and
-would exert so great a horizontal force in all directions that great
-bands of wire entanglements would be bodily uprooted, over considerable
-areas, and literally blown to one side in a jumbled mass.
-
-Our heavy guns, therefore, using 106 Fuses, became ideal wire cutters,
-and it was in this way that much of the Artillery action during the
-forty-eight hours prior to the battle was applied.
-
-The Infantry and Field Artillery plan, which I prepared, was very
-similar in its general character to the battle plan of August 8th.
-It differed only in subordinate details due to local topographical
-variations from the former conditions.
-
-Of the five Divisions available, one--the Second Australian--was to
-remain in Corps reserve, but handy. For that purpose it was brought up
-from its rest near Cappy, by motor bus, to the vicinity of Péronne,
-the move being completed by nightfall on September 27th.
-
-The battle Divisions and their prior dispositions were as follows:
-
-_Line Divisions:_
-
- On the right, the 30th American Division, to attack with the
- 60th Brigade, and to employ the 59th Brigade to form a southern
- defensive flank in the event of the failure of the Ninth Corps to
- cross the Canal.
-
- On the left, the 27th American Division, to attack with the
- 54th Brigade, and to employ the 53rd Brigade to form a northern
- defensive flank, until such time as the Thirteenth Corps was ready
- to pass through in a north-easterly direction.
-
-_"Exploitation" Divisions:_
-
- On the right, the 5th Australian Division, with the 8th and 15th
- Brigades in the first line and the 14th Brigade following in
- support.
-
- On the left, the Third Australian Division, with the 10th and 11th
- Brigades in the first line and the 9th Brigade following in support.
-
-The total frontage was equally divided between the two pairs of
-Divisions, being about 3,500 yards to each. The battle was to be
-divided into two phases, the first to be executed by the Americans,
-under a timed barrage, the second, under open warfare conditions, by
-the Australians. It was intended that the Americans should penetrate to
-the "green line," an average distance of 3,500 yards, which took in the
-villages of Bellicourt, Nauroy, Bony and Gouy.
-
-The Australians were to exploit eastward, but were limited to a further
-advance of 4,000 yards, overrunning Joncourt, Estrées and Beaurevoir.
-Should they reach that objective on the first day, they would have
-passed the last-known wired line, and the country beyond would be
-suitable for Cavalry. Accordingly, I allotted to the 5th Cavalry
-Brigade, which had been placed under my orders, the rôle of passing
-through the Australian Divisions, and carrying the exploitation still
-further east, in the direction of Montbrehain and Brancourt.
-
-As it turned out, the whole of the objectives named were in our
-possession only on the forenoon of October 5th, instead of, as planned,
-by September 30th. The actual battle developed on totally different
-lines from those which I had planned, for reasons which I shall
-relate in due course. Little object would therefore be served in an
-explanation of the considerable mass of detailed arrangements which the
-original plan involved; these would also, by reason of their technical
-character, be more suitable for a text-book on tactics.
-
-Suffice it to say that elaborate arrangements were made--and also
-partly utilized--for the rapid construction of four main roads from
-west to east, through the full width of the Hindenburg system. This
-work was to follow on the heels of the advance. The rôles assigned
-to the Tanks, the Barrage Artillery, the Mobile Artillery, the Heavy
-Artillery and the Armoured Cars were similar in character, although
-differing in detail from those carried out by them on August 8th.
-
-On no previous occasion had the labour of preparation and the stress
-upon all Commanders and Staffs been so heavy, but all responded nobly.
-There were none who did not count the hours till zero hour, which was
-fixed for 5.50 a.m. on September 29th.
-
-In appraising the long sustained fighting on the front of the Fourth
-Army which began on that day, and lasted a full week, regard must be
-had to contemporary events. The American First Army attack on St.
-Mihiel on September 11th had wrought fresh dislocation to the enemy's
-resources, and had created another sore spot on his long front. On
-September 26th the Americans and French again successfully attacked
-between Verdun and Rheims. On September 27th, the First and Third
-British Armies opened a great attack on a front of thirteen miles
-before Cambrai and the magnificent Canadian Corps captured Bourlon Wood
-and advanced to within a mile of Cambrai city. On September 28th, the
-Second British Army and the Belgians attacked between Ypres and the
-sea. All British Armies, except the Fifth, had, therefore, by that time
-developed active battle fronts. On September 29th the first French Army
-would co-operate with us, and on that day the battle front was to cover
-a total length of twenty-five miles.
-
-The simultaneous engagement of so large a portion of the enemy's
-line in Belgium and France during the preceding three days had
-piled difficulty upon difficulty for him, and it was therefore not
-unreasonable to entertain two expectations--firstly, that our task
-would be rendered easier by the wide dispersion of the enemy's
-defensive energies, and, secondly, that he could hardly hope to survive
-a definite breach in his great defensive line at so critical a place as
-the Bellicourt tunnel. If that went he would be secure nowhere, and his
-next possibility of making a stand would be on the line of the Meuse,
-even if not the line of the Rhine.
-
-The day broke with a familiar mist, and the attack was launched
-punctually at the appointed time. Quite early in the day news came
-in that the Ninth Corps on my right hand had achieved an astonishing
-success, that Bellenglise had been captured, and that the deep canal
-had been successfully crossed in several places. It was the 46th
-Imperial Division to which this great success was chiefly due, a
-success achieved by most careful preparation and gallant execution.
-Lifebelts, rafts, boats, mats, portable bridges, and every device
-which ingenuity could suggest had been prepared beforehand for the
-actual crossing of the water in the canal. There can be no doubt
-that this success, conceived at first as a demonstration to distract
-attention from the Australian Corps front, materially assisted me in
-the situation in which I was placed later on the same day.
-
-The first reports from my own front were in every way satisfactory,
-and it looked as if everything were going strictly to schedule. That
-morning the stream of messages pouring into my Headquarters office,
-from special observers, from the air, from the line divisions, from
-the Artillery, and from my liaison officers with neighbouring Corps,
-exceeded in volume and import anything I had met with in my previous
-war experience. I have the typewritten précis of the "inwards" signal
-traffic before me as I write. Those received and laid before me on that
-day cover thirty closely typewritten foolscap pages.
-
-The burden of the earlier messages all pointed to the same conclusion:
-"30th Division crossed the Canal on time;" "1,000 prisoners, all going
-well;" "Bony captured;" "Tanks fighting round Bellicourt at 9 a.m.;"
-"Bellicourt taken."
-
-Those, omitting formal parts, were the burden of all the telegrams up
-to 10 a.m. They continued in such a favourable strain during the whole
-of the time that the two American Divisions had command of the battle
-front.
-
-The time for their arrival at the first objective--_i.e._, the "green"
-line--had been computed to be at 9 a.m. The Australian Divisions were
-to cross the green line at 11 a.m., and at the same hour to take over
-the command on the front of the battle. Two telegrams then came in
-which caused me serious anxiety. It may be of interest to set them out
-in detail:
-
-Received at 11.10 a.m. from 30th American Division:
-
- "Fighting in Bellicourt, owing to Germans having come down along
- the Canal from the north. Fifth Australian Division hung up."
-
-Received at 11.12 a.m. from Third Australian Division:
-
- "We are dug in on west side of tunnel. Americans are held up in
- front of us."
-
-These were only the first symptoms of a miscarriage of the plans.
-Evidences rapidly multiplied that all was not going well. But,
-concurrently, there came a stream of messages from the air that our
-troops and some of our Tanks were east of both Bellicourt and Le
-Catelet.
-
-The situation was therefore confused and uncertain, and it had to be
-diagnosed without delay. I hastened forward with all possible speed
-to get into personal touch with the situation and the Divisional
-Commanders. I soon formed the conclusion that probably both American
-Divisions had successfully followed our barrage, and that numbers of
-their troops had really reached the green line, but that, once again,
-the "mopping up" procedure had been neglected. The enemy had reappeared
-in strength from underground _behind_ the Americans, and was holding up
-the advance of the two Australian Divisions to the second phase of the
-operation.
-
-Subsequent developments and further inquiries entirely bore out these
-conclusions. On the front of the 27th American Division there had been
-difficulty from the start. A number of Tanks allotted to that Division
-had been put out of action, some by direct hits from Artillery, others
-by land mines. It was currently believed that these were not enemy
-mines, but some which had been laid months before by our own Fifth Army
-as a measure of protection against the possible use of Tanks by the
-enemy.
-
-This had given the 27th Division a bad start. Only two out of its
-six assaulting Battalions had managed to catch up with and follow
-the barrage. The remainder could not get forward as far even as the
-Artillery start line. Those Americans who did follow the barrage
-apparently forgot all about "mopping up." They reached Le Catelet and
-Gouy and entered those villages, only to find themselves surrounded on
-all sides by the enemy. A German officer prisoner informed us next day
-that 1,200 of these Americans had been taken prisoner.
-
-The 30th American Division did not fare so badly. They got a good start
-with the barrage, but the broken condition of the ground, the intricate
-trench system and the confusion of wire and dug-outs brought about a
-loss of cohesion and of control. By the time Bellicourt was reached,
-the attacking troops had fallen some distance behind the barrage, and
-most of the weight had gone out of the attack.
-
-Meanwhile, in this part of the field also, the enemy had reappeared
-from underground, and was still in strength on the west side of
-Bellicourt, now in the hands of the Americans, when the advanced guard
-of the Fifth Australian Division came upon them.
-
-It was an unexpected situation for the Fifth Division. But without a
-moment's hesitation the leading troops took its measure. They deployed
-from the Artillery formation[22] in which they had been previously
-advancing into lines of skirmishers. After hard fighting in the face
-of most vigorous resistance, they cleared away all opposition which
-lay between them and Bellicourt, and, sweeping forward through that
-village, carefully "mopping up" as they went, carried with them
-considerable numbers of the Americans whom they found there.
-
-While this was happening, the Third Australian Division, deprived of
-the assistance either of Artillery or of Tanks, and in broad daylight,
-found themselves confronted with the difficult problem of carrying out
-the whole of the task which had been set for the 27th Division, because
-the reappearance of the enemy upon the ground successfully passed over
-by some of the Americans earlier in the day nullified all the value of
-that success.
-
-It was about 2 p.m. before I had succeeded in gathering sufficient
-reliable information about the situation to enable me to arrive at
-a decision how to deal with it. By that hour the Fifth Division had
-advanced through Nauroy, and had passed across the Le Catelet line
-in that vicinity. The Third Division had managed to get obliquely
-astride of the line of the tunnel, its right being well across the
-main Hindenburg wire, while its left was still in the vicinity of the
-American start line of that morning. They had, however, succeeded in
-finally capturing Quennemont Farm. The whole of their advance into such
-a position had been hotly contested.
-
-My troops were therefore, to all intents and purposes, astride of the
-Hindenburg main line, one Division wholly on the east and the other
-Division mainly on the west of it. The southern end of the tunnel was
-in my possession, the northern end was not.
-
-My decision was forthwith to abandon the original plan which had taken
-so many days and so much labour to prepare, to take immediate measures
-for securing our gains for the day, and to organize a continuation of
-the battle next day on totally different lines. These were to conquer
-the remainder of the main Hindenburg trench system, in which the ruin
-of the village of Bony was the key position, by attacking it from the
-south towards the north, instead of from the west towards the east.
-
-The first step in this plan was to ensure effective tactical contact
-between the right flank of the Third Division and the left flank of
-the Fifth Division. I framed an order that both Divisions should take
-immediate steps to such an end. Telephone communication with both
-Gellibrand and Hobbs being momentarily interrupted, I was about to
-forward written orders by dispatch rider to each of them to the effect
-mentioned.
-
-Before the messenger had time to leave, however, messages came in from
-both Divisional Commanders, each reporting that he had just secured
-tactical touch with the other in exactly the way which I wanted. I
-consider this a remarkable example of unity of thought. Each, without
-being able to consult the other or myself, had taken the very course
-which each correctly anticipated that I should decide to have taken.
-The German General Staff used to boast in their writings that no other
-Army approached theirs in this capacity for initiative by subordinates
-on lines in thorough unison with each other and with the policies of
-the higher command.
-
-That the situation on my front, now held exclusively by Australians,
-would have been secure that night against a determined counter-attack
-I did not doubt, even though the fourteen Australian Battalions now
-holding a line of some 9,000 yards would scarcely average 400 rifles
-apiece. However, nothing more than small local counter-attacks was
-attempted, and the hold which I had gained upon the main defences was
-not slackened. I feel sure, nevertheless, that the success of the
-Ninth Corps on my right in swarming across the canal from Bellenglise
-to Bellicourt had much to do with my immunity from interference; the
-enemy probably found himself with quite enough to do there in trying
-to re-establish his line further in rear, and this forbade him to
-materialize sufficient troops for any general counter-attack.
-
-While I have felt obliged to state the facts in regard to the partial
-failure of the two American Divisions to carry out their part of my
-battle plan, I desire, nevertheless, to do full justice to these
-troops. I have no hesitation in saying that they fought most bravely,
-and advanced to the assault most fearlessly; that the leaders, from the
-Divisional Generals downwards, did the utmost within their powers to
-ensure success. Nor must the very bad conditions under which the 27th
-Division had to start be forgotten. Our American Allies are, all things
-considered, entitled to high credit for a fine effort.
-
-But it is, nevertheless, true that in this battle they demonstrated
-their inexperience in war, and their ignorance of some of the
-elementary methods of fighting employed on the French front. For these
-shortcomings they paid a heavy price. Their sacrifices, nevertheless,
-contributed quite definitely to the partial success of the day's
-operations, and although the comprehensive plan, which was to have
-carried my front beyond Beaurevoir on the very first day, had to be
-abandoned, the day's fighting ended with the two Australian Divisions
-in quite a satisfactory position for a continuance of the operations on
-the next day.
-
-To this there was, however, one important qualification. Air observers
-continued to report the presence of American troops between the
-Hindenburg Line and Le Catelet, and also in the latter village. Late
-that night an Australian Artillery liaison officer managed to make his
-way back into our lines with the story that he had actually advanced
-with a battalion of Americans into Le Catelet, and that they were still
-there, although practically surrounded.
-
-The 27th Division made many attempts to get into communication with
-them, but without avail. Beyond the report previously alluded to that
-they had subsequently been made prisoner, I have no information of
-their ultimate fate; but when patrols of the Third Division entered the
-village forty-eight hours later, there was no longer any sign of them.
-A number of small parties of Americans were, however, encountered and
-relieved as the further advance of the Third Division progressed during
-the next two days.
-
-The situation was profoundly embarrassing. With the mass of Artillery
-at my disposal, it would have been a simple matter to cover the further
-advance of the Third Division so amply as to make it easy to master the
-northern half of the tunnel defences, especially if attacked end on.
-But so long as American troops or wounded were presumed to be lying out
-in front, I dared not use Artillery at all, except on a very restricted
-scale. I felt justified, however, in bombarding isolated localities
-which patrols had definitely ascertained to be still in enemy hands;
-but nothing in the shape of adequate artillery support to the Infantry
-could be attempted.
-
-During the night of September 29th orders were issued to the Second
-American Corps to withdraw all advanced troops that could be reached,
-and to concentrate their regiments for rest and reorganization, so as
-to be ready as soon as possible for re-employment. Very considerable
-numbers of American soldiers had become mixed up with the Australian
-Battalions, and, in their eagerness, had gone forward with them,
-regardless of the particular rôles or objectives which had been
-originally assigned to them. It was found to be a matter of some
-difficulty to induce these men to withdraw from the fighting and to
-rejoin their own units, so keen were they to continue their advance.
-
-I also ordered the Second Australian Division to be brought up by bus
-from the Péronne area, and to take up a position of readiness just west
-of the Hindenburg Line. I foresaw that with the nature of the fighting
-before the Third and Fifth Divisions, it would not be very long before
-they would have to be relieved, and there was still the Beaurevoir
-line of trenches to be overcome before the Hindenburg system could be
-claimed as taken in its entirety. This move was duly carried out, and
-the Second Division became available by the evening of October 1st in
-close support of the battle front.
-
-The orders to the two line Divisions for September 30th were to attack
-generally in a north-easterly direction. The immediate objectives
-of the Third Division were Bony village, the "Knob" and the northern
-entrance to the tunnel. The flanks of the two Divisions were to meet
-on the Railway Spur, and the right of the Fifth Division was to swing
-forward in the direction of Joncourt, in sympathy with any advance made
-by the Ninth Corps to the south of them.
-
-There was, as explained, no possibility of attempting anything like
-a methodical advance covered by a co-ordinated Artillery barrage.
-Progress would depend upon the tenacity and skilful leading of the
-front-line troops, and reliance must be had more upon the bayonet and
-the bomb than upon external aids. It was, in a peculiar degree, a
-private soldier's battle.
-
-The night of September 29th brought steady rain, and everybody was
-drenched to the skin. September 30th was a day of intense effort, slow
-and methodical hand-to-hand fighting, in a perfect tangle of trenches,
-with every yard of the advance vigorously contested; but by nightfall
-the line of the Third Division had advanced fully 1,000 yards. Its
-left had pivoted on the "Knoll," to the west of the Hindenburg Line.
-Gillemont Farm was by then securely in their hands; they had reached
-the southern outskirts of Bony village. Their right was well across the
-line of the canal, and joined the left flank of the Fifth Division on
-the Railway Spur. The Fifth Division had cleared the Le Catelet trench
-line of the enemy, and its right was by now well to the east of Nauroy.
-
-Another day's fighting was still before both Divisions, but the effect
-of the successful efforts of September 30th was speedily felt on
-October 1st. Overnight the enemy must have made up his mind that it
-was hopeless to try to retain any further hold upon the tunnel line,
-and his further resistance melted rapidly away. On October 1st events
-moved quickly; by 10 a.m. the Fifth Division reported the capture of
-Joncourt. By midday the whole of the village of Bony was in our hands,
-and at the same hour the air observers reported our patrols rapidly
-approaching the "Knob" and Le Catelet village.
-
-By nightfall of October 1st the whole operation had been successfully
-completed. The northern entrance to the tunnel, the "Knob" and the
-whole of the Railway Spur were in our hands; our line ran just west of
-Le Catelet and east of Estrées and Joncourt; all isolated parties of
-Americans and all American wounded had been gathered in, and the whole
-situation had been satisfactorily cleared up from an Artillery point of
-view.
-
-Later the same night our patrols entered Le Catelet, which lay in a
-hollow below us, and found the village deserted except for a number of
-enemy wounded. The enemy, during that day, relinquished his last hold
-upon the famous tunnel defences, and withdrew precipitately eastwards
-to the Beaurevoir hill and northwards towards Aubencheul. Our total
-captures during the three days' operations amounted to 3,057 prisoners
-and 35 guns.
-
-It had been a stiff fight, and the endurance of the Infantry had
-been highly tested. The skill displayed by the Third Division in the
-course of the close trench fighting of September 30th was particularly
-noteworthy. The stress upon Major-General Gellibrand and his Staff
-and Infantry Brigadiers had been severe. The several Brigades and
-Battalions had unavoidably become seriously mixed up. Control became
-very difficult, but was never completely lost.
-
-This was illustrated by the following incident of the day's fighting. I
-had ascertained that the whole of the Infantry of the Division had been
-committed, and there were no reserves in the hands of the Divisional
-Commander. One Battalion of the 9th Brigade was fighting under the
-orders of the 11th Brigade, another under that of the 10th Brigade.
-I took exception to this, and directed that a Divisional reserve
-should be immediately reconstituted. In spite of the difficulties of
-communication, Gellibrand contrived to carry this intricate order into
-effect during the very climax of the fight.
-
-Gellibrand was a man of interesting personality, more a philosopher
-and student than a man of action. His great personal bravery and his
-high sense of duty compensated in a great measure for some tendency to
-uncertainty in executive action. He had been a professional soldier,
-but before the war had retired into civil life. When the call came,
-he received a junior Staff appointment with the First Division, but
-his outstanding merits soon gained him promotion. As a Brigadier, he
-had, during 1916 and 1917, successfully led several of the Australian
-Brigades. His command of the Third Division during the last five months
-of active fighting was characterized by complete success in battle. His
-temperament and methods sometimes involved him in embarrassments on the
-administrative side of his work; but he succeeded in retaining to the
-last the whole-hearted confidence of his troops.
-
-I feel certain from my close observation of the course of events on
-September 30th and October 1st, that much of the success of the battle
-was due to Gellibrand's personal tenacity, and the assiduous manner
-in which he kept himself in personal touch from hour to hour with the
-forward situation and progress of his troops.
-
-Immediately upon the conclusion of the fighting I issued the following
-message:
-
- "Please convey to all Commanders, Staffs and troops of the Third
- and Fifth Australian Divisions my sincere appreciation of and
- thanks for their fine work of the past three days. Confronted at
- the outset of the operations with a critical situation of great
- difficulty, and hampered by inability to make full use of our
- Artillery resources, these Divisions succeeded in completely
- overwhelming a stubborn defence in the most strongly fortified
- sector of the Western Front. This was due to the determination
- and resource of the leaders and the grit, endurance and fighting
- spirit of the troops. Nothing more praiseworthy has been done by
- Australian troops in this war."
-
-The operations entrusted to the Corps had, by the night of October 1st,
-been substantially completed. Although the Beaurevoir defence line
-still lay to the east of us, the main canal defences, as far as the
-Le Catelet line, had been pierced, and a way had been opened for the
-Thirteenth Corps to pass across the line of the tunnel to be launched
-upon its task of turning the enemy out of the northern continuation of
-the Hindenburg Line by envelopment from the south.
-
-It was impossible to call upon the Third and Fifth Divisions for any
-further effort. Their work had been most exhausting. Furthermore,
-the steady drain upon their resources, after sixty days of almost
-continuous battle activity, had so reduced their fighting strength,
-that a very drastic reorganization had become necessary. This could
-only be effected by a complete withdrawal from the fighting zone.
-
-Accordingly, arrangements were put in hand for the immediate relief of
-these two Divisions. The Fifth Australian was relieved by the Second
-Australian Division, and the Third Australian Division by a Division
-of the Thirteenth Corps. Both the relieved Divisions, in the course of
-the next few days, followed the First and Fourth Australian Divisions
-into the grateful rest area which had been provided to the west and
-south-west of Amiens, and before they were again called upon for
-further front-line service hostilities had ended.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[22] "Artillery Formation" is an advance in numerous small infantry
-columns irregularly spaced both in frontage and depth. "Line of
-Skirmishers" is an advance in successive lines of men, the intervals
-between the men being from two to five paces, and between the lines
-from 50 to 100 paces.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-MONTBREHAIN AND AFTER
-
-
-The successive withdrawals of the First, Fourth, Third and Fifth
-Australian Divisions from the battle zone during the period from
-September 22nd to October 2nd had been arranged with the Fourth
-Army Commander about the middle of September. The Corps had been
-continuously employed on front-line duty since April, and had already
-accomplished a considerable advance, for every inch of which it had
-been obliged to fight.
-
-This consideration alone had earned for the Corps a period of rest. But
-other important questions arose which affected the situation.
-
-I have mentioned that early in 1918 all Brigades of the Imperial
-Service had, owing to failing man-power, been reduced from four to
-three Battalions each. In this reduction the Australian Brigades
-participated only to a small extent during the fighting period.
-Every one of the Australian battalions had created great traditions;
-regimental _esprit_ and pride of unit were very strong. The private
-soldier valued his Battalion colour patch almost more than any other
-decoration.
-
-My predecessor in the Corps Command had, during May, 1918, directed the
-disbandment of one Battalion each of the 9th, 12th and 13th Brigades.
-This was due to the wastage resulting from the heavy fighting by
-these Brigades on the Villers-Bretonneux front. The residues of the
-disbanded battalions were used as drafts to replenish the remaining
-three Battalions of each Brigade. It was doubtless a measure directed
-by necessity, as the flow of reinforcements was steadily diminishing.
-
-Much lamentation was, however, caused among the officers and men who
-thus lost their battalion identity, both among those remaining in the
-field and those convalescing from wounds and sickness, who were thereby
-deprived of the hope of rejoining their former units.
-
-Through all these events I became fully alive to the difficulties which
-would present themselves when the evil day should arrive on which the
-fate of still other battalions would have to be decided. It was a day
-whose advent I was anxious to stave off until the last possible moment.
-
-Throughout the summer and autumn it became incumbent upon me to keep
-a close watch upon the fighting strengths of all the 57 Australian
-Infantry Battalions in the field. I had to consider the numbers
-actually present with the unit, the numbers likely to join from time
-to time from convalescent camps and hospitals, and the flow of new
-recruits from the Australian Depots in England. Almost daily forecasts
-had to be made as to the probable strengths available on a given date
-in all the Battalions likely to be employed in a given operation.
-
-The full official strength of a Battalion of Infantry was 1,000 at the
-outbreak of the war, but a reduction to 900 had been authorized in
-July, 1918. No battalion in the Army was ever for long able to maintain
-itself at a strength of 900. Indeed, experience went to show that so
-long as the strength did not fall below 600, a unit could quite well
-carry out, in battle, a normal battalion task, provided that frequent
-periods of short rest could be assured.
-
-Towards the middle of September, 1918, the successful course of the
-fighting, and the moderate rate of net wastage--by which I mean
-the excess of battle losses over replenishments from the rear--had
-convinced me that there was every reason to hope that the strengths of
-the 57 battalions could be maintained at a useful standard until the
-end of the campaigning season of that year. If the war were to go on
-into 1919, and provided that the Australian Corps could be kept out
-of the line over the three winter months, thereby avoiding the daily
-wastage of trench duty, I felt able to guarantee that by the spring of
-1919 the whole of these battalions would again have become replenished
-to a sufficient extent for a spring campaign.
-
-[Illustration: MAP H]
-
-It may have been an optimistic view; it may have savoured of a desire
-to postpone the evil day. But I felt assured that the disbandment of
-a number of additional battalions would seriously impair the fighting
-spirit of the whole Australian Corps. I was prepared to take the chance
-of being able to carry on until the end of 1918 with the whole 57
-battalions retained intact.
-
-But I was not permitted to do so. At various times during the period
-June to August, 1918, an unimaginative department at G.H.Q. kept
-harassing me with inquiries as to when it was proposed to conform to
-the new Imperial organization in which all Brigades were to be reduced
-to three Battalions each. These inquiries were at first ignored, but
-early in September the Adjutant-General became insistent for a reply.
-
-I set out the whole position as I saw it, and strongly urged a
-postponement of the question until the Corps should have completed the
-vitally important series of fighting operations on which it was then
-engaged. Looking back upon the course of events of that time, it is
-hardly credible now that, having regard to the reasons given, these
-representations should have been ignored. I procrastinated. Suddenly
-I received instructions from the War Office that some 6,000 men of
-the Corps, who had served continuously since 1914, were to be given
-six months' furlough to Australia, and that they were to be held in
-readiness to entrain en route for Australia at forty-eight hours'
-notice.
-
-These orders were received only two days before the battle of
-Hargicourt. The First and Fourth Divisions, destined to fight in that
-battle, were those most affected by such a withdrawal of men, because
-these Divisions contained the battalions and batteries which had been
-longest in the field. I could not, obviously, take up any attitude
-which would postpone the well-earned furlough of these veterans; nor
-had I the smallest inclination to do so. My case against the main
-proposal for an immediate extinction of additional battalions, was,
-however, weakened thereby.
-
-The responsible authorities overruled my objections, and on September
-19th I received peremptory instructions to disband eight additional
-battalions forthwith. With many misgivings, I had no option but to
-comply. I called my Divisional Commanders together, and with them
-decided which battalions should suffer extinction.
-
-It was a difficult choice, and created a situation of great difficulty.
-The whole of the personnel affected raised a very subordinate but
-none the less determined protest. One battalion after another very
-respectfully but very firmly took the stand that they did not wish to
-disband, and would prefer not to fight as dismembered and scattered
-portions of other battalions.
-
-This attitude, perhaps, bordered upon insubordination, but it was
-conceived for a very worthy purpose. It was a pathetic effort, and
-elicited much sympathy from the senior Commanders and myself.
-
-On the eve of the great operations for the overthrow of the Hindenburg
-Line I found myself, therefore, in a sea of troubles, and threatened
-with the possibility of internal disaffection. To outsiders who could
-have no understanding of the situation this might imperil the fair fame
-and prestige of the Australian Army Corps.
-
-Up to this stage the Fourth Army Commander had been in no way concerned
-in the matter. The pressure upon me had come from the War Office and
-the Adjutant-General's Department. Lord Rawlinson's interests, however,
-now became vitally involved. I submitted the whole position to him. I
-pointed out how inopportune the time was for risking trouble of this
-nature. The order for disbandment, having been given, must of course
-stand, and obedience must be insisted upon; but a postponement of
-further action for fourteen days was desirable, if the opportunity
-of a decisive blow against the enemy was not to be imperilled by an
-impairment of the fighting spirit and goodwill of the Australian Corps.
-
-Rawlinson accepted my views in their entirety, and used his authority
-and influence with the Commander-in-Chief. A postponement of action
-was authorized, and all the Battalions which had been threatened with
-extinction, with one exception, were permitted to remain intact during
-the remainder of the fighting period. The exception was made in the
-case of the 59th and 60th Battalions (of the 15th Brigade), whose men
-most loyally made no demur at the immediate amalgamation of the two
-battalions for the purposes of the forthcoming operations.
-
-[Illustration: German Prisoners--captured at the battle of Chuignes,
-August 23rd, 1918.]
-
-[Illustration: Captured German Guns--Park of Ordnance captured by the
-Australians during August, 1918.]
-
-By the end of September, therefore, three separate factors were
-operating to make a short withdrawal of the Corps from the battle zone
-desirable.
-
-These were, the long unbroken period of line service, the orders for
-the reorganization of the Brigades on a three-Battalion basis, and the
-granting of Australian furlough to the veterans.
-
-These were the reasons which brought about the decision that the whole
-of the Australian Corps should be sent for a period of rest in a
-coastal area as soon as the battle operations on which it had embarked
-had been brought to a successful conclusion.
-
-Those operations were, on October 1st, almost completed. Only the
-Beaurevoir line still remained to be mastered, and the Second
-Australian Division, which had been resting since its successes at
-Mont St. Quentin, was available to undertake that task. For the next
-three days the Australian Corps became, therefore, reduced to only one
-Division (the Second Australian) in the line, with the 27th and 30th
-American Divisions in support.
-
-The Second Division occupied the night of October 1st and the greater
-part of October 2nd in the process of taking over line duty from the
-Fifth Division, and in preparing for an attack timed for the next
-morning upon the Beaurevoir defences. I handed over the northern part
-of what had been the Australian Corps front, on the day previous, to
-the 50th Division (of the Thirteenth Corps), which had by now effected
-the passage of the tunnel line, and had deployed upon my left, facing
-north and north-east.
-
-After these adjustments were made, the Corps front, on the night
-of October 2nd, extended from Mont St. Martin through the eastern
-outskirts of Estrées and Joncourt, where I joined with the 32nd
-Division (now belonging to the Ninth Corps). It was a frontage of
-nearly 6,000 yards, an extraordinary length for the battle front of a
-single Division. Our line lay parallel to and about 1,000 yards to the
-west of the Beaurevoir line, and the attack for next day was designed
-to be delivered in a north-easterly direction. If the Beaurevoir
-line itself were captured, the attack was to be pushed on beyond, in
-the endeavour to sweep the enemy off the prominent hill on which was
-situated the village of Beaurevoir. Concurrently the Thirteenth Corps
-would attack Prospect Hill, lying to the north-east of Gouy village.
-
-The Beaurevoir line was a fully-developed defensive system, with front,
-support and communication trenches, thoroughly traversed, well wired
-in, and still in good condition. In 1917 it would have been considered
-impossible to capture such a line of defence by such a force on such a
-frontage.
-
-The Second Division deployed two of its Brigades, the 5th on the right
-and the 7th on the left, with the 6th Brigade in reserve. The 5th
-Tank Brigade, now greatly reduced in numbers, and some Whippet Tanks
-co-operated in the attack. The assault was launched at 6.5 a.m. under
-a Field Artillery barrage. Considerable opposition was met with. The
-trenches were found strongly held, particularly with machine guns, and
-the uncut wire seriously impeded the Infantry.
-
-The frontal attack of the 5th Brigade, nevertheless, achieved almost
-immediate success, although in some parts of the line there were
-centres of resistance which had to be enveloped before they yielded.
-The performance of the Tanks on this day was disappointing. Most of the
-heavier Tanks were disabled by Artillery fire, while the Whippets found
-the Beaurevoir trench lines too wide to straddle. Nevertheless, the
-spirited action of the Artillery made up for the loss of the assistance
-of the Tanks, and by 11 a.m. the whole of the Beaurevoir line in front
-of the 5th Brigade had been captured.
-
-Further to the north, the 7th Brigade found the trenches almost end on
-to the direction of their advance, and the battle here speedily took
-on the form of pure trench fighting with bomb and bayonet, a type of
-fighting in which the Australian excels. Steady progress northwards was
-made.
-
-The whole of the Beaurevoir line over the full extent of the Corps
-front was taken before midday, and although already very tired, the
-assaulting Brigades pushed on beyond, to the ascent of the Beaurevoir
-spur. On a knoll at its south-western extremity stood the stone base of
-the now wrecked Beaurevoir Mill, a prominent landmark visible for miles.
-
-The spur and the vicinity of the Mill were found to be strongly held,
-probably by fugitives driven out that morning from the Beaurevoir
-trenches. The weight of our attack spent itself on the slopes of the
-spur. The 6th Brigade was therefore launched at Beaurevoir Mill and
-village. Although some portion of our attack passed the Mill and
-reached the village, our available Infantry strength was not sufficient
-to mop it up satisfactorily, and the Brigadier decided to establish for
-the night a secure line about 1,000 yards south-west of the village.
-
-The total captures by the Second Division on this day exceeded a
-thousand prisoners and many machine guns--an astonishing performance
-for three weak brigades, fighting under open and exposed conditions.
-
-The attack on Beaurevoir hill had been undertaken chiefly to keep the
-enemy engaged and on the move, while an additional Division of the
-Thirteenth Corps could be brought across the line of the tunnel and
-deployed into the battle line. The direction of the attack had been
-to the north-east. It now became necessary to readjust the general
-easterly line of advance by redistributing the Army front between the
-three Corps now in line. The greater part of October 4th was occupied
-in carrying out these arrangements, and the Second Division availed
-itself of the period to improve its line and the positions of parts of
-it by local attacks and the capture of tactical points along its front.
-On this day the Division gathered in a further 800 prisoners and five
-guns.
-
-By nightfall on October 4th the Corps front, now reduced to 4,000
-yards, ran generally north and south, well east of Wiancourt and
-just east of Ramicourt. The task of the Second Division and of the
-Australian Corps was completed, and in pursuance of arrangements
-previously made, the initial steps were taken on that day to hand
-over the Australian Corps front to the 27th and 30th American
-Divisions, which had, in the days intervening since September 29th,
-been reorganized and rested. They were to be given a place in the front
-battle line under the direct orders of their own Corps Headquarters
-(General Read).
-
-To cover the interval of time necessary to enable the first of the
-American Divisions (30th) to move up into line, General Rawlinson
-desired me to retain control of the battle front for one day longer,
-and avail myself of the time to make an endeavour to advance our line
-still further to the east.
-
-I selected as a suitable objective the village of Montbrehain, which
-stood on a plateau that dominated any further advance.
-
-The Second Division was instructed to carry out this attack early on
-October 5th, and I allotted to them one company of Tanks, which was all
-that could be materialized in fighting trim at such short notice.
-
-Rosenthal launched his attack at five minutes past six in the morning
-of October 5th. It was the 6th Brigade which led it. The village was
-full of machine guns, but the gallant Brigade dashed in with the
-bayonet, and methodically worked its way through the village to its
-eastern outskirts. A counter-attack developed about noon, and for a
-time about 400 yards of ground had to be yielded, but our foremost line
-was speedily restored with the assistance of a battalion of the 5th
-Brigade.
-
-By nightfall our line ran completely around the eastern outskirts of
-the village of Montbrehain, the whole of which was in our possession.
-We took from it over 600 prisoners belonging to nine different German
-regiments.
-
-What was even more interesting was that we came for the first time in
-the war upon French civilians, who had been under the domination of
-the enemy since the autumn of 1914. These unfortunate folk were found
-hidden away in cellars and underground shelters, and their joy at their
-deliverance from foreign bondage was pathetic. It was evident that the
-enemy had not had time to carry out the evacuation of the civilians,
-as had been his practice throughout the whole area over which the
-Australian Corps had hitherto advanced.
-
-By the night of October 5th the Corps had, by the victory of
-Montbrehain, advanced its line to a point six miles to the east of the
-Bellicourt Tunnel, and had thereby confirmed the irretrievable collapse
-of the whole of the Hindenburg defences.
-
-This achievement is, above everything else, an illustration, which
-should become classic, of the maxim that in war the _moral_ is to the
-material as three to one. The enemy had all the advantages of position,
-of carefully prepared field works, of highly-organized defences, of
-detailed acquaintance with our lines of approach from the west, and of
-all the other tactical benefits of the defence.
-
-Yet we had the advantage of moral factors. For the past nine weeks
-the enemy had suffered defeat after defeat. He had at one time been
-surprised and overwhelmed. He had at another time been driven from
-strong positions under conditions when surprise played no part. He had
-been defeated in gunnery, in the air, and in close Infantry fighting.
-The _moral_ of his troops had steadily declined. They no longer hoped
-for victory, but anticipated defeat. They knew that they were a beaten
-army.
-
-The victory won in the series of battles from September 29th to October
-5th was a victory of _moral_, the resolute determination of our troops
-to overcome all obstacles prevailing against the failing spirits of
-the defenders. It was a signal illustration that no defences, however
-powerful, can resist an energetically pressed assault, unless the
-defenders meet the attack with equal resolution. Verdun and the cliffs
-of Gallipoli are examples of resolute defence. Port Arthur and the
-Hindenburg line are equally striking instances of the collapse of
-formidable field works through failure of the _moral_ of the defenders.
-
-Montbrehain was the last Australian battle in the Great War, and the
-fighting career of the Australian Army Corps had, as events turned out,
-come to an end. On that same day my Second Division was relieved by the
-30th American Division, and I handed over command of the battle front
-to General Read. I had borne continuous responsibility, as a Corps
-Commander, for a section of the battle front in France varying from
-four to eleven miles for 128 consecutive days without a break.
-
-On that same day, too, Prince Max of Baden accepted the programme
-of the President of the United States of America, and requested him
-to take in hand the restoration of peace. On behalf of the German
-Government he also asked for an immediate Armistice on Land, Water and
-in the Air.
-
-The long-drawn-out negotiations which followed need only a brief
-reference. It was first necessary for the Entente Powers to agree
-upon a common line of action; then followed negotiations between the
-plenipotentiaries of the belligerents, and hostilities did not actually
-cease until after the conditions of the Armistice had been signed in
-the early morning of November 11th.
-
-During this period of five weeks, however, fighting went on. It was of
-an altogether different character from that in which the Australian
-Corps had been engaged. The enemy had no line of defence left in
-France. He was compelled to a retreat which became general along
-his whole front, and gathered momentum day by day. He gave up Lens,
-Armentières and the Aubers Ridge without a struggle, thus enabling the
-Second and Fifth Armies to advance to the occupation of Lille and the
-adjacent industrial centres.
-
-A great army recoiling rapidly upon itself is beset with even greater
-difficulties than an army sweeping rapidly forward. If its retreat
-is not to be converted into a rout, time must be allowed for the
-methodical withdrawal, in proper sequence, of the whole complex
-organization in rear of the battle front. Headquarters and hospitals,
-workshops and aerodromes, depots and supplies must be dismantled,
-packed and re-established further in rear; guns, transport and reserve
-troops must be withdrawn stage by stage, and, last of all, the fighting
-line must fall back in sympathy with the rate of withdrawal of all in
-rear.
-
-Every hour's delay is an hour gained. Roads become congested, bridges
-overtaxed, cohesion and discipline are imperilled. An enforced
-withdrawal on so large a scale is one of the most difficult operations
-of war.
-
-The enemy's tactics during this period were, therefore, purely those
-of delay, achieved by the methodical destruction of bridges, tearing
-up of railways, and the blowing of great craters at every important
-road intersection. These methods impeded the advance of our armies
-quite as much as his rearguards, who invariably yielded to the smallest
-demonstration of force.
-
-Battles on the grand scale were now a thing of the past, and from the
-completion of the capture of the Hindenburg defences up to the signing
-of the Armistice there was no event in France of outstanding military
-importance.
-
-The pursuit of the enemy towards the eastern frontiers of France and
-Belgium was, however, exhausting to the British and American troops
-on the front which the Australian Corps had vacated. It was only a
-question of time for the Corps to be again called upon, this time to
-take its share of pursuit. The Armistice negotiations were dragging
-out, and it was uncertain that they would be satisfactorily concluded.
-The Australian Corps had had a month for a pleasant rest along the
-banks of the Somme, between Amiens and Abbeville. It had had time to
-carry out the extensive reorganizations required by the War Office. On
-November 5th orders came for the Corps once again to move up to the
-front.
-
-The First and Fourth Divisions led the return to the battle zone. The
-remaining three Divisions were to follow. My Corps Headquarters, on
-November 10th, commenced its move to Le Cateau, to occupy the very
-château which had been inhabited by General von der Marwitz, the
-Commander of the Second German Army, against whom the Australian Corps
-had for so long been operating. I was actually on the way there on
-November 11th when the order arrived for the cessation of hostilities.
-
-The Australian Army Corps was therefore not again employed, either in
-the final stages of pursuing the enemy out of France, or as part of the
-Army of Occupation on German territory.
-
-The Prime Minister of Australia forwarded to me, the day after my
-arrival at Le Cateau, the following message:
-
- The Government and the people of Australia extend their heartiest
- congratulations on the triumphant conclusion of your great
- efforts. I am specially requested to convey to you their heartfelt
- thanks and deep admiration for your brilliant and great leadership,
- and for the way in which you and the brave men associated with
- you have borne the sufferings and trials of the past four
- years, and in common with the troops of all the Allied Nations
- brought the civilized peoples of the world through adversity to
- victorious peace. On behalf of the Government and the people of the
- Commonwealth, I assure you, and every Australian soldier in the
- field, that the Commonwealth is full of pride and admiration of
- their endurance and sacrifice. The Australian soldiers are entitled
- to, and shall receive, not only the thanks of a grateful people,
- but that treatment which their great services deserve.
-
- W. M. HUGHES.
-
-Not long after the conclusion of hostilities I was called upon by
-my Government to undertake the organization and direction of a
-special department to carry out the repatriation of the whole of the
-Australian Imperial Force, in Europe, Egypt, Salonika and Mesopotamia.
-This compelled me to sever, with much regret, my close and intimate
-association with the personnel of the Army Corps.
-
-Before proceeding to England to establish the new department, I issued
-the following Farewell Order:
-
- Upon relinquishing the command of the Australian Army Corps,
- in order to take up the important and difficult work of the
- Repatriation and Demobilization of the Australian Imperial Force,
- which has been entrusted to me by the Commonwealth Government, I
- desire to offer to all ranks of the Corps a heartfelt expression of
- my gratitude to all for the splendid and loyal support which they
- have rendered to me during the past six months.
-
- It has been the period during which the Corps has attained its
- highest development, as a fighting organism, of cohesion and
- efficiency. This has been brought about alike by the valour of
- the troops of all arms and services, and by the splendid devotion
- of Commanders, Staffs, and Regimental Officers, and has resulted
- in the series of brilliant victories which have contributed in so
- high a measure to the overthrow and utter collapse of our principal
- enemy.
-
- For the remainder of the period during which the Corps will
- continue to act as a military body, held in readiness for any
- emergency that may arise during the peace negotiations, I am
- confident that every man will strive to do all in his power to
- uphold the great renown which the Corps has so worthily won.
-
- But, having completed our task in the main object which brought
- us from our distant homeland, and having thereby safeguarded the
- future of our Nation by the conquest of our most formidable enemy,
- we are now faced with another and an equally important task,
- namely, to prepare ourselves to resume our duties of citizenship
- and to assist individually and collectively in the reconstruction
- of the Australian Nation. Our numbers and our prestige place
- this opportunity in our hands, and impose upon us this great
- responsibility.
-
- I feel sure that every man in the Corps will in this also worthily
- respond to the call of duty, and will co-operate loyally and
- self-sacrificingly in the realization of all plans and projects
- which will be developed to so worthy an end.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-RESULTS
-
-
-The time has arrived when it is proper to take stock of gains and
-losses, and to endeavour to appraise, at its true value, the work done
-by the Australian Army Corps during its long-sustained effort of the
-last six months of its fighting career.
-
-It has become customary to regard the actual captures of prisoners and
-guns as a true index of the degree of success which has attended any
-series of battle operations. Every soldier knows, however, that such a
-standard of judgment, applied alone, would render but scant justice.
-The actual captures in any engagement depend more upon the state of
-_moral_ of the enemy and the temperament of the attacking troops than
-upon the military quality of the battle effort considered as a whole.
-While large captures necessarily imply great victories, it does not by
-any means follow that small captures imply the reverse.
-
-Nevertheless, judged by such a purely arbitrary standard, the
-performances of the Australian Army Corps during the period under
-review are worthy of being set out in particular detail.
-
-From March 27th, when Australian troops were for the first time
-interposed to arrest the German advance, until October 5th, when they
-were finally withdrawn from the line, the total captures made by them
-were:
-
- Prisoners 29,144
- Guns 338
-
-No accurate record was ever kept of the capture of machine guns,
-trench mortars, searchlights, vehicles and travelling kitchens or
-pharmacies, nor of the quantity of Artillery ammunition, which alone
-must have amounted to millions of rounds.
-
-During the advance, from August 8th to October 5th, the Australian
-Corps recaptured and released no less than 116 towns and villages.
-Every one of these was defended more or less stoutly. This count of
-them does not include a very large number of minor hamlets, which
-were unnamed on the maps, nor farms, brickfields, factories, sugar
-refineries, and similar isolated groups of buildings, every one of
-which had been fortified and converted by the enemy into a stronghold
-of resistance.
-
-Although the amount of territory reoccupied, taken by itself, is
-ordinarily no criterion of value, the whole circumstances of the
-relentless advance of the Australian Corps make it a convenient
-standard of comparison. The total area of all the ground fought over,
-from the occupation of which the enemy was ejected, amounted in the
-period under consideration to 394 square miles.
-
-A much more definite and crucial basis for evaluating the military
-successes of the Corps is the number of enemy Divisions actually
-engaged and defeated in the course of the operations. Very accurate
-records of these have been kept, and every one of them was identified
-by a substantial contribution to the list of prisoners taken. An
-analysis of this investigation produced the following results:
-
-The total number of separate enemy divisions engaged was thirty-nine.
-Of these, twenty were engaged once only, twelve were engaged twice,
-six three times, and one four times. Each time "engaged" represents
-a separate and distinct period of line duty for the enemy Division
-referred to.
-
-Up to the time of the Armistice we had definitely ascertained that
-at least six of these thirty-nine enemy Divisions had been entirely
-disbanded as the result of the battering which they had received.
-Their numberings have already been given. It is more than probable
-that several other Divisions shared the same fate, by reason of the
-number of prisoners actually taken, and the other casualties known to
-have been inflicted. Up to the time when the signing of the Armistice
-precluded further inquiries, absolutely conclusive evidence of their
-disappearance had not been obtained.
-
-In such an analysis it is possible to go even further, and to compare
-the tangible results achieved with the relative strength of the forces
-engaged. The Australian Army Corps of five Divisions represented 9½
-per cent. of the whole of the remaining 53 Divisions of the British
-Army engaged on the Western Front. Its captures in prisoners, by the
-same comparison, and within the period reviewed--_i.e._, March 27th to
-October 5th--was 23 per cent., in guns 23½ per cent., and in territory
-reoccupied was 21½ per cent. of the whole of the rest of the British
-Army.
-
-The ratio, therefore, of the results to the strengths, as between the
-five Australian Divisions and the whole of the rest of the British
-Army, was as follows:
-
- Prisoners 2.42 times.
- Territory 2.24 "
- Guns 2.47 "
-
-It is not, however, by the mere numerical results disclosed by such a
-comparison that the work of the Australian Army Corps should be judged.
-If a broad survey be made of the whole of the 1918 campaign, I think
-that the decisive part which the Corps took in it will emerge even more
-convincingly.
-
-Such a survey will show that the whole sequence of events may be
-divided into five very definite and clearly-marked stages. The first
-was the arrest and bringing to naught of the great German spring
-offensive; the second was the conversion of the enemy's offensive
-strategy into a distinct and unqualified defensive. Next followed the
-great, initial and irredeemable defeat of August 8th, which, according
-to the enemy's own admissions, was the beginning of the end. Then came
-the denial to the enemy of the respite which he sought on the line of
-the Somme, which might well have helped him to recover himself for
-another year of war; and, finally, there was the overthrow of his great
-defensive system, on which he relied as a last bulwark to safeguard his
-hold upon French soil, a hold which would have enabled him to bargain
-for terms.
-
-It must never be forgotten that whatever claims may be made to the
-contrary, Germany's surrender was precipitated by reason of her
-military defeat in the field. Her submarine campaign, disappointing to
-her expectations as it had been, was still a potent weapon. Her fleet
-was yet intact. Our blockade was grievous, but she did in fact survive
-it, even though it continued in force for a full eight months after
-her surrender. The defection of Bulgaria and the collapse of Turkey
-might conceivably be a source of increased military strength, even if
-one of greater political weakness. Had she been able to hold us at bay
-in France and Belgium for but another month or six weeks, she could
-have been assured of a respite of three months of winter in which to
-organize a levy en masse. Who can say that the stress of another winter
-and the prospect of another year of war might not have destroyed the
-Entente combination against her?
-
-On these grounds I believe that the real and immediate reason for the
-precipitate surrender of Germany on October 5th, 1918, was the defeat
-of her Army in the field. It followed so closely upon the breaching
-of the Hindenburg defences on September 29th to October 4th, that it
-cannot be dissociated from that event as a final determining cause.
-
-Whether this view be correct or not, I think that the claim may fairly
-be made for the Australian Army Corps, that in each of the stages of
-the operations which led to this military overthrow, the Corps played
-an important, and in some of them a predominating, part. No better
-testimony for such a conclusion can be adduced than the admissions of
-Ludendorff himself.
-
-Narrowing our survey of the closing events of the campaign to a
-consideration of the fighting activities of the Australian Corps,
-I would like to emphasize the remarkable character of that effort.
-Deprived of the advantage of a regular inflow of trained recruits,
-and relying practically entirely for any replenishments upon the
-return of its own sick and wounded, the Corps was able to maintain
-an uninterrupted fighting activity over a period of six months. For
-the last sixty days of this period the Corps maintained an unchecked
-advance of thirty-seven miles against the powerful and determined
-opposition of a still formidable enemy, who employed all the mechanical
-and scientific resources at his disposal.
-
-Such a result alone, considered in the abstract and quite apart from
-any comparison with the performances of other forces, is a testimony,
-on the one hand, to the pre-eminent fighting qualities of the
-Australian soldier considered individually, and, on the other hand, to
-the collective capacity and efficiency of the military effort made by
-the Corps. I doubt whether there is any parallel for such a performance
-in the whole range of military history.
-
-As regards the troops themselves, the outstanding feature of the
-campaign was their steadily rising _moral_. Always high, it was, in
-spite of fatigue and stress, never higher than in the closing days. A
-stage had been reached when they regarded their adversary no longer
-with cautious respect but with undisguised contempt.
-
-On the part of the troops it was a remarkable feat of physical and
-mental endurance to face again and yet again the stress of battle. To
-the infantry a certain measure of periodical rest was accorded, but
-the Artillery and technical services had scarcely any respite at all.
-Almost every day of the whole period they worked and fought, night and
-day, under the fire of the enemy's batteries, and under his drenching,
-suffocating gas attacks, for our battery positions were the favourite
-targets for his gas bombardments.
-
-On the part of the staffs it was a period of ceaseless toil, both
-mental and physical. The perfection of the staff work, its precision,
-its completeness, its rapidity, its whole-souled devotion to the
-service of the troops, were the necessary conditions for the victories
-which were won.
-
-Another outstanding feature was the uniformity of standard achieved
-by all the five Divisions, as well as the wonderful comradeship which
-they displayed towards each other. Omitting altogether the performances
-of any one of them in the previous years of the war, it is noteworthy
-that all so fully seized the opportunities that presented themselves,
-that each could boast of outstanding achievements during this
-period--the First Division for its capture of Lihons and the battles of
-Chuignes and Hargicourt, the Second Division for Mont St. Quentin and
-Montbrehain, the Third for Bray, Bouchavesnes and Bony, the Fourth for
-Hamel and Hargicourt, and the Fifth for Péronne and Bellicourt.
-
-[Illustration: MAP J.]
-
-I must also pass in brief review the losses which the Corps suffered
-during its advance. From August 8th to October 5th the total battle
-casualties were as follows:
-
- Killed 3,566
- Died of wounds 1,432
- Wounded 16,166
- Missing 79
- ------
- Total 21,243
-
-Averaging these losses over all five Divisions for the whole period,
-they amount to a wastage from all causes of seventy men per Division
-per day, which must be regarded as extraordinarily moderate, having
-regard to the strenuous nature of the fighting, the great results
-achieved, and the much higher rate of losses incurred by Australian
-troops during the previous years of the war. Even during periods of
-sedentary trench warfare the losses averaged forty per Division per day.
-
-The total losses of the Army Corps during this period were, indeed,
-only a small fraction of Australia's contribution to the casualty roll
-for the whole period of the war. It was the least costly period, for
-Australia, of all the fighting that her soldiers underwent. Had it been
-otherwise, the effort could not have been maintained for so long, nor
-could the spirit of the troops have been sustained. It was the low cost
-of victory after victory which spurred them on to still greater efforts.
-
-Of the causes which contributed to so gratifying a result, much credit
-must be given to the great development in 1918 of mechanical aids, in
-the form of Tanks, and to a considerable augmentation of aeroplanes,
-Artillery and Lewis guns. Of all these the Corps proved eager to avail
-itself to the full.
-
-But the main cause is, after all, the recognition of a principle of
-text-book simplicity, which is that a vigorous offensive is in the
-long run cheaper than a timorous defensive. No war can be decided by
-defensive tactics. The fundamental doctrine of the German conception of
-war was the pursuit of the unrelenting offensive; it was only when the
-Entente Armies, on their part, were able and willing themselves to put
-such a doctrine into practice that our formidable enemies were overcome.
-
-It may be that hereafter I may be charged with responsibility for
-so relentlessly and for so long committing the troops of the Corps
-to a sustained aggressive policy. Such criticisms have already been
-whispered in some quarters. But I am sure that they will not be shared
-by any of the men whom it was my privilege to command. They knew that
-an offensive policy was the cheapest policy, and the proof that they
-accepted it as the right one was their ever-rising _moral_ as the
-campaign developed.
-
-"Feed your troops on victory," is a maxim which does not appear in
-any text-book, but it is nevertheless true. The aim and end of all
-the efforts and of all the heavy sacrifices of the Australian nation
-was victory in the field. Nothing that could be done could lead more
-swiftly and more directly to its fulfilment than an energetic offensive
-policy. The troops themselves recognized this. They learned to believe,
-because of success heaped upon success, that they were invincible. They
-were right, and I believe that I was right in shaping a course which
-would give them the opportunity of proving it.
-
-There are some aspects of the Australian campaign to which, before
-closing this memoir, I should like to make brief reference. Success
-depended first and foremost upon the military proficiency of the
-Australian private soldier and his glorious spirit of heroism. I do
-not propose to attempt here an exhaustive analysis of the causes
-which led to the making of him. The democratic institutions under
-which he was reared, the advanced system of education by which he was
-trained--teaching him to think for himself and to apply what he had
-been taught to practical ends--the instinct of sport and adventure
-which is his national heritage, his pride in his young country, and the
-opportunity which came to him of creating a great national tradition,
-were all factors which made him what he was.
-
-Physically the Australian Army was composed of the flower of the
-youth of the continent. A volunteer army--the only purely volunteer
-army that fought in the Great War--it was composed of men carefully
-selected according to a high physical standard, from which, happily,
-no departure was made, even although recruiting began to fall off in
-the last year of the war, and there were some who had proposed a more
-lenient recruiting examination. The cost to Australia of delivering
-each fighting man, fully trained, to the battle front was too great to
-permit of any doubt whether the physical quality of the raw material
-would survive the wear and tear of war.
-
-Mentally, the Australian soldier was well endowed. In him there was a
-curious blend of a capacity for independent judgment with a readiness
-to submit to self-effacement in a common cause. He had a personal
-dignity all his own. He had the political sense highly developed, and
-was always a keen critic of the way in which his battalion or battery
-was "run," and of the policies which guided his destinies from day to
-day.
-
-His intellectual gifts and his "handiness" made him an apt pupil. It
-was always a delight to see the avidity with which he mastered the
-technique of the weapons which were placed in his hands. Machine guns,
-Lewis guns, Mills' bombs, Stokes' mortars, rifle grenades, flares,
-fuses, detonators, Very lights, signal rockets, German machine guns,
-German stick bombs, never for long remained a mystery to him.
-
-At all schools and classes he proved a diligent scholar, and astonished
-his instructors by the speed with which he absorbed and bettered his
-instruction. Conservatism in military methods was no part of his creed.
-He was always mentally alert to adopt new ideas and often to invent
-them.
-
-His adaptability spared him much hardship. He knew how to make himself
-comfortable. To light a fire and cook his food was a natural instinct.
-A sheet of corrugated iron, a batten or two, and a few strands of wire
-were enough to enable him to fabricate a home in which he could live at
-ease.
-
-Psychologically, he was easy to lead but difficult to drive. His
-imagination was readily fired. War was to him a game, and he played
-for his side with enthusiasm. His bravery was founded upon his sense
-of duty to his unit, comradeship to his fellows, emulation to uphold
-his traditions, and a combative spirit to avenge his hardships and
-sufferings upon the enemy.
-
-Taking him all in all, the Australian soldier was, when once
-understood, not difficult to handle. But he required a sympathetic
-handling, which appealed to his intelligence and satisfied his instinct
-for a "square deal."
-
-Very much and very stupid comment has been made upon the discipline
-of the Australian soldier. That was because the very conception and
-purpose of discipline have been misunderstood. It is, after all, only
-a means to an end, and that end is the power to secure co-ordinated
-action among a large number of individuals for the achievement of a
-definite purpose. It does not mean lip service, nor obsequious homage
-to superiors, nor servile observance of forms and customs, nor a
-suppression of individuality.
-
-Such may have been the outward manifestations of discipline in times
-gone by. If they achieved the end in view, it must have been because
-the individual soldier had acquired in those days no capacity to act
-intelligently and because he could be considered only in the mass. But
-modern war makes high demands upon the intelligence of the private
-soldier and upon his individual initiative. Any method of training
-which tends to suppress that individuality will tend to reduce his
-efficiency and value. The proverbial "iron discipline" of the Prussian
-military ideal ultimately broke down completely under the test of a
-great war.
-
-In the Australian Forces no strong insistence was ever made upon the
-mere outward forms of discipline. The soldier was taught that personal
-cleanliness was necessary to ensure his health and well-being, that a
-soldierly bearing meant a moral and physical uplift which would help
-him to rise superior to his squalid environment, that punctuality meant
-economy of effort, that unquestioning obedience was the only road to
-successful collective action. He acquired these military qualities
-because his intelligence taught him that the reasons given him were
-true ones.
-
-In short, the Australian Army is a proof that individualism is the
-best and not the worst foundation upon which to build up collective
-discipline. The Australian is accustomed to team-work. He learns it
-in the sporting field, in his industrial organizations, and in his
-political activities. The team-work which he developed in the war was
-of the highest order of efficiency. Each man understood his part and
-understood also that the part which others had to play depended upon
-the proper performance of his own.
-
-The gunner knew that the success of the infantry depended upon his own
-punctilious performance of his task, its accuracy, its punctuality,
-its conscientious thoroughness. The runner knew what depended upon
-the rapid delivery at the right destination of the message which he
-carried. The mule driver knew that the load of ammunition entrusted
-to him must be delivered, at any sacrifice, to its destined battery;
-the infantryman knew that he must be at his tape line at the appointed
-moment, and that he must not overrun his allotted objective.
-
-The truest test of battle discipline was the confidence which every
-leader in the field always felt that he could rely upon every man to
-perform the duty which had been prescribed for him, as long as breath
-lasted, and that he would perform it faithfully even when there was no
-possibility of any supervision.
-
-Thus the sense of duty was always very high, and so also was the
-instinct of comradeship. A soldier, a platoon, a whole battalion would
-sooner sacrifice themselves than "let down" a comrade or another unit.
-There was no finer example of individual self-sacrifice, for the
-benefit of comrades, than the Stretcher-bearer service, which suffered
-exceedingly in its noble work of succouring the wounded, and exposed
-itself unflinchingly to every danger.
-
-The relations between the officers and men of the Australian Army were
-also of a nature which is deserving of notice. From almost the earliest
-days of the war violence was done to a deep-rooted tradition of the
-British Army, which discouraged any promotion from the ranks, and
-stringently forbade, in cases where it was given, promotion in the same
-unit. It was rare to recognize the distinguished service of a ranker;
-it was impossible for him to secure a commission in his own regiment.
-
-The Australian Imperial Force changed all that. Those privates,
-corporals and sergeants who displayed, under battle conditions, a
-notable capacity for leadership were earmarked for preferment. If their
-standard of education was good, they received commissions as soon as
-there were vacancies to fill; if not, they were sent to Oxford or
-Cambridge to be given an opportunity of improving both their general
-and their special military knowledge.
-
-As a general rule, they came back as commissioned officers to the very
-unit in which they had enlisted or served. They afforded to all its men
-a tangible and visible proof of the recognition of merit and capacity,
-and their example was always a powerful stimulus to all their former
-comrades.
-
-There was thus no officer caste, no social distinction in the whole
-force. In not a few instances, men of humble origin and belonging
-to the artisan class rose, during the war, from privates to the
-command of Battalions. The efficiency of the force suffered in no
-way in consequence. On the contrary, the whole Australian Army
-became automatically graded into leaders and followers according
-to the individual merits of every man, and there grew a wonderful
-understanding between them.
-
-The duties and responsibilities of the officers were always put upon
-a high plane. They had, during all military service with troops, to
-dress like the men, to live among them in the trenches, to share their
-hardships and privations, and to be responsible for their welfare. No
-officer dared to look after his own comfort until every man or horse
-or mule had been fed and quartered, as well as the circumstances of
-the moment permitted. The battle prowess of the Australian regimental
-officer and the magnificent example he set have become household words.
-
-[Illustration: The Toll of Battle--an Australian gun-team destroyed by
-an enemy shell, September 1st, 1918.]
-
-[Illustration: Inter-Divisional Relief--The 30th American and the 3rd
-Australian Divisions passing each other in the "Roo de Kanga," Péronne,
-during the "relief" after the capture of the Hindenburg Line, October
-4th, 1918.]
-
-Then there must be a word of recognition of the work of the devoted and
-able Staffs. It was upon them, after all, that the principal burden of
-the campaign rested. Upon them, their skill and industry, depended the
-adequacy of all supplies and their proper distribution, the precision
-of all arrangements for battle, the accuracy of all maps, orders and
-instructions, the clearness of messages and reports, the completeness
-of the information on which the Commander must base his decisions, and
-the correct calculations of time and space for the movement of troops,
-guns and transport. Their watchword was "efficiency."
-
-"The Staff Officer is the servant of the troops." This was the ritual
-pronounced at the initiation of every Staff Officer. It was a doctrine
-which contributed powerfully to the success of the staff work as a
-whole. It meant that the Staff Officer's duties extended far beyond
-the mere transmission of orders. It became his business to see that
-they were understood, and rightly acted upon, and to assist in removing
-every kind of difficulty in their due execution. The importance of
-accurate and reliable staff work can be understood when it is realized
-that no mistake can happen without ultimately imposing an added stress
-upon the most subordinate and most helpless of all the components of an
-Army--the private soldier. An error in a clock time, the miscarriage
-of a message, the neglect to issue an instruction, a misreading of an
-order, an omission from a list of names, a mistake in a computation,
-an incomplete inventory, are bound in the long run to involve an added
-burden somewhere upon some private soldier.
-
-The Staff of the Australian Army Corps, its Divisions and Brigades,
-consisted during the last six months almost entirely of Australians,
-many of them belonging to the permanent military forces of the
-Commonwealth, but more still men who, before the war, followed civilian
-occupations. Among both categories the quality of the staff work
-steadily grew in efficiency, speed and accuracy, and during the last
-period of active fighting it reached a very high standard indeed.
-
-Had it been otherwise, I could not have carried out either the rapid
-preparations for several of the greater battles, or the frequent and
-complex interchanges of Divisions which alone rendered it possible
-for me to keep up a continuous pressure on the enemy, or the
-readjustments throughout the whole of the very large area always under
-my jurisdiction which became necessary as the advance proceeded.
-
-No reference to the staff work of the Australian Corps during the
-period of my command would be complete without a tribute to the work
-and personality of Brigadier-General T. A. Blamey, my Chief of Staff.
-He possessed a mind cultured far above the average, widely informed,
-alert and prehensile. He had an infinite capacity for taking pains.
-A Staff College graduate, but not on that account a pedant, he was
-thoroughly versed in the technique of staff work, and in the minutiæ of
-all procedure.
-
-He served me with an exemplary loyalty, for which I owe him a debt of
-gratitude which cannot be repaid. Our temperaments adapted themselves
-to each other in a manner which was ideal. He had an extraordinary
-faculty of self-effacement, posing always and conscientiously as the
-instrument to give effect to my policies and decisions. Really helpful
-whenever his advice was invited, he never obtruded his own opinions,
-although I knew that he did not always agree with me.
-
-Some day the orders which he drafted for the long series of
-history-making military operations upon which we collaborated will
-become a model for Staff Colleges and Schools for military instruction.
-They were accurate, lucid in language, perfect in detail, and always
-an exact interpretation of my intention. It was seldom that I thought
-that my orders or instructions could have been better expressed, and no
-Commander could have been more exacting than I was in the matter of the
-use of clear language to express thought.
-
-Blamey was a man of inexhaustible industry, and accepted every task
-with placid readiness. Nothing was ever too much trouble. He worked
-late and early, and set a high standard for the remainder of the large
-Corps Staff of which he was the head. The personal support which he
-accorded to me was of a nature of which I could always feel the real
-substance. I was able to lean on him in times of trouble, stress and
-difficulty, to a degree which was an inexpressible comfort to me.
-
-To the Commanders of the Five Divisions I have already made detailed
-allusion. They were all renowned leaders. To all the Brigadiers of
-Infantry and Artillery and to the Heads of the Administrative Services
-who laboured under them, the limitations of space forbid my making any
-individual reference. But they were all of them men to whose splendid
-services Australia owes a deep debt of gratitude. In their hands the
-honour of Australia's fighting men and the prestige of her arms were in
-safe keeping.
-
-None but men of character and self-devotion could have carried the
-burden which they had to bear during the last six months of the war.
-In spite of stress and difficulty, unremitting toil and wasted effort,
-weary days and sleepless nights, fresh task piling upon the task but
-just begun, labouring even harder during periods of so-called rest
-than when their troops were actually in the line, this gallant band of
-leaders remained steadfast of purpose, never faltered, never lost their
-faith in final victory, never failed to impress their optimism and
-their unflinching fighting spirit upon the men whom they commanded.
-
-It may be appropriate to end this memoir on a personal note. I have
-permitted myself a tone of eulogy for the triumphant achievements of
-the Australian Army Corps in 1918, which I have endeavoured faithfully
-to portray. Let it not be assumed on that account that the humble part
-which it fell to my lot to perform afforded me any satisfaction or
-prompted any enthusiasm for war. Quite the contrary.
-
-From the far-off days of 1914, when the call first came, until the
-last shot was fired, every day was filled with loathing, horror, and
-distress. I deplored all the time the loss of precious life and the
-waste of human effort. Nothing could have been more repugnant to me
-than the realization of the dreadful inefficiency and the misspent
-energy of war. Yet it had to be, and the thought always uppermost was
-the earnest prayer that Australia might for ever be spared such a
-horror on her own soil.
-
-There is, in my belief, only one way to realize such a prayer. The
-nation that wishes to defend its land and its honour must spare no
-effort, refuse no sacrifice to make itself so formidable that no enemy
-will dare to assail it. A League of Nations may be an instrument for
-the preservation of peace, but an efficient Army is a far more potent
-one.
-
-The essential components of such an Army are a qualified Staff, an
-adequate equipment and a trained soldiery. I state them in what I
-believe to be their order of importance, and my belief is based upon
-the lessons which this war has taught me. In that way alone can
-Australia secure the sanctity of her territory and the preservation of
-her independent liberties.
-
-Such a creed is not militarism, but is of the very essence of national
-self-preservation. For long years before the war it was the creed of a
-small handful of men in Australia, who braved the indifference and even
-the ridicule of public opinion in order to try to qualify themselves
-for the test when it should come. Four dreadful years of war have
-served to convince me of the truth of that creed, and to confirm me in
-the belief that the men of the coming generation, if they love their
-country, must take up the burden which these men have had to bear.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX A
-
- GROUPING INTO AUSTRALIAN DIVISIONS OF ARTILLERY AND
- INFANTRY BRIGADES, DURING THE PERIOD MAY TO OCTOBER,
- 1918, AND THE GENERAL OFFICERS COMMANDING THEM.
-
-FIRST DIVISION (Glasgow):
-
- _Artillery_, 1st and 2nd Brigades (Anderson).
- _Infantry_, 1st Brigade (Mackay).
- 2nd " (Heane).
- 3rd " (Bennett).
-
-SECOND DIVISION (Rosenthal):
-
- _Artillery_, 4th and 5th Brigades (Phillips).
- _Infantry_, 5th Brigade (Martin).
- 6th " (Robertson).
- 7th " (Wisdom).
-
-THIRD DIVISION (Gellibrand):
-
- _Artillery_, 7th and 8th Brigades (Grimwade).
- _Infantry_, 9th Brigade (Goddard).
- 10th " (McNicoll).
- 11th " (Cannan).
-
-FOURTH DIVISION (Maclagan):
-
- _Artillery_, 10th and 11th Brigades (Burgess).
- _Infantry_, 4th Brigade (Brand).
- 12th " (Leane).
- 13th " (Herring).
-
-FIFTH DIVISION (Hobbs):
-
- _Artillery_, 13th and 14th Brigades (Bessel-Browne).
- _Infantry_, 8th Brigade (Tivey).
- 14th " (Stewart).
- 15th " (Elliott).
-
-The 3rd, 6th and 12th Artillery Brigades were Corps Troops not forming
-part of any Division. The 9th Artillery Brigade was disbanded at the
-end of 1916.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX B
-
-
-In order to illustrate the nature of the individual fighting carried
-out by the Australian Corps, during the period covered by this book,
-the following very small selection has been made from the official
-records of deeds of gallantry by individual soldiers. In every one of
-these twenty-nine cases, the VICTORIA CROSS has been awarded by His
-Majesty the King:
-
- No. 4061, SERGEANT STANLEY ROBERT MACDOUGALL, 47th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "At DERNANCOURT, on morning of 28th March, 1918, the enemy
- attacked our line, and his first wave succeeded in gaining an
- entry. Sergt. MacDougall, who was at a post in a flank company,
- realized the situation, and at once charged the enemy's second
- wave single-handed with rifle and bayonet, killing 7 and capturing
- Machine Gun which they had. This he turned on to them, firing
- from the hip, causing many casualties, and routing that wave. He
- then turned his attention to those who had entered, until his
- ammunition had run out, all the time firing at close quarters, when
- he seized a bayonet and charged again, killing three men and a
- German officer, who was just about to kill one of our officers. He
- then used a Lewis Gun on the enemy, killing many and enabling us to
- capture 33 prisoners. His prompt action saved the line and enabled
- us to stop the enemy advance."
-
-LIEUTENANT PERCY VALENTINE STORKEY, 19th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "Lieut. Storkey was in charge of a platoon which took part in
- the attack at BOIS DE HANGARD on morning of 7th April, 1918. On
- emerging from the wood, the enemy trench line was encountered, and
- Lieut. Storkey found himself with 6 men. While continuing his move
- forward, a large enemy party--about 80 to 100 strong--armed with
- several machine guns, was noticed to be holding up the advance of
- the troops on the right. Lieut. Storkey immediately decided to
- attack this party from the flank and rear, and while moving forward
- to the attack, was joined by Lieut. Lipscomb and four men. Under
- the leadership of Lieut. Storkey, this small party of 2 officers
- and 10 other ranks charged the enemy position with fixed bayonets,
- driving the enemy out, killing and wounding about 30 and capturing
- the remainder, viz.: 3 officers and 50 men, also one machine gun."
-
- LIEUTENANT CLIFFORD WILLIAM KING SADLIER, 51st Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For conspicuous gallantry on the night of 24-25th April, 1918,
- during a counter-attack by his Battalion on strong enemy positions
- south of VILLERS-BRETONNEUX, east of Amiens. Lieut. Sadlier's
- platoon, which was on the left of the Battalion, had to advance
- through a wood, where they encountered a strong enemy machine-gun
- post, which caused casualties and prevented the platoon from
- advancing. Although himself wounded, this officer at once collected
- his bombing section, and led them against the machine guns,
- succeeding in killing the crews and capturing two of the guns. By
- this time Lieut. Sadlier's party were all casualties, and he alone
- attacked a third enemy machine gun with his revolver, killing the
- crew of four and taking the gun. In doing so, he was again wounded,
- and unable to go on."
-
-No. 1914, SERGEANT WILLIAM RUTHVEN, 22nd Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For most conspicuous bravery and daring in action during the
- attack at VILLE-SUR-ANCRE, near Albert, on 19th May, 1918.
- During the advance Sergeant Ruthven's Company suffered numerous
- casualties, and his Company Commander was severely wounded. He then
- assumed command of his portion of the assault, took charge of the
- Company Headquarters, and rallied the sections in his vicinity.
- As the leading wave approached its objective, it was subjected to
- heavy fire from an enemy Machine Gun at 30 to 40 yards' range,
- directly in front. This N.C.O., without hesitation, at once sprang
- out, threw a bomb which landed beside the post, and immediately
- rushed the position, bayoneting one of the crew and capturing the
- gun. He then encountered some of the enemy coming out of a shelter.
- He wounded two, captured six others in the same position, and
- handed them over to an escort from the leading wave, which had now
- reached the objective. Sergeant Ruthven then reorganized our men in
- his vicinity, and established a post in the second objective. Enemy
- movement was then seen in a sunken road about 150 yards distant.
- Without hesitation, and armed only with a revolver, he went over
- the open alone and rushed the position, shooting two Germans who
- refused to come out of their dug-out. He then single-handed mopped
- up this post, and captured the whole of the garrison, amounting in
- all to 32, and kept them until assistance arrived to escort them
- back to our lines. During the remainder of the day this gallant
- N.C.O. set a splendid example of leadership, moving up and down his
- position under fire, supervising consolidation and encouraging his
- men."
-
-No. 1327, CORPORAL PHILLIP DAVEY, M.M., 10th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "In a daylight operation against the enemy position near MERRIS on
- June 28th, 1918, Corporal Davey's platoon advanced 200 yards and
- captured part of enemy line. While the platoon was consolidating,
- the enemy pushed a machine gun forward under cover of a hedge,
- and opened fire from close range, inflicting heavy casualties and
- hampering work. Alone Corporal Davey moved forward in the face of
- a fierce point-blank fire, and attacked the gun with hand grenades,
- putting half the crew out of action. Having used all available
- grenades, he returned to the original jumping-off trench, secured
- a further supply and again attacked the gun, the crew of which had
- in the meantime been reinforced. He killed the crew, 8 in all, and
- captured the gun. This gallant N.C.O. then mounted the gun in the
- new post and used it in repelling a determined counter-attack,
- during which he was severely wounded in both legs, back and
- stomach."
-
-No. 3399, PRIVATE (LANCE-CORPORAL) THOMAS LESLIE AXFORD, M.M., 16th
-Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For conspicuous gallantry and initiative during the operations
- against VAIRE and HAMEL WOODS, east of Corbie, on the morning
- of the 4th July, 1918. When the barrage lifted and the Infantry
- advance commenced, the platoon of which he is a member was able
- to reach the first enemy defences through gaps which had been cut
- in the wires. The adjoining platoon got delayed in uncut barbed
- wire. This delay enabled the enemy machine guns to get into action,
- and enabled them to inflict a number of casualties among the men
- struggling through the wires, including the Company Commander,
- who was killed. L.-Corporal Axford, with great initiative and
- magnificent courage, at once dashed to the flank, threw his bombs
- amongst the machine-gun crews; followed up his bombs by jumping
- into the trench, and charging with his bayonet. Unaided he killed
- ten of the enemy and took 6 prisoners; he threw the machine
- guns over the parapet, and called out to the delayed platoon to
- come on. He then rejoined his own platoon, and fought with it
- during the remainder of the operations. Prior to the incidents
- above-mentioned, he had assisted in the laying out of the tapes for
- the jumping-off position, which was within 100 yards of the enemy.
- When the tapes were laid, he remained out as a special patrol to
- ensure that the enemy did not discover any unusual movement on our
- side."
-
-No. 1936, PRIVATE HENRY DALZIEL, 15th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For his magnificent bravery and devotion to duty during operations
- near HAMEL WOOD, east of Corbie, on 4th July, 1918. He was No. 2
- of a Lewis Gun Section, and at the commencement of our advance his
- Company met with determined resistance from Pear Trench strong
- point, which was strongly garrisoned and manned by numerous machine
- guns. This strong point, undamaged by our artillery fire, was
- protected by strong wire entanglements. A heavy concentration of
- machine-gun fire caused heavy casualties and held up our advance.
- His Lewis Gun came into action and silenced enemy guns in one
- direction, when another enemy gun opened up from another direction.
- Private Dalziel dashed at it, and with his revolver killed or
- captured the entire crew and gun, and allowed our advance to
- continue. He was severely wounded in the hand, but carried on and
- took part in the capture of the final objective. He twice went
- over open ground under heavy enemy artillery and machine-gun fire
- to where our aeroplanes had dropped some boxes of ammunition,
- and carried back a box on each occasion to his gun, and though
- suffering from considerable loss of blood, he filled magazines and
- served his gun until severely wounded through the head."
-
-No. 1689A, CORPORAL WALTER ERNEST BROWN, D.C.M., 20th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For gallant service on the morning of 6th July, 1918, north-east
- of VILLERS-BRETONNEUX, east of Amiens. This N.C.O. was one of an
- advanced party from his Battalion making arrangements with the
- Battalion then in the line for relief by his own Battalion. As
- such he was under no obligation to participate in any offensive
- operations before his Battalion took over the line. During the
- night of 5th-6th July the Company to which he was attached
- carried out a minor operation resulting in the capture of a small
- system of enemy trench. Early on the morning of 6th July an enemy
- strong post, about 70 yards distant, caused the occupants of the
- newly-captured trench great inconvenience by persistent sniping.
- It was decided to rush this post. Hearing of this, Corporal Brown,
- on his own initiative, crept out along the shallow trench towards
- the enemy post, and then made a dash across No Man's Land towards
- this post. An enemy machine gun opened fire from another trench,
- and he had to take cover by lying down. He later made another dash
- forward, and succeeded in reaching his objective. With a Mills
- grenade in his hand, he stood at the door of a dug-out and called
- on the occupants to surrender. One of the enemy rushed out, a
- scuffle ensued, and Corporal Brown knocked him down with his fist.
- Loud cries of 'Kamerad' were then heard, and from the dug-out an
- officer and eleven other ranks appeared. Driving them before him,
- Corporal Brown brought back the complete party as prisoners to our
- line."
-
-LIEUTENANT ALBERT CHALMERS BORELLA, M.M., 26th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For exceptional gallantry in the attack near VILLERS-BRETONNEUX,
- on the 17th-18th July, 1918. Whilst leading his platoon with the
- first wave, Lieut. Borella noticed an enemy machine gun firing
- through our barrage--he ran out ahead of his men into the barrage,
- shot two German machine gunners with his revolver, and captured the
- gun. He then led his party, now reduced to ten men and two Lewis
- Guns, further on, against JAFFA TRENCH, which was very strongly
- held, but using his revolver, and later a rifle, with great effect,
- Lieut. Borella shot down the enemy right and left, and set such a
- splendid example, that the garrison were quickly shot and captured.
- Two large dug-outs were bombed here and thirty prisoners taken.
- After reorganization the enemy counter-attacked twice in strong
- force, on the second occasion outnumbering Lieut. Borella's platoon
- by ten to one; but he showed such coolness and determination, that
- the men put up an heroic resistance, and twice repulsed the enemy
- with very heavy loss. It is estimated that from 100 to 150 Germans
- were killed in this vicinity. When Lieut. Borella refused his left
- flank about 40 yards during the first counter-attack he sent his
- men back one at a time, and was himself the last to leave, under
- heavy fire."
-
- LIEUTENANT ALFRED EDWARD GABY, 28th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "During the attack east of VILLERS-BRETONNEUX, near Amiens, on the
- morning of 8th August, 1918, this officer led his Company with
- great dash, being well in front. On reaching the wire in front of
- the enemy trench, strong opposition was encountered. The enemy were
- holding a strong point in force about 40 yards beyond the wire, and
- commanded the gap with four machine guns and rifles. The advance
- was at once checked. Lieut. Gaby found another gap in the wire,
- and entirely by himself approached the strong point, while machine
- guns and rifles were still being fired from it. Running along the
- parapet, still alone, and at point-blank range, he emptied his
- revolver into the garrison, drove the crews from their guns, and
- compelled the surrender of 50 of the enemy, with four machine guns.
- He then quickly reorganized his men and led them on to his final
- objective, which he captured and consolidated. On the morning of
- the 11th August, 1918, during an attack east of FRAMERVILLE, Lieut.
- Gaby again led his Company with great dash on to the objective. The
- enemy brought heavy rifle and machine-gun fire to bear upon the
- line, but in the face of this heavy fire Lieut. Gaby walked along
- his line of posts, encouraging his men to quickly consolidate the
- line. While engaged on this duty he was killed by an enemy sniper."
-
-No. 2742, PRIVATE ROBERT MATTHEW BEATHAM, 8th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty during the attack
- north of ROSIÈRES on 9th August, 1918. Private Beatham showed
- such heroism and courage, that he inspired all officers and men
- in his vicinity in a wonderful manner. When the advance was held
- up by heavy machine-gun fire, Private Beatham dashed forward and,
- assisted by one man, bombed and fought the crews of four enemy
- machine guns, killing ten of them and capturing ten others. The
- bravery of the action greatly facilitated the advance of the whole
- Battalion and prevented casualties. In fighting the crew of the
- first gun he was shot through the right leg, but continued in the
- advance. When the final objective was reached and fierce fighting
- was taking place, he again dashed forward and bombed the machine
- gun that was holding our men off, getting riddled with bullets and
- killed in doing so."
-
-No. 506, SERGEANT PERCY CLYDE STATTON, M.M., 40th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For most conspicuous gallantry and initiative in action near
- PROYART on 12th August, 1918. The platoon commanded by Sergeant
- Statton reached its objective, but the remainder of the Battalion
- was held up by heavy machine-gun fire. He skilfully engaged two
- machine-gun posts with Lewis Gun fire, enabling the remainder of
- his Battalion to advance. The advance of the Battalion on his left
- had been brought to a standstill by the heavy enemy machine-gun
- fire, and the first of our assaulting detachments to reach the
- machine-gun posts were put out of action in taking the first gun.
- Armed only with a revolver, in broad daylight, Sergeant Statton at
- once rushed four enemy machine-gun posts in succession, disposing
- of two of them, killing five of the enemy. The remaining two posts
- retired and were wiped out by Lewis Gun fire. This N.C.O.'s act had
- a very inspiring effect on the troops who had been held up, and
- they cheered him as he returned. By his daring exploit he enabled
- the attacking troops to gain their objective. Later in the evening,
- under heavy machine-gun fire, he went out again and brought in two
- badly-wounded men."
-
-LIEUTENANT LAWRENCE DOMINIC MCCARTHY, 16th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "This officer is especially brought to notice for his wonderful
- gallantry, initiative and leadership on the morning of the 23rd
- August, 1918, when an attack was being made near MADAME WOOD, west
- of Vernandivukkers. The objectives of this Battalion were attained
- without serious opposition. The Battalion on the left flank were
- less fortunate. Here several well-posted machine-gun posts were
- holding up the attack, and heavy fire was being brought to bear on
- our left flank. When Lieut. McCarthy realized the situation, he at
- once engaged the nearest machine-gun post; but still the attacking
- troops failed to get forward. This officer then determined to
- attack the nearest post. Leaving his men to continue the fire
- fight, he, with two others, dashed across the open and dropped
- into a disused trench which had been blocked. One of his two men
- was killed whilst doing this. He was now right under the block
- over which the enemy machine gun was firing. The presence of head
- cover prevented the use of bombs. He therefore tunnelled a hole
- through the bottom of the block, through which he inserted his head
- and one arm. He at once shot dead the two men firing the gun. He
- then crawled through the hole he had made, and by himself charged
- down the trench. He threw his limited number of Mills bombs among
- the German garrison and inflicted more casualties. He then came
- in contact with two German officers, who fired on him with their
- revolvers. One of these he shot dead with his revolver, the other
- he seriously wounded. He then charged down the trench, using his
- revolver and throwing enemy stick bombs, and capturing three more
- enemy machine guns. At this stage, some 700 yards from his starting
- point, he was joined by the N.C.O., whom he had outdistanced when
- he crawled through the hole in the trench block mentioned above.
- Together they continued to bomb up the trench, until touch was
- established with the Lancashire Fusiliers, and in the meanwhile
- yet another machine gun had been captured. A total of 5 machine
- guns and 50 prisoners (37 unwounded and 13 wounded) was captured,
- while Lieut. McCarthy during his most amazing and daring feat
- had, single-handed, killed 20 of the enemy. Having cleared up a
- dangerous situation, he proceeded to establish a garrison in the
- line. Whilst doing this he saw a number of the enemy getting away
- from neighbouring trenches. He at once seized a Lewis Gun and
- inflicted further casualties on the enemy."
-
- LIEUTENANT WILLIAM DONOVAN JOYNT, 8th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty during the attack
- on HERLEVILLE WOOD, near Chuignes, on 23rd August, 1918. Early
- in the advance Lieut. Joynt's Company Commander was killed; he
- immediately took charge of the Company and led them with courage
- and skill. A great deal of the success of the operation in this
- portion of the sector was directly due to his magnificent work.
- When the advance was commenced the Battalion was moving into
- support to another Battalion. On approaching Herleville Wood,
- the troops of the leading Battalion lost all their officers and
- became disorganized. Under very heavy fire, and having no leaders,
- they appeared certain to be annihilated. Lieut. Joynt grasped
- the situation, and rushed forward in the teeth of very heavy
- machine-gun and artillery fire over the open. He got the remaining
- men under control, and worked them into a piece of dead ground,
- until he could reform them. He manoeuvred his own men forward,
- and linked them up with the men of the other Battalion. He then
- made a personal reconnaissance, and found that the fire from the
- wood was holding the whole advance up, the troops on his flanks
- suffering very heavy casualties. Dashing out in front of his men,
- he called them on, and by sheer force of example inspired them into
- a magnificent frontal bayonet attack on the wood. The audacity
- of the move over the open staggered the enemy, and Lieut. Joynt
- succeeded in penetrating the wood and working through it. By his
- leadership and courage a very critical situation was saved, and
- on this officer rests to the greatest extent the success of the
- Brigade's attack. When the Battalion on our left was held up on
- Plateau Wood, and was suffering severe casualties, Lieut. Joynt,
- with a small party of volunteers, worked right forward against
- heavy opposition, and by means of hand-to-hand fighting forced his
- way round the rear of the wood, penetrating it from that side, and
- demoralizing the enemy to such an extent that a very stubborn and
- victorious defensive was changed into an abject surrender. He was
- always in the hardest pressed parts of the line, and seemed to
- bear a charmed life. He was constantly ready to run any personal
- risk and to assist flank units. He continually showed magnificent
- leadership, and his example to his men had a wonderful effect on
- them, causing them to follow him cheerfully in his most daring
- exploits. He continued to do magnificent work until he was badly
- wounded by shell fire in the legs."
-
-No. 23, PRIVATE (LANCE-CORPORAL) BERNARD SYDNEY GORDON, 41st Battalion,
-A.I.F.
-
- "During the operations of the 26-27th August, 1918, east of BRAY,
- this N.C.O. showed most conspicuous gallantry and devotion to
- duty in the face of the enemy. He led his section through heavy
- enemy shelling to its objective, which he consolidated. Then
- single-handed he attacked an enemy machine gun which was enfilading
- the Company on his right, killed the man on the gun, and captured
- the post, which contained one officer (a Captain) and 10 men.
- After handing these over at Company Headquarters, he returned alone
- to the old system of trenches, in which were many machine guns;
- entered a trench and proceeded to mop it up, returning with 15
- prisoners in one squad and 14 in another, together with two machine
- guns. Again he returned to the system, this time with a Trench
- Mortar gun and crew, and proceeded to mop up a further portion of
- the trench, bringing in 22 prisoners, including one officer and
- 3 machine guns. This last capture enabled the British troops on
- our left to advance, which they had not been able to do owing to
- machine-gun fire from these posts. His total captures were thus 2
- officers and 61 other ranks, together with 6 machine guns, and with
- the exception of the Trench Mortar assistance, it was absolutely an
- individual effort and done entirely on his own initiative."
-
-No. 726, PRIVATE GEORGE CARTWRIGHT, 33rd Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For most conspicuous valour and devotion to duty. On the morning
- of the 31st August, 1918, during the attack on ROAD WOOD,
- south-west of Bouchavesnes, near Péronne, Private Cartwright
- displayed exceptional gallantry and supreme disregard for
- personal danger in the face of a most withering machine-gun
- fire. Two Companies were held up by a machine-gun firing from
- the south-western edge of the wood. Without hesitation, this man
- stood up, and walking towards the gun, fired his rifle from his
- shoulder. He shot the No. 1 Gunner; another German manned the gun,
- and he killed him; a third attempted to fire the gun and him he
- also killed. Private Cartwright then threw a bomb at the post, and
- on its exploding, he rushed forward, captured the gun and nine
- Germans. Our line then immediately rushed forward, loudly cheering
- him. This magnificent deed had a most inspiring effect on the whole
- line; all strove to emulate his gallantry. Throughout the operation
- Private Cartwright displayed wonderful dash, grim determination and
- courage of the highest order."
-
-LIEUTENANT EDGAR THOMAS TOWNER, M.C., 2nd Australian Machine Gun
-Battalion.
-
- "On 1st September, 1918, in the attack on MONT ST. QUENTIN, near
- Péronne, this officer was in charge of 4 Vickers guns operating on
- a front of 1,500 yards. During the early stages of the advance an
- enemy machine gun was causing casualties to our advancing Infantry.
- Locating the gun, Lieut. Towner dashed ahead alone, and succeeded
- in killing the crew with his revolver, capturing the gun, and
- then, by turning it against the enemy, inflicted heavy casualties
- on them. Advancing then past a copse from which the enemy were
- firing, he brought his guns into action, placing his fire behind
- the enemy and cutting them off. On their attempting to retire
- before the advancing Infantry, and finding they were prevented by
- this machine-gun fire, the party of 25 Germans surrendered. He then
- reconnoitred alone over open ground exposed to heavy machine-gun
- and snipers' fire, and by the energy, foresight and the promptitude
- with which he brought fire to bear on further enemy groups, enabled
- the Infantry to reach a sunken road. On moving his guns up to
- the sunken road, he found himself short of ammunition, so went
- back across the open under heavy fire and obtained a German gun,
- and brought it and boxes of ammunition into the sunken road. Here
- he mounted and fired the gun in full view of the enemy, causing
- the enemy to retire further, and enabling Infantry on the flank,
- who were previously held up, to advance. Enemy machine gunners
- having direct observation, flicked the earth round and under this
- gun, and played a tattoo along the top of the bank. Though one
- bullet went into his helmet and inflicted a gaping scalp wound, he
- continued firing. Subsequently he refused to go out to have his
- wound attended to, as the situation was critical and his place
- was with his men. Later in the day the Infantry were obliged to
- retire slightly, and one gun was left behind. Lieut. Towner, seeing
- this, dashed back over the open, carried the gun back in spite of
- terrific fire, and brought it into action again. He continued to
- engage the enemy wherever they appeared, and put an enemy machine
- gun out of action. During the following night he insisted on doing
- his tour of duty along with the other officers, and his coolness
- and cheerfulness set an example which had a great effect on the
- men. To steady and calm the men of a small detached outpost, he
- crawled out among the enemy posts to investigate. He remained out
- about an hour, though enemy machine guns fired continuously on the
- sector, and the Germans were moving about him. He moved one gun up
- in support of the Infantry post, and patrolled the communication
- saps which ran off this post into the German line during the
- remainder of the night. Next morning, after his guns assisted in
- dispersing a large party of the enemy, he was led away utterly
- exhausted, 30 hours after being wounded."
-
-No. 2358, SERGEANT ALBERT DAVID LOWERSON, 21st Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "At MONT ST, QUENTIN, north of Péronne, on the 1st September,
- 1918, this N.C.O. displayed courage and tactical skill of the
- very highest order during the attack on this village. Very strong
- opposition was met with early in the attack, and every foot of
- ground was stubbornly contested by the enemy located in very
- strong positions. This N.C.O.'s example during the fighting was
- of the greatest value. He moved about, regardless of the heavy
- enemy machine-gun fire, directing his men, encouraging them to
- still greater effort, and finally led them on to the objective.
- On reaching the objective, he saw that the left attacking party
- had not met with success, and that the attack was held up by an
- enemy strong post, heavily manned with 12 machine guns. Under the
- heaviest sniping and machine gun fire Sergeant Lowerson rallied
- seven men around him into a storming party, and deployed them to
- attack the post from both flanks, one party of three being killed
- immediately. He himself then rushed the strong point, and, with
- effective bombing, inflicted heavy casualties on the enemy, and
- captured the post containing 12 machine guns and 30 prisoners.
- Though severely wounded in the right thigh, he refused to leave the
- front line until the prisoners had been dispatched to the rear, and
- the organization and consolidation of the post by our men had been
- completed. When he saw that the position was thoroughly secure,
- he returned to the rear, but refused to leave the Battalion until
- forced to evacuate two days later by the seriousness of his wound.
- This act was the culminating point of a series of most gallant
- performances by this N.C.O. during the fighting extending over a
- week."
-
-No. 1584A, PRIVATE WILLIAM MATTHEW CURREY, 53rd Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "During the attack on PÉRONNE, on the morning of 1st September,
- 1918, Private Currey displayed most conspicuous gallantry and
- daring. During the early stage of the advance the Battalion was
- suffering heavy casualties from a 77 mm. Field Gun, that was
- firing over sights at very close range. Private Currey, without
- hesitation, rushed forward, and despite a withering machine-gun
- fire that was directed on him from either flank, succeeded in
- capturing the gun single-handed after killing the entire crew.
- Later, when continuing the advance, an enemy strong point,
- containing 30 men and two machine guns, was noticed, which was
- holding up the advance of the left flank. Private Currey crept
- around the flank, and engaged the post with a Lewis Gun, causing
- many casualties. Finally, he rushed the post single-handed,
- killing four, wounding two, and taking one prisoner, the survivors
- running away. It was entirely owing to his gallant conduct that
- the situation was relieved, and the advance enabled to continue.
- After the final stage of the attack, it was imperative that one of
- the Companies that had become isolated should be withdrawn. This
- man at once volunteered to carry the message, although the ground
- to be crossed was very heavily shelled and continuously swept by
- machine-gun fire. He crossed the shell and bullet-swept area three
- times in the effort to locate the Company, and on one occasion his
- box respirator was shot through by machine-gun bullets, and he was
- gassed. Nevertheless, he remained on duty, and after finding the
- isolated Company, delivered the message, and returned with very
- valuable information from the Company Commander. Owing to the gas
- poisoning from which he was suffering Currey had shortly afterwards
- to be evacuated."
-
-No. 6939, PRIVATE ROBERT MACTIER, 23rd Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "On the morning of 1st September, 1918, during the operation
- entailing capture of MONT ST. QUENTIN, this man stands out for
- the greatest bravery and devotion to duty. Fifteen minutes before
- zero two bombing patrols were sent to clear up several enemy
- strong points close to our line, but they met with very stubborn
- resistance and no success, and the Battalion was unable to move on
- to its Jumping Off Trench. Mactier, single-handed and in daylight,
- then jumped out of the trench from the leading Company, rushed past
- the block, closed with and killed the machine-gun garrison of 8 men
- with his revolver and bombs, and threw the enemy machine gun over
- the parapet. He rushed forward another 20 yards and jumped into
- another strong point held by a garrison of 6 men, who immediately
- surrendered. Continuing to the next block through the trench, an
- enemy gun, which had been enfilading our flank advancing troops,
- was swung on to him; but he jumped out of the trench into the open,
- and disposed of this third post and gun crew by bombing them from
- the rear. Before he could get into this trench, he was killed by
- enemy machine gun at close range. In the three posts which Mactier
- rushed, 15 of the enemy were found killed and 30 taken prisoners."
-
-No. 1876, CORPORAL ALEXANDER HENRY BUCKLEY, 54th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For most conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty at PÉRONNE
- during the operations on 1st-2nd September, 1918. After passing
- the first objective, his half Company and part of the Company on
- the flank were held up by an enemy machine-gun nest. With one man
- he rushed the post, shooting 4 of the occupants and taking 22
- prisoners. Later on, reaching a moat, another machine-gun nest
- commanded the only available foot-bridge. Whilst this was being
- engaged from a flank, this N.C.O. endeavoured to cross the bridge
- and rush the post, but was killed in the attempt. Throughout the
- advance he had displayed great initiative, resource and courage,
- being a great inspiration to his men. In order to avert casualties
- amongst his comrades and to permit of their advance, he voluntarily
- essayed a task which practically meant certain death. He set a fine
- example of self-sacrificing devotion to duty and bravery."
-
-No. 2631, CORPORAL ARTHUR CHARLES HALL, 54th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For most conspicuous gallantry, brilliant leadership and devotion
- to duty during the operations at PÉRONNE on 1st and 2nd September,
- 1918. A machine-gun post in the enemy front line was holding up
- the advance; alone, this N.C.O. rushed the position, shot 4 of the
- occupants as he advanced, and captured 9 others and 2 machine guns.
- Then, crossing the objective with a small party, he reconnoitred
- the approaches to the town, covering the infiltration of the
- remainder of the Company. During the mopping up he continuously--in
- advance of the main party--located enemy posts of resistance, and
- then personally led parties to the assault. In this way he captured
- many small parties of prisoners and machine-guns. On the morning
- of 2nd September, during a heavy barrage on the newly consolidated
- position, a man of his platoon was severely wounded. Seeing that
- only immediate medical attention could save him, Corporal Hall
- volunteered and carried the man out of the barrage, handed him to
- a stretcher-bearer, and immediately returned to his post. This
- Company was heavily engaged throughout the day, only one Officer
- remaining unwounded."
-
-No. 1153, PRIVATE (LANCE-CORPORAL) LAURENCE CARTHAGE WEATHERS, 43rd
-Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "On the 2nd September, 1918, during operations north of PÉRONNE,
- Lance-Corporal Weathers was one of an advanced bombing party
- operating well forward of our attacking troops. Just before the
- attack reached its final objective it was held up by the enemy,
- who occupied a trench in great numbers. After an hour's continuous
- fighting Lance-Corporal Weathers went forward alone in face of
- heavy enemy fire and located a large body of them. He immediately
- attacked the enemy with bombs and killed the senior officer; then
- made his way back to our lines and, securing a further supply of
- bombs and taking three men with him, he went forward and again
- attacked under very heavy fire. On reaching the enemy position,
- he jumped up on the parapet of the trench and threw bombs among
- the Bosche. He then signalled for his comrades to come up, and the
- remainder of the enemy, seeing this, surrendered. When counted, the
- number of prisoners totalled 100 and 3 machine guns."
-
-No. 3244, PRIVATE JAMES PARK WOODS, 48th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty during the
- operations near LE VERGUIER, north-west of St. Quentin, on the 18th
- September, 1918. Woods formed one of a party of three to patrol
- the right flank. He encountered a very formidable enemy strong
- point, consisting of about 25 men with four heavy and two light
- machine guns. This strong point commanded the greater portion of
- our position, and it was of the utmost importance to us, insomuch
- as it gave us a commanding view of the whole canal system. The
- strong point was situated at the junction of four enemy fire
- trenches, apparently sited with a view to protecting the approaches
- to the village of Bellenglise. Private Woods, appreciating the
- great importance of this position, and realizing the necessity
- for its immediate capture, fearlessly attacked with his rifle and
- bayonet, capturing one of the enemy and wounding the second with
- his bayonet, forcing the remainder to retire. After the capture of
- the strong point, it was found that one of the party was wounded.
- Private Woods, although himself slightly gassed, stubbornly
- defended the post. The enemy ascertaining that only two men opposed
- them, immediately attempted to recapture the strong point. The
- counter-attack by the enemy was carried out with at least 30 men
- attacking up the three trenches and across the open ground. This
- meant that Private Woods was attacked from both flanks and the
- front. He fearlessly jumped on the parapet, and opened fire on
- the attacking enemy, inflicting several casualties. During this
- operation he was exposed to very heavy machine-gun, rifle fire
- and bombing, but with dogged determination he kept up his fire,
- thus holding up the enemy until help arrived, enabling the enemy
- counter-attack to be repulsed with heavy losses. The capture of
- this strong post was the means of securing our flank, which had
- previously been in the air, and also enabled us to get in touch
- with the troops on our flank."
-
-No. 6594, SERGEANT GERALD SEXTON, 13th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "In the attack near LE VERGUIER, north-west of St. Quentin, on
- the 18th September, 1918, Sergeant Sexton displayed the most
- conspicuous bravery and performed deeds which, apart from their
- gallant nature, were in a great measure responsible for the
- Battalion's success. On the southern edge of the village of Le
- Verguier the enemy fought hard, and serious opposition had to
- be crushed. During the whole period of the advance, Sergeant
- Sexton was to the fore dealing with enemy machine guns by firing
- from the hip as he advanced, rushing enemy posts, and performing
- feats of bravery and endurance, which are better appreciated when
- one realizes that all the time he fired his Lewis Gun from the
- hip without faltering or for a moment taking cover. Immediately
- the attack commenced, Sergeant Sexton's Lewis Gun Section was
- confronted by an enemy machine gun. He called out to his section
- to follow, rushed the machine gun and killed the crew. He then
- called out to the rest of the Company to follow, but they had not
- gone far when they encountered some bombers and riflemen about 70
- yards in front of the Company. Sexton rushed the trench, firing
- his gun from the hip, and killed or took prisoner all the members
- of the post. Continuing, he entered a copse, and killed or took
- prisoner another party of the enemy. The advance continued over the
- ridge at Le Verguier to where Sexton was met by Lieut. Price, who
- pointed out a party of the enemy manning a bank, and a field gun
- in action which was causing casualties and holding up a Company.
- There was also a trench mortar in action. Sergeant Sexton did not
- wait, but firing a few short bursts as he advanced, and calling
- out to his section to follow, rushed down the bank and killed the
- gunners on the field gun. Dashing out on to a flat under fire from
- two hostile machine guns directed on him, he killed 12 more of the
- enemy. Paying no heed to the machine-gun fire, he returned to the
- bank, and after firing down some dug-outs, induced about 30 of the
- enemy to surrender. Owing to his action the Company on the left
- of the Battalion was able to continue the advance where they had
- been definitely held up, and were suffering from the effects of the
- field gun. When the advance was continued from the first to the
- second objective, the Company was again held up by two machine guns
- on the right and one on the left. In conjunction with a Platoon,
- Sexton engaged the machine gun on the left, firing all the while
- from the upright position, a fearless figure which, according to
- eye-witnesses, inspired everyone. To have taken cover would have
- been more prudent, but Sexton realized that prompt action was
- essential, and did not wait to assume the prone position. Silencing
- this gun, he turned his attention to the two machine guns on the
- right and silenced them. He then moved forward into a trench,
- killing quite a number of the enemy and, advancing along a sap,
- took a few prisoners. Further on he was responsible for a few more
- small posts, and, on the final objective, being given a responsible
- post on the left of his Company, he engaged a machine gun which
- was firing across the Company front, and thus enabled his Company
- to dig in. This completed, he went forward down a sunken road and
- captured several more prisoners."
-
-MAJOR BLAIR ANDERSON WARK, D.S.O., 32nd Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "During the period 29th September-1st October, 1918, in the
- operations against the HINDENBURG LINE at BELLICOURT, and the
- advance through NAUROY, ETRICOURT, MAGNY LA FOSSE and JONCOURT,
- Major Wark, in command of the 32nd Battalion, displayed most
- conspicuous gallantry and set a fine example of personal bravery,
- energy, coolness, and control under extremely difficult
- conditions. On 29th September, under heavy artillery and
- machine-gun fire at very close range from all sides and in a dense
- fog, Major Wark, finding that the situation was critical, moved
- quickly forward alone and obtained sufficient information regarding
- the situation in front to be able to lead his command forward. At
- this time American troops were at a standstill and disorganized,
- and Major Wark quickly organized more than 200 of them, and
- attached them to his leading Companies and pressed forward. By
- his prompt action in the early stages of the battle he narrowly
- averted what would have resulted in great confusion on the part
- of the attack-troops. Still moving fearlessly at the head of his
- leading Companies, and at most times far out in advance, attended
- only by a runner, he cheered his men on, and they swept through the
- Hindenburg defences towards Nauroy. Pushing quickly through Nauroy,
- and mopping up the southern portion of the village, the process
- yielding 50 prisoners, the Battalion swung towards Etricourt.
- Still leading his assaulting Companies, he observed a battery of
- 77 mm. guns firing point-blank into his rear Companies and causing
- heavy casualties. Calling on a few of his men to him he rushed the
- battery, capturing the 4 guns and 10 of the crew; the remainder of
- the crew fled or were killed. Moving rapidly forward with only two
- N.C.O.'s, he surprised and captured 50 Germans near Magny la Fosse.
- Quickly seizing this opportunity, he pushed one Company forward
- through the village and made good the position. Having captured
- his objectives for the day, and personally reconnoitring to see
- that his flanks were safe, he found his command in a very difficult
- and dangerous position, his left flank being exposed to the extent
- of 3,000 yards on account of the 31st Battalion not being able
- to advance. He, after a strenuous day's fighting, set about the
- selection and reorganization of a new position, and effected a
- junction with British troops on the right and 31st Battalion on the
- left, and made his line secure. At 6 a.m. on 30th September, he
- again led his command forward to allow of the troops on the right
- being able to advance. The men were tired and had suffered heavily,
- but he personally led them, and his presence amongst them inspired
- them to further efforts. On October 1st, 1918, his Battalion was
- ordered to advance at very short notice. He gave his orders for the
- attack, and personally led his troops forward. A nest of machine
- guns was encountered, causing casualties to his men. Without
- hesitation and regardless of personal risk, he dashed forward
- practically into the muzzles of the guns and under an exceptionally
- heavy fire and silenced them, killing or capturing the entire
- crews. Joncourt and Mill Ridge were then quickly captured and his
- line consolidated. His men were practically exhausted after the
- three days' heavy fighting, but he moved amongst them from post
- to post, across country swept by heavy and continuous shell and
- machine-gun fire at point-blank range, urged them on and the line
- was made secure. Throughout he displayed the greatest courage and
- devotion to duty, coupled with great tact and skill, and his work,
- together with the reports based on his own personal observations,
- which he forwarded, were invaluable to the Brigade. It is beyond
- doubt that the success achieved by the Brigade during the heavy
- fighting on 29th and 30th September and 1st October was due to this
- officer's gallantry, determination, skill and great courage."
-
-No. 1717, PRIVATE JOHN RYAN, 55th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty, and for saving a
- very dangerous situation under particularly gallant circumstances
- during an attack against the Hindenburg defences on 30th September,
- 1918. In the initial assault on the enemy's positions this
- soldier went forward with great dash and determination, and was
- one of the first men of his Company to reach the trench which
- was their objective. Seeing him rush in with his bayonet with
- such exceptional skill and daring, his comrades were inspired and
- followed his example. Although the enemy shell and machine-gun fire
- was extremely heavy, the enemy trench garrison was soon overcome.
- In the assault the attacking troops were weakened by casualties,
- and, as they were too few to cover the whole front of attack, a
- considerable gap was left between Private Ryan's Battalion's left
- and the unit on the flank. The enemy counter-attacked soon after
- the objective was reached, and a few succeeded in infiltrating
- through the gap, and taking up a position of cover in rear of
- our men, where they commenced bombing operations. The section of
- trench occupied by Private Ryan and his comrades was now under fire
- from front and rear, and for a time it seemed that the enemy was
- certain to force his way through. The situation was critical and
- necessitated prompt action by someone in authority. Private Ryan
- found that there were no officers or N.C.O.'s near; they had become
- casualties in the assault. Appreciating the situation at once, he
- organized the few men nearest him, and led them out to attack the
- enemy with bomb and bayonet. Some of his party fell victims to the
- enemy's bombs, and he finally dashed into the enemy position of
- cover with only 3 men. The enemy were three times their number,
- but by skilful bayonet work they succeeded in killing the first
- three Germans on the enemy's flank. Moving along the embankment,
- Private Ryan alone rushed the remainder of the enemy with bombs.
- It was while thus engaged he fell wounded, but his dashing bombing
- assault drove the enemy clear of our positions. Those who were not
- killed or wounded by his bombs fell victims to our Lewis Gunners
- as they retired across No Man's Land. A particularly dangerous
- situation had been saved by this gallant soldier, whose display of
- determined bravery and initiative was witnessed by the men of the
- two attacking Battalions, who, inspired and urged by it, fought
- skilfully and bravely for two days."
-
-LIEUTENANT JOSEPH MAXWELL, M.C., D.C.M., 18th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "On 3rd October, 1918, he took part as a Platoon Commander in an
- attack on the BEAUREVOIR-FONSOMME Line near Estrées, north of St.
- Quentin. His Company Commander was severely wounded soon after the
- jump off, and Lieut. Maxwell at once took charge of the Company.
- When the enemy wire was reached, they were met by a hail of
- machine-gun fire, and suffered considerable casualties, including
- all other officers of the Company. The wire at this point was six
- belts thick, each belt being 20 to 25 feet wide. Lieut. Maxwell
- pushed forward single-handed through the wire, and attacked the
- most dangerous machine gun. He personally killed three of the crew,
- and the remaining four men in the post surrendered to him with a
- machine gun. His Company followed him through the wire and captured
- the trenches forming their objective. Later, it was noticed that
- the Company on his left was held up in the wire by a very strong
- force on the left flank of the Battalion. He at once organized a
- party and moved to the left to endeavour to attack the enemy from
- the rear. Heavy machine-gun fire met them. Lieut. Maxwell again
- dashed forward single-handed at the foremost machine gun, and
- with his revolver shot five of its crew, so silencing the gun.
- Owing to the work of this party, the left Company was then able
- to work a small force through the wire, and eventually to occupy
- the objective and mop up the trenches. In the fighting prior to
- the mopping up, an English-speaking prisoner, who was captured,
- stated that the remainder of the enemy were willing to surrender.
- Lieut. Maxwell and two men, with this prisoner, walked to a post
- containing more than twenty Germans. The latter at once seized and
- disarmed our men. Lieut. Maxwell waited his chance, and then with
- an automatic pistol which he had concealed in his box respirator,
- shot two of the enemy and with the two men escaped. They were
- pursued by rifle fire, and one was wounded. However, Lieut. Maxwell
- organized a small party at once, attacked and captured the post."
-
-SECOND LIEUTENANT GEORGE MORBY INGRAM, M.M., 24th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "During the attack on MONTBREHAIN, east of Péronne, on 5th October,
- 1918, this officer was in charge of a platoon. About 100 yards
- from the Jumping Off Trench severe enemy machine-gun fire was
- encountered from a strong post which had escaped our Artillery
- fire, and the advance was thus held up. Lieut. Ingram dashed out,
- and, under cover of the fire of a Lewis Gun, rushed the post at
- the head of his men. This post contained 9 machine guns and 42
- Germans, who fought until our men were within 3 yards of them.
- They were killed to a man--Lieut. Ingram accounting for no less
- than 18 of them. A number of enemy posts were then observed to be
- firing on our men from about 150 yards further forward, and the
- Company moved forward to attack them, but severe casualties were
- sustained. The Company Commander had been badly wounded, and the
- Company Sergeant-Major and several others, who attempted to lead
- the advance, were killed. Our barrage had passed on, and no Tanks
- were near. Lieut. Ingram quickly seized the situation, rallied his
- men in the face of murderous fire, and, with magnificent courage
- and resolution, led them forward. He himself rushed the first post,
- shot 6 of the enemy, and captured a machine gun, thus overcoming a
- very serious resistance. By this time the Company had been reduced
- from 90 to about 30 other ranks; but this officer, seeing enemy
- fire coming from a quarry, to his left front, again led his men
- forward and rushed the quarry. He jumped into the quarry amongst
- enemy wire, and his men followed and proceeded to mop up a large
- number of the enemy who were in bivouacs there. He then observed an
- enemy machine gun firing from the ventilator of a cellar, through a
- gap in the wall of a house about 20 yards away. Without hesitation
- and entirely alone he scrambled up the edge of the quarry, ran
- round the rear of the house, and entering from the far side, shot
- the enemy gunner through the ventilator of the cellar. He fired
- several more shots into the cellar, then, seeing some enemy jumping
- out of the window of the house, he burst open a door, rushed to
- the head of the stairs leading into the cellar, and forced 62 of
- the enemy to surrender. He now found he was out of touch with the
- Company on his left flank, so went out alone and made a personal
- reconnaissance under heavy fire, and succeeded in gaining touch
- with the left Company, which had lost all its officers. Having
- returned to his Company, he personally placed a post on his left
- flank to ensure its safety, and then reconnoitred and established
- two posts on his right flank. All this was done in the face of
- continuous machine-gun and shell fire."
-
-[Illustration: Australian Artillery--moving up to the front, through
-the Hindenburg wire, October 2nd, 1918.]
-
-[Illustration: Advance during Battle--Third Division Infantry and Tanks
-advancing to the capture of Bony, October 1st, 1918.]
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX C
-
-CORPS ORDERS FOR THE BATTLE OF AUGUST 8TH, 1918
-
-
-The following were the complete orders issued by the Australian Army
-Corps for the Battle of August 8th, 1918. They form only a small part
-of the whole of the orders which were required for the operation. There
-were, in addition, detailed orders by the Corps Artillery Headquarters,
-the Heavy Artillery, the Chief Engineer, and each of the five Divisions
-and fifteen Brigades, and also by the Administrative Services of the
-Corps.
-
-On the question of the form of the orders, the most expedient course
-was found to be the one here adopted--namely, that of issuing a
-numbered series of Battle Instructions, each dealing comprehensively
-with a separate subject matter:
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 1
-
-1. The Australian Corps will attack the enemy from the
-VILLERS-BRETONNEUX--CHAULNES Railway exclusive to the River SOMME,
-inclusive, at a date and hour to be notified.
-
-The Canadian Corps will co-operate on the right, south of the railway
-(inclusive), and the Third Corps on the left, north of the SOMME.
-
-2. _General Method of Attack._--The Australian Corps will attack on a
-two-division front. The attack will be carried out in three phases.
-Divisional boundaries and objectives are shown on the attached map.
-
- (i) _First Phase._--The 2nd and 3rd Australian Divisions will form
- up on a taped line prior to ZERO, and will attack with Tanks under
- a creeping artillery barrage. Their objective is shown by a GREEN
- line on the attached map.
-
- On arrival at their objective they will consolidate.
-
- (ii) _Second Phase._--The 5th and 4th Australian Divisions,
- organized in brigade groups, will advance in open warfare
- formations, from the first objective passing through 2nd and 3rd
- Australian Divisions respectively. Their objective is shown in RED
- on the map.
-
- (iii) _Third Phase._--The 5th and 4th Australian Divisions will
- exploit their success and seize the old British line of Defences
- marked BLUE on the map, and establish themselves defensively on
- this line.
-
- (iv) The 1st Australian Division will be in Corps Reserve.
-
- (v) A detailed programme of the action will be issued.
-
-3. _Assembly._--In order to free as many troops from line duty as
-possible, 2nd and 3rd Australian Divisions will arrange to hold the
-front with one infantry brigade on each Divisional sector. This will be
-completed before daybreak on 5th August.
-
-To prevent any troops arriving at their objectives in an exhausted
-condition through a long march, troops detailed to the farthest
-objectives must be quartered nearest the starting line prior to ZERO.
-
-The brigades of 2nd and 3rd Australian Divisions not holding the line
-will be quartered in rear of all brigades of 5th and 4th Australian
-Divisions respectively prior to ZERO night. This will be completed
-before daybreak on 5th August.
-
-The allotment of areas for quartering during this stage will be made
-by mutual arrangement between Divisional Commanders concerned. The
-allotment of routes and times of movement in accordance with the Corps
-programme will be arranged similarly.
-
-On ZERO night the brigades of 2nd and 3rd Australian Divisions not in
-the line will make their approach march to their tape lines through the
-area occupied by 5th and 4th Australian Divisions respectively.
-
-4. _Artillery._
-
- (i) The Artillery available consists of:
-
- 18 Field Artillery Brigades.
- 12 Heavy Artillery Brigades.
-
- (ii) G.O.C., R.A., Aust. Corps, will command all artillery of the
- Corps during the first phase of the operation.
-
- (iii) For the second phase G.O.C., R.A., Aust. Corps, will allot:
-
- (_a_) Three Field Artillery Brigades to 5th and 4th Aust. Divisions
- for distribution to infantry brigade groups. These will include the
- 5th and 4th Aust. Divisional Artillery respectively.
-
- (_b_) Three brigades of Field Artillery and one battery of 60-pdr.
- Heavy Artillery allotted to each of the 5th and 4th Aust. Divisions
- for employment as may be ordered by the Divisional Commanders.
-
- (_c_) The remainder of the Field Artillery and the Heavy Artillery
- to Corps Reserve.
-
- (iv) Heavy Artillery will be pushed forward by G.O.C., R.A., to
- protect the troops in the second objective.
-
-5. _Tanks._--Instructions for the distribution and employment of Tanks
-will be issued later.
-
-6. _Engineers._--Engineers and Pioneers will be distributed for work as
-follows from midnight on 6th-7th instant:
-
- (i) Corps Pool under Chief Engineer--
- 1 Field Coy. from 4th Aust. Div.
- 1 Field Coy. from 5th Aust. Div.
- 2 Field Coys. from 2nd Aust. Div.
- 2 Field Coys. from 3rd Aust. Div.
- 3 Army Troops Coys. Engineers.
- 5th Aust. Pioneer Bn.
- 3rd Aust. Pioneer Bn.
-
- (ii) With Divisions:
-
- 2nd Aust. Pioneer Bn. will serve 2nd and 3rd Aust. Divisions. 2
- Coys. to each.
-
- 4th Aust. Pioneer Bn. will serve 4th and 5th Aust. Divisions. 2
- Coys. to each.
-
-Divisional Commanders will control:
-
- 2nd Aust. Division--1 Field Coy. and 2nd Aust. Pioneer
- Bn. (less 2 Coys.).
-
- 3rd Aust. Division--1 Field Coy. and 2 Coys. 2nd Aust.
- Pioneer Bn.
-
- 4th Aust. Division--2 Field Coys. and 4th Aust. Pioneer
- Bn. (less 2 Coys.).
-
- 5th Aust. Division--2 Field Coys. and 2 Coys. 4th Aust.
- Pioneer Bn.
-
-Tunnellers will be detailed to each division for dug-out exploration.
-
-Chief Engineer, Aust. Corps, will arrange for the distribution in
-accordance with this.
-
-Chief Engineer will issue instructions for the withdrawal and storing
-of demolition charges of bridges for which the Corps is responsible,
-and for the return of engineer personnel employed on this work to their
-units.
-
-7. Deputy Director of Medical Services will arrange for the
-distribution of medical units.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 2
-
-SECRECY
-
-(_a_) It is of first importance that secrecy should be observed and the
-operation carried out as a surprise.
-
-Commanders will take all possible steps to prevent the scope or date of
-the operation becoming known except to those taking part. Any officer,
-N.C.O., or man discussing the operation in public, or communicating
-details regarding it to any person, either soldier or civilian, not
-immediately concerned, will be severely dealt with.
-
-(_b_) All movement of troops and transport will take place by night,
-whether in the forward or back areas of the Australian Corps, on and
-after 1st August, except where absolutely necessary to move by day.
-
-(_c_) O.C., No. 3 Squadron, A.F.C., will arrange for aeroplanes to
-fly over the Australian Corps Army area during days when flying is
-possible, and to report to Corps H.Q. any abnormal movement of troops
-or transport within our lines.
-
-(_d_) Work on back lines will be continued as at present, so that there
-may be no apparent change in our attitude.
-
-(_e_) Commanders will ensure that the numbers of officers reconnoitring
-the enemy's positions is limited to those for whom such reconnaissance
-is essential.
-
-Nothing attracts attention to an offensive more than a large number of
-officers with maps looking over the parapet and visiting Observation
-Posts.
-
-Commanding Officers of units holding the front line should report at
-once to higher authority any disregard of these orders.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 3
-
-COMMUNICATIONS AND HEADQUARTERS
-
-1. Communications will be carefully organized to ensure the maintenance
-of communication throughout the advance and after its conclusion.
-
-2. (i) Headquarters of Divisions will be established as follows:
-
- 2nd Australian Division--GLISY.
-
- 5th Australian Division--BLANGY-TRONVILLE Château.
- Advanced Headquarters in
- dug-outs at Railway cutting.
-
- 3rd Australian Division--BUSSY.
-
- 4th Australian Division--CORBIE.
-
-(ii) Headquarters of Brigades and battalions will be selected in
-advance, as far as this can be done, and all concerned will be notified
-of their proposed locations.
-
-3. Report Centres in advance of the heads of buried cables will be
-selected in each Divisional Sector and details prepared for the
-organization of communications back to cable head.
-
-4. The following mounted troops are detailed to Divisions:
-
- To 2nd Australian Division--1 Troop 13th L.H.
-
- 3rd Australian Division--1 Troop 13th L.H.
-
- 4th Australian Division--2 Troops 13th L.H.
-
- 5th Australian Division--2 Troops 13th L.H.
-
-Divisions will inform O.C., 13th Light Horse, as to the time and place
-at which the Light Horse will report.
-
-The Cyclist Section now with Divisions will remain.
-
-5. The employment of wireless will be exploited to the full.
-
-6. Popham panels will be employed for communication between Infantry
-and Aeroplanes.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 4
-
-ARTILLERY
-
-(_a_) Ammunition will be dumped at or near gun positions as follows:
-
- 18-pdr. 600 rounds.
- 4.5" Howitzer 500 rounds.
- 60-pdr. 400 rounds.
- 6" guns 400 rounds.
- 6" Howitzers 400 rounds.
- 8" Howitzers 400 rounds.
- 9.2" Howitzers 400 rounds.
- 12" Howitzers 200 rounds.
-
-Arrangements should be made to commence dumping this ammunition as soon
-as feasible. Echelons will be kept full.
-
-(_b_) Boundaries between Corps as regards bombardment and
-counter-battery work coincide with the boundaries between Corps shown
-on map issued with Australian Corps "Battle Instructions No. 1," dated
-1st August, 1918.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 5
-
-TANKS
-
-1. Tanks are available as follows:
-
- _5th Tank Brigade._
-
- Mark V. Tanks--2nd Battalion--Lieut.-Col. E. D.
- BRYCE, D.S.O.
-
- Mark V. Tanks--8th Battalion--Lieut.-Col. The Hon.
- J. D. Y. BINGHAM,
- D.S.O.
-
- 13th Battalion--Lieut.-Col. P. LYON.
-
- Mark V. (Star) Tanks--15th Battalion--Lieut.-Colonel
- RAMSEY-FAIRFAX.
-
- No. 1 G.C.Coy. (24 Carrying Tanks)--Major W. PARTINGTON,
- M.C.
-
-
-2. _Mark V. Tanks_ are allotted as follows:
-
- 13th Battalion (Lieut.-Col. LYON), less one company, to 3rd
- Australian Division.
-
- 2nd Battalion (Lieut.-Col. BRYCE), plus one company 13th Battalion
- attached, to be employed with the two right Divisions--two
- companies to be allotted to each Division.
-
- 8th Battalion (Lieut.-Col. The Hon. J. D. Y. BINGHAM) to 4th
- Australian Division.
-
-One company of the 8th Battalion will be employed in support. It will
-be specially charged with the function of maintaining the attack at
-the junction of Divisions throughout the advance as far as the second
-objective.
-
-Command will be effected through Battalion Commanders in each case
-except that Lieut.-Col. BRYCE will be responsible for command of all
-Mark V. Tanks allotted to both 2nd and 5th Australian Divisions.
-
-3. After the capture of the first objective, Tanks detailed to 2nd and
-3rd Australian Divisions will rally and will be employed to support the
-advance of the 5th and 4th Australian Divisions respectively.
-
-4. After the capture of the second objective, Tanks will rally. One
-company will remain in close support in each divisional sector; the
-remainder will be withdrawn to positions to be arranged between
-Divisional and Tank Commanders.
-
-5. Mark V. (Star) Tanks are allotted as follows:
-
- 1½ companies (18 tanks) to the 5th Australian Division.
- 1½ companies (18 tanks) to the 4th Australian Division.
-
-These tanks are allotted for the capture of the blue line.
-
-_6. Carrying Tanks_ are allotted as follows:
-
- 2nd and 3rd Australian Divisions--3 tanks each.
-
- 4th and 5th Australian Divisions--9 tanks each.
-
-7. Orders for forming up and movement to the Start Line will be issued
-by G.O.C., 5th Tank Brigade.
-
-Battalion Commanders detailed to Divisions will be responsible for all
-liaison duty in connection with the Tanks.
-
-8. For tactical purposes Tanks will be placed under the command of
-Infantry Commanders to whose commands they are allotted.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 5A
-
-ASSEMBLY OF TANKS
-
-_1. Preliminary Movement._
-
-Tanks will be assembled in concealed positions in the forward area
-under the orders of the 5th Tank Brigade prior to night Y/Z.
-
-_2. Advance to Start Line._
-
-On night Y/Z the Tanks allotted to troops attacking the first objective
-will commence to move forward at 9.30 p.m. to the Tank Start Line. They
-will move with full engines to a line not nearer to the Tank Start Line
-than 3,000 yards. From there they will continue the movement forward to
-the Tank Start Line, moving at a slow rate and as quietly as possible.
-The Tank Start Line will be approximately 1,000 yards in rear of the
-Infantry taped line.
-
-Tanks will leave the Tank Start Line at such times as will allow them
-to catch up to the Infantry as the barrage lifts at zero plus three
-minutes.
-
-_3. Concealment of Engine Noise._
-
-To conceal the noise of the engines during the advance of the Tanks,
-the 5th Brigade R.A.F. will arrange to have planes flying continuously
-over the Corps area from 9.30 p.m. until midnight on Y/Z night, and
-from zero minus one hour onward to zero.
-
-_4. Tanks allotted to Second Objective._
-
-The Tanks allotted to the second objective will form up independently
-under the orders of the 5th Tank Brigade in consultation with G.O.'s
-C., 4th and 5th Australian Divisions. These Tanks will be formed up
-when the aeroplanes are in the air during the hours laid down in para.
-3.
-
-_5. Liaison Company._
-
-The company of the 8th Tank Battalion detailed to act in support, and
-to ensure liaison in the battle line at the junction of Divisions, will
-detail a half-company to each wave of Tanks, vide paras. 2 and 4 above.
-
-Divisions will detail special liaison parties of Infantry to work in
-co-operation with this company.
-
-_6. Re-assembly._
-
-As soon as the blue line has been reached, G.O.C. 5th Australian
-Division will arrange to release the 2nd Tank Battalion, less the
-attached company. This battalion will then be withdrawn. The remainder
-of the Tanks, less one company allotted to remain in support of each of
-the 4th and 5th Australian Divisions, will be withdrawn when ordered by
-Divisional Commanders, vide Battle Instructions No. 5, para. 4.
-
-_7. Smoke Grenades._
-
-Divisions will ensure that a proportion of smoke rifle grenades
-accompanies each Infantry detachment detailed to the blue line and
-which accompanies each of the Mark V. (Star) Tanks.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 6
-
-ARTILLERY
-
-_1. Preparation._
-
-Active counter-battery work and harassing fire will be maintained.
-
-Such registration as is necessary will be carried out under cover of
-this fire. A detailed programme for this will be arranged in each
-divisional sector.
-
-The necessity for concealing the increase in the number of guns on the
-front must be borne in mind, and on no account should a large number
-of guns be employed at any one time. Counter preparation and S.O.S.
-plans during the period of preparation for the attack will be drawn up
-accordingly.
-
-Normal fire should, so far as possible, be carried out from positions
-other than those in which batteries will be emplaced during the battle.
-
-_2. Heavy Artillery._
-
- (_a_) In view of the nature of the enemy's defences, the fire of
- the majority of the heavy howitzers, employed for purposes other
- than counter-battery work, will be used during the barrage to
- engage special strong points or localities.
-
- (_b_) Throughout the advance beyond the green line enemy centres of
- resistance will be kept under fire until such time as the progress
- of the Infantry renders this inadvisable. A map will be issued to
- show the times at which heavy artillery fire will cease on zones
- and special localities.
-
- (_c_) At least two-thirds of the available Heavy Artillery will be
- employed for counter-battery purposes.
-
- Heavy concentrations of fire will be directed on the different
- groups of enemy artillery.
-
-3. G.O.C., R.A., will prepare plans for dealing with a heavy
-development of hostile fire on zero night. He will also prepare a
-plan to deal with any attempt at a deliberate gas bombardment of the
-VILLERS-BRETONNEUX area on zero night.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 7
-
-PROGRAMME OF ACTION
-
-_1. Capture of First Objective._
-
-(_a_) Forming-up troops detailed to the capture of the first objective
-will be deployed on the Forming-up Line one hour before zero hour.
-
-(_b_) _Artillery Programme._
-
- (i) The field artillery 18-pdr. barrage will open at zero 200 yards
- in advance of the forming-up line. At zero plus three minutes
- the barrage will commence to advance; lifts will be 100 yards at
- 2-minute intervals. There will be two lifts at this rate.
-
- The rate will then decrease to lifts of 100 yards every 3 minutes.
- There will be eight lifts at this rate.
-
- From the eleventh lift inclusive until the green line is reached
- lifts will be of 100 yards each at 4-minute intervals.
-
- (ii) The 4.5" Howitzer barrage will move 200 yards in advance of
- the 18-pdr. barrage.
-
- (iii) A protective barrage will be maintained in front of the green
- line until zero plus four hours. During this period approximately
- fifty per cent. (50%) of the guns remaining in the barrage will
- be employed in a protective line barrage; the remainder will be
- employed to search and sweep deeply into the enemy's position. At
- zero plus four hours all barrage fire will cease.
-
- Barrage Maps will be issued later.
-
-_2. Capture of Second and Third Objectives._
-
-(_a_) _Assembly._--5th and 4th Australian Divisions will select and
-mark positions for the assembly of their troops.
-
-These areas will be selected in liaison with Tank Commanders and with
-the 2nd and 3rd Australian Divisions respectively, to prevent movement
-to them clashing with the approach march of these divisions and that of
-the Tanks.
-
-This requires careful co-ordination between each pair of Divisions and
-Tank Commanders.
-
-(_b_) _Command._--At zero plus four hours, responsibility for the
-battle front will pass to G.O.C., 5th Australian Division, in the right
-sector, and to G.O.C., 4th Australian Division, in the left sector.
-
-(_c_) _The Advance._--5th and 4th Australian Divisions will time their
-advance so that the leading troops cross the first objective (green
-line) at zero plus four hours.
-
-(_d_) From zero plus four hours the advance will be continued under the
-conditions of open warfare.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 8
-
-ROADS
-
-1. A map is forwarded herewith showing the organization of the road
-system in the captured territory.
-
-2. The Chief Engineer will issue the necessary instructions for the
-preparation of these roads for traffic.
-
-3. All light traffic which is capable of moving across country will do
-so and will avoid main roads.
-
-4. Mule tracks will be a divisional responsibility.
-
-5. Artillery advancing with the 5th and 4th Australian Divisions will
-carry forward a proportion of bridges. Arrangements should be made
-as soon as possible for the development of tracks, making use of the
-routes taken by the artillery over these bridges.
-
-6. The AMIENS--LONGUEAU--VILLERS-BRETONNEUX main road, as far east as
-the cross roads in N.26.c., will be reserved for the exclusive use of
-the Cavalry Corps from 9.30 p.m. on Y/Z night until 8 a.m. on Z day.
-After 8 a.m. on Z day it will be available for the Australian and
-Cavalry Corps.
-
-Assistant Provost Marshal, Australian Corps, will arrange for the
-control of the traffic on this road throughout.
-
-Chief Engineer, Australian Corps, will prepare short avoiding roads at
-the cross roads at N.26.c. to cross the north-east or south-west corner
-to avoid congestion at this spot.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 9
-
-LIGHT SIGNALS, MESSAGE ROCKETS, SMOKE
-
-_1. Light Signals._
-
- (_a_) _Australian Corps._
-
- The following Light Signals will be employed in the Australian
- Corps:
-
- S.O.S. Signal, No. 32 grenade--showing green over green over green.
- Allotment 500 per Division.
-
- Success Signal, No. 32 grenade--showing white over white over
- white. Allotment 600 per Division.
-
-A small reserve of each of these grenades is held at Corps Headquarters.
-
-No other Light Signals will be laid down by Corps. There is no
-objection to the use within Divisions of a Very Light for the local
-indication of targets between Infantry and Tanks.
-
- (_b_) _Other Formations._
-
- Light Signals of other formations are as follows:
-
- _Formation._ _Signal._ _Meaning._
-
- (i) Cavalry Corps. White star turning "Advanced troops
- to red on a parachute of Cavalry are
- fired from here."
- 1½" Very pistol.
-
- (ii) Third Corps. No. 32 grenade, "S.O.S."
- green over green
- over green.
- No. 32 grenade, "Success signal,
- white over white _i.e._, we have
- over white. reached objective."
- One white Very "Barrage is about
- light. to lift."
-
- (iii) Canadian Corps No. 32 grenade, "S.O.S." will also
- red over red mean (_a_) "We are
- over red. held up and cannot
- advance without
- help." (_b_) "Enemy
- is counter-attacking."
- No. 32 grenade, "(_a_) Lift your fire.
- green over green We are going to
- over green. advance. (_b_) Stop
- firing."
- Three white Very "We have reached
- lights in quick this point."
- succession.
-
- _Remark._--In the case of (_a_) a smoke rocket (No. 27 grenade)
- will also be fired in the direction of the obstruction to indicate
- its position.
-
- (_c_) Special care must be taken by the Artillery on the right
- flank of the Corps that all officers and N.C.O.'s are acquainted
- with these signals, so that no mistake may arise as regards the
- difference in the S.O.S. Signals of the Australian and Canadian
- Corps.
-
- 2. _Message-carrying Rockets._
-
- Allotment of Message-carrying Rockets is 80 per Division.
-
- 3. _Smoke._
-
- (_a_) Artillery smoke will be as follows:
-
- (_i_) 3 rounds per gun will be fired during the first three minutes
- of the artillery barrage.
-
- (_ii_) 3 rounds per gun will be fired in quick succession on the
- arrival of the field artillery barrage at the artillery halt line
- covering the first objective.
-
- (_iii_) In the event of wet weather a small proportion of smoke
- will be used in the barrage to replace the smoke and dust caused by
- the burst of the shells in dry weather. This will not be sufficient
- to confuse the effect with that of the smoke shells prescribed in
- paragraph 3 (_a_) (i) and (ii).
-
-(_b_) _Screening beyond the First Objective._
-
-15th Wing, Royal Air Force, will arrange to screen the advance of the
-Tanks and Infantry from special localities in advance of their first
-objective by dropping phosphorus bombs.
-
-Divisions and G.O.C., 5th Tank Brigade, will inform Australian Corps
-Headquarters as early as possible of the localities which they desire
-screened.
-
-A map will be issued showing times at which it is anticipated that the
-Infantry will make good certain zones. Phosphorus bombs will not be
-dropped within these zones at any time after it is anticipated that the
-Infantry will have occupied them.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 10
-
-INTELLIGENCE AND DISPOSAL OF PRISONERS OF WAR
-
-
-1. _Battalion Intelligence Police._
-
-One German speaker and two searchers will be allotted to each battalion
-for use as follows:
-
- (_a_) _German Speaker._
-
- (i) To secure immediate identifications quickly, so that
- identifications will reach Corps Headquarters as speedily as
- possible of enemy units on the battle front.
-
- (ii) To secure immediate information required by the Battalion
- Commander as regards enemy dispositions, assembly positions, orders
- for counter-attack, etc.
-
- (iii) To be in charge of the two searchers and separate important
- documents, orders, maps, etc., translate and convey information of
- moment to the immediate Commander.
-
-(_b_) _Two Searchers._
-
-The two searchers under the German speaker systematically search the
-battlefield, enemy positions, suspected headquarters, dead, etc., for
-papers, documents, maps, etc., have them packed in sandbags, and sent
-through the usual channels to the Corps Cage as quickly as possible.
-
-This personnel should carry torches and, besides rifles or revolvers,
-bombs are recommended as being useful for dealing with any of the enemy
-who may be found in dug-outs.
-
-2. _Divisional Intelligence Officers._
-
-Divisional Intelligence Officers will go forward to an Advanced
-Divisional Collecting Cage, with a view to obtaining, as soon as
-possible, information of immediate tactical importance.
-
-The Cage will be connected by telephone to Divisional H.Q., and
-important information obtained should be transmitted as quickly as
-possible to Divisional and Brigade H.Q.
-
-The main points on which immediate information is required from
-prisoners are: The Order of Battle, Units seen, Distribution of the
-Enemy's Forces, Method of holding the Line, Assembly Positions,
-Counter-attack Orders and Intentions.
-
-This information will be wired to their respective Divisional
-Headquarters and repeated to Corps Headquarters and Corps Cage by
-Divisional Intelligence Officers.
-
-Divisional Intelligence Officers will not detain prisoners longer
-than is necessary to obtain this tactical information of immediate
-importance.
-
-In case a large number of prisoners are captured, they will detain only
-one or two from each regiment, and will not delay the passage of the
-remainder to the Corps Cage.
-
-Any further information required from prisoners by Divisions or lower
-formations can always be obtained by telephone from the Corps Cage.
-
-3. _Searching of Prisoners._
-
- (_a_) _Officers and N.C.O.'s._
-
- Officers and N.C.O.'s will be searched as soon as possible after
- capture by a responsible officer or N.C.O., and all documents taken
- from them sent back with them (in sacks, labelled by regiments, if
- a number are captured) to the Divisional Intelligence Officer, at
- such place as this officer has prearranged.
-
- It is left to the discretion of Divisional Intelligence Officers as
- to what documents, maps, etc., taken from prisoners they hold back
- for the information of Brigade and Divisional Commanders. When this
- is done, Corps "I" will be informed by wire, priority if necessary,
- of the nature of the documents, etc., held back, and of any points
- of immediate tactical importance they may contain.
-
- As soon as possible after information has been extracted from them,
- the documents will be forwarded on to the Corps Cage. Arrangements
- can be made by Corps, if notified that documents are ready to be
- sent on, to fetch them by motorcyclist or cycle.
-
- (_b_) _Other Ranks._
-
- Prisoners other than officers and N.C.O.'s will be searched on
- their arrival at the Corps Cage. Their papers, etc., will be taken
- from them and put into sacks labelled according to regiments.
-
- (_c_) All ranks should understand that a prisoner's pay-book,
- identity disc, and personal belongings should not be taken from
- him. Escorts and guards will be warned to take special precautions
- to prevent prisoners from destroying papers.
-
-4. _Separation of Officers, N.C.O.'s and Men._
-
-Care will be taken that officers, N.C.O.'s and privates are all
-separated from one another at once, and are not allowed to communicate
-with one another. Prisoners who have been interrogated should not be
-allowed to mix with those who have not yet been interrogated.
-
-5. _Notification of Locality of Capture._
-
-It is essential that, when prisoners are sent back, information be sent
-with them which will show where they were captured. Information as to
-the battalion which made the capture is a useful indication.
-
-6. _Authorized Persons only to converse with Prisoners._
-
-It is most important that no officer or N.C.O., except those duly
-authorized, be allowed to interrogate or converse with prisoners.
-
-7. _Prisoners of War Cage._
-
-The Advanced Corps Cage will be situated at VECQUEMONT, N.11.b.8.7. and
-the Rear Corps Cage at N.2.c.3.7.
-
-Intelligence Officers and personnel will be stationed here, and will
-carry out a more detailed interrogation and sort out captured documents.
-
-The Advanced Corps Cage will be connected by telephone to Corps H.Q.
-
-8. _Prisoners._
-
-The following procedure will be adopted for the disposal of prisoners:
-
-After capture they will be escorted to the Advanced Divisional
-Collecting Cage, for examination by the Divisional Intelligence
-Officer, who, after he has finished with them, will send them back to
-the Advanced Corps Cage.
-
-The sending back of prisoners should be carried out as quickly as
-possible, and several escorts should be arranged for them to be passed
-back without any unusual delay. Instructions should be issued to ensure
-that too many men are not employed on escort duty.
-
-In the forward area directing notices should be placed to show the
-route to be taken to the Advanced Divisional Collecting Cage.
-
-Traffic control personnel should be conversant with the method of
-disposing of prisoners.
-
-9. _Identifications._
-
-The importance of passing on all identifications as speedily as
-possible to Corps "I" cannot be too strongly impressed on all
-concerned. It is essential that special efforts be made to wire at
-once, as soon as identifications are made and the locality in which
-obtained.
-
-10._ Maps and Photographs._
-
- The following maps are being issued:
-
- (i) A large issue of 1/20,000 No. 62.D. South-East regular series
- for distribution to all officers.
-
- (ii) 1/20,000 Map Message Form, for distribution down to N.C.O.'s.
-
- (iii) A small issue of 1/10,000 Maps of forward area only.
-
- (iv) 1/20,000 Barrage Map, for distribution down to Company
- Commanders.
-
- (v) 1/40,000 Organization Map, together with notes on the enemy.
-
-The following special photographs are being issued:
-
- (_a_) A Mosaic of each Divisional front, squared and contoured and
- freely annotated, for distribution down to N.C.O.'s.
-
- (_b_) Oblique Photographs of each Divisional front, for
- distribution to all officers.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 11
-
-CO-OPERATION OF INFANTRY AND AIRCRAFT
-
-1. _Contact Aeroplanes._
-
- (i) _Indication of position by flares._
-
- (_a_) Red ground flares will be used to indicate the infantry
- positions to contact aeroplanes. They will be lit by infantry in
- the most advanced line only.
-
- (_b_) A contact aeroplane will fly along the line of the first
- objective at zero plus 2 hours 30 minutes. Flares will be called
- for by the aeroplane sounding a succession of "A's" on the Klaxon
- horn and by firing a white Very Light. If the aeroplane fails to
- mark the line accurately, it will repeat its call ten minutes later.
-
- Should the infantry not have reached the line of the objective at
- the time laid down above, the contact aeroplane will return at
- half-hour intervals until flares are shown.
-
- (_c_) A contact aeroplane will fly along the line of the second
- objective at zero plus 6 hours 30 minutes. It will call for flares,
- and the same procedure will be followed on this objective as on the
- first objective until the flares are seen.
-
- (_d_) A contact aeroplane will fly over third objective at zero
- plus 7 hours, when the procedure laid down for the first objective
- will be observed until the flares are shown.
-
- (_e_) Divisions will organize message-dropping stations in the
- vicinity of their Headquarters.
-
- (ii) _Other means of identifying the position of the Infantry._
-
- (_a_) _Rifles._--Three or four rifles laid parallel across the top
- of the trench.
-
- (_b_) _Metal Discs._--Metal discs will be used as reflectors by
- flashing in the sun. This method has been successful even on days
- which have not been particularly bright.
-
- The disc is most easily carried sewn to the Small Box Respirator,
- and can be used in this way without inconvenience.
-
-2. _Counter-attack Planes._
-
- (_a_) From zero hour counter-attack planes will be constantly in
- the air, with the object of observing hostile concentrations or
- abnormal movement.
-
- (_b_) In the event of an enemy concentration indicating a
- counter-attack, the counter-attack aeroplane will signal this
- information to the Artillery by wireless. In the case of a
- counter-attack actually developing a white parachute flare will be
- fired by the aeroplane in the direction of the troops moving for
- the impending counter-attack, for the information of the Infantry.
-
-3. _Ammunition-carrying Aeroplanes._
-
- (_a_) Aeroplanes will be detailed to transport ammunition from zero
- plus 2 hours 30 minutes.
-
- (_b_) Vickers guns will display a white "V" at the point where
- ammunition is to be dropped. The arms of the "V" to be 6 feet in
- length and 1 foot in width. The apex of the "V" to point towards
- the enemy.
-
- (_c_) Ammunition aeroplanes will have the under-side of the lower
- planes painted black for a distance of 2½ feet from the tips.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 12
-
-CONSOLIDATION
-
-1. _Divisions allotted to First Objective._
-
-(_a_) _Consolidation._--As soon as the first objective has been
-captured troops will dig in.
-
-(_b_) _Troops holding present front line._--The brigades of 2nd and
-3rd Australian Divisions holding the line on the night prior to zero
-will remain in their battle positions until all troops detailed to the
-attack have passed through. They will then be organized and prepared to
-move to meet any emergency.
-
-2nd Australian Division will be prepared to detach its brigade to act
-in support of 5th Australian Division, and 3rd Australian Division to
-detach its brigade in support of 4th Australian Division.
-
-(_c_) _Reorganization of Troops on First Objective._--As soon as the
-whole of the troops detailed to the capture of second (red line) and
-third (blue line) objectives have passed through the line of the
-first objective, 2nd and 3rd Australian Divisions will organize the
-defence of their sectors on the first objective in depth in each
-brigade sub-sector. Units will be reorganized, and those not detailed
-to the defence of the line will be withdrawn into support and held in
-readiness for eventualities. At least one battalion in each brigade
-sub-sector should be withdrawn in this way.
-
-2. _Second Objective._
-
-_Consolidation._--As soon as the second objective (the red line)
-has been captured, the position will be thoroughly consolidated.
-Arrangements will be made to ensure a supply of engineering material
-for this.
-
-3. _Main Line of Resistance._
-
-(_a_) When the third objective (the blue line) is attained, it will be
-organized and consolidated as the main line of resistance.
-
-(_b_) If the enemy is able to develop an immediate counter-attack, or
-if he has a definite plan, and the troops available in close reserve
-for the defence of the blue line, it may not be possible to reach
-the third objective. In this case the second objective (red line)
-will become the main line of resistance, and will be consolidated and
-organized in depth accordingly.
-
-(_c_) Definite plans will be prepared to deal with either case.
-The Corps must be prepared, as early as possible, to fight a stiff
-defensive battle on the main line of resistance.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 13
-
-1. The 5th Australian Division will move into its assembly area by
-Brigade Groups as follows:
-
- "A" Brigade Group on the night 4th-5th August from MONTIÈRES
- to CAMON and RIVERY area. Quarters have been arranged for one
- brigade, less one battalion. Shelters will be drawn from Area
- Commandant, CAMON, for this battalion.
-
- "B" Brigade Group from ALLONVILLE area to forward area.
-
- "C" Brigade Group from VAUX area to ALLONVILLE area.
-
-2. For the purposes of staging, POULAINVILLE will be included as one of
-the battalion areas of the ALLONVILLE brigade area.
-
-The camp in BOIS DE MAI has been allotted for the use of the 5th
-Division nucleus.
-
-It is left to the discretion of the G.O.C., 5th Australian Division,
-as to whether the Battalion at POULAINVILLE moves on the night of 4th
-August.
-
-3. On the night 5th-6th August the 5th Australian Division will
-continue its move into its allotted assembly grounds in the forward
-area.
-
-4. Rear parties are to be left in charge of all camps until handed over
-to the Area Commandant.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 14
-
-ARMOURED CAR BATTALION
-
-1. The 17th Armoured Car Battalion has been placed at the disposal of
-the Australian Corps, and will join the 5th Tank Brigade shortly.
-
-2. This battalion is organized in two companies of eight (8) armoured
-cars each. Each armoured car carries one forward and one rear Hotchkiss
-gun.
-
-3. One and a half (1½) companies are allotted to the 5th Australian
-Division, and half (½) a company will remain in Corps Reserve.
-
-The half company detailed to remain in Corps Reserve will select a
-position of assembly in Square 0.26, and will occupy this position
-by 9.30 p.m. on Y/Z night. During the action its orders will be
-transmitted through the 5th Australian Divisional Signal Service. The
-Commander will arrange with the 5th Australian Division accordingly.
-
-4. As soon as the Battalion Commander or his representative reports to
-the 5th Tank Brigade, he will be instructed to report to the General
-Staff, Australian Corps, and then to Headquarters, 5th Australian
-Division.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 14A
-
-ARMOURED CAR BATTALION
-
-
-1. The 17th Armoured Car Battalion is being given definite rôles
-in accordance with paragraph 3 of Battle Instructions No. 14. The
-rôles assigned to this battalion may carry the cars forward for a
-considerable distance into enemy territory, and may necessitate their
-returning through other Divisional Sectors than that of the 5th
-Australian Division.
-
-2. British Armoured Cars can be recognized by the red and white band
-markings which are similar to those of the British Tanks.
-
-3. All troops will be warned of the possibility of our armoured cars
-coming into our own sector, and of the way in which they are marked.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 15
-
-ZERO HOUR--SYNCHRONIZATION OF WATCHES
-
-1. _Zero Hour._
-
-Zero hour will be notified in writing from Australian Corps
-Headquarters by noon on the day prior to zero.
-
-2. _Synchronization of Watches._
-
-Watches will be synchronized by officers detailed by Australian Corps
-Headquarters, who will visit Headquarters in the following order,
-leaving Corps Headquarters shortly after noon and 6 p.m. on Y day:
-
- (_a_) One officer to Headquarters Heavy Artillery, 3rd Australian
- Division and 4th Australian Division.
-
- (_b_) One officer to 2nd Australian Division and 5th Australian
- Division.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 16
-
-AIRCRAFT
-
-1. The Air Forces which will operate on the Australian Corps front
-during the battle will be as follows:
-
- (_a_) Corps Squadron--3rd Australian Squadron.
-
- (_b_) 5th Tank Brigade--8th Squadron.
-
- (_c_) The 22nd Wing, consisting of eight Scout Squadrons, which
- will be exclusively employed in engaging ground targets by bombing
- and machine-gunning along the whole Army front.
-
- (_d_) One night-bombing squadron--101st Bombing Squadron.
-
- (_e_) One Reconnaissance Squadron--48th Squadron.
-
-Four additional day-bombing squadrons and three additional
-night-bombing squadrons are being obtained from other Wings for
-co-operation with the above, making 19 Squadrons in all.
-
-2. _Low-flying Scouts._
-
-The low-flying scouts of the 22nd Wing are being detailed on an even
-distribution to the Corps front. They will operate in two phases, viz.:
-
- (_a_) From zero to zero plus four hours eastward from the green
- line.
-
- (_b_) From zero plus four hours onwards eastwards from the red line.
-
-In each phase favourable targets will be engaged in addition to the
-targets marked by the green and red lines.
-
-3. _Markings on Planes._
-
-The following will be the special markings of machines allotted to
-special duties:
-
- (_a_) Contact patrol machines--Rectangular panels 2' by 1' on both
- lower planes about three feet from the fuselage.
-
- (_b_) Machines working with Tanks--Black band on middle of right
- side of tail.
-
-4. _Ammunition-carrying Squadron._
-
-Aeroplanes carrying small arms ammunition will drop it at points
-as laid down in Battle Instructions No. 11, para. 3 (b). The first
-ammunition-carrying planes will arrive over the battlefield at zero
-plus seven hours.
-
-5. _Aeroplane Smoke Screens._
-
-In addition to carrying small arms ammunition, this Squadron will be
-employed to drop phosphorus smoke bombs to obstruct the enemy's view.
-The areas to be screened and the time at which the screening in each
-case shall cease in order not to interfere with the advance of the
-Infantry will be shown on a map to be issued later.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 17
-
-ARTILLERY ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE LAST NIGHT BEFORE ZERO
-
-1. _S.O.S._
-
- (_i_) Each line division will arrange for four field artillery
- brigades, or an equivalent number of guns, to fire on S.O.S. lines
- at any time up to zero minus fifteen minutes.
-
- (_ii_) From zero minus fifteen minutes until zero hour S.O.S.
- arrangements will be inoperative.
-
-2. _Heavy Artillery._
-
-In the event of the enemy opening a gas bombardment on the
-VILLERS-BRETONNEUX area, arrangements have been made for the
-co-operation of the Canadian Corps Heavy Artillery in an artillery
-counter-attack on enemy batteries. The Canadian Corps will deal with
-the enemy artillery about WIENCOURT and MARCELCAVE. Fire will be
-opened, on application, direct between the two Corps Headquarters.
-
-G.O.C., R.A., Australian Corps, will arrange details with G.O.C., R.A.,
-Canadian Corps.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 18
-
-These are not reproduced. They refer only to Wireless Code Calls
-prescribed for all units.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 19
-
-LIAISON ARRANGEMENTS
-
-1. Officers are detailed for liaison duties as follows:
-
-
- (_a_) At Canadian Corps Headquarters--Capt. SHEARMAN, D.S.O., M.C.
-
- (_b_) At Third Corps Headquarters--Major R. MORRELL, D.S.O.
-
- (_c_) With 1st Australian Division--To be notified.
-
- (_d_) With 2nd Australian Division--Major H. PAGE, M.C.
-
- (_e_) With 3rd Australian Division--Lt.-Col. A. R. WOOLCOCK, D.S.O.
-
- (_f_) With 4th Australian Division--Major G. F. DICKINSON, D.S.O.
-
- (_g_) With 5th Australian Division--Lt.-Col. N. MARSHALL, D.S.O.
-
-2. The main function of the liaison officer is to relieve the Staff of
-the fighting formation of the necessity of:
-
- (_a_) Supplying information to Australian Corps Headquarters.
-
- (_b_) Collecting information from Corps Headquarters for
- transmission to the formation for whom they are carrying out
- liaison duties. It is their function to save the Staff as far as
- possible, and not to get in the way. At the same time, they are
- expected to keep Corps Headquarters and the formation to which they
- are attached fully informed of events.
-
-3. Direct telephone lines exist between Australian Corps Headquarters
-and neighbouring Corps.
-
-For the battle there is a special General Staff switchboard with direct
-lines to 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th Australian Divisions.
-
-4. An information bureau will be established in a marquee to be erected
-on the lawn in front of the Headquarters offices. Major W. W. BERRY
-will be in charge of this bureau. It will be provided with a telephone,
-writing material, maps, etc.
-
-Liaison officers from other formation at Australian Corps Headquarters
-will be accommodated in this marquee.
-
-During the battle officers whose business does not require them to
-visit the General Staff Office will make all inquiries at this office
-for information as to the progress of the operations.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 20
-
-CAVALRY
-
-1. The First Cavalry Brigade, plus one company of Whippet Tanks
-attached, comes under the command of the Australian Corps Commander at
-9 p.m. on Y/Z night.
-
-2. Its function is to assist in carrying out the main Cavalry rôle by
-seizing any opportunity which may occur to push through this Corps
-front.
-
-3. The First Cavalry Brigade will operate north of the AMIENS--CHAULNES
-railway in conjunction with 5th Australian Division. It will move
-from its assembly position in Square n.32 under orders of G.O.C., 1st
-Cavalry Division, via the southern side of BOIS DE L'ABBÉ.
-
-It will cross to the north side of the railway east of
-VILLERS-BRETONNEUX.
-
-It will push forward patrols to keep in touch with 8th and 15th
-Australian Brigades.
-
-After crossing the railway the main body of 1st Cavalry Brigade will
-march roughly parallel to it, keeping close touch with the remainder of
-1st Cavalry Division to the south.
-
-4. If a break in enemy's resistance occurs, the remainder of the 1st
-Cavalry Division may be employed in support of 1st Cavalry Brigade.
-
-5. Command of 1st Cavalry Brigade will pass from Australian Corps to
-the 1st Cavalry Division when the Infantry reaches the red line unless
-the brigade is required in the area south of the Australian Corps to
-exploit success gained before that hour. This will be determined by
-G.O.C., 1st Cavalry Division, who will inform Australian Corps and 5th
-Australian Division, and issue orders direct to 1st Cavalry Brigade.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 21
-
-NOTIFICATION OF DATE AND TIME OF BATTLE
-
-1. Reference paragraph 1 of General Staff Memo. No. AC/42, dated 7th
-instant, ZERO will be 4.20 a.m. 8th instant.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- Administrative Services, 12.
-
- Aeroplanes first used to carry small arms ammunition, 59.
- As noise camouflage, 105.
-
- Air Force, 13, 171.
-
- Albert, 30, 36, 79.
-
- Allied Offensive, Aug. 8th:
- Conference at Flexicourt, 73.
- Outline of plan, 73-80.
- Three phases, 84.
- Disposition of brigades, 93-94.
- Artillery calibration, 102.
- Tanks, 104.
- Armoured cars, 107.
- Intelligence Service, 112.
- Air Squadron, 113.
- Day before battle, 119.
- Zero hour, 4.20 a.m., 120.
- Guns begin, 121.
- First phase completed, 122.
- "Outwards" telegrams, 123.
- Enemy completely surprised, 125.
- Third Corps failed to reach objective, 126.
- Armoured cars, sensational report, 127.
- Guns and booty captured, 129.
- Ludendorff's comments, 130.
- General meeting at Villers-Bretonneux, 132.
- The King at Bertangles, 132.
-
- American Army's first great attack, 206, 259.
- First offensive battle, Hamel, 59.
- Second Corps, 235.
- To join Fourth British Army, 236, 243, 254.
- 1,200 taken prisoners, 262.
- 131st Regt., 136, 143.
- 27th Div., 275, 278.
- 30th Div., 275, 278.
- 33rd Div., 52.
-
- Amiens, defence of, 26 _et seq._
-
- Anzac, First and Second Corps, 7.
- Corps, abolition of, 9.
- Day, 3rd anniversary, 37.
-
- Arcy Wood, 161, 163.
-
- Armistice requested by enemy, 280.
-
- Army Corps improvised, 2.
- Constitution and scope, 3.
-
- Artillery barrage, 228-229.
- Classification of, 12.
-
- Assevillers, 221, 247.
-
- Aubigny, 31.
-
- Australian Army Corps constituted, 9.
- United, 10.
-
- Australian Corps Headquarters, Bertangles, 35.
-
- Australian Soldier's high _moral_, 288.
- Adaptability, 291.
- Instinct for "square deal," 292.
-
- Australian Staff watchword, "Efficiency," 295.
-
- Australia's five Divisions, 5.
-
- Authie, 25.
-
-
- Bapaume, 198.
-
- Basseux, 24.
-
- Battles on grand scale finished, 281.
-
- Beaurevoir, 218, 258, 276.
-
- Bell, Maj.-Gen. John, 52, 136.
-
- Bellenglise, 219.
- Captured, 260.
-
- Bellicourt taken, 261.
-
- Bellicourt Tunnel, 219, 237.
-
- Bertangles, Australian Corps H.Q., 35, 52, 132.
-
- Biaches, 198.
-
- Bingham, Lt.-Col., 106.
-
- Birdwood, Gen., 9, 36, 40, 132.
-
- Birdwood, Gen. Sir William:
- Commands First Anzac Corps, 7.
- Appointed Commander Australian Imperial Force, 10.
- Appointed Commander Fifth British Army, 10, 40, 209.
-
- Blamey, Brig.-Gen., 296.
-
- Bony captured, 267.
-
- Bouchavesnes, 182.
-
- Bourlon Wood, 259.
-
- Braithwaite, Lieut.-Gen., 204, 221.
-
- Brancourt, 259.
-
- Bray, 137, 148, 155, 158, 195.
-
- Brie, 196, 198.
-
- Brigade reductions, 15.
-
- British Fifth Army, 40, 219.
-
- Brown, Corpl. W., captures officer and 11 men, 66.
-
- Bryce, Lt.-Col., 106.
-
- Bussy, 62.
-
- Butler, Gen., Third Corps, 73, 136, 221.
-
- Byng, Gen., 27, 134.
-
-
- Calibration, 102.
-
- Cambrai, 259.
-
- Canadians, 73, 75, 76, 115, 122, 129, 133, 134, 136, 139, 140, 198, 259.
-
- Canadian Troops, fixed constitution, 5.
-
- Cannan, Brig.-Gen., 27.
-
- Cappy, 137, 157, 166.
-
- Captive Balloon Service, 14.
-
- Carter, Lieut.-Col. E. J., 108.
-
- Cavalry first employed, 201.
-
- Cerisy, 136.
-
- Cessation of hostilities, 281.
-
- Chamier, 22.
-
- Château-Thierry, 72.
- End of German offensive, 72.
-
- Chipilly, 126, 136, 137.
-
- Chuignes, 152, 156.
-
- Churchill, Mr. Winston, 209.
-
- Clemenceau, M.:
- Speech to troops after Hamel battle, 62.
- After Aug. 8th, 132.
-
- Cléry, 170-180.
-
- Combles, 198.
-
- Commanders and Staffs, 16-17.
-
- Congreve, Gen., his first order, 26.
-
- Contact aeroplanes, 171.
-
- Cook, Sir Joseph, 55.
-
- Corps Cavalry, 11.
-
- Corps Commander's responsibilities, 4.
-
- Corps Conferences, 150.
-
- Corps Signal Troops, 11.
-
- Corps Troops, 11.
-
- Couin, 25.
-
- Courage, Brig.-Gen., 50, 106, 222.
-
- Couturelle, 24.
-
- Cox, Maj.-Gen. Sir H. W., 9.
-
- Crossing the Somme, plan for, 178.
-
- Cummings, Brig.-Gen., 29.
-
- Curlu, 170.
-
- Currie, Gen., 73, 132, 140.
-
-
- Dernancourt, 31, 33.
-
- Difficulties of Army in retreat, 280.
-
- Disorganized British retreat, 23.
-
- Division, the fighting unit, 2.
-
- Division I., 18, 34, 40, 43, 73, 117, 134, 139, 140, 146, 152, 166,
- 203, 205, 221, 232, 243, 281.
- Last fight, 233.
-
- Division II., 18, 34, 40, 43, 65, 67, 71, 86, 115, 122, 135, 139,
- 146, 165, 170, 184, 257, 266, 270, 275, 277, 279.
- Last fight, 279.
-
- Division III., 18, 20, 31, 37, 40, 53, 86, 115, 122, 126, 137, 142,
- 146, 155, 158, 165, 170, 184, 191, 200, 201, 205, 235, 253, 261,
- 263, 265, 268, 270.
- Last fight, 270.
-
- Division IV., 18, 24, 30, 33, 65, 89, 115, 117, 126, 137, 146, 164,
- 203, 205, 221, 232, 233, 243, 281.
- Last fight, 233.
-
- Division V., 18, 34, 65, 76, 89, 115, 134, 146, 165, 169, 184, 193,
- 235, 253, 261, 262, 267.
- Last fight, 270.
-
- Doullens, population prepare to evacuate, 23.
- First move, 22-23.
-
- Dummy Tanks, 223.
-
-
- Efficient Army more potent than League of Nations, 298.
-
- Elles, Gen., 44, 221.
-
- End of German offensive, 72.
-
- Enemy attack in the South, July 15th, 72.
- Comments on our successes, 66-67.
- Discover our movement South, 116.
- Move from Russian to Western Front, 20.
- "On the run," 168.
- Propaganda, 160.
- Reserves melting away, 42.
- Reserves absorbed, 206.
- Secure our "Recruiting
- Cable," 159.
- Withdraws in disorder, 170.
-
- Engineers, Companies of, 12.
-
- Estries, 258.
-
- Eterpigny, 196.
-
- Etinehem, 137.
-
-
- Fairfax, Lieut.-Col. Ramsay-, 106.
-
- Farewell Order to Third Division, 41.
-
- Farewell Order, 282.
-
- Feuillancourt, 185.
-
- Feuillères, 137.
-
- Fifth Army defensive unduly attenuated, 23.
-
- Fifth British Army, 21.
-
- First Australian Division, 5.
-
- First British Army attack, Aug. 26th, 198.
-
- First Order from 10th Corps, 25.
-
- Flamicourt, 191.
-
- Flanders' liquid mud, 18, 20.
-
- Flexicourt Conference, 73.
-
- Foch, Marshal, appointed Supreme Commander, 37; 142, 200.
-
- Fontaine, 169.
-
- Foott, Brig.-Gen., 196.
-
- Forty-sixth Imperial Division, 260.
-
- Foucaucourt, 169.
-
- Fourth Army enlarged, 204.
- British flank with French, 37.
-
- Fourth and Fifth Australian Divisions, 6.
-
- Framerville, 135.
-
- Franvillers, 27, 33.
-
- Fraser, Brig.-Gen., 173, 222.
-
- French Army's different outlook, 71.
-
- Frevent, 23.
-
- "Fuse 106" as wire cutter, 257.
-
-
- Garenne Wood, 157.
-
- Gellibrand, Maj.-Gen., 268.
-
- German attack, March 21st, 1918, 21.
- Propaganda, 160.
- Withdrawal general on all fronts, Sept. 4th, 205.
-
- Germany's "Black Day," 130.
- Crack regiments opposed to Australians, 183.
- Surrender due to military defeat, 287.
- Determining cause, breach of Hindenburg defences, 287.
-
- Gillemont Farm, 251, 267.
-
- Glasgow, Maj.-Gen., 158, 221.
-
- Godley, Lieut.-Gen. Sir A., commands Second Anzac Corps,
- 7, 132, 136, 199, 204.
-
- Gouy, 262.
-
- Grimwade, Brig.-Gen., 30.
-
-
- Haig, Brig.-Gen. Neil, 201.
- Field Marshal, 54, 62, 132, 209, 250.
-
- Hamel, proposed operation against, 44-48.
- Battle of, planned, 51.
- Zero fixed, 56.
- Over in 93 minutes, 56.
- Official commentary, 57.
- Americans' first offensive battle, 59.
- No gas shells used, 60.
- Congratulatory messages, 61.
- M. Clemenceau's speech, 62-3.
- Dinner at Amiens to celebrate victory, 63-64.
- End of British defensive, 64.
-
- Hamel Wood, 33, 39, 44, 56.
-
- Hangard, 34, 36.
-
- Hargicourt, Zero hour, 5.20 a.m. Sept. 8th, 226.
- Red line reached before 10 o'clock, 232.
- Outpost line captured, 232.
-
- Haut Allaines, 200.
-
- Hautcloque, 23.
-
- Hazebrouck, 35.
-
- Headquarters of Army Corps, 11.
-
- Hebuterne, 25.
-
- Heilly, 28.
-
- Hem, 170.
-
- Herleville, 152.
-
- Hill 90, 157.
-
- Hill 104, 33, 36, 65.
-
- Hindenburg Line, 199.
- Purpose of, 214.
- St. Quentin-Cambrai section, 215.
- Germans' elaborate system of trenches, 217.
- Hargicourt line, 218.
- Capture of plans of German defence scheme, 219.
- Plan for attacking, 221.
- Machine gun barrage, 223.
- Dummy tanks, 223.
- Tapes for Infantry start line, 224.
- Direction boards, 225.
- Plan for further advance, 236-240.
- America's Second Corps in battle front, 242.
- Australian and American Divisions, 254.
- Mustard gas first used, 256.
- Destroying wire entanglements, 256.
- Disposition of Divisions, 258.
- Two phases, 258.
- Zero hour, 5.50 a.m. Sept. 29th, 259.
- Fifth Australians hung up, 261.
- Americans held up, 261.
- Forget to mop up, 262.
- Change of plan, 264.
- Enemy relinquish tunnel defences, 268.
- Collapse of the whole defences, 279.
-
- Hobbs, Maj.-Gen., 108, 169, 193.
-
- Hughes, W. M., 55.
- Message from, 61, 281.
-
- Hunn, Maj. A. S., 210.
-
-
- Infantry advance behind barrage, 229.
-
- Infantry Brigade reductions, 15.
-
- "Instantaneous" fuse, 257.
-
-
- Joncourt, 258, 267.
-
- July 18th, French and American counter-stroke, 72.
-
-
- Kavanagh, Gen., Cavalry Corps, 73, 132.
-
- King, the, at Bertangles, 132.
-
- Knob, the, 267.
-
- Knoll, the, 267.
-
-
- Labour Corps, 12.
-
- La Flaque, 129.
-
- La Neuville, 155.
-
- Last Australian battle in Great War, 279.
-
- La Verguier, 232.
-
- League of Nations less potent than efficient Army, 298.
-
- "Leap Frog" tactics, 81.
-
- Le Cateau, 281.
-
- Le Catelet, 218, 261.
-
- Leslie, Brig.-Gen. W. B., 9.
-
- Lewis, Maj.-Gen., 246.
-
- Lewis Gun detachments, 91.
-
- "Liaison Force," 143.
-
- Lihons, 135.
-
- Losses, comparison of, 289.
-
- Ludendorff's comments on Aug. 8th attack, 130.
-
- Lyon, Lt.-Col., 106.
-
-
- Maclagan, Maj.-Gen., 24, 26, 30, 52, 136, 221, 243, 247.
-
- McNicoll, Brig.-Gen., 24, 28.
-
- March 22nd, 1918, first move, 21.
-
- Marett Wood, 29.
-
- Martin, Brig.-Gen., 185.
-
- Marwitz, Gen. von der, 281.
-
- Maurepas, 198.
-
- Max (Prince) of Baden, 280.
-
- Mechanical Transport, 11.
-
- Méricourt, 133, 139.
-
- Mills's grenades, 248.
-
- Minor battles begun, 37.
- Result, 38-39.
-
- Monash, Lieut.-Gen., Sir John:
- In command First Australian Div., 5.
- Third Australian Div., 6.
- Australian Army Corps, 10.
- 17th Imperial Div., 16.
- 32nd Imperial Div., 16.
- 27th American Div., 16.
- 30th American Div., 16.
- Without orders, 23.
- Honoured by the King, 132.
- Hands over command to General Read, 279.
-
- Mondicourt, 24.
-
- Monster German Naval 15-inch gun captured, 161.
-
- Montbrehain, 278.
- Last Australian battle, 279.
-
- Montgomery, 132.
-
- Mont St. Martin, 275.
-
- Mont St. Quentin, 177, 182.
- Second Prussian Guards defend, 183.
- Captured, 184, 193.
-
- Monument Wood, 67.
-
- Mopping up, 229, 248.
- Result of neglecting, 252, 262.
-
- Morain, M., entertains British and French Army officers after Hamel,
- 64.
-
- _Moral v._ material, 279.
-
- Motor Ambulance Corps, 12.
-
- Mound, the, 78.
-
- Mullens, Maj.-Gen., letter of appreciation, 31.
-
- Mustard gas, 78, 255.
-
-
- Nauroy, 218, 263, 267.
-
- Nielles-lez-Blequin, 20.
-
- Noise camouflage, 105.
-
- Nollet, Gen., 164.
-
- Noyons, 198.
-
-
- Officers and men, relations between, 293.
-
- Ommiécourt, 137.
-
- O'Ryan Maj.-Gen., 246.
-
-
- Partington, Major, 106.
-
- Pas, 25.
-
- Péronne, 148, 182.
- Enemy defence of, 183.
- Taken, 191.
-
- Poulainville, 129.
-
- Prince Max of Baden, 280.
-
- Prisoners, treatment of, 210.
- Excuses for surrender, 213.
- Cages, 209.
- "Pigeons" employed to gain information, 211.
-
- Proyart, 139.
-
- Prussian Guards hold Mont St. Quentin, 183.
-
-
- Quennemont Farm, 251, 263.
-
-
- Ramicourt, 277.
-
- Ramsay-Fairfax, Lieut.-Col., 106.
-
- Rawlinson, Gen. Lord, 35-44, 52, 72, 73, 96, 132, 166, 181,
- 192, 221, 235, 236, 241, 250, 274, 278.
-
- Read, Maj.-Gen. G. W., 243, 278, 279.
-
- Reorganization of Brigades, 272-3.
-
- Repatriation of Australian Forces, 282.
-
- Results, analysis of, 284 _et seq._
-
- Rheims, 259.
-
- Robertson, Maj. P. R., 142.
-
- Roisel, 204.
-
- Rosenthal, Brig.-Gen., 24, 43, 67, 169, 192, 278.
-
- Rosières, 129.
-
- Roye, 133, 141, 198.
-
-
- Sailly-Laurette, 29.
-
- Sailly-le-Sec, 31.
-
- Second Australian Division, 5.
-
- "Set-piece" operations, 226.
-
- "Siegfried Line," 214.
-
- Skene, Brig.-Gen. P. G. M., 9.
-
- Smoke shells, 169.
-
- Smyth, Sir N. M., V.C., 9.
-
- Soissons, German withdrawal, 78.
-
- Somme Canal, 174.
- Line of, 148.
- Enemy retreat, 182.
-
- Somme, North, 34.
- Plan for crossing, 178.
- South, 34.
-
- St. Christ, 198.
-
- St. Denis, 190.
-
- St. Gratien, 33.
-
- St. Mihiel Salient attack, Sept. 11th, 206.
-
- St. Quentin Canal, 216, 232.
-
-
- Tanks, 14, 44, 48, 49, 91, 104, 276.
- Improved type, 48.
- Dummy, 223.
- "Star," 91.
-
- Teamwork, 150.
-
- Third Australian Division, 6.
-
- Third British Army attack Aug. 21st, 154, 198, 221.
-
- Time-table for successive Army engagements impossible, 153.
-
- Tivoli Wood, 170.
-
- Toulorge, Gen., 42.
-
- Treux Wood, 29.
-
- Tunnellers, 12.
-
-
- Underground shelters, galleries and dug-outs, German, 249.
-
-
- Vaire Wood, 39, 56.
-
- Vaux, 49.
-
- Vauxvillers, 133, 135.
-
- Verdun, 259.
-
- Vermandovillers, 169.
-
- Villers-Bretonneux, 33, 36, 37, 64, 67, 78.
-
- Visitors to Corps, 208.
- Lord Milner, 209.
- Mr. Winston Churchill, 209.
-
-
- Wackett, Capt., Australian Flying Corps, 60.
-
- Walker, Maj.-Gen. Sir H. B., 9.
-
- Warneton, early 1918, 18.
-
- Whippet tanks, 276.
-
- Wiancourt, 277.
-
- Wilson, Sir Henry, 132.
-
- Wisdom, Brig.-Gen., 143.
-
-
- Ypres, 260.
-
-
- Zero hour, Aug. 8th, 120.
- Hamel, 56.
- Hargicourt, 226.
- Hindenburg Line, 259.
-
- _Printed at The Chapel River Press, Kingston, Surrey._
-
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's note:
-
-Obvious errors of punctuation and diacritical markings were corrected.
-
-Inconsistent hyphenation was made consistent.
-
-P. 123: No correction made to "Sent at 2.5 p.m."
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE AUSTRALIAN VICTORIES IN FRANCE
-IN 1918***
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-<body>
-<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Australian Victories in France in 1918,
-by Sir John Monash</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
-restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at <a
-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: The Australian Victories in France in 1918</p>
-<p>Author: Sir John Monash</p>
-<p>Release Date: February 10, 2016 [eBook #51163]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE AUSTRALIAN VICTORIES IN FRANCE IN 1918***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4>E-text prepared by Brian Coe, Moti Ben-Ari,<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries<br />
- (<a href="https://archive.org/details/toronto">https://archive.org/details/toronto</a>)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries. See
- <a href="https://archive.org/details/australianvictor00mona">
- https://archive.org/details/australianvictor00mona</a>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[i]</a></span></p>
-
-<p id="half-title"> <i>The Australian Victories
-in France in 1918</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[ii]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 763px;">
-<a name="frontispiece" id="frontispiece"><img src="images/i_a_frontispiece.jpg" width="763" height="1200" alt="" /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p>Lieut.-General Sir John Monash, <span class="smcap">G.C.M.G.</span>,
-<span class="smcap">K.C.B.</span>, <span class="smcap">V.D.</span>, <span class="smcap">D.C.L.</span>, <span class="smcap">LL.D.</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[iii]</a></span></p>
-<h1><i>The Australian Victories in France in 1918</i></h1>
-
-<p class="center spaced space-above">
-<i>By</i><br />
-<i>Lieutenant-General Sir John Monash</i>,<br />
-<i>G.C.M.G.</i>, <i>K.C.B.</i>, <i>V.D.</i>, <i>D.C.L.</i>, <i>LL.D.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="center spaced space-above">
-<i>WITH 9 FOLDING MAPS IN COLOUR<br />
-AND 31 ILLUSTRATIONS</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="center spaced space-above">
-<i>LONDON: HUTCHINSON &amp; CO.<br />
-PATERNOSTER ROW</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[iv]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="center">
-DEDICATED<br />
-to the<br />
-AUSTRALIAN SOLDIER<br />
-who by his military virtues, and by his deeds<br />
-in battle, has earned for himself a<br />
-place in history which none<br />
-can challenge<br />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[v]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>PREFACE</h2>
-
-
-<p>The following pages, of which I began the compilation when still
-engaged in the arduous work of Repatriation of the Australian troops
-in all theatres of war, were intended to be something in the nature
-of a consecutive and comprehensive story of the Australian Imperial
-Force in France during the closing phases of the Great War. I soon
-found that the time at my disposal was far too limited to allow me
-to make full use of the very voluminous documentary material which
-I had collected during the campaign. The realization of such a
-project must await a time of greater leisure. So much as I have had
-the opportunity of setting down has, therefore, inevitably taken the
-form rather of an individual memoir of this stirring period. While I
-feel obliged to ask the indulgence of the reader for the personal
-character of the present narrative, this may not be altogether a disadvantage.
-Having regard to the responsibilities which it fell to
-my lot to bear, it may, indeed, be desirable that I should in all candour
-set down what was passing in my mind, and should attempt to describe
-the ever-changing external circumstances which operated to guide and
-form the judgments and decisions which it became my duty to make
-from day to day. It may be that hereafter my exercise of command
-in the field and the manner in which I made use of the opportunities
-which presented themselves will be the subject of criticism. I welcome
-this, provided that the facts and the events of the time are
-known to and duly weighed by the critic.</p>
-
-<p>My purpose has been to describe in broad outline the part played
-by the Australian Army Corps in the closing months of the war, and
-I have based upon that record somewhat large claims on behalf of
-the Corps. It would have overloaded the story to include in it any
-larger number of extracts from original documents than has been done.
-I may, however, assert with confidence that the statements, statistics
-and deductions made can be verified by reference to authoritative
-sources.</p>
-
-<p>The photographs have been selected from a very large number
-taken, during the fighting and often under fire, by Captain G. H.
-Wilkins, M.C. The maps have been prepared under my personal
-supervision, and are compiled from the official battle maps in actual
-use by me during the operations.</p>
-
-<div class="right"><span class="smcap">John Monash.</span></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[vi]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="right">CHAP.</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">PAGE</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Preface</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_v">v</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Introduction&mdash;The Australian Army Corps</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">I.&mdash;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Back to the Somme</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_18">18</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">II.&mdash;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Defence of Amiens</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_36">36</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">III.&mdash;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Hamel</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_51">51</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">IV.&mdash;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Turning the Tide</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_69">69</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">V.&mdash;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Battle Plan</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_81">81</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">VI.&mdash;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Battle Plan</span> (<i>continued</i>)&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_97">97</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">VII.&mdash;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Chase begins</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_115">115</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">VIII.&mdash;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Exploitation</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_133">133</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">IX.&mdash;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Chuignes</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_148">148</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">X.&mdash;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Pursuit</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_164">164</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">XI.&mdash;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Mont St. Quentin and Péronne</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_182">182</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">XII.&mdash;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">A Lull</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_198">198</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">XIII.&mdash;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Hargicourt</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_214">214</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">XIV.&mdash;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">America joins in</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_235">235</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">XV.&mdash;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Bellicourt and Bony</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_254">254</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">XVI.&mdash;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Montbrehain and after</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_271">271</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">XVII.&mdash;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Results</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_284">284</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Appendix A</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_299">299</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Appendix B</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_300">300</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Appendix C</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_317">317</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Index</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_345">345</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2>LIST OF MAPS</h2>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="right">A&mdash;</td><td align="left">The Advances of the Third Division&mdash;March to May, 1918</td><td align="center"><i>Facing page</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_32">32</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">B&mdash;</td><td align="left">Battle of Hamel, July 4th, 1918</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_64">64</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">C&mdash;</td><td align="left">Battle of August 8th, 1918</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_144">144</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">D&mdash;</td><td align="left">Battle of Chuignes and Bray, August 23rd, 1918</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_160">160</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">E&mdash;</td><td align="left">Péronne and Mont St. Quentin</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_192">192</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">F&mdash;</td><td align="left">Advances of Australian Corps, September 2nd to 17th, 1918</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_208">208</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">G&mdash;</td><td align="left">Battle of September 18th, 1918</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_224">224</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">H&mdash;</td><td align="left">Breaching of Hindenburg Defences</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_272">272</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">J&mdash;</td><td align="left">Australian Corps Campaign</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_288">288</a></td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>LIST OF PHOTOGRAPHS</h2>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Lieut.-General Sir John Monash, G.C.M.G.,</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">K.C.B., V.D., D.C.L., LL.D.</td><td align="center">&nbsp;</td><td align="right"><a href="#frontispiece"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">1.&mdash;</td><td align="left">The Australian Corps Commander&mdash;with the</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Generals of his Staff</td><td align="center"><i>Facing page</i></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_14">14</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">2.&mdash;</td><td align="left">The Valley of the Somme&mdash;looking east towards</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Bray, which was then still in enemy hands</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_15">15</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">3.&mdash;</td><td align="left">German Prisoners&mdash;taken by the Corps at</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Hamel, being marched to the rear</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_40">40</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">4.&mdash;</td><td align="left">Visit of M. Clemenceau&mdash;group taken at Bussy,</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">July 7th, 1918</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_41">41</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">5.&mdash;</td><td align="left">Railway Gun, 11.2-inch Bore&mdash;captured near</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Rosières on August 8th, 1918</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_66">66</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">6.&mdash;</td><td align="left">German Depot of Stores&mdash;captured on August</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">8th, 1918</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_67">67</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">7.&mdash;</td><td align="left">Tanks marching into Battle</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_96">96</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">8.&mdash;</td><td align="left">Morcourt Valley&mdash;the Australian attack swept</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">across this on August 8th, 1918</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_97">97</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">9.&mdash;</td><td align="left">Dug-outs at Froissy-Beacon&mdash;being "mopped</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">up" during battle</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_112">112</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">10.&mdash;</td><td align="left">Péronne&mdash;barricade in main street</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_113">113</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">11.&mdash;</td><td align="left">Burning Villages&mdash;east of Péronne</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_128">128</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">12.&mdash;</td><td align="left">Dummy Tank Manufacture</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_129">129</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">13.&mdash;</td><td align="left">The Canal and Tunnel at Bellicourt&mdash;looking north</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_152">152</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">14.&mdash;</td><td align="left">The Hindenburg Line&mdash;a characteristic belt of</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">sunken wire</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_153">153</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">15.&mdash;</td><td align="left">Final Instructions to the Platoon&mdash;an incident</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">of the battle of August 8th, 1918. The</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">platoon is waiting to advance to Phase B of the battle</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_176">176</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">16.&mdash;</td><td align="left">An Armoured Car&mdash;disabled near Bony, during</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">the battle of September 29th, 1918</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_177">177</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">17.&mdash;</td><td align="left">The Hindenburg Line Wire&mdash;near Bony</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_198">198</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">18.&mdash;</td><td align="left">The 15-inch Naval Gun&mdash;captured at Chuignes</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">August 23rd, 1918</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_199">199</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">19.&mdash;</td><td align="left">Australian Artillery&mdash;going into action at</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Cressaire Wood</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_218">218</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">20.&mdash;</td><td align="left">Battle of August 8th, 1918&mdash;German prisoners<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">being brought out of the battle under the fire</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">of their own Artillery</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_219">219</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">21.&mdash;</td><td align="left">Mont St. Quentin&mdash;collecting Australian</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">wounded under protection of the Red Cross</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">flag, September 1st, 1918</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_240">240</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">22.&mdash;</td><td align="left">An Ammunition Dump&mdash;established in Warfusee</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">village on August 8th, 1918, after its</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">capture the same morning</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_241">241</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">23.&mdash;</td><td align="left">Australian Light Horse&mdash;the 13th A.L.H.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Regiment riding into action on August 17th, 1918</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_256">256</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">24.&mdash;</td><td align="left">The Sniper sniped&mdash;an enemy sniper disposed</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">of by an Australian Sharp-shooter, August 22nd, 1918</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_257">257</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">25.&mdash;</td><td align="left">German Prisoners&mdash;captured at the battle of</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Chuignes, August 23rd, 1918</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_274">274</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">26.&mdash;</td><td align="left">Captured German Guns&mdash;Park of Ordnance,</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">captured by the Australians during August, 1918</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_275">275</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">27.&mdash;</td><td align="left">The Toll of Battle&mdash;an Australian gun-team</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">destroyed by an enemy shell, September 1st, 1918</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_294">294</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">28.&mdash;</td><td align="left">Inter-Divisional Relief&mdash;the 30th American</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">and the 3rd Australian Divisions passing each</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">other in the "Roo de Kanga," Péronne,</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">during the "relief" after the capture of the</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Hindenburg Line, October 4th, 1918</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_295">295</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">29.&mdash;</td><td align="left">Australian Artillery&mdash;moving up to the front,</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">through the Hindenburg wire, October 2nd, 1918</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_316">316</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">30.&mdash;</td><td align="left">Advance during Battle&mdash;Third Division Infantry</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">and Tanks advancing to the capture of Bony,</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">October 1st, 1918</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_317">317</a></td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="center"><big>The Australian Victories in France in 1918</big></div>
-
-<h2>INTRODUCTION<br />
-THE AUSTRALIAN ARMY CORPS</h2>
-
-
-<p>The renown of the Australians as individual fighters, in
-all theatres of the Great War, has loomed large in the
-minds and imagination of the people of the Empire.</p>
-
-<p>Many stories of the work they did have been published in
-the daily Press and in book form. But it is seldom that any
-appreciation can be discovered of the fact that the Australians
-in France gradually became, as the war progressed, moulded
-into a single, complete and fully organized Army Corps.</p>
-
-<p>Seldom has any stress been laid upon the fact that because
-it thus became a formation fixed and stable in composition, fighting
-under a single command, and provided with all accessory
-arms and services, the Corps was able successfully to undertake
-fighting operations on the grandest scale.</p>
-
-<p>There can be little question, however, that it was this development
-which constituted the paramount and precedent condition
-for the brilliant successes achieved by these splendid troops
-during the summer and autumn of 1918&mdash;successes which far
-overshadowed those of any earlier period of the war.</p>
-
-<p>For a complete understanding of all the factors which contributed
-to those successes, and for an intelligent grasp of the
-course of events following so dramatically upon the outbreak of
-the great German offensive of March 21st of that year, I propose
-to trace, very briefly, the genesis and ultimate development of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
-the Corps, as it became constituted when, on August 8th, it was
-launched upon its great enterprise of opening, in close collaboration
-with the Army Corps of its sister Dominion of Canada, that
-remarkable counter-offensive, which it maintained, without pause,
-without check, and without reverse, for sixty consecutive days&mdash;a
-period full of glorious achievement&mdash;which contributed, as
-I shall show in these pages, in the most direct and decisive manner,
-to the final collapse and surrender of the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>In the days before the war, there was in the British Service no
-recognized or authorized organization known as an Army Corps.
-When the Expeditionary Force was launched into the conflict
-in 1914, the Army Corps organization was hastily improvised,
-and consisted at first merely of an Army Corps Staff, with a small
-allotment of special Corps Troops and services, and of a fluctuating
-number of Divisions.</p>
-
-<p>It was the <i>Division</i><a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> and not the <i>Corps</i>, which was then the
-strategical unit of the Army. Even when the necessity for the
-formation of Army Corps was recognized, it was still a fundamental
-conception that it was the Division, and not the Army
-Corps, which constituted the fighting unit.</p>
-
-<p>To each Army Corps were allotted at first only two, but later
-as many as four Divisions, according to the needs and circumstances
-of the moment. But the component Divisions never,
-for long, remained the same. The actual composition of every
-Army Corps was subject to constant changes and interchanges,
-and it was rare for any given Division to remain for more than
-a few weeks in any one Army Corps.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span></p>
-<p>The disadvantages of such an arrangement are sufficiently
-obvious to require no great elaboration; at the same time,
-it has to be recognized that, during the first three years of the
-war, at any rate, the Army was undergoing a process of rapid
-expansion, and that, on grounds of expediency, it was neither
-possible nor desirable to adopt a policy of a fixed and immutable
-composition for so large a formation as an Army Corps.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, the special conditions of trench warfare made it
-imperative to create, under the respective Armies, and in the
-respective zones of those Armies, a subordinate administrative
-and tactical authority with a more or less fixed geographical
-jurisdiction. Thus, the frontage held by each of the five British
-Armies became subdivided into a series of Corps frontages, and
-each Corps Commander had allotted to him a definite frontage,
-a definite depth and a definite area, for his administrative and
-executive direction.</p>
-
-<p>It was within this Corps area that he exercised entire control
-of all functions of a purely local and geographical character:
-such as the maintenance of all roads, railways, canals, telegraphs
-and telephones; the control of all traffic; the apportionment of
-all billeting and quartering facilities; the allocation and employment
-of all means of transport; the collection and distribution
-of all supplies, comprising food, forage, munitions and engineering
-materials; the conservation and distribution of all water
-supply; the sanitation of the area; the whole medical administration
-within, and the evacuation of sick and wounded from
-the area; the establishment and working of shops of all descriptions,
-both for general engineering and for Ordnance purposes;
-also of laundries, bathing establishments and rest camps; the
-creation of facilities for the entertainment and recreation of
-resting troops, and of schools for their military training and for
-the education of their leaders.</p>
-
-<p>The Corps Commander was, in addition, directly responsible
-to the Army Commander for the tactical defence of his whole
-area, for the creation and maintenance of the entire system of field
-defences covering his frontage, comprising trench systems in
-numerous successive zones and field fortifications of all descriptions;
-for preparations for the demolition of railways and bridges<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
-to meet the eventuality of an enforced withdrawal; and for
-detailed plans for an advance into the enemy's territory whenever
-the opportune moment should arrive.</p>
-
-<p>The extensive responsibilities thus imposed upon the Corps
-Commander, and upon the whole of his Staff, obviously demanded
-an intimate study and knowledge of the whole of the Corps area,
-such as could be acquired only by continuous occupation of one
-and the same area for a period extending over many months.
-It would therefore have been in the highest degree inconvenient
-to move such a complex organization as an Army Corps Staff
-from one area to another at short intervals of time. On the
-other hand, the several Divisions allotted to any given Corps for
-the actual occupation and maintenance of the defences could
-not be called upon to carry out without relief or rest, trench
-duty for continuous periods longer than a few weeks at a time.</p>
-
-<p>During the first three years the number of Divisions at the
-disposal of the British High Command was never adequate to
-provide each Army Corps in the front line with sufficient Divisions
-to permit of a regular alternation out of its own resources of
-periods of trench duty and periods of rest. For a Corps holding
-a two-Division frontage, for example, it would have been necessary
-to provide a permanent strength of at least four Divisions
-in order to permit of such a rotation.</p>
-
-<p>The expedient generally adopted, therefore, was to withdraw
-altogether from the Army Corps, each Division in turn, as it
-became due for a rest behind the line or was required for duty
-elsewhere, and to substitute some other available Division from
-G.H.Q. or Army Reserve. The broad result was that such an
-deal as that of a fixed composition for an Army Corps proved
-quite unattainable, and there was a constant interchange of
-nearly the whole of the Divisions of the Army, who served in
-succession, for short periods, in many different Corps, and under
-many different Commanders.</p>
-
-<p>To this general rule there was, from the outset of its formation,
-one striking exception, in the case of the Canadian Army
-Corps, consisting of the four Canadian Divisions, which, with
-rare exceptions, and these only for short periods and for quite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
-special purposes, invariably fought as a complete Corps of fixed
-constitution.</p>
-
-<p>It is impossible to overvalue the advantages which accrued
-to the Canadian troops from this close and constant association
-of all the four Divisions with each other, with the Corps Commander
-and his Staff, and with all the accessory Corps services.
-It meant mutual knowledge of each other among all Commanders,
-all Staffs, all arms and services, and the mutual trust and confidence
-born of that knowledge. It was the prime factor in
-achieving the brilliant conquest of the Vimy Ridge by that Corps
-in the early spring of 1917.</p>
-
-<p>The consummation, so long and so ardently hoped for, of a
-similar welding together of all Australian units in the field in
-France into a single Corps was not achieved in its entirety until
-a full year later, and it will be interesting to trace briefly the
-steps by which such a result, strongly pressed as it was by the
-Australian Government, was finally brought about.</p>
-
-<p>Australia put into the field and maintained until the end,
-altogether five Divisions of Infantry, complete with all requisite
-Artillery, Engineers, Pioneers and all Supply, Medical and
-Veterinary Services, in full conformity with the Imperial War
-Establishments laid down for such Divisions. But the method
-and time of their formation and organization, the manner and
-circumstances of their war preparation, and their employment as
-part of a Corps varied considerably.</p>
-
-<p>The First Australian Division, together with the Fourth
-Infantry Brigade, which was then under my command and
-subsequently became the nucleus of the Fourth Australian Division,
-were raised in Australia in 1914, immediately after the
-outbreak of war, were transported to Egypt, where they underwent
-their war training in the winter of 1915, and ultimately
-formed, with the New Zealand Contingent, the body known as
-the "Anzac" Corps, which carried out, on April 25th, the
-memorable landing on the Gallipoli Peninsula.</p>
-
-<p>The Second Australian Division speedily followed, being raised
-in Australia during 1915, and the greater part of this Second
-Contingent joined the Anzac Corps in the later stages of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>
-Dardanelles Expedition. Another independent Brigade (the
-Eighth) was also sent to Egypt in that year.</p>
-
-<p>The raising of the Third Australian Division, early in 1916,
-was the magnificent answer which Australia made when public
-men and the Press declared that the Australian people would
-resent the Evacuation from Gallipoli, and the seemingly fruitless
-sacrifices which it entailed. This Division was shipped direct
-to England, and assembled on Salisbury Plain during the summer
-of 1916, where I assumed the command of it. There it underwent
-its war training under conditions far more advantageous
-than those which confronted the First and Second Divisions in
-the Egyptian desert. The Third Division entered the theatre
-of war in France in November, 1916.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime, the Evacuation of the Peninsula, in December,
-1915, led to the assembly in Egypt of the First and Second
-Australian Divisions, the Fourth and Eighth independent
-Infantry Brigades and some thirty thousand reinforcements and
-convalescents.</p>
-
-<p>Out of this supply of fighting material it was then decided to
-constitute two additional complete Divisions, the Fourth Brigade
-forming the nucleus of the Fourth Australian Division, while
-the 8th Brigade formed that of the Fifth Australian Division;
-the remaining Brigades and the Divisional troops were drawn
-from reinforcements, stiffened by a considerable contribution
-of veterans taken from the four Infantry Brigades who had
-carried out the landing on Gallipoli.</p>
-
-<p>The Fourth and Fifth Divisions were thus formed in Egypt
-in February and March, 1916, and the conditions of their war
-training were even less satisfactory than those which had confronted
-the earlier Divisions. The hot season speedily arrived;
-equipment, munitions and animals materialized slowly; training
-equipment and suitable training grounds were of the most
-meagre character; and upon all these difficulties supervened
-the urgent obligation to undertake the strenuous toil of organizing
-and executing, on the Sinai desert, the field fortifications required
-for the defence of the Suez Canal zone.</p>
-
-<p>The method in which the Divisions then available in Egypt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
-were to be grouped for the purposes of Corps Command was
-ripe for decision. It was then that the determination was reached
-to constitute two separate Army Corps, to be called respectively
-"First Anzac" and "Second Anzac." The former embodied
-the First, Second and Fifth Australian Divisions, under General
-Sir William Birdwood; the latter comprised the Fourth Australian
-and the New Zealand Divisions under Lieut.-General
-Sir Alexander Godley.</p>
-
-<p>This was the organization of the Australian troops when the
-time arrived, in May, 1916, for their transfer by sea from Egypt
-to the scene of the titanic conflict which had been for nearly two
-years raging on the soil of France and Belgium.</p>
-
-<p>This grouping did not, however, persist for more than a few
-weeks. The opening of the great Somme offensive in July 1916
-found the First, Second and Fourth Divisions operating under
-First Anzac in the valley of the Somme, while the Fifth Australian
-and the New Zealand Division constituted the Second
-Anzac Corps in the Armentières-Fleurbaix sector. There followed
-other interchanges as the campaign developed, and by
-November of 1916, the grouping stood with First Anzac employing
-the First, Second, Fourth and Fifth Divisions, while Second
-Anzac comprised the Third Australian, the New Zealand and
-the Thirty-Fourth British Divisions.</p>
-
-<p>The series of offensive operations opening with the great
-and successful battle of Messines on June 7th, 1917, found the
-Fourth Australian Division once again under the command of
-General Godley, only to be again withdrawn before the concluding
-phases of the Third Battle of Ypres, in September and
-October, 1917. The autumn offensive of 1917, aiming at the
-capture of the Passchendaele ridge, was the first occasion on
-which the whole of the five Divisions were simultaneously
-engaged in the same locality in a common enterprise; but
-even on that occasion they still remained distributed under
-two different Corps Commands, and had not yet achieved the
-long-desired unity of command and of policy.</p>
-
-<p>This constant interchange of these Divisions, unavoidable
-as it probably was, undoubtedly militated against the attainment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
-of the highest standard of efficiency. Uniform in scope
-and purpose as military administration and tactical policy aims
-to be when considered on broad lines, yet in a thousand and one
-matters of detail, many of them of dominating importance, the
-personality and the individual idiosyncrasies of the Corps Commander
-and of his principal executive Staff Officers, are calculated
-to exercise a powerful influence upon the functioning of
-the whole Corps.</p>
-
-<p>Under each Corps Commander there grew up in course of time
-a particular code of rules, and policies, of technical methods
-and even of technical jargon&mdash;most of it in an unwritten form.
-This nevertheless tended towards efficiency so long as the whole
-of the component personnel of the Corps remained stable, but
-imposed many difficulties upon Divisions and other units which
-joined and remained under the Corps for a short period only.</p>
-
-<p>The result was that a Divisional Commander and his Staff,
-accustomed to work in one environment, often found great difficulty,
-and occupied some appreciable period of time, in accommodating
-themselves to a new environment, in which doctrines
-of attack or defence, counter-attack or trench routine, supply or
-maintenance were, some or all of them, widely different from
-those to which they had formerly become accustomed.</p>
-
-<p>But, in the case of Dominion troops, there was a motive far
-overshadowing the desire for a removal of difficulties of merely
-a technical nature. It was one founded upon a sense of Nationhood,
-which prompted the wish, vaguely formed early in the war,
-and steadily crystallizing in the minds both of the Australian
-people and of the troops themselves, that all the Australian
-Divisions should be brought together under a single leadership.</p>
-
-<p>This ideal was associated with the hope that the Commanders
-and Staffs should to as large an extent as possible, consist solely
-of Australian Officers, as soon as ever men sufficiently qualified
-became available. It is difficult to emphasize such a desire
-without appearing to display ingratitude to a number of brilliant
-General and other officers of the Imperial Regular Service. These
-men, at a time when Australia was still able to produce only
-few officers with the necessary training and experience to justify<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-their appointment to the command of Divisions and Brigades,
-or to the senior Administrative and General Staffs, bore these
-burdens in a manner which reflected upon them the greatest
-credit, and earned for them the gratitude of the Australian
-people.</p>
-
-<p>I refer, among many others, particularly to General Sir W.
-Birdwood, Major-Generals Sir H. B. Walker, Sir N. M. Smyth,
-V.C. and Sir H. V. Cox and Brigadier-Generals W. B. Lesslie and
-P. G. M. Skene. But as the war went on, this aspect of the
-national aspiration became steadily realized; one by one, the
-senior commands and staff appointments were taken over by
-Australian Officers who had proved their aptitude and suitability
-for such responsibilities.</p>
-
-<p>The other ideal of unity of command and close association with
-each other of all Australian units, proved slower of realization. All
-concerned thought and hoped that it had been, at last, achieved
-in December, 1917, when it was decided to abolish the two
-"Anzac" Corps, and to constitute a single Australian Army
-Corps. This was effected by the transfer of the Third Australian
-Division from Second to First Anzac Corps, by altering the title
-of "Second Anzac" to "XXII. Corps," and by substituting
-for the name "First Anzac" the name "Australian Army
-Corps," which name it bore until the termination of the war.</p>
-
-<p>The only regrettable feature of this development was the
-dissolution of the close comradeship which had existed between
-the troops from the sister Dominions of Australia and New
-Zealand.</p>
-
-<p>Even then all hopes were doomed to disappointment. For
-the next four months the Corps contained five Divisions in name
-only. Almost at once, the Fourth Australian Division was
-withdrawn to serve under the VII. Corps in connection with the
-operations before Cambrai. Not many weeks later, when the
-German avalanche was loosed, the whole five Divisions became
-widely scattered, and, for a time, the Third and Fourth Divisions
-served under the VII. British Corps, the Fifth Division under
-the III. Corps, and the First Division under the XV. Corps.
-It was not until April, 1918, that four out of the five Divisions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-again came together under the control of the Australian Corps
-Commander, at that time General Sir William Birdwood.</p>
-
-<p>About the middle of May, 1918, this popular Commander was
-appointed to the leadership of the Fifth British Army. In deference
-to his long association with the Australian Imperial Force,
-he was asked to retain his status as G.O.C., A.I.F. His responsibilities
-as the Commander of an Army, and its removal to quite
-a different area in the theatre of war, made it, however, impossible
-for him to take any active part in the direction of the further
-operations of the Australian Corps.</p>
-
-<p>Owing to the vacancy thus created, the Commander-in-Chief,
-with the concurrence of the Commonwealth Government, did me
-the great honour to appoint me to the command of the Australian
-Army Corps, a command which I took over during the closing
-days of May and retained until after the Armistice.</p>
-
-<p>At that juncture the First Australian Division was still
-involved in heavy fighting, under the XV. Corps, in the Hazebrouck
-sector, and no amount of pressure which I could bring to
-bear succeeded in prevailing upon G.H.Q. to release this Division.
-It was not until early in August, 1918, on the very eve of the
-opening of the great offensive, that, at long last, all the five
-Australian Divisions became united into one Corps, never to be
-again separated. From that date onwards all five Divisions
-embarked (for the first time in their history) upon a series of
-combined offensive operations, the story of which I have set
-myself the task of unfolding in these pages.</p>
-
-<p>The Australian Army Corps had by that time evolved from
-a mere geographical organization into one which, over and
-above its component Infantry Divisions, had acquired a large
-number of accessory arms and services, called Corps Troops,
-which formed no part of a Division. It is desirable for the
-complete understanding of the battle plans of the offensive period,
-to consider the extent and nature of the whole of the fighting
-and maintenance resources of the Corps.</p>
-
-<p>These fell theoretically into two categories, comprising on
-the one hand those units properly designated as "Corps Troops,"
-which possessed a fixed and unalterable constitution, and, on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-the other hand, those additional units, known as "Army Troops,"
-whose number and character fluctuated in accordance with the
-varying needs of the situation, and with the requirements of
-the various operations.</p>
-
-<p>These Army Troops, whenever detailed to act under the
-orders of the Corps Commander, became an integral part of the
-Corps, and were to all intents and purposes Corps Troops, until
-such time as they had completed the tasks allotted to them.
-The Corps Troops were multifarious in character, and amounted
-in the aggregate to large numbers, occasionally exceeding 50,000,
-a number as great as that of three additional Divisions, whose
-normal strength in the closing phases of the war never exceeded
-17,000.</p>
-
-<p>The Headquarters of the Army Corps comprised upwards of
-300 Staff and assistant Staff Officers, clerks, orderlies, draughtsmen,
-motor drivers, grooms, batmen, cooks and general helpers.
-The Corps Cavalry consisted, in the case of the Australian Army
-Corps, of the 13th Regiment of Australian Light Horse, and was
-employed, in conjunction with the Australian Cyclist Battalion,
-for reconnaissance, escort and dispatch rider duty.</p>
-
-<p>The Corps Signal Troops were an extensive organization, and
-controlled the whole of the Signal communications throughout
-the Corps area (except within the Divisions themselves), being
-responsible for the establishment, upkeep and working of every
-method of communication, whether by telegraph, telephone,
-wireless, pigeons, messenger dogs, aeroplane, or dispatch rider.
-Apart from telegraphists, mechanics and electrical experts in
-considerable numbers, adequate for the very heavy signal
-traffic during battle, and even during periods of comparative
-quiet, Corps Signals also operated two Motor Air Line and two
-Cable Sections, for the laying out and maintenance of wires.
-Those within the Corps Area, at any one place and time,
-amounted to several hundreds of miles.</p>
-
-<p>The whole of the Mechanical Transport, consisting of hundreds
-of motor lorries, for the collection and distribution of ammunition,
-food, forage and ordnance stores of all descriptions, was
-also under the direct control of Corps Headquarters. So also<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-were some half-dozen mobile Ordnance Workshops, for the
-repair of weapons and vehicles of all kinds. All these were permanent
-Corps Troops, but represented only a fraction of those
-serving under the orders of the Corps Commander.</p>
-
-<p>Among the Administrative Services there was a large contingent
-of the Labour Corps comprising some 20 Companies, for
-the construction and maintenance of all roads, and water supply
-installations, and for the handling, daily, of a formidable bulk
-and weight of Artillery ammunition; also two or more Motor
-Ambulance Convoys, for the evacuation of the sick and wounded
-out of the Corps area, and a number of Army Troops Companies
-of Engineers, as well as two Companies of Australian Tunnellers,
-who were usually employed upon the construction and maintenance
-of bridges, locks, water transport mechanism, deep
-dug-outs and battle stations.</p>
-
-<p>But the fighting units of the Corps Troops formed by far the
-largest proportion, and comprised Artillery, Heavy Trench
-Mortars, Air Squadrons and Tanks. The Artillery alone merits
-more detailed consideration. It comprised a vast array of
-many different classes of guns for many different purposes, and
-classified into various categories by reference either to their
-calibres, their mobility or their tactical purposes.</p>
-
-<p>Grouped according to calibre, all guns and howitzers of
-4&frac12;-inch bore or less were strictly considered as Field Artillery
-which, although administered by the Divisions, was almost
-invariably fought under the direct orders of the Corps Commander.
-All guns and howitzers of greater bore, up to the giant 15-inch,
-were known as Heavy and Siege Artillery.</p>
-
-<p>Regarded from the point of view of mobility, all field guns and
-that wonderfully useful weapon, the 60-pounder, were horse-drawn,
-the larger ordnance were tractor-drawn, and the very
-largest were mounted on railway trains and hauled by steam
-locomotive.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, as regards tactical utilization, some natures of ordnance
-were invariably employed for barrage or harassing fire,
-others for bombardment, others for counter-battery fighting, and
-yet others for anti-aircraft purposes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The total ordnance under the orders of the Australian Army
-Corps naturally fluctuated according to the daily battle requirements,
-but amounted at times, during the period of the war
-under consideration, to as many as 1,200 guns of all natures and
-calibres, grouped in Brigades each of four to six Batteries, each
-of four to six guns.</p>
-
-<p>This very formidable Artillery equipment far transcended
-in quantity and dynamic power anything that had been envisaged
-in the previous years of the war, or in any previous war, as
-possible of administrative or tactical control under a single Commander.
-It undoubtedly became a paramount factor in the
-victories which the Corps achieved. The Artillery of the Corps
-is entitled to the proud boast that it earned the confidence and
-gratitude of the Infantry.</p>
-
-<p>It must be left to the imagination to conceive the complexity
-of the task of keeping this enormous mass of Artillery regularly
-supplied with its ammunition, of multifarious types and in
-adequate quantities of each, of allocating to each Brigade and
-even to each Battery its appropriate task in the general plan,
-and of advancing the whole organization over half-ruined roads
-and broken bridges, in order to keep up with the Infantry as
-the battle moved forward from day to day. It would defy a
-detailed description intelligible to any but gunnery experts.</p>
-
-<p>The Air Force had, by the summer of 1918, also achieved
-a great development. The numerous Air Squadrons had embarked
-upon a policy of specialization in tactical employment,
-in accordance with the build and capacities of the aeroplanes
-with which they were equipped. Thus gradually the whole
-range of utilization became covered, from the small fast single-seater
-fighting scout, intended to engage and drive off enemy
-'planes, to the slower two-seater reconnaissance machines,
-employed chiefly for photography and for the direction of Artillery
-fire, and the giant long-distance bombing machines.</p>
-
-<p>The Australian Corps had at its exclusive disposal at all
-times the No. 3 Squadron of the Australian Flying Corps, and
-employed the machines for reconnaissance prior to and after
-battle, and for contact and counter-attack work and Artillery<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-observation during battle. But, whenever the scope of the
-operations rendered it necessary, the resources of the Corps in
-aircraft were enormously increased, and as many as a dozen
-squadrons were on occasions employed, during battle, in low
-flying pursuit of enemy infantry and transport, in production of
-smoke screens, in bombing, in ammunition carrying, and in
-dispatch bearing&mdash;over and above usual reconnaissance work
-designed to keep Corps and Divisional Headquarters rapidly and
-minutely informed, from moment to moment, of the situation of
-the Infantry in actual contact with the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>Another branch of the Air Force activities under the direct
-control of the Corps was the Captive Balloon Service. Some five
-large captive or kite balloons, carrying trained Artillery Observers,
-regularly ascended along the Corps front whenever the
-weather and the conditions of visibility permitted, to a height
-of from 2,000 to 3,000 feet, and with the aid of powerful telescopes
-and of telephone wires woven into the anchoring cables,
-kept the Artillery regularly notified of all visible enemy movement,
-and of the occurrence of all suitable targets of opportunity,
-such as the flashes from enemy guns in action.</p>
-
-<p>During battle one such balloon was invariably sent up well
-forward to observe as closely as possible the progress of the
-fighting, but the results were almost uniformly disappointing,
-because the smoke and dust of the barrage and the general murk
-of battle usually proved impenetrable to the air observer, tied
-as he was to a fixed position. The reports of these observers
-were usually confined to the laconic observation: "Can't see
-much, but all apparently going well."</p>
-
-<p>The last of the major fighting units of Corps Troops remaining
-to be mentioned are the Tanks. These extraordinary products
-of the war underwent a remarkable evolution during the
-two years which followed their first introduction on the battlefield
-in the Somme campaign of 1916. The standard of efficiency
-which had been reached by the early summer of 1918,
-in the most developed types of these curious monsters, as far outclassed
-that of the earlier types in both mechanical and fighting
-properties as the modern service rifle compared with the old
-Brown Bess of the Peninsular War. The Tank crews had
-improved in like proportion, both in skill, enterprise and
-adaptability.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_014fp.jpg" width="1200" height="780" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>The Australian Corps Commander&mdash;with the Generals of his Staff.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_015fp.jpg" width="1200" height="768" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>The Valley of the Somme&mdash;looking East towards Bray, which was then still in enemy hands.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Nothing can be more unstinted than the acknowledgment
-which the Australian Corps makes of its obligation to the Tank
-Corps for its powerful assistance throughout the whole of the great
-offensive. Commencing with the battle of Hamel, a large contingent
-of Tanks participated in every important "set-piece"
-engagement which the Corps undertook. The Tanks were
-organized into Brigades, each of three Battalions, each of three
-Companies, each of twelve Tanks. During the opening phases,
-early in August, the Tank contingent comprised a whole Brigade
-of Mark V. Tanks, a Battalion of Mark V. (Star) Tanks, and a
-Battalion of fast Armoured Cars; in the later phases, during the
-assault on the Hindenburg Line, a second Brigade of Mark V.
-Tanks and a Battalion of Whippets also co-operated.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the formidable array of fighting resources under
-the direct orders of the Australian Corps Commander, and,
-together with the five Australian Divisions, formed a fighting
-organization of great strength and solidarity. It became an
-instrument for offensive warfare, as has been said by a high
-authority, which for size and power excelled all Corps organizations
-which either this or any previous war had produced. It
-was an instrument which it was a great responsibility, as also
-a great honour, to wield in the task of shattering the still formidable
-military power of the enemy. For in the early summer
-of 1918, that power appeared to be still unimpaired, and still
-capable of inflicting serious reverses upon the Allied cause.</p>
-
-<p>Early in 1918, owing to the depletion of human material,
-the Imperial Divisions were reconstituted by a reduction of their
-Infantry Brigades from a four-battalion to a three-battalion
-basis, thus reducing the available infantry by twenty-five per
-cent. But in this reduction, the Australian Divisions during the
-fighting period shared only to a very small extent. In March
-the strength of the 15 Brigades of Australian Infantry in the
-field was still 60 Battalions. The heavy fighting of March and
-April compelled the extinction of 3 Battalions, one each<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-respectively in the 9th, 12th and 13th Infantry Brigades; but
-the remaining 57 Battalions of Infantry remained intact until
-after the close of the actual fighting operations early in October.
-The Corps was therefore enabled to maintain an additional
-twelve battalions over and above the then prevailing corresponding
-Imperial organization.</p>
-
-<p>It was thus the largest of all Army Corps ever organized, in
-this or any other war, by any of the combatants&mdash;the largest
-both in point of numbers and of military resources of all descriptions,
-approaching, and in one case exceeding, a full Army
-command.</p>
-
-<p>But even these great resources and responsibilities were
-added to, during the course of the operations, by the allocation,
-at successive times, to the Australian Corps of the 17th Imperial
-Division, the 32nd Imperial Division and the 27th and 30th
-American Divisions. Thus, during the closing days of September,
-1918, the Corps numbered a total of nearly 200,000 men, exceeding
-more than fourfold the whole of the British troops under the
-command of the Duke of Wellington at the Battle of Waterloo.</p>
-
-<p>Of this total about one-half comprised Australian troops,
-the Heavy Artillery and other Army units attached to the Corps
-consisting of Imperial troops. The Commanders and Staffs
-from June, 1918, until the end consisted almost entirely of
-Australian officers, among whom the following were the
-senior:</p>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="left">Corps Commander</td><td align="left">Lieut.-General Sir J. Monash,</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">G.C.M.G., K.C.B., V.D.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Corps Chief-of-Staff</span></td><td align="left">Brigadier-General T. A. Blamey,</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">C.M.G., D.S.O.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Corps Artillery Commander</span></td><td align="left">Brigadier-General W. A. Coxen,</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">C.B., C.M.G., D.S.O.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Chief Engineer</span></td><td align="left">Brigadier-General C. H. Foott,</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">C.B., C.M.G.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">1st Div. Commander</td><td align="left">Major-General Sir T. W. Glasgow,</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">K.C.B., D.S.O.</span>
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">General Staff Officer</span></td><td align="left">Lieut.-Colonel A. M. Ross, C.M.G., D.S.O.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Chief Admin. Officer</span></td><td align="left">Lieut.-Colonel H. G. Viney,</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">C.M.G., D.S.O.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">2nd Div. Commander</td><td align="left">Major-General Sir C. Rosenthal,</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">K.C.B., C.M.G., D.S.O.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">General Staff Officer</span></td><td align="left">Lieut.-Colonel C. G. N. Miles,</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">C.M.G., D.S.O.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Chief Admin. Officer</span></td><td align="left">Lieut.-Colonel J. M. A. Durrant,</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">C.M.G., D.S.O.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">3rd Div. Commander</td><td align="left">Major-General Sir J. Gellibrand,</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">K.C.B., D.S.O.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">General Staff Officer</span></td><td align="left">Lieut.-Colonel C. H. Jess, C.M.G., D.S.O.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Chief Admin. Officer</span></td><td align="left">Lieut.-Colonel R. E. Jackson, D.S.O.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">4th Div. Commander</td><td align="left">Major-General E. G. Sinclair-Maclagan,</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">C.B., D.S.O.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">General Staff Officer</span></td><td align="left">Lieut.-Colonel J. D. Lavarack,</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">C.M.G., D.S.O.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Chief Admin. Officer</span></td><td align="left">Lieutenant-Colonel R. Dowse, D.S.O.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">5th Div. Commander</td><td align="left">Major-General Sir J. J. T. Hobbs,</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">K.C.B., K.C.M.G., V.D.</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">General Staff Officer</span></td><td align="left">Lieut.-Colonel J. H. Peck, C.M.G., D.S.O.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">and later</span></td><td align="left">Lieut.-Colonel J. T. McColl, O.B.E., M.C.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Chief Admin. Officer</span></td><td align="left">Colonel J. H. Bruche, C.B., C.M.G.</td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<p>All the above were Australian Officers, and most of them were
-of Australian birth. There were also two senior staff officers
-of the Regular Army, Brigadier-General R. A. Carruthers, C.B.,
-C.M.G., who was Chief of the Administrative Services, and
-Brigadier-General L. D. Fraser, C.B., C.M.G., who was in immediate
-command of the Heavy Artillery of the Corps.<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> A <i>Division</i> consists of three Infantry Brigades, Divisional Artillery, three
-Field Companies of Engineers, three Field Ambulances, a Pioneer Battalion, a
-Machine Gun Battalion, together with Supply, Sanitary and Veterinary
-Services. Its nominal strength is 20,000.
-</p>
-<p>
-An <i>Infantry Brigade</i> consists of four Infantry Battalions, each of 1,000 men,
-and a Light Trench Mortar Battery.
-</p>
-<p>
-Divisional Artillery comprises two Brigades each of four batteries, each of six
-guns or howitzers, also one Heavy and three medium Trench Mortar Batteries,
-and the Divisional Ammunition Column.
-</p>
-<p>
-This composition of a Division was modified in detail during the course of
-the war.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> For grouping of Australian Brigades into Divisions, see Appendix "A."</p></div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER I<br />
-
-BACK TO THE SOMME</h2>
-
-
-<p>The early days of the year 1918 found the Australian Corps
-consisting of the First, Second, Third and Fifth Australian
-Divisions, while the Fourth had been transferred far south
-to co-operate in the later developments of the Cambrai fighting.
-The Corps was then holding, defensively, a sector of the line
-in Flanders, which had in the previous years of the war become,
-at various times, familiar to all our Divisions, and which extended
-from the river Lys at Armentières, northwards, as far as to include
-the southern half of the Messines Ridge.</p>
-
-<p>It was, indeed, that very stretch of country, which in June,
-1917, had been captured by our Third Division, in co-operation
-with the New Zealanders. Opposite its centre lay the town of
-Warneton, still in the hands of the enemy. Excepting for a
-small area of undulating ground in the extreme north of the
-Corps sector, the country was a forbidding expanse of devastation,
-flat and woebegone, with long stretches of the front line
-submerged waist deep after every freshet in the river Lys, and
-with the greater part of our trench system like nothing but a
-series of canals of liquid mud.</p>
-
-<p>This unsavoury region formed, however, the most obvious
-line of approach for an enemy who, debouching from the direction
-of Warneton, aimed at the high land between us and the Channel
-Ports; so that, tactically useless as were these mud flats, it was
-imperative that they should be strongly defended, in order to
-protect from capture the important heights of Messines, Kemmel,
-Hill 63, Mont des Cats and Cassel.</p>
-
-<p>During the fighting of the preceding summer and early autumn,
-which gave the Australian troops possession of this territory,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-the locality was dry, practicable for movement, and reasonably
-comfortable for the front line troops. Now it was water-logged,
-often ice-bound, bleak and inhospitable. The precious months
-of dry weather, between August and October, 1917, had been
-allowed to pass without any comprehensive attempt on the part
-of those Divisions which had relieved the Second Anzac Corps
-after its capture of this ground to perfect the defences of the
-newly-conquered territory. At any rate, there was little to
-show for any work that may have been attempted.</p>
-
-<p>Now, in the very depth of the worst season of the year, the
-demand came to prepare the region for defence and resistance
-to the last; for the threat of a great German offensive in the
-opening of the 1918 campaigning season was already beginning
-to take shape. It was the Australian Corps which was called
-upon to answer that demand. There followed week after week
-of heart-breaking labour, much of it necessarily by night, in
-draining the flat land, in erecting acre upon acre of wire entanglements,
-in constructing hundreds of strong points, and
-concrete machine gun emplacements. Trenches had to be dug,
-although the sides collapsed unless immediately revetted with
-fascines or sheet iron; roads had to be repaired, and vain attempts
-were made to provide the trench garrisons with dry and
-bearable underground living quarters.</p>
-
-<p>The monotony of all this labour, which long after&mdash;when the
-Australians had disappeared from the scene and were again
-fighting on the Somme&mdash;proved to have been undertaken all in
-vain, was relieved only by an occasional raid, undertaken by one
-or other of our front line Divisions, for the purpose of molesting
-the enemy and gathering information. The Corps front was
-held by two Divisions in line, one in support, and one resting
-in a back area; the rotation of trench duty gave each Division
-about six weeks in the line.</p>
-
-<p>My own command at that juncture still comprised the Third
-Australian Division, which I had organized and trained in
-England, eighteen months before. Although this Division had
-never been on the Somme, it had seen a great deal of fighting
-in Flanders during 1917. During this period, therefore, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-until the outbreak of the storm in the last days of March, 1918,
-my interest centred chiefly in the doings of the Third Division,
-although for a very short period I had the honour of commanding
-the Corps during the temporary absence of Sir William
-Birdwood.</p>
-
-<p>The information at our disposal led to the inevitable conclusion
-that, during January and February, the enemy was busy
-in transferring a great mass of military resources from the
-Russian to the Western Front. No one capable of reading the
-signs entertained the smallest doubt that he contemplated
-taking the offensive, in the spring, on a large scale. The only
-questions were, at what point would he strike? and what tactics
-would he employ?</p>
-
-<p>Every responsible Australian Commander, accordingly, during
-those months, applied himself diligently to these problems,
-formulated his doctrines of obstinate defence, and of the defensive
-offensive; and saw to it that his troops received such precognition
-in these matters as was possible at such a time and in
-such an environment. The principles of defence in successive
-zones, of the rapid development of Infantry and Artillery fire
-power, of the correct distribution of machine guns, of rearguard
-tactics, and questions of the best equipment for long marches
-and rapid movement were debated and resolved upon, in both
-official and unofficial conferences of officers.</p>
-
-<p>All this discussion bore good fruit. Among the possible rôles
-which the Australian Divisions might be called upon to fill,
-when the great issue was joined, were those which involved these
-very matters. And so the event proved; and the Australians
-then approached their new and unfamiliar tasks, not wholly
-unprepared by training and study for the difficulties involved.</p>
-
-<p>It was on March 8th that the Third Division bade a last but
-by no means a regretful farewell to the mud of Flanders and
-Belgium&mdash;regions which it had inhabited almost continuously for
-the preceding sixteen months. The Division moved back for
-a well-earned rest, to a pleasant countryside at Nielles-lez-Blequin,
-not far from Boulogne. It was lying there, enjoying<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-the first signs of dawning spring when, on March 21st, the
-curtain was rung up for a great drama, in which the Australian
-troops were destined to play no subordinate part.</p>
-
-<p>There followed many weeks of crowded and strenuous days,
-and the story of this time must, of necessity, assume the form
-of a personal narrative. Events followed one upon the other
-so rapidly, and the centre of interest changed so quickly from
-place to place and from hour to hour, that no recital except that
-of the future historian writing with a wealth of collected material
-at his disposal, could take upon itself any other guise than that
-of a record of individual experience.</p>
-
-<p>The Germans attacked the front of the Fifth British Army on
-March 21st. The information which was at the disposal of our
-High Command was not of such a nature that the promulgation
-of it would have been calculated to elevate the spirits of the
-Army; consequently Divisions situated as we were, in Reserve,
-and, for the time being, entirely out of the picture, had to depend
-for our news partly upon rumour, which was always unreliable,
-and partly upon severely censored communiqués, framed so as
-to allay public anxiety. Nothing definite emerged from such
-sources, except that things were going ill and that fighting was
-taking place on ground far behind what had been our front line
-near St. Quentin. This hint was enough to justify the expectation
-that my Division would not be left for long unemployed;
-and on the same day, March 21st, instructions were issued for all
-units to prepare for a move, to dump unessential baggage, to fill
-up all mobile supplies, and to stand by in readiness to march at
-a few hours' notice.</p>
-
-<p>Orders came to move on March 22nd. The Division was to
-move <i>east</i>, that is, back into Flanders, and not south to the Somme
-Valley, as all had hoped. The prescribed move duly started, but
-by March 24th had been arrested, for orders had come to cancel
-the move and await fresh orders. Advanced parties, for billeting
-duty, were to proceed next morning by motor lorry to Doullens,
-and there await orders. Later came detailed instructions that
-the Division was to be transferred from the Australian Corps to
-the Tenth Corps, which latter was to be G.H.Q. Reserve, and that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-the whole Division was to be moved the next night to the Doullens<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a>
-area, the dismounted troops by rail, and the Artillery and other
-mounted units by route-march.</p>
-
-<p>It was evident that the plans of the High Command were the
-subject of rapid changes, in sympathy, probably, with fluctuations
-in the situation, which were not ascertainable by me. There
-followed a night and day of strenuous activity, during which
-arrangements were completed to entrain the three Infantry
-Brigades and the Pioneers at three different railway stations, to
-start off the whole of the mounted units on their long march by
-road, and to ensure that all fighting troops were properly equipped
-with munitions, food and water, all ready for immediate employment.
-It was well that my Staff responded capably to the heavy
-demands made upon them, and that all this preparatory work was
-efficiently done.</p>
-
-<p>The entrainments commenced at midnight on the 25th and
-continued all night. At break of day on the 26th, after assuring
-myself that everyone was correctly on the move, I proceeded
-south by motor-car, in the endeavour to find the Tenth Corps Headquarters,
-and to report to them for orders. My fruitless search
-of that forenoon revealed to me the first glimpse of the true reason
-for that far-reaching disorganization and confusion which
-confronted me during the next twenty-four hours.</p>
-
-<p>Over three years of trench warfare had accustomed the whole
-Army to fixed locations for all Headquarters, and to settled
-routes and lines of inter-communication. The powerful German
-onslaught and the recoil of a broad section of our fighting front
-had suddenly disturbed the whole of this complex organization.
-The Headquarters of Brigades, Divisions, and even Corps, ceased
-to have fixed locations where they could be found, or assured lines
-of telegraph or telephone communications, by which they could
-be reached. Everything was in a state of flux, and the process
-of getting into personal contact with each other suddenly took
-responsible leaders hours where it had previously taken minutes.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span></p>
-<p>In its broad result, this disorganization affected most seriously
-the retiring troops, by depriving them of the advantages of
-rapidly disseminated orders for properly co-ordinated action by a
-large number of Corps and Divisions withdrawing side by side. The
-consequence was, I am convinced, that the recoil&mdash;which may have
-been inevitable at first by reason of the intensity of the German
-attack, and because the defensive organization of the Fifth Army
-had been unduly attenuated&mdash;was allowed to extend over a much
-greater distance, and to continue for longer, in point of time, than
-ought to have been the case.</p>
-
-<p>Between Albert and St. Quentin there were in existence several
-lines of defence, which by reason of their topographical features,
-or the existence of trenches and entanglements, were eminently
-suitable for making a stand. Yet no stand was made, at any rate
-on a broad front, because there was no co-ordination in the
-spasmodic attempts to do so. I subsequently learned of more
-than one instance where Brigades of Infantry or of Artillery found
-themselves perfectly well able to hold on, but were compelled to
-a continued retirement by the melting away of the units on their
-flanks.</p>
-
-<p>I sought the Tenth Corps at Hautcloque, where they were to
-be. They were not there. I proceeded to Frevent, where they
-were said to have been the night before. They had already left.
-In despair, I proceeded to Doullens, resolved at least to ensure
-the orderly detrainment of my Division and their quartering for
-the following night, and there to await further orders. A despatch
-rider was sent off to G.H.Q. to report my whereabouts, and the
-fact that I was without orders.</p>
-
-<p>Arriving at Doullens, I tumbled into a scene of indescribable
-confusion. The population were preparing to evacuate the
-town <i>en masse</i>, and an exhausted and hungry soldiery was pouring
-into the town from the east and south-east, with excited tales that
-the German cavalry was on their heels. Influenced by the
-persistency of these reports, I determined to make, immediately,
-dispositions to cover the detrainment of my troops, so that some
-show of resistance could be made.</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of all this stress and anxiety, I was favoured by a
-run of good luck. Within half an hour of my reaching Doullens,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-the first of my railway trains arrived, bringing Brigadier-General
-Rosenthal and a battalion of the 9th Brigade, sufficient troops,
-at any rate, to furnish a strong outpost line for covering the eastern
-approaches of Doullens, while the remainder of the Brigade should
-arrive. These arrangements made, I motored to Mondicourt,
-where almost immediately afterwards a train arrived, bringing
-Brigadier-General McNicoll and the first battalion of the 10th
-Brigade.</p>
-
-<p>There also arrived, almost simultaneously, that rumour with
-the ridiculous <i>dénouement</i>, that German armoured motor-cars
-were approaching along the road from Albert and were within
-three miles of that point. Those Armoured Cars proved ultimately
-to be a train of French agricultural implements which a
-wheezy and rumbling traction engine was doing its best to salve.
-McNicoll likewise received orders to put out a line of outposts
-to cover Mondicourt railway station.</p>
-
-<p>At this point, too, endless streams of dust-begrimed soldiers
-were straggling westwards. McNicoll collected many hundreds
-of them, and did not omit, by very direct methods, to prevail
-upon all of them who had not yet lost their rifles and essential
-equipment, to call a halt and join his own troops in the defensive
-dispositions which he was making.</p>
-
-<p>My next business was to select a suitable central point at which
-to establish my Headquarters, preferably where I could find a
-still intact telephone service. Again by good luck I found a
-most suitable location in a small château at Couturelle, whose
-owner hospitably provided a much needed meal.</p>
-
-<p>It was there, soon after my arrival, that I learned of the
-presence in the neighbourhood of Major-General Maclagan;
-this news, implying as it did the presence also of some at least of
-the Fourth Australian Division, was a gleam of sunshine in an
-otherwise gloomy prospect. Report said that he was at Basseux,
-and thither I proceeded, in order to arrange, by personal conference
-with him, some plan for co-ordinated action.</p>
-
-<p>Basseux rests on the main road from Doullens to Arras, which
-lies roughly parallel to the line along which, as subsequently
-transpired, the vanguard of the enemy was endeavouring to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-advance at that part of the front. That main road I found packed,
-for the whole of the length which I had to traverse, with a steadily
-retreating collection of heterogeneous units, service vehicles and
-guns of all imaginable types and sizes, intermingled with hundreds
-of civilian refugees, and farm waggons, carts, trollies and barrows
-packed high with pathetic loads of household effects. The retrograde
-movement was orderly and methodical enough, and there
-was nothing in the nature of a rout, but it was nevertheless a
-determined movement to the rear which evidenced nothing but a
-desire to keep moving.</p>
-
-<p>I found Maclagan at about four o'clock. His Division had
-already been on the move, by bus and route march, for three days
-without rest. The position to the east and south-east of him
-was obscure, and he also had posted a line of outposts in the
-supposed direction of the enemy, and was arranging to despatch
-his 4th Brigade to Hebuterne (which the enemy was reported to
-have entered), with orders to recapture that town. That the
-enemy was not very far away became evident from the fact that
-the vicinity of the hut in which we were conferring presently
-came under desultory long-range shell-fire.</p>
-
-<p>There was nothing to be done except to arrange jointly to keep
-up an effective and as far as possible continuous line of outposts
-towards the south-east, and to await developments. Having
-made these arrangements I returned along the same crowded
-road, which was now also being leisurely shelled by the enemy, to
-Couturelle. There I found that the principal officers of my Staff
-had arrived.</p>
-
-<p>Thereupon orders were issued for the concentration, after
-detrainment, of my three Brigades in the following areas, each
-with due outpost precautions, viz.: 9th Brigade at Pas, 10th
-Brigade at Authie, and 11th Brigade at Couin. My Artillery was
-still distant a full day's march by road.</p>
-
-<p>About nine o'clock that evening I received, by telephone, my
-first order from the Tenth Corps. It ran as follows: "A Staff
-Officer has left some time ago on his way to you, carrying instructions
-for you to report personally at once to Corbie for orders.
-We have since heard that you are to go to Montigny instead."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was nearly an hour before the Staff Officer arrived, having
-been delayed on the road by congestion of traffic. The instructions
-he carried transferred my Division from the Tenth to the
-Seventh Corps, to whom I was to report personally, without delay,
-at Corbie. It was evident from the later telephone message that
-the Seventh Corps had been compelled to withdraw from Corbie,
-and was proceeding to Montigny.</p>
-
-<p>This was the second stroke of good luck that day; for if the
-telephone message above recited had not overtaken the Staff
-Officer, it is quite probable that I should have already started
-for a wrong destination, and have had to waste valuable time at a
-most critical juncture. Had I failed to find General Congreve,
-the Seventh Corps Commander, <i>that same night</i>, it is almost
-certain that my Division would have arrived on the Somme too
-late to prevent the capture of Amiens.</p>
-
-<p>Setting out from Couturelle shortly after ten o'clock that night,
-accompanied by four of my Staff and two despatch-riders, with
-two motor-cars and two motor cycles, in black darkness, on unfamiliar
-roads congested with refugee traffic, I did not reach Montigny
-until after midnight. I found General Congreve in the
-corner of a bare salon of stately proportions, in a deserted
-château by the roadside, seated with his Chief of Staff at a small
-table, and examining a map by the flickering light of a candle.
-The rest of the château was in darkness, but heaps of hastily
-dumped Staff baggage impeded all the corridors.</p>
-
-<p>General Congreve was brief and to the point. What he said
-amounted to this: "At four o'clock to-day my Corps was holding
-a line from Albert to Bray, when the line gave way. The enemy
-is now pushing westwards and if not stopped to-morrow will
-certainly secure all the heights overlooking Amiens. What you
-must try and do is to get your Division deployed across his path.
-The valleys of the Ancre and the Somme offer good points for
-your flanks to rest upon. You must, of course, get as far east as
-you can, but I know of a good line of old trenches, which I believe
-are still in good condition, running from Méricourt-l'Abbé towards
-Sailly-le-Sec. Occupy them, if you can't get further east."</p>
-
-<p>At that juncture General Maclagan arrived and received<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-similar crisp orders to bring his Division into a position of support
-on the high land in the bend of the Ancre to the west of Albert.
-I gleaned further that the Seventh Corps was now the south flank
-Corps of the Third Army, and that as the Fifth Army, south of
-the Somme, had practically melted away, while the French were
-retiring south-westerly and leaving an hourly increasing gap
-between their north flank and the Somme, General Byng had
-resolved to make every effort not only to maintain the flank of
-his Third Army on the Somme, but also to prevent it being turned
-from the south, while the Commander-in-Chief was taking other
-measures to attempt next day to fill the gap above alluded to.</p>
-
-<p>It was already 1 a.m. of March 27th, and I had left my Division
-twenty miles away. Everything depended now on quick decision
-and faultless executive action. It was fortunate that a telephone
-line to G.H.Q. had been found in good working order, and that
-the services of three large motor bus convoys could be arranged
-for to proceed at once to the Doullens area, in order to transport
-my Infantry during the night to the place appointed. I worked
-with my Staff till nearly break of day, considering and settling
-all detailed arrangements, and we then separated in various
-directions to our appointed tasks.</p>
-
-<p>I proceeded myself a little after dawn, with one Staff Officer,
-to Franvillers, which had been decided upon as the point for
-leaving the buses. There was yet no sign of any Australian
-troops, and the village was being hastily evacuated by the terror-stricken
-inhabitants. But there were ample and visible signs,
-far away on the high plateau beyond the Ancre Valley, that the
-German line of skirmishers was already on the move, slowly
-driving back the few troops of British Cavalry who were, most
-valiantly, trying to delay their advance.</p>
-
-<p>The next hour was one of intense suspense and expectancy;
-but my anxiety was relieved when there rolled into the village
-from the north, a motor bus convoy of thirty vehicles, crowded
-with good staunch Australian Infantry of the 11th Brigade, and
-bringing also Brigadier-General Cannan and some of his Brigade
-Staff. It was not the first time in the war that the London motor-bus&mdash;after
-abandoning the population of the great metropolis<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-to enforced pedestrianism&mdash;had helped to save a most critical
-situation.</p>
-
-<p>Almost immediately after, there arrived McNicoll, with a
-battalion of his 10th Brigade. Hour after hour a steady stream
-of omnibus convoys came in. No time was lost in assembling
-the troops, and in directing the Infantry&mdash;company after company&mdash;down
-the steep, winding road to the little village of Heilly, and
-thence across the Ancre, to deploy on the selected line of defence
-indicated in the orders above recited.</p>
-
-<p>The spectacle of that Infantry will be ever memorable to me,
-as one of the most inspiring sights of the whole war. Here was
-the Third Division&mdash;the "new chum" Division, which, in spite
-of its great successes in Belgium and Flanders, had never been
-able to boast, like its sister Divisions, that it had been "down on
-the Somme"&mdash;come into its own at last, and called upon to prove
-its mettle. And then there was the thought that they were going
-to measure themselves, man to man, against an enemy who,
-skulking behind his field works, had for so long pounded them to
-pieces in their trenches, poisoned them with gas, and bombed
-them as they slept in their billets.</p>
-
-<p>That, at any rate, was the point of view of the private soldier,
-and no one who saw those battalions, in spite of the fatigue of
-two sleepless nights, marching on that crisp, clear spring morning,
-with head erect and the swing and precision of a Royal review
-parade, could doubt that not a man of them would flinch from
-any assault that was likely to fall upon them. Nor was there a
-man who did not fully grasp that upon him and his comrades
-was about to fall the whole responsibility of frustrating the
-German attempt to capture Amiens and separate the Allied
-Armies.</p>
-
-<p>By midday, the situation was already well in hand, and by
-four o'clock I was able to report to the Seventh Corps that no less
-than six Battalions were already deployed, astride of the
-triangle formed by the Ancre and the Somme, on the line Méricourt&mdash;Sailly-le-Sec,
-distributed in a series of "localities"
-defended by rifles and Lewis guns. As yet no Artillery was available.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The 11th Brigade occupied this line to the south of the main
-road from Corbie to Bray, the 10th Brigade continued it to the
-north of the road, while the 9th Brigade was leaving the buses
-and assembling in the neighbourhood of Heilly.</p>
-
-<p>So far, the pressure of the enemy upon my front had not been
-serious. It was obvious that he had, as yet, very little Artillery
-at his disposal. We had not, however, found our front totally
-devoid of defenders. During the forenoon, a few troops of our
-cavalry, and a force under Brigadier-General Cummings, comprising
-about 1,500 mixed infantry, the remnants of a large
-number of different units of the Third Army, were slowly withdrawing
-under pressure from the advancing German patrols.
-These valiant "die-hards," deserving of the greatest praise in
-comparison with the many thousands of their comrades who
-had withdrawn from any further attempt to stem the onflowing
-tide, were now ordered to retire through my outpost line, thus
-leaving the Australian Infantry at last face to face with the
-enemy.</p>
-
-<p>These dispositions were completed only in the nick of time. All
-that afternoon the enemy appeared over the sky-line in front of
-us, both in lines of skirmishers and in numerous small patrols,
-endeavouring to work forward in the folds of the ground, and to
-sneak towards us in the gullies. But all of them were received
-with well directed rifle fire and the enemy suffered many losses.
-Towards nightfall the attempts to continue his advance died away.</p>
-
-<p>That was, literally, the end of the great German advance in
-this part of the field, and although, as will be told later, the enemy
-renewed the attempt on several subsequent occasions to reach
-Amiens, he gained not a single inch of ground, but, on the contrary,
-was compelled in front of us to undertake a slow but steady
-retrograde movement.</p>
-
-<p>Our reconnoitring patrols discovered, however, that the enemy
-already had possession of the village of Sailly-Laurette, and of
-Marett and Treux Woods, but that he was not yet in great
-strength on the crest of the plateau. Orders were issued to perfect
-the organization of our defensive line, put out wire entanglements,
-dig-in machine guns, and rest the troops in relays during<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-the coming night, but not to attempt any forward movement
-until the next night.</p>
-
-<p>My Artillery and other mounted units were still half a day's
-march away; but Brigadier-General Grimwade, their Commander,
-had been instructed to push on in advance, with the
-whole of the Commanders of his Brigades and Batteries. They
-arrived on the scene in sufficient time to enable the whole situation
-to be examined in the daylight, and for detailed action to
-be decided upon. The Artillery kept coming in during the whole
-of the following night, and although men and horses were almost
-exhausted after two days of forced marching, their spirits were
-never higher. Next morning found the guns already in action,
-and engaging all bodies of the enemy who dared to expose themselves
-to view.</p>
-
-<p>I must now turn to the Fourth Australian Division. They
-had been less fortunate in several respects. Maclagan was
-directed to leave behind his 4th Brigade, which had on the
-26th speedily become committed to important operations under
-the 62nd Division in front of Hebuterne, from which village this
-Brigade had driven the enemy. This left him with only two
-Brigades, the 12th and 13th. He was faced with the obligation
-of bringing his already over-tired infantry, by route march, down
-from the Basseux area, to the high ground west and south-west of
-Albert. That town had fallen and the situation there had, by the
-26th, also become very critical.</p>
-
-<p>This march was, however, accomplished in strict accordance
-with orders, and was a remarkable feat of endurance by the
-troops of the 12th and 13th Brigades. There can be no doubt,
-however, that the effort was more than justified, for the mere
-presence, in a position of readiness, of these two Australian
-Brigades, did much to steady the situation opposite Albert, by
-heartening the line troops and stimulating their Commanders
-to hang on for a little longer. It was this last effort which
-brought to a standstill the German advance north of the Ancre,
-as the entry of the Third Division had stopped that to the south
-of that river.</p>
-
-<p>After his two Brigades had had only four hours' rest, Maclagan<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-took over, with them, the control of the fighting front, opposite
-Dernancourt and Albert, which the Seventh Corps had allotted
-to him.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, by the night of the 27th, as the result of the rapid movements
-which I have described and the ready response of the
-troops, there was already in position the nucleus of a stout defence
-by five Australian Brigades, stretching almost continuously from
-Hebuterne to the Somme, while another Australian Brigade, the
-9th, remained still uncommitted.</p>
-
-<p>But the situation south of the Somme gave cause for the
-gravest anxiety. The north flank of the French was hourly
-retiring in a south-westerly direction, and the ever widening gap
-was filled only by a scratch force of odd units supported and
-assisted by a few elements of the First Cavalry Division. The
-right flank of our Third Army, therefore, lay exposed to the danger
-of being turned, if the enemy should succeed in pressing his
-advantage as far west as Corbie, and in crossing the river at or
-west of that town.</p>
-
-<p>It was for this reason that, after a conference with General
-Congreve, late in the day, I decided to deploy my 9th Brigade
-along the Somme from Sailly-le-Sec westward as far as Aubigny,<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a>&mdash;far
-too extended a front for one Brigade, but at least an effort
-to dispute the passage by the enemy of the existing bridges and
-lock-gates over the Somme.</p>
-
-<p>The two following days were full of toil and hard travelling
-in establishing touch with Divisional Headquarters to the north
-and south of me, in arranging for co-ordinated action with them,
-and in gleaning all possible information as to the situation, and
-as to the number and condition of other troops available in an
-emergency.</p>
-
-<p>It was an especial pleasure for the Australian troops to find
-themselves fighting in these days in close association with famous
-British Cavalry Regiments, and that these feelings were reciprocated
-may be gathered from the following letter from Major-General
-Mullens, who commanded the First Cavalry Division,
-which was devoting its energies to covering the gap between the
-Somme and the French flank:</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span></p>
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"<span class="smcap">My dear Monash</span>,</p>
-
-<p>"I was hoping to have come to see you, when the
-battle allowed, to thank you, your Artillery Commander,
-and your Brigadiers who were alongside of my Division,
-for your most valuable and encouraging support and assistance,
-especially on the 30th March, when we had a hard
-fight to keep the Bosche out of our position. I was very
-much struck by the courtesy of yourself and your officers
-in coming to see me personally, and for your own and their
-keen desire to do everything in their power to help. As
-you know, we had a curious collection of units to deal with,
-and it was a very real relief to know that I had your stout-hearted
-fellows on my left flank and that all worry was
-therefore eliminated as to the safety of my flanks. Your
-order for the placing of your heavy guns and batteries so as
-to cover my front was of very real assistance, and incidentally
-they killed a lot of Huns, and what they did was much
-appreciated by us all. Will you convey to all concerned my
-own appreciation, and that of all ranks of the 1st Cavalry
-Division. It was a pleasure and an honour to be fighting
-alongside troops who displayed such magnificent <i>moral</i>.
-I only hope we may have the chance of co-operating with you
-again, and under more favourable circumstances.</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-"Yours sincerely,<br />
-(Sgnd.) "<span class="smcap">R. L. Mullens</span>."<br />
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>On the night of March 29th I advanced my line, pivotting on my
-right, until my left rested on the Ancre east of Buire, an extreme
-advance of over 2,000 yards, meeting some opposition and taking
-a few prisoners. This deprived the enemy of over a mile of
-valuable vantage ground on the crest of the plateau along which
-ran the main road from Corbie to Bray.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/map-a.jpg" width="1200" height="906" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">Map A.</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>By that time it was apparent that the enemy's Artillery
-resources were hourly accumulating, and on the next afternoon
-he delivered a determined attack along my whole front, employing
-two Divisions. The attack was completely repelled, with an
-estimated loss to the enemy of at least 3,000 killed. My Artillery
-were firing over open sights and had never in their previous
-experience had such tempting targets.</p>
-
-<p>On the previous day, however, the situation between the Somme
-and Villers-Bretonneux, and still further to the south, had become
-desperate; and much to my discomfiture I was ordered to hand
-over my 9th Brigade (Rosenthal) for duty with the 61st Division,
-in order to reinforce that dissolving sector. My importunity
-as to the necessity for maintaining the defence of my river flank,
-however, led the Seventh Corps Commander to let me have, in
-exchange, the 15th Brigade (Elliott), which was the first Brigade
-of the Fifth Australian Division to arrive from Flanders on the
-present scene of operations. This interchange of Brigades was
-completed by the 30th.</p>
-
-<p>That day was further marked by a concentrated bombardment
-of the village of Franvillers, in which I had established my
-Headquarters. Although no serious loss was suffered, the responsible
-work of my Staff was disturbed. On reporting the
-occurrence to General Congreve, he insisted upon my moving
-my Headquarters back to St. Gratien, which move was completed
-the next day.</p>
-
-<p>On April 4th the enemy attacked, in force, south of the Somme,
-and the village of Hamel was lost to us by the rout of the remnants
-of a very exhausted British Division which had been sent
-in the night before to defend it. This success gave the enemy
-a footing upon a portion of Hill 104, and brought him to the eastern
-outskirts of Villers-Bretonneux. Three months later it cost the
-Australian Corps a concentrated effort to compel him to surrender
-these advantages.</p>
-
-<p>One last and final attempt to break through the Australian
-phalanx north of the Somme was made by the enemy on April 5th.
-The full weight of this blow fell chiefly upon the gallant Fourth
-Australian Division. The battle of Dernancourt will live long
-in the annals of military history as an example of dogged and
-successful defence. The whole day long the enemy expended<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-Division after Division in the vain endeavour to compel two weak
-Australian Brigades to loosen their hold on the important high
-ground lying west of Albert. He well knew that the capture by
-him of these heights involved the inevitable withdrawal of the
-Third Australian Division also, and that thereby the path to
-Amiens would again lie open.</p>
-
-<p>The great German blow against the important railway centre
-of Amiens had been parried, and from this time onwards interest
-in this sphere of operations rapidly waned. It blazed up again
-for a few hours only when, three weeks later, the enemy made
-his final attempt to reach his goal, on this occasion by way of
-Villers-Bretonneux. North of the Somme, his activity quickly
-died down, and the attitude of both combatants gradually assumed
-the old familiar aspect of trench warfare, with its endless digging
-of trenches, line behind line, its weary trench routine, and its
-elaborate installation of permanent lines of communication and
-of administrative establishments of all descriptions.</p>
-
-<p>South of the Somme, the Fifth Australian Division came into
-the line on April 5th, relieving a Cavalry Division on a frontage
-of about 5,000 yards, and thereby obviating any further
-necessity for the maintenance of my flank river defence. This
-duty had been performed for me in succession by the 15th
-Australian, the 104th Imperial and the 13th Australian Brigades
-(the latter then under Glasgow). My 9th Brigade still remained
-detached from me, operating under both the 18th and 61st British
-Divisions, and performed prodigies of valorous fighting in a
-series of desperate local attacks and counter-attacks, which took
-place between Villers-Bretonneux and Hangard, where the
-French northern flank then lay. In this service the 9th Brigade
-received gallant co-operation from the 5th Australian Brigade
-(of the 2nd Australian Division), which was now also arriving
-in this area, after having been relieved from trench garrison duty
-in the Messines&mdash;Warneton sector in Flanders.</p>
-
-<p>The Fifth Division and these two detached Brigades were,
-during this period, serving under the Third Corps (Butler),
-which had been reconstituted to fill the gap between the Somme
-and the flank of the French Army. The First Australian Division<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-was already well on the way to follow the Second Division, when,
-on April 11th, it was hurriedly re-transferred to Flanders to assist
-in stemming the new German flood which was inundating the
-whole of that region, and which was not arrested until it had
-almost reached Hazebrouck. This task the First Australian
-Division performed most valiantly, thereby upholding the reputation
-already earned by its younger sister Divisions for a capacity
-for rapid, ordered movement and decisive intervention at a
-critical juncture.</p>
-
-<p>For some days there had been rumours that the Australian
-Corps Headquarters would shortly be transferred to the Amiens
-area, and would once again gather under its control the numerous
-elements of the four Australian Divisions which were by now
-widely scattered, and had been fighting under the orders of three
-different Army Corps. There was the still more interesting and
-pregnant rumour that General Lord Rawlinson&mdash;relinquishing
-his post of British representative on the Supreme War Council
-at Versailles&mdash;was soon to arrive and to form and command a
-reconstituted Fourth British Army,<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> which was to be composed
-of the Australian and the Third (British) Army Corps.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> The majority of the place-names mentioned in the remainder of this chapter
-will be found on Maps A or J.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> Two miles west of Corbie.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> The Fourth Army had disappeared when, in 1917, General Rawlinson went
-to Versailles. The Fifth Army was not revived until June, 1918.</p></div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER II<br />
-
-THE DEFENCE OF AMIENS</h2>
-
-
-<p>The Australian Corps Headquarters, under General Birdwood,
-commenced its activities at Villers-Bocage on
-April 7th, but soon after removed to the handsome seventeenth-century
-Château at Bertangles, with its pleasant grounds and
-spacious parks. One by one the detached Australian Brigades
-rejoined their Divisions, and the Divisions themselves came back
-under the orders of their own Corps.</p>
-
-<p>The comparative calm which had supervened upon all the
-excitement of the closing days of March and the first weeks of
-April was rudely broken when, before daybreak on April 24th,
-the enemy began a furious bombardment of the whole region
-extending from opposite Albert to a point as far south as Hangard.
-It was certain that this demonstration was the prelude
-of an infantry attack in force, but it was not until well after midday
-that the situation clarified, and it became known that the
-attack had been confined to the country south of the Somme, that
-it had struck the southern flank of the Fifth Australian Division,
-which had stood firm and had thereby saved the loss of the
-remainder of the tactically important Hill 104. But the town of
-Villers-Bretonneux, lying beyond the Australian sector, had
-fallen and the Germans were in possession of it.</p>
-
-<p>It was imperative to retrieve this situation, or at least
-to make an attempt to do so. The nearest available reserve
-Brigades of Infantry were Australian, the 13th under Glasgow,
-and the 15th under Elliott. They were placed under the orders
-of the Third Corps, and by them directed to recapture the town.</p>
-
-<p>Both Brigades had to make long marches to reach the battleground.
-It was already dark before they had deployed on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-appointed lines of departure. The details of this enthralling and
-wonderful night attack form too lengthy a story to find a place
-in this brief narrative; suffice it to say that when the sun rose on
-the third Anniversary of Anzac Day, it looked down upon the
-Australians in full possession of the whole town, and standing
-upon our original lines of twenty-four hours before, with nearly
-1,000 German prisoners to their credit.</p>
-
-<p>In this summary fashion, the last German attempt to split
-in two the Allied Armies failed ignominiously, and the attempt
-was never again renewed.</p>
-
-<p>A comprehensive rearrangement of the whole Front in this
-much-contested region then took place. The appointment of
-Marshal Foch as Supreme Commander on the Western Front
-bore, as one of its first fruits, a clear decision as to the final point
-of junction between the French and the British Armies. This
-was fixed just south of Villers-Bretonneux, and not at the Somme
-Valley, as was thought desirable by some of the British Commanders.</p>
-
-<p>The new Fourth Army became the flank British Army in
-contact with the French. The Australian Corps became the
-south flank of that Army. Its sector extended, from the point
-named, northwards as far as the Ancre. The Third Corps was
-transferred to the north of the Ancre, opposite Albert, and those
-two Corps comprised, for some time to come, the whole of the
-Fourth Army resources.</p>
-
-<p>The Australian Corps now organized its front with three Divisions
-in line and one in reserve. My occupation, with the Third
-Australian Division, of the original sector between the Ancre
-and the Somme remained undisturbed, and my front line remained
-for a time stationary on the alignment gained on March 29th.</p>
-
-<p>But the Third Division had had enough of stationary warfare,
-and the troops were athirst for adventure. They were tired of
-raids, which meant a mere incursion into enemy territory, and a
-subsequent withdrawal, after doing as much damage as possible.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly, I resolved to embark upon a series of minor battles,
-designed not merely to capture prisoners and machine guns, but
-also to hold on to the ground gained. This would invite counter-attacks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-which I knew could only enhance the balance in our favour,
-and would seriously disorganize the enemy's whole defensive
-system, while wearing out his nerves and lowering the <i>moral</i>
-of his troops.</p>
-
-<p>Four such miniature battles<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> were fought in rapid succession,
-on April 30th and May 3rd, 6th and 7th, by the 9th and 10th
-Brigades, who were then in line. These yielded most satisfactory
-results. Not only did we capture several hundred prisoners and
-numerous machine guns, but also advanced our whole line an
-average total distance of a mile. This deprived the enemy of
-valuable observation, and forced back his whole Artillery organization.</p>
-
-<p>But these combats, and the numerous offensive patrol operations,
-which were also nightly undertaken along my whole
-front, did a great deal more. They yielded a constant stream
-of prisoners, who at this stage of the war had become sufficiently
-demoralized by their disappointments to talk freely, and impart
-a mass of valuable information as to movements and conditions
-behind the German lines.</p>
-
-<p>The following list of 41 separate identifications, covering
-a total of over 300 prisoners, represents the fruits of these efforts
-during the period from March 27th to May 11th. From these it
-will be seen that during these six weeks I had been confronted by
-no less than six different German Divisions:</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="right"><i>No.</i></td><td align="center"><i>Date.</i></td><td align="center" colspan="4"><i>Identification.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">1</td><td align="center">28.3.18</td><td align="right">3</td><td align="left">Gren. R.</td><td align="right">1st</td><td align="center">Div.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">2</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right">13</td><td align="left">I.R.</td><td align="right">13</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">3</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right">3</td><td align="left">Gren. R.</td><td align="right">1st</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">4</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right">1</td><td align="left">I.R.</td><td align="right">1st</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">&nbsp;</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right">13</td><td align="left">I.R.</td><td align="right">13</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">5</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right">86</td><td align="left">Fus. R.</td><td align="right">18</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">6</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right">1</td><td align="left">I.R.</td><td align="right">1st</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">7</td><td align="center">30.3.18</td><td align="right">13</td><td align="left">I.R.</td><td align="right">13</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">8</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right">31</td><td align="left">I.R.</td><td align="right">18</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">9</td><td align="center">31.3.18</td><td align="right">18</td><td align="left">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">10</td><td align="center">1.4.18</td><td align="right">20</td><td align="left">Foot Arty.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">11</td><td align="center">2.4.18</td><td align="right">3</td><td align="left">"</td><td align="right">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">12</td><td align="center">2/3.4.18</td><td align="right">1</td><td align="left" colspan="3">R.R.Bav. Ft. Arty.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">13</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right">13</td><td align="left">I.R.</td><td align="right">13</td><td align="center">Div.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">14</td><td align="center">4/5.4.18</td><td align="right">1</td><td align="left">M.W.Coy.</td><td align="right">1st</td><td align="center">Div.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">15</td><td align="center">6/7.4.18</td><td align="right">3</td><td align="left">Jäger Bn.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">16</td><td align="center">9/10.4.18</td><td align="right">31</td><td align="left">I.R.</td><td align="right">18</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">17</td><td align="center">11/12.4.18</td><td align="right">31</td><td align="left">I.R.</td><td align="right">18</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">18</td><td align="center">13/14.4.18</td><td align="right">86</td><td align="left">Fus. R.</td><td align="right">18</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">19</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right">31</td><td align="left">I.R.</td><td align="right">18</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">20</td><td align="center">14/15.4.18</td><td align="right">85</td><td align="left">I.R.</td><td align="right">18</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">21</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right">31</td><td align="left">I.R.</td><td align="right">18</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">22</td><td align="center">17/18.4.18</td><td align="right">229</td><td align="left">R.I.R.</td><td align="right">30</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">23</td><td align="center">18/19.4.18</td><td align="right">231</td><td align="left">R.I.R.</td><td align="right">50</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">24</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right">85</td><td align="left">I.R.</td><td align="right">18</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">25</td><td align="center">19/20.4.18</td><td align="right">85</td><td align="left">I.R.</td><td align="right">18</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">26</td><td align="center">25/26.4.18</td><td align="right">246</td><td align="left">R.I.R.</td><td align="right">54</td><td align="center">Res. Div.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">27</td><td align="center">27/28.4.18</td><td align="right">229</td><td align="left">R.I.R.</td><td align="right">50</td><td align="center">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">28</td><td align="center">28/29.4.18</td><td align="right">247</td><td align="left">R.I.R.</td><td align="right">54</td><td align="center">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">29</td><td align="center">30/1.5.18</td><td align="right">247</td><td align="left">R.I.R.</td><td align="right">54</td><td align="center">"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">30</td><td align="center">3/4.5.18</td><td align="right">357</td><td align="left">I.R.</td><td align="right">199</td><td align="center">Div.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">31</td><td align="center">4/5.5.18</td><td align="right">114</td><td align="left">I.R.</td><td align="right">199</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">32</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right">31</td><td align="left">I.R.</td><td align="right">18</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">33</td><td align="center">5/6.5.18</td><td align="right">237</td><td align="left">R.I.R.</td><td align="right">199</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">34</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right">114</td><td align="left">I.R.</td><td align="right">199</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">35</td><td align="center">6/7.5.18</td><td align="right">237</td><td align="left">R.I.R.</td><td align="right">199</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">36</td><td align="center">7/8.5.18</td><td align="right">114</td><td align="left">I.R.</td><td align="right">199</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">37</td><td align="center">8/9.5.18</td><td align="right">114</td><td align="left">I.R.</td><td align="right">199</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">38</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right">237</td><td align="left">R.I.R.</td><td align="right">199</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">39</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right">31</td><td align="left">I.R.</td><td align="right">18</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">40</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right">357</td><td align="left">I.R.</td><td align="right">199</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="right">41</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="right">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;357</td><td align="left">I.R.</td><td align="right">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;199</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left" colspan="6">I.R.=Infantry Regiment; R.I.R.=Reserve ditto.</td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<p>While I was thus exerting a steady pressure on the enemy
-and gaining ground easterly, the Australian Corps line south of
-the Somme remained stationary, and each successive advance
-north of the river served only to accentuate the deep re-entrant
-which had been formed on the day when the loss of Hamel forced
-the British front line back along the Somme as far as Vaire-sous-Corbie.</p>
-
-<p>While this was not very serious from the point of view of
-observation, because I was in possession of much the higher
-ground, and was able to look down, almost as upon a map, on to
-the enemy in the Hamel basin, yet I was beginning to feel very
-seriously the inconvenience of having, square on to my flank, such
-excellent concealed Artillery positions as Vaire and Hamel Woods,
-which the enemy did not long delay in occupying.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span></p>
-<p>Moreover, the whole of the slopes of the valley on my side of
-the river remained useless to me, because they were exposed to
-the full view of the enemy, so long as he was permitted to occupy
-the Hamel salient, which he had on April 5th driven into the very
-middle of what was now the Corps front. I therefore made more
-than one attempt to persuade the then Corps Commander to
-undertake an operation for the elimination in whole or in part of
-this inconvenient bend, but, for reasons doubtless satisfactory
-at that time, he declined to accept the suggestion. It fell to my
-lot myself to carry out this operation nearly two months later.</p>
-
-<p>The Third Division was, however, relieved in the line by our
-Second Division on May 11th, and was withdrawn for a short
-but well-earned rest after six weeks of trench duty, following
-its first fateful rush into the thick of the battle.</p>
-
-<p>It was on May 12th that I received the first intimation from
-General Sir William Birdwood that he was to be appointed to
-the command of a new Fifth Army, which the British War Council
-had decided to form, and that, upon his taking up these new
-duties, the task of leading the Australian Army Corps would
-devolve upon me.</p>
-
-<p>In consequence of this and other changes, it was shortly
-afterwards decided, in consultation, that Glasgow should take
-over the command of the First Division, then still fighting at
-Hazebrouck, that Rosenthal should command the Second
-Division, and that Gellibrand should succeed me at the head of
-the Third Division.</p>
-
-<p>Far, therefore, from being permitted a little respite from the
-strenuous labours of the preceding six weeks, I found myself
-confronted with responsibilities which, in point of numbers
-alone, exceeded sixfold those which I had previously had to bear,
-but which, in point of difficulty, involved an even higher ratio.</p>
-
-<p>There were numerous Arms and Services, under the Corps,
-with whose detailed functions and methods of operation I had not
-been previously concerned. The other Divisional Commanders
-had hitherto been my colleagues, and I was now called upon to
-consider their personalities and temperaments as my subordinates.
-There was a vastly increased territory for whose administration
-and defence I would become responsible. I had to be
-prepared to enter an atmosphere of policy higher and larger than
-that which surrounded me as the Commander of a Division. And
-finally there was the selection of my new Staff.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_040fp.jpg" width="1200" height="798" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>German Prisoners&mdash;taken by the Corps at Hamel, being marched to the rear.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_041fp.jpg" width="1200" height="770" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Visit of Monsieur Clemenceau&mdash;group taken at Bussy on July 7th, 1918.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>My last executive work with the Third Division was the process
-of putting this Division back into the line, this time in the Villers-Bretonneux
-sector of our front. After handing over the Division
-and all its outstanding current affairs to Major-General Gellibrand,
-I assumed command of the Australian Army Corps on
-May 30th, with Brigadier-General Blamey as my Chief-of-Staff.<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></p>
-
-<p>I very soon became aware that, as Corps Commander, I was
-privileged to have access to a very large body of interesting
-secret information, which was methodically distributed daily by
-G.H.Q. Intelligence. This comprised detailed information of
-the true facts of all happenings on the fronts of all the Allies,
-the gist of the reports of our Secret Service, and very full particulars
-from which the nature and distribution of the enemy's military
-resources could be deduced with fair accuracy.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span></p>
-<p>The numberings and locations of all his Corps and Divisions
-actually in the front line, on all the Allied fronts, was, of course,
-quite definitely known from day to day. The numberings of all
-Formations lying in Reserve were known with equal certainty,
-although their actual positions on any date were largely a matter
-of deduction by expert investigators. Of particular importance
-were the further deductions which could be drawn as to the
-condition of readiness or exhaustion of such reserve Divisions,
-from known facts as to their successive appearance and experiences
-on any active battle front.</p>
-
-<p>Our experts were thus able to classify the enemy Divisions,
-and to determine from day to day the probable number, and
-even the probable numberings, of fit Divisions actually available
-(after one, or after two, or after three days) to reinforce any portion
-of the front which was to be the object of an attack by us.
-They could also compute the number of fit Divisions which the
-enemy had at his disposal at any time for launching an offensive
-against us.</p>
-
-<p>All such data had a very direct bearing, not only on the probable
-course of the campaign in the immediate future, but also
-upon the responsibility which always weighed upon a Corps
-Commander of keeping his own sector in preparedness to meet an
-attack or to prevent such an attack from coming upon him as a
-surprise. He must therefore be alert to watch the signs and
-astute to read them aright.</p>
-
-<p>One striking feature of the information at our disposal during
-the early part of June was the steady melting away of the enemy
-reserves as the consequence of his resultless, even if locally successful,
-assaults during the preceding two and a half months,
-against Amiens, in Flanders, and on the Chemin des Dames.
-But it was apparent that he still held formidable Reserves of
-Infantry, and a practically intact Artillery, which he was bound
-to employ for at least one great and final effort to gain a decision.</p>
-
-<p>The junction of the French and British Armies still offered a
-tempting point of weakness. As mine was now the flank British
-Corps, in immediate contact with General Toulorge's 31st French
-Corps, I could not afford to relax any of the precautions of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-vigilance or preparation which had been initiated by my
-predecessor for meeting such an attack. Consequently, during
-June, 1918, I ordered on the part of all my line Divisions a
-maintenance of their energetic efforts to perfect the defensive
-organizations. I also undertook out of other Corps labour
-resources the development of further substantial rear systems of
-defence, so that Amiens need not, in the event of a renewed
-attack, be abandoned to its fate without a prolonged struggle.</p>
-
-<p>The First Australian Division was not yet a part of my new Command,
-its continued presence in the Hazebrouck and Merris area,
-under the Fifteenth Corps, being still considered indispensable.
-My Corps front now extended over a total length of ten miles,
-and I had but four Divisions at my disposal to defend it. Three
-Divisions held the line, one to the north and two to the south of
-the Somme. Only one Division at a time could therefore be
-permitted a short rest, and this Division formed my only tactical
-reserve.</p>
-
-<p>All this added to the anxieties of the situation, and focussed
-the energies of the whole command on a constant scrutiny of all
-signs and symptoms that the enemy might be preparing to
-deliver his next blow against us. Active patrolling was maintained
-and continued to yield a steady stream of prisoners. A
-well conceived and planned minor enterprise by the Second
-Division, which was carried out on June 10th, and was Rosenthal's
-first Divisional operation, gave us possession of a further
-slice of the important ridge between Sailly-Laurette and Morlancourt.
-It gained us 330 prisoners and 33 machine guns. But
-no sign of any preparations on the part of the enemy for an attack
-upon us, in this zone, emerged from the careful investigations
-which followed this operation.</p>
-
-<p>The days passed and evidences increased that the enemy
-was now beginning to devote his further attentions to the French
-front far to the south of us. At any rate, he continued to leave
-us unmolested, and the interrogations of our numerous prisoners
-all confirmed the absence of any preparations for an attack.</p>
-
-<p>The defensive attitude which the situation thus forced upon
-us did not for long suit the present temper of the Australian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-troops, and I sought for a promising enterprise on which again to
-test their offensive power, on a scale larger than we had yet
-attempted in the year's campaign. There had been no Allied
-offensive, of any appreciable size, on any of our fronts, in any of
-the many theatres of war, since the close of the Passchendaele
-fighting in the autumn of 1917.</p>
-
-<p>It was high time that the anxiety and nervousness of the
-public, at the sinister encroachments of the enemy upon regions
-which he had never previously trodden, should be allayed by a
-demonstration that there was still some kick left in the British
-Army. It was high time, too, that some Commanders on our
-side of No Man's Land should begin to "think offensively," and
-cease to look over their shoulders in order to estimate how far
-it still was to the coast.</p>
-
-<p>I was ambitious that any such kick should be administered,
-first, at any rate, by the Australians. A visit which I was
-privileged to pay to General Elles, Commander of the Tank Corps,
-when he gave me a demonstration of the capacities of the newer
-types of Tanks, only confirmed me in this ambition. Finally,
-the Hamel re-entrant had for two months been, as I have already
-explained, a source of annoyance and anxiety to me. It was for
-these reasons that I resolved to propose an operation for the recapture
-of Hamel, conditional upon being supplied with the
-assistance of Tanks, a small increase of my Artillery and an addition
-to my air resources.</p>
-
-<p>I thereupon set about preparing a general plan for such a battle,
-which was to be my first Corps operation. Having mentioned the
-matter first verbally to Lord Rawlinson, he requested me to
-submit a concrete proposal in writing. The communication is
-here reproduced, and will serve to convey an idea of the complexities
-involved in even so relatively small an undertaking:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<div class="right">
-Australian Corps.<br />
-21st June, 1918.<br />
-</div>
-
-<p><i>Fourth Army.</i></p>
-
-<div class="center">HAMEL OFFENSIVE</div>
-
-<p>1. With reference to my proposal for an offensive operation
-on the front of the "A" and "B" Divisions of this
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>Corps, with a view to the capture of <span class="smcap">Hamel</span> Village and
-<span class="smcap">Vaire</span> and <span class="smcap">Hamel Wood</span>, etc., the accompanying map
-shows, in blue, the proposed ultimate objective line. This
-line has been chosen as representing the minimum operation
-that would appear to be worth undertaking, while offering
-a prospect of substantial advantages.</p>
-
-<p>2. These advantages may be briefly summarized thus:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(a) Straightening of our line.</p>
-
-<p>(b) Shortening of our line.</p>
-
-<p>(c) Deepening our forward defensive zone, particularly
-east of Hill 104.</p>
-
-<p>(d) Improvement of jumping-off position for future
-operations.</p>
-
-<p>(e) Advancement of our artillery, south of the <span class="smcap">Somme</span>.</p>
-
-<p>(f) Denial to enemy of observation of ground near
-<span class="smcap">Vaux-sur-Somme</span>, valuable for battery positions.</p>
-
-<p>(g) Facilitating subsequent further minor advances
-north of the <span class="smcap">Somme</span>.</p>
-
-<p>(h) Disorganization of enemy defences.</p>
-
-<p>(i) Disorganization of possible enemy offensive preparations.</p>
-
-<p>(j) Inflicting losses on enemy personnel and material.</p>
-
-<p>(k) Improvement of our observation.</p>
-
-<p>(l) Maintenance of our initiative on this Corps front.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>3. The disadvantages are those arising from the necessity
-of bringing into rapid existence a new defensive system on
-a frontage of 7,000 yards and also the particular incidence,
-at the present juncture, of the inevitable losses, small or
-large, of such an operation in this Corps.</p>
-
-<p>4. In view of the unsatisfactory position of Australian
-reinforcements, any substantial losses would precipitate the
-time when the question of the reduction in the number of
-Australian Divisions would have to be seriously considered.
-It is for higher authority to decide whether a portion of the
-present resources in Australian man-power in this Corps
-would be more profitably ventured upon such an operation
-as this, which is in itself a very attractive proposition,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>rather than to conserve such resources for employment
-elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p>5. Detailed plans can only be prepared after I have
-had conferences with representatives of all Arms and Services
-involved, but the following proposals are submitted
-as the basis of further elaboration:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(a) The operation will be primarily a Tank operation&mdash;at
-least one and preferably two Battalions of
-Tanks to be employed.</p>
-
-<p>(b) The whole battle front will be placed temporarily
-under command of one Divisional Commander&mdash;by
-a temporary readjustment of inter-Divisional
-boundaries.</p>
-
-<p>(c) The infantry employed will comprise one Division
-plus a Brigade, <i>i.e.</i>, 4 Infantry Brigades, totalling,
-say, 7,500 bayonets; about one-half of this force
-to be employed in the advance and the other half
-to hold our present front defensively, taking over
-the captured territory within 48 hours after
-Zero.<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></p>
-
-<p>(d) The action will be designed on lines to permit of
-the Tanks effecting the capture of the ground;
-the rôles of the Infantry following the Tanks
-will be:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(i) to assist in reducing strong points and localities.</p>
-
-<p>(ii) to "mop up."</p>
-
-<p>(iii) to consolidate the ground captured.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>(e) Apart from neutralizing all enemy artillery likely
-to engage our troops, our artillery will be employed
-to keep under fire enemy centres of resistance and
-selected targets&mdash;in front of the advance of the
-Tanks. Artillery detailed for close targets will
-work on a prearranged and detailed time-table
-which will be adjusted to the time-table of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>Tank and Infantry advance. Sufficient "silent"
-field artillery supplied before the battle should
-be emplaced in advanced positions, to ensure an
-effective protective barrage to cover consolidation
-on the blue line,<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> and to engage all localities
-from which enemy counter-attacks can be
-launched. It is estimated that, in addition to
-the resources of the Corps, four Field Artillery
-Brigades will be required for, say, four days in all.</p>
-
-<p>(f) Engineer stores in sufficient quantities to provide
-for the complete organization of the new defences
-will require to be dumped beforehand as far forward
-as practicable.</p>
-
-<p>(g) No additional machine guns, outside of Corps
-resources, will be required,</p>
-
-<p>(h) Contact and counter-attack planes and low-flying
-bombing planes prior to and during advance
-must be arranged for.</p>
-
-<p>(i) Artillery and mortar smoke to screen the operations
-from view of all ground north of the Somme
-in the <span class="smcap">Sailly-Laurette</span> locality are required.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>6. As to the date of the operations, the necessary preparations
-will occupy at least seven days after authority
-to proceed has been given. As an inter-Divisional relief
-is planned to occur on June 28th-29th and 29th-30th, it would
-seem that this operation cannot take place earlier than the
-first week in July. The postponement of this relief would
-not be desirable for several reasons.</p>
-
-<p>7. Valuable training in the joint action of Tanks and
-Infantry can be arranged, probably in the territory west of
-the <span class="smcap">Hallue</span> Valley&mdash;provided that one or two Tank Companies
-can be detached for such a purpose. Thorough
-liaison prior to and during the operation between all Tank
-and all Infantry Commanders would have to be a special
-feature. For this reason only Infantry units not in the line
-can be considered as available to undergo the necessary
-preparation.</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-(Sgd.) <span class="smcap">John Monash</span>,<br />
-Lieut.-General.<br />
-Cmdg. Australian Corps.<br />
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Approval to these proposals was given without delay; the
-additional resources were promised, and preparations for the
-battle were immediately put in hand. As I hope, in a later
-context, to attempt to describe the evolution of a battle plan,
-and the comprehensive measures which are associated with such
-an enterprise, it will not be necessary to do so here.</p>
-
-<p>It was the straightening of the Corps front, as an essential
-preliminary to any offensive operations on a still larger scale,
-to be undertaken when the opportune moment should arrive,
-that made the Hamel proposal tactically attractive; it was the
-availability of an improved type of Tank that gave it promise of
-success, without pledging important resources, or risking serious
-losses.</p>
-
-<p>The new Mark V. Tank had not previously been employed in
-battle. It marked a great advance upon the earlier types. The
-epicyclic gearing with which it was now furnished, the greater
-power of its engines, the improved balance of its whole design
-gave it increased mobility, facility in turning and immunity from
-foundering in ground even of the most broken and uneven character.
-It could be driven and steered by one man, where it previously
-took four; and it rarely suffered suspended animation
-from engine trouble.</p>
-
-<p>But, above all, the men of the Tank Corps had, by the training
-which they had undergone, and by the spirited leadership of
-Generals Elles, Courage, Hankey and other Tank Commanders,
-achieved a higher standard of skill, enterprise and moral; they
-were now, more than ever, on their mettle to uphold the prestige
-of the Tank Corps.</p>
-
-<p>All the same, the Tanks had become anathema to the Australian
-troops. For, at Bullecourt more than a year before,
-they had failed badly, and had "let down" the gallant Infantry,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-who suffered heavily in consequence; a failure due partly to the
-mechanical defects of the Tanks of those days, partly to the
-inexperience of the crews, and partly to indifferent staff arrangements,
-in the co-ordination of the combined action of the Infantry
-and the Tanks.</p>
-
-<p>It was not an easy problem to restore to the Australian soldier
-his lost confidence, or to teach him the sympathetic dependence
-upon the due performance by the Tanks of the rôles to be allotted
-to them, which was essential to a complete utilization of the possibilities
-which were now opening up. That the Tanks, appropriately
-utilized, were destined to exert a paramount influence
-upon the course of the war, was apparent to those who could
-envisage the future.</p>
-
-<p>This problem was intensified because the battalions of the
-Fourth Division who were to carry out the Infantry tasks at
-Hamel were the very units who had undergone that unfortunate
-experience at Bullecourt. But, on the principle of restoring the
-nerves of the unseated rider by remounting him to continue the
-hunt, it was especially important to wean the Fourth Division
-from their prejudices.</p>
-
-<p>Battalion after battalion of the 4th, 6th and 11th Brigades of
-Infantry was brought by bus to Vaux, a little village tucked away
-in a quiet valley, north-west of Amiens, there to spend the day at
-play with the Tanks. The Tanks kept open house, and, in the
-intervals of more formal rehearsals of tactical schemes of attack,
-the Infantry were taken over the field for "joy rides," were
-allowed to clamber all over the monsters, inside and out, and even
-to help to drive them and put them through their paces.
-Platoon and Company leaders met dozens of Tank officers face
-to face, and they argued each other to a standstill upon every
-aspect that arose.</p>
-
-<p>Set-piece man&oelig;uvre exercises on the scale of a battalion were
-designed and rehearsed over and over again; red flags marked
-enemy machine-gun posts; real wire entanglements were laid
-out to show how easily the Tanks could mow them down; real
-trenches were dug for the Tanks to leap and straddle and search
-with fire; real rifle grenades were fired by the Infantry to indicate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-to the Tanks the enemy strong points which were molesting
-and impeding their advance. The Tanks would throw themselves
-upon these places, and, pirouetting round and round, would blot
-them out, much as a man's heel would crush a scorpion.</p>
-
-<p>It was invaluable as mere training for battle, but the effect
-upon the spirits of the men was remarkable. The fame of the
-Tanks, and all the wonderful things they could do, spread rapidly
-throughout the Corps. The "digger" took the Tank to his
-heart, and ever after, each Tank was given a pet name by the
-Company of Infantry which it served in battle, a name which was
-kept chalked on its iron sides, together with a panegyric commentary
-upon its prowess.</p>
-
-<p>There remained, however, much to be arranged, and many
-difficult questions to be settled, as regards the tactical employment
-of the Tanks. I can never be sufficiently grateful to
-Brigadier-General Courage, of the 5th Tank Brigade, for his
-diligent assistance, and for his loyal acceptance of the onerous
-conditions which the tactical methods that I finally decided
-upon imposed upon the Tanks.</p>
-
-<p>These methods involved two entirely new principles. Firstly,
-each Tank was, for tactical purposes, to be treated as an Infantry
-weapon; from the moment that it entered the battle
-until the objective had been gained it was to be under the
-exclusive orders of the Infantry Commander to whom it had been
-assigned.</p>
-
-<p>Secondly, the deployed line of Tanks was to advance, <i>level
-with the Infantry</i>, and pressing close up to the barrage. This,
-of course, subjected the Tanks, which towered high above the
-heads of the neighbouring infantry, to the danger of being
-struck by any of our own shells which happened to fall a little
-short. Tank experts, consulted beforehand, considered therefore
-that it was not practicable for Tanks to follow close behind
-an artillery barrage. The battle of Hamel proved that it was.</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> See Map A.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> A farewell order to the Third Division was issued in the following terms:
-</p>
-<p>
-"As I am about to take up other duties the time has come when I must relinquish
-the command of the Division.
-</p>
-<p>
-"Closely associated with you as I have been, since the days of your first
-assembly and War Training in <span class="smcap">England</span>, and, later, throughout all your magnificent
-work during the past nineteen months in the war zone, it is naturally
-a severe wrench for me to part from you.
-</p>
-<p>
-"I find it quite impossible to give adequate expression to my feelings of
-gratitude towards all ranks for the splendid and loyal support which you have,
-at all times, accorded to me. I am deeply indebted to my Staff, to all Commanders
-and to the officers and troops of all Arms and Services for a whole-hearted
-co-operation upon which, more than upon any other factor, the success
-of the Division has depended.
-</p>
-<p>
-"It is my earnest hope, and also my sincere conviction, that the fine spirit
-and the high efficiency of the Division will be maintained under the leadership
-of my successor, Brigadier-General Gellibrand; and if the men of the Division
-feel, as I trust they do, an obligation to perpetuate for my sake the traditions
-built up by them during the period of my command, they can do so in no better
-way than by rendering to him a service as thorough and a support as loyal
-as I have been privileged to enjoy at their hands.
-</p>
-<p>
-"In formally wishing the Division good-bye and good luck, I wish simply,
-but none the less sincerely, to thank each and all of you, for all that you have
-done.
-</p>
-<div class="right">
-"(Signed) <span class="smcap">John Monash</span>,<br />
-Major-General."<br />
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> "Zero" refers to the day and hour, not yet determined, on which the battle
-is to begin.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> "Blue Line," arbitrarily so called, because this line was drawn on the
-accompanying map in blue. It was to be the final objective for the day.</p></div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER III<br />
-
-HAMEL</h2>
-
-
-<p>The larger questions relating to the employment of the
-Tanks at the battle of Hamel having been disposed of,
-the remaining arrangements for the battle presented few novel
-aspects. Their manner of execution, however, brought into
-prominence some features which became fundamental doctrines
-in the Australian Corps then and thereafter.</p>
-
-<p>Although complete written orders were invariably prepared and
-issued by a General Staff whose skill and industry left nothing
-to be desired, very great importance was attached to the holding
-of conferences, at which were assembled every one of the Senior
-Commanders and heads of Departments concerned in the impending
-operation. At these I personally explained every detail of
-the plan, and assured myself that all present applied an identical
-interpretation to all orders that had been issued.</p>
-
-<p>Questions were invited; difficulties were cleared up; and the
-conflicting views of the different services on matters of technical
-detail were ventilated. The points brought to an issue were
-invariably decided on the spot. The battle plan having been
-thus crystallized, no subsequent alterations were permissible,
-under any circumstances, no matter how tempting. This fixity
-of plan engendered a confidence throughout the whole command
-which facilitated the work of every Commander and Staff Officer.
-It obviated the vicious habit of postponing action until the last
-possible moment, lest counter orders should necessitate some
-alternative action. It was a powerful factor in the gaining of
-time, usually all too short for the extensive preparations
-necessary.</p>
-
-<p>The final Corps Conference for the battle of Hamel was held at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-Bertangles on June 30th, and the date of the battle itself was
-fixed for July 4th. This selection was prompted partly by the
-desire to allow ample time for the completion of all arrangements;
-but there were also sentimental grounds, because this
-was the anniversary of the American national holiday, and a
-considerable contingent of the United States Army was to co-operate
-in the fight.</p>
-
-<p>For some weeks previously the 33rd American Division,
-under Major-General John Bell, had been training in the Fourth
-Army area, and its several regiments had been distributed, for
-training and trench experience, to the Australian and the III.
-Corps. I had applied to the Fourth Army and had received
-approval to employ in the battle a contingent equivalent in
-strength to two British battalions, or a total of about 2,000
-men, organized in eight companies. The very proper condition
-was attached, however, that these Americans should not be split
-up and scattered individually among the Australians, but should
-fight at least as complete platoons, under their own platoon
-leaders.</p>
-
-<p>All went well until three days before the appointed date, when
-General Rawlinson conveyed to me the instruction that, the
-matter having been reconsidered, only 1,000 Americans were to
-be used. Strongly averse, as I was, from embarrassing the
-Infantry plans of General Maclagan, to whom I had entrusted the
-conduct of the actual assault, it was not then too late to rearrange
-the distribution.</p>
-
-<p>The four companies of United States troops who, under this
-decision, had to be withdrawn were loud in their lamentations,
-but the remaining four companies were distributed by platoons
-among the troops of the three Australian Brigades who were
-to carry out the attack&mdash;each American platoon being assigned a
-definite place in the line of battle. The dispositions of the main
-body of Australian infantry were based upon this arrangement.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime, somewhere in the upper realms of high control,
-a discussion must have been going on as to the propriety of
-after all allowing any American troops at all to participate in the
-forthcoming operations. Whether the objections were founded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
-upon policy, or upon an under-estimate of the fitness of these
-troops for offensive fighting, I have never been able to ascertain;
-but, to my consternation, I received about four o'clock on the
-afternoon of July 3rd, a telephone message from Lord Rawlinson
-to the effect that it had now been decided that <i>no</i> American troops
-were to be used the next day.</p>
-
-<p>I was, at the moment, while on my daily round of visits to
-Divisions and Brigades, at the Headquarters of the Third
-Division, at Glisy, and far from my own station. I could only
-request that the Army Commander might be so good as to come
-at once to the forward area and meet me at Bussy-les-Daours,
-the Headquarters of Maclagan&mdash;he being the Commander immediately
-affected by this proposed change of plan. In due course
-we all met at five o'clock, Rawlinson being accompanied by
-Montgomery, his Chief-of-Staff.</p>
-
-<p>It was a meeting full of tense situations&mdash;and of grave import.
-At that moment of time, the whole of the Infantry destined for
-the assault at dawn next morning, including those very Americans,
-was already well on its way to its battle stations; the Artillery
-was in the act of dissolving its defensive organization with a view
-to moving forward into its battle emplacements as soon as dusk
-should fall; I well knew that even if orders could still with
-certainty reach the battalions concerned, the withdrawal of those
-Americans would result in untold confusion and in dangerous
-gaps in our line of battle.</p>
-
-<p>Even had I been ready to risk the success of the battle by going
-ahead without them, I could not afford to take the further risk
-of the occurrence of something in the nature of an "international
-incident" between the troops concerned, whose respective points
-of view about the resulting situation could be readily surmised.
-So I resolved to take a firm stand and press my views as strongly
-as I dared; for even a Corps Commander must use circumspection
-when presuming to argue with an Army Commander.</p>
-
-<p>However, disguised in the best diplomatic language that I
-was able to command, my representations amounted to this:
-firstly, that it was already too late to carry out the order;
-secondly, that the battle would have to go on either with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-Americans participating, or not at all; thirdly, that unless I
-were expressly ordered to abandon the battle, I intended to go on
-as originally planned; and lastly, that unless I received such a
-cancellation order before 6.30 p.m. it would in any case be too
-late to stop the battle, the preliminary phases of which were just
-on the point of beginning.</p>
-
-<p>As always, Lord Rawlinson's charming and sympathetic
-personality made it easy to lay my whole case before him. He
-was good enough to say that while he entirely agreed with me,
-he felt himself bound by the terms of a clear order from the
-Commander-in-Chief. My last resource, then, was to urge the
-argument that I felt perfectly sure that the Commander-in-Chief
-when giving such an order could not have had present to
-his mind the probability that compliance with it meant the
-abandonment of the battle, and that, under the circumstances,
-it was competent for the senior Commander on the spot to act
-in the light of the situation as known to him, even to the extent
-of disobeying an order.</p>
-
-<p>Rawlinson agreed that this view was correct provided the
-Commander-in-Chief was not accessible for reference. Repeated
-attempts to raise General Headquarters from Bussy eventually
-elicited the information that the Field Marshal was then actually
-on his way from Versailles, and expected to arrive in half an
-hour. Thereupon Rawlinson promised a decision by 6.30, and
-we separated to rejoin our respective Headquarters.</p>
-
-<p>In due course, the Army Commander telephoned that he had
-succeeded in speaking to the Field Marshal, who explained that
-he had directed the withdrawal of the Americans in deference
-to the wish of General Pershing, but that, as matters stood, he
-now wished everything to go on as originally planned. And so&mdash;the
-crisis passed as suddenly as it had appeared. For, to me
-it had taken the form of a very serious crisis, feeling confident
-as I did of the success of the forthcoming battle, and of the far-reaching
-consequences which would be certain to follow. It
-appeared to me at the time that great issues had hung for an
-hour or so upon the chance of my being able to carry my point.</p>
-
-<p>An interesting episode, intimately bound up with the story<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-of this battle, was the visit to the Corps area on July 2nd of the
-Prime Minister of the Commonwealth, Mr. W. M. Hughes, and
-Sir Joseph Cook, the Minister of the Navy. They arrived all
-unconscious of the impending enterprise, but only by taking
-them fully into my confidence could I justify my evident preoccupation
-with other business of first-class importance. Most
-readily, however, did they accommodate themselves to the
-exigencies of the situation.</p>
-
-<p>Both Ministers accompanied me that afternoon on a tour of
-inspection of the eight battalions who were then already parading
-in full battle array, and on the point of moving off to the assembly
-positions from which next day they would march into battle.
-The stirring addresses delivered to the men by both Ministers
-did much to hearten and stimulate them. As they were on
-their way to an Inter-Allied War Council at Versailles, the personal
-contact of the Ministers with the actual battle preparations
-had the subsequent result of focussing upon the outcome of
-the battle a good deal of interest on the part of the whole War
-Council.</p>
-
-<p>The fixing of the exact moment for the opening of a battle
-has always been the subject of much controversy. As in many
-other matters, it becomes in the end the responsibility of one
-man to make the fatal decision. The Australians always
-favoured the break of day, as this gave them the protection of
-the hours of darkness for the assembly of the assaulting troops
-in battle order in our front trenches. But there must be at
-least sufficient light to see one's way for two hundred yards or
-so, otherwise direction is lost and confusion ensues.</p>
-
-<p>The season of the year, the presence and altitude of the moon,
-the prospect of fog or ground mist, the state of the weather,
-and the nature and condition of the ground are all factors which
-affect the proper choice of the correct moment. To aid a decision,
-careful observations were usually made on three or four mornings
-preceding the chosen day. A new factor on this occasion was
-the strong appeal by the Tanks for an extra five minutes of
-dawning light, to ensure a true line of approach upon the allotted
-objective, whether a ruined village, or a thicket, or a field work.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The decision actually given by me was that "Zero" would
-be ten minutes past three, and every watch had been carefully
-synchronized to the second, to ensure simultaneous action.
-A perfected modern battle plan is like nothing so much as a
-score for an orchestral composition, where the various arms and
-units are the instruments, and the tasks they perform are their
-respective musical phrases. Every individual unit must make
-its entry precisely at the proper moment, and play its phrase
-in the general harmony. The whole programme is controlled
-by an exact time-table, to which every infantryman, every
-heavy or light gun, every mortar and machine gun, every tank
-and aeroplane must respond with punctuality; otherwise there
-will be discords which will impair the success of the operation,
-and increase the cost of it.</p>
-
-<p>The morning of July 4th was ushered in with a heavy ground
-mist. This impeded observation and made guidance difficult,
-but it greatly enhanced the surprise. The unexpected occurrence
-of this fog lessened the importance of the elaborate care which
-had been taken to introduce into the Artillery barrage a due
-percentage of smoke shell, and to form smoke screens by the use
-of mortars on the flanks of the attack. But the fog largely
-accounted for the cheap price at which the victory was bought.</p>
-
-<p>No battle within my previous experience, not even Messines,
-passed off so smoothly, so exactly to time-table, or was so free
-from any kind of hitch. It was all over in ninety-three minutes.
-It was the perfection of team work. It attained all its objectives;
-and it yielded great results. The actual assault was
-delivered, from right to left, by two battalions of the 6th Brigade,
-three battalions of the 4th Brigade, and three battalions of the
-11th Brigade. It was also part of the plan that advantage was
-taken by a battalion of the 15th Brigade to snatch from the
-enemy another slice of territory far away in the Ancre Valley,
-opposite Dernancourt, and so, by extending the battle front,
-further to distract him.</p>
-
-<p>The attack was a complete surprise, and swept without check
-across the whole of the doomed territory. Vaire and Hamel
-Woods fell to the 4th Brigade, while the 11th Brigade, with its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-allotted Tanks, speedily mastered Hamel Village itself. The
-selected objective line was reached in the times prescribed for
-its various parts, and was speedily consolidated. It gave us
-possession of the whole of the Hamel Valley, and landed us on
-the forward or eastern slope of the last ridge, from which the
-enemy had been able to overlook any of the country held by us.</p>
-
-<p>Still more important results were that we gathered in no less
-than 1,500 prisoners, and killed and disabled at least as many
-more, besides taking a great deal of booty, including two field
-guns, 26 mortars and 171 machine guns&mdash;at a cost to us of less
-than 800 casualties of all kinds, the great majority of whom were
-walking wounded. The Tanks fulfilled every expectation, and
-the suitability of the tactics employed was fully demonstrated.
-Of the 60 Tanks utilized, only 3 were disabled, and even these
-3 were taken back to their rallying points under their own power
-the very next night. Their moral effect was also proved, and,
-with the exception of a few enemy machine-gun teams, who
-bravely stood their ground to the very last, most of the enemy
-encountered by the Tanks readily surrendered.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after the battle, G.H.Q. paid the Australian Corps
-the compliment of publishing to the whole British Army a General
-Staff brochure,<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> containing the complete text of the orders, and
-a full and detailed description of the whole of the battle plans
-and preparations, with an official commentary upon them. The
-last paragraph of this document, which follows, expresses tersely
-the conclusions reached by our High Command:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"81. The success of the attack was due:</p>
-
-<p>(a) To the care and skill as regards every detail with
-which the plan was drawn up by the Corps,
-Division, Brigade and Battalion Staffs.</p>
-
-<p>(b) The excellent co-operation between the infantry,
-machine gunners, artillery, tanks and R.A.F.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span></p>
-<p>(c) The complete surprise of the enemy, resulting
-from the manner in which the operation had
-been kept secret up till zero hour.</p>
-
-<p>(d) The precautions which were taken and successfully
-carried out by which no warning was given to
-the enemy by any previous activity which was
-not normal.</p>
-
-<p>(e) The effective counter-battery work and accurate
-barrage.</p>
-
-<p>(f) The skill and dash with which the tanks were
-handled, and the care taken over details in bringing
-them up to the starting line.</p>
-
-<p>(g) Last, but most important of all, the skill, determination
-and fine fighting spirit of the infantry
-carrying out the attack."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Of the extent to which the tactical principles, and the methods
-of preparation which had been employed at Hamel, came to be
-utilized by other Corps in the later fighting of 1918 no reliable
-record is yet available to me. But within the Corps itself this
-comparatively small operation became the model for all enterprises
-of a similar character, which it afterwards fell to the lot
-of the Corps to carry out.</p>
-
-<p>The operation was a small one, however, only by contrast with
-the events which followed, although not in comparison with
-some of the major operations which had preceded it&mdash;by reference
-to the number of troops engaged, although not to the extent of
-territory or booty captured. Although only eight Battalions
-(or the equivalent of less than one Division) were committed
-in the actual assault, the territory recovered was more than four
-times that which was, in the pitched battles of 1917, customarily
-allotted as an objective to a single Division. The number of
-prisoners in relation to our own casualties was also far higher
-than had been the experience of previous years. Both of these
-new standards which had thus been set up may be regarded as
-flowing directly from the employment of the Tanks.</p>
-
-<p>Among other aspects of this battle which are worthy of
-mention is the fact that it was the first occasion in the war that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-the American troops fought in an offensive battle. The contingent
-of them who joined us acquitted themselves most gallantly
-and were ever after received by the Australians as blood brothers&mdash;a
-fraternity which operated to great mutual advantage nearly
-three months later.</p>
-
-<p>This was the first occasion, also, on which the experiment was
-made of using aeroplanes for the purpose of carrying and delivering
-small-arms ammunition. The "consolidation" of a newly-captured
-territory implies, in its broadest sense, its organization
-for defence against recapture. For such a purpose the most
-rapidly realizable expedient had been found to be the placing of
-a predetermined number of machine guns in previously chosen
-positions, arranged chequer-wise over the captured ground.
-According to such a plan, suitable localities were selected by
-an examination of the map and a specified number of Vickers
-machine-gun crews were specially told off for the duty of making,
-during the battle, by the most direct route, to the selected
-localities, there promptly digging in, and preparing to deal with
-any attempt on the part of the enemy to press a counter-attack.</p>
-
-<p>The main difficulty affecting the use of machine guns is the
-maintenance for them of a regular and adequate supply of ammunition.
-Heretofore this function had to be performed by infantry
-ammunition carrying parties. It required two men to carry
-one ammunition box, holding a thousand rounds, which a machine
-gun in action could easily expend in less than five minutes.
-Those carrying parties had to travel probably not less than
-two to three miles in the double journey across the open, exposed
-both to view and fire. Casualties among ammunition carriers
-were always substantial.</p>
-
-<p>It was therefore decided to attempt the distribution of this
-class of ammunition by aeroplane. Most of the machines of
-the Corps Squadron were fitted with bomb racks and releasing
-levers. It required no great ingenuity to adapt this gear for
-the carrying by each plane of two boxes of ammunition simultaneously,
-and to arrange for its release, by hand lever, at the
-appropriate time. It remained to determine, by experiment,
-the correct size and mode of attachment for a parachute for each<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-box of ammunition, so that the box would descend from the air
-slowly, and reach the ground without severe impact.</p>
-
-<p>It was Captain Wackett, of the Australian Flying Corps, who
-perfected these ideas, and who trained the pilots to put them
-into practice. Each machine-gun crew, upon reaching its
-appointed locality, spread upon the ground a large V-shaped
-canvas (V representing the word "Vickers") as an intimation
-to the air of their whereabouts, and that they needed ammunition.
-After a very little training, the air-pilots were able to
-drop this ammunition from a height of at least 1,000 feet to well
-within 100 yards of the appointed spot. In this way, at least
-100,000 rounds of ammunition were successfully distributed
-during this battle, with obvious economy in lives and wounds.
-The method thus initiated became general during later months.</p>
-
-<p>The Corps also put into practice, on this occasion, a stratagem
-which had frequently on a smaller scale been employed in connection
-with trench raids. Our Artillery was supplied with
-many different types of projectile, but among them were both
-gas shell and smoke shell. The latter were designed to create
-a very palpable smoke cloud, to be employed for the purpose of
-screening an assault, but were otherwise harmless. The former
-burst, on the other hand, with very little evolution of smoke,
-but with a pronounced and easily recognized smell, and their
-gas was very deadly.</p>
-
-<p>My practice was, therefore, during the ordinary harassing fire
-in periods between offensive activities, always to fire both classes
-of shell <i>together</i>, so that the enemy became accustomed to the
-belief at the least that our smoke shells were invariably accompanied
-by gas shell, even if he did not believe that it was the
-smoke shell which alone gave out the warning smell. The effect
-upon him of either belief was, however, the same; for it compelled
-him in any case to put on his gas mask in order to protect
-himself from gas poisoning.</p>
-
-<p>On the actual battle day, however, we fired smoke shell <i>only</i>,
-as we dared not vitiate the air through which our own men would
-shortly pass. But the enemy had no rapid means of becoming
-aware that we were firing only harmless smoke shell. He would,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-therefore, promptly don his gas mask, which would obscure his
-vision, hamper his freedom of action, and reduce his powers of
-resistance. On July 4th both the 4th and 11th Brigades accordingly
-took prisoner large numbers of men who were found actually
-wearing their gas masks. The stratagem had worked out exactly
-as planned.</p>
-
-<p>The battle was over, and when the results were made known
-there followed the inevitable flow of congratulatory messages
-from superiors, and colleagues and friends, from all parts of the
-Front and from England. The following telegrams received
-from the Commonwealth Prime Minister were particularly
-gratifying:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>1. "On behalf of Prime Minister of Britain, and also of
-Prime Ministers of Canada, New Zealand and Newfoundland,
-attending <span class="smcap">Versailles</span> Council, I am commissioned
-to offer you our warmest congratulations upon brilliant
-success of Australian Forces under your command, and to
-say that the victory achieved by your Troops is worthy to
-rank with greatest achievements of Australian Armies."</p>
-
-<p>2. "My personal congratulations and those of the Government
-of Commonwealth on brilliant success of battle.
-Please convey to Officers and Men participating in attack
-warmest admiration of their valour and dash and manner
-in which they have maintained highest traditions of Australian
-Army. I am sure that achievement will have most
-considerable military and political effect upon Allies and
-neutrals, and will heighten <i>moral</i> of all Imperial Forces."</p>
-
-<p>3. "In company with Mr. Lloyd George and General
-Rawlinson to-day saw several hundred of prisoners taken
-by Australian Troops in battle before Hamel. Rawlinson
-expressed to me the opinion that the operation was a brilliant
-piece of work. Please convey this to troops."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The following message transmitted to me by the Commander
-of the Fourth Army was also received from the Field Marshal
-Commanding-in-Chief:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"Will you please convey to Lieutenant-General Sir John
-Monash and all Ranks under his command, including the
-Tanks and the detachment of 33rd American Division, my
-warm congratulations on the success which attended the
-operation carried out this morning, and on the skill and
-gallantry with which it was conducted.</p>
-
-<div class="right">"<span class="smcap">D. Haig.</span>"</div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>A steady stream of visitors also set in, including numbers of
-General Staff Officers, who had been sent down from other
-Corps and Armies to gather information as to the methods
-employed. Everyone, of course, recognized that there was
-only one War, and that it was to the mutual benefit of all that
-all expedients calculated to accelerate the end of it should become
-the common property of all. My Staff were accordingly kept
-busy for many days with maps and diagrams explaining the
-lines on which the enterprise had been carried out.</p>
-
-<p>The most distinguished and most welcome of all our visitors,
-however, was Monsieur Clemenceau, the veteran statesman of
-France, who, in spite of the physical effort, immediately after
-the sitting of the Versailles War Council had closed, made haste
-to travel to the Amiens area, and to visit the Corps for the special
-purpose of thanking the troops. He arrived on July 7th, and a
-large assemblage of Australian soldiers who had participated in
-the battle, and who were resting from their labours near General
-Maclagan's Headquarters at Bussy, were privileged to hear him
-address them in English in the following terms:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"I am glad to be able to speak at least this small amount
-of English, because it enables me to tell you what all French
-people think of you. They expected a great deal of you,
-because they have heard what you have accomplished in
-the development of your own country. I should not like
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>to say that they are surprised that you have fulfilled their
-expectations. By that high standard they judge you, and
-admire you that you have reached it. We have all been
-fighting the same battle of freedom in these old battlegrounds.
-You have all heard the names of them in history.
-But it is a great wonder, too, in history that you should
-be here fighting on the old battlefields, which you never
-thought, perhaps, to see. The work of our fathers, which
-we wanted to hand down unharmed to our children, the
-Germans tried to take from us. They tried to rob us of all
-that is dearest in modern human society. But men were
-the same in Australia, England, France, Italy, and all
-countries proud of being the home of free people. That is
-what made you come; that is what made us greet you
-when you came. We knew you would fight a real fight, but
-we did not know that from the very beginning you would
-astonish the whole Continent with your valour. I have
-come here for the simple purpose of seeing the Australians
-and telling them this. I shall go back to-morrow and say
-to my countrymen: 'I have seen the Australians; I have
-looked into their eyes. I know that they, men who have
-fought great battles in the cause of freedom, will fight on
-alongside us, till the freedom for which we are all fighting
-is guaranteed for us and our children.'"</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The French inhabitants of the Amiens district were also
-highly elated at the victory. The city itself had been, for some
-weeks, completely evacuated, by official order. Not only had
-it become the object of nightly visitations by flights of Gothas;
-but also, somewhere in the east and far beyond the reach of my
-longest range guns, the enemy had succeeded in emplacing a
-cannon of exceptionally large calibre, range and power, which
-took its daily toll of the buildings of this beautiful city.</p>
-
-<p>The anniversary of the French national fête was approaching,
-and the Prefect of the Department of the Somme, Monsieur
-Morain&mdash;appreciating the significance of the Hamel victory as
-a definite step towards the ultimate disengagement of the city<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-from the German terror&mdash;determined to make the celebration
-of this fête not only a compliment to the Australian Corps, but
-also a proof of the unquenchable fortitude of the people of his
-Department.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly, in the Hôtel de Ville, in the very heart of the
-deserted city, amidst the crumbling ruins of its upper stories,
-and of the devastation of the surrounding city blocks, he presided
-at a humble but memorable repast, which had been spread
-in an undamaged apartment, inviting to his board a bare twenty
-representatives of the French and British Armies, and of the
-city of Amiens. While we toasted the King and the Republic,
-and voiced the firm resolve of both Allies to see the struggle
-through to the bitter end, the enemy shells were still thundering
-overhead.</p>
-
-<p>But other matters than rejoicings in a task thus happily
-accomplished compelled my chief attention during the remaining
-days of this July. I had to study and gauge accurately the
-tactical and strategical results of the victory of Hamel, and to
-lose no time in using the advantage gained. The moral results
-both on the enemy and on ourselves were far more important,
-and deserve far more emphasis than do the material gains.</p>
-
-<p>It was, as I have said, the first offensive operation, on any
-substantial scale, that had been fought by any of the Allies
-since the previous autumn. Its effect was electric, and it stimulated
-many men to the realization that the enemy was, after all,
-not invulnerable, in spite of the formidable increase in his
-resources which he had brought from Russia. It marked the
-termination, once and for all, of the purely defensive attitude of
-the British front. It incited in many quarters an examination
-of the possibilities of offensive action on similar lines by similar
-means&mdash;a changed attitude of mind, which bore a rich harvest
-only a very few weeks later.</p>
-
-<p>But its effect on the enemy was even more startling. His
-whole front from the Ancre to Villers-Bretonneux had become
-unstable, and was reeling from the blow. It was only the consideration
-that I had still to defend a ten-mile front, and had
-still only one Division in reserve in case of emergency, that
-deterred me from embarking at once upon another blow on an
-even larger scale. But I seized every occasion to importune the
-Army Commander either to narrow my front, or to let the First
-Division from Hazebrouck join my command, or both; but so
-far without result.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 789px;">
-<img src="images/map-b.jpg" width="789" height="1200" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">Map B.</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The only course that remained open to me was to initiate
-immediate measures for taking the fullest advantage of the
-enemy's demoralization by exploiting the success obtained to
-the utmost possible extent. No later than on the afternoon
-of the battle of Hamel itself, orders were issued to all three
-line Divisions to commence most vigorous offensive patrolling
-all along the Corps front, with a view not merely to prevent the
-enemy from re-establishing an organized defensive system, but
-also ourselves to penetrate the enemy's ground by the establishment
-therein of isolated posts, as a nucleus for subsequent
-more effective occupation.</p>
-
-<p>Enterprise of such a nature appeals strongly to the sporting
-instinct of the Australian soldier. Divisions, Brigades and
-Battalions vied with each other in predatory expeditions, even in
-broad daylight, into the enemy's ground, and a steady stream of
-prisoners and machine guns flowed in. On the nights of July
-5th and 6th, the Fifth Division, now in the sector between the
-Ancre and the Somme, possessed themselves with very little
-effort of a strip of some three hundred acres of hostile positions,
-bringing our front line so near to Morlancourt as to make that
-village no longer tenable by the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>On the same nights, and again on July 8th and 9th, the Second
-and Fourth Divisions advanced their lines by an average of
-two hundred to three hundred yards along their respective fronts,
-and this advance was, in the case of the Second Division, particularly
-valuable in carrying our front line over the crest of the
-plateau of Hill 104, and giving us clear and unbroken observation
-far into the enemy's country, in the directions of Warfusee
-and Marcelcave.</p>
-
-<p>It was a period replete with instances of individual enterprise
-and daring adventure. One incident, characteristic of the varied
-efforts of these days, was the capture, single-handed, and in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-broad daylight, by Corporal W. Brown, V.C., of the 20th Battalion,
-Second Division, of an officer and eleven men of the German
-Army, whom he stalked as they lay skulking in a trench dug-out
-not far from his observation post, and terrorized into submission
-by the threat of throwing a bomb at them.</p>
-
-<p>But perhaps the best testimony of the successful activities
-of my troops during this period, and of the serious impression
-which they made upon the enemy, can be gathered by extracts
-from his own documents, a number of which were captured
-during this and subsequent fighting. Of these, the following,
-issued by the Second German Army Headquarters (Von der
-Marwitz), are among the more interesting:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"The enemy has in his minor enterprises again taken
-prisoner a complete front line battalion and part of a support
-battalion. The reason is our faulty leadership."</p>
-
-<p>"The enemy penetrated the forward zone of the 108th
-Division by means of large patrols at midnight, on July 8th,
-1918, without any artillery preparation, and again on the
-same night at 11 p.m., with artillery preparation, astride of
-the Marcelcave&mdash;Villers-Bretonneux railway. He occupied
-the trenches where our most advanced outposts lay, and
-took the occupants, comprising fifteen men, prisoner. The
-larger part of the forward zone has been lost."</p>
-
-<p>"In the case of the present trench Division, it has often
-happened that <i>complete</i> picquets have disappeared from the
-forward zone without a trace."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>All the above refers to the period between July 4th and 12th.
-We read again under date July 13th:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"During the last few days the Australians have succeeded
-in penetrating, or taking prisoner, single posts or picquets.
-They have gradually&mdash;sometimes even in daylight&mdash;succeeded
-in getting possession of the majority of the forward
-zone of a whole Division."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"Troops must fight. They must not give way at every
-opportunity and seek to avoid fighting, otherwise they will
-get the feeling that the enemy are superior to them."</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_066fp.jpg" width="1200" height="781" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Railway Gun, 11.2-inch Bore&mdash;captured near Rosières on August 8th, 1918.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_067fp.jpg" width="1200" height="787" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>German Depot of Stores&mdash;captured on August 8th, 1918.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>One last extract from these interesting papers:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"The best way to make the enemy more careful in his
-attempt to drive us bit by bit out of the outpost line and
-forward zone is to do active reconnaissance and carry out
-patrol encounters oneself. In this respect absolutely nothing
-seems to have been done. If the enemy can succeed in
-scoring a success without any special support by artillery
-or assistance from special troops, we must be in a position
-to do the same."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Our line in front of Villers-Bretonneux had for months run
-very close to the eastern outskirts of that town, a circumstance
-which cramped and embarrassed our defence of it. The enemy
-could peer into its streets and sweep them with machine guns. He
-had held in strength a locality known as Monument Wood, the
-ruins of a once prosperous orchard, and his possession of it
-had been a source of annoyance both to us and to the French,
-for it lay just opposite the international boundary posts.</p>
-
-<p>The time seemed opportune for a set-piece operation designed
-to advance our line opposite the town by 1,000 yards, on a broad
-front, to dislodge the enemy from Monument Wood, gain valuable
-elbow room, and obtain mastery of the remainder of the plateau
-on which the town was built. I had actually completed the draft
-of a plan for such an operation, and had held a preliminary conference
-with my Staff to discuss it, when it became apparent that
-the nightly encroachments which the Second Division were
-effecting in this region would, in the course of a few days, achieve
-the capture of the whole of this territory without any special
-organized effort at all.</p>
-
-<p>And so it proved; for before the middle of July, Rosenthal
-had succeeded in possessing himself, by such a process of "peaceful
-penetration," of the whole of the coveted area. It was a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-further evidence of the serious demoralization which our aggressive
-attitude of the preceding months had wrought among the
-German forces opposed to us.</p>
-
-<p>The era of minor aggression by the Australian Corps was, however,
-about to draw to a close, and the situation was rapidly
-beginning to shape itself for greater events.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> Staff-Sheet No. 218: "Operations of the Australian Corps against Hamel,
-etc.," published July, 1918.</p></div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IV<br />
-
-TURNING THE TIDE</h2>
-
-
-<p>The course of events during June and July pointed to the
-conclusions, firstly, that the enemy contemplated no
-further offensive operations in the Somme Valley, and, secondly,
-that the condition of the whole German Second Army, astride
-of the Somme, offered every temptation to us to seize the initiative
-against it.</p>
-
-<p>So far as the Australian Corps was concerned, however, my
-total frontage, which had been increased (as the result of our
-exploitation) to over eleven miles, precluded the possibility, with
-only four Divisions at my disposal, of maintaining, even if I could
-succeed in initiating, an ambitious offensive. The time was
-nevertheless ripe for action on a scale far more decisive than
-had become orthodox in the British Army in the past. Efforts
-on that method had been confined to a thrust, limited in point
-both of distance and of time, and followed by a period of
-inaction; they had often given the enemy ample leisure to
-recover, and to reorganize his order of battle.</p>
-
-<p>To maintain an offensive, day after day, indefinitely, would
-require sufficient resources, particularly in infantry, to allow
-Divisions to be used alternatingly. Only in such a way, by having
-rested Divisions always available to alternate with tired Divisions,
-could a continuous pressure be maintained.</p>
-
-<p>I took every opportunity of pressing these views upon the
-Army Commander, and expressed the readiness of the Australian
-Corps to undertake and maintain a long sustained offensive,
-provided that arrangements could be made to shorten my frontage
-from a three to a two-Division battle front, and to increase my
-resources, from the present four, to five or even six Divisions. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-was further essential that in any advances attempted by us, other
-Corps must co-operate on both flanks.</p>
-
-<p>It would be bad tactics to drive into the enemy's front a salient
-with a narrow base, for such a salient would make our situation
-worse instead of better, affording to the enemy the opportunity
-of artillery attack upon it from both its flanks as well as from
-its front. The salient must therefore be broad based in relation
-to its depth, and the base must ever widen as the head of the
-salient advances.</p>
-
-<p>This principle implied that a large-scale operation of such a
-nature must be begun on a whole Army front, and that, even
-at its inception, at least three Corps must co-operate, to be aided
-by the entry of additional Corps on the outer flanks as the central
-depth developed. In other words, it was a project implying a
-large commitment of resources, and the urgent question was
-whether the time was yet ripe for taking the risks involved.</p>
-
-<p>The matter, however, now became a subject at least worthy
-of practical discussion, and, during the days which followed Hamel,
-the Staffs of both the Corps and Army were kept busy with
-the investigation of data, maps, and information, while the
-availability of additional resources in guns, tanks and aeroplanes
-became the subject of anxious inquiry.</p>
-
-<p>A circumstance which troubled me sorely was the fact that
-my Corps stood on the flank of the British Army, and that the
-troops on my right belonged to the French Army. The relations
-between the Australian troops and the Tirailleurs and Zouaves of
-the 31st French Corps (General Toulorge) had always been the
-very friendliest, and the joint "international" posts had been
-the scenes of hearty fraternization and of the evolution of a strange
-common vernacular.</p>
-
-<p>This comradeship of "poilu" with "digger" did not, however,
-lessen the difficulties incidental to the joint conduct of a major
-Operation of War by two Corps of different nationalities, speaking
-different languages, with diverse tactical conceptions, and, above
-all, of substantially divergent temperaments. The French are
-irresistible in attack as they are dogged in defence, but whether
-they will attack or defend depends greatly on their temperament<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-of the moment. In this they are totally unlike the British or
-Australian soldier who will at any time philosophically accept
-either rôle that may be prescribed for him.</p>
-
-<p>In short, it was not possible to hope for an effective co-ordination
-of effort, controlled particularly by the minute observance
-of a time-table, on the part of the Australian and its adjacent
-French Corps, and I felt quite unprepared to count upon it. It
-was for this reason that I expressed to the Army Commander
-the hope that a British Corps might be obtainable to operate on
-my right flank in any undertaking that should be decided upon.
-Understanding that the greater part of the Canadian Corps was
-then unemployed, resting in a back area, I ventured to hope that
-this Corps might be made available, in the event of a decision
-that the proposal should be proceeded with.</p>
-
-<p>My hesitation to accept the French as colleagues in such a
-battle was based not altogether on theoretical or sentimental
-grounds. The steady progress in mopping up enemy territory
-to the east of Villers-Bretonneux, which had been made by my
-south flank Division (the Second) as the aftermath of Hamel,
-soon produced a contortion of the Allied front line at this point
-which bade fair to prove just as troublesome to me as had been
-the great re-entrant opposite Hamel, which that battle had been
-specially undertaken to eliminate.</p>
-
-<p>No persuasions on my part, or on that of my flank Division,
-could induce the adjacent French Division to extend any co-operation
-in these advances or to adopt any measures to flatten
-out the re-entrant which, growing deeper every day, threatened
-to expose my right flank. I am convinced that such hesitation
-was based upon no timidity, but was the result wholly of an
-entirely different outlook and policy from those which the Australian
-Corps was doing its best to interpret. But the experience
-of it made the prospect of punctual co-operation on their part
-in much more serious undertakings distinctly less encouraging.</p>
-
-<p>The proposed offensive involved, therefore, far-reaching redispositions,
-comprising a substantial displacement southwards
-of the inter-Allied boundary, a lengthening by several miles
-of the whole British Western front, and an entire rearrangement<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-of the respective fronts of the Third and Fourth British Armies.
-It is not surprising that a decision was deferred, while the
-project was being critically investigated from every point of
-view.</p>
-
-<p>Then, suddenly, a new situation arose. On July 15th, the enemy
-opened a fresh attack against the French in the south. The scale
-on which he undertook it immediately made it patent to all
-students of the situation that he was probably employing his
-whole remaining reserves of fit, rested Divisions; that he meant
-this to be his decisive blow; and that whether he gained a decision
-or not, it would be his last effort on the grand scale.</p>
-
-<p>It did not succeed; for just as he had once again reached the
-line of the Marne and had on July 17th achieved his "furthest
-south" at Château-Thierry, a beautifully timed counter-stroke
-by the French and Americans upon the western face of the salient,
-extending from Soissons to the Marne, resulted on July 18th in
-the capture by the Allies on that day alone, of 15,000 prisoners
-and 200 guns.</p>
-
-<p>It was the end of German offensive in the war. Their mobile
-reserves were exhausted, and they were compelled slowly to
-recede from the Château-Thierry salient. The appropriate
-moment, for which Foch and Haig had doubtless been waiting
-for months, had at last arrived to begin an Allied counter offensive,
-and it was only a question of deciding at what point along the
-Franco-British front the effort should be made, and on what
-date it should open.</p>
-
-<p>Doubtless influenced by the reasons already discussed, the
-choice fell upon that portion of the front of the Fourth Army
-which lay south of the Somme; in other words upon the southern
-portion of the Australian Corps front. The date remained undecided,
-but the requisite redisposition of Armies and Corps was
-so extensive that no time was to be lost in making a beginning.</p>
-
-<p>It was on July 21st that General Rawlinson first called together
-the Corps Commanders who were to be entrusted with this portentous
-task. The strictest secrecy was enjoined, and never
-was a secret better kept; with the exception of the Field Marshal
-and his Army Commanders, none outside of the Fourth Army<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-had any inkling of what was afoot until the actual moment
-for action had arrived.</p>
-
-<p>Yet an observant enemy agent, if any such there had been
-in the vicinity, might well have drawn a shrewd conclusion that
-some mischief was brewing, had he happened along the main
-street of the prettily-situated village of Flexicourt, on the Somme,
-on that bright summer afternoon, and had observed in front of a
-pretentious white mansion, over which floated the black and red
-flag of an Army Commander, a quite unusual procession of motor-cars,
-ostentatiously flying the Canadian and Australian flags and
-the red-and-white pennants of two other Corps Commanders.</p>
-
-<p>There were present at that conference, General Currie, the
-Canadian, General Butler, of the Third Corps, General Kavanagh,
-of the Cavalry Corps, and myself, while senior representatives of
-the Tanks and Air Force also attended. Rawlinson unfolded
-the outline of the whole Army plan, and details were discussed
-at great length in the light of the views held by each Corps Commander
-as to the tasks which he was prepared to undertake
-with the resources in his hands or promised to him.</p>
-
-<p>The conditions which I had sought in my previous negotiations
-with the Army Commander were, I found, conceded to me almost
-to the full extent. My battle front was to be reduced from eleven
-miles to a little over 7,000 yards. It would, in fact, extend from
-the Somme, as the northern, to the main Péronne railway, as the
-southern flank. And&mdash;what was equally important, and profoundly
-welcome&mdash;the First Australian Division was shortly
-to be relieved in Flanders, and would at last join my Corps, thus
-for the first time in the war bringing all Australian field units in
-France under one command.</p>
-
-<p>The Canadians were to operate on my right, and further south
-again the First French Army (Debenay) was to supply a Corps
-to form a defensive flank for the Canadians. The Third British
-Corps was to carry out for me a similar function on my northern
-flank. Thus, four Corps in line were to operate, the two central
-Corps carrying out the main advance, while the two outer flank
-Corps would be employed further to broaden the base of the
-great salient which the operation would create.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Cavalry Corps would appear in the battle area also, with
-all preparations made for a rapid exploitation of any success
-achieved. The utility of the Cavalry in modern war, at any rate
-in a European theatre, has been the subject of endless controversy.
-It is one into which I do not propose to enter. There is
-no doubt that, given suitable ground and an absence of wire
-entanglements, Cavalry can move rapidly, and undertake important
-turning or enveloping movements. Yet it has been argued
-that the rarity of such suitable conditions negatives any justification
-for superimposing so unwieldy a burden as a large body of
-Cavalry&mdash;on the bare chance that it <i>might</i> be useful&mdash;upon
-already overpopulated areas, billets, watering places and roads.</p>
-
-<p>I may, however, anticipate the event by saying that the
-First Cavalry Brigade was duly allotted to me, and did its best to
-prove its utility; but I am bound to say that the results achieved,
-in what proved to be very unsuitable country beyond the range
-of the Infantry advance, did not justify the effort expended either
-by this gallant Brigade or by the other arms and services upon
-whom the very presence of the Cavalry proved an added burden.</p>
-
-<p>For the full understanding of subsequent developments both
-during and after the battle it becomes of special importance
-to consider the proposed rôle of the Third Corps in relation to my
-left flank. It is to be remembered that the Fourth Army decided
-that the River Somme was to be the tactical boundary between
-the two Northern Corps. It was not competent for me to criticize
-this decision at the time, but I am free now to say that I believed
-such a boundary to have been unsuitable, and the event speedily
-proved that it was.</p>
-
-<p>It is always, in my opinion, undesirable to select any bold
-natural or artificial feature&mdash;such as a river, ravine, ridge, road
-or railway&mdash;as a boundary. It creates, at once, a divided responsibility,
-and necessitates between two independent commanders,
-and at a critical point, a degree of effective co-operation which
-can rarely be hoped for. It is much better boldly to place a unit,
-however large or small, <i>astride</i> of such a feature, so that both
-sides of it may come under the control of one and the same
-Commander.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This was especially the case in this part of the Somme Valley
-which is broad, and has an ill-defined central line, tortuous, and
-with the slopes on either side tactically interdependent; but most
-of all because, as I have already described, the high plateau on
-the north completely overlooks the relatively lower flats on the
-south of the river. The point I am trying to make should be
-borne in mind, for I believe it has been fully borne out by subsequent
-events.</p>
-
-<p>The decision standing, however, as it did, it fell to the task of
-the Third Corps to make an assault (concurrently with that of
-the Australian Corps south of the river) for the capture of the
-whole of that reach of the river known as the Chipilly Bend, and
-of all the high ground on the spur which that bend enfolds. The
-object was to deprive the enemy of all ground from which he could
-look down upon my advancing left flank, or from which he could
-bring rifle or artillery fire to bear upon it.</p>
-
-<p>The Third Corps was to operate on the front of one Division,
-the 58th, which, pivoting its left upon the Corbie&mdash;Bray road,
-was to advance its right&mdash;in sympathy with the advance of the
-left of the Australian Corps&mdash;until it rested upon the river about
-one mile downstream from Etinehem. It was a movement
-the success of which was rendered promising by the nature of the
-ground and the disorganized condition of the enemy between the
-Ancre and the Somme.</p>
-
-<p>As regards my right flank, this was to rest as stated upon the
-main railway. The Canadian Corps, of four Divisions, would
-take over from the French a frontage of about 6,000 yards and
-deliver a thrust parallel to and south of the railway, in the direction
-of Caix and Beaucourt, and would aim at the seizure of the
-important Hill 102, immediately to the west of the latter locality.
-At no time did any question of the security of my right flank
-furnish me with any cause for anxiety; the prowess of the Canadian
-Corps was well known to all Australians, and I knew that,
-to use his own expressive vernacular, it was General Currie's
-invariable habit to "deliver the goods."</p>
-
-<p>The comprehensive project thus outlined at the conference
-of July 21st involved, as a preliminary step, a far-reaching redisposition<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-of very large bodies of troops over a very wide front.
-With the readjustment of the boundaries between the Third and
-Fourth British Armies we are not particularly concerned, because
-this affected a region, north of the Ancre, which lay well outside
-of the battle area. Nor did the internal readjustment of the
-northern part of the Fourth Army front present any difficulty,
-as it meant nothing more than a routine "relief" by the 58th
-Division of the Fifth Australian Division which was at this juncture
-holding that part of my Corps sector which lay between the
-Somme and the Ancre.</p>
-
-<p>But the southern half was a very different matter. The First
-French Army was to give up to the British a section of about four
-miles, extending from Villers-Bretonneux to Thennes. This
-was ultimately to be taken over by the Canadian Corps as a
-battle front, but that Corps still had two of its Divisions in the
-line in the neighbourhood of Arras.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, it was of the utmost importance to conceal from
-the enemy until the last possible moment any change in our dispositions.
-This meant concealing them from our own troops
-also, because the loss by us of a single talkative prisoner would
-have been sufficient to disclose to the enemy at least the suspicion,
-if not the certainty, that an attack was in preparation.</p>
-
-<p>After examining the problem and discussing several alternative
-solutions, it was ultimately decided at this conference that, five
-or six days before the date fixed for the attack, the French
-would be relieved in this sector by a Division, not of Canadians,
-but of Australians; that under cover of and behind this Australian
-Division, the Canadian Corps would come in from the north,
-and would proceed to carry out its battle preparations; and
-finally that the actual appearance of Canadian troops in the
-front line would not ensue until three days before the battle.</p>
-
-<p>During the preceding two days, the Australian troops would
-be gradually withdrawn from the sector, leaving only one Brigade
-in occupation of the line, to be backed up by the incoming Canadians
-in the unexpected contingency of an attack by the enemy.
-This last Brigade would quietly melt away, leaving the Canadians
-in full possession of the field.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was hoped that, during the days of the temporary Australian
-occupation of the sector, nothing would happen which might
-disclose to the enemy that the French had left it; and even if
-we were to have the misfortune to lose from this sector any
-Australian prisoners to the enemy, it was further hoped that,
-if kept in total ignorance of the inflow of Canadians, such prisoners
-would be unable to make any embarrassing disclosures. The
-<i>dénouement</i>, which will be told later, showed that this judgment
-of possibilities was a shrewd one, and that such precautions were
-not taken in vain.</p>
-
-<p>At this period of the war, large numbers of Americans had
-already arrived in France, but only few of them were yet ready
-to take their places in the line of battle. The time had not yet
-arrived, therefore, when, by taking over large sections of the
-Western front they could help to shorten the French and British
-frontages. The British front was, therefore, still so extended
-that the mobile reserve Divisions at the disposal of the Field
-Marshal were few.</p>
-
-<p>This consideration made the contemplated reliefs and interchanges
-of Corps and Divisions, and their transference from
-one part of our front to another a matter of great complexity,
-and one which required time to execute. Each stage of the process
-was contingent upon the due completion of a previous stage.
-It is, moreover, a process which cannot be unduly hastened,
-without serious discomfort and fatigue to the troops and animals
-concerned.</p>
-
-<p>Troops destined for battle must be kept in the highest physical
-condition. This means good feeding, comfortable housing, and
-adequate rest. A couple of weary days and sleepless nights spent
-in crowded railway trains, with cold food and little exercise, are
-sufficient to play havoc with the fighting trim of even a crack
-battalion. So, the daily stages of the journey must be short,
-and comfortable billets must be in readiness for each night's halt.
-The day's supplies must arrive punctually and at the right railhead,
-to ensure hot, well-cooked meals.</p>
-
-<p>With the very limited number of serviceable railway lines
-which remained available behind the British front&mdash;and with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-the congestion of traffic resulting from the daily transportation
-of many thousands of tons of artillery ammunition and other war
-stores&mdash;it was not surprising that as the result of the deliberations
-of the conference it was resolved to advise the Commander-in-Chief
-that it would take not less than five days to rearrange our
-order of battle on the lines decided upon, and another five days,
-after Corps and Divisions had taken over their battle fronts, to
-enable them to complete their preparations.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, the Fourth Army could be ready at ten days' notice,
-and the conference broke up, pledged to secrecy and complete
-inaction, until formal approval had been given to the proposals
-and a date fixed for their realization.</p>
-
-<p>The remainder of July passed with no very startling occurrences.
-In the south the German withdrawal from the Soissons salient
-and the Marne continued steadily, with the French and Americans
-on their heels; but it was a methodical retreat, which would
-bring about a substantial shortening of the German line, and so
-release Divisions to rest and refit, which might conceivably become
-available for a fresh assault elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p>But there was still no sign of any such design upon that always
-tender spot, the Allied junction at Villers-Bretonneux. On
-the contrary, my second Division still continued to make free
-with the enemy's advanced patrols, and in a very brilliant little
-infantry operation by the 7th Brigade captured the "Mound,"
-a long spoilbank beside the railway at a point about a mile east
-of the town, which dominated the landscape in every direction.
-The ardour of his troops was only enhanced when they heard that
-General Rosenthal himself, while reconnoitring from the Mound,
-had been sniped at and had received a nasty wound in the arm.</p>
-
-<p>The enemy attempted nothing in the way of infantry retaliation.
-But whenever he had been thoroughly angered, he treated
-my front to a liberal drenching of mustard gas, fired by his
-artillery. His supplies of mustard gas shell seemed inexhaustible,
-and he would frequently expend as many as 10,000 of them
-in a single night upon the half-ruined town of Villers-Bretonneux
-or on the Bois l'Abbé and other woods which he suspected were
-sheltering my reserve infantry.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>These gas attacks were annoying and troublesome, in the
-extreme. During the actual bombardments, troops wore their
-gas masks as a matter of course, but doffed them when the
-characteristic smell of the gas had disappeared. But it was
-warm weather, and as the sun rose, the poisonous liquid, which
-had spattered the ground over immense areas, would volatilize,
-and rise in sufficient volume still to attack all whose business
-took them to and fro across this ground. In this way hundreds of
-our men became incapacitated; although there were a few serious
-cases, most of the men would be fit to rejoin in two or three weeks.
-But this form of attack, and the constant dread of it, made life
-in the forward areas anything but endurable.</p>
-
-<p>I was beset by quite another trepidation also. Prisoners
-captured during the German withdrawal from the Marne, which
-was then in progress, told tales of contemplated withdrawals
-on other fronts, and some even asserted that a withdrawal opposite
-my own front was being talked of. Judged by subsequent
-events, it is more than probable that these stories were stimulated
-by the many articles which were at that time appearing in the
-German newspapers from the pens of press strategists, who, in
-order to allay public anxiety, were representing these withdrawals
-as deliberate, and as a masterpiece of strategy, compelling the
-Allies to a costly pursuit over difficult and worthless ground.</p>
-
-<p>Opposite Albert, signs that such a withdrawal was actually
-in progress also began to appear, although it subsequently transpired
-that, in its early stages, this procedure was merely prompted
-by a purely local consideration, namely, the desire of the enemy
-to improve his tactical position by abandoning the outposts,
-which he had been maintaining in the valley of the Ancre, and
-transferring them to the higher and better ground on the east
-of that river.</p>
-
-<p>It was only natural that those of us who knew of the impending
-attack, and of the immense effort which its preparation would
-involve, felt nervous lest the enemy might forestall us by withdrawing
-his whole line to some methodically prepared position
-of defence in the rear, just as he had done once before in 1917
-on so large a scale in the Bapaume region. It would probably<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
-have been a sound measure of military policy, but it would
-assuredly, at that juncture, have had as disastrous an effect
-upon the <i>moral</i> of the German people as his enforced withdrawal,
-which was soon to begin, actually produced not long after.</p>
-
-<p>The order to prepare the attack, and fixing the date of it
-for August 8th, came in the closing days of July, and at once
-all was bustle and excitement in the Australian Corps. Commanders,
-Staff Officers, and Intelligence Service, the Artillery,
-the Corps Flying Squadron, the map and photography sections
-spent busy days in reconnaissance, and toilsome nights in office
-work. The vast extent of the detailed work involved, particularly
-upon the administrative services, can only be appreciated
-by a study of the plan for the battle, which it fell to my lot, as
-Corps Commander, first to formulate, and then to expound to a
-series of conferences which were held at Bertangles on July 30th,
-and on August 2nd and 4th.</p>
-
-<p>It is, therefore, perhaps appropriate that I should now attempt
-to repeat, in non-technical language, an exposition of the outlines
-of that plan.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER V<br />
-
-THE BATTLE PLAN</h2>
-
-
-<p>My plan for the impending battle involved the employment
-of four Divisions in the actual assault, with one Division
-in reserve. The Reserve Division was to be available for use
-in one of two ways; either as a reserve of fresh troops to exploit
-any successes gained upon the first day, or else to take over and
-hold defensively the ground won, if the assaulting Divisions
-should have become too exhausted to be relied upon for successful
-resistance to a counter-attack in force.</p>
-
-<p>The frontage allotted to the Corps was 7,000 yards, and this
-extent of front accommodated itself naturally to the employment
-of two first-line Divisions, each on a 3,500 yard front,
-each Division having two Brigades in the front line, with one
-Brigade in reserve.</p>
-
-<p>As four Divisions were available to me for immediate use in
-the battle, I decided to undertake, for the first time in the war,
-on so comprehensive a scale, the tactical expedient of a "leapfrog"
-by Divisions over each other.</p>
-
-<p>This term had, long before, passed into the homely phraseology
-of the war, in order to describe a procedure by which one
-body of troops, having reached its objective, was there halted,
-as at a completed task, while a second body of troops, of similar
-order of importance, but under an entirely separate Commander,
-advanced over the ground won, reached the foremost battle line,
-took over the tactical responsibility for the fighting front, and
-after a prescribed interval of time continued the advance to a
-further and more distant objective.</p>
-
-<p>This conception of an advance by a process of "leapfrog"
-had been evolved early in 1917 in connection with a method of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-assault on successive lines of trenches. It was intended at the
-outset to be applied only to very small bodies of infantry, such
-as platoons. A normal battle plan for a company of infantry
-of four platoons was for the first two platoons to capture and hold
-the front line trench, while the next two following platoons would
-leap over this trench and over the troops who had gained it, and
-then pass beyond to the capture of the second, or support trench.
-The method was used, for the first time, on such a modest scale,
-at the battle of Messines, in June, 1917, and later on in the
-same year was adopted for bodies as large even as Battalions,
-in the fighting for the Broodseinde and Passchendaele
-heights.</p>
-
-<p>But on no previous occasion had such a principle been applied
-to whole Divisions. It is true that at the battle of Messines,
-the Fourth Australian Division passed through the New Zealand
-Division after the latter had completed the capture of the main
-Messines ridge, but this was really exploitation, undertaken in
-order to take advantage of the temporary confusion of the enemy,
-and for the purpose of gaining ground upon the eastern slopes
-of the captured ridge. It was not a movement which was really
-part of the main assault, and it was confined to a single Division.</p>
-
-<p>On the present occasion my purpose was to carry out a clear
-and definite process of "leapfrogging," not only simultaneously
-by two Divisions side by side, but also as an essential part of the
-time-table programme for the main battle, and before the exploitation
-stage of the fighting was timed to be reached. It was, undeniably,
-a daring proposal, involving very definite risks, enormously
-increasing the labour of preparation and the mass of
-detailed precautions which had to be undertaken in order to
-obviate the possibility of great confusion.</p>
-
-<p>The preparations necessary for a single Division proposing
-to advance alone, to a prescribed distance, over country much
-of which was usually visible to us from our front line, are sufficiently
-complex, relating as they do, not only to the establishment
-of numerous protected headquarters for Brigades and Battalions,
-of miles upon miles of buried and ground cables, of dumps of
-all kinds of supplies, and of dressing stations and medical aid<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-posts; but also to the disposition, in concealed positions, of
-all the assaulting units, down to the smallest of them, of Infantry
-Engineers and Pioneers. All these preparations assume a
-tenfold complexity when a second Division has to make arrangements
-exactly similar in character, variety and extent, using
-exactly the same territory for the purpose and at the same
-time, and planning to advance over more distant country, entirely
-beyond visual range and preliminary reconnaissance.</p>
-
-<p>The project also involved a much greater crowding of troops
-into the areas immediately behind our line of departure, and,
-therefore, enormously increased the risk of premature detection
-by the enemy, both from ground and from air observation, of
-unusual movement and of other symptoms which presaged the
-possibility of an attack by us. The plan also necessitated the
-closest possible co-ordination of effort, and mutual sympathy
-and understanding, between the Commanders and Staffs of the
-twin Divisions having a common jurisdiction over one and the
-same area of preparation, and one and the same battle front.
-This was a degree of co-operation which could not have been
-looked for unless the personnel concerned had already established,
-from long and close association with each other, the most
-cordial personal relations. And dominating all other difficulties
-were those involved in the proposal to execute this difficult
-and untried operation of a Divisional leapfrog, not singly
-but in a duplex manner, necessitating the assurance of exactly
-similar simultaneous action, similarly timed in every stage, both
-before and during battle, by each of two separate pairs of
-Divisions.</p>
-
-<p>These threatening difficulties were surely formidable enough,
-but I knew that I could rely upon the goodwill of the Divisions
-towards each other, and upon the loyal support of them all.
-This seemed to me to justify the attempt, and to minimize the
-risks; having regard above all else to the results which I stood
-to gain if the operation could be executed as planned.</p>
-
-<p>On no previous occasion in the war had an attempt ever been
-made to effect a penetration into the enemy's defences at the
-first blow, and on the first day, greater than a mile or two. Rarely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-had any previous set-piece attack succeeded in reaching the
-enemy's line of field-guns. The result had been that the bulk
-of his Artillery had been withdrawn at his leisure, and his losses
-had been confined to a few hundred acres of shattered territory.
-But the task I had set myself was not only to reach, at the first
-onslaught, the whole of the enemy's Artillery positions, but greatly
-to overrun them with a view to obliterating, by destruction
-or capture, the whole of his defensive organizations and the
-whole of the fighting resources which they contained, along the
-full extent of my Corps front.</p>
-
-<p>To achieve this object I prepared my plans upon the basis
-of a total advance, on the first day, of not less than 9,000 yards.
-This was to be divided into three separate stages, as follows:</p>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="left">Phase A&mdash;Set-piece attack with barrage,</td><td align="right">3,000</td><td align="center">yards.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Phase B&mdash;Open-warfare advance,</td><td align="right">4,500</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Phase C&mdash;Exploitation,</td><td align="right">1,500</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Total distance to final objective,</td><td align="right">9,000</td><td align="center">yards.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>The opening phase involved no novel or unusual features so
-far as the infantry were concerned, and was conceived on lines
-with which the fighting of 1917 had familiarized me, modified
-further by the accumulated experience gained from earlier mistakes
-in the technical details of such an enterprise. The recent
-battle of Hamel became the model for this phase, the conditions
-of that battle being now reproduced on a much enlarged
-scale.</p>
-
-<p>But there was one very important feature which distinguished
-the present undertaking from the battles of Messines and Broodseinde,
-and that was in regard to the frontage allotted for attack
-to a single Division. At Messines, the Divisional battle front
-was 2,000 yards; in the third battle of Ypres it differed but little
-from the same standard. For the present battle, I adopted a
-battle front of two miles for each assaulting Division, or a mile
-for each of the four assaulting Brigades.</p>
-
-<p>This innovation seemed to me to be justified by four principal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-factors. The first of these was that the weather, which was
-dry, and the state of the ground, which was hard, made the
-"going" easy and the stress upon the infantry comparatively
-light. Next, the condition of the enemy's defensive works was
-undeveloped and stagnant, as clearly disclosed by the air photographs
-which the Corps Air Squadron produced in great numbers
-on every fine day. No doubt this was due to the encroachments
-we had made on his forward works during the fighting at Hamel
-and in the remaining weeks of July. Thirdly, the powerful assistance
-anticipated from a contingent of four Battalions of Tanks
-which General Rawlinson had arranged to place under my orders
-led me to estimate that I might greatly reduce the number of
-men per yard of front. Lastly, the plan was justified by the
-known distribution of the enemy's infantry and guns along the
-frontage under attack. For all these reasons, I felt prepared to
-impose on the infantry a task which, computed solely upon the
-factor of frontage, was more than twice that demanded by me
-on any previous occasion.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time, so extended a frontage involved the employment
-of a much higher ratio of barrage artillery to the number
-of battalions of Infantry actually engaged. Success depended
-more upon the efficiency of the fire power of the barrage than
-upon any other factor, and I could not afford to incur any risk
-by weakening the density of the barrage. For this reason, I
-adhered to the standard which previous experience of several
-major battles and many minor raids had shown to be adequate
-for covering the assaulting infantry, and for keeping down the
-enemy's fire. This standard never fluctuated widely from one
-field-gun per twenty yards of front, and involved the employment,
-on this occasion, of some 432 field-guns in the barrage
-alone. This result could not have been achieved if the Fourth
-Army authorities had not seen their way to place at my disposal
-five additional Brigades of Field Artillery over and above the
-thirteen Australian Brigades which formed a permanent part
-of the whole Artillery of the Corps.</p>
-
-<p>Phase A, as already stated, involved a penetration of 3,000
-yards, and the objective line for this phase, which came to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-known as the "green" line (from the colour employed to delineate
-it upon all the fighting maps propounded by the Corps),
-was chosen, after an exhaustive study of all aeroplane photographs,
-and of the results of numerous observations, by many
-diverse means, of the locations of the enemy's Artillery, so as
-to make certain that during this phase the whole mass of the
-enemy's forward Artillery would be overrun, and captured or
-put out of action.</p>
-
-<p>The green line was, in fact, located along the crest of the spur
-running north-easterly from Lamotte-en-Santerre in the direction
-of Cerisy-Gailly, with the object of carrying the battle well
-to the east of the Cerisy valley, in which large numbers of the
-enemy's guns had been definitely located. This would give us,
-by the capture of this valley, suitable concealed positions in which
-the Infantry destined for Phase B could rest for a short
-"breather;" and would land the Infantry of the original assault
-in a position from which they could detect and forestall any
-attempt on the part of the enemy to launch a counter-attack
-before the time for the opening of Phase B had
-arrived.</p>
-
-<p>The task of executing Phase A of the battle fell to the Second
-and Third Australian Divisions, in that order from south to
-north, the southern flank of the Second Division resting upon the
-main railway line from Amiens to Péronne, and being there in
-contact with the Canadian Corps, under General Currie. The
-northern flank of the Third Division rested on the River Somme,
-and was there in contact with the Third British Corps under
-General Butler, while the inter-divisional boundary was at the
-southern edge of the Bois-d'Accroche.</p>
-
-<p>These two Divisions were the line Divisions during the period
-immediately preceding the battle, and had been holding the line
-each with two Brigades in line and one Brigade in support.
-Three days prior to the battle, however, it was arranged that
-each Division should hold its front with only one Brigade, thereby
-making available two Brigades each for the actual carrying
-out of Phase A of the attack. These assaulting Brigades were
-the 7th, 5th, 9th and 11th, in that order from south to north,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-each Brigade having its due allotment of Tanks and machine
-guns, etc.</p>
-
-<p>The total estimated time for the completion of Phase A was to
-be 143 minutes after the opening of the barrage at "zero" hour;
-and there was then to be a pause of 100 minutes to allow time
-for the advance and deployment into battle order of the succeeding
-two Divisions, who were to carry out the process of "leapfrogging"
-and to execute Phases B and C of the battle.</p>
-
-<p>The planning of Phase B, or the advance from the "green"
-to the "red" line, involved a totally different tactical conception
-and the adoption of a type of warfare which had almost
-entirely disappeared from the Western theatre of war since
-those far-off days in the late autumn of 1914, when the German
-Army first dug itself in, in France and Belgium, and committed
-both combatants to the prolonged agony of over three years
-of stationary warfare. I allude to the moving battle, or as it
-is called in text-book language, "open warfare;" a type of
-fighting in which few of the British Forces formed since the original
-Expeditionary Force had any experience except on the man&oelig;uvre
-ground under peace conditions&mdash;a disability which applied
-equally to the Australian troops. Confident, however, in their
-adaptability and in their power of initiative under novel conditions,
-I did not hesitate to prescribe, for this second phase of
-the battle, the adoption of the principles and methods of open
-warfare.</p>
-
-<p>In two very important respects in particular, this type of
-fighting involved conditions to which the troops had not been
-accustomed, and under which they had no previous experience
-in battle. In trench warfare, and in a deliberate attack on entrenched
-defences, the positions of all headquarters, medical
-aid posts, supply dumps and signal stations remained fixed and
-immovable. The whole of the internal communications by
-telegraph and telephone could, therefore, be completely installed
-beforehand, down to the last detail, and the transmission
-of all messages, reports, orders and instructions, during the course
-of the battle, was rapid and assured. But in a moving battle
-no such comprehensive or stable signalling arrangements are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-possible, and reliance must be placed upon the much slower
-and much more uncertain methods of transmission by flag
-and lamp signalling, by dispatch riders, pigeons and runners.</p>
-
-<p>Divisional Headquarters would, therefore, almost as soon as
-the battle commenced, fall out of touch with Brigades, and they
-in turn with their Battalions; information as to the actual
-situation at the fighting front would travel slowly, and would
-reach those responsible for making consequential decisions
-often long after an entire alteration in the situation had removed
-the need for action. Thus, a greatly enhanced responsibility
-would come to be imposed upon subordinate leaders to decide
-for themselves, without waiting for guidance or orders from higher
-authority, and to grasp the initiative by taking all possible
-action on the spot in the light of the circumstances and situation
-of the moment.</p>
-
-<p>Again, the nature of the Artillery action is, in the moving
-battle, fundamentally different from that which prevails during
-trench warfare. To begin with, only that portion of the Artillery
-which is in the strictest sense mobile can participate to any extent
-in open warfare. The employment of Artillery is, therefore,
-confined to a few and to the smaller natures of Ordnance, namely,
-the 18-pounder field-gun, the 4&frac12;-inch field howitzer and the
-60-pounder, which are all horse drawn and which are capable
-of being moved off the roads and across all but the most broken
-country. Heavier guns, from 6-inch upwards, are in practice confined
-to roads, and are too slow and cumbersome to keep pace
-with the Infantry. The Artillery fire action is also intrinsically
-different, because the guns can be sighted directly upon their
-targets, while in trench warfare they are always laid by indirect
-methods, with the use of the map and compass, and without
-observation, at any rate by the crew of the gun, of the objects
-fired at.</p>
-
-<p>The decision which I had to take of carrying out the second
-phase of this great battle on the principles of open warfare was,
-therefore, one which also involved a certain element of risk.
-But it was a risk which I felt justified in taking, in spite of the
-fact that the German High Command had more than once expressed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-itself in contemptuous terms of the capacity of any
-British troops successfully to undertake any operation of open
-warfare. My justification lay primarily in my confidence in
-the ability of the subordinate commanders and troops to work
-satisfactorily under these novel conditions&mdash;a confidence which
-the event abundantly justified. But I was placed in the position
-of having either to accept this risk, or else abandon altogether
-the project of a quite unprecedented penetration of enemy
-country to be completed on the first day. It would have been
-clearly impossible to continue the advance beyond the green line
-without an interval of at least forty-eight hours, which would
-have been necessary to enable the Artillery to be redisposed for
-barrage fire in forward positions and provided with the necessary
-supplies of ammunition for such a purpose.</p>
-
-<p>The Divisions which were told off to carry out the "leapfrog"
-enterprise and to execute Phase B of the battle were the Fifth
-Australian Division on the south and the Fourth Australian
-Division on the north, the outer flanks of the attack remaining
-as before, <i>i.e.</i>, the Péronne Railway on the south and the River
-Somme on the north. Each of these Divisions was directed to
-deploy, on its own frontage, two Infantry Brigades. Its third
-Brigade was to be kept intact and to advance during Phase B
-at some distance behind, as a support to the fighting line, and to
-be employed in the subsequent phase, if it were found that Phase
-B could be completed without calling upon this spare Brigade.
-The actual dispositions of the Brigades finally proposed by the
-respective Divisional Commanders and approved by me brought
-about the arrangement that the four first-line mobile Infantry
-Brigades were successively, from south to north, the 15th,
-8th, 12th and 4th, while the 14th and 1st Brigades followed as
-supports in a second line.</p>
-
-<p>To each of these Infantry Brigades I allotted a Brigade of
-Field Artillery, to be employed under the direct orders of the
-Infantry Brigade Commander, and, in addition, three Artillery
-Brigades as well as one Battery of 60-pounders, to each Divisional
-Commander. As my resources in Artillery were not unlimited,
-the twelve Artillery Brigades, so disposed of, were necessarily<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-drawn from the original eighteen Brigades which were to fire
-the covering Artillery barrage for Phase A of the battle. The
-orders to that portion of the Field Artillery which was to become
-mobile in pursuance of this plan, accordingly, were that immediately
-upon the completion of their original tasks, by the capture
-of the green line, they were to "pull out of the barrage."</p>
-
-<p>This meant, in effect, that all the teams, limbers, battery
-wagons, and ammunition wagons of these twelve Brigades,
-waiting in their wagon lines far in rear, fully harnessed up and
-hooked in at the opening of the battle, had to advance during
-the progress of the first phase, so as to reach their guns just at
-the right time, but no earlier, to enable these guns to be limbered
-up, and the batteries to become completely mobile in order to
-join and advance with the Infantry of the second phase.</p>
-
-<p>This was an operation which required the greatest nicety in
-timing, and the greatest accuracy in execution. No Australian
-Artillery had ever previously undertaken such an operation,
-except perhaps on the man&oelig;uvre ground, and then only on the
-very limited scale of a Brigade or two at a time. That this rapid
-transition from the completely stationary to the completely
-mobile battle was carried out, during the very crisis of a great
-engagement, without the slightest hitch, and with only the
-trifling loss of two or three gun horse teams from shell fire, reflects
-the very highest credit upon every officer and man of the Australian
-Field Artillery.</p>
-
-<p>The open warfare Infantry Brigades were also to be provided,
-out of their own divisional resources, each with a Company of
-Engineers, a Company of Machine Guns, a Field Ambulance, and
-a detachment of Pioneers, so that, in the most complete sense,
-they became a Brigade Group of all arms, capable of dealing,
-out of their own resources and on their own ground, with any
-situation that might arise during their advance of nearly three
-miles from the green to the red line. A detachment of nine
-tanks completed the fighting equipment of each of the four front
-line Brigades destined to capture the red line.</p>
-
-<p>I must now briefly describe the nature of Phase C, the third
-and last stage in this ambitious and complex battle programme.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-This phase was to consist of "exploitation," which implies that
-it was a provisional preparation, which was to be carried out
-only if complete success attended the two preceding phases.
-The objective of Phase C was the "blue" line, which I had
-located about one mile to the east of the red line, along a system
-of old French trenches extending from the river at a point near
-Méricourt, and running southerly to the railway at a point a
-little to the south-east of Harbonnières. This line gave promise
-of furnishing a good defensive position in which to deal with any
-possible counter-attack. It also gave a good line of departure
-for subsequent operations, and provided ideal artillery positions
-in a series of valleys, running parallel and a little to the west of
-the line itself.</p>
-
-<p>The troops earmarked for this Exploitation Phase were the
-two second line Brigades of the two Divisions which were to
-capture the red line, namely, the 14th and 1st Brigades, and the
-orders to the Divisional Commanders were that if the red line
-was reached without mishap, without undue loss of time, and
-without involving the Reserve Brigades, but not otherwise, these
-Reserve Brigades were to push on with the utmost determination
-to secure and hold the blue line until such time as they could
-be reinforced.</p>
-
-<p>Each of these exploitation Brigades was equipped similarly
-to the red line Brigades in all respects except that they were
-provided with a special contingent of 18 Mark V. (Star) Tanks
-of the very latest design. These differed from the Mark V. Tank
-employed at Hamel and in the other stages of the present operation,
-in that they were longer and had sufficient internal space
-to carry, as passengers, over and above their own crews, two
-complete infantry Lewis gun detachments each. It was expected
-that this infantry fire power, added to the fire power from the
-machine guns carried by these 36 Tanks themselves and operated
-by the Tank crews, would go far to compensate for the somewhat
-attenuated line of probably tired Infantry spread in
-two Brigades over an ultimate frontage of over 10,000
-yards.</p>
-
-<p>No definite time-table was laid down for the closing phases<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
-of the battle, except for the regulation of the times when our
-Heavy Artillery should "lift off" designated targets&mdash;such as
-villages, farms, and known gun positions&mdash;and lengthen its range
-so as not to obstruct the further advance of our own Infantry.
-But it was estimated that, from the opening of the battle, the
-green line would be reached in two and a half hours, the red line
-in six hours, and the blue line in eight hours. As the battle was
-to open at the first streak of dawn, it would, if all went well,
-be completed according to plan by about midday.</p>
-
-<p>In every battle plan, whether great or small, it is necessary
-first of all to map out the whole of the intended action of the
-Infantry, at any rate on the general lines indicated above. When
-that has been done the next step is to work backwards, and to
-test the feasibility of each body of infantry being able to reach
-its allotted point of departure, punctually, without undue
-stress on the troops, and without crossing or impeding the line
-of movement of any other body of infantry. It is often necessary
-to test minutely, by reference to calculations of time and space,
-more than one alternative plan for marshalling the Infantry
-prior to battle, and for the successive movements, day by day,
-and from point to point, of every battalion engaged.</p>
-
-<p>The present case was no exception, and, indeed, presented
-quite special difficulties. The whole of the area for a depth
-of many thousands of yards behind our then front line was open
-rolling country, devoid of any cover, and (except in the actual
-valley of the Somme) with every village, hamlet, farmhouse,
-factory and wood obliterated. The plan involved the assembly,
-in this confined area, fully exposed by day to the view of any
-inquisitive enemy aircraft, of no less than 45 Infantry Battalions,
-with all their paraphernalia of war; not to speak of our 600
-guns of all calibres, their wagon lines, horse lines and motor
-parks, together with Engineers, Pioneers, Tanks, Medical and
-Supply Units amounting to tens of thousands of men and animals.</p>
-
-<p>A new factor which, however, ultimately controlled the final
-decision which I had to make as to the nature of the dispositions
-prior to battle, lay in the consideration of the maximum distances
-which would have to be covered by the foot soldiers in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-such a far-flung battle. I had little difficulty in coming to the
-conclusion that the obvious and normal arrangement was on
-this occasion a totally wrong arrangement. If the assaulting
-Brigades had been arranged, from front to rear, in their assembly
-areas prior to battle, in the same order as that in which they would
-have to come into action, this would have involved that the
-individual man, who was to be required to march and fight his
-way furthest into enemy country, and, therefore, was to be the
-last to enter the fight, would also be called upon to march furthest
-from his rearmost position of assembly before even reaching
-the battle zone. The maximum distance to be traversed on the
-day of battle by infantry would have amounted, according to
-such a plan, to over ten miles. While this is an easy day's march
-on a good road, under tranquil conditions, it would have been an
-altogether unreasonable demand upon any infantryman during
-the stress and nervous excitement of battle. It would have
-been courting a breakdown from over-fatigue, among the very
-troops upon whom I had to rely most to defend the captured
-territory against any serious enemy reaction.</p>
-
-<p>I therefore adopted the not very obvious course of completely
-reversing the normal procedure, and of disposing the Brigades
-in depth, from front to rear, in exactly the <i>reverse</i> of the order in
-which, in point of time, they would enter the battle.</p>
-
-<p>The following represents, diagrammatically, the disposition of
-all twelve Brigades after having been fully <i>deployed</i> in the actual
-course of the battle:</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 944px;">
-<img src="images/diagram1.png" width="944" height="357" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<pre>
-^ (4th Division) | (5th Division)
-| Direction 4 -- 12 | 8 -- 15
-| of North 1 Inter- 14 South
-| enemy. (3rd Division) Divisional (2nd Division)
-| 11 -- 9 Boundary. 5 -- 7
-| | Our front line
-|----------------------------------+-------------------------------
-| | before battle
-| 10 (in our trenches) | 6 (in our trenches)
-</pre>
-
-<p>The next diagram shows how the twelve Brigades were disposed while<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-Phase A of the battle was in progress, and before the second Phase had
-begun:</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 918px;">
-<img src="images/diagram2.png" width="918" height="372" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<pre>
- (3rd Division) | (2nd Division)
- 11 -- 9 | 5 -- 7
- Inter- Our front line
------------------------Divisional---------------------------
- Boundary. before battle
- 10 (in our trenches) | 6 (in our trenches)
- (4th Division) | (5th Division)
- 4 -- 12 | 8 -- 15
- 1 | 14
-</pre>
-
-<p>But the following diagram represents, in a similar manner, the order
-of disposition of the same Brigades, in the territory under our own
-occupation, immediately <i>prior</i> to the battle:</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 940px;">
-<img src="images/diagram3.png" width="940" height="416" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<pre>
-^ (3rd Division) | (2nd Division)
-| | Our front line
-|-----------------------------------+-----------------------------
-| Direction Inter- before battle
-| of 10 (in our trenches) Divisional 6 (in our trenches)
-| enemy. (4th Division) Boundary. (5th Division)
-| 4 -- 12 | 8 -- 15
-| North 1 | 14 South
-| (3rd Division) | (2nd Division)
-| 11 -- 9 | 5 -- 7
-</pre>
-
-<p>A little consideration will show that this apparently paradoxical
-procedure brought about the desired result of more nearly
-equalizing the stress upon the whole of the Infantry engaged,
-in point, at least, of the maximum distance to be traversed in
-the day's operations. But it produced something else, also,
-of much greater concern, which was that the scheme involved
-a leapfrogging of Divisions during the approach march into the
-battle, in addition to a second leapfrogging, to which I was already
-committed, to occur at a later stage during the battle itself.</p>
-
-<p>Thus I was confronted with the dilemma that the only scheme<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-of disposition which promised success for the subsequent battle
-was also that scheme which made the greatest possible demands
-upon the intelligence of the troops and the sympathetic, loyal
-and efficient co-operation of my own Corps Staff, and those of
-the Commanders acting under me. Influenced once again by
-the confidence which I felt in my whole command, I did not
-hesitate to increase the complexity of the plans for the Infantry
-action by calling upon the four Divisions to execute a man&oelig;uvre
-which is unique in the history of war, namely, a "double leapfrog,"
-simultaneously carried out by two separate pairs of Divisions,
-operating side by side. The first leap was to take place
-during the approach to the battle, the second during the progress
-of the battle itself.</p>
-
-<p>This expedient, which I finally decided to adopt, in spite of the
-dangers involved in its complexity and in the absence of any
-precedent, was, however, as logical analysis and the event itself
-proved, the very keynote of the success of the entire project.
-The whole plan, thanks to an intelligent interpretation by all
-Commanders and Staffs concerned, worked like a well-oiled machine,
-with smoothness, precision and punctuality, and achieved
-to the fullest extent the advantages aimed at.</p>
-
-<p>On the one hand, the stress upon the troops was reduced to
-a minimum. By the reduction of physical fatigue, it conserved
-the energies of whole Divisions in a manner which permitted of
-their speedy re-employment in subsequent decisive operations.
-And on the other hand, by the great depth of penetration which
-it rendered possible, it ensured a victory which amounted to so
-crushing a blow to the enemy that its momentum hurled him
-into a retrograde movement, not only along the whole front
-under attack, but also for many miles on either flank. This
-recoil he was never able to arrest, as we followed up our victory
-by blow after blow delivered while he was still reeling from the
-effects of the first onslaught of August 8th.</p>
-
-<p>But, so far, I have written of the Infantry plan only; and
-much remains to be told of the simultaneous action designed
-to be taken by all the other arms, which rendered possible and
-emphasized the success of the Infantry. No one can rival me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-in my admiration for the transcendant military virtues of the
-Australian Infantryman, for his bravery, his battle discipline,
-his absolute reliability, his individual resource, his initiative and
-endurance. But I had formed the theory that the true rôle
-of the Infantry was not to expend itself upon heroic physical
-effort, nor to wither away under merciless machine-gun fire,
-nor to impale itself on hostile bayonets, nor to tear itself to pieces
-in hostile entanglements&mdash;(I am thinking of Pozières and Stormy
-Trench and Bullecourt, and other bloody fields)&mdash;but, on the contrary,
-to advance under the maximum possible protection of the
-maximum possible array of mechanical resources, in the form of
-guns, machine guns, tanks, mortars and aeroplanes; to advance
-with as little impediment as possible; to be relieved as far as
-possible of the obligation to <i>fight</i> their way forward; to march,
-resolutely, regardless of the din and tumult of battle, to the appointed
-goal; and there to hold and defend the territory gained;
-and to gather in the form of prisoners, guns and stores, the fruits
-of victory.</p>
-
-<p>It is my purpose, therefore, to emphasize particularly the
-extent to which this theory was realized in the battle under review,
-by the achievement of a great and decisive victory at a trifling
-cost. That result was due primarily to the very ample resources
-in mechanical aids which the foresight and confidence of the
-Fourth Army Commander, General Rawlinson, entrusted to me;
-but it was due partly, also, to the manner in which those resources
-were employed. And that is why I shall attempt to describe
-the remainder of the Corps plan.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_096fp.jpg" width="1200" height="763" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Tanks marching into Battle.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_097fp.jpg" width="1200" height="763" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Morcourt Valley&mdash;the Australian attack swept across this on August 8th, 1918.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VI<br />
-
-The battle plan (<i>continued</i>)</h2>
-
-
-<p>Surprise has been, from time immemorial, one of the
-most potent weapons in the armoury of the tactician.
-It can be achieved not merely by doing that which the enemy
-least anticipates, but also by acting at a time when he least
-expects any action. It was a weapon which had been employed
-only rarely in the previous greater battles of this war. The
-offensive before Cambrai, planned by General Sir Julian Byng,
-and the battle of Hamel, were rare exceptions to our general
-procedure of heralding the approach of an offensive by feverish
-and obvious activity on our part, and by a long sustained preliminary
-bombardment of the enemy's defences, designed to
-destroy his works and impair his <i>moral</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The situation on the Fourth Army front, early in August,
-1918, offered a rare opportunity for the employment of surprise
-tactics on the boldest scale. The incessant "nibbling" activities
-of the Australian troops during the preceding three months
-had been of such a consistent nature as to suggest that our
-resources were not equal to any greater effort upon such an
-extended front as we were then holding, from the Ancre down to
-and beyond Villers-Bretonneux. On the other hand, the passivity
-of the first French Army, to the south of the latter town, conveyed
-no suggestion of any offensive enterprise on the part of our Ally
-in this region.</p>
-
-<p>The problem, therefore, was to convert an extensive front
-from a state of passive defence to a state of complete preparedness
-for an attack on the largest scale, and to keep the enemy&mdash;who,
-as always, was alert and observant both from the ground<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-and from the air&mdash;in complete ignorance of every portion of these
-extensive preparations, until the very moment when the battle
-was to burst upon him. It was, of course, a question not merely
-of deceiving the enemy troops in their trenches immediately
-opposed to us, but also of arousing in the minds of the German
-High Command no suspicions which might have prompted them
-to hold in a state of readiness, or to put into motion towards
-the threatened zone, any of the reserve Divisions forming part of
-their still considerable resources.</p>
-
-<p>The following memorandum, which was issued to the whole of
-the senior commanders in the Australian Corps on August 1st,
-gives in outline some of the measures adopted to this end:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"<span class="smcap">Secrecy.</span></p>
-
-<p>"1. The first essential to success is the maintenance of
-secrecy. The means to be adopted are as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(i) No person is to be told or informed in any part
-or way until such time as the development of the plan
-demands action from him. This is the main principle
-and will be pursued throughout, down to the lowest
-formation.</p>
-
-<p>(ii) Divisional Commanders will work out their reliefs
-in such a way as will ensure that the troops in the line
-know nothing of the proposed operation until the last
-possible moment. This will apply in particular to any
-troops who may be employed in the area south of the
-<span class="smcap">Amiens</span>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Villers-Bretonneux</span> railway.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>"2. In order to conceal the intention to carry out a
-large operation on this front the following plan has been
-adopted:</p>
-
-<p>"The Australian Corps has been relieved of one divisional
-sector by the Third Corps, and takes over a divisional sector
-from the French Corps. The object of this is to lead the
-enemy, and our own people, too, to believe that the action
-of the French in the <span class="smcap">Soissons</span> salient has been so costly as
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>to demand that further French troops had to be made available,
-and that this is the apparent cause of the extension of
-the Australian Corps front to the south.</p>
-
-<p>"3. (a) The idea is being circulated that the Canadian
-Corps is being brought to the south to take over the
-rôle of Reserve Corps at the junction of the British and
-French Armies in replacement of the 22nd Corps, which
-occupied that rôle until it was ordered to the <span class="smcap">Champagne</span>
-front. In order that the enemy may be deceived as to the
-destination of the Canadian Corps in the event of his discovering
-that it has been withdrawn from the <span class="smcap">Arras</span> front,
-Canadian wireless personnel has been sent to the Second
-Army area,<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> where they have taken over certain wireless
-zones.</p>
-
-<p>"(b) To prevent the enemy from discovering the arrival
-of the Canadian Corps in this region, they will not take over
-from the 4th Australian Division until 'Y' night. This
-will necessitate a proportion of the troops of the Fourth
-Australian Division remaining in the line in this sector
-until 'Y' night. As the Fourth Australian Division will
-be required to participate in the attack it is proposed to
-distribute one brigade to hold the whole of the line from
-'W' night onwards. This will enable the remaining two
-Brigades to be withdrawn, given a day or two's rest, and
-allow of their part in the operation being fully explained
-to them. The place of these two Brigades in rear of the line
-Brigade will be taken over by Canadian Divisions.</p>
-
-<p>"(c) In order to deceive our own troops as to the cause
-of the coming down here of the Canadians, a rumour is going
-abroad that the Canadian Corps is being brought down
-with the object of relieving the Australian Corps in the
-line. To most of the Australian Corps this would appear
-to be an obvious reason for their coming, as the idea has
-been mooted on former occasions. While it is not intended
-that this rumour should be promulgated, it is not desired
-that anyone should disclose the actual facts. This idea,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>together with the idea put forth in paragraph 3 (a), should
-do much to prevent the real facts from becoming known."<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a></p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The references to "W," "X," "Y" and "Z" days and nights
-in the above memo, are to the successive days preceding Zero
-day&mdash;known briefly as "Z" day, on which the battle was to
-open. The actual <i>date</i> of "Z" day was kept a close secret by
-the Army Commander and the three Corps Commanders concerned,
-until a few days before the actual date; while the actual
-moment of assault, or "Zero" hour, was not determined or made
-known until noon on the day preceding the battle, after a close
-study of the conditions of visibility before and after break of
-day, on the three preceding mornings.</p>
-
-<p>But these arrangements were directed only towards the prevention
-of a premature disclosure of our intention to attack to
-the enemy, to our own troops, and through them to the civilian
-public, and to enemy agents, whose presence among us had
-always to be reckoned with. It still remained to carry out our
-battle preparations in a manner which would preclude the
-possibility of detection by enemy aircraft, either through direct
-observation, or by the help of photography.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly I issued orders that all movements of troops and
-of transport of all descriptions, should take place only during the
-hours of darkness, whether in the forward or in the rear areas;
-and in order to keep an effective control over the faithful execution
-of these difficult orders, I arranged for relays of "police"
-aeroplanes, furnished by our No. 3 Squadron, to fly continuously,
-by day, over the whole of the Corps area, in order to detect and
-report upon any observed unusual movement.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At the same time, the normal work on the construction of new
-lines of defence, covering Amiens, in my rear areas, which had
-been continuously in progress for many weeks and was still
-far from complete, was to continue, with a full display of activity;
-so that the enemy should be unable to infer, from a stoppage of
-such works, any change in our attitude.</p>
-
-<p>Orders were also given to discourage the usual stream of officers
-who ordinarily visited our front trenches prior to an operation,
-and who often, thoughtlessly, made a great display of unusual
-activity, under the very noses of the enemy front line observers,
-by the flourishing of maps and field-glasses, and by bobbing up
-above our parapets to catch fleeting glimpses of the country to
-be fought over. Such reconnaissance, however desirable, was to
-be confined to a few senior Commanders and Staff Officers.
-All subordinates were to rely upon the very large number of
-admirable photographs, taken regularly from the air, both
-vertically and obliquely, by the indefatigable Corps Air Squadron.
-These served excellently as a substitute for visual observation
-from the ground.</p>
-
-<p>The prohibition against the movement of any transport in
-the daylight naturally very seriously hampered the freedom of
-action of the troops of all arms and services, but was felt in quite
-a special degree by the whole of the Artillery. Over 600 guns of
-all natures had to be dragged to and emplaced in their battle positions,
-and there camouflaged, each gun involving the concurrent
-movement of a number of associated vehicles. A full supply
-of ammunition had to be collected from railhead, distributed by
-mechanical transport to great main dumps, and thence taken by
-horsed vehicles for distribution to the numerous actual gun-pits.</p>
-
-<p>As the amount of ammunition to be held in readiness for the
-opening of the battle averaged 500 rounds per gun, it became
-necessary to handle a total of about 300,000 rounds of shells
-and a similar number of cartridges of all calibres, from 3&frac12; to
-12 inches, not to mention fuses and primers, or the immense
-bulk and weight of infantry and machine-gun ammunition,
-bombs, flares, rockets, and the like, for the supply of all of which
-the artillery was equally responsible.<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> The great amount of
-movement involved in the handling and dumping of all these
-munitions, and the deterrent difficulties of carrying out all such
-work only during the short hours of darkness, must be left to the
-imagination.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span></p>
-<p>The artillery was, however, confronted, for the first time, with
-a difficulty of quite a different nature. In the previous years of
-the war every gun, <i>after</i> being placed in its fighting pit or position,
-had to be carefully "registered," by firing a series of rounds at
-previously identified reference points, and noting the errors in
-line or range due to the instrumental error of the gun, which
-error varied with the gradual wearing-out of the gun barrel.
-By these means, battery commanders were enabled to compute
-the necessary corrections to be applied to any given gun, at any
-one time or place, so as to ensure that the gun would fire true to
-the task set.</p>
-
-<p>Such registration naturally involved, for a large number of guns,
-a very considerable volume of Artillery fire, the extent of which
-would speedily disclose to the enemy the presence of a largely
-increased mass of Artillery, and would inevitably lead him to the
-conclusion that some mischief was afoot. Fortunately, however,
-the rapid evolution during the war of scientific methods had by
-this juncture placed at my disposal a means of ascertaining the
-instrumental error of the guns on a testing ground located many
-miles behind the battle zone. This method was known as "calibration,"
-and consisted of the firing of the gun through a series
-of wired screens, placed successively at known distances from the
-muzzle of the gun. The whole elements of the flight of the projectile
-could then be accurately determined by recording the intervals
-of time between its passage through the respective screens.
-From these data could be deduced the muzzle velocity, the jump,
-the droop and the lateral error of each gun.</p>
-
-<p>Simple and obvious as was the principle of such an experiment,
-the merit of the new process of calibration lay in the remarkable
-rapidity and accuracy with which the electric and photographic
-mechanism employed made the necessary delicate time
-observations, correct to small fractions of a second, and automatically
-deduced the mathematical results required. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-calibration hut, in which this mechanism was housed, became one
-of the show spots to which visitors to the Corps area were taken to
-be overawed by the scientific methods of our gunners.</p>
-
-<p>In the early days of August the calibration range of the Australian
-Corps was a scene of feverish activity. All day long,
-battery after battery of guns could be seen route-marching to the
-testing ground, going through the performance of firing six rounds
-per gun, and then route-marching back again the same night to
-its allotted battle position. So rapid was the procedure that long
-before he had reached his destination the Battery Commander
-had received the full error sheet of every one of his guns, and by
-means of it was enabled to go into action whenever required without
-any previous registration whatever. This great advance
-in the art of gunnery contributed in the most direct manner
-to the result that when these 600 guns opened their tornado of
-fire upon the enemy at daybreak on August 8th, the very presence
-in this area of most of them remained totally unsuspected.</p>
-
-<p>The manner of the employment of the ponderous mass of Heavy
-Artillery at my disposal will be referred to later. The action of
-that portion of the Field Artillery which was to become mobile
-in the concluding phases of the battle has already been dealt with.
-It remains only to describe, in outline, the arrangements made
-for the normal barrage fire of the Field Artillery during the
-first phase.</p>
-
-<p>It has been my invariable practice to reduce the barrage plan
-to the simplest possible elements, avoiding in every direction the
-over-elaboration so frequently encountered. By following these
-principles not only is the actual preparatory work of the Artillery
-greatly reduced in bulk and simplified in quality, but also the
-liability to mistake and to erratic shooting of individual batteries
-or guns, and consequent risks of damage to our own Infantry,
-are greatly diminished. These advantages are bought at the
-small price of calling upon the Infantry to undertake, before the
-battle, such rectifications and adjustments of our front line as
-would accommodate themselves to a straight and simple barrage
-line. This is in sharp contrast to the much more usual procedure
-which prevailed (and persisted in other Corps to the end of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-war) of complicating the barrage enormously in an attempt to
-make it conform to the tortuous configuration of our Infantry
-front line.</p>
-
-<p>For the present battle it was accordingly arranged that the
-barrage should open on a line which was <i>dead straight</i> for the
-whole 7,000 yards of our front, and the Infantry tape lines,<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a>
-which were to mark the alignment of the Infantry at the moment
-of launching the assault, were to be laid exactly 200 yards in
-rear of this Artillery "start line." The barrage was to advance,
-in exactly parallel lines, 100 yards at a time, at equal rates along
-the whole frontage. These rates were 100 yards every 3 minutes,
-for the first 24 minutes, and thereafter 100 yards every 4 minutes,
-until the conclusion of the time-table at 143 minutes after Zero.
-By such a simple plan every one of the 432 field guns engaged was
-given a task of uniform character.</p>
-
-<p>Great as was the care necessary to conceal all Artillery preparations,
-it required still greater thought and consideration to keep
-entirely secret the presence behind the battle front of some 160
-Tanks, and particularly to conceal their approach march into the
-battle. To both combatants, the arrival of a Tank, or anything
-that could be mistaken on an air photograph for a Tank, had for
-long been regarded as a sure indication of coming trouble. And,
-therefore, imputing to the enemy the same keenness to detect,
-in good time, the presence of Tanks, and the same nervousness
-which we had been accustomed to feel when prisoners' tales of
-the coming into the war of enormous hordes of German monsters
-had been crystallized by the reports of some excited observer into
-a definite suspicion that the fateful hour had arrived, I considered
-it wise to repeat on a much elaborated scale all the precautions of
-secrecy first employed for this purpose at Hamel.</p>
-
-<p>It is quite easy to detect from an air photograph the broad,
-corrugated track made by a Tank, if the ground be soft and muddy
-enough to record such an impression. Consequently, Tanks were
-forbidden to move across ploughed fields or marshy land, and were
-confined to hard surface. They moved only in small bodies,
-and only at night, and were carefully stabled, during the daylight,
-in the midst of village ruins, or under the deep shade of woods and
-thickets. Thus, by daily stages, and by cautious bounds, each Tank
-or group of Tanks ultimately reached its appointed assembly
-ground, from which it was to make its last leap into the thick of
-the battle, where it would arrive precisely at Zero hour.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span></p>
-<p>But that last leap was just the whole difficulty. For the Tank
-is a noisy brute, and it was just as imperative to make him
-inaudible as to make him invisible. By a fortunate chance,
-the noise and buzz made by the powerful petrol engines of a Tank
-are so similar to those of the engines of a large-sized bombing
-plane, as for example of the Handley-Page type, especially if the
-latter be flying at a comparatively low altitude, that from a
-little distance off it is quite impossible to distinguish the one sound
-from the other.</p>
-
-<p>It was therefore possible to adopt the conjurer's trick of directing
-the special attention of the observer to those things which do
-not particularly matter, in order to distract his attention from
-other things which really do matter very much. In other words,
-a flight of high-power bombing planes was kept flying backwards
-and forwards over the battle front during the whole of that very
-hour, just before dawn, during which our 160 Tanks were loudly
-and fussily buzzing their way forward, along carefully reconnoitred
-routes, marked by special black and white tapes, across that last
-mile of country which brought them up level with the infantry
-at the precise moment when the great battle was ushered in by the
-belching forth of a volcano of Artillery fire.</p>
-
-<p>The subterfuge succeeded to perfection, as was obvious to
-observers and confirmed by the subsequent narratives of prisoners.
-The German trench garrisons and trench observers were fully
-occupied in listening to the hum of the bombing planes, in
-watching their threatened visitation for their customary "egg"
-dropping performances, in engaging them with rifle fire, and in
-holding themselves in readiness to duck for cover should they
-come too near. They never suspected for a moment that this was
-merely a new stratagem of "noise camouflage," and that the real
-danger was stalking steadily and relentlessly towards them over the
-whole front, upon the surface of the ground, instead of in the air.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But the trick would not have succeeded so well, or would perhaps
-have failed altogether, if the employment of those planes had
-been confined to the morning of the battle. Such an unusual
-demonstration might have aroused vague suspicions sufficient to
-justify a "stand to arms" and a preparedness for some further
-activity on our part. And what we had most to fear was the
-danger of "giving the show away" in the last ten minutes. For
-it would have taken much less than that time for nervous German
-trench sentries, by the firing of signal rockets, to bring down
-upon our front line trenches, crowded as they were with
-expectant fighters, a murderous fire from the German
-Artillery.</p>
-
-<p>Consequently the puzzled enemy was treated to the spectacle
-of an early morning promenade by these same bombing planes on
-every morning, for an hour before dawn, during several mornings
-preceding the actual battle day. Doubtless the first morning's
-exhibition of such apparently aimless air activity in the darkness
-really startled him. After two or three repetitions, it merely
-earned his contempt. By the time the actual date arrived he
-treated it as negligible. All prisoners interrogated subsequently
-agreed that neither the presence nor the noisy approach of so
-mighty a phalanx of Tanks had been in the least suspected up to
-the very moment when they plunged into view out of the darkness,
-just as day was breaking.</p>
-
-<p>The force of Tanks placed at my disposal for the purposes of
-this battle comprised the 2nd, 8th and 13th Tank Battalions,
-commanded respectively by Lieut.-Colonels Bryce, Bingham
-and Lyon, all under the 5th Tank Brigade, commanded by
-Brigadier-General Courage. All these Tanks were of the Mark V.
-type, as used at Hamel; but there were also attached to the same
-Brigade a Battalion of Mark V. (Star) Tanks, of still later design,
-under Lieut.-Colonel Ramsay-Fairfax, and also a full Company of
-24 Carrying Tanks, under Major Partington. These Carrying
-Tanks were not employed in fighting, but were of wonderful
-utility in the rapid transport of stores of all descriptions across
-the battle zone; and in carrying the wounded out of the battle
-on their return journey. I am confident that each of these Tanks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-was capable of doing the work of at least 200 men, with an almost
-complete immunity from casualty.</p>
-
-<p>There were thus available to me 168 Tanks in all, and their
-dispositions have been already indicated in sufficient detail in
-Chapter V. It was a definite feature of the whole plan of battle
-that the combined Tank and Infantry tactics which had proved
-so successful in the Hamel operation, and which have been
-described in Chapter II., were to be employed and exploited to their
-utmost. Each Tank became thereby definitely associated with a
-specified body of Infantry, and acted during the actual battle
-under the immediate orders of the Commander of that body:
-the working rule was "one Tank, one Company."</p>
-
-<p>To this was added the second working principle of "one Tank,
-one task," which rules meant, in their practical application,
-that no individual Tank was to be relied upon to serve more than
-one body of Infantry, nor to carry out more than one phase of the
-battle. Elementary as this may sound, it involved this striking
-advantage that, in the event of any one Tank becoming disabled,
-its loss would impair no portion of the battle plan other than
-that fraction of it to which that Tank had been allotted.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, the whole of the Infantry operating in Phases B and C
-of the battle had each their own adequate equipment of Tanks,
-which would be certain to be available to them, even if the whole
-of the Tanks employed during Phase A had been knocked out.
-At the same time clear orders were issued, and due arrangements
-were made, that all Tanks which survived Phase A, and whose
-crews were not by then too exhausted, were to rally (during the
-100 minutes' pause on the green line) in order to co-operate in the
-succeeding phases of the fight.</p>
-
-<p>There was still another Unit, coming under the jurisdiction of
-the Tank Corps, which proved of wonderful utility to me, and
-which deserved quite special mention. This was the 17th
-Armoured Car Battalion, organized into two companies of eight
-cars each. Each car carried one forward and one rear Hotchkiss
-gun. It was heavily armoured, and the crew operating the guns,
-as also the car driver, were protected from all except direct hits
-by Artillery. The cars had a speed of 20 miles per hour,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-either forwards or backwards. The Battalion was under the
-command of Lieut.-Colonel E. J. Carter, an officer of the British
-Cavalry. I allotted 12 cars to the use of the 5th Australian
-Division, under Major-General Hobbs, who would be likely to
-find specially useful employment for them, in scouring the network
-of roads beyond his final objective; and retained four cars in
-Corps reserve for a special reconnaissance enterprise.</p>
-
-<p>Full of promise of usefulness as were the speed and armament
-of these cars, they suffered from one serious disability. Their
-top hamper was so heavy compared to their light chassis that
-they could not be relied upon to travel without premature breakdown
-across country, or indeed on anything but moderately
-good roads. Now, such roads were certainly available, as was
-evident from aeroplane photographs, in the enemy's back country,
-after a zone for a mile or two immediately behind his front line
-was passed; but all the subsidiary roads in that zone had been
-practically obliterated by shell-craters, and even the great main
-road from Villers-Bretonneux to Saint Quentin, which is a Roman
-Road and substantially constructed throughout, was known to
-have been cut up and traversed by numerous trenches both on our
-side and on the enemy's side of "No Man's Land." There was
-also every expectation that the few remaining trees which flanked
-this great road would be felled by our bombardment, and some of
-them would surely fall across and obstruct the roadway.</p>
-
-<p>That road was, however, the only possible outlet into enemy
-country for the armoured cars, and I resolved upon a special programme,
-and the allotment of a special body of troops for its execution.
-The object was to ensure that the cars could be taken
-across the impracticable and obstructed stretch of roadway already
-described, and launched at the enemy at its eastern extremity,
-at the earliest possible moment of time. Then, before the
-numerous enemy Corps and Divisional Headquarters and all their
-rear organization had time to get clear intelligence of what was
-happening at the front, or to recover from the first shock of
-surprise, these Armoured Cars would fall upon them, and, travelling
-hither and thither at great speed, would spread death, destruction
-and confusion in all directions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A whole Battalion of Pioneers, and detachments of other technical
-troops, with an adequate amount of road-repairing material,
-were got ready, under the direct orders of my Chief Engineer, to
-carry out this special task. All trenches in that portion of the
-road lying within our own zone of occupation were bridged or
-filled in and all obstructions cleared away before the day of the
-battle. But as to the more distant stretch of the road, still in
-the hands of the enemy, elaborate preparations were made, by a
-careful and detailed distribution of tasks to small gangs of men,
-and by a fully worked-out time-table. The plan was that from the
-moment of the opening of the battle, this road repair work was to
-commence, and its advance was to synchronize with the advance
-of the Artillery barrage and Infantry skirmishing line.</p>
-
-<p>A pilot armoured car was to follow the working gangs in order
-to test the sufficiency of the repair work, and arrangements
-were made for sending back signals to the remainder of the cars,
-lying waiting in readiness in the shelter of Villers-Bretonneux.
-It was planned that the first two miles of road would, by these
-means, be cleared and repaired to a sufficient width, within four
-hours after the opening of the battle.</p>
-
-<p>I am tempted to anticipate the narrative of the battle by saying
-that the whole plan worked out with complete success to the last
-detail. The cars got through punctually to time, and the story
-of their subsequent adventures, as told later, reads like a romance.
-As indicating the importance which I attached to this little
-enterprise, which in magnitude was quite a small "side-show,"
-but which in its results had the most far-reaching consequence,
-I reproduce below the full text (omitting merely formal portions)
-of one of the several orders issued by me on this subject:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<div class="right">
-Australian Corps,<br />
-7th August, 1918.<br />
-</div>
-
-<p>1. The detachment of the 17th Armoured Car Battalion
-held in Corps Reserve (2 sections each of 2 cars), will be
-employed on the special duty of long distance reconnaissance
-on "Z" day.</p>
-
-<p>2. These sections will be sent forward under the orders
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>of the C.O., 17th Armoured Car Battalion, passing the
-green line as soon as practicable after Zero plus four hours,
-and proceeding eastward, following the lifts of our Heavy
-Artillery bombardment, so as to pass the blue line at or
-after Zero plus five hours.</p>
-
-<p>3. The area to be reconnoitred lies in the bend of the
-Somme, north of the Villers-Bretonneux&mdash;Chaulnes Railway;
-but the old Somme battlefield lying N.E. of Chaulnes
-need not be entered.</p>
-
-<p>4. Information is required as to presence, distribution
-and movement of enemy supporting and reserve troops,
-and his defensive organizations within this area.</p>
-
-<p>5. While the primary function of this detachment is to
-reconnoitre and not to fight, except defensively, advantage
-should be taken of every opportunity to damage the
-enemy's telephonic and telegraphic communications.</p>
-
-<p>6. The following information as to enemy organizations
-is thought to be reliable:</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="left">Vauvillers</td><td align="left">Billets and Detraining point.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Proyart</td><td align="left">Divisional H.Q. and billets.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Chuignolles</td><td align="left">Divisional H.Q. and billets.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Framerville</td><td align="left">Corps H.Q.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Rainecourt</td><td align="left">Billets.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Cappy</td><td align="left">Aerodrome and dumps.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Foucaucourt</td><td align="left">Corps H.Q., dump, billets.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Chaulnes</td><td align="left">Important railway junction.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Ommiécourt</td><td align="left">Dumps.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Fontaine</td><td align="left">Aerodrome, Div. H.Q. and dump.</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>The Heavy Artillery of the Corps was divided, for this battle
-as normally, into two distinct groups, of which the one, or Bombardment
-Group, was to devote its energies to destructive
-attack, throughout the course of the battle, upon known enemy
-centres of resistance, suspected Headquarters, and telephone or
-telegraph exchanges, villages believed to be housing support
-and reserve troops, railway junctions and the like. The selection<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-of all such targets depended upon a judicious choice of many
-tempting objectives disclosed by the very comprehensive records
-of the highly efficient Intelligence Officers belonging to my
-Heavy Artillery Headquarters. After that selection was made,
-all that remained was to draw up a time-table for the action of
-all bombardment guns which would ensure that they would
-lift off any given target just before our own Infantry would be
-likely to reach it, and then to apply their fire to a more distant
-locality.</p>
-
-<p>The second group of Heavy Guns was known as the Counter-battery
-Group, and was at all times under the direction of a
-special staff, especially skilled in all the scientific means at our
-disposal for determining the position and distribution of the
-enemy's Artillery, and in the methods and artifices for silencing
-or totally destroying it. Just as it was the special rôle of the
-Tanks to deal with the enemy machine guns, so it was the special
-rôle of our Counter-battery Artillery to deal with the enemy's
-field and heavy guns and howitzers. These&mdash;the guns and
-the machine guns&mdash;were the only things that troubled us;
-because, for the German soldier individually, our Australian
-infantryman is and always has been more than a match.</p>
-
-<p>Very special care was, therefore, devoted to the whole of
-the arrangements, first for carefully ascertaining beforehand the
-actual or probable position of every enemy gun that could be
-brought to bear on our Infantry, and then for allocating as many
-heavy guns as could be spared, each with a task appropriate to
-its range and hitting-power, to the destruction or suppression
-of the selected target. For it served the immediate purpose of
-eliminating the causes of molestation to our advancing Infantry
-equally well, whether the enemy gun was merely silenced by a
-sustained fire of shrapnel or high explosives which drove off the
-gun detachment, or by a flood of gas which compelled them to
-put on their gas masks, or whether it was actually destroyed by
-a direct hit and rendered permanently useless.</p>
-
-<p>The days before the battle were of supreme interest in this
-particular aspect. Each day I visited the Counter-battery
-Staff Officer, in his modest shanty, hidden away in the interior<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-of a leafy wood, where in constant touch, by telephone, with all
-balloons, observers and sound-ranging stations, and surrounded
-by an imposing array of maps, studded with pins of many shapes
-and colours, he made his daily report to me of the enemy gun
-positions definitely identified or located, or found to have been
-vacated. And here again there was an opportunity for the
-display of a modest little stratagem. Having suspected or
-verified the fact that the enemy had altered the location of any
-given battery, leaving the empty gun pits as a tempting bait to
-us, fruitlessly to expend our energies and ammunition upon them&mdash;it
-would have been the worst of folly to prove to him that he
-had failed to fool us, by engaging his battery in its new position.</p>
-
-<p>On the contrary, we deliberately allowed ourselves to be
-fooled; and for several days before the great battle we intentionally
-committed the stupid error of methodically engaging
-all his empty gun positions. No doubt the German gunners
-laughed consumedly as they watched, from a safe distance, our
-wasted efforts; but they did not, doubtless, laugh quite so
-heartily when at dawn on the great day, the whole weight of
-our attack from over a hundred of my heaviest Counter-battery
-guns fells upon them in the new positions, which they believed
-that we had failed to detect.</p>
-
-<p>The Intelligence Service of the Corps was an extensive and
-highly organized department, whose jurisdiction extended
-throughout all the Divisions, Brigades and Battalions. Its
-routine work comprised the collection and collation of the daily
-flow of information from a large staff of observers in the forward
-zone, from the interrogation of prisoners, from the examination
-of documents and maps, and from neighbouring Corps and
-Armies. Before and during battle, however, a greatly added
-burden fell upon the shoulders of the Intelligence Staff.</p>
-
-<p>Closely associated with this branch of the Staff work were
-two activities of quite special interest. The Australian Corps
-organized a Topographical Section, manned by expert draftsmen
-and lithographers, who compiled and printed all the maps
-required throughout the whole Corps, and it was their business
-to keep all battle maps, barrage maps and topographical data
-recorded and corrected up to date. This alone proved a heavy
-task when pace had to be kept with a rapid advance. At such
-times the maps prepared on one day became obsolete two or
-three days later.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_112fp.jpg" width="1200" height="776" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Dug-outs at Froissy Beacon&mdash;being "mopped up" during battle.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_113fp.jpg" width="1200" height="778" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Péronne&mdash;barricade in main street.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The issue of such maps was not confined to Commanders and
-Staffs. For all important operations, large numbers of handy
-sectional maps were struck off, so that they could be placed in
-the hands even of the subordinate officers and non-commissioned
-officers. These maps not only enabled the most junior leaders
-to study their objectives and tasks in detail before every battle,
-but also became a convenient vehicle for sending back reports
-as to the positions reached or occupied by front-line troops or
-detached parties. On occasions as many as five thousand of
-such maps would be struck off for the use of the troops, in a
-single operation.</p>
-
-<p>There was also a branch of the Intelligence Staff attached
-to the No. 3 Australian Air Squadron. Its special business was
-to print and distribute large numbers of photographs, both
-vertical and oblique, taken from the air over the territory to be
-captured&mdash;showing trenches, wire, roads, hedges and many
-other features of paramount interest to the troops. Thousands
-of such photographs were distributed before every battle.</p>
-
-<p>The important considerations, in regard both to maps and
-photographs, were that on the one hand, they were of priceless
-value to all who understood how to read and use them, and on
-the other hand, the event proved that their issue was in no sense
-labour in vain, for the keen interest taken, even by the private
-soldiers, in these facilities contributed powerfully to the success
-and precision with which all battle orders were carried out, and
-this more than repaid us for the additional trouble involved.
-It was inspiriting to me to see, on the eve of every great battle,
-as I made my round of the troops, numerous small groups of
-men gathered around their sergeant or corporal, eagerly discussing
-these maps and the photographs and the things they
-disclosed, the lie of the land, the wire, the trenches, the probable
-machine-gun posts, the dug-outs and the suspected enemy
-strong points.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>My account of the details prepared for the battle of August
-8th is not nearly complete; but the demands of space forbid
-any more informative reference to numerous other essential
-ingredients of the plan than a mere recital of some of them.
-Thus, for example, it was necessary to decide the action of all
-Machine Guns, both those used collectively under Corps control,
-and those left to be handled by the Divisions; the employment
-of Smoke Tactics, by the use of smoke screens created both by
-mortars from the ground and by phosphorus bombs dropped
-from the air; the use to be made of all the technical troops
-(Engineers and Pioneers) in bridging, road and railway repairs
-and field fortifications; the arrangements for the medical
-evacuation of the wounded, and for the collection and safe-keeping
-of the anticipated haul of prisoners, the synchronization
-of watches throughout the whole command, so that action should
-occur punctually at a common clock time; and last, but not
-least, the establishment of the machinery of liaison internally
-between all the numerous formations of the Australian Corps,
-and also externally with my flank Corps, the Canadians, under
-Currie, on my right, and the British Third Corps, under Butler,
-on my left.</p>
-
-<p>Such, in outline, were my battle plans and my preparations
-for what I hoped would prove an operation of decisive influence
-upon the future of the campaign. The immediate results,
-which could be estimated on the spot and at the time, and the
-admissions of Ludendorff, which came to light only many months
-afterwards, combine to show that I was not mistaken.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> This was in Flanders and Belgium.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> The secret was, indeed, so well kept, and the "camouflage" stories circulated
-proved so effective, that the King of the Belgians forwarded a strong
-protest to Marshal Foch because the Canadians were about to deliver an attack
-in his country, without his having been consulted or made aware of the plans;
-and the Canadian Headquarters in London complained to the War Office that
-the Canadian Forces were being divided, and were being sent by detachments
-to different parts of the front, instead of being always kept together as the
-Canadian Government desired. It is said that even Mr. Lloyd George knew
-nothing of the intention to attack until late on the day before the battle.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> The weight of supplies of all kinds exceeded 10,000 tons.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> See Chapter XIII.</p></div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VII<br />
-
-THE CHASE BEGINS</h2>
-
-
-<p>The preliminary movements of Divisions were duly carried
-out without special difficulty. The Fifth Australian
-Division was relieved on August 1st by a Division of the Third
-Corps, in that part of the Corps front which lay north of the
-Somme, and passed into Corps Reserve, in a rear area, there to
-undergo training with Tanks, and to prepare itself for the work
-which it had to do.</p>
-
-<p>The Fourth Australian Division, from Corps Reserve, took
-over the French front, as far south as the Amiens&mdash;Roye road
-on August 2nd, and on the next night took over from the Second
-Australian Division all that part of its front which lay south
-of the railway, thus disposing itself upon what was ultimately
-to become the battle front of the Canadian Corps.</p>
-
-<p>On the same night, the Second and Third Divisions, who had
-thus been left in sole occupation of the sector which was to be
-the Australian Corps battle front, carried out a readjustment
-of their own mutual boundary, which would place each of these
-two Divisions upon its own proper battle front.</p>
-
-<p>On the night of August 4th, the Second and Third Divisions
-rearranged their defensive dispositions so that each of them
-deployed only a single Brigade for the passive defence of its
-front, and withdrew to its rear area its remaining two Brigades,
-who were thus afforded three clear days to complete their internal
-preparations.</p>
-
-<p>The Canadian Corps commenced to arrive, and on August 4th
-two Canadian Brigades relieved two Brigades of the Fourth
-Division, thereby releasing them so that they also might commence
-to prepare for the battle. It was originally intended<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-that the last Brigade of the Fourth Division should also be
-relieved by Canadians on August 6th, when an untoward incident
-happened, which caused considerable alarm and speculation;
-and it led to a modification of this part of the plan.</p>
-
-<p>The 13th Australian Brigade (of the Fourth Division) was on
-August 4th spread out upon a front of over six thousand yards.
-It had no option but to leave the greater part of the front-line
-trenches unoccupied, and to defend its area with a series of
-small, but isolated, posts. On that night, one of these posts,
-in the vicinity of the road to Roye,<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> was raided by the enemy,
-and the whole of its occupants, comprising a sergeant and four
-or five men, were surrounded and taken prisoner.</p>
-
-<p>It was an unusual display of enterprise on the part of the
-enemy, at this point of time and in this locality. Whether it
-had been inspired by sneering criticisms from behind his line
-of the nature which have been quoted, or whether signs of
-unusual movement or a changed attitude on the part of our
-trench garrison had instigated a suspicion that something was
-happening which required investigation, could only be surmised.
-But the fact remained that five Australians had been
-taken, at a place several miles south of the southernmost point
-hitherto occupied by "the English."</p>
-
-<p>The side-stepping of the Australian Corps southwards had
-thereby become known to the enemy, and it was necessary
-to estimate the deductions which he would be likely to draw
-from that discovery. Much depended upon the behaviour of
-these prisoners. Would they talk? and, if so, what did they
-know? That Australian captives would not volunteer information
-likely to imperil the lives of their comrades, might be taken
-for granted, but German Intelligence Officers had means at their
-disposal to draw from prisoners, unwittingly, anything they
-might know.</p>
-
-<p>We could only hope, under the circumstances, that these men
-really did know nothing of our intention to attack; and that,
-if they had become aware of the presence of Canadian troops
-in the rear areas, they would believe the story which we had
-sedulously spread, that the Canadians were merely coming to
-relieve the Australian Corps, so that it might have a long rest
-after its heroic labours.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span></p>
-<p>Not many weeks afterwards it was my good fortune to capture
-a German Headquarters, in which were found Intelligence Reports
-containing a narrative of this very incident. The importance
-of the capture of these men had been recognized, and they had
-been taken far behind the lines for an exhaustive examination.
-But, despite all efforts of the German Intelligence Staff, they
-had refused to disclose anything whatever but their names and
-units&mdash;which they were bound to do under the rules of war.
-The report went on to praise their soldierly bearing and loyal
-reticence, and held up these brave Australians as a model to
-be followed by their own men, adding that such a demeanour
-could only earn the respect of an enemy.</p>
-
-<p>The alarm which this untoward happening created on our
-side of the line led to a determination to redouble our precautions.
-The Army Commander proposed, and I agreed, that the
-relief of the 13th Brigade by Canadians, <i>prior</i> to the eve of the
-battle, was out of the question, as being too risky. It was
-decided that the 13th Brigade must remain in the line until the
-very last.</p>
-
-<p>This decision deprived General Maclagan of one of his three
-Brigades, and as it would be asking too much of the Fourth
-Division to carry out the rôle which had been allotted to it
-in the battle, with only two Brigades, I decided that the only
-thing to be done was to transfer to the Fourth Division, temporarily,
-one of the Brigades of the First Division, which was to
-arrive from the north in the course of the next three days.</p>
-
-<p>Urgent telegrams were therefore despatched to accelerate the
-arrival of one of the Brigades of the First Division. In due
-course the First Australian Brigade (Mackay) arrived by four
-special trains on the night of August 6th, in sufficient time to
-enable it to take its place in General Maclagan's order of battle,
-in substitution for the 13th Brigade. The 13th Brigade was
-destined to have some further stirring adventures before it
-again joined its own Division.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The day preceding the great battle arrived all too soon. The
-prospect of an advance had sent a thrill through all ranks and
-expectation became tense. The use of the telephone had been
-ordered to be restricted, especially in the forward areas; for it
-was known that the enemy was in possession of listening apparatus,
-similar to our own, by which conversations on the telephone
-could be tapped, and unguarded references to the impending
-operations could be overheard.</p>
-
-<p>Final inspections had, therefore, to be made, and final injunctions
-administered, by Commanders and Staffs traversing
-long distances over the extensive Corps area by motor car and
-horse, and even on foot. A strange and ominous quiet pervaded
-the scene; it was only when the explosion of a stray enemy
-shell would cause hundreds of heads to peer out from trenches,
-gun-pits and underground shelters, that one became aware that
-the whole country was really packed thick with a teeming
-population carefully hidden away.</p>
-
-<p>Later in the afternoon of that last day came another note of
-alarm. To the Fourth and Fifth Australian Divisions had been
-allotted eighteen Store and Carrying Tanks. These had been
-brought the night before, into a small plantation lying about
-half a mile to the north of Villers-Bretonneux, loaded to their
-utmost capacity with battle stores of all descriptions: reserves
-of food and water, rifle ammunition, and a large reserve of Stokes
-Mortar bombs; also considerable supplies of petrol, to satisfy
-the ravenous appetites of the Tanks themselves.</p>
-
-<p>This locality suddenly became the object of the closest attention
-by the enemy's Artillery. He began to deluge it with such
-a volume of fire that in less than half an hour a great conflagration
-had been started, which did not subside until fifteen of the
-Tanks and all their valuable cargo had been reduced to irretrievable
-ruin.</p>
-
-<p>Had some unusually keen enemy observer perceived the
-presence of Tanks in our area, and would that knowledge have
-disclosed to him our jealously guarded secret? Fortunately,
-my Artillery Commander, Brigadier-General Coxen, making his
-last rounds of the Battery positions, was an eye-witness of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-whole occurrence, and was able to reassure me. A chance shell&mdash;the
-last of a dozen fired entirely at random into our area&mdash;fell
-into the very centre of this group of Tanks, and set fire to
-some of the petrol. The resulting cloud of smoke became a
-signal to the enemy that something was burning which our
-men would probably attempt to salve; and in consonance with
-an entirely correct Artillery procedure, he at once concentrated
-a heavy fire upon the spot.</p>
-
-<p>That incident is typical of the perturbations through which
-all responsible Commanders have to pass on such occasions.
-The occurrence was explained as accidental, and implied no
-premature discovery by the enemy. Nothing remained but to
-repair the damage, and make special arrangements to replenish
-the Stores which these Divisions had lost.</p>
-
-<p>On the forenoon of the day before the battle, the following
-message was promulgated to all the troops:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<div class="right">
-Corps Headquarters,<br />
-August 7th, 1918.<br />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">To the Soldiers of the Australian Army Corps.</span></p>
-
-<p>For the first time in the history of this Corps, all five
-Australian Divisions will to-morrow engage in the largest
-and most important battle operation ever undertaken by
-the Corps.</p>
-
-<p>They will be supported by an exceptionally powerful
-Artillery, and by Tanks and Aeroplanes on a scale never
-previously attempted. The full resources of our sister
-Dominion, the Canadian Corps, will also operate on our
-right, while two British Divisions will guard our left flank.</p>
-
-<p>The many successful offensives which the Brigades and
-Battalions of this Corps have so brilliantly executed during
-the past four months have been but the prelude to, and the
-preparation for, this greatest and culminating effort.</p>
-
-<p>Because of the completeness of our plans and dispositions,
-of the magnitude of the operations, of the number of troops
-employed, and of the depth to which we intend to overrun
-the enemy's positions, this battle will be one of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>most memorable of the whole war; and there can be no
-doubt that, by capturing our objectives, we shall inflict
-blows upon the enemy which will make him stagger, and
-will bring the end appreciably nearer.</p>
-
-<p>I entertain no sort of doubt that every Australian soldier
-will worthily rise to so great an occasion, and that every
-man, imbued with the spirit of victory, will, in spite of
-every difficulty that may confront him, be animated by no
-other resolve than grim determination to see through to
-a clean finish, whatever his task may be.</p>
-
-<p>The work to be done to-morrow will perhaps make heavy
-demands upon the endurance and staying powers of many of
-you; but I am confident that, in spite of excitement, fatigue,
-and physical strain, every man will carry on to the utmost
-of his powers until his goal is won; for the sake of <span class="smcap">Australia</span>,
-the Empire and our cause.</p>
-
-<p>I earnestly wish every soldier of the Corps the best of
-good fortune, and a glorious and decisive victory, the story
-of which will re-echo throughout the world, and will live
-for ever in the history of our home land.</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-<span class="smcap">John Monash</span>,<br />
-Lieut.-General.<br />
-Cmdg. Australian Corps.<br />
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>Not many days afterwards a copy of this order fell into the
-hands of the enemy, and the use he tried to make of it, to his
-own grave discomfiture, as the event proved, is an interesting
-story which will be told in due course.</p>
-
-<p>Zero hour was fixed for twenty minutes past four, on the
-morning of August 8th. It needs a pen more facile than I can
-command to describe, and an imagination more vivid to realize
-the stupendous import of the last ten minutes. In black darkness,
-a hundred thousand infantry, deployed over twelve miles
-of front, are standing grimly, silently, expectantly, in readiness to
-advance, or are already crawling stealthily forward to get within
-eighty yards of the line on which the barrage will fall; all feel
-to make sure that their bayonets are firmly locked, or to set<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
-their steel helmets firmly on their heads; Company and Platoon
-Commanders, their whistles ready to hand, are nervously glancing
-at their luminous watches, waiting for minute after minute to go
-by&mdash;and giving a last look over their commands&mdash;ensuring that
-their runners are by their sides, their observers alert, and that
-the officers detailed to control direction have their compasses
-set and ready. Carrying parties shoulder their burdens, and
-adjust the straps; pioneers grasp their picks and shovels;
-engineers take up their stores of explosives and primers and
-fuses; machine and Lewis gunners whisper for the last time
-to the carriers of their magazines and belt boxes to be sure and
-follow up. The Stokes Mortar carrier slings his heavy load, and
-his loading numbers fumble to see that their haversacks of
-cartridges are handy. Overhead drone the aeroplanes, and from
-the rear, in swelling chorus, the buzzing and clamour of the
-Tanks grows every moment louder and louder. Scores of telegraph
-operators sit by their instruments with their message
-forms and registers ready to hand, bracing themselves for the
-rush of signal traffic which will set in a few moments later;
-dozens of Staff Officers spread their maps in readiness, to record
-with coloured pencils the stream of expected information. In
-hundreds of pits, the guns are already run up, loaded and laid
-on their opening lines of fire; the sergeant is checking the range
-for the last time; the layer stands silently with the lanyard
-in his hand. The section officer, watch on wrist, counts the last
-seconds: "A minute to go"&mdash;"Thirty seconds"&mdash;"Ten seconds"&mdash;"Fire."</p>
-
-<p>And, suddenly, with a mighty roar, more than a thousand
-guns begin the symphony. A great illumination lights up the
-Eastern horizon; and instantly the whole complex organization,
-extending far back to areas almost beyond earshot of the guns,
-begins to move forward; every man, every unit, every vehicle
-and every Tank on their appointed tasks and to their designated
-goals; sweeping onward relentlessly and irresistibly. Viewed
-from a high vantage point and in the glimmer of the breaking
-day, a great Artillery barrage surely surpasses in dynamic
-splendour any other manifestation of collective human effort.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Artillery barrage dominates the battle, and the landscape.
-The field is speedily covered with a cloak of dust, and smoke and
-spume, making impossible any detailed observation, at the time,
-of the course of the battle as a whole. The story can only be
-indifferently pieced together, long after, by an attempted compilation
-of the reports of a hundred different participants, whose
-narratives are usually much impaired by personal bias, by the
-nervous excitement of the moment, and by an all too limited
-range of vision. That is why no comprehensive account yet
-exists of some of the major battles of the war, and why those
-partial narratives hitherto produced are so often in conflict.</p>
-
-<p>In so great a battle as this, only the broad facts and tangible
-results can be placed on record without danger of controversy.
-The whole immense operation proceeded according to plan in
-every detail, with a single exception, to which I must specially
-refer later on. The first phase, controlled as it was by the
-barrage time-table, necessarily ended punctually, and with the
-whole of the green line objective in our hands. This success
-gave us possession of nearly all the enemy's guns, so that his
-artillery retaliation speedily died down.</p>
-
-<p>The captures in this phase were considerable, and few of the
-garrisons of the enemy's forward offensive zone escaped destruction
-or capture. The Second and Third Divisions had a comparative
-"walk over," and they had come to a halt, with their
-tasks completed, before 7 a.m.</p>
-
-<p>The "open warfare" phase commenced at twenty minutes
-past eight, and both the red and the blue lines were captured in
-succession half-an-hour ahead of scheduled time. This capture
-covered the whole length of my front except the extreme left,
-where a half expected difficulty arose, but one which exercised
-no influence upon the day's success.</p>
-
-<p>The Canadians, on my right, had a similar story to tell;
-they had driven far into the enemy's defences, exactly as planned.
-In spite of the difficulties of observation, the recurrence of a
-ground mist of the same nature as we had experienced at Hamel,
-and the long distances over which messages and reports had to
-travel&mdash;the stream of information which reached me, by telegraph,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-telephone, pigeon and aeroplane was so full and ample
-that I was not left for a moment out of touch with the situation.</p>
-
-<p>The "inwards" messages are, naturally, far too voluminous for
-reproduction; but a brief selection from the many "outwards"
-messages telegraphed during that day to the Fourth Army
-Headquarters, and which, on a point of responsibility, I made it
-an invariable rule to draft myself, will give some indication of
-the course of events as they became known:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><i>Sent at 7 a.m.</i>: "Everything going well at 6.45 a.m.
-Heavy ground mist facilitating our advance, but delaying
-information. Infantry and Tanks got away punctually.
-Our attack was a complete surprise. Gailly Village and
-Accroche Wood captured. Enemy artillery has ceased
-along my whole front. Flanks Corps apparently doing
-well."</p>
-
-<p><i>Sent at 8.30 a.m.</i>: "Although not definitely confirmed, no
-doubt that our first objective green line captured along
-whole Corps front including Gailly, Warfusee, Lamotte and
-whole Cerisy Valley. Many guns and prisoners taken.
-Infantry and Artillery for second phase moving up to
-green line."</p>
-
-<p><i>Sent at 10.55 a.m.</i>: "Fifteenth Battalion has captured
-Cerisy with 300 prisoners. Advance to red line going
-well."</p>
-
-<p><i>Sent at 11.10 a.m.</i>: "Have taken Morcourt and Bayonvillers
-and many additional prisoners and guns. We are
-nearing our second objective and have reached it in places.
-My Cavalry Brigade has passed across our red line. We are
-now advancing to our final objective blue line."</p>
-
-<p><i>Sent at 12.15 p.m.</i>: "Hobbs has captured Harbonnières
-and reached blue line final objective on his whole
-front."</p>
-
-<p><i>Sent at 1.15 p.m.</i>: "Australian flag hoisted over Harbonnières
-at midday to-day. Should be glad if Chief would
-cable this to our Governor-General on behalf of Australian
-Corps."</p>
-
-<p><i>Sent at 2.5 p.m.</i>: "Total Australian casualties through
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>dressing stations up to 12 noon under 600. Prisoners actually
-counted exceed 4,000. Many more coming in."</p>
-
-<p><i>Sent at 4.40 p.m.</i>: "Captured enemy Corps H.Q. near
-Framerville shortly after noon to-day." (This was the 51st
-German Corps).</p>
-
-<p><i>Sent at 8 p.m.</i>: "Corps captures will greatly exceed
-6,000 prisoners, 100 guns, including heavy and railway
-guns, thousands of machine guns, a railway train, and
-hundreds of vehicles and teams of regimental transport.
-Total casualties for whole Corps will not exceed 1,200."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The vital information, which it is imperative for the Corps
-Commander to have accurately and rapidly delivered throughout
-the course of a battle, is that relating to the actual position,
-at any given moment of time, of our front line troops; showing
-the locations which they have reached, and whether they are
-stationary, advancing or retiring. For it has to be remembered
-that the whole Artillery resources of the Corps were pooled and
-kept under his own hand; and it was imperative that any changes
-in the Artillery action or employment must be quickly made, so
-as to extend the utmost help to any Infantry which might get
-into difficulties.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, for example, the failure of any body of Infantry to
-enter and pass beyond a wood or a village, would be a sure
-indication that such locality was still held in strength by the
-enemy, and it would be appropriate to "switch" Artillery fire
-upon it, in order to drive him out. But such a proceeding would
-be anything but prudent if the information on which such action
-was to be based were already an hour old.</p>
-
-<p>Transmission of messages from the front line troops to the
-nearest telephone terminal is usually slow and uncertain, and the
-retransmission of such messages, in succession, by Battalions,
-Brigades and Divisions only prolongs the delay. The normal
-process is in consequence far too dilatory for the exigencies of
-actual battle control.</p>
-
-<p>A vastly superior method had therefore to be devised, and
-recourse was had to the use of aeroplanes. The No. 3 Australian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-Squadron soon acquired great proficiency in this work. They
-were equipped with two-seater planes, carrying both pilot and
-observer, and the work was called "Contact Patrol."</p>
-
-<p>The "plane" flying quite low, usually at not more than 500 feet,
-the observer would mark down by conventional signs on a map
-the actual positions of our Infantry, of enemy Infantry or other
-facts of prime importance, and he often had time to scribble a few
-informative notes also. The "plane" then flew back at top
-speed to Corps H.Q., and the map, with or without an added report,
-was dropped in the middle of an adjacent field, wrapped in
-a weighted streamer of many colours. It was then brought by
-cyclists into the Staff Office.</p>
-
-<p>Relays of Contact planes were on such service all day on
-every battle day, and although it was a hazardous duty few
-planes were lost. The total time which elapsed between the
-making of the observation at the front line and the arrival of
-the information in the hands of the Corps Staff was seldom
-more than ten minutes.</p>
-
-<p>There can be no doubt that the whole operation was a complete
-surprise both to the troops opposed to us and to the German
-High Command. It became abundantly clear, in the following
-days, that no proper arrangements existed for rapidly
-reinforcing this part of the front in the event of an attack by us,
-but that these had to be extemporized after the event. This
-discovery points to the conclusion that the enemy had once
-again come to regard the British Army as a negligible quantity,
-a mistake for which he paid an even heavier price than when he
-made it in the early days of the war.</p>
-
-<p>As an indication that even the Divisions in the line whose
-duty it primarily was to know, had no suspicions of an impending
-attack, comes the story of a German medical officer who was
-captured in his pyjamas in Warfusee village, and who confessed
-that being awakened by our bombardment and thinking it was
-merely a raid, he left his dug-out to see what was afoot, and
-thought he must be still dreaming when he saw our Pioneers
-a few hundred feet away, busily at work repairing the main road.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There was only one blemish in the whole day's operations.
-Not serious in relation to the whole, it nevertheless gravely
-hampered the work of the left Brigade of the Fourth Division.
-In short, the Third Corps Infantry failed to reach their ultimate
-objective line, and the enemy remained in possession of the
-Chipilly spur and of all the advantages which that possession
-conferred upon him.</p>
-
-<p>The advance of my left flank, from the green to the red line,
-along the margin of the plateau bordering the Somme, was left
-exposed to his full view, while the river valley itself remained
-under the domination of his rifle fire, at quite moderate ranges.
-But worse than all, a battery of his Field Artillery emplaced just
-above the village of Chipilly remained in action, and one after
-another, six of the nine Tanks which had been allotted to the
-4th Brigade were put out of action by direct hits from these guns.</p>
-
-<p>The possibility was one which had been considered and measures
-to meet it were promptly taken. Maclagan, whose right Brigade
-in due course reached the blue line according to programme,
-making in its progress a splendid haul of prisoners and guns,
-took immediate steps to "refuse" his left flank, <i>i.e.</i>, to bend
-it back towards Morcourt, and to establish, with a reserve
-battalion, a flank defence along the river, facing north from Cerisy
-to Morcourt.</p>
-
-<p>Both these villages were, however, successfully captured,
-and "mopped up," which meant that all the enemy and machine
-guns lurking in them were accounted for. But the river valley
-was not captured, and became, until the situation was ultimately
-cleared up, a kind of No Man's Land between the enemy still
-holding the Chipilly spur on the north, and the Fourth Division
-on the south of the river.</p>
-
-<p>The ultimate conquest of the Chipilly Bend forms no part
-of that day's story. What were the reasons for the failure of
-the Third Corps to complete its allotted task may have been
-the subject of internal inquiry, but the result of any such was
-not made known. The official report for the day was to the effect
-that the enemy on this front had resisted strongly, that fighting
-had been fierce, and that no progress could be made. But one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-is compelled to recognize that such language was often an euphemistic
-method of describing faulty Staff co-ordination, or faulty
-local leadership. There would be no justification, however, for
-questioning the bravery of the troops themselves.</p>
-
-<p>It has already been foreshadowed that the experiences on
-that day of the contingent of sixteen Armoured Motor-cars under
-Lieutenant-Colonel Carter would form sensational reading, and
-the story of August 8th would not be complete without at least
-a brief reference to their exploits.</p>
-
-<p>It was nearly midnight when Carter, with a Staff Officer, got
-back to Corps H.Q. to render their report. They were scarcely
-recognizable, covered as they were from head to feet, with grime
-and grease. They had had a busy time. The substance of what
-they had to tell was taken down at the time almost verbatim,
-and reads as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"Got Armoured Cars through to Warfusee-Abancourt.
-When we reached the other side of No Man's Land we
-found that the road was good but a number of trees (large
-and small) had been shot down and lay right across it
-in places. Obstacles removed by chopping up the smaller
-trees and hauling off the big ones by means of a Tank.
-Pioneers helped us to clear the road all the way down.
-We did not come up to our advancing troops until they
-were almost near the Red Line. When we got past our
-leading Infantry we came upon quite a number of Huns
-and dealt with them. Had then to wait a little on account
-of our barrage, but went through a light barrage. When
-we got to Blue Line we detached three sections to run down
-to Framerville. When they got there they found all the
-Boche horse transport and many lorries drawn up in the
-main road ready to move off. Head of column tried to
-bolt in one direction and other vehicles in another. Complete
-confusion. Our men killed the lot (using 3,000 rounds)
-and left them there; four Staff Officers on horseback shot
-also. The cars then ran down to the east side of Harbonnières,
-on the south-east road to Vauvillers, and met<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-there a number of steam wagons; fired into their boilers
-causing an impassable block. Had a lot of good shooting
-around Vauvillers. Then came back to main road. Two
-sections of cars went on to Foucaucourt and came in contact
-with a Boche gun in a wood north-east of Foucaucourt.
-This gun blew the wheels off one car and also hit three
-others. However, three of the cars were got away. Two
-other cars went to Proyart and found a lot of troops billeted
-there having lunch in the houses. Our cars shot through
-the windows into the houses, killing quite a lot of the enemy.
-Another section went towards Chuignolles and found it full
-of German soldiers. Our cars shot them. Found rest
-billets and old trenches also with troops in them. Engaged
-them. Had quite a battle there. Extent of damage not
-known, but considerable. Cars then came back to main
-road. We were then well in advance of Blue Line. Everything
-was now perfectly quiet&mdash;no shell-fire of any kind.</p>
-
-<p>"I went a quarter of a mile beyond La Flaque. There
-was a big dump there, and Huns kept continually coming
-out and surrendering, and we brought quite a lot of them
-back as prisoners. It was then about 10.30 a.m. A party
-of Hun prisoners was detailed to tow back my disabled car.
-I saw no sign of any wired system anywhere. Old overgrown
-trenches but no organized trench system. I proceeded
-to some rising ground near Framerville. Did not
-go into Framerville, but could see that the roofs of the
-houses were intact. Saw no trace of any organized system
-of defence of any kind and no troops. My people saw no
-formed bodies of troops of any kind during the day coming
-towards us, but very large numbers of fugitives hastening
-in the opposite direction. Engaged as many of them as
-could be reached from the roads. I saw, from the hill, open
-country with a certain amount of vegetation on it."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The consternation and disorganization caused by the sudden
-onslaught of these cars, at places fully ten miles behind the
-enemy's front line of that morning, may be left to the imagination.
-It was a feat of daring and resolute performance, which
-deserves to be remembered.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_128fp.jpg" width="1200" height="777" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>The Burning Villages&mdash;east of Péronne.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_129fp.jpg" width="1200" height="774" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Dummy Tank Manufacture.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Throughout the whole day, surrenders by the enemy, particularly
-of troops in rear or reserve positions, were on a wholesale
-scale. The total number of live prisoners actually counted
-up to nightfall in the Divisional and Corps Prisoner-of-War
-Cages exceeded 8,000 and the Canadians had gathered in at
-least as many more.</p>
-
-<p>The Australian Corps also captured 173 guns capable of being
-hauled away, not counting those which had been blown to pieces.
-These captures included two "railway" guns, one of 9-inch and
-the other of 11.2-inch bore. The latter was an imposing affair.
-The gun itself rested on two great bogie carriages, each on eight
-axles; it was provided with a whole train of railway trucks
-fitted some to carry its giant ammunition, others as workshops,
-and others as living quarters for the gun detachment. The outfit
-was completed by a locomotive to haul the gun forward to its
-daily task of shelling Amiens, and hauling it back to its garage
-when its ugly work was done.</p>
-
-<p>The captures of machine guns and of trench mortars of all
-types and sizes were on so extensive a scale that no attempt
-was ever made to make even an approximate count of them.
-They were ultimately collected into numerous dumps, and
-German prisoners were employed for many weeks in cleaning
-and oiling them for transport to Australia as trophies of war.</p>
-
-<p>But the booty comprised a large and varied assortment of
-many other kinds of warlike stores. The huge dumps of engineering
-material at Rosières and La Flaque served all the
-needs of the Corps for the remainder of the war. There were
-horses, wagons, lorries and tractors by the hundred, including
-field searchlights, mobile pharmacies, motor ambulances, travelling
-kitchens, mess carts, limbers, and ammunition wagons,
-and there were literally hundreds of thousands of rounds of
-artillery ammunition scattered all over the captured territory in
-dumps both large and small.</p>
-
-<p>For the next two days all roads leading from the battle area
-back towards the Army Cage at Poulainville, where railway<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-trains were waiting to receive them, were congested with column
-after column of German prisoners, roughly organized into companies&mdash;tangible
-evidences to the civilians of the district, as to
-our own troops, that a great victory had been won.</p>
-
-<p>The tactical value of the victory was immense, and has never
-yet been fully appreciated by the public of the Empire, perhaps
-because our censorship at the time strove to conceal the intention
-to follow it up immediately with further attacks. But no
-better testimony is needed than that of Ludendorff himself, who
-calls it Germany's "black day," after which he himself gave
-up all hope of a German victory.</p>
-
-<p>Ludendorff in his "Memoirs," republished in the <i>Times</i> of
-August 22nd, 1919, writes:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"August 8th was the black day of the German Army
-in the history of the war. This was the worst experience
-I had to go through.... Early on August 8th, in a dense
-fog that had been rendered still thicker by artificial means,
-the British, mainly with Australian and Canadian Divisions,
-and French, attacked between Albert and Moreuil with
-strong squadrons of Tanks, but for the rest with no great
-superiority. They broke between the Somme and the
-Luce deep into our front. The Divisions in line allowed
-themselves to be completely overwhelmed. Divisional
-Staffs were surprised in their Headquarters by enemy Tanks"
-[<i>sic</i>, our armoured cars were meant].... "The exhausted
-[<i>sic</i>] Divisions that had been relieved a few days earlier
-and that were lying in the region south-west of Péronne
-were immediately alarmed and set in motion by the Commander-in-Chief
-of the Second Army. At the same time
-he brought forward towards the breach all available troops.
-The Rupprecht Army Group dispatched reserves thither
-by train. The 18th Army threw its own reserves directly
-into the battle from the south-east.... On an order from
-me, the 9th Army too, although itself in danger, had to
-contribute. Days of course elapsed before the troops
-from a further distance could reach the spot.... It was a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-very gloomy situation.... Six or seven Divisions that were
-quite fairly to be described as effective had been completely
-battered.... The situation was uncommonly
-serious. If they continued to attack with even comparative
-vigour, we should no longer be able to maintain ourselves
-west of the Somme.... The wastage of the Second Army
-had been very great. Heavy toll had also been taken of
-the reserves which had been thrown in.... Owing to the
-deficit created our losses had reached such proportions
-that the Supreme Command was faced with the necessity
-of having to disband a series of Divisions, in order to furnish
-drafts.... The enemy had also captured documentary
-material of inestimable value to him.... The General
-Staff Officer whom I had dispatched to the battlefield on
-August 8th, gave me such an account that I was deeply confounded....
-August 8th made things clear for both Army
-Commands, both for the German and for that of the enemy."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>A hole had been driven on a width of nearly twelve miles,
-right through the German defence, and had blotted out, at one
-blow, the whole of the military resources which it had contained.
-The obligation which was thereby cast upon the enemy to
-throw into the gap troops and guns hastily collected from every
-part of his front, imposed upon him also an increased vulnerability
-at every other point which had to be so denuded.</p>
-
-<p>It was no part of our programme to rest content upon our
-oars, and allow the enemy time to collect himself at leisure.
-The resources of the Australian Corps had suffered scarcely any
-impairment as the result of that glorious day. Such small
-losses as had been incurred were more than counter-balanced by
-the elation of these volunteer troops at this further demonstration
-of their moral and physical superiority over the professional
-soldiers of a militarist enemy nation.</p>
-
-<p>On that very day all necessary measures were taken to maintain
-the battle without pause. But, in order not to interrupt the
-continuity of the story of subsequent developments, it will be
-convenient to mention, in this place, two events which cannot<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-be dissociated from the great battle, and which will be memorable
-to those who participated in them.</p>
-
-<p>The first was an accidental meeting together of a number
-of the most distinguished figures in the war. On August 11th,
-the Commander-in-Chief was to come to congratulate the Corps
-and to thank the troops through their Commanders. I called
-the Divisional Generals together at the Red Château at Villers-Bretonneux
-to meet him that afternoon. In the meantime
-General Rawlinson invited his Corps Commanders to meet him
-in the same village for a battle conference, and chose the same
-hour and a spot in the open, under a spreading beech, where
-his Generals sat informally around the maps spread upon the
-grass. At this meeting were Rawlinson, Currie, Kavanagh,
-Godley, myself, Montgomery and Budworth. The Field Marshal,
-with Laurence, the Chief of his General Staff, on their way to
-the Red Château, soon arrived. Shortly after Sir Henry Wilson,
-happening to pass in his car, also joined the party; and not many
-moments afterwards there arrived, again entirely without previous
-arrangement, Clemenceau and his Finance Minister Klotz.</p>
-
-<p>Villers-Bretonneux, only three days before reeking with gas
-and unapproachable, and now delivered from its bondage, was
-the lodestone which had attracted the individual members of
-this remarkable assemblage; and the more serious business in
-hand was perforce postponed while Rawlinson, Currie and I had
-to listen to the generous felicitations of all these great war leaders.</p>
-
-<p>The second event was the visit of His Majesty the King, on
-August 12th, to Bertangles, when he conferred on me the honour
-of Knighthood, in the presence of selected detachments of five
-hundred of the men who had fought in the battle, a hundred
-from each of my Five Divisions. A representative collection
-of guns and other war trophies had been hauled in from the
-battlefield to line the avenues by which the King approached.
-His Majesty was particularly interested in the German transport
-horses, expressing the hope that they would soon learn the
-Australian language; a pleasantry which he well remembered
-when I had the honour of an audience with him, on the anniversary
-of that very day.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTE:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> See Map J.</p></div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER VIII<br />
-
-EXPLOITATION</h2>
-
-
-<p>The Fourth British Army had opened the great Allied counter-offensive
-with a brilliant stroke. It remained to see in
-what fashion the Allied High Command would proceed to
-exploit the victory. Would the Fourth Army be called upon,
-with added resources, at once to thrust due east, with the object
-of drawing upon itself the German reserves, and dealing with
-them as they arrived; or would blows now be delivered on
-other fronts with a view to keeping those reserves dispersed?</p>
-
-<p>The immediate decision, communicated to me by the Army
-Commander on the afternoon of August 8th, was that, while the
-whole situation was being considered, and troop movements were
-in progress to enable the necessary concentrations to be made
-elsewhere, the Fourth Army would continue its advance forthwith;
-but that, instead of driving due east, the thrust was to
-be made in a south-easterly direction.</p>
-
-<p>The object was to aim at Roye, and either by the capture
-of that important railway centre, or at least by the threat of its
-capture, to precipitate a withdrawal by the enemy from the
-great salient which he had in his April and May advances pressed
-into the French front opposite Moreuil and Montdidier, a salient
-which could be kept supplied by that railway alone.</p>
-
-<p>The Australian Corps front on the evening of August 8th
-lay roughly on a north and south line, just east of Méricourt
-and just west of Vauvillers. But the Canadian Corps front
-bent back sharply from the latter point in a south-westerly direction.
-The Canadians were, therefore, to advance between the
-railway and the Amiens&mdash;Roye road to the general line Lihons-Le Quesnoy.
-The rôle of the Australian Corps was to make a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-defensive flank to this advance, by pivotting its left on the Somme
-in the vicinity of Méricourt, but advancing its right along the
-railway, in the direction of Lihons.</p>
-
-<p>It was a decision which was unpalatable to me, for it condemned
-me to leaving the whole of the great bend of the Somme,
-on which lay Bray, Péronne and Brie, in the undisturbed possession
-of the enemy; and in view of the reports sent in from the
-front and confirmed later by the Armoured Cars, it appeared
-to me that the resumption of a vigorous advance due east next
-day would give us, without fighting, possession, or at least
-command, of the whole of this bend; while if we allowed the
-enemy to take breath and recover from his shock, he would
-probably have time to rally the fugitives, and turn again to face
-us.</p>
-
-<p>This same great bend of the river had been the scene of two
-years of sedentary warfare, in 1915 and 1916, when the French
-and German artillery had converted it into a barren wilderness.
-It was, in its eastern part, scored with trenches, and bristled
-with wire entanglements in every direction; it was devoid of
-villages, woods, or any kind of shelter&mdash;a forbidding expanse
-of devastation.</p>
-
-<p>But between our front lines of that day and the western edge
-of this wilderness, there still lay a belt of some six or seven
-miles of practically unharmed country over which the retreat
-of our Fifth Army in March had carried them without much
-fighting. I should have welcomed an order to push on the next
-morning, in open warfare formation, to gain possession of the
-whole of this belt, and force the enemy to make any attempt to
-reorganize his line on the inhospitable ground which lay
-beyond.</p>
-
-<p>The order stood, however; and instructions were issued for
-the First Australian Division to be drawn into the fight, and
-to take upon themselves the task of conforming to the advance
-of the Canadians along the railway. The first phase of this
-advance was to have been carried out at 11 a.m. on August 9th
-by the First Division passing through the right Brigade of the
-Fifth Division.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The 1st Brigade of the First Australian Division had, as already
-related, arrived from the North in time to participate in the fighting
-of the day before; but the remaining two Brigades arrived so
-late, and had to perform so long a march from their detraining
-station near Amiens to our now greatly advanced battle front,
-that it soon became evident that they could not arrive at
-the line of departure in time to synchronize with the Canadian
-advance.</p>
-
-<p>In consequence, the Fifth Division was instructed to detail
-its right line Brigade to begin this duty; and in due course
-the 15th Brigade carried out the first part of the task and advanced
-our line to include the capture of Vauvillers, an operation
-which was successfully completed by midday.</p>
-
-<p>It will be remembered that the Second and Third Divisions
-had been given a task for the previous day which was limited
-in time, though not in difficulty, and that this task had been
-completed, as it proved with very little stress, by 7 a.m. These
-Divisions had thus had a whole day in which to rest and reorganize.
-The Second Division was therefore placed under
-orders to participate in the advance of August 9th.</p>
-
-<p>In due course, the First Division arrived at our fighting front,
-and that afternoon both the First and Second Divisions advanced
-in battle order, the former passing through the right Brigade
-of the Fifth Division, and the latter through its left Brigade.
-This operation carried our front line in this part of the field to
-the foot of the Lihons hill, and gave us complete possession of
-the village of Framerville. It also incidentally released the
-Fifth Division from further line duty.</p>
-
-<p>The opposition met with during this day's operations varied
-considerably along the battle front, which extended in this
-part of the field over about 6,000 yards. The Lihons ridge was
-found to be strongly held, and much fire both from field guns
-and machine guns was encountered. It was evident that, over-night,
-the enemy had succeeded in organizing sufficient troops
-for the local defence of this important point.</p>
-
-<p>Upon the front of the Second Division, however, there was
-little opposition and the enemy gave up Framerville almost<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-without a struggle. Three Battalions of Tanks co-operated in
-the day's fighting, but several of them were disabled by direct
-fire from Lihons. The task assigned to the Corps for that day
-was, none the less, carried out in its entirety, and by nightfall
-contact had been made with the Second Canadian Division on
-the railway about a mile east of Rosières.</p>
-
-<p>The situation on the left flank of the Australian Corps was,
-however, anything but satisfactory. The Chipilly spur was still
-in the hands of the enemy, all the efforts over-night on the part
-of the 58th Division (Third Corps) to dislodge them having failed.
-General Butler, the Corps Commander, in pursuance of arrangements
-come to some days before, was to proceed on sick leave,
-as he had for some time been far from well; and General Godley
-(my former chief of the 22nd Corps) was temporarily to take
-his place. I therefore persuaded the Army Commander to
-avail himself of this change to allow me to take in hand the
-situation at Chipilly, and to give me, for this purpose, a limited
-jurisdiction over the north bank of the Somme. This was merely
-getting in the thin edge of the wedge; and not many hours later,
-I found myself where I had so strongly desired to be from the
-first, namely, astride of the Somme valley.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly, the 13th Australian Brigade, after a day's rest
-from the anxious duty of acting as a screen for the Canadians
-on the eve of the main battle, were told off to deal with the
-Chipilly spur. Before, however, they could reach the locality,
-and in the late afternoon of August 9th, the 131st American
-Regiment (of Bell's Division), which was still under the orders
-of the Third Corps, very gallantly advanced in broad daylight and
-took possession practically of the whole spur.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime the 13th Brigade arrived, sending a Battalion
-across the Somme at Cerisy, and, joining the Americans, helped
-to clear up the whole situation. This made my left flank more
-secure, and enabled Maclagan to withdraw the defensive flank
-which he had deployed along the river from Cerisy to Morcourt.
-That night I took over the 131st American Regiment from
-the Third Corps, attached it, as a temporary measure, to the Fourth
-Division, and placed Maclagan in charge of the newly captured<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-front, which extended north of the river as far as the Corbie&mdash;Bray
-road.</p>
-
-<p>The day ended with Divisions in the line from south to north
-in the following order, viz.:&mdash;First, Second and Fourth, the
-last named having been augmented by an American Regiment,
-having had its own 13th Brigade restored to it, and having in
-exchange yielded up to the First Division the 1st Brigade of the
-latter.</p>
-
-<p>The Fourth Division had had comparatively much the worst
-of it, up to this stage, of any of my Divisions, and I felt that
-they were due for a short rest. Accordingly, I issued orders
-that same night for the Third Division, which, like the Second,
-had been resting since the previous forenoon, to relieve the Fourth
-Division on that part of the front which lay between the Somme
-and the main St. Quentin road on the following day, but for the
-time being leaving the newly captured ground north of the
-Somme still in Maclagan's hands.</p>
-
-<p>After an examination of the ground and a study of the situation,
-the opportunity for a further immediate local operation, certain
-to gain valuable tactical ground, and likely also to yield a good
-number of prisoners, presented itself to me. A further attraction
-was that it would permit of a useful advance of my left flank on
-the south of the Somme. This project, being of some tactical
-interest, demands a short explanatory reference to the terrain.</p>
-
-<p>The river Somme, from Cerisy as far east as Péronne, flows
-in a tortuous valley which describes a succession of bends, almost
-uniform in size and regular in disposition. These bends face
-with their bases alternately north and south, and average a
-depth of two miles, by a width across the base of about a mile and
-a half. Each came to be known to us by the name of one of the
-villages which reposed in its folds, such as Chipilly, Etinehem,
-Bray, Cappy, Feuillères, and Ommiécourt; all these have become
-names to be remembered in the subsequent conquest of this part
-of the Somme valley.</p>
-
-<p>The valley itself is in this region a mile broad; its sides are
-steep and often precipitous, and the adjoining plateaus rise some
-200 feet above its bed. Through this valley winds, in ordered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-curves, the canal for barge traffic; it is flanked by vast stretches
-of backwaters and heavily grassed morasses, in which the river
-loses itself. The valley can be traversed only by the few bridges
-and the lock gates of the canal, and the causeways leading to
-them from either bank.</p>
-
-<p>It would be difficult country for a fight on a general scale,
-but ideal for guerilla warfare. The whole succession of villages
-clinging to the sides of the valley were in the hands of the enemy,
-and in use by him for the housing and shelter of his troops.
-To attack and overcome them one by one, by fighting up the
-winding valley, would have been a costly business. But it
-suggested itself that they might all be won by a species of investment.</p>
-
-<p>Taking any one of these U-shaped bends singly, by drawing
-a cordon across its base, the whole of any enemy forces who might
-be occupying the bend would be denied escape from it, except
-by <i>crossing</i> the river into the adjacent bend. But if a semi-cordon
-had been simultaneously drawn across the base of that
-next bend also, even that loophole would be closed, and moreover
-such troops as inhabited the second bend would find themselves
-surrounded also.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately before my left flank lay the Méricourt bend
-on the south of the river and the Etinehem bend to the north of
-it. Both were held by the enemy, doubtless fugitives from the
-great battle, who had sought food, water and underground
-shelter in the numerous dug-outs which honeycombed the sides of
-the valley. The design was to capture the whole of these with
-little effort. It was a good plan, and only an unforeseen accident
-prevented its full realization.</p>
-
-<p>Early on the morning of the 10th, I summoned a conference
-at Maclagan's Headquarters in Corbie, which was attended by the
-Commanders and certain Brigadiers of the Third and Fourth
-Divisions. It was arranged that on the north of the river, the
-13th Brigade would that night get astride of the Etinehem spur
-on the north, while simultaneously the 10th Brigade, by making a
-side sweep skirting Proyart, would advance our line till its left
-rested on the river a mile east of Méricourt.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Columns were to move along defined routes, leaving the objectives
-well to the flanks, and then to encircle the enemy positions.
-Each column was to be accompanied by Tanks and was to
-move in an easterly direction and then wheel in towards the
-Somme. Although Tanks had never previously been used at
-night, as their utility was uncertain, it was thought that the
-effect of the noise they made would lead to the speedy collapse
-of the defence.</p>
-
-<p>The plan succeeded to perfection on the north of the river,
-and the Etinehem spur and village with all its defenders fell
-to us almost without a blow. Four Tanks amused themselves
-by racing up and down the main Corbie&mdash;Bray road at top speed,
-and the clamour they made cleared the path for the marching
-infantry.</p>
-
-<p>On the south, however, just after nightfall, a sudden onslaught
-by a flight of enemy bombing planes, threw the head of the
-10th Brigade column into confusion, and its Commander was
-killed. Two of the Tanks were also disabled by direct hits
-from Artillery. This delayed the progress of the operation, and
-the next day broke with the task uncompleted. The 9th and
-11th Brigades were, however, at once sent up to reinforce, and
-during the following day all three Brigades completed the operation
-by possessing themselves of the villages of Méricourt and
-Proyart and the woods adjoining the river.</p>
-
-<p>This series of local operations yielded some 300 prisoners, and
-entirely cleared up the confused and unsatisfactory situation
-which had existed on my left flank, as the aftermath of the
-Chipilly spur failure of the first day. It also brought my
-line up more square to the Somme, and so somewhat shortened
-my already expanding front. But my left flank was at last quite
-secure.</p>
-
-<p>I must now turn to the extreme right flank, which was, on this
-same day, also the scene of very severe fighting. I have related
-the progress of the First Division to the foot of the Lihons ridge
-the night before. On August 10th and 11th the advance was
-continued by the First and Second Divisions in sympathy with
-the advance of the Canadian Corps on the south of the railway.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-There were only a few Tanks left available to assist in this advance;
-and the resistance of the enemy in the neighbourhood of
-Lihons had stiffened considerably.</p>
-
-<p>The devastated area had already been reached by us
-in this part of the field, and the terrain was a labyrinth
-of old trenches, and a sea of shell-holes; the remains of old
-wire entanglements spread in every direction, and the whole
-area had been covered by a rank growth of thistles and
-brambles. It furnished numerous harbours for machine-guns,
-and it was country over which it was difficult to preserve
-the semblance of an organized battle formation during an
-advance.</p>
-
-<p>The enemy fought hard and determinedly to retain Lihons,
-and in some parts of the line the battle swayed to and fro. But
-before the morning was well advanced, we had taken possession
-of the whole of the Lihons Knoll, of Auger Wood, and of the
-villages of Lihons and Rainecourt, while the Canadians had passed
-through Chilly just south of the railway. All that afternoon the
-enemy made repeated counter-attacks, particularly directed
-against Lihons and Rainecourt; but they were all successfully
-driven off by rifle and machine-gun fire without the loss of any
-ground.</p>
-
-<p>It was a great feat to the credit of the First Australian Division,
-and ranks among its best performances during the war. Some
-20 field-guns and hundreds of machine-guns were captured.
-Such a battle, with such results, would, in 1917, have been
-placarded as a victory of the first magnitude. Now, with the
-new standards set up by the great battle of August 8th, it was
-reckoned merely as a local skirmish.</p>
-
-<p>General Currie, operating on my right, had had a similar experience
-of slow, although definite, progress, against hourly
-stiffening opposition, and the fighting by the methods of open
-warfare was growing daily more costly. The enemy had recovered
-from his first surprise, our resources in Tanks had been
-greatly diminished, and much of our heavy Artillery had not yet
-had time to get into its forward positions. In other words, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-possibility of further cheap exploitation of the success of August
-8th had come to an end.</p>
-
-<p>It was decided, therefore, to recommend to the Army Commander
-that a temporary halt should be called on the line thus
-reached, and that rested troops should be brought up to relieve
-the line Divisions. He concurred and decided that we should
-prepare for the delivery on August 15th of another combined
-"set-piece" blow, which would have the probable effect of
-again putting the enemy on the run, so that the moving battle
-could be resumed.</p>
-
-<p>This plan was never actually carried into effect, for reasons
-which did not at once appear. But it transpired later that
-General Currie had made very strong private representations
-to the Fourth Army against the plan. He questioned the wisdom
-of expending the resources of the Canadian Corps upon an attempt
-to repeat, over such broken country, covered as it was with
-entanglements and other obstacles, the great success of August
-8th. He urged that the Canadian Corps should be transferred
-back to the Arras district&mdash;which they knew so well. It was
-country lending itself admirably to operations requiring careful
-organization, which none understood better than Currie and his
-admirable Staff.</p>
-
-<p>It was an issue in which I was not greatly concerned, for
-my share in the proposed operation of August 15th was to be quite
-subsidiary. It was to consist merely in once again advancing
-my right flank, in sympathy with the Canadian advance, as far as
-to include Chaulnes Hill and the very important railway junction
-at that town. In ignorance of the fact that the matter was
-under discussion, I prepared complete plans for the co-operation
-of the Australian Corps, and detailed the Fourth and Fifth
-Australian Divisions to carry them out. Fortunately, before any
-actual executive action had been initiated, orders came that the
-project was to be abandoned.</p>
-
-<p>It soon became known that still larger questions were being
-discussed. The British front, which in July reached south as
-far only as Villers-Bretonneux, had now been extended to the
-latitude of Roye. The Field Marshal was urging reduction, so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
-as to liberate Divisions for offensive operations elsewhere, and
-Marshal Foch agreed that, as by the elimination of the Soissons
-salient the French front had been shortened, this could be done.
-In due course confidential announcements were made that, as
-soon as it could be arranged, the Canadians would be withdrawn
-from the line, and their places taken by French troops. This
-would once again make my Corps the south flank Corps of the
-British Army, and I would junction with the French on the
-Lihons Hill.</p>
-
-<p>The halt thus called gave me breathing time to consider a
-thorough reorganization of my whole Corps front. This had,
-by August 12th, again grown to a total length of over 16,000
-yards. This increase had been the result, firstly, of my having,
-as narrated, taken over ground to the north of the Somme,
-secondly, by reason of the fact that during the advances of the
-last four days my right had hugged the railway, while my left
-had continued to rest on the Somme, two lines which were
-rapidly diverging from each other, and thirdly, because my front
-line now lay sharply oblique to my general line of advance.</p>
-
-<p>Even with a fifth Division, which I now had at my disposal,
-a front of 16,000 yards was far too attenuated for Corps operations
-on the grand scale, and even for more localized operations,
-by one or two Divisions at a time, there was little opportunity
-to provide the troops with adequate intervals of rest. I therefore
-strongly urged upon General Rawlinson either a shortening of
-my front, or a further increase in my resources.</p>
-
-<p>He chose the latter alternative, and on August 12th placed
-under my orders, provisionally, the 17th British Division
-(Major-General P. R. Robertson), coupled with the condition
-that while it might be employed as a line Division, it was not to
-be used for offensive operations. The reason, confidentially
-given, was that it was shortly to be employed in a large scale
-offensive in course of preparation by the Third British
-Army.</p>
-
-<p>It was, for me, a most opportune measure of relief from a
-difficult situation; for the Third Australian Division was now
-also badly in need of a rest. Prior to the great advance, it had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-been longest of any of the Divisions in the line, and had subsequently
-had a hard time in fighting its way forward from
-Méricourt to Proyart. It was therefore relieved in the line on
-August 13th by the 17th Division and went into Corps Reserve.</p>
-
-<p>On the same day I put into effect a project of organization
-which the necessities of the case forced upon me. North of the
-river stood the 13th Australian Brigade, and the 131st American
-Regiment, both still under the command of General Maclagan,
-the remainder of whose Division was resting, and this Division
-might be required at short notice for operations at a totally
-different part of the front. (I had, in fact, earmarked it for the
-proposed attack on August 15th to which I have referred.)</p>
-
-<p>To overcome this anomalous position, I decided to constitute,
-for a brief period, an independent force, composed of the two
-units north of the river which I have named, to appoint to the
-command of it Brigadier-General Wisdom (of the 7th Brigade),
-and to supply him with a nucleus Staff, some Artillery, and
-supply and signal services. It became, in fact, to all intents
-and purposes, an additional Division with a Headquarters
-directly responsible to me.</p>
-
-<p>This force received the name of "Liaison Force" and continued
-in existence for about eight days. Its functions were to
-keep tactical touch and liaison with the Third Corps, to protect
-my left flank by guarding the Etinehem spur from recapture, and
-to act as a kind of loose link between the two Corps, advancing
-its northern or its southern flanks, or both, in sympathy with any
-forward movement to be made by either Corps. While, during
-its existence as a separate force, no operations of first magnitude
-took place, yet the Liaison Force served me well in the very useful
-function of a custodian of my tactical ownership of the Somme
-valley, an ownership which I succeeded in retaining to the immense
-advantage of the operations of the Corps less than three
-weeks later.</p>
-
-<p>By August 13th, therefore, my responsibilities included the
-control of seven separate Divisions as well as all the Corps
-Troops, and Army Troops attached. The next week was occupied
-in local operations by the front line Divisions to straighten<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
-our front, and to dispose of a number of strong points, small
-woods, and village ruins which, so long as they were in enemy
-hands, were a source of annoyance to us. The attitude of the
-enemy was alert but not aggressive, and an important point
-was that he showed every desire to stand his ground, and to contest
-our further advance. There was as yet no indication of any
-comprehensive withdrawal out of the great river bend. Each
-day brought its useful toll of prisoners, all of whom, however,
-corroborated the view that the enemy meant to hold on, and
-that the troops opposing us were more than a mere rearguard
-intended to delay our advance.</p>
-
-<p>The period from August 13th to 20th was also occupied in
-carrying out a number of inter-divisional reliefs&mdash;events of
-merely technical interest to the student of military history, but
-imposing an immense amount of detailed work upon the Staff
-of the Corps and upon the Commanders and Staffs of the Divisions
-concerned. It was my own special responsibility, and one
-which I could not delegate, to decide the date of the relief of
-each Division and by which other Division it should be relieved.
-Such decisions involved a close inquiry into, and a just and
-humane appreciation of the condition of the troops, almost from
-hour to hour every day, a duty in the discharge of which I was
-able to rely upon the loyal help of the Divisional Commanders
-and Brigadiers.</p>
-
-<p>The time that had elapsed since last they had rested, the
-marching they had since done, the fighting they had undertaken
-and its nature, the mental and physical stress which they had
-undergone, and the probable nature and date of their future
-employment were all factors which had to be weighed carefully,
-and set against the advantages or disadvantages of cutting short
-the period of rest of the troops who were available to relieve
-them. It was a function which had to be exercised, at all times,
-with the greatest circumspection, and the strictest justice; for
-troops are very ready to acquire the impression that they are
-being called upon to do more than their fair share.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/map-c.jpg" width="1200" height="629" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>MAP C.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>An actual inter-divisional relief usually occupied two nights
-and the intervening day. Incoming units, both fighting and
-technical, had to be shown all over the sector, to be taught the
-dispositions and the exact situation in front of us; maps, orders
-and photographs had to be explained and handed over; stores
-and dumps had to be inventoried and receipts passed; while
-on the other hand the outgoing troops expected to find their
-billets, offices, stables, wagon lines, bathing-places and entertainment
-rooms in the rear area all allocated and ready for their
-occupation.</p>
-
-<p>Each such mutual relief meant the movement of upwards of
-20,000 men, and separate roads had to be allotted for their use.
-Frequently in so large a Corps as this, two such inter-divisional
-reliefs would synchronize or overlap, and the danger of congestion
-and the Staff work necessary to avoid it would be thereby more
-than doubled. And all this work would have to go on smoothly
-even if the Corps front were in the throes of an actual battle
-at the time.</p>
-
-<p>Although much of the routine of such reliefs, which had become
-almost a ritual during the preceding years of trench warfare,
-was now scrapped, it is a matter of pride to the Australian Corps
-and its Divisions, that all such relief operations, even amid all
-the stress of these busy fighting months of August and September,
-were, until the end, carried out with precision, freedom from
-irritating hitches, and a minimum of stress on the troops.</p>
-
-<p>The decisions which had to be given regarding the times and
-alternations of these Divisional reliefs became from now on
-really of basic importance, and affected the main framework of
-the whole of my future plans. It was no longer merely a question
-of earmarking certain Divisions for a specified single operation;
-but of planning, many days ahead, the rotation in which the
-Divisions were to be employed in a continuous series of operations.
-I regarded it as a fundamental principle to employ whenever
-possible absolutely fresh and rested troops for an operation of
-any magnitude or importance. To carry such a principle into
-effect involved the necessity of making the best surmise that was
-possible as to the course of events a week or even two weeks
-ahead.</p>
-
-<p>As I shall endeavour to make clear in the course of the following<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-pages, the really outstanding and exceptional features of the
-work of the Corps in its last sixty days were the sustained vigour
-of its fighting, and the unbroken continuity of its collective
-effort. Those results would clearly depend more on the manner
-in which the resources in troops were manipulated than upon
-any other factor. Each Division had to be kept employed until
-the last ounce of effort, consistent with speedy recovery, had
-been yielded, and each Division had to rest a sufficient time to
-enable it fully to recover its spirit and tone, and yet had to be
-ready by the time it was wanted.</p>
-
-<p>The fulfilment of such conditions involved, as a little reflection
-will show, a great deal more than a mere mechanical rotation
-of employment; for the problem was, always to have available
-an adequate supply of sufficiently rested troops for a prospective
-demand which, although varying always in accordance with the
-changing situation, had nevertheless to be predicted or conjectured.</p>
-
-<p>August 21st found our front line much about the same as that
-of August 13th, although generally more advanced and straightened
-out. The Corps frontage was still over 16,000 yards, and
-upon the completion of the series of reliefs to which I have
-alluded the dispositions of the Corps were as follows: The
-Fourth Australian Division from Lihons to just south of Herleville,
-the 32nd British Division opposite Herleville, the Fifth Australian
-Division in front of Proyart, and the Third Australian Division
-on the north of the river. The First and Second Divisions
-were in Corps Reserve, the former having by then had a good
-rest from its Lihons fighting. The Liaison Force had been
-broken up; and the 32nd British Division (Major-General T. S.
-Lambert) had joined my command in substitution for the
-17th Division, which had been withdrawn to join the Third
-Army.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the situation of the Australian Corps, when on
-August 21st the short period of comparative inactivity came to a
-close, and it was destined soon to go forward to further decisive
-events. On the previous day the French opened a great attack
-in the south, which yielded 10,000 prisoners on the first day, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-on the day in question the Third British Army delivered north
-of Albert the attack which had been expected for some days.
-Thus the enemy would have his hands full in endeavouring to
-parry those fresh blows; and the time seemed appropriate for
-another stroke on the front of the Fourth Army.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER IX<br />
-
-CHUIGNES</h2>
-
-
-<p>Allusion has been made to the great bend which occurs
-in the course of the River Somme. It is indeed a geographical
-circumstance which must be borne in mind, if the
-phraseology current at this epoch in the war is to be clearly
-comprehended.</p>
-
-<p>The river flows in an almost due northerly direction from the
-neighbourhood of Roye as far as Péronne, and then bends quite
-sharply, at that locality, in a western direction, past Bray,
-Corbie and Amiens, towards the sea, beyond Abbeville. In
-the story of the fighting of the period from March to August we
-have been concerned only with that portion of the river valley
-which ran parallel to our line of advance; but interest will
-henceforth focus itself largely upon that other reach of the Somme
-which runs on a north and south line, upstream, from the town
-of Péronne.</p>
-
-<p>This latter stretch of the river lies squarely athwart the
-direction in which the Corps had been advancing, and the obstacle
-to that advance which the river would presently constitute was
-continued in a northerly direction from Péronne by an unfinished
-work of a great canalization scheme to be called the "Canal du
-Nord." This canal was already wide and deep, and formed a
-tactical obstacle of some significance, for the excavations incidental
-to this project had been almost completed before the
-war.</p>
-
-<p>The "line of the Somme," as it was understood in the tactical
-discussions of the period now to be dealt with, meant, in short,
-the line formed by that part of the river which lay upstream (<i>i.e.</i>,
-to the south of Péronne), and the continuation northwards of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-that line by the Canal du Nord. Both features being military
-obstacles, they and the highlands to the east of them together
-afforded an eminently suitable continuous line on which the
-enemy might, if he were permitted to do so, establish himself in
-a defensive attitude in order to bar our eastward progress.</p>
-
-<p>The autumn was upon us; not more than another eight or
-nine weeks of campaigning weather could be relied upon. A
-quite definite possibility existed that the enemy might be able
-to put forth so powerful an effort to contest our further advance,
-inch by inch, that he would gain sufficient time to prepare the
-line of the Somme for a stout defence, and hold us up until the
-arrival of winter compelled a suspension of large operations.</p>
-
-<p>There were at that time, indeed, some who contended that as
-we had apparently succeeded in putting an end to the German
-offensive we should rest content with the year's work; that our
-soundest strategy would be to permit the enemy to take up such
-a line of defence; and then quietly to wait over the winter until
-1919 for the full development of the American effort, now only
-in its inception.</p>
-
-<p>So far, the enemy had given no indication of any readiness
-to undertake a precipitate withdrawal from the great bend west
-of the Somme. On the contrary, his resistance had stiffened
-to such an extent that little further progress was to be hoped for
-from the methods of open warfare which I had employed since
-August 8th.</p>
-
-<p>If, however, another powerful blow could be delivered, to be
-followed by energetic exploitation, it was quite possible that the
-enemy might be hustled across the Somme, that this might be
-achieved at such a rate that I could gain a firm footing on the
-east bank, and that thereby the value to him of the line of the
-Somme, as a winter defence, might be destroyed.</p>
-
-<p>This was the very project on which I now embarked. The
-First Division was in Corps Reserve, had rested and was fresh.
-The 32nd Division had only just come into the line. By handing
-over a substantial sector to the French, my frontage south of the
-Somme was about to be shortened to 7,000 yards, a very suitable
-front for a deliberate attack by two Divisions.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I held a conference at Fouilloy, near Corbie, in the afternoon
-of August 21st to announce the plan, and to settle all details with
-the Commanders and services concerned. The Infantry assault
-was to be entrusted to Glasgow and Lambert, attacking side by
-side; but the former had allotted to him much the larger share
-of the battle front, at the northern end, the corollary rôle of the
-32nd Division being to seize Herleville and carry our line just
-to the east of it.</p>
-
-<p>The date of the attack was fixed for August 23rd, and the
-Second and Fifth Divisions were warned to be in readiness to
-come into the line a day or two after the battle, in order to commence
-immediately the process of keeping the enemy on the run,
-and hustling him clean out of the river bend and across the line
-of the Somme.</p>
-
-<p>The conference of that day was of special interest, in that I
-had to deal with two Divisions which had not participated in
-any of those Corps Conferences, previously held, which had
-initiated a fully organized Corps operation. The Commanders
-and Staffs were strangers to each other and, some of them, to
-me and my Staff. Nearly all of them were yet unfamiliar with
-the special methods of the Corps. The conference was therefore
-a lengthy one, for many problems of tactical mechanism, which
-had been settled in connection with the preceding battles of
-Hamel and August 8th, had to be reopened and elucidated.</p>
-
-<p>These regular battle conferences were in the Australian Corps
-an innovation from the time the command of it devolved upon
-me. They proved a powerful instrument for the moulding of
-a uniformity of tactical thought and method throughout the
-command. They brought together men who met face to face
-but seldom, and they permitted of an exhaustive and educative
-interchange of views. They led to a development of "team-work"
-of a very high order of efficiency.</p>
-
-<p>The work of preparing for, and the actual conduct of, these
-conferences was always a very arduous business; but they more
-than repaid me for the effort they entailed. They served two
-paramount purposes. They enabled me to apply the requisite
-driving force to all subordinates collectively, instead of individually,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
-and thereby created a responsive spirit which was
-competitive. In addition, each Commander or Service had the
-advantage not only of receiving instructions regarding his own
-action, but also of hearing in full detail the instructions conveyed
-to his colleagues. He knew, not merely what his colleagues had
-to do, but also knew that they had been told what to do; and
-he had an opportunity of considering the effect of their action
-on his own.</p>
-
-<p>The senior representative of the Heavy Artillery, Tank and
-Air Services invariably attended, and listened to all the points
-discussed with the Divisions, and the Divisional Commanders
-heard all matters arranged with these services. In this way,
-each arm acquired in the most direct manner a steadily expanding
-knowledge of the technology of all the other arms.</p>
-
-<p>My reason for emphasizing these matters in the present context
-is that, on this particular occasion, an attempt was to be made to
-carry out a major Corps operation at little more than thirty-six
-hours' notice; and the Division which was to have assigned to it
-the principal rôle was still in Corps Reserve and a day's march
-from the battle front.</p>
-
-<p>That, in spite of these handicaps, the battle proved brilliantly
-successful is a testimony to the valuable part which these Corps
-conferences played in securing rapid and efficiently co-ordinated
-action; a result which would, I am confident, have been unattainable
-under the stated conditions by the mere issue of formal
-written orders.</p>
-
-<p>Although only two out of the seven Divisions of the Corps were
-to participate in this operation, it was my intention to employ,
-for the full assistance of the Infantry, the whole resources of the
-Corps in Artillery, Tanks and Aircraft. That was a principle
-which I always regarded as fundamental, and one from which
-I never permitted any exception to be made, although the
-pressure upon me to rest a substantial portion of these ancillary
-services was always very great.</p>
-
-<p>The general plan for the battle ran briefly as follows. The
-32nd Division would attack with one Infantry Brigade, under a
-barrage, on a frontage of 1,000 yards; the capture of the village<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-of Herleville, which was still strongly held, being its principal
-objective.</p>
-
-<p>The 1st Australian Division would attack on a frontage of
-4,500 yards, with two Brigades in line, and one Brigade
-in reserve. The attack would be carried out in three
-phases.</p>
-
-<p>The first phase was a normal assault, under an Artillery barrage,
-and with the assistance of Tanks, to a predetermined line, which
-would carry us beyond the Chuignes Valley; the second phase
-was in the nature of exploitation by the two line Brigades, but
-was expressly limited to a maximum distance of 1,000 yards
-beyond the main first objective.</p>
-
-<p>The third phase was to be contingent upon the complete
-success of the preceding phases, and would consist of an advance
-by the Reserve Brigade for a further exploitation of success, by
-the seizure of the whole of the Cappy bend of the river, including
-the towering hill close to the Somme Canal known as Froissy
-Beacon.</p>
-
-<p>All arrangements for the forthcoming battle having thus been
-completed, the First Division duly relieved the Fifth Division
-on the night of August 21st, and hastened forward its preparations
-for the attack, which had been fixed for 4.45 a.m. on
-August 23rd.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime, the first attack which any British Army
-other than the Fourth had made since August 8th was at last
-launched on August 21st along the whole front of the Third
-British Army, northwards from Albert.</p>
-
-<p>It has come to be an article of faith that the whole of the
-successive stages of the great closing offensive of the war had been
-the subject of most careful timing, and of minute organization
-on the part of the Allied High Command, and of our own G.H.Q.
-Much eulogistic writing has been devoted to an attempted
-analysis of the comprehensive and far-reaching plans which
-resulted in the delivery of blow upon blow, in a prescribed order
-of time and for the achievement of definite strategical or tactical
-ends.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_152fp.jpg" width="1200" height="779" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>The Canal and Tunnel at Bellicourt&mdash;looking north.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_153fp.jpg" width="1200" height="784" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>The Hindenburg Line&mdash;a characteristic belt of sunken wire.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>All who played any part in these great events well know that
-it was nothing of the kind; that nothing in the nature of a detailed
-time-table to control so vast a field of effort was possible.
-All Commanders, and the most exalted of them in a higher degree
-even than those wielding lesser forces, became opportunists, and
-bent their energies, not to the realization of a great general plan
-for a succession of timed attacks, but upon the problem of hitting
-whenever and wherever an opportunity offered, and the means
-were ready to hand.</p>
-
-<p>In these matters it was the force of circumstances which
-controlled the sequence of events, and nothing else. An elaborate
-time-table controlled by definite dates and sequences for the
-successive engagement of a series of Armies would have been quite
-impossible of realization. Even a Corps Commander had
-difficulty in forecasting within a day or two when he would be
-ready to launch an attack on any given part of the front. For
-an Army Commander it was a matter of a week or even
-two.</p>
-
-<p>All attempted time-tables were controlled by our Artillery
-requirements; both the assembling of the necessary guns&mdash;often
-drawn from distant fronts&mdash;and the accumulating of the
-requisite "head" of ammunition to see a battle through,
-were processes whose duration could only be very roughly forecasted.</p>
-
-<p>The dumping, in the gun pits and in ammunition stores, of
-the necessary 500 or 600 rounds per gun meant days of labour
-in collection and distribution on the part of the railways and
-motor lorries. The breakdown of a few motor lorries at a critical
-time, or the dropping of a single bomb upon an important railway
-junction, were disturbing factors quite sufficient to have arrested
-the flow of ammunition, and to have postponed, indefinitely, any
-programme based upon its prompt delivery.</p>
-
-<p>It will be obvious, therefore, that no reliance could be placed,
-days or weeks beforehand, upon a given attack taking place on
-a given day; therefore no plans could be made which depended
-upon such attacks taking place in a predetermined sequence.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly put, therefore, the decisions of the High Command
-were confined to questions such as where an attack should be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-made, in what direction, and by what forces. The date was
-always a matter of uncertainty, and the only control that could
-be exercised was by postponement, and never by acceleration.</p>
-
-<p>For the greater part of the offensive period it was therefore
-necessarily left to the Commanders of the Armies to conform
-to a general policy of attack, the time and method being left to
-their own decision or recommendation. And they, in turn,
-relied upon their Corps Commanders to seize the initiative in
-the pursuit of such a policy. Naturally, the Army at all times
-made every effort to secure co-ordinated action by its several
-Corps; but it rarely happened that more than one Corps at a
-time carried through the main effort&mdash;the other Corps performing
-subsidiary rôles. The great battle of September 29th to October
-1st, which completed the final rupture of the Hindenburg line,
-was, however, a signal exception to this rule.</p>
-
-<p>The attack by the Third British Army on August 21st is a case
-which illustrates the delays inseparable from battle preparations.
-The project of such an attack had already been mooted on
-August 11th, when General Byng (Third Army) paid me a visit
-to discuss my battle plan of August 8th, and I gathered on that
-occasion that he hoped to begin within four or five days. The event
-showed that the operation actually took ten days to materialize.
-No criticism is suggested. The conditions of transport of troops
-and munitions doubtless made its earlier realization quite impossible.</p>
-
-<p>The attack coming when it did, however, considerably eased
-the situation of the Fourth Army, upon whose front Ludendorff
-had flung all his available reserves, drawn from all parts of the
-German front, in his endeavours to bring the Australians and
-Canadians to a halt.</p>
-
-<p>He was now suddenly confronted with the prospect of
-another "break through" in a different part of his line, and
-the German people had been taught by their press correspondents
-to believe that a "break through" was the one thing most to be
-resisted by the German Supreme Command, and the one thing
-impossible of achievement by us.</p>
-
-<p>There can be no doubt, therefore, that the success of the Third<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
-Army on August 21st, although not comparable in its results
-with the battle of August 8th, did materially assist the prospects
-of my own success in the operations upon which I was then
-embarking.</p>
-
-<p>The immediate effect of it was already felt the very next
-day. For the Third Corps, which was still the left flank Corps of
-the Fourth Army, and which had made very little progress since
-August 8th, was enabled to advance its line a little past Albert
-and Meaulte.</p>
-
-<p>The Third Australian Division, which, it will be remembered,
-had taken over the front and the rôle of the now disbanded
-Liaison Force, participated, by arrangement, in this attack and,
-swinging up its left, brought my front line, north of the river,
-square to the Somme Valley, and just to the forward slopes of
-the high plateau overlooking Bray and La Neuville. The Third
-Pioneer Battalion at once got to work on restoring the broken
-crossings over the Somme, to the south of Bray, and put out
-a series of advanced posts upon the left bank of the river, which
-gave us practical control of the great island on which stands
-La Neuville.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, on the left flank of the 9th Brigade, which had
-carried out the Third Divisional attack, there was serious trouble.
-The enemy counter-attacked in the late afternoon. The 9th
-Brigade stood firm; but the 47th Division (of the Third Corps)
-yielded ground, leaving the flank of the 9th Brigade in the air.
-A chalk pit, which we had seized, formed a welcome redoubt
-which enabled the 33rd Battalion to hang on for sufficiently
-long to permit of the 34th Battalion coming up to form a defensive
-flank, facing north.</p>
-
-<p>In this way the gallant 9th Brigade (Goddard) was able to
-retain the whole of its gains of that day; but the risk of an
-immediate further advance was too great while the situation to
-the north remained obscure and unsatisfactory. The capture
-of the village of Bray, which was still strongly held by the enemy,
-had, therefore, to be postponed, although it had been part of
-my plan to capture it that same day as a measure of precaution,
-seeing that I calculated upon being able the next day to advance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-my line south of the Somme to a point well to the east of
-Bray.</p>
-
-<p>The great attack by the First Division supported by the 32nd
-Division, which has come to be known as the battle of Chuignes,
-was launched at dawn on August 23rd, and was an unqualified
-success.</p>
-
-<p>The main valley of the Somme in this region is flanked by a
-number of tributary valleys, which run generally in a north and
-south direction, extending back from the river four or five miles.
-They are broad, with heavily-wooded sides, and harbour a
-number of villages, such as Proyart, Chuignolles, Herleville
-and Chuignes, which cluster on their slopes.</p>
-
-<p>One such valley, larger and longer than any of those which,
-in our previous advances, we had yet crossed, lay before our
-front line of that morning, and square across our path. It ran
-from Herleville, northwards, past Chuignes, to join the Somme in
-the Bray bend. It was the most easterly of all the tributary
-valleys to which I have referred, and it was also the last piece of
-habitable country before the devastated area of 1916 was reached,
-just a mile to the east of it.</p>
-
-<p>The valley afforded excellent cover for the enemy's guns, and
-the expectation was that some of them would be overrun by
-our attack. It was also ideal country for machine-gun defence,
-for the numerous woods, hedges and copses afforded excellent
-cover, and had in all probability been amply fortified with
-barbed wire. It was a formidable proposition to attack such a
-position on such a frontage with only two Brigades.</p>
-
-<p>The 2nd Brigade (Heane) attacked on the right, the 1st Brigade
-(Mackay) on the left, and the first phase was completed to time-table,
-with the green objective line, located on the east side of
-the long valley, in our possession. The only temporary hitch
-in the advance along the whole front was at Robert Wood, where
-the enemy held out, and had to be completely enveloped from
-both flanks before surrendering.</p>
-
-<p>Then came the second phase, and no difficulty was experienced
-in advancing our line 1,000 yards east of the green line, nor in
-establishing there a firm line of outposts for the night.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The third phase presented a great deal more difficulty than I
-had anticipated. It was to have been undertaken by the 3rd
-Brigade (Bennett) pushing without delay through the 1st Brigade,
-and advancing in open warfare formation north-easterly towards
-Cappy, for the seizure of Hill 90, overlooking that village and on
-the south-west of it, and terminating at its northern extremity
-in the high bluff of Froissy Beacon.</p>
-
-<p>There was, however, some unexplained delay in the initiation
-of this advance, and it was not until about 2 o'clock that the
-3rd Brigade moved forward to the assault of the long slope of
-the Chuignes Valley, which still lay before them in this part of
-the field. The enemy, under the impression that our attack
-had spent itself, had occupied the plateau in great strength, and
-at first little progress could be made.</p>
-
-<p>Mobile Artillery was, however, promptly pushed up, and this
-proved of great assistance to the infantry. Garenne Wood, on
-the top of the plateau, into which large numbers of the enemy
-had withdrawn, proved a difficult obstacle, and incapable of capture
-by frontal attack. It, too, was conquered by enveloping
-tactics, and with its fall the resistance of the enemy rapidly
-subsided, and the 3rd Brigade had the satisfaction of hunting
-the fugitives clean off the plateau into the Cappy Valley.</p>
-
-<p>The whole of this phase of the battle was an especially fine
-piece of work on the part of the Regimental Officers. It was
-open warfare of the most complete character, and the victory
-was won by excellent battle control on the part of the Battalion
-Commanders, by splendid co-operation between the four
-Battalions of the Brigade, and by intelligent and gallant leadership
-on the part of the Company and Platoon Commanders.</p>
-
-<p>Beset as I had been by many anxieties during the early afternoon
-as to how the Third Brigade would fare in the difficult
-task which had been given it, rendered more difficult by the delay
-of which I have spoken, I had the satisfaction that night of
-contemplating a victory far greater than I had calculated
-upon.</p>
-
-<p>For the 32nd Division had successfully captured Herleville,
-and the First Division had seized the whole country for a depth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-of 1&frac12; miles up to a line extending from Herleville to the western
-edge of Cappy. The whole Chuignes Valley was ours. By its
-capture the enemy had been despoiled of all habitable areas, and
-had been relegated to a waste of broken and ruined country
-between us and the line of the Somme.</p>
-
-<p>We took that day 21 guns and over 3,100 prisoners from ten
-different regiments. The slaughter of the enemy in the tangled
-valleys was considerable, for our Infantry are always vigorous
-bayonet fighters. They received much assistance from the Tanks
-in disposing of the numerous machine gun detachments which
-held their ground to the last.</p>
-
-<p>It was a smashing blow, and far exceeded in its results any
-previous record in my experience, having regard to the number
-of troops engaged. Its immediate result, the same night, was the
-capture of Bray by the Third Division, north of the river, thus
-completing the work of that Division which the failure of the
-47th Division on their left the day before had compelled them to
-leave unfinished. The 40th Battalion took 200 prisoners, with
-trifling loss to themselves.</p>
-
-<p>A more remote result, which made itself apparent in the next
-few days, was that it compelled the enemy to abandon all hope
-of retaining a hold of any country west of the line of the Somme;
-it impelled him at last to an evacuation of the great bend of the
-river, a process which he began in a very few days.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the battle of Chuignes. Much of the success of this
-brilliant engagement was due to the personality of the Divisional
-Commander, Major-General Glasgow. He had commenced his
-career in the war as a Major of Light Horse, and had participated
-in the earliest stages of the fighting on the Gallipoli
-Peninsula.</p>
-
-<p>Speedily gaining promotion during that campaign, his outstanding
-merits as a leader gained him an appointment to the
-command of the 13th Brigade, when the latter was formed in
-Egypt in the spring of 1916. For two years he led that Brigade
-through all its arduous experiences on the Somme, at Messines
-and in the third battle of Ypres.</p>
-
-<p>This fine record was but the prelude to the history-making<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-performances of the 13th Brigade in 1918 at Dernancourt and
-Villers-Bretonneux, and Glasgow seemed easily the most promising,
-among all the Brigadiers of that time, as a prospective
-Divisional Commander: a judgment which fully justified itself.</p>
-
-<p>Of strong though not heavy build and of energetic demeanour,
-Glasgow succeeded not so much by exceptional mental gifts, or
-by tactical skill of any very high order, as by his personal driving
-force and determination, which impressed themselves upon all his
-subordinates. He always got where he wanted to get&mdash;was
-consistently loyal to the Australian ideal, and intensely proud
-of the Australian soldier.</p>
-
-<p>The number of prisoners captured on this day, and the total
-numbers of the enemy encountered in the course of an advance
-which was relatively small, pointed to a disposition of troops
-which was unusual on the part of the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>According to the principles so strongly emphasized by Ludendorff,
-in instructions which he had issued, and copies of which
-duly fell into my hands, there was to be, in his scheme of defensive
-tactics, a "fore-field" relatively lightly held by outposts and
-machine guns. The main line of resistance was to be well in
-rear, and there the main concentration of troops was to be effected.</p>
-
-<p>Why had this dictum been so widely disregarded on this
-occasion? It was a question worthy of close inquiry, and two
-German Battalion Commanders who were captured by us on that
-day supplied the answer.</p>
-
-<p>Reference has already been made to the message which I
-issued to the Corps on the eve of the great opening battle; and
-to the fact that a copy of this message had fallen into the hands
-of the enemy, probably by the capture of an officer in the close
-fighting which took place at Lihons on August 9th and 10th.</p>
-
-<p>In due course the substance of this message was published
-in the German wireless news, and in the German press of the time,
-but cleverly mistranslated to convey a colouring desirable for
-the German public.</p>
-
-<p>It so happened that not long before the opening of our offensive
-I had, at the request of the authorities, sent to Australia a recruiting
-cable, which appealed to the Australian public for a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-maintenance of supplies of fighting men.<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> That the full text
-of this cable also became speedily known to the enemy is a
-testimony to the far-flung alertness of their Intelligence Service.
-It, also, was published in their press.</p>
-
-<p>Basing their editorial comments on this material, the <i>Berliner
-Tageblatt</i> of August 17th, 1918, a copy of which I captured, and
-another journal whose name was not ascertainable, because in
-the copy captured the title had been torn off, both indulged
-in arguments, which were long, and intended to be convincing,
-to prove to the German people that I had promised my troops
-a "break-through;" that I had failed, and that, admittedly,
-the "proud" Australian Corps had been shattered, had come to
-the end of its resources and was no longer to be taken into calculation
-as an instrument of attack by the "English."</p>
-
-<p>It was perfectly legitimate, if clumsy, propaganda. But it
-was a curious example of a propaganda which recoiled upon the
-heads of its propounders. The Battalion Commanders, who,
-like all German officers whom we captured, were always voluble
-in excuses for their defeat, pleaded that they had been deceived
-by the utterances of their own journals into believing that the
-Australian offensive effort had come to an end, once and for all,
-and that no further attack by this Corps was possible.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 808px;">
-<img src="images/map-d.jpg" width="808" height="1200" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">Map D</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was this belief which, they said, had prompted their respective
-Divisions (for each of them represented a separate one)
-to disregard Ludendorff's prescription; their Divisional Generals
-had felt justified in availing themselves of the very excellent
-living quarters which existed in the Chuignes Valley, near the
-German front line of August 22nd, to quarter all their support
-and reserve Battalions.</p>
-
-<p>It was there that we found them&mdash;increasing the population
-of the front zone far beyond that which we had been accustomed
-to find. Was there ever a more diverting example of a propaganda
-which recoiled upon those who uttered it? Intended to
-deceive the German public, it ended in deceiving the German
-front line troops, to their own lamentable undoing.</p>
-
-<p>Among the captures of the battle of Chuignes, which, as usual,
-comprised a large and varied assortment of warlike stores, including
-another great dump of engineering materials near Froissy
-Beacon, and two complete railway trains, was the monster
-naval gun of 15-inch bore, which had been so systematically
-bombarding the city of Amiens, and had wrought such havoc
-among its buildings and monuments.</p>
-
-<p>It was first reached by the 3rd Australian Battalion (1st
-Brigade) during a bayonet charge which cleared Arcy Wood,
-in the shelter of which the giant gun had been erected. An
-imposing amount of labour had been expended upon its installation,
-and the most cursory examination of the effort involved
-was sufficient to make it evident that the enemy entertained no
-expectation of ever being hurled back from the region which
-it dominated.</p>
-
-<p>The gun with its carriage, platform and concrete foundations
-weighed over 500 tons. It was a naval gun, obviously of the type
-in use on the German Dreadnoughts, and never intended by its
-original designers for use on land. It had a range of over twenty-four
-miles, fired a projectile weighing nearly a ton, and the barrel
-was seventy feet long.</p>
-
-<p>It had been installed with the elaborate completeness of German
-methods. A double railway track, several miles long, had
-been built to the site, for the transport of the gun and its parts.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-It was electrically trained and elevated. Its ammunition was
-handled and loaded by mechanical means. The adjacent hill-side
-had been tunnelled to receive the operating machinery, and
-the supplies of shells, cartridges and fuses.</p>
-
-<p>The gun and its mounting, when captured, were found to have
-been completely disabled. A heavy charge of explosive had
-burst the chamber of the gun, and had torn off the projecting
-muzzle end, which lay with its nose helplessly buried in the mud.
-The giant carriage had been burst asunder, and over acres all
-around was strewn the debris of the explosion.</p>
-
-<p>For some time, some of my gunner experts favoured the
-theory that the gun had burst accidentally, but the view which
-ultimately prevailed was that the demolition had been intentional.
-Many months afterwards, the full story of the gun and
-its performances was elicited from a prisoner who had belonged
-to the No. 4 (German) Heavy Artillery Regiment, and it was
-circumstantial enough to be credible.</p>
-
-<p>The story is worthy of repetition, not only because no authentic
-account of this wonderful trophy has yet been published, but
-also because the history of this gun curiously illuminates the
-enemy's plans, intentions and expectations between the dates
-of his onslaught in March and his recoil in August.</p>
-
-<p>The substance of the story is as follows: The gun came from
-Krupp's. Work on the position was started early in April,
-1918&mdash;only a few days after the site had fallen into the enemy's
-hands. It was completed and ready for action on the morning
-of June 2nd. Its maximum firing capacity was twenty-eight
-rounds per day. It fired continuously until June 28th. By this
-time the original gun was worn out, having fired over 350 rounds
-at Amiens. A new piece was ordered from Krupp's. It arrived
-on August 7th, and was ready to fire by 7 p.m. It fired its first
-round on August 8th at 2 a.m. and kept on firing till August
-9th, firing thirty-five rounds in all. At 7 a.m. on August 9th, all
-hands were ordered to remove everything that was portable
-and of value. Demolition charges were laid and fired about
-9 a.m. on August 9th. The crew returned to Krupp's.</p>
-
-<p>It is to be inferred from this narrative that the enemy's defeat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-at Hamel on July 4th did not deter him from his enterprise of
-replacing the original worn gun, but that after August 8th, he
-quite definitely accepted the certainty that he would be allowed
-no time to remove the gun intact, and so he destroyed it in order
-that we might not be able to use it against him.</p>
-
-<p>This is the largest single trophy of war won by any Commander
-during the war, and it was a matter of great regret to me that
-the cost of its transportation to Australia was prohibitive. The
-gun, as it stands, was, therefore, fenced in, and it has been
-formally presented to the City of Amiens as a souvenir of the
-Australian Army Corps.</p>
-
-<p>So long as any Australian soldiers remained in France, this
-spot was a Mecca to which thousands of pilgrims wandered;
-and soon there was, over the whole of the immense structure,
-not one square inch upon which the "diggers" had not inscribed
-their names and sentiments. There, in the shade of Arcy Wood,
-the great ruin rests, a memorial alike of the sufferings of Amiens
-and of the great Australian victory of Chuignes.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a>
-The cablegram in question was dated July 13th, and was in the following terms:
-</p>
-<p>
-"Since the opening of the German offensive in March every Division of the
-Australian Army in France has been engaged and always with decisive success.
-The men of Australia, wherever and whenever they have entered this mighty
-conflict, have invariably brought the enemy to a standstill, and have made him
-pay dearly for each futile attempt to pass them on the roads to Amiens and to
-the Channel Ports. Their reputation as skilful, disciplined and gallant soldiers
-has never stood higher throughout the Empire than it does to-day. Those who
-are privileged to lead in battle such splendid men are animated with a pride
-and admiration which is tempered only by concern at their waning numbers.
-Already some battalions which have made historic traditions have ceased to
-exist as fighting units, and others must follow unless the Australian nation
-stands by us and sees to it that our ranks are kept filled. We refuse to believe
-that the men and women of Australia will suffer their famous Divisions to decay,
-or that the young manhood still remaining in our homeland will not wish to
-share in the renown of their brothers in France. Nothing matters now but
-to see this job through to the end, and we appeal to every man to come, and
-come quickly, to help in our work, and to share in our glorious endeavour.
-</p>
-<div class="right">
-"<span class="smcap">Monash</span>, Lieutenant-General."<br />
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER X<br />
-
-PURSUIT</h2>
-
-
-<p>The design which I had formed after the battle of August
-8th of driving the enemy completely out of the bend
-of the Somme&mdash;but which I was obliged to abandon for the time
-being because of the decision of the Fourth Army to thrust in
-a south-easterly direction&mdash;was now about to be realized. The
-effect of the battle of Chuignes, following so closely upon the
-advance of the Third Army two days before, made it probable
-that the enemy would decide upon a definite withdrawal to the
-line of the Somme.</p>
-
-<p>It now became my object to ensure, if he should attempt to
-do so, firstly, that his withdrawal should be more precipitate
-than would be agreeable to him, and, secondly, that when he
-reached that line he should be accorded no breathing time to
-establish upon it a firm defence from which he could hold us at
-bay for the remainder of the fine weather.</p>
-
-<p>The French Army took over from me on the night of the
-23rd August the whole of that portion of my front which still
-extended south of Lihons. General Nollet, Commander of the
-36th French Corps (34th and 35th French Divisions), became my
-southern neighbour, displacing my Fourth Division, and also a
-Canadian Division, for whose sector I had become responsible
-since the departure of General Currie, a few days before.</p>
-
-<p>During these redispositions, probably induced to do so by
-evidences patent to him that large troop movements were in
-progress, the enemy carried out a very heavy gas bombardment
-and maintained it for some hours over the whole of the front
-which was being taken over by the French.</p>
-
-<p>The wind blowing from the south, the gas, which was unusually<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-dense, drifted over the whole areas both of the Fourth Australian
-and the 32nd British Divisions, and caused a large number of
-gas casualties, which weakened the available garrisons of these
-sectors.</p>
-
-<p>The Second and Fifth Divisions were brought up on the night
-of August 26th to relieve the First Division, which had worthily
-earned a rest, and by these redispositions my whole frontage,
-which, in spite of the reduction effected, still exceeded nine miles,
-was organized to be held by four Divisions, counting from south
-to north as follows: 32nd Division, Fifth Division, Second
-Division and Third Division, the latter lying north of the River
-Somme.</p>
-
-<p>The First and Fourth Divisions were each sent back, the
-former to a pleasant reach of the Somme near Chipilly, and the
-latter to the neighbourhood of Amiens, there to have a long
-rest and to recuperate after their strenuous labours. These two
-Divisions were, I had resolved, to be kept in reserve for any <i>tour
-de force</i>, the need for which might arise later. This disposition
-was based on intuition rather than on reasoning; but the event
-proved that it was a fortunate decision; for, at a juncture,
-three weeks later, when a great opportunity presented itself,
-these two Divisions, then fully rested, proved of priceless value.</p>
-
-<p>The Third Division held my front north of the Somme, and
-their presence there ensured my unchallenged tactical control
-of that important river valley. Numerous crossings had been
-systematically destroyed by the enemy, as he was being driven
-back from bend to bend, and as systematically repaired by my
-indefatigable engineer and pioneer services, as fast as the ground
-passed under our control.</p>
-
-<p>Reconstruction of bridges and culverts is as tedious a business
-as their demolition is expeditious. A charge of gun-cotton,
-placed in the right spot, a primer, a short length of fuse, or an
-electric lead to a press button are all that are needed, and a single
-sapper standing by with a match, to be lighted at the last moment,
-can do all that is necessary to provide three days' work for a
-whole Company of Engineers.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, the control of the river valley was of inestimable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-advantage, for it enabled me to carry out a policy of continuous
-and rapid repair. Consequently, during the whole of our subsequent
-advance, every means of traversing the valley from south
-to north, which had been tampered with, was soon restored, as
-fast as my infantry had made good their advance beyond the
-ruined crossing.</p>
-
-<p>This facility was to have an important bearing upon my
-freedom of action, not many days later, when the Corps came
-head on to the north and south stretch of the Somme, and
-found every bridge gone. That circumstance alone would have
-proved an irretrievable misfortune, if I had not had already
-available numerous restored crossings upon the east and west
-reach of the river. For by that means, my ability to pass
-troops and guns rapidly from one bank of the Somme to the
-other remained unimpaired.</p>
-
-<p>Before leaving the line, the First Division had captured Cappy
-and advanced its line on the right to the western outskirts of
-Foucaucourt, while the Third Division had possessed itself of
-Suzanne. This was the situation when, on the night of August
-26th, the Second and Fifth Divisions came into the line. Conferences
-with the four line Divisions were held both on the 25th
-and 26th August, in order to ensure co-ordinate action for the
-process of hustling the enemy across the Somme.</p>
-
-<p>I was, at this stage, sorely perplexed by the uncertain attitude
-of the Fourth Army. I was all for pushing on energetically,
-and received General Rawlinson's approval to do so on
-August 24th; but on the very next day he enunciated a diametrically
-opposite policy, which greatly embarrassed me.</p>
-
-<p>The gist of the Army attitude on the 25th may be thus expressed.
-The presence of a new German Division, the 41st, of
-whom we had taken many prisoners in Cappy, pointed to an
-intention on the part of the enemy to reinforce. This negatived
-any intention to undertake a withdrawal. This conclusion
-justified a revision of the Fourth Army policy. The Army had
-done its fair share; it had drawn in upon its front all the loose
-German reserves. Its resources in Tanks had been depleted,
-and it would take a month to replace them. Other Armies would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
-now take up the burden, and the Fourth Army would now mark
-time, and await events elsewhere. There was no object in hastening
-the enemy's evacuation of the bad ground in the bend of the
-Somme, or in our taking possession of it. There was a possibility
-of the French taking over more frontage from us, and the Australian
-Corps front might in consequence be reduced to a three-Division
-front, with three Divisions in Corps Reserve.</p>
-
-<p>The course of events, in the next seven days, convinced me
-that the results which were then achieved were totally unexpected
-by the Fourth Army, and very vitally influenced the whole
-subsequent course of the campaign. In point of fact, Lord
-Rawlinson quite frankly conceded to me as much in express
-terms a week later. The appreciation made at the time was
-doubtless an intentionally conservative one, but it did not take
-into account the reserve of striking power which remained in
-the Australian Corps, even after the past eighteen days of continuous
-fighting, and even without the assistance of the Tanks.</p>
-
-<p>There was only one saving clause in the Army attitude, and
-this fortunately gave all the loophole necessary for the continued
-activity which I desired to pursue. It was this: "Touch
-must be kept with the enemy." This was of course a mere
-formality of tactics, and was intended as no more than such.
-But it was sufficient to justify an aggressive policy on my part.</p>
-
-<p>As the result of my redispositions, completed by the night of
-August 27th, and of my conferences with the line Divisions,
-each Division stood on that morning on a single Brigade front,
-with its two remaining Brigades arranged in depth behind it.
-My orders were that in the event of the enemy giving way, the
-line Brigade was to push on energetically, and was to be kept
-in the line until it had reached the limits of its endurance. The
-other two Brigades were to follow up more leisurely, but to be
-prepared, each in turn, to relieve the line Brigade.</p>
-
-<p>I had calculated that, by this method, each Brigade should
-be able to function for at least two days on the frontage allotted;
-and that, therefore, the present line Divisions could continue
-for at least six days; and if the stress upon the troops had not
-been severe, they could carry out a second rotation of Brigades for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-a second tour of six days. The calculation was, in general terms,
-fully realized; and all of the four line Divisions of that day did
-actually carry on for twelve days, and two of them for an additional
-six days.</p>
-
-<p>The Artillery resources of the Corps were throughout the whole
-of this period fully maintained at the standard of the early days
-of August. I still had at my disposal eighteen Brigades of Field
-Artillery; and so was able to allot four Brigades of Artillery to
-each line Division, while keeping two in Corps Reserve.</p>
-
-<p>Early on the morning of August 27th, a policy of vigorous
-patrolling all along our front was initiated. At several points,
-enemy posts which were known to have been strongly held the
-night before were found to be now unoccupied. Although reports
-varied along my front, they so fully confirmed my anticipations,
-that without waiting to make any reference to the Army, I
-ordered an immediate general advance along my whole front.</p>
-
-<p>There followed a merry and exciting three days of pursuit;
-for the enemy was really on the run, and by nightfall on August
-29th, not a German who was not a prisoner remained west of
-the Somme between Péronne and Brie.</p>
-
-<p>In previous years, during the enemy's retreat from Bapaume
-to the Hindenburg Line, we had had experience of his methods
-of withdrawal. Then they were deliberate, and his rearguards
-so methodically and resolutely held up the British advance, that
-the enemy had been able not only to remove from the evacuated
-area every particle of his warlike stores, which were of any value,
-but also to carry out a systematic devastation of the whole area,
-even to the felling of all the fruit trees, and the tearing up of all
-the railways for miles.</p>
-
-<p>The present withdrawal was of a very different character.
-To begin with, it had been forced upon him by the battle of
-Chuignes, and he had to undertake it precipitately and without
-adequate preparation. Secondly, he had an impassable river
-behind him, which could be crossed only at three points, Brie,
-Eterpigny, and Péronne. Thirdly, he had in front of him a
-Corps flushed with its recent victories, while he had been suffering
-a succession of defeats and heavy losses.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, he put up a good fight, and employed well-considered
-tactics. The German Machine Gun Corps was much
-the best of all his services. The manner in which the machine
-gunners stood their ground, serving their guns to the very last,
-and defying even the Juggernaut menace of the Tanks, won the
-unstinted admiration of our men. During these three days of
-retreat the enemy used his machine guns to the best advantage,
-and they constituted the only obstacle to our rapid
-advance.</p>
-
-<p>These tactics were not unexpected by me, and I had an answer
-ready. Defying the whole traditions of Artillery tactics in open
-warfare, I insisted upon two somewhat startling innovations.
-The first was to break up battery control, by detaching even
-sections (two guns), to come under the direct orders of Infantry
-Commanders for the purpose of engaging with direct fire any
-machine-gun nest which was holding them up.</p>
-
-<p>The second was to insist that all batteries should carry 20 per
-cent. of smoke shell. This elicited a storm of protest from the
-gunners. Every shell carried which was not a high explosive or
-shrapnel shell meant a shell less of destructive power, and,
-therefore, a shell wasted. That had been the Gunnery School
-doctrine. But I imagine that the test made at this epoch of the
-liberal use of smoke shell against machine guns will lead to a
-revision of that doctrine.</p>
-
-<p>Smoke shell proved of inestimable value in blinding the German
-machine gunners. A few rounds judiciously placed screened the
-approach of our Infantry, and many a machine-gun post was
-thereby rushed by us from the flanks or even from the rear.
-General Hobbs (Fifth Division) and General Rosenthal (Second
-Division), both of whom had formerly been gunners, proved the
-strongest advocates for these smoke tactics.</p>
-
-<p>By such means an energetic and successful pursuit was launched
-and maintained. By the night of August 27th, our line already
-lay to the east of the villages of Vermandovillers, Foucaucourt
-(on the main road) and Fontaine. We also mastered the whole
-of the Cappy bend, including the crossings of the Somme at
-Eclusier. The Fifth Division had a particularly hard fight<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-at Foucaucourt, which did not fall to us until we had subjected
-it to a considerable bombardment. Tivoli Wood was the chief
-obstacle encountered that day by the Second Division. The
-advance of the 32nd Division also progressed smoothly.</p>
-
-<p>During August 28th our advance was continued methodically,
-and by that night the Corps front had reached the line Génermont&mdash;Berry-en-Santerre&mdash;Estrées&mdash;Frise.</p>
-
-<p>On August 29th the line of the Somme was reached, and all
-three Divisions south of the Somme stood upon the high ground
-sloping down to the Somme, with the river in sight from opposite
-Cléry, past Péronne and as far south as St. Christ.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime the Third Division north of the Somme
-had marched forward, in sympathetic step with the southern
-advance, successively seizing Suzanne, Vaux, Curlu, Hem and
-Cléry. The Third Corps on my left had followed up the general
-advance, though always lagging a little in rear, thus keeping
-my left flank secure; and beyond the Third Corps, the Third
-Army was approaching the line of the Canal du Nord, which
-lay, as explained, in prolongation of the south-north course of
-the Somme.</p>
-
-<p>The war correspondents of this time were given to representing
-the progress of the Australian Corps during these three days
-as a leisurely advance, regulated in its pace by the speed of the
-retiring enemy. But it was nothing of the kind.</p>
-
-<p>On the contrary, it was his withdrawal which was regulated
-by the speed of our advance. There was not a foot of ground
-which was not contested by all the effort which the enemy was
-able to put forth. It is quite true that his withdrawal was
-intentional; but it is not true that it was conducted at the
-deliberate rate which was necessary to enable him to withdraw
-in good order.</p>
-
-<p>He was compelled to fight all the time and to withdraw in
-disorder. He was forced to abandon guns and huge quantities
-of stores. The amount of derelict artillery ammunition found
-scattered over the whole of this considerable area alone reached
-hundreds of thousands of rounds, distributed in hundreds of
-dumps and depots, as well as scores of tons of empty artillery<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-cartridge-cases, the brass of which had become of priceless value
-to the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>Regimental and even Divisional Headquarters were abandoned
-as they stood, with all their furniture and mess equipment left
-intact. Signal wire and telephone equipment remained installed
-in all directions, hospitals and dressing-stations were left to their
-fate. The advance yielded to us over 600 prisoners, some half-dozen
-field-guns, and large numbers of smaller weapons.</p>
-
-<p>The last two days of the advance led us across a maze of
-trenches and the debris of the 1916 campaign. The weather
-was unfavourable, there was much rain and an entire absence
-of any kind of shelter. As a result the line Brigades had to put
-forth all their powers of endurance and reached the Somme in
-a very tired condition.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime my air squadron had an exceptionally
-busy time. Contact patrols were maintained throughout every
-hour of daylight. Difficult as it was to identify the positions
-reached by our leading troops during an organized battle, where
-their approximate positions and ultimate objective lines were
-known beforehand, it was doubly so when no guide whatever
-existed as to the probable extent of each day's advance, or as to
-the amount of resistance likely to be encountered at different
-parts of the front.</p>
-
-<p>Yet it was just under these circumstances that rapid and
-reliable information as to the progress of the various elements
-of our front line troops was more important than ever, and no
-means for obtaining such information was so expeditious as the
-Contact Aeroplane.</p>
-
-<p>To assist the air observer in identifying our troops, the latter
-were provided with flares, of colours which were varied from
-time to time in order to minimize the risk of imitation by the
-enemy. The method of their employment, whether singly or
-in pairs, or three at a time, was also frequently varied.</p>
-
-<p>These flares on being lit gave out a dense cloud of coloured
-smoke, easily distinguishable from a moderate height. The
-contact plane, which would carry coloured streamers so that
-the infantry could identify it as flying on that particular duty,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-would, when ready to observe, blow its horn and thereupon
-the foremost infantry would light their flares.</p>
-
-<p>It was a method of inter-communication between air and
-ground, which, after a little practice, came to be well understood
-and intelligently carried out. By its means a Divisional or
-Brigade Commander was kept accurately informed, with great
-promptitude, of the progress of each of his front line units, in
-relation to the various woods, ruined mills, and other obstacles
-which lay spread across their path.</p>
-
-<p>But the Air Force had another interesting duty, which was
-to watch the roads leading back from the enemy's front line
-to his rear areas. During tranquil times little movement could
-ever be seen on the enemy's roads in the hours of daylight, for
-the very good reason that he took care to carry out all his transportation
-to and from his front zone under cover of darkness.</p>
-
-<p>Now, however, his needs pressed sorely upon him; and our
-air reports, from this time onwards, became almost monotonous
-in their iteration of the fact that large columns of transport
-were to be seen moving back in an easterly direction. These
-were his retiring batteries or his convoys of wagons carrying
-such stores as he was able to salve.</p>
-
-<p>Occasionally, too, came reports of convoys, which looked
-like motor lorries or buses, moving hurriedly westward towards
-the German front. These were generally diagnosed by us as
-reinforcements which were being continually hurried forward to
-replace his human wastage, which was considerable both by
-direct losses from death, wounds and capture and by reason of
-the fatigue of such a strenuous and nerve-racking retreat.</p>
-
-<p>All this movement in the enemy's rearward areas was a legitimate
-object of interest to my Artillery. But, unfortunately, most
-of it lay well beyond the range of my lighter Ordnance. The
-mobile Field Artillery was effective at no greater range than
-about four miles. The longer range 60-pounders found it a
-formidable task to traverse such broken country, while the still
-heavier tractor-drawn 6-inch guns found it quite impossible.</p>
-
-<p>The latter, and all the Heavy and Super-Heavy guns and
-howitzers were tied down to the roads, and it proved a tremendous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
-business to advance them in sufficient time and numbers to
-make their influence felt upon the present situation. I have
-nothing but praise for the admirable manner in which Brigadier-General
-Fraser and his Heavy Artillery Headquarters carried
-out the forward moves of the whole of his extensive Artillery
-equipment and organization from August 8th onwards to August
-23rd. But the rapid advance of the battle line during the last
-week of August left the great bulk of Heavy Artillery far behind.</p>
-
-<p>This was not entirely or even appreciably a question of the
-rate of movement of the great lumbering steam or motor-drawn
-heavy guns. They could quite easily march their eight or ten
-miles a day if they could have a clear road upon which to do it.
-But it was this question of roads that dominated the whole
-situation during this period, and subsequently until the end of the
-campaign of the Corps.</p>
-
-<p>The construction and upkeep of roads throughout the Corps
-area had been, even in the days of stationary warfare, a difficult
-problem. At a time like the present, when the battle was
-moving forward from day to day, it became one of the first
-magnitude.</p>
-
-<p>The rate of our advance was controlled almost as much by
-the speed with which main and secondary roads could be made
-practicable for traffic as by the degree of resistance offered by
-the enemy. Obstacles had to be removed, the debris of war
-cleared to one side, shell holes solidly filled in, craters of mine
-explosions bridged or circumvented, culverts repaired and drains
-freed of obstructions.</p>
-
-<p>The road surfaces, speedily deteriorating under the strain
-and wear of heavy motor lorry traffic, had to be kept constantly
-under repair. The transportation of the necessary road stone
-for this purpose alone, imposed a heavy burden upon the roads
-and impeded other urgent traffic. The amount of road construction
-and reconstruction actually in hand within the Corps
-area, at any one time, far exceeded that normally required in
-peace time for any great city district.</p>
-
-<p>The traffic on the roads was always of the most dense and
-varied character. For the proper maintenance and supply of a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-large Army Corps at least three good main roads, leading back
-to our sources of supply, would have been no more than adequate;
-but I seldom had at my disposal more than one such main road,
-which had often to be shared with an adjoining Corps.</p>
-
-<p>There was ever an endless stream of traffic, labouring slowly
-along in both directions. On such a road as that leading east
-from Amiens towards the battle front, the congestion was always
-extreme. Ammunition lorries, regimental horsed transport,
-motor dispatch riders, marching infantry, long strings of horses
-and mules going to and from water, traction engines, convoy after
-convoy of motor buses, supply wagons, mess carts, signal motor
-tenders, complete batteries of Artillery, motor tractors, tanks,
-Staff motor cars and gangs of coolie labourers surged steadily
-forward, in an amazing jumble, with never a moment's pause.</p>
-
-<p>Such were some of the difficulties with which I was beset in
-the rear of my battle line. They were negligible compared
-with those which now loomed in front of it.</p>
-
-<p>The reach of the Somme which runs northerly from Ham
-past Brie to Péronne and there turns westerly, differs entirely
-in its topographical features from that picturesque Somme
-Valley along both of whose banks the Corps had been fighting
-its way forward. The steep banks have disappeared, and for
-a mile or so on either side the ground slopes gently towards the
-river bed.</p>
-
-<p>The river itself is not less than 1,000 yards wide, being, in fact,
-a broad marsh, studded with islets which are overgrown with
-rushes, while the stream of the river threads its way in numerous
-channels between them. The marsh itself is no more than waist-deep,
-but the flowing water is too deep to be waded.</p>
-
-<p>Along the western side of this marsh runs the canalized river,
-or, as it is here known, the Somme Canal, flowing between
-masonry-lined banks. The construction of a crossing of such
-a marsh was, even in peace time, a troublesome business. It
-meant, to begin with, a causeway solidly founded upon a firm
-masonry bed sunk deep into the mud of the valley bed. The
-canal itself and each rivulet required its separate bridge, in spans
-varying from thirty to sixty feet.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>What, therefore, came to be known as the Brie Bridge, situated
-on the line of the main road from Amiens to St. Quentin, really
-consisted of no less than eight separate bridges disposed at
-irregular intervals along the line of the causeway, between the
-western and eastern banks of the valley. The demolition of
-even the smallest of these eight bridges would render the whole
-causeway unusable, and would prohibit all traffic.</p>
-
-<p>There exists an almost exactly similar arrangement of bridges
-at St. Christ, about two miles to the south of Brie, but no other
-traffic crossing to the north of Brie until Péronne is reached.
-There, both the main road and the railway, which cross side by
-side, are provided with large span lattice girder bridges, over the
-main canal, while the marsh has been reclaimed where the town
-has encroached upon it. The river overflow is led through the
-town in several smaller canals or drains, all of them liberally
-bridged where crossed by roads and streets.</p>
-
-<p>The Péronne bridges are, therefore, no less indispensable, and
-no less easily rendered useless than those at Brie. Should
-such crossings be denied to me, it would be just possible to pass
-infantry across the valley, by night, by wading and swimming,
-or by the use of rafts, always provided that no opposition were
-to be met with. But to pass tanks or heavy guns, or even vehicles
-of the lightest description across the marsh, would have been quite
-impossible.</p>
-
-<p>The Somme threatened, therefore, to be a most formidable
-obstacle to my further advance. It was incumbent upon me to
-assume that at the very least one of each series of bridges would
-be demolished by the enemy in his retreat. It would have been
-criminal folly on his part were it to have been otherwise; and I
-had had previous evidence of the efficiency of his engineer services.</p>
-
-<p>Reconnaissances pushed out on the night of August 29th
-speedily verified the assumption that some at least of the bridges
-had been wrecked. It was ultimately ascertained that every
-single bridge in every one of the crossings named had been
-methodically and systematically blown to pieces.</p>
-
-<p>There was only one tactical method by which such an obstacle
-could be forced by a frontal operation. By bringing up sufficient<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-Artillery to dominate the enemy's defences on the east bank of
-the river valley, it might have been possible to pass across
-sufficient infantry to establish a wide bridge-head, behind which
-the ruined crossings could be restored, probably under enemy
-Artillery fire.</p>
-
-<p>But it would have been a costly enterprise, and fraught with
-every prospect of failure, should the enemy be prepared to put
-up any sort of a fight to prevent it.</p>
-
-<p>The value to me of the possession of the whole of the Somme
-Valley from Cléry westwards, and the rapid repair of the bridges
-therein which I had been able to effect, will now become apparent.
-For it permitted the crystallizing into action of a project for
-dealing with the present situation, which had been vaguely
-forming in my mind ever since the day when I took over the
-Chipilly spur.</p>
-
-<p>This was the plan of turning the line of the Somme from the
-north, instead of forcing it by direct assault from the west.</p>
-
-<p>It may be argued that such a plan would have been equally
-practicable, even if the left flank of the Australian Corps had
-hitherto remained and now still lay south of the Somme, instead
-of well to the north of it. In that case other Corps on the north
-would have carried out that identical plan, which ultimately did
-achieve this important and decisive result.</p>
-
-<p>I very much doubt it.</p>
-
-<p>I had also had some experience of the futility of relying too
-much upon the sympathetic action of flank Corps, who usually
-had their hands full enough with their own problems, and had
-little time to devote to the needs of their neighbours. It would,
-moreover, have been disagreeable and inexpedient in the extreme
-to seek a right of way through the territory over which another
-Corps held jurisdiction. Corps Commanders were inclined to be
-jealous of any encroachment upon their frontiers, or upon the
-tactical problems in front of them.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, I wanted, more than anything else, that this should
-be an exclusively Australian achievement.</p>
-
-<p>The situation being as it was, I possessed freedom of action,
-elbow room, and control not only of all the territory which I
-should require to use, but also of all the Somme crossings west
-of Cléry.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_176fp.jpg" width="1200" height="768" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Final Instructions to the Platoon&mdash;an incident of the battle of August 8th, 1918. The platoon is waiting to
-advance to Phase B of the battle.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_177fp.jpg" width="1200" height="776" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>An Armoured Car&mdash;disabled near Bony, during the battle of September 29th, 1918.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The strategic object in view was to make the line of the Somme
-useless to the enemy as a defensive line, and thereby render
-probable his immediate further enforced retreat to the Hindenburg
-line.</p>
-
-<p>The tactical process by which this was to be achieved was
-to be an attack upon and the seizure of the key position of the
-whole line, the dominating hill of Mont St. Quentin.</p>
-
-<p>But the paramount consideration was that the attack must
-be delivered <i>without delay</i> and that the enemy should not be
-allowed a single hour longer than necessary to establish himself
-upon that hill.</p>
-
-<p>Often since those days, wondering at the success which came
-to the Australian Corps at Mont St. Quentin, I have tried justly
-to estimate the causes which won us that success. And I have
-always come back to the same conclusion, that it was due firstly
-and chiefly to the wonderful gallantry of the men who participated,
-secondly to the rapidity with which our plans were put
-into action, and thirdly to the sheer daring of the attempt.</p>
-
-<p>Mont St. Quentin lies a mile north of Péronne. It stands
-as a sentinel guarding the northern and western approaches to
-the town, a bastion of solid defence against any advance from
-the west designed to encircle it. The paintings and drawings of
-many artists who have visited the historic spot will familiarize
-the world with its gentle contours.</p>
-
-<p>Viewed from the west, from the vantage point of the high
-ground near Biaches in the very angle of the bend of the river,
-Mont St. Quentin constitutes no striking feature in the landscape.
-But standing upon the hill itself one speedily realizes how fully
-its possession dominates the whole of the approaches to it. So
-placed that both stretches of the river can from it be commanded
-by fire, and giving full and uninterrupted observation over all
-the country to the west and north and south of it, the hill is
-ringed around with line upon line of wire entanglements, and its
-forward slopes are glacis-like and bare of almost any cover.</p>
-
-<p>Estimated by the eye of an expert in tactics, it would surely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-be reckoned as completely impregnable to the assault, unaided
-by Tanks, of any infantry that should attempt it.</p>
-
-<p>It was the seizure, by a sudden attack, of this tactical key
-that was the kernel of the plan which now had to be evolved.
-The capture of the town of Péronne was consequential upon it,
-though little less formidable a task. The effect of both captures
-would be completely to turn the whole line of the Somme to the
-south, and the line of the Canal du Nord; to open a wide gate
-through which the remainder of the Fourth and Third Armies
-could pour, so as to roll up the enemy's line in both directions.</p>
-
-<p>In view of the historical importance of the occasion, and the
-controversies which have already risen regarding the genesis
-of the conception of these plans, I make no apology for reproducing,
-<i>in extenso</i>, a literal copy of the notes used at the conference
-which I held in the late afternoon of August 29th at the
-Headquarters of the Fifth Division, then situated in a group of
-bare sheds&mdash;but recently vacated by the enemy&mdash;on the main
-east and west road, just south of Proyart. The conference was
-attended by Lambert (32nd Division), Hobbs (Fifth Division),
-Rosenthal (Second Division), and Gellibrand (Third Division).
-Neither "Tanks" nor "Heavy Artillery" attended as they
-could not, in any event, co-operate in the execution of the plan.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<div class="right">29. 8. 18.<br /></div>
-
-<div class="center">PLAN FOR CROSSING THE SOMME</div>
-
-<p>A. <span class="smcap">Alteration of Frontages.</span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p><i>Defensive Front</i>: 32nd Division to take over on 30th
-from Fifth Division front as far north as Ferme Lamire,
-total 7,500 yards, to hold same defensively, place outposts
-on river line, demonstrate actively as if aiming
-to cross Somme; if no resistance, endeavour establish
-posts on far bank; otherwise demonstrate only. Use
-only one Brigade; remainder of Division to rest and
-refit.</p>
-
-<p><i>Offensive Frontages</i>: Fifth Division to extend along
-canal bank from Ferme Lamire to Biaches, frontage
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>4,000 yards. Second Division to extend from Biaches
-for 4,700 yards to bridge at Ommiécourt. Third Division:
-present front north of river.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>B. <span class="smcap">Objectives.</span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>All Divisions to continue eastward advance. Each
-Division to have an immediate and an ultimate objective,
-thus:</p>
-
-<p>Third Division:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Immediate: High ground north-east of Cléry.</p>
-<p>Ultimate: Bouchavesnes Spur.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>Second Division:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>Immediate: Bridge Head at Halle. If crossing there impossible then cross behind front of Third Division.</p>
-<p>Ultimate: Mont St. Quentin.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>Fifth Division:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>Immediate: Force crossing at Péronne Bridges; if bridges gone, follow Second Division
-and aim at high ground south of Péronne.</p>
-<p>Ultimate: Wooded spur east of Péronne.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>Whichever Division first succeeds in crossing Somme
-Valley, the other Divisions to have right of way over
-the same crossings.</p>
-
-<p>Each Division to employ only one Brigade until a satisfactory
-footing is established on immediate objective.</p>
-
-<p>Second Division to lead the north-east movement.</p>
-
-<p>Artillery to stand as at present allotted, but liable to
-re-allotment by me as operation develops.</p>
-</blockquote>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>The above brief notes require but little elucidation. It is to
-be remembered that at the time they were prepared, no definite
-information had yet been received as to the condition of any of
-the Somme crossings, because at that hour the river bank had
-not yet been reached, and fighting on the west bank of the Somme
-was still going on.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It has also to be remembered that these notes were only for
-my own guidance in verbally expounding the plan, and were
-not actually issued as written orders. Naturally many details,
-left unexpressed by the notes, were filled in during the conference.
-Moreover I anticipated that the whole operation would be one of
-a nature in which I would have to intervene as the battle proceeded,
-in accordance with the varying situation from time to time,
-and this actually proved to be necessary.</p>
-
-<p>It will be noted that on August 29th I had already reached
-the definite decision not to attempt to force the passage of the
-Somme south of Péronne; the 32nd Division was, however, instructed
-to make every demonstration of a desire to attempt it,
-the object being to divert the attention of the enemy from the
-real point of attack.</p>
-
-<p>This was to be launched from the direction of Cléry. In
-preparation for it, the Second Division sent its reserve Brigade,
-the 5th (Martin), to cross the river at Feuillères, on August 30th,
-to pass through the area and front of the Third Division, and
-secure a bridge head on the Cléry side of the river, opposite to the
-Ommiécourt bend. The object was to exploit the possibility of
-using the Ommiécourt crossing, and if it were found to be intact
-to use it for the purpose of crossing with the remaining two
-Brigades that same night.</p>
-
-<p>This move was successfully accomplished, although the 5th
-Brigade found portion of the village of Cléry still occupied, and
-that the trench systems to the east of it were still held in strength.
-After much skilful fighting, the Brigade reached its allotted destination,
-with slight casualties, capturing seven machine guns and
-120 prisoners.</p>
-
-<p>The bridge at Ommiécourt was found to be damaged, but repairable
-so as to be usable by infantry on foot, and this work
-was at once put in hand. The same night the rearrangement
-of the fronts of all four Divisions in the line was carried out, and
-all was in readiness for the daring attempt to break the line of the
-Somme.</p>
-
-<p>During the afternoon of August 30th, General Rawlinson
-came to see me, and I unfolded to him the details of the operations<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
-contemplated and the arrangements made for the next day. I
-have already referred to the pleasant and attractive personality
-of this distinguished soldier. His qualities of broad outlook,
-searching insight, great sagacity, and strong determination,
-tempered by a wise restraint, never failed to impress me deeply.
-He always listened sympathetically, and responded convincingly.
-On this occasion he was pleased to be pleasantly satirical. "And
-so you think you're going to take Mont St. Quentin with three
-battalions! What presumption! However, I don't think I
-ought to stop you! So, go ahead, and try!&mdash;and I wish you
-luck!"</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XI<br />
-
-MONT ST. QUENTIN AND PÉRONNE</h2>
-
-
-<p>From early dawn on Saturday, August 31st, until the evening
-of September 3rd, three Divisions of the Australian
-Corps engaged in a heroic combat which will ever be memorable
-in Australian history.</p>
-
-<p>At its conclusion we emerged complete masters of the situation.
-Mont St. Quentin, the Bouchavesnes spur, the large town of
-Péronne, and the high ground overlooking it from the east and
-north-east, were in our possession. A wide breach had been
-driven into the line of defence which the enemy had endeavoured
-to establish on the series of heights lying to the east of the Somme
-and of the Canal du Nord.</p>
-
-<p>From the edges of this breach, the flanks of that portion of his
-line which were still intact were being threatened with envelopment.
-For him there was nothing for it, but finally to abandon
-the line of the Somme, and to resume his retreat helter-skelter
-to the hoped-for secure protection of the great Hindenburg Line.</p>
-
-<p>The extraordinary character of this Australian feat of arms
-can best be appreciated by a realization of the supreme efforts
-which the enemy put forward to prevent it.</p>
-
-<p>The shower of blows which he had received on the front of his
-Second Army from August 8th onwards, had wrought upon it a
-grievous disorganization. The battered remnants of his line
-Divisions had been reinforced from day to day by fresh units,
-scraped up from other parts of his front, and thrown into the
-fight as fast as they could be made available.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes they were complete Divisions from Reserve, often
-single reserve Regiments of Divisions already deeply involved,
-and sometimes even single Battalions torn from other Regiments&mdash;Pioneer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-Battalions, units of the Labour Corps, Army Troops,
-Minenwerfer Companies had all been thrown in, indiscriminately.</p>
-
-<p>This brought about a heterogeneous jumble of units, and of
-German nationalities, for Prussians, Bavarians, Saxons and
-Würtembergers were captured side by side. The tactical control
-of such mixed forces, during a hasty and enforced retreat, and
-their daily maintenance, must have presented sore perplexities
-to the Headquarters of the German Second Army in those fateful
-days.</p>
-
-<p>To meet the crisis with which Ludendorff was now confronted,
-he determined to throw in one of the finest of the reserve Divisions
-still left at his disposal. The Second Prussian Guards Division
-was sent forward to occupy the key position of Mont St. Quentin,
-and to hold it at all costs.</p>
-
-<p>This famous Division comprised among its units, the Kaiserin
-Augusta and the Kaiser Alexander Regiments, almost as famous
-in history and rich in tradition as are our own Grenadiers and
-Coldstreams. There is no doubt that this celebrated Division
-fought desperately to obey its instructions.</p>
-
-<p>For the defence of Péronne, the enemy command went even
-further, and called for volunteers, forming with them a strong
-garrison of picked men drawn from many different line Regiments,
-to man the ramparts which surround the town. Dozens of machine
-guns were posted in vantage points from which the approaches
-could be swept.</p>
-
-<p>All over the river flats lying in the angle of the Somme between
-Cléry, Mont St. Quentin and Péronne ran line upon line of barbed
-wire entanglements, a legacy from the 1916 fighting, and much of
-this was still intact, although breaches had been made in many
-places both by the French in 1917 and by the Germans themselves,
-to facilitate movement over the ground, during their respective
-re-occupations of this territory.</p>
-
-<p>The terrain, which was in greater part open, and exposed in
-every direction to full view from the heights, sloped gently
-upwards towards the commanding knoll. Cover was scarce, and
-the few ruins of brickfields and sugar refineries which dotted
-the landscape had also been garrisoned by the enemy as centres<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-of resistance, designed to break up and dislocate any general
-attack.</p>
-
-<p>Our infantry was deprived of the assistance of any Tanks,
-for the heavy casualties which had been suffered by this Arm
-made it imperative to allow the Tank Corps time for repairs,
-renewals and the training of fresh crews. Nor was any appreciable
-quantity of Heavy Artillery yet available, since the congested
-and dilapidated condition of the roads prevented the
-advance of all but a few of the lighter varieties of heavy guns.</p>
-
-<p>The fighting of these four days was, therefore, essentially a pure
-infantry combat, assisted only by such mobile Artillery of lesser
-calibres as was available.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the formidable nature of the task, and of the disabilities
-under which the Second, Third and Fifth Divisions
-approached it. That they overcame all obstacles, gained all
-their objectives, and captured nearly 2,000 prisoners, mainly
-from crack Prussian regiments, constitutes an achievement
-memorable in military annals and standing to the everlasting
-glory of the troops who took part in it.<a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a></p>
-
-<p>It is difficult to write a connected and consecutive account
-of the details of the fighting which took place. The most that
-is possible in the brief space available is to indicate on general
-lines the successive stages of the battle. Indeed, a minute
-account of the action of each of the 35 Battalions engaged would
-only prove wearisome and confusing. The best method of presenting
-a general picture of the course of the engagement is to
-follow the fortunes of each Brigade in turn.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span></p>
-<p>First in order of time, and of most importance in relation to
-its immediate results, was the action of the Second Division.
-It was the 5th Brigade (Martin) which Major-General Rosenthal
-had detailed to open the attack. The remaining two Brigades
-of the Divisions (6th and 7th) received orders to rest the troops
-as much as possible, but to be in readiness to move at the shortest
-notice.</p>
-
-<p>A Machine Gun Company (16 guns) was placed at the disposal
-of Brigadier-General Martin, while the Artillery at the disposal
-of the Division, comprising five Brigades of Field Artillery and
-one Brigade of Heavy Artillery, remained under the personal
-control of the Divisional Commander.</p>
-
-<p>The attack opened with three Battalions of the 5th Brigade in
-the first line, and one Battalion in support. The total strength
-of the assaulting Infantry of this whole Brigade was on this day
-not more than 70 Officers and 1,250 other ranks. The centre
-Battalion was directed straight at the highest knoll of Mont
-St. Quentin, while the right Battalion prolonged the line to the
-right. The left Battalion had assigned to it as an immediate
-objective the ruins of the village of Feuillaucourt, from
-which it was hoped that a flank attack upon the Mount could be
-developed.</p>
-
-<p>The advance began at 5 a.m. It was a dull morning and still
-quite dark. The two right Battalions advanced with as much
-noise as possible, a ruse which secured the surrender of numbers
-of the enemy lying out in advanced outpost positions. A nest
-of seven Machine Guns was rushed and captured without any loss
-to us.</p>
-
-<p>At the appointed hour, our Artillery opened on selected
-targets, the ranges being lengthened from moment to moment
-in sympathy with the advance of the Infantry. Although during
-the advance a great deal of machine gun fire was encountered,
-all went well. The centre and left Battalions gained a footing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-respectively in Feuillaucourt and on the main hill, but the progress
-of the right Battalion was arrested by heavy machine gun fire
-from St. Denis. This was the site of a ruined sugar refinery, and
-lay on the main road between Péronne and Mont St. Quentin.
-It was a strong point that presented a great deal of difficulty
-and held out to the last.</p>
-
-<p>The centre Battalion had by 7 a.m. passed through the ruins
-of Mont St. Quentin village and had crossed the main road from
-Péronne to Bouchavesnes. It now had to receive the full brunt of
-a determined counter attack, at a moment when it was still disorganized
-and breathless from its difficult assault. The Battalion
-was therefore withdrawn across the road and firmly established
-itself in an old trench system to the west of it.</p>
-
-<p>In this position it beat off five successive counter attacks,
-inflicting most severe losses upon the enemy. The Brigade
-maintained its position until nightfall. Its losses for the day were
-380.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime the 6th Brigade (Robertson) of the Second
-Division had been ordered to cross the Somme and move up behind
-the 5th Brigade, in readiness to carry on the attack, and obtain
-possession of the remainder of the main spur of Mont St. Quentin.
-As this Brigade only entered into the fight at a later hour, I must
-revert to the events of the forenoon of August 31st.</p>
-
-<p>It was about 8 a.m. that I was able to report to General
-Rawlinson, by telephone, that we had obtained a footing on Mont
-St. Quentin itself. He was at first totally incredulous, but soon
-generously congratulatory, proclaiming that the event was
-calculated to have a most important influence upon the immediate
-future course of the war. He expressed the hope that we should
-be able to hold on to all that we had gained.</p>
-
-<p>To this task I now had to bend myself, and I found it necessary
-to put a severe strain upon the endurance and capacity of the
-troops. Great as had always been my concern in the pitched
-battles of the days recently passed to reduce to very definite
-limits the demands made upon the physical powers of the Infantry
-soldier, a juncture had arrived and a situation had been
-created, which demanded the utmost rapidity in decision and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
-action, and a relentless insistence upon prompt response by the
-troops.</p>
-
-<p>The 5th Brigade had been thrust out nearly two miles beyond
-our general line. Its flanks were in the air. It was undoubtedly
-fatigued. Everything must be done and done promptly to
-render it adequate support, to take advantage of its success, and
-to ensure that its effort had not been in vain.</p>
-
-<p>It will be remembered that the Fifth and Second Divisions had
-both been instructed to endeavour to secure a crossing over the
-river. Whichever Division first succeeded was to accord right
-of way to its neighbour. No success had yet attended the efforts
-of the Fifth Division, the main Péronne bridges being still
-inaccessible from the south. The bridge sites were under the
-enemy's fire, which precluded the possibility of repair; and the
-approaches to them were also swept by Machine Gun fire.</p>
-
-<p>The Second Division, on the other hand, had during the past
-48 hours succeeded in making the Feuillères bridge traffickable
-for guns and vehicles, and those at Buscourt and Ommiécourt
-for foot traffic. It transpired later that the enemy, rightly
-suspecting that I would attempt to use this latter crossing, kept
-it under heavy Artillery fire all day.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as I had formed a judgment on the situation, about
-8.30 a.m. (August 31st), I issued instructions to General Hobbs immediately
-to put in motion his reserve Brigade, the 14th (Stewart).
-He was to direct it towards the Ommiécourt crossing, and later
-in the day to pass it across the river and through the ground
-won that morning by the 5th Brigade, with a view to developing
-at the earliest possible moment an attack in a south-easterly
-direction upon the town of Péronne itself. The ultimate objective
-was still to be the high ground south and east of Péronne.
-His 8th Brigade was also to be held ready to move at the shortest
-notice.</p>
-
-<p>It was a serious performance to demand, and it was fraught
-with many risks. There was no time to assemble responsible
-Commanders concerned, separated as they were by long distances
-over bad and congested roads. In the absence of properly co-ordinated
-action, there was every chance of confusion, and cross-purposes,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-and even of collision of authority arising from the
-troops of one Division passing over ground under the tactical
-control of another Division.</p>
-
-<p>But the only alternative was to do nothing and attempt
-nothing. That would have been the worst of bad generalship,
-and it was an occasion when risks must be taken.</p>
-
-<p>The course of subsequent events fully demonstrated that the
-only true solution was the one chosen, for the whole of the defences
-of Péronne were thereby taken with a rush, while they were still
-being organized by the enemy. The delay of only a day or two
-would have meant that the capture of Péronne would have been
-many times more costly than it actually proved to be.</p>
-
-<p>The 14th Brigade had before it a march of some seven miles to
-bring it into a position in which it could deploy for an attack
-on Péronne. Working according to text book such a march
-could have been accomplished in something under three hours.
-It took the Brigade over ten hours. For the line of march lay
-across the very worst of the shell-torn, tangled country enclosed
-in the great bend of the Somme, and progress was most difficult
-and exhausting. Frequent halts were necessary to rest the men,
-and restore order to the struggling columns.</p>
-
-<p>Discovering the impossibility of crossing the river at Ommiécourt,
-the Brigade made a wide detour to cross by the newly
-established bridge at Buscourt. It arrived there just at the same
-time as the 7th Brigade (Wisdom), which Rosenthal had also
-directed to the same point for the same purpose. This occurrence
-illustrates the nature of the risks of a hastily developed tactical
-plan. However, the good sense of the Commanders on the spot
-obviated any serious confusion and the 7th Brigade gave the 14th
-Brigade the right of way.</p>
-
-<p>The 14th Brigade completed its march during the hours of
-falling darkness and, passing through Cléry, came up on the right
-of the 6th Brigade, in readiness for the combined attack by the
-two Divisions at dawn on September 1st.</p>
-
-<p>The night that followed was a stressful one for all Commanders.
-Divisional Generals had to co-ordinate all action between their
-Brigadiers, and their Artillery. The Brigadiers in turn had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-afterwards to assemble their Battalion Commanders, and decide
-on detailed plans of action for each separate unit. Distances
-were long, the country was strange, roads were few and unfamiliar;
-so that it is not surprising that the last conferences did
-not break up until well into the small hours of September 1st.
-There was no sleep that night for any senior officer in the battle
-area.</p>
-
-<p>September 1st was a day full of great happenings and bloody
-hand to hand fighting. The assault by the 6th Brigade passing
-over the line won the day before by the 5th Brigade carried it
-well over the crest of Mont St. Quentin, and confirmed for good
-and all our hold on that imperious fortress. Few prisoners were
-taken, for it was bayonet work over every inch of the advance,
-and the field was strewn all over with enemy dead. The impetus
-of the 6th Brigade assault carried our line 600 yards to the east
-of the summit of the knoll.</p>
-
-<p>It is difficult to allocate, in due proportion, the credit for the
-capture of this important stronghold between the two gallant
-Brigades concerned. It is true that the 6th Brigade did on
-September 1st achieve the summit of the Mount; but it is equally
-true that it only completed what the 5th Brigade had so wonderfully
-begun the day before. No one will grudge to either
-of the two Brigades their share of the honour that is due to both.</p>
-
-<p>The action of the Second Division on that day was completed
-by the bringing up of the 7th Brigade into a position of support
-behind the 6th Brigade, thereby relieving the 5th Brigade from
-further line duty.</p>
-
-<p>Although the action of the individual Brigades of all the three
-battle Divisions must necessarily be narrated separately and
-with some attempt at a proper chronological sequence, yet it
-would be a mistake to suppose that their actions were independent
-of each other. On the contrary, they all operated as
-part of a comprehensive battle plan, which necessarily took full
-account of the interdependence of the course of events in
-different parts of the field.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the advance on this day of the 6th Brigade materially
-assisted the attack on Péronne by the 14th Brigade, while the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-progress of the latter removed much trouble from the southern
-flank of the 6th Brigade.</p>
-
-<p>The men of the 14th Brigade that day had their mettle up
-to a degree which was astonishing. On the occasion of the great
-attack of August 8th, and ever since, it had been the cruel fate
-of this Brigade to be the reserve unit of its Division on every
-occasion when there was any serious fighting in hand. The
-Brigade felt its position very keenly. As one Company Commander,
-who distinguished himself in that day's fighting, afterwards
-picturesquely put it: "You see! We'd been trying
-to buy a fight off the other fellows for a matter of three weeks.
-On that day we got what we'd been looking for, and we made the
-most of it."<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a></p>
-
-<p>The 14th Brigade advanced to the assault at 6 a.m. concurrently
-with the eastern thrust of the 6th Brigade. One Battalion,
-with two others in support, was directed against St. Denis, while
-the fourth made a direct attack on Péronne. Many belts of wire
-had to be struggled through. There was much machine gun fire,
-from front and flanks, and it looked as if further progress would
-be impossible. Nevertheless, this gallant Brigade, by persistent
-effort, made itself master of the western half of Péronne.</p>
-
-<p>The attack on St. Denis at first made very slow progress, the
-enemy holding out resolutely in the ruins of that hamlet, and in
-the adjacent brickfields. During the day, the 15th Brigade made
-spirited attempts to effect the crossing of the river, and to co-operate
-from the south.</p>
-
-<p>The records of the events of these three days are confused
-and discontinuous. Many of the men who could have filled in
-the gaps of the story were unfortunately killed or evacuated as
-casualties. But from the mass of reports, the salient facts
-emerge clearly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The 15th Brigade succeeded, on September 2nd, in putting a
-Battalion across the river, and this assisted the 14th Brigade
-to "mop up" the remainder of the town of Péronne. Later the
-rest of the 15th Brigade and two Battalions of the 8th Brigade
-(Tivey) were also drawn into the fighting. St. Denis and the
-brickfields fell to us during this period.</p>
-
-<p>Although the situation, from the point of view of the advance
-eastwards, remained almost stationary, it was a time of fierce
-local fighting. Many deeds of valour and sacrifice adorn the story.</p>
-
-<p>It was late on September 3rd that the effects of this long-sustained
-struggle became apparent. The whole of Péronne and
-most of the high ground in its vicinity were, by then, definitely
-in our hands, and although the little suburb of Flamicourt held
-out determinedly for another day, the further resistance of the
-enemy began to fade away.</p>
-
-<p>Doubtless the loss of Mont St. Quentin was a controlling
-factor in the decision which was forced upon him to undertake
-a retreat, for with that eminence in our possession, he could not
-have maintained himself for many days in the town, nor would
-its retention have been of any tactical value to him.</p>
-
-<p>As an immediate result, the high ground of the Flamicourt
-spur just south of Péronne fell into our hands on September 3rd,
-and the enemy outposts spread along the banks of the marsh
-in front of the 32nd Division sought safety from complete envelopment
-by a hasty withdrawal; a number of their isolated
-posts were, however, left unwarned of this retreat, so that these
-were, later on, captured by us from the rear.</p>
-
-<p>I must now briefly turn to the doings of the Third Australian
-Division during these four epic days. Its three Brigades (9th,
-10th and 11th) daily performed prodigies of valour. The Division
-carried our line, inexorably, up the Bouchavesnes spur in a
-north-easterly direction. The seizure of this very important
-ground not only powerfully aided but also strongly confirmed
-our seizure of Mont St. Quentin.</p>
-
-<p>The Division, having been given its general rôle, was necessarily
-left to a large extent to decide for itself its detailed
-action from day to day, seeing that it still had to perform the
-function, inevitable for a flank Division, of a link with my
-neighbouring Corps. Fortunately the arrival of a new, fresh<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
-Division (the 74th) from the Eastern theatre of war, which came
-into the Third Corps and was promptly thrown in, enabled
-that Corps to keep up fairly well with the general advance.</p>
-
-<p>The British Third Army, too, was now beginning to make its
-pressure felt, and was approaching the line of the Canal du Nord
-over a wide front. The Third Division was therefore free to
-conform its forward movement to that of the rest of the Australian
-Corps; its energetic action gave me elbow room for the
-man&oelig;uvring of so many Brigades in the region of Cléry, and its
-capture of so much valuable ground east of the Canal du Nord
-served greatly to widen the breach.</p>
-
-<p>By the night of September 3rd, the main tactical purposes
-on which the Corps had been launched on August 29th had been
-achieved in their entirety. Their execution furnishes the finest
-example in the war of spirited and successful Infantry action
-conducted by three whole Divisions operating simultaneously
-side by side.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Rawlinson has more than once referred to the operation
-as the finest single feat of the war. Inevitably the dramatic
-and unlooked for success of the Second Division in the rapid
-storming of the Mount enthrals the imagination and overshadows
-all the other noteworthy incidents of these pregnant days. But
-none will begrudge the rain of congratulations which fell upon
-the head of Major-General Rosenthal. A massive man, whose
-build belies his extraordinary physical energy, he always was an
-egregious optimist, incapable of recognizing the possibility of
-failure. That is why he invariably succeeded in all that he
-undertook, and often embarked upon the apparently impossible.
-An architect before the war, he served for the first two years as
-an Artillery officer, both as a Brigade Commander and as a
-General of Divisional Artillery. He gained his Infantry experience
-as Commander of the 9th Brigade, and so was well qualified
-by versatile service to assume the command of the Second
-Division. His leadership of the latter contributed in no small
-measure to the fame which it has won.</p>
-
-<p>The text of the congratulatory message issued on this occasion
-by the Fourth Army read as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 791px;">
-<img src="images/map-e.jpg" width="791" height="1200" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">Map E</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"The capture of Mont St. Quentin by the Second
-Division is a feat of arms worthy of the highest praise.
-The natural strength of the position is immense, and the
-tactical value of it, in reference to Péronne and the whole
-system of the Somme defences, cannot be over-estimated.
-I am filled with admiration at the gallantry and surpassing
-daring of the Second Division in winning this important
-fortress, and I congratulate them with all my heart.</p>
-
-<div class="right">"<span class="smcap">Rawlinson.</span>"</div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>I am concerned nevertheless that the fine performance of the
-Fifth Division should not be underrated. The circumstances
-under which General Hobbs was called upon to intervene in the
-battle, at very short notice, imposed upon him, personally,
-difficulties of no mean order. I am prepared to admit quite
-frankly that the demands which I had to make upon him, his
-Staff and his Division were severe.</p>
-
-<p>Following upon four days of arduous pursuit, his troops were
-called upon to undertake a long and difficult march over a most
-broken country, to be followed by three days of intensive fighting
-of the most severe character.</p>
-
-<p>General Hobbs was, first and foremost, a lover of the Australian
-soldiers, and their devoted servitor. He belonged to that
-type of citizen-soldier who, before the war, had spent long
-years in preparing himself for a day when his country would
-surely require his military services. Like several of the most
-successful of Australia's generals, he had specialized in Artillery,
-and was, in fact, selected as the senior Artillery Commander of
-Australia's first contingent. That fact alone was the stamp of
-his ability. While he would be the last to lay claim to special
-brilliance, or outstanding military genius, he nevertheless succeeded
-fully as the Commander of a Division, by his sound
-common sense, and his sane attitude towards every problem that
-confronted him. He possessed also the virtue of a large-hearted
-sympathy for all subordinate to him; and that gave him a loyal
-following, which carried him successfully through several great
-crises in the affairs of the Fifth Division.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This period was one of those crises. When, late on the afternoon
-of August 31st, he urged upon me with much earnestness
-the stress upon his troops, and repeated the anxious representations
-of his Brigadiers&mdash;I was compelled to harden my heart and
-to insist that it was imperative to recognize a great opportunity
-and to seize it unflinchingly. His response was loyal and
-whole-hearted. His Division followed the lead which he thus
-gave them, and he led them to imperishable fame.</p>
-
-<p>Considerable redispositions followed upon the transfer of my
-battle front to the country east of the Somme. These, and the
-reasons which governed their nature, chief among which was
-the resumption of the enemy's rearward movement, I shall deal
-with in due course.</p>
-
-<p>Battle problems on the grand scale were, for the moment,
-relegated to the background, and there now arose a multitude
-of other problems, almost equally burdensome, relating to the
-supply and maintenance of the Corps.</p>
-
-<p>Every Corps must be based upon a thoroughly reliable and
-efficient line of supply, and for this a railway in first-class operating
-condition is a prime essential. Every kind of requisite must be
-carried by rail to some advanced distribution point called a
-"railhead." Thence supplies are distributed by motor lorry to
-the areas still further forward.</p>
-
-<p>The appropriate distance of the railhead behind the battle
-front is conditioned by the available supply of motor lorries,
-and their range of action. If the distance be too great the
-stress upon the mechanical transport becomes so severe that it
-rapidly deteriorates, and an undue proportion of lorries daily
-falls out of service. As the facilities for repair in the mobile
-workshops are strictly limited, an excessive rate of wastage
-among these vehicles soon dislocates the whole supply arrangements.</p>
-
-<p>The experience hitherto gained had demonstrated that a railhead
-could not conveniently be allowed to fall behind our advance
-more than ten or twelve miles. This limit had already been
-reached when the Corps front arrived on the west bank of the
-Somme, and the strain upon the lorry service was already great.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>For a further deep advance of the whole Corps in pursuit of
-the enemy towards the Hindenburg Line, still distant another
-fifteen miles, it became imperative, therefore, that the railway
-service to Péronne and beyond should be speedily reopened, or
-some equally efficient alternative provided. The great lattice
-girder railway bridge at Péronne had been irretrievably demolished.
-Engineers estimated that it would take two months
-to restore it, and at least a month to provide even a temporary
-deviation and crossing. Nevertheless, the work was put in hand
-without delay.</p>
-
-<p>An alternative possibility was to construct a new line of railway
-to connect the existing military line at Bray to the Péronne
-railway station, a length of new construction amounting
-to some six miles. It was estimated that such a link could
-be built in a fortnight, and this work also was commenced
-forthwith.</p>
-
-<p>There was a third possibility. This was speedily to repair
-that portion of the railway which lay west of the Somme, and
-to establish a railhead near Péronne, but on the opposite bank
-of the river. This proposal involved only a few days' work, for
-extensive sidings already existed on the west bank, and had
-been left more or less undamaged by the enemy. But it also
-involved the complete restoration of all road traffic bridges,
-both at Péronne and at Brie, for the service of the intense traffic
-which would ensue across the Somme from such a point of
-departure.</p>
-
-<p>The rebuilding of the crossings was, in any case, a matter
-of urgent necessity. By this time all my heaviest guns had
-already been brought up to the vicinity of the west bank of the
-Somme, and had there perforce to wait; for a long detour, on
-the densely-crowded roads, to cross the Somme, say as far
-back as Corbie, where bridges were strong and grades were easy,
-was out of the question.</p>
-
-<p>The problem, therefore, involved a stable and comprehensive
-reconstruction; half measures would not meet the case. But
-half measures were an inevitable necessity of the situation, to
-begin with, because troops had to be fed, and their supplies could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
-be carried in no lighter way, in adequate quantities, than in the
-normal horse-transport wagons.</p>
-
-<p>The order of procedure had, therefore, to be, firstly, hastily to
-reconstruct some sort of bridging, based generally upon the
-wreckage of the original bridge, and strong enough to carry loads
-up to those of horsed wagons; next to stay, strut and strengthen
-these temporary bridges to fit them for the passage of the
-lighter guns, and finally to reconstruct them in their entirety
-for the heaviest loads.</p>
-
-<p>At a point such as the southern entrance to Péronne, where
-the approaches could not be conveniently deviated, the difficulties
-of such successive reconstructions, while the flow of traffic had
-to be maintained, can hardly be fully realized.</p>
-
-<p>For many days, in the early part of September, Brie, Eterpigny
-and Péronne were scenes of feverish activity. Every available
-technical unit that could be spared from other urgent duty
-was concentrated upon this vital work. Most of the Engineer
-Field Companies, three of the five Pioneer Battalions, both
-Tunnelling Companies, and all the Army Troops Companies,
-laboured in relays, night and day.</p>
-
-<p>Hundreds of tons of steel girders, of all lengths and sections,
-were hurried up, by special lorry service. Pile-driving gear was
-hastily improvised. The wreckage of the original bridges was
-overhauled for sound, useful timbers. The torn and twisted
-steelwork was dragged out of the way by horse or steam power,
-and tumbled in a confused mass into the river bed. Hammer,
-saw and axe were wielded with a zest and vigour rarely seen in
-peace-time construction. The whole work was supervised by
-my Chief Engineer, Brigadier-General Foott, and was later,
-when the advance of the Corps was resumed, completed by the
-Army authorities. The speed and punctuality with which the
-first temporary viaducts were completed and ready for use
-were exemplary, and reflect every credit upon Foott and his
-helpers. Within forty-eight hours bridges usable for ordinary
-supplies and for field guns became available, and thereafter
-were rapidly strengthened by successive stages.</p>
-
-<p>The whole work of restoration, in which the Australian technical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
-services played so prominent a part, won the highest praise
-from the Field Marshal, who expressed his appreciation in a
-special message of thanks to these services.</p>
-
-<p>The congestion of traffic at the Péronne bottleneck was,
-however, serious. Blocks occurred, reminiscent of those which
-are familiar in the heart of London when the dense traffic is
-temporarily held up by a passing procession. Marching troops
-always had the right of way; and a Division on the move up
-to or back from the line meant a severe super-load upon the
-already overtaxed road capacity.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes a block of traffic would occur for an hour at a
-time, and a motley collection of vehicles, stretching back for
-miles, would pile up on the roads. The capabilities of a very
-able road and traffic control service, numbering hundreds of
-officers and men, acting under the direction of my Provost
-Marshal, were often severely tested. More than once my own
-motor car was unavoidably held up at this bottleneck for half
-an hour at a time, on occasions, too, when the situation required
-my urgent presence at some important meeting.</p>
-
-<p>All these minor embarrassments arising from the passage by
-the Australian Corps of a great military obstacle such as the
-Somme were, however, soon dissipated. The Somme had loomed
-large, for many days, in the minds of all of us&mdash;first as a problem
-of tactics, and next as a problem of engineering. Before the end
-of the first week of September the Somme had ceased to hold
-our further interest. It had become a thing that was behind
-us, both in thought and in actuality.</p>
-
-<p>The enemy was once more on the move, and it became our
-business to press relentlessly on his heels.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> The following telegram, selected at random from the files of September 1st,
-indicates the extraordinary mixture of units which the enemy had collected
-to defend this vital point:
-</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"To Australian Corps Intelligence from 2nd Division&mdash;sent September 1st
-at 7 p.m. Identifications from prisoners examined since noon: 28th R.I.R.;
-65th I.R.; 161st I.R.; 94th I.R.; 95th I.R.; 96th I.R.; Alexander Regt.;
-Augusta Regt.; 4th Bav. I.R.; 8th Bav. I.R.; 25th Bav. I.R.; 447th I.R.;
-2nd G. Guard F.A.R.; 221st F.A.R.; 2nd Co. M.G. Corps; 67th Pioneer Co.;
-3rd Army Troops; 102nd Pioneer Bn. of 2nd Guards Div.; 402nd M.W.Co.;
-185th R.I.R. A pioneer of the 23rd Co. has been retained for 5th Aust. Div. to
-remove charges from bridges not yet blown. Prisoner 96th I.R. says Regt.
-came up for counter-attack night 31-1 to retake Mt. St. Quentin, but counter-attack
-did not come off, owing to attack expected from us. All prisoners
-interrogated agree that line was to be held at all costs. Regiments are now
-considerably intermingled and disorganized."</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>
-(<span class="smcap">Note.</span>&mdash;I.R.&mdash;Infanterie Regiment; R.I.R.&mdash;Reserve Infanterie Regiment;
-M.W.Co.&mdash;Minenwerfer Compagnie; Bav.&mdash;Bavarian.)</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> Mr. Hughes, the Commonwealth Prime Minister, visited the battlefield of
-Mont St. Quentin, with a distinguished company, on September 14th. The
-officer in question, standing near the summit of the hill, was about to relate his
-experiences, and this was his preamble.</p></div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XII<br />
-
-A LULL</h2>
-
-
-<p>During the closing days of August events had commenced
-to move rapidly; for the offensive activities initiated
-by the Fourth Army, three weeks earlier, began to spread in
-both directions along the Allied front.</p>
-
-<p>The Third British Army had entered the fray on August 21st;
-the First British Army was ready with its offensive on August
-26th, on which date the Canadian Corps, restored to its old
-familiar battleground, delivered a great attack opposite Arras.</p>
-
-<p>The French, who, on my right flank, had along their front
-followed up the enemy retirement begun after the battle of
-Chuignes, reached Roye on August 27th, and Noyon on August
-28th. Their line, however, still bore back south-westerly from
-the vicinity of the river near Brie and St. Christ.</p>
-
-<p>By August 29th the line of the First Army had reached and
-passed Bapaume, and that of the Third Army cut through
-Combles. The Third Corps, on my immediate left, had made
-good its advance as far as Maurepas.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, the thrust of the Australian Corps beyond the Canal
-du Nord, on August 31st to September 3rd, formed the spearhead
-which pierced the Somme line, and the Corps was still
-leading the advance both of the French and the British.</p>
-
-<p>From the morning of September 4th the evidences of the
-enemy's resolution to withdraw to the Hindenburg Line became
-hourly more unmistakable. His Artillery fire died down considerably,
-particularly that from his long range and high velocity
-guns. These were probably already on the move to the rear,
-in order to clear the roads for his lighter traffic.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_198fp.jpg" width="1200" height="793" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>The Hindenburg Line Wire&mdash;near Bony.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_199fp.jpg" width="1200" height="786" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>The 15-inch Naval Gun&mdash;captured at Chuignes, August 23rd, 1918.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The high ground near Biaches (west of Péronne) provided a
-vantage point from which an extensive view of the whole country
-could be obtained. There lay before us, beyond the Somme,
-a belt about eight miles deep, which had scarcely suffered at all
-from the ravages of the previous years of war.</p>
-
-<p>It was gently undulating country, liberally watered, and
-heavily wooded, especially in the minor valleys, in which snuggled
-numerous villages still almost intact and habitable, although, of
-course, entirely deserted by the civilian population.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond this agreeable region there began again an area of
-devastation, which grew in awful thoroughness as the great
-Hindenburg Line was approached some six miles further on.
-For, through the autumn and winter of 1917, and up to the
-moment of the German offensive in March, 1918, it was there
-that the British Fifth Army had faced the enemy in intensive
-trench fighting.</p>
-
-<p>In all directions over this still habitable belt there were now
-signs of unusual life and activity. Columns of smoke began to
-rise in the direction of all the villages. Sounds of great explosions
-rent the air. These were sure indications that the
-enemy was burning the stores which he could not hope to salve,
-and was destroying his ammunition dumps lest they should
-fall into our hands.</p>
-
-<p>A vigorous pursuit was now the policy most to be desired.
-But my troops in the line were very tired from the exertions of
-a great struggle, and many of the units, by reason of their battle
-losses, required time to reorganize and refit. It was also essential
-that no rapid advance should be attempted until the arrangements
-for supply, depending upon the completion of the Somme
-crossings, had been assured.</p>
-
-<p>The general line of advance of the Corps had, during August,
-been in a due easterly direction. The operations about Péronne
-had necessitated a drive north-easterly, and the advance of my
-Third Division up the Bouchavesnes spur had carried them
-square across the line of advance of the Third Corps.</p>
-
-<p>The first step was to restore our original Corps boundaries,
-and to resume the original line of advance. By arrangement
-with General Godley, his 74th Division took over the ground<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
-captured by my Third Division, which was thereby released
-and enabled to concentrate, for a couple of days' rest, in the
-Cléry region. The Second Division employed its 7th Brigade
-on September 2nd and 3rd to advance our line beyond Haut
-Allaines, another two miles east of Mont St. Quentin, routing
-from the trenches of that spur the strong rearguards which the
-enemy had posted for the purpose of delaying us.</p>
-
-<p>On the night of September 4th the 74th Division took over
-the Haut Allaines spur also, thereby releasing my Second
-Division, and the latter was withdrawn to the Cappy area for a
-thorough and well-deserved rest.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, the 32nd Imperial Division, availing itself of the
-temporary crossings which had hastily been effected over the
-Somme, brought its front up, on the eastern bank of the river,
-level with the line which had by September 4th been reached
-by the Fifth Australian Division.</p>
-
-<p>On September 5th, therefore, I had, east of the Somme, two
-Divisions in the line, the 32nd on the right or south, the Fifth
-Australian on the left or north, each operating on a frontage of
-two Brigades, with one Brigade in reserve. This was, however,
-quite a temporary arrangement, devised merely to allow time
-for the Third Division to reorganize and resume its place in the
-front line of the general advance.</p>
-
-<p>The general withdrawal of the enemy, over a very wide front,
-now began to effect a very substantial reduction of the length of
-frontage which he had to defend. The enemy communiqués
-and wireless propaganda of that time busied themselves with the
-explanation that the withdrawals in progress were being deliberately
-carried out for the very purpose of releasing forces
-from the line to form a great strategic reserve.</p>
-
-<p>These protestations did not deceive us, nor did we on our
-part fail also to take full advantage of the steady shortenings of
-the Allied front. Marshal Foch decided once again to readjust
-the international boundary, and my own front was thereby
-considerably shortened. The French took over from the 32nd
-Division all ground south of the main Amiens&mdash;St. Quentin road;
-and that road henceforth became my southern boundary.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This, coupled with the readjustment of the northern boundary
-with the Third Corps, as already narrated, reduced the total
-frontage for which I remained responsible to about ten thousand
-yards, an extent which was never again exceeded. It was still,
-however, in my judgment, too long a frontage for an effective
-pursuit by only two Divisions, and arrangements were initiated
-on the same day to bring back the Third Division into line.</p>
-
-<p>During September 5th I advanced my front to the line Athies&mdash;Le
-Mesnil&mdash;Doingt&mdash;Bussu. Severe fighting took place near
-Doingt. Opposition came mainly from machine guns; but
-isolated field-guns also gave us trouble. We captured that day
-about a hundred and fifty prisoners.</p>
-
-<p>Next day my Third Division came into the line on the north.
-I divided my frontage equally between the three Divisions,
-placing each on a single Brigade front. This was, in fact, a
-repetition of the order of battle which had carried us so successfully
-and rapidly up to the Somme.</p>
-
-<p>Each front line Brigade took up the rôle of Advanced Guard
-to its Division. The 11th Brigade led the Third Division; the
-8th Brigade led the Fifth Division, while the 97th Brigade covered
-the 32nd Imperial Division.</p>
-
-<p>For the first time in the war I found an opportunity of employing
-my Corps Cavalry (13th Australian Light Horse) on
-other than their habitual duty of carrying despatches, or providing
-mounted escorts to convoys of prisoners of war. Here
-at last was a chance for bold mounted tactics, as the county
-was mainly open and free of wire and trenches.</p>
-
-<p>To each Division I therefore allotted a squadron of Light
-Horse for vanguard duty, together with detachments of the
-Australian Cyclist Battalion. These troops more than justified
-their employment by bold, forward reconnaissance, and energetic
-pressure upon the enemy rearguards.</p>
-
-<p>So promising, indeed, was the prospect of the useful employment
-of cavalry, that I prevailed upon the Army Commander
-to endeavour to secure for my use a whole Cavalry Brigade.
-Brigadier-General Neil Haig (cousin of the Field Marshal) was
-actually sent for and placed under my orders. I duly arranged<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
-a plan of action with him, but before the 1st Cavalry Brigade,
-stationed many miles away, had completed its long march into
-my area, the situation had already changed, and the employment
-of Cavalry on the Fourth Army front had to be postponed
-until a much later date.</p>
-
-<p>A juncture had arrived when it became imperative for me
-to consider the possibility of affording some relief to the three
-line Divisions; all of them had been fighting without respite
-since August 27th. The troops were so tired from want of sleep
-and physical strain that many of them could be seen by the
-roadside, fast asleep. These three Divisions had almost reached
-the limits of their endurance.</p>
-
-<p>It was essential, however, that they should be called upon
-to yield up the last particle of effort of which they were capable.
-Every mile by which they could approach nearer to the Hindenburg
-defences meant a saving of effort on the part of the fresh
-waiting Divisions, whom I had earmarked for the first stage of
-our contemplated assault upon that formidable system; a
-system which I knew to be too deep to be overwhelmed in a
-single operation.</p>
-
-<p>It was for this reason that I was compelled to disregard the
-evident signs of overstrain which were brought to my notice
-by the Divisional Generals and their Brigadiers, and which
-were patent to my own observation of the condition of the troops.
-I arranged, however, two measures of immediate relief, the first
-being to set a definite limit of time for the further demands to
-be made upon the line Divisions. This was fixed for September
-10th. The second was to issue orders that the rate of our further
-advance was to be controlled by consideration for the well-being
-of our own troops, and not by the rate of the enemy's retreat.
-If, in consequence, any gap should eventuate, touch with the
-enemy was to be kept by the mounted troops and cyclists.</p>
-
-<p>The preliminary steps for effecting the reliefs thus promised
-for September 10th were begun on September 5th. The
-Corps was, as stated, on a three Division front. I had only
-two fit Divisions in Corps Reserve (<i>i.e.</i>, the First and Fourth),
-the Second Division being not yet rested. My representations<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
-to the Army Commander on this matter bore immediate fruit;
-for he placed under my orders the Sixth (Imperial) Division
-(one of the first seven Divisions of the original Expeditionary
-Force). Before, however, I could take advantage of this windfall,
-the constitution of the Fourth Army underwent a vital
-alteration, of which more will be told later.</p>
-
-<p>The First and Fourth Divisions had been resting since August
-26th. They had had time to reorganize their units, to reclothe
-and refit their troops, to receive and absorb reinforcements, and
-to fill vacancies among leaders. Staffs had been able to deal
-with a mass of arrears. The men had enjoyed a pleasant holiday
-in the now peaceful Somme Valley, far in rear, a holiday devoted
-to games and aquatic sports. Horse and man, alike, were
-refreshed, and had been inspired by the continued successes of
-the remainder of the Corps.</p>
-
-<p>They were however, by now, far in rear; and it was out of
-the question to tax their restored energies by calling upon them
-to march back to the battle zone. The Fourth Army, as always,
-extended its sympathetic help; two motor bus convoys, each
-capable of dealing with a Brigade group a day, were speedily
-materialized from the resources of G.H.Q.</p>
-
-<p>The completion of the moves of these two Divisions from the
-back area to within easy marching distance of the battle front
-therefore occupied three days. The use of mechanical transport
-for the execution of troop movements has now entirely passed
-the experimental stage, and in future wars, calculations of time
-and space will be vitally affected, whenever an ample supply of
-lorries or buses and suitable roads are available for the rapid
-concentration or dispersal of large bodies of troops.</p>
-
-<p>The Australian soldier is individually philosophic and stoical,
-but in the mass he is sensitive to a degree; and he is intelligent
-enough to realize how he is used or misused. It was the subject
-of complaint among the troops during the earlier years of the war,
-that while they were indulgently carried by lorries into the battle
-at a time when they were fresh and fit, they were invariably left
-to march long distances, out of the battle, when they were on
-the verge of exhaustion. I therefore tried, whenever possible,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-to provide tired troops with the means of transport to their
-rest areas, a facility which was always highly appreciated by
-them.</p>
-
-<p>By the time the First and Fourth Divisions had thus been
-assembled in the forward areas, ready to relieve the Third and
-Fifth Divisions, these latter, together with the 32nd Division,
-had advanced our front approximately to the line Vermand&mdash;Vendelles&mdash;Hesbecourt,
-carrying it to within three miles of the
-front line of the Hindenburg defence system.</p>
-
-<p>There can be no doubt, however, that the rate of our advance,
-retarded as it had been for the reasons already explained, had
-proceeded much more rapidly than suited the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>A steady stream of prisoners kept pouring in, captured in
-twos and threes, all along my front, by my energetic patrols.
-Numerous machine guns were taken; and in the vicinity of
-Roisel, fully three hundred transport vehicles and much engineering
-material were captured, which the enemy had been compelled
-to abandon in haste.</p>
-
-<p>At this juncture the British High Command arrived at the
-important decision to enlarge the Fourth Army, by adding
-another Corps; doubtless contemplating the possibility of operations
-on a large scale against the Hindenburg defences in the
-near future.</p>
-
-<p>A new Corps Headquarters, the Ninth, was to be reconstituted
-under Lieut.-General Braithwaite, and he was to become my
-neighbour on my southern flank, interposed between me and
-the French. Braithwaite had been Chief of Staff to Sir Ian
-Hamilton during the Dardanelles Expedition, and I had seen
-much of him there. I was to have the advantage, therefore, of
-having old Gallipoli comrades on either flank, Braithwaite on
-the south, and Godley on the north.</p>
-
-<p>The immediate result of this decision, which came into effect
-early on September 12th, was that the 32nd Division, which
-had been under my orders for nearly four weeks, passed over
-to the Ninth Corps. Lambert, his Staff and his Division had
-served me well and efficiently, and I was sorry to lose them
-out of my Corps.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>With the impending further shortening of my front, I had
-no justification for pressing to be permitted to retain this Division.
-On the contrary, my representations to General Rawlinson had
-always been in favour of shortening my frontage to the effective
-battle standard of August 8th, so that the Corps might at any
-time be in a position to embark on a major operation, with its
-whole resources in Artillery and Infantry concentrated, as on
-that occasion, upon a relatively narrow objective. My greatly
-extended front, and the direct control of the affairs of six separate
-Divisions, had been a heavy burden, involving great and manifold
-responsibilities.</p>
-
-<p>According to my promises to the remaining two line Divisions,
-the Fifth and Third, these were duly relieved on September
-10th by the First and Fourth Divisions, the former on the north,
-the latter on the south. Each Division had a frontage of about
-four thousand yards, but this was to diminish rapidly, if the
-advance of the Corps continued, by reason of the fact that
-my southern boundary now became the Omignon River, whose
-course ran obliquely from the north-east.</p>
-
-<p>While all these changes in dispositions were being effected,
-there was breathing time to give attention to a heavy mass of
-arrears of work; for there could be no question of undertaking
-an attack on the Hindenburg defences without most careful
-and exhaustive preparation.</p>
-
-<p>For this the time was not yet ripe. It would still take some
-days to bring forward the remainder of my heaviest Artillery,
-to advance the railheads, to replenish the ammunition depots
-and supply dumps, and to re-establish telegraph and telephone
-communications.</p>
-
-<p>Another good reason for a more leisurely policy on the front
-of the Fourth Army lay in the events on other portions of the
-Allied fronts. By September 4th the German withdrawal
-had become general on all fronts.</p>
-
-<p>It had become clear that the enemy's retirement to his former
-position of March, 1918, was not to be confined to those fronts
-on which he had been receiving such punishment. All evidence
-pointed to the fact that his present strategy was to take up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-as speedily as possible a strong defensive attitude, behind the
-great system of field works, which had already served him so
-well during 1917, at a time when a considerable proportion of
-his military resources was still involved on the Russian and
-Roumanian fronts.</p>
-
-<p>His retirement before the First and Third British Armies was
-proceeding methodically, and on September 5th the French
-were crossing the Vesle, between Rheims and Soissons. All
-was going well; and those in the confidence of our High Command
-knew that, on any day now, news might be expected of
-the first great attack to be made by the American Army, to be
-directed against the St. Mihiel Salient on the Alsace front.</p>
-
-<p>This latter attack actually opened on September 11th, and it
-was clearly sound military policy to wait for a few days, in order
-correctly to diagnose the effect of these operations upon the
-enemy's distribution of forces.</p>
-
-<p>Information as to the locations and movements of all the enemy
-Divisions was in these days voluminous, accurate and speedy.
-Prisoners and documents were daily falling into the hands of the
-Allies over the whole length of the Western Front. His Divisions
-in the front line were identified daily by actual contact. As to
-those resting or refitting or in reserve, accurate deductions could
-be made from the mass of information at our disposal.</p>
-
-<p>It was at this time that it began to be made clear to us that
-the enemy's mobile reserves had been almost completely absorbed
-into the front line. One Division after another, particularly
-among those which had been engaged against the Australian
-Corps in August, was being disbanded. Among these were the
-109th, 225th, 233rd, 54th Reserve, and 14th Bavarian Divisions.</p>
-
-<p>The strength of the enemy's remaining Divisions was also
-rapidly diminishing. From prisoners we learned that many
-Battalions now had only three Companies instead of four, many
-Regiments only two Battalions instead of three, and even the
-Company strengths were at a low ebb.</p>
-
-<p>We could well afford to approach the immediate future with
-greater deliberation.</p>
-
-<p>Since August 8th, the Corps front had already advanced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-twenty-five miles, and it was not long before I had to abandon
-the luxurious château of the Marquis de Clermont-Tonnere, at
-Bertangles, whose spacious halls and spreading parks had formed
-so pleasant a habitation for the whole of my Corps Headquarters.</p>
-
-<p>The scale of comfort possible for all senior Commanders and
-Staffs rapidly declined as the advance developed. Generals of
-Corps, Divisions and Brigades had to be content with living and
-office quarters in a steadily descending gradation of convenience.
-From château to humbler dwelling house, and thence into bare
-wooden huts, and later still into mere holes hollowed out in the
-sides of quarries or railway cuttings, were the stages of progress
-in this downward scale.</p>
-
-<p>My Headquarters moved from Bertangles to a group of village
-houses at Glisy on August 13th; thence on August 31st to Méricourt,
-where the best had to be made of a derelict, much battered
-and almost roofless château, which the Germans had rifled of
-every stick of furniture, and even of all doors and windows, in
-order to equip a large collection of dug-outs in a neighbouring
-hill-side.</p>
-
-<p>Again on September 8th I moved into the very centre of the
-devastated area lying in the Somme bend, on to a small rise near
-Assevillers, where a number of tiny wooden huts served us as
-bedrooms by night and offices by day. Only one hut, more pretentiously
-brick-walled and evidently built for the use of some
-German officer of high rank, was available to fulfil the duties of
-hospitality.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of such discomforts, the daily life at Corps Headquarters
-flowed on uninterruptedly in its several quite distinct
-activities. On the one hand, there was the grim business of
-fighting, the detailed conduct of the battle of to-day, the troop
-and artillery movements for that of to-morrow, the planning of the
-one to be undertaken still later; rounds of conferences and consultations;
-visits to Divisions and Brigades, and to Artillery;
-reconnaissances to the forward zone; and an intent and ceaseless
-study of maps and Intelligence summaries.</p>
-
-<p>Hourly contact with Headquarters of Fourth Army and of
-flank Corps had to be maintained. Then, following the day's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
-strenuous activities out of doors, there was at nights a never-diminishing
-mass of administrative work, disciplinary questions,
-honours, awards, appointments, promotions, and a formidable
-correspondence which must not be allowed to fall into arrear.</p>
-
-<p>Again, in the back areas there were the unemployed Divisions
-of the Corps, who must be regularly visited, both at training and
-at play. There were medals and ribbons to be distributed to the
-gallant winners; addresses to be delivered; and the work of
-reorganizing and refitting the resting units to be supervised.
-Still further in rear, demonstrations of new experiments in tactics
-or in weapons, or in mechanical warfare, had frequently to be
-attended, for study and criticism.</p>
-
-<p>And lastly there was the social life of the Corps; for its performances
-were beginning to attract attention beyond the limited,
-if select, circles of the Fourth Army. A steady stream of visitors
-began to set in. It was a necessary burden that suitable arrangements
-for their reception and entertainment had to be maintained.</p>
-
-<p>The duties of hospitality had been simple at a time when Corps
-Headquarters was still housed in palatial châteaux, situated in
-country hitherto untouched by the war, and within easy reach of
-all supplies. It was a very different matter to offer even reasonable
-comfort to a visitor at a time when Government rations
-constituted the backbone of our fare, when there were only bare
-floors to sleep upon for those who were not fortunate enough to
-possess a camp bed or valise, and when even an extra blanket
-or pillow or towel was at a premium.</p>
-
-<p>Yet we were always most glad to see visitors, and those of them
-who were soldiers had, of course, a full understanding of our
-limitations. It was not always so with others who, in the earlier
-years of the war, when all Corps had a fixed location and had
-achieved a high standard of domestic comfort, had been accustomed
-to an adequate reception.</p>
-
-<p>Upon the whole, our guests were indulgent, and understood
-that the stress of current events placed a very strict limit upon
-the amount of time that the members of my Staff or I could
-devote to them.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/map-f.jpg" width="1200" height="610" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">Map F</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
-
-Among many other distinguished men whom I had the honour
-to receive were members of the War Cabinet, such as Lord
-Milner, then Secretary of State for War, and Mr. Winston
-Churchill, the Minister of Munitions; public men, such as Sir
-Horace Plunkett and Robert Blatchford; eminent authors, such
-as Sir Conan Doyle, Sir Gilbert Parker and Ian Hay; famous
-artists, such as Louis Raemakers, Streeton and Longstaff;
-celebrated journalists, like Viscount Burnham, Thomas Marlowe
-and Cope Cornford; together with many representatives of
-the Royal Navy, and of the armies of our Allies, and Attachés
-from all the Allied Embassies.</p>
-
-<p>The Commander-in-Chief, Field Marshal Haig, was a frequent
-caller, and never departed without leaving a stimulating impression
-of his placid, hopeful and undaunted personality, nor without
-a generous recognition of the work which the Corps was doing.</p>
-
-<p>General Birdwood, also, the former Corps Commander, who
-now commanded the Fifth Army, paid several visits to the Corps,
-travelling long distances in order to speak a few encouraging words
-to the Commanders and troops with whom he had formerly been
-so long and so closely associated. He, too, was always a most
-welcome visitor. Although since the previous May he had ceased
-to control the fighting activities of the Corps, this did not lessen
-the intense pride which he took in its daily successes.</p>
-
-<p>Many of our civilian visitors thirsted for the noise and tumult
-of battle, and were most keen to get under fire, even if only of
-long-range artillery fire. This was a constant source of anxiety
-to me, for it was an unwritten law that the responsibility of their
-safe sojourn in the Corps area rested with me. More often than
-not they had to be dissuaded from visiting the forward zone, and
-induced to spend their available time in inspecting some of our
-show spots in the rearward areas, such as the Calibration ranges,
-or the Corps central telegraph station, or the Tank park, or even
-the Prisoner of War Cages, and the numerous depots of captured
-guns and war trophies.</p>
-
-<p>The Corps prisoners' cage was always, throughout the period
-of our active fighting, a scene both of great interest and much
-activity. Although all prisoners of war had to be evacuated to
-the rear usually within about twenty-four hours of their admission,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-and every day a batch marched out under escort, yet the
-Corps cage between July and October was never empty.</p>
-
-<p>When early in July the stream of prisoners began to flow in,
-and thereafter grew steadily stronger, my Intelligence Service,
-headed by Major S. A. Hunn, rose thoroughly to the occasion.
-Among our troops sufficient numbers of all ranks proficient in the
-German language were speedily found. After a little training
-they learned to deal expeditiously with the lengthy searchings
-and interrogations which followed the arrival of all new-comers.</p>
-
-<p>Documents of every description found upon prisoners excepting
-their pay-books, were seized and examined. The German
-soldier is an inveterate sender and recipient of picture postcards.
-It was surprising how much information of an invaluable character
-could be gleaned from a postcard. A date, a place name, the
-number of a Unit or Regiment, the name of a Commander,
-reference to a train journey or a fight, are often sufficient, when
-read by an expert in relation to the context, to furnish definite
-information of the whereabouts of a Division, or of the fact that
-it has been or is about to be disbanded, or of its intended movement
-to some other part of the front, or of the losses which it has
-suffered.</p>
-
-<p>All these scraps of information, when compared with similar
-items gathered on other fronts, soon enabled the whole story of
-all movement that was going on behind the enemy's lines to be
-deduced from day to day with wonderful completeness.</p>
-
-<p>So, also, maps, sketches, copies of orders, or of battle instructions,
-and the contents of note-books and of personal diaries
-always repaid the closest scrutiny. Such study produced results
-which, even if not of immediate value to me, were nevertheless
-passed on to the Army, and by them broadly promulgated, in
-daily summaries, for the benefit of all our other Corps.</p>
-
-<p>The oral interrogation of the prisoners, particularly of officers,
-often produced results of first-class importance. Information
-as to dispositions, intentions, new tactical methods or new weapons
-frequently emerged from these inquiries. It was rare that
-prisoners refused to talk, and rarer still for them to attempt to
-mislead with false information. If they did attempt it, the interrogating<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
-officer was usually sufficiently well-informed upon the
-subject of inquiry to be able to detect the inconsistency.</p>
-
-<p>As the prisoners were invariably examined separately, it was
-never difficult to discriminate between the true, upon which the
-majority of them were in agreement, and the false, upon which
-the minority never agreed.</p>
-
-<p>Should the prisoner prove uncommunicative or deceitful,
-then if he were of sufficient education to make it worth while,
-the Intelligence Officer had yet another method, besides direct
-questioning, at his disposal.</p>
-
-<p>For a certain number of our own men, who could speak German
-fluently, and who had been carefully tutored in their rôle, were
-provided with enemy uniforms, and allowed to grow a three-days'
-beard, so as to impersonate prisoners of war. These men, so
-equipped, were called "pigeons." A pigeon would be ostentatiously
-brought under escort into the prisoners' cage, and would
-sojourn for a day or more in a compartment of it among the
-specially selected genuine prisoners. He would indicate by a
-secret sign the time when he should himself be led to the Intelligence
-Office for interrogation. It was seldom that he came away
-empty-handed.</p>
-
-<p>The demeanour of our captives, on reaching the cages, varied
-widely, according to the stress which they had undergone. Some
-wore an air of abject misery, and were thoroughly cowed and
-subservient. Others were defiant, sulky and even arrogant.</p>
-
-<p>Our treatment of them was firm, but humane. Physically,
-they had nothing to complain of; they were fed and quartered
-on the same standard as our own men. But they were given to
-understand from the very outset that we would stand no
-nonsense, and that they must do exactly what they were told.
-Few of them ever gave us any real trouble.</p>
-
-<p>The subsequent employment of prisoners of war did not come
-under my jurisdiction, and it was seldom that any prisoner
-working parties were available to me. My Corps area rarely
-extended sufficiently far back from the front line to carry it
-beyond the zone in which, by agreement between the belligerents,
-the employment of prisoners of war was forbidden.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Australian soldiers are nothing if not sportsmen, and no case
-ever came under my notice of brutality or inhumanity to prisoners.
-Upon the contrary, when once a man's surrender had been
-accepted, and he had been fully disarmed, he was treated with
-marked kindness. The front line troops were always ready to
-share their water and rations with their prisoners, and cigarettes
-were distributed with a liberal hand.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, the souvenir-hunting instinct of the
-Australian led him to help himself freely to such mementos
-as our orders had not forbidden him to touch. Prisoners rarely
-got as far as the Corps cage with a full outfit of regimental buttons,
-cockades, shoulder-straps, or other accoutrements. Personal
-trinkets, pay-books, money and other individual belongings were,
-however, invariably respected; unless, as often happened, the
-prisoners themselves were anxious to trade them away to their
-captors, or escorts, for tobacco, chocolates, or other luxuries.</p>
-
-<p>Before I leave the subject of prisoners I should mention my
-impression of the German officers, particularly of those who were
-more senior in rank. Whenever a Regimental or Battalion Commander
-was captured, and time permitted, he was brought before
-me for a further interrogation. It was an experience which was
-almost universal that such officers were willing to give me little
-information which might injure their cause; on the other hand,
-they exhibited an altogether exaggerated air of wounded pride
-at their capture, and at the defeat of the troops whom they had
-commanded.</p>
-
-<p>It was that feeling of professional pique which dominated their
-whole demeanour. They were always volubly full of excuses,
-the weather, the fog, the poor <i>moral</i> of their own men, the unexpectedness
-of our attack, the Tanks, errors in their maps&mdash;anything
-at all but a frank admission of their own military
-inferiority.</p>
-
-<p>There were two amusing exceptions to this experience. The
-day after the fighting for Péronne, when a large batch of the
-prisoners then taken was being got ready to march out of the
-Corps cage, officers in one enclosure, other ranks in another,
-the senior German officer, a Regimental Commander, formally<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
-requested permission to address some eighty other officers present
-in the cage. This request was granted.</p>
-
-<p>He told them that they had fought a good fight, that their
-capture was not to their discredit, and that he would report
-favourably upon them to his superiors at the first opportunity.
-He then went on to say that on his own and on their behalf he
-desired to tender to the Australians an expression of his admiration
-for their prowess, and to make a frank acknowledgment to
-them that he fully recognized that on this occasion his garrison
-had been outclassed, out-man&oelig;uvred, and out-fought. The whole
-assembly expressed their acquiescence in these observations by
-collectively bowing gravely to the small group of my Intelligence
-Officers who were amused spectators of the scene.</p>
-
-<p>On another occasion&mdash;it was just after the battle of September
-18th&mdash;I was asking a German Battalion Commander whether he
-could explain why it was that his men had that day surrendered
-in such large numbers without much show of resistance. "Well,
-you see," said he, with a twinkle in his eye, "they are dreadfully
-afraid of the Australians. So they are of the Tanks. But when
-they saw both of them coming at them <i>together</i>, they thought it
-was high time to throw up their hands."</p>
-
-<p>But this story is slightly anticipatory. The short breathing-space
-which had been afforded by our more leisurely advance
-towards the Hindenburg system was over. By September 12th
-I was once again immersed in all the perplexities of shaping means
-to ends. I had to decide, in collaboration with the Army Staff
-and the Corps on my flanks, first, the extent of the resources which
-would be required, and second, the successive stages which would
-offer promise of success in overthrowing the last great defensive
-system of all those which the enemy had created upon the tortured
-soil of France.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIII<br />
-
-HARGICOURT</h2>
-
-
-<p>The great Hindenburg system, by which name it has come
-to be known to English readers, or the "Siegfried Line,"
-as it is called by the Germans, was brought into existence during
-the winter of 1916 and early spring of 1917 in order to fulfil a
-very definite strategic purpose. This was to put into effect, on a
-stupendous scale, a very elementary principle of minor tactics,
-namely, that field works are constructed for the purpose of reducing
-the number of men required to defend a given front or
-locality.</p>
-
-<p>In themselves, field fortifications have, of course, no offensive
-value whatever, but their use permits a reduced number of men
-to defend one place, in order that a greater number of men may be
-available to attack another place.</p>
-
-<p>The German High Command proceeded to make use of this
-principle on a scale previously unknown in history. The whole
-of the Western front, in Belgium and France, was to be held
-defensively throughout 1917. The military resources required
-to defend that front were to be reduced to a minimum, by the
-provision of a line of defences protected by powerful field works,
-believed to be impregnable. This would liberate the greatest
-possible resources for the Eastern front, where an end could be
-made of the Russians and Roumanians there. As soon as these
-were disposed of, those troops, guns and aeroplanes could again be
-transferred to the West, in order similarly to dispose of the remainder
-of our Alliance.</p>
-
-<p>This great strategic plan was carried out in its entirety until
-the middle of 1918. It was the great Hindenburg line which had
-been the kernel of the whole conception, and, until the days which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
-we are now approaching, it had remained, practically over its
-whole length, an impregnable barrier against the assaults of the
-French and British.</p>
-
-<p>It is to be remembered that the very basis which justified the
-expenditure of such enormous labour on the creation of these
-defences was the saving in man-power. It is an accepted principle
-of tactics that in any given battle the advantage always
-rests heavily on the side of the defence. Where numbers, resources
-and <i>moral</i> are equal, no attack can hope to succeed.</p>
-
-<p>If, in the teachings before the war, it was correct to say that
-a Commander should hesitate to attack unless he had a preponderance
-of men and guns of at least two to one, such a dictum
-assuredly did not take into account field defences of the permanent
-and elaborate character of the Hindenburg Line. I
-should hardly venture to fix a ratio of relative strength appropriate
-in such circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>But this much is clear. The Germans had once already relied
-successfully upon the impregnability of this great work. They
-had every justification for believing that it would once again
-serve them to keep us at bay for just a few weeks longer. Winter
-was very near, and the Entente peoples might not have been able
-to hold together to face another year of war.</p>
-
-<p>We, on our part also, had as much justification for the resolve
-that every sacrifice must be made to overthrow these defences
-before the end of 1918, and for believing that it would require a
-great, concerted and intense effort to succeed in this.</p>
-
-<p>It is quite necessary, for a due appreciation of the magnitude
-of the effort which was actually made, and of the wonderful
-success with which it was rewarded, that the nature of the
-defences of the Hindenburg Line should be clearly understood.
-This can best be done, I think, by making an endeavour to realize
-the sense of security which the possession of such a line of defence
-must have afforded to the enemy. We are here interested only
-in that portion of the line which extends from St. Quentin northwards
-towards Cambrai.</p>
-
-<p>Between these two cities the country is higher than that adjoining
-it on the north and the south. It forms, therefore, a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-watershed, dividing the basin of the Somme from that of the
-Scheldt. Early in the nineteenth century, Napoleon realized
-the ambitious project of connecting these two river systems by a
-great Canal scheme, cutting right through this high country from
-south to north.</p>
-
-<p>The canal is called, in its southern reaches, Canal de St.
-Quentin. Before Cambrai is reached it merges into the Canal
-de l'Escaut. Throughout the whole of that portion which
-concerns us, it runs in a deep cutting, reaching, for great stretches,
-a depth of 50 to 60 feet. In certain places where the ground
-rises still higher, the canal passes through in great tunnels. The
-southernmost, or Le Tronquoy Tunnel, near St. Quentin, is but
-short; the northern boasts of the imposing length of 6,000 yards,
-and extends from Bellicourt,<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> at its southern portal, to Le Catelet
-at its northern one. From that point northwards the canal
-flows in "open cut" which gradually becomes shallower as
-Cambrai is approached.</p>
-
-<p>The canal excavation&mdash;except where the tunnels occur&mdash;itself
-affords an excellent military obstacle, the passage of which
-could be stoutly contested by resolute troops well dug in on its
-eastern banks, for the descent and ascent of the slopes could be
-obstructed by wire entanglements, and swept with fire. The
-water alone, which is too deep to be waded, would seriously impede
-infantry, while the passage of tanks, guns and vehicles would
-be impossible once the few high level bridges over the canal had
-been destroyed.</p>
-
-<p>Such an obstacle would not, however, of itself fulfil the requirements
-of modern war, with its searching and destructive Artillery
-fire. It was to be regarded more as the foundation upon which
-a complete system of defences could be built, and as a last line of
-resistance <i>à outrance</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The canal had been, naturally, located by its engineers, in the
-lowest ground available, so that its course closely follows the
-lines of the minor valleys and depressions of the ground. On
-both sides, therefore, the canal is flanked by somewhat higher
-ground, from which its immediate banks can be overlooked. On
-the western side particularly, there is a regular line of such higher
-plateaux on which the villages of Villeret, Hargicourt and
-Ronssoy once stood.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span></p>
-<p>It was clearly desirable both to deprive a besieger of such
-vantage ground, and also to provide the canal defences with a
-stout outpost defence. For these reasons, the Germans had constructed
-an elaborate system of trenches on a line generally parallel
-to and on the average a full mile west of the canal. These
-trenches had been perfected with dug-outs, concrete machine
-gun and mortar emplacements, and underground shelters. They
-were protected by belt after belt of barbed wire entanglements,
-in a fashion which no one understood better, or achieved more
-thoroughly, than the Germans.</p>
-
-<p>But much more remained. Deep communication trenches
-led back to the canal banks, in the sides of which tier upon tier
-of comfortable living quarters for the troops had been tunnelled
-out. Here support and reserve troops could live in safety and
-defy our heaviest bombardments. They could be secretly hurried
-to the front trenches whenever danger threatened.</p>
-
-<p>There was, indeed, a perfect tangle of underground shelters
-and passages. Roomy dug-outs were provided with tunnelled
-ways which led to cunningly hidden machine-gun posts, and the
-best of care was taken to provide numerous exits, so that the
-occupants should not be imprisoned by the blocking of one or
-other of them by our bombardment. But it was the barbed wire
-which formed the groundwork of the defence. It was everywhere,
-and ran in all directions, cleverly disposed so as to herd the
-attackers into the very jaws of the machine guns.</p>
-
-<p>The stretch of 6,000 yards of the canal which had been
-tunnelled was, however, both a hindrance and a benefit to the
-perfection of the scheme. On the one hand, the advantage of
-the open cut, as a last obstacle, was lost. Its place had to be
-taken by a second complete system of trench and wire defences,
-roughly following the line of the tunnel, but of course far above
-the latter. On the other hand, the tunnel itself afforded secure
-living accommodation for a substantial garrison.</p>
-
-<p>The Germans had collected large numbers of canal barges,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-and had towed them into the interior of the tunnel, mooring
-them end to end. They served as living quarters and as depots
-for stores and munitions. It was no great business to provide
-electric lighting for the tunnel. Indeed, the leads for this
-purpose had been in existence before the war. Here, again,
-underground shafts and ways were cut to enable the troops
-rapidly to man the trenches and machine guns, and as rapidly to
-seek a safe asylum from the heaviest shell fire.</p>
-
-<p>The whole scheme produced, in fact, a veritable fortress&mdash;not
-one, in the popular acceptation of the term, consisting of massive
-walls and battlements, which, as was proved in the early days of
-the war at Liége and Namur, can speedily be blown to pieces
-by modern heavy artillery&mdash;but one defying destruction by any
-powers of gunnery, and presenting the most formidable difficulties
-to the bravest of Infantry.</p>
-
-<p>Even this was not all. On the east side of the St. Quentin
-Canal and parallel to it were built still two further trench lines,
-both fully protected by wire entanglements, and capable of determined
-defence. The first of these is the Le Catelet line, about
-one mile distant from the canal. It skirts and embraces the villages
-of Nauroy and Le Catelet, while two miles still further east
-is the Beaurevoir line, the last or most easterly of all the prepared
-defences which the Germans had in France.</p>
-
-<p>Neither of these latter trench systems was nearly so formidably
-prepared as the main systems previously described, but together
-with them they go to make up the whole Hindenburg defensive
-system. In this region that system runs generally due north
-and south, with many minor convolutions in its line. It is altogether
-some 4&frac12; miles across from west to east.</p>
-
-<p>As its overthrow could not be attempted in a single operation,
-it is necessary for clearness of description to give definite names
-to each of the successive lines of trenches which go to form the
-whole defence system. Taking them in the order in which we
-attacked them, from west to east, they will be referred to as:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>
-The Hindenburg Outpost line (known also in this part of the field as the Hargicourt line).<br />
-The Hindenburg main line (<i>i.e.</i>, the Canal and Tunnel line).<br />
-The Le Catelet line.<br />
-The Beaurevoir line.<br />
-</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_218fp.jpg" width="1200" height="778" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Australian Artillery&mdash;going into action at Cressaire Wood.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_219fp.jpg" width="1200" height="780" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Battle of August 8th, 1918&mdash;German prisoners being brought out of the battle under the fire of their own artillery.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>During the winter of 1917-1918 the British Fifth Army and
-the Germans had faced each other in this region for many
-months. On our side, also, a system of field defences had been
-developed. They fell far short, indeed, of the completeness and
-ingenuity of the German works, because the latter had been
-constructed at leisure, long before, while ours had been built
-under the very fire of the German guns.</p>
-
-<p>For months the opposing Artilleries had pounded the country
-to pieces, effaced every sign of civilization, and churned up the
-ground in all directions over a belt some three miles wide.
-Heaps of broken bricks marked the sites of once prosperous
-villages. Broken telegraph poles, charred tree trunks, twisted
-rails, a chaos of mangled machinery, were the only remains of
-what had once been gardens, orchards, railways and factories.
-The whole territory presented the aspect of a rolling, tumbled
-desert from which life itself had been banished.</p>
-
-<p>This was the region whose western verge the vanguard of the
-Australian advance approached on September 11th, on a frontage
-of about 8,000 yards, the northern extremity directed on Bellicourt,
-the southern on Bellenglise. That is to say, if our further
-advance had but continued unimpeded in the same due easterly
-direction, it would have brought us square upon the open
-excavation of the canal, and just clear and to the south of the
-Bellicourt&mdash;Le Catelet tunnel. Some significance attached to this
-circumstance, as will later appear.</p>
-
-<p>Now, some little time before, an event of peculiar interest had
-occurred. This was the capture, on another front, of a very
-ordinary-looking transport vehicle loaded high with miscellaneous
-baggage. Little escaped the inquisitive eyes of the
-British Intelligence Service, which speedily discovered that
-among this baggage there safely reposed a large collection of
-maps and documents. On examination these proved to be
-nothing less than the complete Defence Scheme of the whole<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-"Siegfried" system, in that very sector which now lay before
-the Australian Corps.</p>
-
-<p>These papers were carefully overhauled and arranged. There
-were dozens of accurately drawn detailed maps, and minute
-descriptions of every tactical feature of the defences. The
-position of every gun emplacement was given; every searchlight,
-machine-gun pit, observation post, telephone exchange,
-command station and mortar emplacement was clearly marked;
-the topographical and tactical features of the ground were discussed
-in minute detail, and plans for the action of every
-individual unit of the garrisons were fully displayed.</p>
-
-<p>Naturally, an army of translators and copying clerks was
-set to work upon this precious find, and my Intelligence Service
-was kept busy for many days in making for me digests of those
-items likely to prove of special interest. It had, of course, to
-be remembered that the Defence Scheme had been brought into
-operation for the campaign of 1917, and it remained to be seen
-to what extent it might by now have become obsolete.</p>
-
-<p>It was hardly to be expected that the enemy would adhere
-to it in its entirety, especially if he were aware, as I was bound
-to assume that he was, that all this information had fallen into
-our hands. But the Scheme contained a full exposition of many
-important topographical facts which it was in any case beyond
-his power to alter, and which it was of priceless value for me to
-know.</p>
-
-<p>Although I had to devote hour upon hour to a concentrated
-study of these papers, it proved to be in greater part labour in
-vain so far as the Australian Corps was concerned, because it
-ultimately came about that although I did carry out the attack
-upon the Hindenburg outpost line in my present sector, the
-attack upon the Hindenburg main line, which I was, later,
-called upon to make, took place in the next adjoining sector to
-the north, <i>i.e.</i>, the Bellicourt tunnel sector, to which these
-captured documents only incidentally referred. Nevertheless,
-the Ninth Corps, under Braithwaite, ultimately got the full benefit
-of these discoveries.</p>
-
-<p>The production of these documents on September 10th formed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
-the starting point of the discussions which were now initiated in
-the Fourth Army upon the question of the series of operations
-necessary to overthrow the Hindenburg defences. General
-Rawlinson, on September 13th, asked his three Corps Commanders
-(Butler, now restored to health and back at duty, Braithwaite
-and myself) to meet him at my newly-installed hutted camp
-at Assevillers. There, quite informally, over a cup of afternoon
-tea, the great series of operations took birth which so directly
-helped to finish the war.</p>
-
-<p>It was decided that the operation must necessarily be divided
-into two main phases&mdash;separated in point of time by an interval
-of several days for further preparation. All of us recognized the
-impossibility of overrunning, in a single day, so deep and formidable
-a system of defences, in such tortured country, and in
-weather which was already becoming unsettled.</p>
-
-<p>The first phase was to be an attempt to capture the Hindenburg
-outpost line, along the whole Army front. The French and
-the Third British Armies were to be asked to make a synchronized
-attack on the same objective. The three Corps of the Fourth
-Army were to attack upon the frontages and in the sectors on
-which they then stood. The date was left undecided, but all
-were to be ready at three days' notice.</p>
-
-<p>One important consideration was the meagre supply of Tanks
-available. The operations of August had been costly, not to say
-extravagant, in Tanks, and General Elles' repair workshops,
-manned largely by very competent Chinese coolie mechanics,
-had been working night and day ever since to repair the minor
-damages, and new Tanks were steadily arriving from England
-to replace those damaged beyond repair. But no large contingent
-of Tanks was to be expected until towards the end of
-the month. The upshot was that I was to be content with only
-eight Tanks for use in the contemplated operation.</p>
-
-<p>Late the same afternoon I communicated to Generals Maclagan
-and Glasgow an outline of the probable rôle of their respective
-Divisions in the very near future.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime, the front-line troops had not been idle.
-My orders were that the First and Fourth Divisions were to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
-carry the line forward as far as possible towards the Hindenburg
-outpost line, without committing the Corps to an organized
-attack. They were to operate by vigorous patrol action against
-enemy points of resistance, for the enemy had evidently no
-intention of quietly giving up the ground which lay between us
-and the Hindenburg outpost line. On the contrary, he had
-posted strong rearguards on every point of tactical value, and
-did his best to keep us as long as possible at arm's length, and
-beyond striking distance of his first great line of defence.</p>
-
-<p>These orders were entirely to the taste of the two Divisions now
-in the line. The First Division had served its apprenticeship
-to that very kind of fighting in the Merris area in the previous
-spring, and the Fourth Division did not mean to be a second
-best. Each Division stood on a one-Brigade front, being ordered
-to keep its other two Brigades well out of harm's way and
-resting, for any great effort that might be required.</p>
-
-<p>The next few days witnessed some daring exploits on the
-part of the 13th Brigade of the Fourth Division and the 2nd
-Brigade of the First Division in the capture of tactical points,
-and in the bloody repulse of all attempts by the enemy to
-recapture them. In this way our line was carried up to and a
-little beyond what had been the old British reserve line of
-trenches of March, 1918, which lay within 5,000 yards of the
-final objective of the first phase of the contemplated operations.</p>
-
-<p>On September 16th I called together the whole of the Commanders
-who were to participate in the next great battle,
-Maclagan (Fourth Division), Glasgow (First Division), Courage
-(Tanks), Chamier (Air Force), Fraser (Heavy Artillery), and the
-four Generals of my own Staff. The conference took place in a
-Y.M.C.A. marquee erected near Maclagan's Headquarters, and
-I was able to announce that the date had been fixed for September
-18th.</p>
-
-<p>The contemplated battle presented only a few novel features.
-The methods of the Corps were becoming stereotyped, and by this
-time we all began to understand each other so well that most of
-what I had to say could almost be taken for granted. Each<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
-Commander was ready to anticipate the action that would be
-required of him, almost as soon as I had unfolded the general
-plan.</p>
-
-<p>The shortage of Tanks was a source of much anxiety to me.
-I felt that it would mean a heavier risk to the Infantry, and the
-contemplation of losses among our splendid men, which might
-be lessened by the more liberal use of mechanical aids, always
-sorely troubled me. I endeavoured to meet the situation by
-adopting two unusual expedients.</p>
-
-<p>The first was to <i>double</i> the machine-gun resources of the two
-battle Divisions. This was effected by bringing up the complete
-machine-gun battalions of the Third and Fifth Divisions, and
-adding them to those of the line Divisions. This gave me a
-total of 256 Vickers Machine Guns on a frontage now reduced
-to 7,000 yards. It enabled me to deliver so dense a machine-gun
-barrage, advancing 300 yards ahead of the infantry, that to
-quote the words of a German Battalion Commander who was
-captured on September 18th: "The small-arms fire was absolutely
-too terrible for words. There was nothing to be done but
-to crouch down in our trenches and wait for you to come and
-take us."</p>
-
-<p>The other expedient was amusing, although no less effective.
-This was to make up for the shortage of real Tanks by fabricating
-a number of dummy ones. As soon as the word went
-round Engineers and Pioneers vied with each other in rapid
-"Tank" manufacture. Dumps and stores were clandestinely
-robbed of hessian, paint, wire nails, and battens, and some
-weird monstrosities were produced. The best and most plausible
-of them were selected, and actually used on the day of the battle.
-Four men dragged out each dummy, before dawn, into a position
-from which it was bound to be seen by the enemy and there
-abandoned it. There is little doubt that this trick contributed
-its share to the day's astonishing success.</p>
-
-<p>Once again, also, I put into practice the principle of an Artillery
-barrage plan reduced to the utmost simplicity. This, as already
-described, consisted in having the line, on which were to fall
-the shells from the whole of the barrage guns employed, perfectly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
-straight across the whole front, so as to avoid all complexities
-in fire direction.</p>
-
-<p>The first line on which the barrage fell was called the Artillery
-"Start Line," and from such a line the barrage advanced, by
-regular leaps or "lifts" of 100 yards at a time, in perfectly parallel
-lines, until the final objective was reached. Now, experience had
-shown that such a start line for the Artillery should be at least
-200 yards in advance of the line on which the Infantry were to
-form up ready for the assault. A liberal margin of space had to
-be allowed, in order to minimize the risks to our own Infantry.</p>
-
-<p>The Artillery "Start Line" was defined on our fighting maps.
-The guns were laid upon it by methods which depended upon
-accurate surveys, on the ground, of the exact position of every
-gun. When that had been determined, the map and compass
-helped to decide the range and alignment upon which the gun
-should open fire.</p>
-
-<p>On the map, also, was drawn another line 200 yards short of,
-or on our side of the Artillery "Start Line," and this was called
-the Infantry "Start Line." It then became necessary to determine,
-upon the actual ground, the position of this Infantry
-Start Line, and to mark it in such a way that the Infantry would
-be enabled to take up their correct positions. This would ensure
-that the Infantry would know that the fall of our opening barrage
-would be 200 yards in advance of the line so marked.</p>
-
-<p>This delicate work of marking out of the Infantry Start Line
-on the ground was invariably entrusted to the Engineers attached
-to the Brigades co-operating in the attack. The marking was
-done by laying out and pegging down broad tapes of white linen,
-which could be recognized in the dim light of early dawn. The
-whole work, had, of course, to be done unobserved by the enemy,
-and it was always a dangerous task.</p>
-
-<p>Only the fact that we were in possession of reliable large scale
-maps, recording every feature of the ground, made it possible
-for the Engineers, resourceful as they were, to do this delicate
-work with reasonable accuracy. The battered condition of the
-country was always a difficulty; for it was never easy to recognize,
-on the ground, reference points, such as a road intersection, or
-the corner of a field, or a crucifix or similar land mark, which might
-aid the surveyors in getting their bearings.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 826px;">
-<img src="images/map-g.jpg" width="826" height="1200" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">Map G</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Infantry Start Line had, naturally, to be located so that
-the ground upon which the tapes were to be pegged down was
-ground which was already within our possession, or accessible
-to us without coming dangerously near the enemy. It was
-a necessary consequence that portions of our always irregular
-front line of posts or trenches would lie beyond or on the
-enemy's side of the tape line.</p>
-
-<p>It was always a rule of our practice, therefore, that any Infantry
-posted in advance of the taped line should be withdrawn, behind
-the tapes, an hour before the time of Zero. It was also customary
-to order that all assaulting troops should be spread, in their
-appropriate dispositions, along the tape line, also one hour
-before Zero.</p>
-
-<p>The result of these arrangements was that for the last hour
-before the actual opening of the battle, all Infantry intended to
-take part in the assault was deployed along the tapes in a perfectly
-straight line, all along the battle front, while no troops
-previously in occupation of posts or trenches in advance of the
-tapes were left out in front, exposed to the risk of either being
-hit by our own Artillery, or mistaken, in the half light of dawn, for
-enemies by our own Infantry.</p>
-
-<p>Complex and difficult as these arrangements may appear
-from this description, they worked out in actual practice with
-the utmost smoothness. The resulting simplification of the
-Artillery plans, in this as in similar previous battles, more than
-justified their adoption.</p>
-
-<p>A liberal use was also made of direction boards, which marked
-the routes by which each separate body of assaulting Infantry
-should, during the last night, march from its place of assembly
-to the taped line or "jumping off" line, and also to mark the position
-which it was to take up upon that line. Each board had
-painted upon it the name of the unit to which it referred. Such
-preparatory measures, troublesome as they were, greatly reduced
-the risk of any confusion or mistake, and lessened the fatigue of
-the assaulting troops.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The moon would set, on the morning of the battle, at 3.37 a.m.,
-and the sun would rise at 6.27 a.m. Zero hour, for the opening
-of the attack, was therefore fixed for twenty minutes past five.</p>
-
-<p>Operations began inauspiciously. A soaking rain set in some
-two hours before, and made movement over the broken, clayey
-surface anything but pleasant. Although the troops were soon
-drenched to the skin, this did not in any way damp their spirits.
-It probably added much to the misery of the enemy, who could
-hardly fail to realize that, on any morning, a fresh attack might
-break upon him.</p>
-
-<p>Modern war is in many ways unlike the wars of previous days,
-but in nothing so much as in the employment of what I have
-more than once referred to as "set-piece" operations. The term
-is one which should convey its own meaning. It is the direct
-result of the great extension, which this war has introduced,
-of mechanical warfare. It is a "set-piece" because the stage
-is elaborately set, parts are written for all the performers, and
-carefully rehearsed by many of them. The whole performance
-is controlled by a time-table, and, so long as all goes according to
-plan, there is no likelihood of unexpected happenings, or of
-interesting developments.</p>
-
-<p>The Artillery barrage advances from line to line, in regular
-leaps, at regulated intervals of time, determined beforehand,
-and incapable of alteration once the battle has begun. Should
-the rate prove too slow and the Infantry could have advanced
-more quickly, it cannot be helped, and no great harm is done.
-On the other hand, if there be any risk of the barrage rate being
-too fast, one or two halts of ten or fifteen minutes are often
-introduced into the time-table to allow the infantry line, or any
-part of it which may be hung up for any reason, to catch up.</p>
-
-<p>Following the barrage, comes line upon line of infantry in
-skirmishing order, together with the line of Tanks when such are
-used. The foremost lines advance to capture and hold the
-ground, the lines in rear to "mop up" and deal with the enemy
-either showing fight or hiding underground, the rearmost lines
-collect prisoners or our own wounded, or carry supplies, tools
-and ammunition.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In a well-planned battle of this nature, fully organized, powerfully
-covered by Artillery and Machine Gun barrages, given a resolute
-Infantry and that the enemy's guns are kept successfully
-silenced by our own counter-battery Artillery, nothing happens,
-nothing can happen, except the regular progress of the advance
-according to the plan arranged. The whole battle sweeps relentlessly
-and methodically across the ground until it reaches the line
-laid down as the final objective.</p>
-
-<p>Such a set-piece battle lasts usually, from first to last, for
-80 to 100 minutes; seldom for more. When the Artillery
-programme is ended the battle is either completely won, or
-to all intents and purposes completely lost. If the barrage
-for any reason gets away from our Infantry, and they are relegated
-to hand to hand fighting in order to complete their advance,
-the battle immediately assumes a totally different character,
-and is no longer a set-piece affair.</p>
-
-<p>It will be obvious, therefore, that the more nearly such a
-battle proceeds according to plan, the more free it is from any
-incidents awakening any human interest. Only the externals
-and only the large aspects of such battles can be successfully
-recorded. It is for this reason that no stirring accounts exist
-of the more intimate details of such great set-pieces as Messines,
-Vimy, Hamel and many others. They will never be written, for
-there is no material upon which to base them. The story of what
-did take place on the day of battle would be a mere paraphrase
-of the battle orders prescribing all that was to take
-place.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand battles such as the second phase of August
-8th, the battle for Mont St. Quentin, and the later battles of
-Bony and Beaurevoir were not set-piece operations. Therefore
-the developments from hour to hour, and even from moment
-to moment, are full of intense human interest, and replete with
-tales of individual courage and initiative. Some day, when all
-the material has been gathered, an abler pen than mine will
-write their story.</p>
-
-<p>If the reader will bear in mind all these considerations, with
-special reference to the battle of Hargicourt on September 18th<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
-he will realize that, in describing the dispositions, the objectives,
-the time-table and the preparations for the battle, I have told
-practically all that there is to tell of the course it took, except only
-as regards the results actually achieved, in ground won and
-prisoners taken.</p>
-
-<p>It has been difficult, nevertheless, to refrain from dwelling in
-detail upon the performances and experiences in battle of the
-individual fighting men. Any attempt to do so would, however,
-prove hopelessly inadequate. The numbers engaged were always
-so large, their activities so varied, the conditions of each battle
-so different in detail, that to do adequate justice and avoid
-unfair discrimination would make impossible demands upon the
-space available to me.</p>
-
-<p>Popular interest naturally centres upon the Infantry, not only
-because they are the most numerous, but also because they are
-invariably in the forefront of the battle and often in immediate
-contact with the enemy. Without the slightest disparagement
-to the important rôle of the Infantryman and to the valour
-which its performance demands, it must never be forgotten that
-the work of the Artillery, Engineers, Pioneers, Machine Gunners,
-Trench Mortars, Air Service and Tanks is in every way equally
-important and essential to the success of any battle operation.
-Yet it is equally true that no battle can be won without the
-Infantry.</p>
-
-<p>In a deliberately prepared battle it is not too much to say that
-the rôle of the Infantry is not, as a rule, the paramount one,
-provided that all goes well and that there is no breakdown in any
-part of the battle plan. That does not, however, imply that the
-Infantry task makes no high demand upon courage and resolution.
-On the contrary, these are the essentials upon which
-the success of the Infantry rôle and therefore of the whole battle
-depends.</p>
-
-<p>The primary duty of the Infantry, in an assault covered by an
-Artillery barrage, is to follow up the barrage closely. The
-barrage is nothing more nor less than a steady shower of shells,
-bursting over the very heads of the leading lines of Infantry, and
-striking the ground some 80 to 120 yards in front of them. This<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
-shower is usually so dense that three to four shells per minute
-fall on every twenty yards of frontage. It is so intense a fire that
-no enemy, however courageous, could remain exposed to it. It
-falls on one line for three or four minutes, while the Infantry lie
-down flat. Suddenly, the barrage "lifts" or advances 100 yards.
-At a signal from the platoon or company commander the whole
-line rises and rushes at top speed to catch up to the barrage, again
-to throw itself flat upon the ground.</p>
-
-<p>So long as no enemy are encountered, these successive rushes
-may go on without check for hundreds of yards. If during the
-course of any rush, trenches or strong points are met with and
-they contain enemy who do not immediately surrender, prompt
-use must be made of rifle and bayonet. But it is the primary
-business of the leading line of Infantry to push on and not to
-delay by engaging in close combat. The second and third lines
-of Infantry are there to "mop up," that is, to dispose, by destruction
-or capture, of any enemy overrun or ignored by the
-leading line. Where Tanks co-operate that is also their special
-business, and when it has been attended to they go forward at
-top speed to rejoin the leading line.</p>
-
-<p>In such a methodical way the advance continues until the
-final objective is reached. This event can be recognized by the
-Infantry in any of three ways, firstly by reference to the clock
-time; for the arrival of the barrage at any line on the map or
-ground occurs in pursuance of a definite time-table; secondly by
-the topographical features, and thirdly by the expedient of
-maintaining the barrage stationary at the final objective for
-fifteen to thirty minutes. In some battles, I also adopted the
-device of firing from every gun in the barrage, three rounds of
-smoke shell in rapid succession, as a signal to the Commanders
-of the leading line of Infantry to call the final halt, to select a good
-line for trenches, and to dig-in rapidly, a process technically
-called "consolidation."</p>
-
-<p>It would be too much to hope that in an attack covering
-a front of four or five miles, every part of the line should be able
-to advance without any check whatever up to the final halting
-place. But the expectation always is that by far the greater<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-part of the whole line will be able to do so. If, here and there
-along the front, platoons or even whole companies were to be
-held up or delayed by special difficulties or obstacles such as
-thickets, or copses strongly manned by the enemy, or by belts
-of wire, or village ruins, such breaks in the general line of advance
-would matter but little to the success of the operations as
-a whole. The gaps discovered in the leading line of Infantry,
-when it had come to a halt at the final objective, would be
-speedily filled by supporting troops from both flanks of the gap,
-and thereby the enemy holding out further back, would be completely
-enveloped. His surrender would follow as soon as he
-realized his position, and that he had been cut off from any
-contact with his friends in his rear.</p>
-
-<p>Such is the normal course of the Infantry action in a pitched
-battle. It makes great demands upon the iron resolution of
-the Infantryman to push on vigorously against all obstacles, and
-to put forth his utmost physical powers to keep up with the
-barrage, especially when the ground is wet and sticky, or when
-uncut wire has to be crawled through. All this he must do,
-utterly regardless of the enemy fire which may be directed against
-him, whether from Artillery or machine guns. His best hope
-of immunity is always to make his rush rapidly and determinedly,
-and to get to ground immediately that he reaches the halting
-place, close up to the barrage, when signalled by his officer.</p>
-
-<p>Very different from such a stereotyped procedure is the action
-of the Infantry in any operation or any part of an operation
-which partakes of the character of open warfare. The main
-tactical purpose is still, as before, to advance to the seizure of an
-appointed objective, but there is no barrage, no time-table, no
-fixity of route, no prescribed formation or procedure. Everything
-must be left to the judgment, initiative and enterprise of
-the leader on the spot.</p>
-
-<p>The tactical unit of Infantry is the platoon. The action of a
-whole battalion is compounded merely of the separate actions of
-its sixteen platoons, each performing the separate rôle, in a
-general plan, that may be laid down by the Battalion Commanders,
-some to advance and fight, some to act in support, some to lie<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
-in reserve, some to engage in a flank attack, others to fetch and
-carry food, water and munitions.</p>
-
-<p>The platoon is commanded by a Lieutenant and comprises
-four sections, each under a Sergeant or Corporal. There are two
-sections of riflemen, a Lewis gun section and a section of rifle
-grenadiers. Each section may consist of from five to eight
-men. Let it be supposed that it is the business of the platoon to
-capture a small farmhouse which the enemy has fortified and in
-which he is holding out. Always supposing that the enemy
-garrison is not of a strength requiring more than one platoon
-for its capture the normal action of the attacking platoon would
-be somewhat as follows. The Lewis gun section would, from a
-concealed position, on one flank, keep the place under steady
-fire. The rifle grenadiers from the same or another flank would
-fire smoke grenades to make a smoke screen. One section of
-riflemen would endeavour to sneak up depressions and ditches
-or along hedges, so as to get well behind the farm and threaten
-it by fire from the rear. The other section of riflemen would
-choose some direct line of attack, over ground which offered concealment
-to them until they were close enough to take the objective
-with a rush.</p>
-
-<p>Such in very bare outline is merely an imaginary example,
-but it is sufficient to show the amount of skill, resource and
-energy required on the part not only of the leader, but also of
-every man in the platoon. The secret of success of the Australian
-open fighting lay in the extraordinary vigour, judgment and team-work
-which characterized the many hundreds of little platoon
-battles which were fought on just such lines as I have tried to
-suggest in this example.</p>
-
-<p>It will be readily seen that no comprehensive description
-is possible which would present an adequate picture of the widely
-varying activities of the Australian Infantryman in this campaign.
-There is only one source from which reliable narratives of individual
-fighting can be gathered, and that source is so voluminous
-that space forbids any but a meagre attempt to supply extracts
-from it. I refer to the recommendations made by Commanders
-for honours and rewards for individual acts of gallantry. A<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-very small selection of these has been made and is presented in an
-appendix to this book.<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a></p>
-
-<p>But to return to my narrative of September 18th. On that
-day each Division attacked on a frontage of two Brigades. No
-serious opposition was encountered except at La Verguier, which
-was not far from our start line. Nevertheless, the whole of the
-"red" line, which was the objective of the "set-piece" phase of
-the day's battle, was in our possession, throughout the whole
-length of the Corps front, well before 10 o'clock.</p>
-
-<p>This gave us complete possession of the old British front line
-of March, 1918; but the Hindenburg outpost line yet lay before
-us, still distant another 1,500 to 2,000 yards. This latter line
-was to be the ultimate or exploitation objective of the day's
-operations, and I could hardly have dared to hope that a trench
-system of such considerable strength, which had defied the Fifth
-Army for so long, would fall into our hands so easily as it did.</p>
-
-<p>Glasgow's Division pushed on without pause, and before
-nightfall had overwhelmed the garrison of the Hindenburg
-outpost line along its front. Maclagan's Division also fought
-its way forward to within 500 yards of that line. But the troops
-were by then very exhausted; all movement was in full view
-of the enemy; and the ground was very difficult. After a
-consultation with Maclagan I decided to rest the troops, and to
-make an attempt to reach the final objective (blue line) that same
-night.</p>
-
-<p>Advantage was taken of this pause to advance the Artillery,
-so that the enemy's defences could be thoroughly bombarded
-before the final assault. At 11 o'clock the same night, the
-Fourth Division again attacked, and after severe fighting also
-captured the whole of the objective trench system.</p>
-
-<p>It was a great victory. The Hindenburg outpost line had been
-vanquished. From it we could now look down upon the St.
-Quentin Canal, and sweep with fire the whole of the sloping
-ground which lay between us and the Canal, denying the use of
-that ground to the enemy, and making it impossible for him to
-withdraw the guns and stores which littered the area.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span></p>
-<p>The overwhelming nature of the success can best be realized
-by the following almost incredible analysis of the material results
-of the day's fighting. The First Division attacked with a total
-strength of 2,854 Infantry. They suffered only 490 casualties
-(killed and wounded). They captured 1,700 prisoners, apart
-from the large numbers who were killed, and the wounded enemy
-who made good their escape.</p>
-
-<p>The Fourth Division had a total assaulting strength of 3,048
-of all ranks, of whom 532 became casualties. Their captures
-of live prisoners amounted to 2,543.</p>
-
-<p>In addition, the Corps gathered in upwards of 80 guns, which
-had been overrun, and had to be abandoned by the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>There is no record in this war of any previous success on such
-a scale, won with so little loss.</p>
-
-<p>The Corps on either flank of me had successes of varying
-quality. The Ninth Corps on the south had reached the red line,
-but the exploitation phase of the operation was not pressed
-until a later day. The Third Corps, on my left, however, made
-indifferent progress. Their line still bent back sharply from my
-left flank, and none of the enemy's outpost system had been
-gained. This portion of the Army front was that which lay
-square opposite the Bellicourt tunnel, and the fact that in this
-part of the field the Fourth Army had not yet mastered the
-Hindenburg outpost system was to be fraught with very serious
-difficulties for me, not many days later.</p>
-
-<p>The general plan propounded by General Rawlinson on
-September 13th had been realized in part, although not in its
-entirety. The successes gained on September 18th were nevertheless
-sufficiently important and decisive to justify immediate
-preparations for working out the plan for a great, combined and
-final effort to sweep the enemy out of the remainder of the last
-lines of defence which he had established in France.</p>
-
-<p>The First and Fourth Australian Divisions had, however,
-as it turned out, fought their last fight in the war. Their long
-and brilliant fighting career, which had been opened three and a
-half years before, the one on the cliffs of Gallipoli, and the other
-in the desert of Egypt, thus ended in a blaze of glory. Although<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
-a number of the officers and non-commissioned officers of both
-these Divisions were called upon, very shortly after, to render
-one more valuable service to the Australian Corps, the Divisions
-themselves were destined, because of the termination of hostilities,
-not again to make their appearance on any battle front. Their
-labours ended, the troops were taken by motor bus and railway
-to a coastal district lying to the south-west of Amiens, there to
-rest and recuperate in the contemplation of a noble past devoted
-to the service of the Empire.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> See Map H.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> See Appendix B.</p></div></div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XIV<br />
-
-AMERICA JOINS IN</h2>
-
-
-<p>I had foreseen that the battle to be fought on September 18th
-was the last in which the First and Fourth Divisions could
-be called upon to participate during the remainder of the 1918
-campaigning season. The wastage of their Battalions had gone
-on faster than the inflow of fresh drafts, or the return of convalescent
-sick and wounded. These two Divisions contained
-the original sixteen Battalions who had immortalized themselves,
-in 1915, in the landing on Gallipoli. I was strongly averse from
-disbanding any one of them to furnish drafts for the remainder.
-My hope then was that, if these Divisions could be allowed to rest
-over the winter, they could be sufficiently replenished by the spring
-of 1919 to be able to maintain all sixteen Battalions at a satisfactory
-fighting strength.</p>
-
-<p>Of the remaining three Divisions, the Third and Fifth required
-at least another week's rest; and I had promised the Second
-Division that after their heroic efforts at Mont St. Quentin, they
-would not be again called upon until towards the end of September.
-I would thus be left with insufficient resources to maintain an
-immediate continuance of the pressure upon the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>On explaining the situation to General Rawlinson, he suggested
-the interesting possibility of being able to obtain, very shortly,
-the services of the Second American Corps of two Divisions, and
-asked me whether I would be prepared to accept the responsibility
-of taking this large force under my command for the continuance
-of the operations.</p>
-
-<p>I had no reason to hesitate. My experience of the quality
-of the American troops, both at the battle of Hamel and on the
-Chipilly spur, had been eminently satisfactory. It was true that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
-this new American Corps had no previous battle service, but
-measures were possible to supply them with any technical guidance
-which they might lack.</p>
-
-<p>I therefore accepted the suggestion, and Rawlinson then asked
-me to submit a proposal for a joint operation to take place towards
-the end of the month by these two American and the remaining
-three Australian Divisions, with the object of completing the
-task, so well begun, of breaking through the Hindenburg
-defences. I was to propose my objectives, to show how I intended
-to employ each of the five Divisions, and also to set out my requirements
-in Artillery, Tanks and other services.</p>
-
-<p>It was anything but an easy task, and it had to be undertaken
-at a time when the preparations for the battle of Hargicourt
-were uppermost in my mind. Much time also had to be devoted
-to numerous distinguished visitors.</p>
-
-<p>The outcome was a letter to the Fourth Army which foreshadowed,
-almost in its entirety, the battle plan which subsequently
-was actually employed. The substance of this letter
-is here reproduced. The text has been modified only by the
-omission of the reference letters to a large coloured map which
-accompanied it:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<div class="right">
-Corps Headquarters,<br />
-18th September, 1918.<br />
-</div>
-
-<p><i>Fourth Army.</i></p>
-
-<p>1. I beg to submit the outlines of a plan for a series of
-operations for the capture of the Hindenburg Line in the
-Sector Bellicourt-Vendhuille, based upon the expectation
-that two American Divisions will be available immediately
-to supplement this Corps.</p>
-
-<p>2. The resources of the Corps in Infantry, which will
-be available, are exclusive of the First and Fourth Australian
-Divisions, although the Artillery, Technical Troops
-and Machine Gun Battalions of those Divisions will continue
-to be available.</p>
-
-<p>3. The plan is based upon the assumption that the
-objective Blue Line of the operations of September 18th<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
-is in our possession all along the Army Front, or can be
-seized in the very near future.</p>
-
-<p>4. The accompanying Map shows the coloured lines
-referred to in the following description, as also the reference
-letters in blue.</p>
-
-<p>5. This plan is in outline only, and the various objective
-lines and boundaries suggested are merely tentative, to form
-the basis for a general plan.</p>
-
-<p>6. The Blue Line is the line of eventual exploitation for
-the operations of September 18th.</p>
-
-<p>7. The present Corps front on the Blue Line extends
-a distance of 6,000 yards. It is suggested, either that the
-Corps front should be extended to a total frontage of 10,000
-yards, or that it should be side-slipped northwards to a
-frontage of 6,000 yards. The latter would obviously be
-preferable, so far as the Corps is concerned, as enabling all
-its resources to be concentrated upon a smaller frontage.</p>
-
-<p>8. The major outlines of the plan are as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(a) An attack by two American Divisions for the
-capture of the Green Line.</p>
-
-<p>(b) A subsequent attack by two Australian Divisions
-for the capture of the Red Line.</p>
-
-<p>(c) Exploitation by the Cavalry from the Red Line,
-in an Easterly and north-easterly direction.</p>
-
-<p>(d) A turning movement by the Ninth Corps, through
-Bellicourt and Nauroy to turn the Canal defences,
-operating from north to south&mdash;or alternatively.</p>
-
-<p>(e) A turning movement by the Third Corps, operating
-through Le Catelet northwards.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>9. The details of the above plan will run on the following
-lines:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(a) The new Corps front to be taken over at the
-earliest possible moment by two American Divisions,
-each Division deploying for this purpose only one
-Regiment of one Brigade. This will place in Line six
-Battalions on the Corps front, giving each Battalion
-about 1,000 yards. These troops will hold the line
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>defensively, and will, with the assistance of technical
-troops, prepare the battle front.</p>
-
-<p>(b) The battle troops of the two American Divisions
-will thus comprise three Regiments or nine Battalions
-for each Division. The allocation of objectives to these
-troops will be as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(i) One Brigade (two Regiments) of the right
-Division to advance 4,500 yards on a frontage of
-3,000 yards. This Brigade (six Battalions) would
-attack with four Battalions in Line (750 yards
-frontage each) and two Battalions in support for
-"mopping up" duties. Its principal objective,
-apart from the main trench systems, is Bellicourt.</p>
-
-<p>(ii) Similarly, one Brigade (two Regiments) of
-the left Division, with similar dispositions. Its
-principal objective, apart from the main trench
-systems, is Catelet.</p>
-
-<p>(iii) The odd Regiment of the right Division to
-be responsible for forming the south defensive flank.</p>
-
-<p>(iv) The odd Regiment of the left Division to be
-responsible for forming the north defensive flank.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>(c) It will be noted that the Green Line has been
-drawn so as to include all ground giving good observation
-northward, eastward and southwards, and to
-deny observation to the enemy. It is probable that
-the Field Artillery barrage will not be able to penetrate
-to the extreme limits of this proposed objective along
-the whole battle front without moving forward some of
-the batteries, particularly in the Northern Divisional
-Sector. This will probably necessitate a halt of an
-hour or an hour and a half, to enable Artillery to be
-advanced.</p>
-
-<p>(d) Assuming that the battle opens about 6 a.m., the
-Green Line should be reached by 10 a.m. or earlier.
-By mobilizing ample resources in technical troops,
-both American and Australian, and ample tools and
-engineering material, it should be easily possible to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>construct not less than four roads, sufficiently developed
-for horse transport, from the Blue Line to the Green
-Line, by 2 p.m. These roads would be located so as
-to make use of existing roads, and trench crossings
-would be made by filling in with earth and not by
-bridging. It is estimated, therefore, that Mobile
-Artillery could move forward not later than 2 p.m. on
-Zero day.</p>
-
-<p>(e) The Australian Infantry of two Divisions would
-move at such an hour as would enable them to reach and
-be deployed upon the Green Line by 2 p.m., shortly
-after which hour they would be joined by the necessary
-Mobile Artillery. This phase of the operation would
-also involve the capture of the Beaurevoir Line. It is
-assumed that Tanks would be available to deal with
-the crossing of the wire entanglements covering this
-line.</p>
-
-<p>(f) The completion of the defensive flanks would be
-allocated to American troops.</p>
-
-<p>(g) As soon as the Australian Infantry had passed the
-Green Line, the four American Regiments who had
-participated in the capture of the Green Line, would
-be concentrated, refitted and rested for operations
-eastwards.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>10. The following considerations should be kept in view,
-in connection with this plan.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(a) There should be sufficient Field Artillery, not
-merely to provide an effective barrage for the time-table
-advance to the Green Line and its flanks, but also,
-in addition, sufficient Mobile Field Artillery, not
-employed in the barrage, to enable the Australian
-Infantry to be provided with at least six Artillery
-Brigades for the exploitation phase of the operation.</p>
-
-<p>(b) There should be at least 60 Tanks available
-for the first phase, in order absolutely to guarantee
-the breaching of the main Hindenburg trench systems.
-There should, in addition, be available not less than
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>30 Tanks to assist the Australian Infantry through
-the Beaurevoir Line.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>11. There should be a systematic destructive bombardment
-of the whole of the Hindenburg trench system on the
-battle front, lasting at least four days, in order not merely
-to destroy the defensive organization, but also to demoralize
-and starve the trench garrisons. This destructive bombardment
-should extend a considerable distance to the
-north and south of the battle front.</p>
-
-<p>12. The rapid construction of usable roads, both for
-horse transport and mechanical transport, across the Canal
-tunnel, would have to be a special feature of the organization,
-so that the whole of our battle organization could be
-rapidly carried forward to maintain the battle eastward of
-the Red Line. This would involve the mobilization of a
-large amount of mechanical transport, ready loaded with
-road-stone, so that road-making can commence after Zero
-hour without any delay. For these works, there would be
-available the greater part of the Australian and American
-technical troops of seven Divisions, as well as Army Troops
-Companies.</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-<span class="smcap">John Monash</span>,<br />
-Lieut.-General.<br />
-Commanding Australian Corps.<br />
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>Some comment is necessary upon this proposal. The composition
-of the American Divisions, following the French and not
-the British precedent, differed materially from my own Divisions.
-The American Division consisted of two Brigades, each of two
-Regiments, each of three Battalions. Its total strength was
-nearly double that of an English Division.</p>
-
-<p>It will be noted that my proposal involved a concentrated
-attack, not upon the canal, but upon that sector of 6,000 yards
-which lay over the Bellicourt-Catelet tunnel. This zone at that
-time lay clear of and to the north of my Corps area, and that is
-what involved the necessity of "side-slipping" the Corps front
-to the north.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_240fp.jpg" width="1200" height="766" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Mont St. Quentin&mdash;Collecting Australian wounded under the protection of the Red Cross flag, September 1st, 1918.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_241fp.jpg" width="1200" height="765" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>An Ammunition Dump&mdash;established in Warfusee village on August 8th, 1918, after its capture the same morning.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Moreover, I put forward no suggestion that the Canal sector,
-then in front of me, should be the subject of a frontal attack at
-all. My proposal was that it should be taken by envelopment,
-through the breach to be made over the tunnel. At the time I
-regarded it as unlikely that the deep canal itself could be stormed
-except at great cost. I was not prepared to commit any Australian
-troops under my command to such an enterprise, and
-therefore naturally hesitated to propose that any other Corps
-should attempt it. For this reason I submitted an alternative
-plan of envelopment.</p>
-
-<p>This was, however, a matter for the Army Commander to
-decide. My business was merely to show that the proposed action
-of my own Corps permitted of the co-operation of the other Corps
-of the Army in a specified way.</p>
-
-<p>General Rawlinson's decisions were given on September 19th,
-at a conference which he assembled at my Headquarters. My
-plan for the action of the Australian and American Corps was to
-be adopted in its entirety, with the sole exception that the
-capture of the Beaurevoir line, on the first day of battle, was not
-to be included in the plan. It was to be left to await the results
-of the prior stages. In this modification I could readily concur.</p>
-
-<p>As regards the action of the flank Corps, General Rawlinson
-held the view that a direct assault on the canal itself ought to be
-attempted, and that this should be entrusted to the Ninth Corps.
-He was doubtless influenced, in this view, by the knowledge,
-disclosed to us for the first time on that day, that he intended
-to propose that the attack on the Hindenburg Line would, if
-undertaken, extend over the front of at least three Armies, the
-French on the south, and the Fourth and Third British Armies.
-Such a simultaneous attack, over a very wide front, would
-naturally increase the prospects of success for every Corps
-participating.</p>
-
-<p>As to the Third Corps, it was to take part only in the preliminaries
-of the battle, and not in the battle itself. Another
-Corps, the Thirteenth (Lieut.-General Sir T. L. N. Morland)
-was to join the Fourth Army. If the Australian Corps succeeded
-in effecting the breach of the Hindenburg Line as I had proposed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
-to do, it was to be the Thirteenth Corps, and not the Third Corps,
-which, pouring through the breach, was to envelop the flank of
-the Hindenburg Line towards the north.</p>
-
-<p>The main consideration that affected me was the approval of
-my plan for the action of the two American and three Australian
-Divisions. I was able to begin immediately the development
-in detail of that plan, a task which proved at once the most
-arduous, the most responsible, and the most difficult of any that
-I have had to undertake throughout the whole of the war.</p>
-
-<p>The first step was to get the American Divisions into the line
-opposite their prospective battle fronts, and the next was to hand
-over what had hitherto been the Australian Corps front to the
-Ninth Corps.</p>
-
-<p>The Ninth Corps battle front was to extend from Bellenglise to
-Bellicourt, mine from opposite Bellicourt to opposite Le Catelet.</p>
-
-<p>The necessary troop movements and inter-divisional reliefs
-required nearly a week for their completion. By the evening
-of September 23rd, the last of the two Australian Divisions had
-been relieved by the Americans and the Ninth Corps, and on that
-night these stood on their respective battle frontages. I took over
-command of this new front, thus manned by Americans, in the
-forenoon of September 25th.</p>
-
-<p>It is a somewhat noteworthy circumstance, but one which
-attracted no attention at the time, that between September
-25th and September 29th, there was a period of five days during
-which <i>no</i> Australian troops were in the front line in any part of
-the French theatre of war. This was a situation which had never
-arisen since the first contingent of Australians arrived from Egypt
-in April, 1916. For nearly two and a half years, there had never
-previously been a moment when some Australians had not been
-confronting the enemy, somewhere or other in the long battle
-front in France.</p>
-
-<p>I have said that I had been called upon to undertake the
-responsibility of directing in a great battle two Divisions (the
-27th and 30th) of United States troops, numbering altogether
-some 50,000 men. These had been organized into a Corps, called
-the Second American Corps, and commanded by Major-General G.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
-W. Read. It was certainly anomalous that a whole organized
-Corps should pass under the orders of a Corps Headquarters of
-another nationality, but in authorizing such an arrangement,
-General Rawlinson relied upon the good sense and mutual forbearance
-of the Corps Commanders concerned.</p>
-
-<p>I am bound to say that the arrangement caused me no anxiety
-or difficulty. General Read and his Staff most readily adapted
-themselves to the situation. He established his Headquarters
-quite close to my own, and gave me perfect freedom of action in
-dealing direct with his two Divisional Commanders, so far as I
-found it necessary to do so. Read was a man of sound common
-sense and clear judgment, a reserved but agreeable and courteous
-personality. His only desire was the success of his Divisions, and
-he very generously took upon himself the role of an interested
-spectator, so that I might not be hampered in issuing orders or
-instructions to his troops. At the same time, I am sure that in his
-quiet, forceful way he did much to ensure on the part of his
-Divisional Commanders and Brigadiers a sympathetic attitude
-towards me and the demands I had to make upon them.</p>
-
-<p>The Australian Corps had specialized in comprehensive and
-careful preparations for battle. Its methods had been reduced to
-a quite definite code of practice, with which every Staff Officer
-and Battalion Adjutant had, by experience, become intimately
-familiar. All this procedure was a closed book to the American
-troops, and they were severely handicapped accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>I therefore proposed to General Read, and he gratefully
-accepted, the creation of an "Australian Mission" to his Corps,
-whose rôle would be to act as a body of expert advisers on all
-questions of tactical technique, and of supply and maintenance.
-This idea once accepted was worked out on a fully elaborated
-scale.</p>
-
-<p>To the head of this Mission I appointed Major-General
-Maclagan, not only to command the personnel of the Mission
-itself, but also to live with and act as adviser to General Read's
-own Staff. The Mission comprised a total of 217 men, chosen
-from the First and Fourth Australian Divisions, and consisted of
-specially selected and very experienced officers and N.C.O.'s.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
-The American Corps Headquarters was provided with a Major-General,
-assisted by one General Staff, one Administrative, one
-Signal, one Intelligence, and one Machine Gun Staff Officer.
-Each American Division had assigned to it an Australian
-Brigadier-General, assisted by several Staff Officers; each American
-Brigade had an Australian Battalion Commander and Signal
-Officer; and so on down the chain. Each American Battalion,
-even, had four highly expert Warrant or Non-commissioned
-officers to advise on every detail of supply, equipment and tactical
-employment of the troops.</p>
-
-<p>By such an arrangement it became possible to talk to the whole
-American Corps in our own technical language. This saved me
-and my Staff a vast amount of time and energy, because the
-members of this Mission acted as interpreters of the technical
-terms and usages customary in the orders and maps of the
-Australian Corps, which were necessarily quite unfamiliar to the
-American troops.</p>
-
-<p>Maclagan was a man eminently fitted for this task. In
-appearance and in temperament he is every inch a soldier. Of
-all my Divisional Commanders he was the only one who, immediately
-before the war, was a professional soldier of the Imperial
-Army. Although not Australian born, he was whole-heartedly
-Australian, for he had spent some years as Director of Military
-Training at the Royal Military College at Duntroon. On the outbreak
-of war he received the command of the 3rd Australian Brigade,
-and with it carried out the most difficult preliminary phase
-of the landing on the Gallipoli peninsula. He commanded the
-Fourth Australian Division from the autumn of 1917 until the
-conclusion of hostilities. His characteristic attitude of mind, so
-strongly in contrast to that of Rosenthal, was pessimistic. But
-that was not because he looked for difficulties, but because he
-preferred squarely to recognize and face all the difficulties there
-were. Yet he never failed in performance, and invariably contrived
-to do what he had urged could not be done. One could
-not afford to take him at his own modest estimate of himself.
-Both he and his Division always bettered any promise they
-gave.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I entertain no kind of doubt that it was only because of the
-creation of this Australian Mission to the Americans, and of
-Maclagan's tact, industry and judgment in controlling it, that the
-combined action of the two Corps in the great battle of the closing
-days of September proved as successful as it did. Under no other
-conditions would it have been possible to bring about any reasonable
-degree of co-operation between two forces whose war experiences,
-outlook, attitude towards their problems, training and
-temperament were so fundamentally different.</p>
-
-<p>It is not necessary to indulge in either a panegyric or a condemnation
-of these American Divisions. Neither would be deserved
-or appropriate. They showed a fine spirit, a keen desire to
-learn, magnificent individual bravery, and splendid comradeship.
-But they were lacking in war experience, in training, and in knowledge
-of technique. They had not yet learned the virtues of
-unquestioning obedience, of punctuality, of quick initiative, of
-anticipating the next action. They were, many of them, unfamiliar
-with the weapons and instruments of fighting, with the
-numerous kinds of explosive materials, or with the routine of
-preparing and promulgating clear orders. They seriously underrated
-the necessity for a well-organized system of supply, particularly
-of food and water, to the battle troops. They hardly, as
-yet, appreciated the tactical expedients available for reducing
-losses in battle.</p>
-
-<p>Yet all these shortcomings were the results only of inexperience,
-and it is perhaps unfair to contrast them with the Australian
-troops who had seen front-line service in France for two and a
-half years continuously, and whose leaders, high and low, had
-served a long and graduated apprenticeship in every branch of
-their duties.</p>
-
-<p>The Australian Mission assisted greatly to minimize these
-difficulties. Although its members were vested with no executive
-powers, their advice and help were eagerly sought, and
-zealously adopted. In many ways, large and small, their assistance
-must have proved invaluable. How to interpret orders
-from above and how to issue them to those below, how to draw
-stores and how to distribute them, how to organize the signal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
-service and how to ensure a flow of information&mdash;these ranked
-among the greater matters. In quite small things also, help was
-needed, such as the way to detonate mortar bombs, to equip the
-infantryman for battle, to organize and use the messenger (<i>i.e.</i>,
-runner) service, and to keep battle stations clear of people who had
-no urgent business there.</p>
-
-<p>It is not, of course, intended to convey that all these defects
-were present in every regiment. Some, however, were met with,
-by the officers of the Australian Mission, in all of them.</p>
-
-<p>It greatly added to the burden cast upon the American Divisions
-that they were called upon to fight almost as soon as they had
-taken up duty in the line. The necessity for this was really a
-legacy from the Third Corps, whom they had relieved, and it is
-essential for an understanding of the course of events during these
-days to narrate them in proper chronological order.</p>
-
-<p>I have explained that as the result of the battle of Hargicourt,
-the Australian Corps had succeeded in mastering the whole of
-the Hindenburg outpost line opposite its front, as far as a point
-a little north of and opposite to Bellicourt. The advance of
-the Third Corps, however, had failed to reach the same line, and
-had stopped short of it by an average distance of nearly a thousand
-yards. On my pointing out that the front I had taken
-over did not comply with the stipulations which I had made
-in my battle plan,<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> the Army Commander decided that prior
-to the main attack, the northern of the two American Divisions
-should make good this shortage, by an attack aiming at the
-capture of the remainder of the Hindenburg outpost line opposite
-the tunnel sector.</p>
-
-<p>I must now anticipate an explanation of the main outlines of
-the plan which I had prepared for the great battle, by a brief
-reference to the situation and disposition of troops on September
-25th. The two American Divisions were respectively the 30th,
-commanded by Major-General Lewis, on the right or south,
-and the 27th, commanded by Major-General O'Ryan, on the
-left or north, each lying on a frontage of three thousand yards.
-These two Divisions comprised, in all, eight regiments, each of
-three battalions. I had instructed each of them to place one
-regiment in the line, and to keep the remaining three, <i>i.e.</i>, six
-in all, in reserve, for the main operation.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span></p>
-<p>My first Corps conference dealing with the forthcoming operations
-was held at my Headquarters at Assevillers, on September
-23rd. The American Generals Read, Lewis and O'Ryan, with
-their respective Staffs, attended, as also did the Australian
-Generals Maclagan, Brand and Mackay, who were members
-of the Australian Mission to the American Corps. None of
-the Australian Commanders destined to take part in the operations
-attended on this day, for two reasons, firstly, because I
-intended to confine myself entirely to that portion of the operation
-which concerned the American troops only, and secondly,
-because the date of the battle had not then been decided, and
-I wished to run no risk of confusing executive action by any
-premature announcements to the Australians, which subsequent
-events might modify.</p>
-
-<p>The American rôle, had, however, sufficiently crystallized to
-enable me to explain it to the assembled Generals in great detail.
-As will subsequently appear, it was a plan which had, intentionally,
-been reduced to the simplest possible elements. It
-was to be a straightforward trench to trench attack, from a
-perfectly straight "jumping off" line to a perfectly straight
-objective line, under a dense Artillery and Machine-Gun barrage,
-and with the assistance of a large contingent of Tanks.</p>
-
-<p>The advance was to be at a deliberate pace, and if due regard
-were had to a few elementary precautions, should prove a simple
-task for the American Infantry. It was, indeed, on quite
-stereotyped lines, such as had so often carried the Australian
-Infantry to victory in set-piece battles such as Messines, Broodseinde,
-Hamel and the first phase of August 8th.</p>
-
-<p>It was, however, borne in upon me, very soon after this Conference
-opened, that I was now confronted with quite a different
-proposition from that to which I had been accustomed in the
-conferences attended by my own Divisional Generals. The
-exposition of the plan itself was brief and simple, but it elicited
-such a rain of questions, that in the end I found myself compelled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
-to embark upon a very detailed exposition of the fundamental
-principles of my battle practice.</p>
-
-<p>With blackboard and chalk, maps and diagrams, I had to
-speak for more than three hours in an endeavour to explain
-methods and reasons, mistakes and remedies, dangers and precautions,
-procedures and expedients. The proceedings left me
-with no doubt that the American Generals became fully informed
-as to the tasks and duties allotted to them, and fully understood
-them.</p>
-
-<p>In the light of after events, I am not so sure that they succeeded
-in passing on the information to their subordinates&mdash;not
-by reason of any shortcomings on their own part, for they impressed
-me as able, strong men&mdash;but because their Divisions had
-not yet learned the methods and machinery of effectively and
-rapidly conveying instructions to large bodies of troops.</p>
-
-<p>In one particular, subordinate though vital, there certainly
-was a serious failure to reach the troops. The enemy had, during
-1916, met our assault tactics with an answer which proved
-disastrously effective against us until we had learned how to
-meet it. He provided his trench systems with many and roomy
-shell-proof dug-outs. Whenever our barrage fell upon his
-trenches, his garrisons promptly took cover in these dug-outs.
-When our assaulting infantry reached the enemy trenches
-they found but few of the enemy there, and they rushed headlong
-forward to the next objective trenches. From out of their
-dug-outs streamed the enemy, faced about, attacked our assaulting
-lines in rear and withered them with fire. Many an attack
-by the British on the Somme failed for just such reasons.</p>
-
-<p>In 1917 we evolved, and applied for the first time at the battle
-of Messines, an effective answer to such tactics. Close on the
-heels of our first line of assaulting troops came a second line,
-whose rôle was to occupy the captured trench immediately,
-and to "mop it up." This meant the killing or disarming of
-all enemy found in hiding, the picketing of the entrances and
-exits of all dug-outs, and laying siege to them until their occupants
-surrendered, a course to which they were encouraged by
-a liberal use of phosphorus bombs or Mills's grenades.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This process of "mopping up" became an integral part of
-our attack procedure. Australian infantry soon learned its
-importance, and practised the method with a thoroughness and
-efficiency to which I remember no exception. Even a junior
-sergeant commanding a dozen men could be relied on to take
-all measures necessary to ensure that no enemy was ever left
-in hiding and unguarded behind his little party as they advanced.</p>
-
-<p>In the forthcoming attack upon the Hindenburg defences,
-the process of "mopping up" became of supreme importance,
-because of the very fact, of which we had become well aware,
-that the whole defensive system had been provided, on quite
-an exceptional scale, with underground shelters, galleries,
-passages and dug-outs. I made the most of this knowledge in
-my talks to the Americans, emphasized the dangers as strongly
-as I was able, insisted that the "mopping up" organization of
-their infantry must be absolutely perfected, and ordered that
-of the total Infantry participating in the assault, not less than
-one-half should have the special role of safeguarding all underground
-exits and entrances.</p>
-
-<p>The great fear was, of course, that these new troops, eager to
-show their mettle, would be carried away in the excitement of
-the moment, and would rush headlong forward, regardless of
-the dangers that lurked behind them. It is, after all, no small
-demand to make upon the discipline of an Infantry soldier, to
-expect him patiently and obediently to stand guard over some
-dug-out entrance, allowing the battle to sweep on, and his comrades
-to go forward to the excitement and glory of achieving the
-final objectives.</p>
-
-<p>So indeed it happened. The American Infantry had either
-not been sufficiently tutored in this important matter, or the
-need of it had not penetrated their understanding. In the
-attacks carried out by these troops, while under my command,
-the "mopping up" was always badly done, even in the few
-cases where it was attempted. The result was failure to achieve
-a clean success, and a great addition to their own casualty list.
-This criticism will be fully borne out by the narrative of the great
-battle itself.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A second and much larger conference was held at my Headquarters
-on September 26th, for the really complete and final
-co-ordination of the whole of the procedure for the forthcoming
-battle. It was attended not only by the American Divisional
-Generals and Brigadiers, but also by the Commanders of the
-Second, Third and Fifth Australian Divisions, their Staffs, the
-Tanks, Air Force and Cavalry.</p>
-
-<p>It was much the largest and was also destined to be the last
-of any assemblage of Commanders that it had been my privilege
-to call together in the course of this memorable campaign.</p>
-
-<p>No one present will soon forget the tense interest and confident
-expectancy which characterized that meeting. America,
-a great English-speaking democracy on one shore of the Pacific,
-was to co-operate with Australia, its younger sister democracy
-on the opposite shore, in what was the greatest and what might
-be the most decisive battle of the great European War. Few
-present doubted that, if we were successful, the war could not
-last much longer&mdash;because the loss of the Hindenburg system
-would inevitably mean for the enemy his final enforced withdrawal
-from France.</p>
-
-<p>While the conference was in full swing, the Field Marshal
-himself paid me a call. He had come to wish me success in the
-task before me. He was interested to find so many Divisional
-Commanders assembled, and was persuaded to address a few
-words to the gathering.</p>
-
-<p>The conduct of the proceedings of this conference was a heavy
-strain. The main battle was to take place on September 29th,
-or within seventy-two hours, and part of my front line still stood
-a thousand yards west of the Hindenburg outpost lines. General
-Rawlinson had decided that this defect was to be made good
-prior to the main operation, and the attempt to do so had been
-timed to take place on September 27th, the day after the conference.</p>
-
-<p>I had, therefore, to complete my organization upon the basis
-of a set of precedent conditions which had not yet been entirely
-realized. It was a new and a difficult situation. The whole of
-the powerful Artillery at my disposal for the battle, amounting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
-now to over a thousand guns, was naturally clamouring for final
-decisions, so that final barrage maps could be submitted for my
-approval, printed by my very diligent and competent body of
-lithographic draughtsmen, and circulated to all the batteries
-and Infantry.</p>
-
-<p>To await the result of the operation of the next day would
-have allowed insufficient time to complete the necessary maps
-and to distribute them before nightfall on September 28th.
-There was no option but to assume that General O'Ryan (27th
-American Division) would succeed in capturing the northern
-section of the outpost line still in enemy hands, and upon that
-assumption to fix the Artillery "start line" as falling to the east
-of that objective. For the first time I had to gamble on a
-chance. It was contrary to the policy which had governed
-all my previous battle plans, in which <i>nothing</i> had been left to
-chance.</p>
-
-<p>At 5.30 a.m. next morning the 27th American Division
-carried out the attack, under a barrage, and assisted by Tanks.
-The principal objective points in the trench system under attack
-were Quennemont Farm and Gillemont Farm. Every trace of
-these once prosperous homesteads and plantations had, of course,
-long since disappeared. The names alone remained as memories
-of the fighting there of 1917.</p>
-
-<p>What happened on that day will never be accurately known.
-For once, the information from the air did not harmonize with
-the claims made on behalf of the assaulting troops, perhaps
-because the troops, being untrained in the use of flares, or having
-been left unsupplied with them, failed to assist the aeroplanes in
-identifying their correct positions. However that may be, it
-became sufficiently clear, as the day proceeded, that no proper
-success for the operation could be claimed.</p>
-
-<p>There remained no doubt that some enemy were still left in
-occupation of trenches on our side of the objective for that day,
-and such American troops as may have gained their objective
-could not therefore be reached. It appeared afterwards that
-small parties of Americans had reached the vicinity of their
-objectives and had very gallantly maintained themselves there,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
-although surrounded on all sides, until relieved by the Australians
-on September 29th.</p>
-
-<p>The non-success of this operation of September 27th appeared
-undoubtedly to be due to a failure to carry out "mopping up"
-duties satisfactorily. It considerably embarrassed the preparations
-for the main attack on the 29th. The knowledge
-that a number of American wounded were still lying out in front,
-and the suspicion that some of the American troops had succeeded
-in reaching Gillemont Farm, precluded any alteration of
-the Artillery plans for September 29th, even if there had still
-been time to do so without creating untold confusion. To have
-brought the Artillery start line, proposed for September 29th,
-back to the start line of September 27th would have brought our
-own barrage down upon these forward troops of ours.</p>
-
-<p>I hastened to the Army Commander to put the position before
-him, stating that I felt grave concern for the success of the main
-operation, in view of the fact that my Artillery barrage would
-have to come down fully a thousand yards in front of what was
-still the front of the 27th Division. I suggested a postponement
-for a day to give this Division, which had ample resources in
-troops, another opportunity of retrieving the position. He
-explained, however, that it was now too late to alter the programme,
-because three whole Armies were committed to the
-date first appointed. He said that he was, under the circumstances,
-quite prepared for a partial failure at this point, and
-requested me to do my best to pursue the original plan, in spite
-of this difficult situation.</p>
-
-<p>He agreed, however, to my further request, that additional
-Tanks, out of Army reserves, should be placed at my disposal,
-so that I might allot them to the 27th Division, to assist them
-in passing over the thousand yards which would bring them up
-level with the Artillery barrage. I hoped that this would enable
-the Division to catch up with the southern half of the battle line.</p>
-
-<p>It was an unsatisfactory expedient, and gave no promise of
-certain success. It proved futile, and gravely affected the
-actual course, although not the ultimate success, of the battle
-still to come. It was the only occasion in the campaign on which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
-I was compelled to accept preliminary arrangements which were
-not such as would absolutely guarantee success.</p>
-
-<p>The genesis of the difficulty thus created had, however, been
-the failure of the Third Corps to complete their programme of
-September 18th. It had been confirmed by the subsequent
-failure of the 27th American Division to make up the deficiency
-on September 27th. I still think, as I then urged, that I should
-have been allowed to accept the situation as I found it on taking
-over this front on September 25th, and that the 27th Division
-should not have been called upon, at the eleventh hour, to
-endeavour to establish that new situation which had been
-originally assumed as the basis for the battle plan of September
-29th. My original proposal of September 18th, in my letter of
-that date, paragraph 3 (see above), had, of course, been made
-before I could foresee that the Third Corps would fail to capture
-the start line contemplated in my first plan.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, all is well that ends well. But, for an anxious and
-turbulent period of twenty-four hours on September 29th and
-30th, the issue of the battle hung in grave doubt. The operation,
-although successful, did <i>not</i> proceed "according to plan"
-in its entirety, and it was due to the wonderful gallantry and
-skilful leading of the Third Australian Division that a very ugly
-situation was retrieved, a result to which the Fifth Australian
-Division also contributed in no small degree.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> See paragraph 3 of same.</p></div></div>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XV<br />
-
-BELLICOURT AND BONY</h2>
-
-
-<p>A full account of the battle plan for the forcing of the
-main Hindenburg Line, on the front of the Australian
-Corps, would alone fill a volume. Nothing but brief references
-to the main outlines of the plan can be attempted here.</p>
-
-<p>The forces now at my disposal, for immediate use, were greater
-than I had ever before committed to a single operation. They
-comprised, in all, five Divisions, of which two were American
-and three Australian, besides the whole of the Corps troops.
-The total personnel employed on that occasion, under my orders
-in one capacity or another, almost reached 200,000 men.</p>
-
-<p>Besides 58 Battalions of Infantry, there were over 20,000
-technical troops, including Engineers, Pioneers and Signallers,
-upwards of 1,000 guns of all calibres, more than 500 Machine
-Guns, over 200 Tanks, a Brigade of Cavalry, a Battalion of
-Armoured Cars, and numerous Air Squadrons. The subsidiary
-services made an imposing array, comprising observation
-balloons, supply trains, ammunition columns, auxiliary horse
-transport, ambulances, motor convoys and mechanical transport,
-together with railway, veterinary, sanitary and labour units.</p>
-
-<p>It was no small task correctly to apportion to each fighting
-unit and to each service its appropriate place in the general
-scheme, so that these great resources should be employed to the
-best advantage, without overtaxing the capacity of any one of
-them. I had also to secure the greatest measure of co-operation
-between them all, and the punctual performance by each of the
-work prescribed.</p>
-
-<p>In contrast with the great battle of August 8th, there was on
-this occasion no possibility of securing any advantage from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
-surprise. The enemy command was bound to know quite as
-well as we did that we intended to deliver an attack on a gigantic
-scale, and there is no doubt that they put forth their utmost
-efforts, and marshalled their fullest resources in men and guns,
-to meet it.</p>
-
-<p>There was, therefore, no object to be served by any measures
-of concealment, and our task could not be made any the harder
-through heralding the approach of the actual attack by adequate
-Artillery preparation.</p>
-
-<p>The programme, therefore, began on the night of September
-26th. There was an intense Artillery action, extending over
-some sixty hours, with every gun that could be brought to bear.
-This does not, of course, imply that every individual gun or
-battery remained in action during the whole of this period;
-ammunition supplies were not inexhaustible, and gun detachments
-required periods of rest. But the programme of times
-and targets was so arranged, and the tasks were so distributed
-over the available batteries, that throughout this period there
-was no respite for the enemy in any part of the field.</p>
-
-<p>For some days prior to the opening of this bombardment,
-railway trains and motor lorries had been working at the highest
-possible pressure, to enable gunners to accumulate at their gun
-pits and in all their dumps a sufficient supply of Artillery
-ammunition for this purpose. In the short period which had
-elapsed since the forcing of the Somme, in the early days of
-September, the railway diversion from Bray to Péronne had
-been completed. The railway from Péronne to Roisel, although
-seriously damaged by the enemy in many places, had been
-restored, and Roisel had become the railhead for the delivery
-of ammunition. It was a noteworthy performance, for all the
-Corps services concerned, to carry out the whole supply of this
-battle in so smooth and expeditious a manner.</p>
-
-<p>The first phase of this bombardment was of a novel character.
-For over two years the enemy had been using a shell containing
-an irritant and poisonous gas known to us as "mustard" gas.
-It was so called only because of the smell. For a long time we
-had been promised that the British Artillery service would shortly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
-be supplied with a gas shell, of similar character, but even more
-potent. It was, moreover, anticipated that the German gas mask
-would prove no adequate protection against this kind of gas.</p>
-
-<p>At last the new shell was forthcoming, and the first shipment
-from England, amounting to some fifty thousand rounds, was
-placed at the disposal of the Australian Corps. My Artillery
-action, therefore, opened with a concentrated gas bombardment
-for twelve hours, attacking probable living quarters, occupied
-defences, and all known or suspected approaches to them. Apart
-from being the first occasion, I believe that it was also the only
-occasion during the war when our "mustard" gas shell was
-used. No suitable opportunity for further use occurred before
-the close of hostilities.</p>
-
-<p>The gas bombardment was followed by forty-eight hours'
-destructive bombardment with high explosive shell. This was
-directed partly against the enemy's Artillery, as far as the short
-time available had permitted us to locate his batteries.</p>
-
-<p>Another part of the bombardment was devoted to the
-approaches from the enemy's rear to his forward defences. The
-object was to render his roads and tracks unusable, and thereby
-to prevent the delivery of rations, or, at any rate, of hot food to
-his garrisons, or of ammunition to his guns. By these means we
-expected, by partially starving him out, to impair the enemy's
-<i>moral</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The main weight of the bombardment was, however, devoted
-to the destruction of the enemy's defences, of which his barbed wire
-entanglements were for us the most formidable feature.
-Much of this wire was disposed in concealed positions, either in
-depressions of the ground, or in sunken moats, artificially prepared.
-It was, therefore, difficult to locate, and still more
-difficult for my gunners to direct their fire upon it. Nevertheless,
-there was a considerable quantity of wire which was
-plainly visible, and every band of entanglements through which
-breaches could be blown was so much to the good, in clearing the
-path for the Infantry assault.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_256fp.jpg" width="1200" height="775" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Australian Light Horse&mdash;the 13th A.L.H. Regiment riding into action on August 17th, 1918.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_257fp.jpg" width="1200" height="766" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>The Sniper sniped&mdash;an enemy sniper disposed of by an Australian Sharp-shooter, August 22nd, 1918.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In earlier years it had been the custom to attack barbed wire
-with our lighter guns, using shrapnel shell. This shell is, however,
-essentially a "man-killing" projectile, and has no great
-destructive power against field works. On the other hand, our
-heavier guns were scarcely more useful for wire cutting, because
-the great craters which were made by the explosion of their
-shells destroyed the wire only very locally, and, by upheaving
-the ground, increased rather than reduced the difficulties of the
-Infantry.</p>
-
-<p>This was due to the employment of fuses, which permitted
-the projectile, after striking, to bury itself in the ground for a
-small fraction of time before igniting the explosive charge which
-it contained. Hence the great shell craters. It was a very
-proper fuse to use for destroying trenches, dug-outs, gun-pits and
-emplacements, but of little use for cutting wire.</p>
-
-<p>In due course the British service evolved an "instantaneous"
-fuse, which became known to the gunners as the "106 Fuse."
-This had the merit of being perfectly safe to handle, up to the
-moment of firing the gun, but by means of a most ingenious
-mechanism it became highly sensitive while the projectile was
-in flight between the gun and the target. The result was that
-the very slightest obstacle met with, even a strand of wire, was
-sufficient to set off the fuse and explode the shell. Even if the
-shell met no obstacle before striking the earth, the explosion
-would take place above instead of below the surface of the
-ground, and would exert so great a horizontal force in all directions
-that great bands of wire entanglements would be bodily
-uprooted, over considerable areas, and literally blown to one
-side in a jumbled mass.</p>
-
-<p>Our heavy guns, therefore, using 106 Fuses, became ideal wire
-cutters, and it was in this way that much of the Artillery action
-during the forty-eight hours prior to the battle was applied.</p>
-
-<p>The Infantry and Field Artillery plan, which I prepared, was
-very similar in its general character to the battle plan of August
-8th. It differed only in subordinate details due to local topographical
-variations from the former conditions.</p>
-
-<p>Of the five Divisions available, one&mdash;the Second Australian&mdash;was
-to remain in Corps reserve, but handy. For that purpose it
-was brought up from its rest near Cappy, by motor bus, to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
-vicinity of Péronne, the move being completed by nightfall on
-September 27th.</p>
-
-<p>The battle Divisions and their prior dispositions were as
-follows:</p>
-
-<p><i>Line Divisions:</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>On the right, the 30th American Division, to attack
-with the 60th Brigade, and to employ the 59th Brigade
-to form a southern defensive flank in the event of the
-failure of the Ninth Corps to cross the Canal.</p>
-
-<p>On the left, the 27th American Division, to attack with
-the 54th Brigade, and to employ the 53rd Brigade to form
-a northern defensive flank, until such time as the Thirteenth
-Corps was ready to pass through in a north-easterly
-direction.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><i>"Exploitation" Divisions:</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>On the right, the 5th Australian Division, with the
-8th and 15th Brigades in the first line and the 14th Brigade
-following in support.</p>
-
-<p>On the left, the Third Australian Division, with the
-10th and 11th Brigades in the first line and the 9th
-Brigade following in support.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The total frontage was equally divided between the two pairs
-of Divisions, being about 3,500 yards to each. The battle was
-to be divided into two phases, the first to be executed by the
-Americans, under a timed barrage, the second, under open
-warfare conditions, by the Australians. It was intended that
-the Americans should penetrate to the "green line," an average
-distance of 3,500 yards, which took in the villages of Bellicourt,
-Nauroy, Bony and Gouy.</p>
-
-<p>The Australians were to exploit eastward, but were limited
-to a further advance of 4,000 yards, overrunning Joncourt,
-Estrées and Beaurevoir. Should they reach that objective on
-the first day, they would have passed the last-known wired line,
-and the country beyond would be suitable for Cavalry. Accordingly,
-I allotted to the 5th Cavalry Brigade, which had been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
-placed under my orders, the rôle of passing through the Australian
-Divisions, and carrying the exploitation still further
-east, in the direction of Montbrehain and Brancourt.</p>
-
-<p>As it turned out, the whole of the objectives named were in
-our possession only on the forenoon of October 5th, instead of,
-as planned, by September 30th. The actual battle developed
-on totally different lines from those which I had planned, for
-reasons which I shall relate in due course. Little object would
-therefore be served in an explanation of the considerable mass
-of detailed arrangements which the original plan involved;
-these would also, by reason of their technical character, be more
-suitable for a text-book on tactics.</p>
-
-<p>Suffice it to say that elaborate arrangements were made&mdash;and
-also partly utilized&mdash;for the rapid construction of four main
-roads from west to east, through the full width of the Hindenburg
-system. This work was to follow on the heels of the
-advance. The rôles assigned to the Tanks, the Barrage Artillery,
-the Mobile Artillery, the Heavy Artillery and the Armoured
-Cars were similar in character, although differing in detail from
-those carried out by them on August 8th.</p>
-
-<p>On no previous occasion had the labour of preparation and
-the stress upon all Commanders and Staffs been so heavy, but
-all responded nobly. There were none who did not count the
-hours till zero hour, which was fixed for 5.50 a.m. on September
-29th.</p>
-
-<p>In appraising the long sustained fighting on the front of the
-Fourth Army which began on that day, and lasted a full week,
-regard must be had to contemporary events. The American
-First Army attack on St. Mihiel on September 11th had wrought
-fresh dislocation to the enemy's resources, and had created another
-sore spot on his long front. On September 26th the Americans
-and French again successfully attacked between Verdun and
-Rheims. On September 27th, the First and Third British Armies
-opened a great attack on a front of thirteen miles before Cambrai
-and the magnificent Canadian Corps captured Bourlon Wood
-and advanced to within a mile of Cambrai city. On September
-28th, the Second British Army and the Belgians attacked between<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>
-Ypres and the sea. All British Armies, except the Fifth, had,
-therefore, by that time developed active battle fronts. On September
-29th the first French Army would co-operate with us,
-and on that day the battle front was to cover a total length of
-twenty-five miles.</p>
-
-<p>The simultaneous engagement of so large a portion of the
-enemy's line in Belgium and France during the preceding three
-days had piled difficulty upon difficulty for him, and it was
-therefore not unreasonable to entertain two expectations&mdash;firstly,
-that our task would be rendered easier by the wide dispersion of
-the enemy's defensive energies, and, secondly, that he could
-hardly hope to survive a definite breach in his great defensive
-line at so critical a place as the Bellicourt tunnel. If that went
-he would be secure nowhere, and his next possibility of making a
-stand would be on the line of the Meuse, even if not the line
-of the Rhine.</p>
-
-<p>The day broke with a familiar mist, and the attack was
-launched punctually at the appointed time. Quite early in the
-day news came in that the Ninth Corps on my right hand had
-achieved an astonishing success, that Bellenglise had been
-captured, and that the deep canal had been successfully crossed
-in several places. It was the 46th Imperial Division to which
-this great success was chiefly due, a success achieved by most
-careful preparation and gallant execution. Lifebelts, rafts,
-boats, mats, portable bridges, and every device which ingenuity
-could suggest had been prepared beforehand for the actual
-crossing of the water in the canal. There can be no doubt that
-this success, conceived at first as a demonstration to distract
-attention from the Australian Corps front, materially assisted
-me in the situation in which I was placed later on the same
-day.</p>
-
-<p>The first reports from my own front were in every way satisfactory,
-and it looked as if everything were going strictly to
-schedule. That morning the stream of messages pouring into
-my Headquarters office, from special observers, from the air,
-from the line divisions, from the Artillery, and from my liaison
-officers with neighbouring Corps, exceeded in volume and import<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
-anything I had met with in my previous war experience. I have
-the typewritten précis of the "inwards" signal traffic before me
-as I write. Those received and laid before me on that day
-cover thirty closely typewritten foolscap pages.</p>
-
-<p>The burden of the earlier messages all pointed to the same
-conclusion: "30th Division crossed the Canal on time;"
-"1,000 prisoners, all going well;" "Bony captured;" "Tanks
-fighting round Bellicourt at 9 a.m.;" "Bellicourt taken."</p>
-
-<p>Those, omitting formal parts, were the burden of all the telegrams
-up to 10 a.m. They continued in such a favourable strain
-during the whole of the time that the two American Divisions
-had command of the battle front.</p>
-
-<p>The time for their arrival at the first objective&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, the
-"green" line&mdash;had been computed to be at 9 a.m. The Australian
-Divisions were to cross the green line at 11 a.m., and at
-the same hour to take over the command on the front of the
-battle. Two telegrams then came in which caused me serious
-anxiety. It may be of interest to set them out in detail:</p>
-
-<p>Received at 11.10 a.m. from 30th American Division:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"Fighting in Bellicourt, owing to Germans having come
-down along the Canal from the north. Fifth Australian
-Division hung up."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Received at 11.12 a.m. from Third Australian Division:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"We are dug in on west side of tunnel. Americans are
-held up in front of us."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>These were only the first symptoms of a miscarriage of the
-plans. Evidences rapidly multiplied that all was not going well.
-But, concurrently, there came a stream of messages from the
-air that our troops and some of our Tanks were east of both
-Bellicourt and Le Catelet.</p>
-
-<p>The situation was therefore confused and uncertain, and it
-had to be diagnosed without delay. I hastened forward with all
-possible speed to get into personal touch with the situation and
-the Divisional Commanders. I soon formed the conclusion that
-probably both American Divisions had successfully followed our
-barrage, and that numbers of their troops had really reached the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
-green line, but that, once again, the "mopping up" procedure
-had been neglected. The enemy had reappeared in strength
-from underground <i>behind</i> the Americans, and was holding up
-the advance of the two Australian Divisions to the second phase
-of the operation.</p>
-
-<p>Subsequent developments and further inquiries entirely bore
-out these conclusions. On the front of the 27th American
-Division there had been difficulty from the start. A number
-of Tanks allotted to that Division had been put out of action,
-some by direct hits from Artillery, others by land mines. It
-was currently believed that these were not enemy mines, but
-some which had been laid months before by our own Fifth Army
-as a measure of protection against the possible use of Tanks by
-the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>This had given the 27th Division a bad start. Only two out
-of its six assaulting Battalions had managed to catch up with
-and follow the barrage. The remainder could not get forward as
-far even as the Artillery start line. Those Americans who did
-follow the barrage apparently forgot all about "mopping up."
-They reached Le Catelet and Gouy and entered those villages,
-only to find themselves surrounded on all sides by the enemy.
-A German officer prisoner informed us next day that 1,200 of
-these Americans had been taken prisoner.</p>
-
-<p>The 30th American Division did not fare so badly. They got
-a good start with the barrage, but the broken condition of the
-ground, the intricate trench system and the confusion of wire
-and dug-outs brought about a loss of cohesion and of control.
-By the time Bellicourt was reached, the attacking troops had
-fallen some distance behind the barrage, and most of the weight
-had gone out of the attack.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, in this part of the field also, the enemy had
-reappeared from underground, and was still in strength on the
-west side of Bellicourt, now in the hands of the Americans,
-when the advanced guard of the Fifth Australian Division came
-upon them.</p>
-
-<p>It was an unexpected situation for the Fifth Division. But
-without a moment's hesitation the leading troops took its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
-measure. They deployed from the Artillery formation<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> in which
-they had been previously advancing into lines of skirmishers.
-After hard fighting in the face of most vigorous resistance, they
-cleared away all opposition which lay between them and Bellicourt,
-and, sweeping forward through that village, carefully
-"mopping up" as they went, carried with them considerable
-numbers of the Americans whom they found there.</p>
-
-<p>While this was happening, the Third Australian Division,
-deprived of the assistance either of Artillery or of Tanks, and
-in broad daylight, found themselves confronted with the difficult
-problem of carrying out the whole of the task which had
-been set for the 27th Division, because the reappearance of the
-enemy upon the ground successfully passed over by some of
-the Americans earlier in the day nullified all the value of that
-success.</p>
-
-<p>It was about 2 p.m. before I had succeeded in gathering sufficient
-reliable information about the situation to enable me to
-arrive at a decision how to deal with it. By that hour the Fifth
-Division had advanced through Nauroy, and had passed across
-the Le Catelet line in that vicinity. The Third Division had
-managed to get obliquely astride of the line of the tunnel, its
-right being well across the main Hindenburg wire, while its left
-was still in the vicinity of the American start line of that morning.
-They had, however, succeeded in finally capturing Quennemont
-Farm. The whole of their advance into such a position had
-been hotly contested.</p>
-
-<p>My troops were therefore, to all intents and purposes, astride
-of the Hindenburg main line, one Division wholly on the east
-and the other Division mainly on the west of it. The southern
-end of the tunnel was in my possession, the northern end was
-not.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span></p>
-<p>My decision was forthwith to abandon the original plan
-which had taken so many days and so much labour to prepare,
-to take immediate measures for securing our gains for the day,
-and to organize a continuation of the battle next day on totally
-different lines. These were to conquer the remainder of the
-main Hindenburg trench system, in which the ruin of the village
-of Bony was the key position, by attacking it from the south
-towards the north, instead of from the west towards the
-east.</p>
-
-<p>The first step in this plan was to ensure effective tactical
-contact between the right flank of the Third Division and the
-left flank of the Fifth Division. I framed an order that both
-Divisions should take immediate steps to such an end. Telephone
-communication with both Gellibrand and Hobbs being
-momentarily interrupted, I was about to forward written orders
-by dispatch rider to each of them to the effect mentioned.</p>
-
-<p>Before the messenger had time to leave, however, messages
-came in from both Divisional Commanders, each reporting that
-he had just secured tactical touch with the other in exactly the
-way which I wanted. I consider this a remarkable example of
-unity of thought. Each, without being able to consult the other
-or myself, had taken the very course which each correctly anticipated
-that I should decide to have taken. The German
-General Staff used to boast in their writings that no other Army
-approached theirs in this capacity for initiative by subordinates
-on lines in thorough unison with each other and with the
-policies of the higher command.</p>
-
-<p>That the situation on my front, now held exclusively by
-Australians, would have been secure that night against a determined
-counter-attack I did not doubt, even though the fourteen
-Australian Battalions now holding a line of some 9,000 yards
-would scarcely average 400 rifles apiece. However, nothing
-more than small local counter-attacks was attempted, and the
-hold which I had gained upon the main defences was not
-slackened. I feel sure, nevertheless, that the success of the
-Ninth Corps on my right in swarming across the canal from
-Bellenglise to Bellicourt had much to do with my immunity
-from interference; the enemy probably found himself with quite
-enough to do there in trying to re-establish his line further in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
-rear, and this forbade him to materialize sufficient troops for
-any general counter-attack.</p>
-
-<p>While I have felt obliged to state the facts in regard to the
-partial failure of the two American Divisions to carry out their
-part of my battle plan, I desire, nevertheless, to do full justice
-to these troops. I have no hesitation in saying that they fought
-most bravely, and advanced to the assault most fearlessly;
-that the leaders, from the Divisional Generals downwards, did
-the utmost within their powers to ensure success. Nor must the
-very bad conditions under which the 27th Division had to start
-be forgotten. Our American Allies are, all things considered,
-entitled to high credit for a fine effort.</p>
-
-<p>But it is, nevertheless, true that in this battle they demonstrated
-their inexperience in war, and their ignorance of some
-of the elementary methods of fighting employed on the French
-front. For these shortcomings they paid a heavy price. Their
-sacrifices, nevertheless, contributed quite definitely to the
-partial success of the day's operations, and although the comprehensive
-plan, which was to have carried my front beyond
-Beaurevoir on the very first day, had to be abandoned, the day's
-fighting ended with the two Australian Divisions in quite a
-satisfactory position for a continuance of the operations on the
-next day.</p>
-
-<p>To this there was, however, one important qualification.
-Air observers continued to report the presence of American troops
-between the Hindenburg Line and Le Catelet, and also in the
-latter village. Late that night an Australian Artillery liaison
-officer managed to make his way back into our lines with the
-story that he had actually advanced with a battalion of
-Americans into Le Catelet, and that they were still there, although
-practically surrounded.</p>
-
-<p>The 27th Division made many attempts to get into communication
-with them, but without avail. Beyond the report
-previously alluded to that they had subsequently been made
-prisoner, I have no information of their ultimate fate; but
-when patrols of the Third Division entered the village forty-eight
-hours later, there was no longer any sign of them. A<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>
-number of small parties of Americans were, however, encountered
-and relieved as the further advance of the Third Division progressed
-during the next two days.</p>
-
-<p>The situation was profoundly embarrassing. With the mass
-of Artillery at my disposal, it would have been a simple matter
-to cover the further advance of the Third Division so amply as
-to make it easy to master the northern half of the tunnel
-defences, especially if attacked end on. But so long as American
-troops or wounded were presumed to be lying out in front, I
-dared not use Artillery at all, except on a very restricted scale.
-I felt justified, however, in bombarding isolated localities which
-patrols had definitely ascertained to be still in enemy hands;
-but nothing in the shape of adequate artillery support to the
-Infantry could be attempted.</p>
-
-<p>During the night of September 29th orders were issued to the
-Second American Corps to withdraw all advanced troops that
-could be reached, and to concentrate their regiments for rest
-and reorganization, so as to be ready as soon as possible for
-re-employment. Very considerable numbers of American soldiers
-had become mixed up with the Australian Battalions, and,
-in their eagerness, had gone forward with them, regardless of
-the particular rôles or objectives which had been originally
-assigned to them. It was found to be a matter of some difficulty
-to induce these men to withdraw from the fighting and to rejoin
-their own units, so keen were they to continue their advance.</p>
-
-<p>I also ordered the Second Australian Division to be brought
-up by bus from the Péronne area, and to take up a position of
-readiness just west of the Hindenburg Line. I foresaw that
-with the nature of the fighting before the Third and Fifth Divisions,
-it would not be very long before they would have to be
-relieved, and there was still the Beaurevoir line of trenches to
-be overcome before the Hindenburg system could be claimed
-as taken in its entirety. This move was duly carried out, and
-the Second Division became available by the evening of October
-1st in close support of the battle front.</p>
-
-<p>The orders to the two line Divisions for September 30th were
-to attack generally in a north-easterly direction. The immediate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
-objectives of the Third Division were Bony village, the "Knob"
-and the northern entrance to the tunnel. The flanks of the
-two Divisions were to meet on the Railway Spur, and the right
-of the Fifth Division was to swing forward in the direction of
-Joncourt, in sympathy with any advance made by the Ninth
-Corps to the south of them.</p>
-
-<p>There was, as explained, no possibility of attempting anything
-like a methodical advance covered by a co-ordinated
-Artillery barrage. Progress would depend upon the tenacity and
-skilful leading of the front-line troops, and reliance must be had
-more upon the bayonet and the bomb than upon external aids.
-It was, in a peculiar degree, a private soldier's battle.</p>
-
-<p>The night of September 29th brought steady rain, and everybody
-was drenched to the skin. September 30th was a day of
-intense effort, slow and methodical hand-to-hand fighting, in a
-perfect tangle of trenches, with every yard of the advance
-vigorously contested; but by nightfall the line of the Third
-Division had advanced fully 1,000 yards. Its left had pivoted
-on the "Knoll," to the west of the Hindenburg Line. Gillemont
-Farm was by then securely in their hands; they had reached
-the southern outskirts of Bony village. Their right was well
-across the line of the canal, and joined the left flank of the Fifth
-Division on the Railway Spur. The Fifth Division had cleared
-the Le Catelet trench line of the enemy, and its right was by
-now well to the east of Nauroy.</p>
-
-<p>Another day's fighting was still before both Divisions, but the
-effect of the successful efforts of September 30th was speedily
-felt on October 1st. Overnight the enemy must have made
-up his mind that it was hopeless to try to retain any further
-hold upon the tunnel line, and his further resistance melted
-rapidly away. On October 1st events moved quickly; by 10
-a.m. the Fifth Division reported the capture of Joncourt.
-By midday the whole of the village of Bony was in our hands,
-and at the same hour the air observers reported our patrols
-rapidly approaching the "Knob" and Le Catelet village.</p>
-
-<p>By nightfall of October 1st the whole operation had been
-successfully completed. The northern entrance to the tunnel,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
-the "Knob" and the whole of the Railway Spur were in our
-hands; our line ran just west of Le Catelet and east of Estrées
-and Joncourt; all isolated parties of Americans and all
-American wounded had been gathered in, and the whole situation
-had been satisfactorily cleared up from an Artillery point of
-view.</p>
-
-<p>Later the same night our patrols entered Le Catelet, which
-lay in a hollow below us, and found the village deserted except
-for a number of enemy wounded. The enemy, during that day,
-relinquished his last hold upon the famous tunnel defences, and
-withdrew precipitately eastwards to the Beaurevoir hill and
-northwards towards Aubencheul. Our total captures during
-the three days' operations amounted to 3,057 prisoners and
-35 guns.</p>
-
-<p>It had been a stiff fight, and the endurance of the Infantry
-had been highly tested. The skill displayed by the Third Division
-in the course of the close trench fighting of September 30th
-was particularly noteworthy. The stress upon Major-General
-Gellibrand and his Staff and Infantry Brigadiers had been severe.
-The several Brigades and Battalions had unavoidably become
-seriously mixed up. Control became very difficult, but was
-never completely lost.</p>
-
-<p>This was illustrated by the following incident of the day's
-fighting. I had ascertained that the whole of the Infantry of
-the Division had been committed, and there were no reserves
-in the hands of the Divisional Commander. One Battalion of
-the 9th Brigade was fighting under the orders of the 11th Brigade,
-another under that of the 10th Brigade. I took exception to
-this, and directed that a Divisional reserve should be immediately
-reconstituted. In spite of the difficulties of communication,
-Gellibrand contrived to carry this intricate order into effect
-during the very climax of the fight.</p>
-
-<p>Gellibrand was a man of interesting personality, more a philosopher
-and student than a man of action. His great personal
-bravery and his high sense of duty compensated in a great
-measure for some tendency to uncertainty in executive action.
-He had been a professional soldier, but before the war had retired<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
-into civil life. When the call came, he received a junior Staff
-appointment with the First Division, but his outstanding merits
-soon gained him promotion. As a Brigadier, he had, during
-1916 and 1917, successfully led several of the Australian Brigades.
-His command of the Third Division during the last five months
-of active fighting was characterized by complete success in
-battle. His temperament and methods sometimes involved
-him in embarrassments on the administrative side of his work;
-but he succeeded in retaining to the last the whole-hearted
-confidence of his troops.</p>
-
-<p>I feel certain from my close observation of the course of events
-on September 30th and October 1st, that much of the success
-of the battle was due to Gellibrand's personal tenacity, and the
-assiduous manner in which he kept himself in personal touch
-from hour to hour with the forward situation and progress of
-his troops.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately upon the conclusion of the fighting I issued the
-following message:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"Please convey to all Commanders, Staffs and troops
-of the Third and Fifth Australian Divisions my sincere
-appreciation of and thanks for their fine work of the past
-three days. Confronted at the outset of the operations
-with a critical situation of great difficulty, and hampered
-by inability to make full use of our Artillery resources,
-these Divisions succeeded in completely overwhelming a
-stubborn defence in the most strongly fortified sector of the
-Western Front. This was due to the determination and
-resource of the leaders and the grit, endurance and fighting
-spirit of the troops. Nothing more praiseworthy has been
-done by Australian troops in this war."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The operations entrusted to the Corps had, by the night of
-October 1st, been substantially completed. Although the Beaurevoir
-defence line still lay to the east of us, the main canal
-defences, as far as the Le Catelet line, had been pierced, and
-a way had been opened for the Thirteenth Corps to pass across
-the line of the tunnel to be launched upon its task of turning the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>
-enemy out of the northern continuation of the Hindenburg Line
-by envelopment from the south.</p>
-
-<p>It was impossible to call upon the Third and Fifth Divisions
-for any further effort. Their work had been most exhausting.
-Furthermore, the steady drain upon their resources, after sixty
-days of almost continuous battle activity, had so reduced their
-fighting strength, that a very drastic reorganization had become
-necessary. This could only be effected by a complete withdrawal
-from the fighting zone.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly, arrangements were put in hand for the immediate
-relief of these two Divisions. The Fifth Australian was relieved
-by the Second Australian Division, and the Third Australian
-Division by a Division of the Thirteenth Corps. Both the
-relieved Divisions, in the course of the next few days, followed
-the First and Fourth Australian Divisions into the grateful
-rest area which had been provided to the west and south-west
-of Amiens, and before they were again called upon for further
-front-line service hostilities had ended.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTE:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> "Artillery Formation" is an advance in numerous small infantry columns
-irregularly spaced both in frontage and depth. "Line of Skirmishers" is an
-advance in successive lines of men, the intervals between the men being from
-two to five paces, and between the lines from 50 to 100 paces.</p></div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVI<br />
-
-MONTBREHAIN AND AFTER</h2>
-
-
-<p>The successive withdrawals of the First, Fourth, Third
-and Fifth Australian Divisions from the battle zone
-during the period from September 22nd to October 2nd had
-been arranged with the Fourth Army Commander about the
-middle of September. The Corps had been continuously
-employed on front-line duty since April, and had already accomplished
-a considerable advance, for every inch of which it had
-been obliged to fight.</p>
-
-<p>This consideration alone had earned for the Corps a period
-of rest. But other important questions arose which affected
-the situation.</p>
-
-<p>I have mentioned that early in 1918 all Brigades of the
-Imperial Service had, owing to failing man-power, been reduced
-from four to three Battalions each. In this reduction the
-Australian Brigades participated only to a small extent during
-the fighting period. Every one of the Australian battalions had
-created great traditions; regimental <i>esprit</i> and pride of unit
-were very strong. The private soldier valued his Battalion
-colour patch almost more than any other decoration.</p>
-
-<p>My predecessor in the Corps Command had, during May, 1918,
-directed the disbandment of one Battalion each of the 9th, 12th
-and 13th Brigades. This was due to the wastage resulting from
-the heavy fighting by these Brigades on the Villers-Bretonneux
-front. The residues of the disbanded battalions were used as
-drafts to replenish the remaining three Battalions of each
-Brigade. It was doubtless a measure directed by necessity, as
-the flow of reinforcements was steadily diminishing.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Much lamentation was, however, caused among the officers
-and men who thus lost their battalion identity, both among
-those remaining in the field and those convalescing from wounds
-and sickness, who were thereby deprived of the hope of rejoining
-their former units.</p>
-
-<p>Through all these events I became fully alive to the difficulties
-which would present themselves when the evil day
-should arrive on which the fate of still other battalions would
-have to be decided. It was a day whose advent I was anxious
-to stave off until the last possible moment.</p>
-
-<p>Throughout the summer and autumn it became incumbent
-upon me to keep a close watch upon the fighting strengths of all
-the 57 Australian Infantry Battalions in the field. I had to
-consider the numbers actually present with the unit, the numbers
-likely to join from time to time from convalescent camps and
-hospitals, and the flow of new recruits from the Australian
-Depots in England. Almost daily forecasts had to be made as
-to the probable strengths available on a given date in all the
-Battalions likely to be employed in a given operation.</p>
-
-<p>The full official strength of a Battalion of Infantry was 1,000
-at the outbreak of the war, but a reduction to 900 had been
-authorized in July, 1918. No battalion in the Army was ever
-for long able to maintain itself at a strength of 900. Indeed,
-experience went to show that so long as the strength did not fall
-below 600, a unit could quite well carry out, in battle, a normal
-battalion task, provided that frequent periods of short rest
-could be assured.</p>
-
-<p>Towards the middle of September, 1918, the successful course
-of the fighting, and the moderate rate of net wastage&mdash;by which
-I mean the excess of battle losses over replenishments from the
-rear&mdash;had convinced me that there was every reason to hope
-that the strengths of the 57 battalions could be maintained at
-a useful standard until the end of the campaigning season of
-that year. If the war were to go on into 1919, and provided that
-the Australian Corps could be kept out of the line over the
-three winter months, thereby avoiding the daily wastage of
-trench duty, I felt able to guarantee that by the spring of 1919
-the whole of these battalions would again have become replenished
-to a sufficient extent for a spring campaign.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/map-h.jpg" width="1200" height="911" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">Map H</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It may have been an optimistic view; it may have savoured
-of a desire to postpone the evil day. But I felt assured that the
-disbandment of a number of additional battalions would seriously
-impair the fighting spirit of the whole Australian Corps. I was
-prepared to take the chance of being able to carry on until the
-end of 1918 with the whole 57 battalions retained intact.</p>
-
-<p>But I was not permitted to do so. At various times during
-the period June to August, 1918, an unimaginative department
-at G.H.Q. kept harassing me with inquiries as to when it was
-proposed to conform to the new Imperial organization in which
-all Brigades were to be reduced to three Battalions each. These
-inquiries were at first ignored, but early in September the
-Adjutant-General became insistent for a reply.</p>
-
-<p>I set out the whole position as I saw it, and strongly urged a
-postponement of the question until the Corps should have completed
-the vitally important series of fighting operations on which
-it was then engaged. Looking back upon the course of events
-of that time, it is hardly credible now that, having regard to
-the reasons given, these representations should have been ignored.
-I procrastinated. Suddenly I received instructions from the
-War Office that some 6,000 men of the Corps, who had served
-continuously since 1914, were to be given six months' furlough
-to Australia, and that they were to be held in readiness to
-entrain en route for Australia at forty-eight hours' notice.</p>
-
-<p>These orders were received only two days before the battle of
-Hargicourt. The First and Fourth Divisions, destined to fight
-in that battle, were those most affected by such a withdrawal of
-men, because these Divisions contained the battalions and
-batteries which had been longest in the field. I could not,
-obviously, take up any attitude which would postpone the
-well-earned furlough of these veterans; nor had I the smallest
-inclination to do so. My case against the main proposal for an
-immediate extinction of additional battalions, was, however,
-weakened thereby.</p>
-
-<p>The responsible authorities overruled my objections, and on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
-September 19th I received peremptory instructions to disband
-eight additional battalions forthwith. With many misgivings,
-I had no option but to comply. I called my Divisional Commanders
-together, and with them decided which battalions should
-suffer extinction.</p>
-
-<p>It was a difficult choice, and created a situation of great
-difficulty. The whole of the personnel affected raised a very
-subordinate but none the less determined protest. One battalion
-after another very respectfully but very firmly took the stand
-that they did not wish to disband, and would prefer not to fight
-as dismembered and scattered portions of other battalions.</p>
-
-<p>This attitude, perhaps, bordered upon insubordination, but
-it was conceived for a very worthy purpose. It was a pathetic
-effort, and elicited much sympathy from the senior Commanders
-and myself.</p>
-
-<p>On the eve of the great operations for the overthrow of the
-Hindenburg Line I found myself, therefore, in a sea of troubles,
-and threatened with the possibility of internal disaffection. To
-outsiders who could have no understanding of the situation
-this might imperil the fair fame and prestige of the Australian
-Army Corps.</p>
-
-<p>Up to this stage the Fourth Army Commander had been in no
-way concerned in the matter. The pressure upon me had come
-from the War Office and the Adjutant-General's Department.
-Lord Rawlinson's interests, however, now became vitally
-involved. I submitted the whole position to him. I pointed out
-how inopportune the time was for risking trouble of this nature.
-The order for disbandment, having been given, must of course
-stand, and obedience must be insisted upon; but a postponement
-of further action for fourteen days was desirable, if the opportunity
-of a decisive blow against the enemy was not to be imperilled
-by an impairment of the fighting spirit and goodwill of
-the Australian Corps.</p>
-
-<p>Rawlinson accepted my views in their entirety, and used his
-authority and influence with the Commander-in-Chief. A postponement
-of action was authorized, and all the Battalions which
-had been threatened with extinction, with one exception, were
-permitted to remain intact during the remainder of the fighting
-period. The exception was made in the case of the 59th and
-60th Battalions (of the 15th Brigade), whose men most loyally
-made no demur at the immediate amalgamation of the two
-battalions for the purposes of the forthcoming operations.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_274fp.jpg" width="1200" height="769" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>German Prisoners&mdash;captured at the battle of Chuignes, August 23rd, 1918.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_275fp.jpg" width="1200" height="773" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Captured German Guns&mdash;Park of Ordnance captured by the Australians during August, 1918.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>By the end of September, therefore, three separate factors
-were operating to make a short withdrawal of the Corps from
-the battle zone desirable.</p>
-
-<p>These were, the long unbroken period of line service, the
-orders for the reorganization of the Brigades on a three-Battalion
-basis, and the granting of Australian furlough to the veterans.</p>
-
-<p>These were the reasons which brought about the decision that
-the whole of the Australian Corps should be sent for a period of
-rest in a coastal area as soon as the battle operations on which
-it had embarked had been brought to a successful conclusion.</p>
-
-<p>Those operations were, on October 1st, almost completed.
-Only the Beaurevoir line still remained to be mastered, and
-the Second Australian Division, which had been resting since
-its successes at Mont St. Quentin, was available to undertake
-that task. For the next three days the Australian Corps became,
-therefore, reduced to only one Division (the Second Australian)
-in the line, with the 27th and 30th American Divisions in support.</p>
-
-<p>The Second Division occupied the night of October 1st and
-the greater part of October 2nd in the process of taking over
-line duty from the Fifth Division, and in preparing for an attack
-timed for the next morning upon the Beaurevoir defences. I
-handed over the northern part of what had been the Australian
-Corps front, on the day previous, to the 50th Division (of the
-Thirteenth Corps), which had by now effected the passage of
-the tunnel line, and had deployed upon my left, facing north
-and north-east.</p>
-
-<p>After these adjustments were made, the Corps front, on the
-night of October 2nd, extended from Mont St. Martin through
-the eastern outskirts of Estrées and Joncourt, where I joined
-with the 32nd Division (now belonging to the Ninth Corps).
-It was a frontage of nearly 6,000 yards, an extraordinary length
-for the battle front of a single Division. Our line lay parallel to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
-and about 1,000 yards to the west of the Beaurevoir line, and the
-attack for next day was designed to be delivered in a north-easterly
-direction. If the Beaurevoir line itself were captured,
-the attack was to be pushed on beyond, in the endeavour to
-sweep the enemy off the prominent hill on which was situated
-the village of Beaurevoir. Concurrently the Thirteenth Corps
-would attack Prospect Hill, lying to the north-east of Gouy
-village.</p>
-
-<p>The Beaurevoir line was a fully-developed defensive system,
-with front, support and communication trenches, thoroughly
-traversed, well wired in, and still in good condition. In 1917
-it would have been considered impossible to capture such a line
-of defence by such a force on such a frontage.</p>
-
-<p>The Second Division deployed two of its Brigades, the 5th
-on the right and the 7th on the left, with the 6th Brigade in
-reserve. The 5th Tank Brigade, now greatly reduced in
-numbers, and some Whippet Tanks co-operated in the attack.
-The assault was launched at 6.5 a.m. under a Field Artillery
-barrage. Considerable opposition was met with. The trenches
-were found strongly held, particularly with machine guns, and
-the uncut wire seriously impeded the Infantry.</p>
-
-<p>The frontal attack of the 5th Brigade, nevertheless, achieved
-almost immediate success, although in some parts of the line
-there were centres of resistance which had to be enveloped before
-they yielded. The performance of the Tanks on this day was
-disappointing. Most of the heavier Tanks were disabled by
-Artillery fire, while the Whippets found the Beaurevoir trench
-lines too wide to straddle. Nevertheless, the spirited action of the
-Artillery made up for the loss of the assistance of the Tanks,
-and by 11 a.m. the whole of the Beaurevoir line in front of the
-5th Brigade had been captured.</p>
-
-<p>Further to the north, the 7th Brigade found the trenches
-almost end on to the direction of their advance, and the battle
-here speedily took on the form of pure trench fighting with bomb
-and bayonet, a type of fighting in which the Australian excels.
-Steady progress northwards was made.</p>
-
-<p>The whole of the Beaurevoir line over the full extent of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>
-Corps front was taken before midday, and although already
-very tired, the assaulting Brigades pushed on beyond, to the
-ascent of the Beaurevoir spur. On a knoll at its south-western
-extremity stood the stone base of the now wrecked Beaurevoir
-Mill, a prominent landmark visible for miles.</p>
-
-<p>The spur and the vicinity of the Mill were found to be strongly
-held, probably by fugitives driven out that morning from the
-Beaurevoir trenches. The weight of our attack spent itself on
-the slopes of the spur. The 6th Brigade was therefore launched
-at Beaurevoir Mill and village. Although some portion of our
-attack passed the Mill and reached the village, our available
-Infantry strength was not sufficient to mop it up satisfactorily,
-and the Brigadier decided to establish for the night a secure line
-about 1,000 yards south-west of the village.</p>
-
-<p>The total captures by the Second Division on this day exceeded
-a thousand prisoners and many machine guns&mdash;an astonishing
-performance for three weak brigades, fighting under open and
-exposed conditions.</p>
-
-<p>The attack on Beaurevoir hill had been undertaken chiefly to
-keep the enemy engaged and on the move, while an additional
-Division of the Thirteenth Corps could be brought across the
-line of the tunnel and deployed into the battle line. The direction
-of the attack had been to the north-east. It now became
-necessary to readjust the general easterly line of advance by
-redistributing the Army front between the three Corps now in
-line. The greater part of October 4th was occupied in carrying
-out these arrangements, and the Second Division availed itself of
-the period to improve its line and the positions of parts of it by
-local attacks and the capture of tactical points along its front.
-On this day the Division gathered in a further 800 prisoners and
-five guns.</p>
-
-<p>By nightfall on October 4th the Corps front, now reduced to
-4,000 yards, ran generally north and south, well east of Wiancourt
-and just east of Ramicourt. The task of the Second Division
-and of the Australian Corps was completed, and in pursuance
-of arrangements previously made, the initial steps were
-taken on that day to hand over the Australian Corps front to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
-27th and 30th American Divisions, which had, in the days intervening
-since September 29th, been reorganized and rested. They
-were to be given a place in the front battle line under the direct
-orders of their own Corps Headquarters (General Read).</p>
-
-<p>To cover the interval of time necessary to enable the first of
-the American Divisions (30th) to move up into line, General
-Rawlinson desired me to retain control of the battle front for
-one day longer, and avail myself of the time to make an endeavour
-to advance our line still further to the east.</p>
-
-<p>I selected as a suitable objective the village of Montbrehain,
-which stood on a plateau that dominated any further advance.</p>
-
-<p>The Second Division was instructed to carry out this attack
-early on October 5th, and I allotted to them one company of
-Tanks, which was all that could be materialized in fighting trim
-at such short notice.</p>
-
-<p>Rosenthal launched his attack at five minutes past six in the
-morning of October 5th. It was the 6th Brigade which led it.
-The village was full of machine guns, but the gallant Brigade
-dashed in with the bayonet, and methodically worked its way
-through the village to its eastern outskirts. A counter-attack
-developed about noon, and for a time about 400 yards of ground
-had to be yielded, but our foremost line was speedily restored
-with the assistance of a battalion of the 5th Brigade.</p>
-
-<p>By nightfall our line ran completely around the eastern outskirts
-of the village of Montbrehain, the whole of which was
-in our possession. We took from it over 600 prisoners belonging
-to nine different German regiments.</p>
-
-<p>What was even more interesting was that we came for the
-first time in the war upon French civilians, who had been under
-the domination of the enemy since the autumn of 1914. These
-unfortunate folk were found hidden away in cellars and underground
-shelters, and their joy at their deliverance from foreign
-bondage was pathetic. It was evident that the enemy had not
-had time to carry out the evacuation of the civilians, as had been
-his practice throughout the whole area over which the Australian
-Corps had hitherto advanced.</p>
-
-<p>By the night of October 5th the Corps had, by the victory of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
-Montbrehain, advanced its line to a point six miles to the east
-of the Bellicourt Tunnel, and had thereby confirmed the irretrievable
-collapse of the whole of the Hindenburg defences.</p>
-
-<p>This achievement is, above everything else, an illustration,
-which should become classic, of the maxim that in war the
-<i>moral</i> is to the material as three to one. The enemy had all the
-advantages of position, of carefully prepared field works, of
-highly-organized defences, of detailed acquaintance with our
-lines of approach from the west, and of all the other tactical
-benefits of the defence.</p>
-
-<p>Yet we had the advantage of moral factors. For the past
-nine weeks the enemy had suffered defeat after defeat. He had
-at one time been surprised and overwhelmed. He had at
-another time been driven from strong positions under conditions
-when surprise played no part. He had been defeated in gunnery,
-in the air, and in close Infantry fighting. The <i>moral</i>
-of his troops had steadily declined. They no longer hoped for
-victory, but anticipated defeat. They knew that they were a
-beaten army.</p>
-
-<p>The victory won in the series of battles from September 29th
-to October 5th was a victory of <i>moral</i>, the resolute determination
-of our troops to overcome all obstacles prevailing
-against the failing spirits of the defenders. It was a signal
-illustration that no defences, however powerful, can resist an
-energetically pressed assault, unless the defenders meet the attack
-with equal resolution. Verdun and the cliffs of Gallipoli are examples
-of resolute defence. Port Arthur and the Hindenburg
-line are equally striking instances of the collapse of formidable
-field works through failure of the <i>moral</i> of the defenders.</p>
-
-<p>Montbrehain was the last Australian battle in the Great War,
-and the fighting career of the Australian Army Corps had, as
-events turned out, come to an end. On that same day my
-Second Division was relieved by the 30th American Division,
-and I handed over command of the battle front to General Read.
-I had borne continuous responsibility, as a Corps Commander,
-for a section of the battle front in France varying from four
-to eleven miles for 128 consecutive days without a break.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On that same day, too, Prince Max of Baden accepted the
-programme of the President of the United States of America,
-and requested him to take in hand the restoration of peace.
-On behalf of the German Government he also asked for an
-immediate Armistice on Land, Water and in the Air.</p>
-
-<p>The long-drawn-out negotiations which followed need only a
-brief reference. It was first necessary for the Entente Powers
-to agree upon a common line of action; then followed negotiations
-between the plenipotentiaries of the belligerents, and
-hostilities did not actually cease until after the conditions of
-the Armistice had been signed in the early morning of November
-11th.</p>
-
-<p>During this period of five weeks, however, fighting went on.
-It was of an altogether different character from that in which
-the Australian Corps had been engaged. The enemy had no line
-of defence left in France. He was compelled to a retreat which
-became general along his whole front, and gathered momentum
-day by day. He gave up Lens, Armentières and the Aubers Ridge
-without a struggle, thus enabling the Second and Fifth Armies
-to advance to the occupation of Lille and the adjacent industrial
-centres.</p>
-
-<p>A great army recoiling rapidly upon itself is beset with even
-greater difficulties than an army sweeping rapidly forward. If
-its retreat is not to be converted into a rout, time must be
-allowed for the methodical withdrawal, in proper sequence, of
-the whole complex organization in rear of the battle front.
-Headquarters and hospitals, workshops and aerodromes, depots
-and supplies must be dismantled, packed and re-established
-further in rear; guns, transport and reserve troops must be
-withdrawn stage by stage, and, last of all, the fighting line must
-fall back in sympathy with the rate of withdrawal of all in rear.</p>
-
-<p>Every hour's delay is an hour gained. Roads become congested,
-bridges overtaxed, cohesion and discipline are imperilled.
-An enforced withdrawal on so large a scale is one of the most
-difficult operations of war.</p>
-
-<p>The enemy's tactics during this period were, therefore, purely
-those of delay, achieved by the methodical destruction of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
-bridges, tearing up of railways, and the blowing of great craters
-at every important road intersection. These methods impeded
-the advance of our armies quite as much as his rearguards,
-who invariably yielded to the smallest demonstration of force.</p>
-
-<p>Battles on the grand scale were now a thing of the past, and
-from the completion of the capture of the Hindenburg defences
-up to the signing of the Armistice there was no event in France
-of outstanding military importance.</p>
-
-<p>The pursuit of the enemy towards the eastern frontiers of
-France and Belgium was, however, exhausting to the British
-and American troops on the front which the Australian Corps
-had vacated. It was only a question of time for the Corps to
-be again called upon, this time to take its share of pursuit. The
-Armistice negotiations were dragging out, and it was uncertain
-that they would be satisfactorily concluded. The Australian
-Corps had had a month for a pleasant rest along the banks of
-the Somme, between Amiens and Abbeville. It had had time
-to carry out the extensive reorganizations required by the War
-Office. On November 5th orders came for the Corps once
-again to move up to the front.</p>
-
-<p>The First and Fourth Divisions led the return to the battle
-zone. The remaining three Divisions were to follow. My Corps
-Headquarters, on November 10th, commenced its move to Le
-Cateau, to occupy the very château which had been inhabited
-by General von der Marwitz, the Commander of the Second
-German Army, against whom the Australian Corps had for so
-long been operating. I was actually on the way there on
-November 11th when the order arrived for the cessation of
-hostilities.</p>
-
-<p>The Australian Army Corps was therefore not again employed,
-either in the final stages of pursuing the enemy out of France,
-or as part of the Army of Occupation on German territory.</p>
-
-<p>The Prime Minister of Australia forwarded to me, the day
-after my arrival at Le Cateau, the following message:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>The Government and the people of Australia extend
-their heartiest congratulations on the triumphant conclusion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
-of your great efforts. I am specially requested to
-convey to you their heartfelt thanks and deep admiration
-for your brilliant and great leadership, and for the way in
-which you and the brave men associated with you have
-borne the sufferings and trials of the past four years, and
-in common with the troops of all the Allied Nations brought
-the civilized peoples of the world through adversity to
-victorious peace. On behalf of the Government and the
-people of the Commonwealth, I assure you, and every
-Australian soldier in the field, that the Commonwealth is
-full of pride and admiration of their endurance and sacrifice.
-The Australian soldiers are entitled to, and shall
-receive, not only the thanks of a grateful people, but that
-treatment which their great services deserve.</p>
-
-<div class="right">
-<span class="smcap">W. M. Hughes.</span><br />
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>Not long after the conclusion of hostilities I was called upon
-by my Government to undertake the organization and direction
-of a special department to carry out the repatriation of the
-whole of the Australian Imperial Force, in Europe, Egypt, Salonika
-and Mesopotamia. This compelled me to sever, with much regret,
-my close and intimate association with the personnel of the
-Army Corps.</p>
-
-<p>Before proceeding to England to establish the new department,
-I issued the following Farewell Order:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>Upon relinquishing the command of the Australian Army
-Corps, in order to take up the important and difficult work
-of the Repatriation and Demobilization of the Australian
-Imperial Force, which has been entrusted to me by the
-Commonwealth Government, I desire to offer to all ranks of
-the Corps a heartfelt expression of my gratitude to all for
-the splendid and loyal support which they have rendered
-to me during the past six months.</p>
-
-<p>It has been the period during which the Corps has attained
-its highest development, as a fighting organism, of cohesion
-and efficiency. This has been brought about alike by the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
-valour of the troops of all arms and services, and by the
-splendid devotion of Commanders, Staffs, and Regimental
-Officers, and has resulted in the series of brilliant victories
-which have contributed in so high a measure to the overthrow
-and utter collapse of our principal enemy.</p>
-
-<p>For the remainder of the period during which the Corps
-will continue to act as a military body, held in readiness
-for any emergency that may arise during the peace negotiations,
-I am confident that every man will strive to do all
-in his power to uphold the great renown which the Corps
-has so worthily won.</p>
-
-<p>But, having completed our task in the main object which
-brought us from our distant homeland, and having thereby
-safeguarded the future of our Nation by the conquest of our
-most formidable enemy, we are now faced with another
-and an equally important task, namely, to prepare ourselves
-to resume our duties of citizenship and to assist individually
-and collectively in the reconstruction of the Australian
-Nation. Our numbers and our prestige place this opportunity
-in our hands, and impose upon us this great
-responsibility.</p>
-
-<p>I feel sure that every man in the Corps will in this also
-worthily respond to the call of duty, and will co-operate
-loyally and self-sacrificingly in the realization of all plans
-and projects which will be developed to so worthy an end.</p></blockquote>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVII<br />
-
-RESULTS</h2>
-
-
-<p>The time has arrived when it is proper to take stock of
-gains and losses, and to endeavour to appraise, at its
-true value, the work done by the Australian Army Corps during
-its long-sustained effort of the last six months of its fighting
-career.</p>
-
-<p>It has become customary to regard the actual captures of
-prisoners and guns as a true index of the degree of success
-which has attended any series of battle operations. Every
-soldier knows, however, that such a standard of judgment,
-applied alone, would render but scant justice. The actual
-captures in any engagement depend more upon the state of
-<i>moral</i> of the enemy and the temperament of the attacking troops
-than upon the military quality of the battle effort considered as
-a whole. While large captures necessarily imply great victories,
-it does not by any means follow that small captures imply the
-reverse.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, judged by such a purely arbitrary standard,
-the performances of the Australian Army Corps during the
-period under review are worthy of being set out in particular
-detail.</p>
-
-<p>From March 27th, when Australian troops were for the first
-time interposed to arrest the German advance, until October 5th,
-when they were finally withdrawn from the line, the total
-captures made by them were:</p>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="left">Prisoners&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td align="right">29,144</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Guns</td><td align="right">338</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>No accurate record was ever kept of the capture of machine<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>
-guns, trench mortars, searchlights, vehicles and travelling
-kitchens or pharmacies, nor of the quantity of Artillery ammunition,
-which alone must have amounted to millions of rounds.</p>
-
-<p>During the advance, from August 8th to October 5th, the
-Australian Corps recaptured and released no less than 116 towns
-and villages. Every one of these was defended more or less
-stoutly. This count of them does not include a very large
-number of minor hamlets, which were unnamed on the maps,
-nor farms, brickfields, factories, sugar refineries, and similar
-isolated groups of buildings, every one of which had been fortified
-and converted by the enemy into a stronghold of resistance.</p>
-
-<p>Although the amount of territory reoccupied, taken by itself,
-is ordinarily no criterion of value, the whole circumstances of
-the relentless advance of the Australian Corps make it a convenient
-standard of comparison. The total area of all the
-ground fought over, from the occupation of which the enemy
-was ejected, amounted in the period under consideration to 394
-square miles.</p>
-
-<p>A much more definite and crucial basis for evaluating the
-military successes of the Corps is the number of enemy Divisions
-actually engaged and defeated in the course of the operations.
-Very accurate records of these have been kept, and every one of
-them was identified by a substantial contribution to the list
-of prisoners taken. An analysis of this investigation produced
-the following results:</p>
-
-<p>The total number of separate enemy divisions engaged was
-thirty-nine. Of these, twenty were engaged once only, twelve
-were engaged twice, six three times, and one four times. Each
-time "engaged" represents a separate and distinct period of
-line duty for the enemy Division referred to.</p>
-
-<p>Up to the time of the Armistice we had definitely ascertained
-that at least six of these thirty-nine enemy Divisions had been
-entirely disbanded as the result of the battering which they
-had received. Their numberings have already been given. It
-is more than probable that several other Divisions shared the
-same fate, by reason of the number of prisoners actually taken,
-and the other casualties known to have been inflicted. Up to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>
-the time when the signing of the Armistice precluded further
-inquiries, absolutely conclusive evidence of their disappearance
-had not been obtained.</p>
-
-<p>In such an analysis it is possible to go even further, and to
-compare the tangible results achieved with the relative strength
-of the forces engaged. The Australian Army Corps of five
-Divisions represented 9&frac12; per cent. of the whole of the remaining
-53 Divisions of the British Army engaged on the Western Front.
-Its captures in prisoners, by the same comparison, and within
-the period reviewed&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, March 27th to October 5th&mdash;was
-23 per cent., in guns 23&frac12; per cent., and in territory reoccupied
-was 21&frac12; per cent. of the whole of the rest of the British Army.</p>
-
-<p>The ratio, therefore, of the results to the strengths, as between
-the five Australian Divisions and the whole of the rest of the
-British Army, was as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="left">Prisoners</td><td align="right">2.42</td><td align="center">times.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Territory&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td align="right">2.24</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Guns</td><td align="right">2.47</td><td align="center">"</td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<p>It is not, however, by the mere numerical results disclosed
-by such a comparison that the work of the Australian Army
-Corps should be judged. If a broad survey be made of the
-whole of the 1918 campaign, I think that the decisive part which
-the Corps took in it will emerge even more convincingly.</p>
-
-<p>Such a survey will show that the whole sequence of events
-may be divided into five very definite and clearly-marked
-stages. The first was the arrest and bringing to naught of the
-great German spring offensive; the second was the conversion
-of the enemy's offensive strategy into a distinct and unqualified
-defensive. Next followed the great, initial and irredeemable
-defeat of August 8th, which, according to the enemy's own
-admissions, was the beginning of the end. Then came the denial
-to the enemy of the respite which he sought on the line of the
-Somme, which might well have helped him to recover himself
-for another year of war; and, finally, there was the overthrow
-of his great defensive system, on which he relied as a last bulwark
-to safeguard his hold upon French soil, a hold which would
-have enabled him to bargain for terms.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It must never be forgotten that whatever claims may be made
-to the contrary, Germany's surrender was precipitated by reason
-of her military defeat in the field. Her submarine campaign,
-disappointing to her expectations as it had been, was still a
-potent weapon. Her fleet was yet intact. Our blockade was
-grievous, but she did in fact survive it, even though it continued
-in force for a full eight months after her surrender. The
-defection of Bulgaria and the collapse of Turkey might conceivably
-be a source of increased military strength, even if one
-of greater political weakness. Had she been able to hold us at
-bay in France and Belgium for but another month or six weeks,
-she could have been assured of a respite of three months of
-winter in which to organize a levy en masse. Who can say that
-the stress of another winter and the prospect of another year
-of war might not have destroyed the Entente combination
-against her?</p>
-
-<p>On these grounds I believe that the real and immediate reason
-for the precipitate surrender of Germany on October 5th, 1918,
-was the defeat of her Army in the field. It followed so closely
-upon the breaching of the Hindenburg defences on September
-29th to October 4th, that it cannot be dissociated from that
-event as a final determining cause.</p>
-
-<p>Whether this view be correct or not, I think that the claim may
-fairly be made for the Australian Army Corps, that in each of
-the stages of the operations which led to this military overthrow,
-the Corps played an important, and in some of them a predominating,
-part. No better testimony for such a conclusion
-can be adduced than the admissions of Ludendorff himself.</p>
-
-<p>Narrowing our survey of the closing events of the campaign
-to a consideration of the fighting activities of the Australian
-Corps, I would like to emphasize the remarkable character of that
-effort. Deprived of the advantage of a regular inflow of trained
-recruits, and relying practically entirely for any replenishments
-upon the return of its own sick and wounded, the Corps was
-able to maintain an uninterrupted fighting activity over a period
-of six months. For the last sixty days of this period the Corps
-maintained an unchecked advance of thirty-seven miles against<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span>
-the powerful and determined opposition of a still formidable
-enemy, who employed all the mechanical and scientific resources
-at his disposal.</p>
-
-<p>Such a result alone, considered in the abstract and quite apart
-from any comparison with the performances of other forces, is
-a testimony, on the one hand, to the pre-eminent fighting
-qualities of the Australian soldier considered individually, and,
-on the other hand, to the collective capacity and efficiency of
-the military effort made by the Corps. I doubt whether there
-is any parallel for such a performance in the whole range of
-military history.</p>
-
-<p>As regards the troops themselves, the outstanding feature
-of the campaign was their steadily rising <i>moral</i>. Always high,
-it was, in spite of fatigue and stress, never higher than in the
-closing days. A stage had been reached when they regarded
-their adversary no longer with cautious respect but with undisguised
-contempt.</p>
-
-<p>On the part of the troops it was a remarkable feat of physical
-and mental endurance to face again and yet again the stress of
-battle. To the infantry a certain measure of periodical rest was
-accorded, but the Artillery and technical services had scarcely any
-respite at all. Almost every day of the whole period they
-worked and fought, night and day, under the fire of the enemy's
-batteries, and under his drenching, suffocating gas attacks,
-for our battery positions were the favourite targets for his gas
-bombardments.</p>
-
-<p>On the part of the staffs it was a period of ceaseless toil, both
-mental and physical. The perfection of the staff work, its precision,
-its completeness, its rapidity, its whole-souled devotion
-to the service of the troops, were the necessary conditions for
-the victories which were won.</p>
-
-<p>Another outstanding feature was the uniformity of standard
-achieved by all the five Divisions, as well as the wonderful comradeship
-which they displayed towards each other. Omitting
-altogether the performances of any one of them in the previous
-years of the war, it is noteworthy that all so fully seized the
-opportunities that presented themselves, that each could boast of
-outstanding achievements during this period&mdash;the First Division
-for its capture of Lihons and the battles of Chuignes and Hargicourt,
-the Second Division for Mont St. Quentin and Montbrehain,
-the Third for Bray, Bouchavesnes and Bony, the Fourth for
-Hamel and Hargicourt, and the Fifth for Péronne and Bellicourt.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/map-j.jpg" width="1200" height="803" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p><span class="smcap">Map J.</span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I must also pass in brief review the losses which the Corps
-suffered during its advance. From August 8th to October 5th
-the total battle casualties were as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="left">Killed</td><td align="right">3,566</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Died of wounds&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td align="right">1,432</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Wounded</td><td align="right">16,166</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Missing</td><td align="right">79</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Total</td><td align="right">21,243</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>Averaging these losses over all five Divisions for the whole
-period, they amount to a wastage from all causes of seventy
-men per Division per day, which must be regarded as extraordinarily
-moderate, having regard to the strenuous nature of
-the fighting, the great results achieved, and the much higher
-rate of losses incurred by Australian troops during the previous
-years of the war. Even during periods of sedentary trench
-warfare the losses averaged forty per Division per day.</p>
-
-<p>The total losses of the Army Corps during this period were,
-indeed, only a small fraction of Australia's contribution to the
-casualty roll for the whole period of the war. It was the least
-costly period, for Australia, of all the fighting that her soldiers
-underwent. Had it been otherwise, the effort could not have
-been maintained for so long, nor could the spirit of the troops
-have been sustained. It was the low cost of victory after
-victory which spurred them on to still greater efforts.</p>
-
-<p>Of the causes which contributed to so gratifying a result,
-much credit must be given to the great development in 1918 of
-mechanical aids, in the form of Tanks, and to a considerable
-augmentation of aeroplanes, Artillery and Lewis guns. Of all
-these the Corps proved eager to avail itself to the full.</p>
-
-<p>But the main cause is, after all, the recognition of a principle
-of text-book simplicity, which is that a vigorous offensive is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>
-in the long run cheaper than a timorous defensive. No war can
-be decided by defensive tactics. The fundamental doctrine of
-the German conception of war was the pursuit of the unrelenting
-offensive; it was only when the Entente Armies, on their part,
-were able and willing themselves to put such a doctrine into
-practice that our formidable enemies were overcome.</p>
-
-<p>It may be that hereafter I may be charged with responsibility
-for so relentlessly and for so long committing the troops of the
-Corps to a sustained aggressive policy. Such criticisms have
-already been whispered in some quarters. But I am sure that
-they will not be shared by any of the men whom it was my privilege
-to command. They knew that an offensive policy was the
-cheapest policy, and the proof that they accepted it as the
-right one was their ever-rising <i>moral</i> as the campaign developed.</p>
-
-<p>"Feed your troops on victory," is a maxim which does not
-appear in any text-book, but it is nevertheless true. The aim
-and end of all the efforts and of all the heavy sacrifices of the
-Australian nation was victory in the field. Nothing that could
-be done could lead more swiftly and more directly to its fulfilment
-than an energetic offensive policy. The troops themselves
-recognized this. They learned to believe, because of success
-heaped upon success, that they were invincible. They were
-right, and I believe that I was right in shaping a course which
-would give them the opportunity of proving it.</p>
-
-<p>There are some aspects of the Australian campaign to which,
-before closing this memoir, I should like to make brief reference.
-Success depended first and foremost upon the military proficiency
-of the Australian private soldier and his glorious spirit of heroism.
-I do not propose to attempt here an exhaustive analysis of the
-causes which led to the making of him. The democratic institutions
-under which he was reared, the advanced system of education
-by which he was trained&mdash;teaching him to think for himself
-and to apply what he had been taught to practical ends&mdash;the
-instinct of sport and adventure which is his national heritage,
-his pride in his young country, and the opportunity which came
-to him of creating a great national tradition, were all factors
-which made him what he was.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Physically the Australian Army was composed of the flower
-of the youth of the continent. A volunteer army&mdash;the only
-purely volunteer army that fought in the Great War&mdash;it was
-composed of men carefully selected according to a high physical
-standard, from which, happily, no departure was made, even
-although recruiting began to fall off in the last year of the war,
-and there were some who had proposed a more lenient recruiting
-examination. The cost to Australia of delivering each fighting
-man, fully trained, to the battle front was too great to permit
-of any doubt whether the physical quality of the raw material
-would survive the wear and tear of war.</p>
-
-<p>Mentally, the Australian soldier was well endowed. In him
-there was a curious blend of a capacity for independent judgment
-with a readiness to submit to self-effacement in a common
-cause. He had a personal dignity all his own. He had the
-political sense highly developed, and was always a keen critic
-of the way in which his battalion or battery was "run," and of
-the policies which guided his destinies from day to day.</p>
-
-<p>His intellectual gifts and his "handiness" made him an apt
-pupil. It was always a delight to see the avidity with which
-he mastered the technique of the weapons which were placed in
-his hands. Machine guns, Lewis guns, Mills' bombs, Stokes'
-mortars, rifle grenades, flares, fuses, detonators, Very lights,
-signal rockets, German machine guns, German stick bombs,
-never for long remained a mystery to him.</p>
-
-<p>At all schools and classes he proved a diligent scholar, and
-astonished his instructors by the speed with which he absorbed
-and bettered his instruction. Conservatism in military methods
-was no part of his creed. He was always mentally alert to adopt
-new ideas and often to invent them.</p>
-
-<p>His adaptability spared him much hardship. He knew how
-to make himself comfortable. To light a fire and cook his food
-was a natural instinct. A sheet of corrugated iron, a batten or
-two, and a few strands of wire were enough to enable him to
-fabricate a home in which he could live at ease.</p>
-
-<p>Psychologically, he was easy to lead but difficult to drive.
-His imagination was readily fired. War was to him a game,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>
-and he played for his side with enthusiasm. His bravery was
-founded upon his sense of duty to his unit, comradeship to his
-fellows, emulation to uphold his traditions, and a combative
-spirit to avenge his hardships and sufferings upon the
-enemy.</p>
-
-<p>Taking him all in all, the Australian soldier was, when once
-understood, not difficult to handle. But he required a sympathetic
-handling, which appealed to his intelligence and satisfied
-his instinct for a "square deal."</p>
-
-<p>Very much and very stupid comment has been made upon
-the discipline of the Australian soldier. That was because the
-very conception and purpose of discipline have been misunderstood.
-It is, after all, only a means to an end, and that end is
-the power to secure co-ordinated action among a large number
-of individuals for the achievement of a definite purpose. It does
-not mean lip service, nor obsequious homage to superiors, nor
-servile observance of forms and customs, nor a suppression of
-individuality.</p>
-
-<p>Such may have been the outward manifestations of discipline
-in times gone by. If they achieved the end in view, it must
-have been because the individual soldier had acquired in those
-days no capacity to act intelligently and because he could be
-considered only in the mass. But modern war makes high
-demands upon the intelligence of the private soldier and upon
-his individual initiative. Any method of training which tends
-to suppress that individuality will tend to reduce his efficiency
-and value. The proverbial "iron discipline" of the Prussian
-military ideal ultimately broke down completely under the test
-of a great war.</p>
-
-<p>In the Australian Forces no strong insistence was ever made
-upon the mere outward forms of discipline. The soldier was
-taught that personal cleanliness was necessary to ensure his
-health and well-being, that a soldierly bearing meant a moral and
-physical uplift which would help him to rise superior to his
-squalid environment, that punctuality meant economy of effort,
-that unquestioning obedience was the only road to successful
-collective action. He acquired these military qualities because<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>
-his intelligence taught him that the reasons given him were true
-ones.</p>
-
-<p>In short, the Australian Army is a proof that individualism
-is the best and not the worst foundation upon which to build up
-collective discipline. The Australian is accustomed to team-work.
-He learns it in the sporting field, in his industrial organizations,
-and in his political activities. The team-work which he
-developed in the war was of the highest order of efficiency.
-Each man understood his part and understood also that the
-part which others had to play depended upon the proper performance
-of his own.</p>
-
-<p>The gunner knew that the success of the infantry depended
-upon his own punctilious performance of his task, its accuracy,
-its punctuality, its conscientious thoroughness. The runner
-knew what depended upon the rapid delivery at the right
-destination of the message which he carried. The mule driver
-knew that the load of ammunition entrusted to him must be
-delivered, at any sacrifice, to its destined battery; the infantryman
-knew that he must be at his tape line at the appointed
-moment, and that he must not overrun his allotted objective.</p>
-
-<p>The truest test of battle discipline was the confidence which
-every leader in the field always felt that he could rely upon
-every man to perform the duty which had been prescribed for
-him, as long as breath lasted, and that he would perform it faithfully
-even when there was no possibility of any supervision.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the sense of duty was always very high, and so also was
-the instinct of comradeship. A soldier, a platoon, a whole
-battalion would sooner sacrifice themselves than "let down"
-a comrade or another unit. There was no finer example of individual
-self-sacrifice, for the benefit of comrades, than the
-Stretcher-bearer service, which suffered exceedingly in its noble
-work of succouring the wounded, and exposed itself unflinchingly
-to every danger.</p>
-
-<p>The relations between the officers and men of the Australian
-Army were also of a nature which is deserving of notice. From
-almost the earliest days of the war violence was done to a deep-rooted
-tradition of the British Army, which discouraged any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>
-promotion from the ranks, and stringently forbade, in cases
-where it was given, promotion in the same unit. It was rare
-to recognize the distinguished service of a ranker; it was impossible
-for him to secure a commission in his own regiment.</p>
-
-<p>The Australian Imperial Force changed all that. Those
-privates, corporals and sergeants who displayed, under battle
-conditions, a notable capacity for leadership were earmarked
-for preferment. If their standard of education was good, they
-received commissions as soon as there were vacancies to fill;
-if not, they were sent to Oxford or Cambridge to be given an
-opportunity of improving both their general and their special
-military knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>As a general rule, they came back as commissioned officers
-to the very unit in which they had enlisted or served. They
-afforded to all its men a tangible and visible proof of the recognition
-of merit and capacity, and their example was always a
-powerful stimulus to all their former comrades.</p>
-
-<p>There was thus no officer caste, no social distinction in the
-whole force. In not a few instances, men of humble origin and
-belonging to the artisan class rose, during the war, from privates
-to the command of Battalions. The efficiency of the force
-suffered in no way in consequence. On the contrary, the whole
-Australian Army became automatically graded into leaders and
-followers according to the individual merits of every man, and
-there grew a wonderful understanding between them.</p>
-
-<p>The duties and responsibilities of the officers were always put
-upon a high plane. They had, during all military service with
-troops, to dress like the men, to live among them in the trenches,
-to share their hardships and privations, and to be responsible
-for their welfare. No officer dared to look after his own comfort
-until every man or horse or mule had been fed and quartered,
-as well as the circumstances of the moment permitted. The
-battle prowess of the Australian regimental officer and the
-magnificent example he set have become household words.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_294fp.jpg" width="1200" height="761" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>The Toll of Battle&mdash;an Australian gun-team destroyed by an enemy shell, September 1st, 1918.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_295fp.jpg" width="1200" height="776" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Inter-Divisional Relief&mdash;The 30th American and the 3rd Australian Divisions passing each other in the "Roo de
-Kanga," Péronne, during the "relief" after the capture of the Hindenburg Line, October 4th, 1918.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Then there must be a word of recognition of the work of the
-devoted and able Staffs. It was upon them, after all, that the
-principal burden of the campaign rested. Upon them, their
-skill and industry, depended the adequacy of all supplies and
-their proper distribution, the precision of all arrangements for
-battle, the accuracy of all maps, orders and instructions, the
-clearness of messages and reports, the completeness of the
-information on which the Commander must base his decisions,
-and the correct calculations of time and space for the movement
-of troops, guns and transport. Their watchword was
-"efficiency."</p>
-
-<p>"The Staff Officer is the servant of the troops." This was
-the ritual pronounced at the initiation of every Staff Officer.
-It was a doctrine which contributed powerfully to the success of
-the staff work as a whole. It meant that the Staff Officer's duties
-extended far beyond the mere transmission of orders. It became
-his business to see that they were understood, and rightly acted
-upon, and to assist in removing every kind of difficulty in their
-due execution. The importance of accurate and reliable staff
-work can be understood when it is realized that no mistake can
-happen without ultimately imposing an added stress upon the
-most subordinate and most helpless of all the components of
-an Army&mdash;the private soldier. An error in a clock time, the
-miscarriage of a message, the neglect to issue an instruction, a
-misreading of an order, an omission from a list of names, a
-mistake in a computation, an incomplete inventory, are bound
-in the long run to involve an added burden somewhere upon
-some private soldier.</p>
-
-<p>The Staff of the Australian Army Corps, its Divisions and
-Brigades, consisted during the last six months almost entirely
-of Australians, many of them belonging to the permanent military
-forces of the Commonwealth, but more still men who, before the
-war, followed civilian occupations. Among both categories
-the quality of the staff work steadily grew in efficiency, speed
-and accuracy, and during the last period of active fighting it
-reached a very high standard indeed.</p>
-
-<p>Had it been otherwise, I could not have carried out either the
-rapid preparations for several of the greater battles, or the
-frequent and complex interchanges of Divisions which alone
-rendered it possible for me to keep up a continuous pressure on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
-the enemy, or the readjustments throughout the whole of the
-very large area always under my jurisdiction which became
-necessary as the advance proceeded.</p>
-
-<p>No reference to the staff work of the Australian Corps during
-the period of my command would be complete without a tribute
-to the work and personality of Brigadier-General T. A. Blamey,
-my Chief of Staff. He possessed a mind cultured far above the
-average, widely informed, alert and prehensile. He had an
-infinite capacity for taking pains. A Staff College graduate, but
-not on that account a pedant, he was thoroughly versed in the
-technique of staff work, and in the minutiæ of all procedure.</p>
-
-<p>He served me with an exemplary loyalty, for which I owe him
-a debt of gratitude which cannot be repaid. Our temperaments
-adapted themselves to each other in a manner which was ideal.
-He had an extraordinary faculty of self-effacement, posing
-always and conscientiously as the instrument to give effect to
-my policies and decisions. Really helpful whenever his advice
-was invited, he never obtruded his own opinions, although I
-knew that he did not always agree with me.</p>
-
-<p>Some day the orders which he drafted for the long series of
-history-making military operations upon which we collaborated
-will become a model for Staff Colleges and Schools for military
-instruction. They were accurate, lucid in language, perfect in
-detail, and always an exact interpretation of my intention. It
-was seldom that I thought that my orders or instructions could
-have been better expressed, and no Commander could have been
-more exacting than I was in the matter of the use of clear
-language to express thought.</p>
-
-<p>Blamey was a man of inexhaustible industry, and accepted
-every task with placid readiness. Nothing was ever too much
-trouble. He worked late and early, and set a high standard for
-the remainder of the large Corps Staff of which he was the head.
-The personal support which he accorded to me was of a nature of
-which I could always feel the real substance. I was able to lean
-on him in times of trouble, stress and difficulty, to a degree which
-was an inexpressible comfort to me.</p>
-
-<p>To the Commanders of the Five Divisions I have already made<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
-detailed allusion. They were all renowned leaders. To all the
-Brigadiers of Infantry and Artillery and to the Heads of the
-Administrative Services who laboured under them, the limitations
-of space forbid my making any individual reference. But
-they were all of them men to whose splendid services Australia
-owes a deep debt of gratitude. In their hands the honour of
-Australia's fighting men and the prestige of her arms were in
-safe keeping.</p>
-
-<p>None but men of character and self-devotion could have
-carried the burden which they had to bear during the last six
-months of the war. In spite of stress and difficulty, unremitting
-toil and wasted effort, weary days and sleepless nights, fresh
-task piling upon the task but just begun, labouring even harder
-during periods of so-called rest than when their troops were
-actually in the line, this gallant band of leaders remained steadfast
-of purpose, never faltered, never lost their faith in final
-victory, never failed to impress their optimism and their unflinching
-fighting spirit upon the men whom they commanded.</p>
-
-<p>It may be appropriate to end this memoir on a personal note.
-I have permitted myself a tone of eulogy for the triumphant
-achievements of the Australian Army Corps in 1918, which I
-have endeavoured faithfully to portray. Let it not be assumed
-on that account that the humble part which it fell to my lot to
-perform afforded me any satisfaction or prompted any enthusiasm
-for war. Quite the contrary.</p>
-
-<p>From the far-off days of 1914, when the call first came, until
-the last shot was fired, every day was filled with loathing, horror,
-and distress. I deplored all the time the loss of precious life
-and the waste of human effort. Nothing could have been more
-repugnant to me than the realization of the dreadful inefficiency
-and the misspent energy of war. Yet it had to be, and the
-thought always uppermost was the earnest prayer that Australia
-might for ever be spared such a horror on her own soil.</p>
-
-<p>There is, in my belief, only one way to realize such a prayer.
-The nation that wishes to defend its land and its honour must
-spare no effort, refuse no sacrifice to make itself so formidable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>
-that no enemy will dare to assail it. A League of Nations may
-be an instrument for the preservation of peace, but an efficient
-Army is a far more potent one.</p>
-
-<p>The essential components of such an Army are a qualified
-Staff, an adequate equipment and a trained soldiery. I state
-them in what I believe to be their order of importance, and my
-belief is based upon the lessons which this war has taught me.
-In that way alone can Australia secure the sanctity of her
-territory and the preservation of her independent liberties.</p>
-
-<p>Such a creed is not militarism, but is of the very essence of
-national self-preservation. For long years before the war it
-was the creed of a small handful of men in Australia, who braved
-the indifference and even the ridicule of public opinion in order
-to try to qualify themselves for the test when it should come.
-Four dreadful years of war have served to convince me of the
-truth of that creed, and to confirm me in the belief that the men
-of the coming generation, if they love their country, must take
-up the burden which these men have had to bear.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>APPENDIX A<br />
-<span class="smcap">Grouping into Australian Divisions of Artillery and<br />
-Infantry Brigades, during the period May to October,<br />
-1918, and the General Officers commanding them.</span><br />
-</h2>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">First Division</span> (Glasgow):</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><i>Artillery</i>,</td><td align="right">1st and 2nd</td><td align="center">Brigades</td><td align="left">(Anderson).</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><i>Infantry</i>,</td><td align="right">1st</td><td align="center">Brigade</td><td align="left">(Mackay).</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">2nd</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="left">(Heane).</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">3rd</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="left">(Bennett).</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Second Division</span> (Rosenthal):</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><i>Artillery</i>,</td><td align="right">4th and 5th</td><td align="center">Brigades</td><td align="left">(Phillips).</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><i>Infantry</i>,</td><td align="right">5th</td><td align="center">Brigade</td><td align="left">(Martin).</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">6th</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="left">(Robertson).</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">7th</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="left">(Wisdom).</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Third Division</span> (Gellibrand):</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><i>Artillery</i>,</td><td align="right">7th and 8th</td><td align="center">Brigades</td><td align="left">(Grimwade).</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><i>Infantry</i>,</td><td align="right">9th</td><td align="center">Brigade</td><td align="left">(Goddard).</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">10th</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="left">(McNicoll).</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">11th</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="left">(Cannan).</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Fourth Division</span> (Maclagan):</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><i>Artillery</i>,</td><td align="right">10th and 11th</td><td align="center">Brigades</td><td align="left">(Burgess).</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><i>Infantry</i>,</td><td align="right">4th</td><td align="center">Brigade</td><td align="left">(Brand).</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">12th</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="left">(Leane).</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">13th</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="left">(Herring).</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Fifth Division</span> (Hobbs):</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><i>Artillery</i>,</td><td align="right">13th and 14th</td><td align="center">Brigades</td><td align="left">(Bessel-Browne).</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><i>Infantry</i>,</td><td align="right">8th</td><td align="center">Brigade</td><td align="left">(Tivey).</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">14th</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="left">(Stewart).</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="right">15th</td><td align="center">"</td><td align="left">(Elliott).</td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<p>The 3rd, 6th and 12th Artillery Brigades were Corps Troops
-not forming part of any Division. The 9th Artillery Brigade
-was disbanded at the end of 1916.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>APPENDIX B</h2>
-
-
-<p>In order to illustrate the nature of the individual fighting carried
-out by the Australian Corps, during the period covered by this
-book, the following very small selection has been made from
-the official records of deeds of gallantry by individual soldiers.
-In every one of these twenty-nine cases, the <span class="smcap">Victoria Cross</span> has
-been awarded by His Majesty the King:</p>
-
-<p>No. 4061, <span class="smcap">Sergeant Stanley Robert MacDougall</span>,
-47th Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"At <span class="smcap">Dernancourt</span>, on morning of 28th March, 1918, the enemy
-attacked our line, and his first wave succeeded in gaining an entry.
-Sergt. MacDougall, who was at a post in a flank company, realized the
-situation, and at once charged the enemy's second wave single-handed
-with rifle and bayonet, killing 7 and capturing Machine Gun which they
-had. This he turned on to them, firing from the hip, causing many
-casualties, and routing that wave. He then turned his attention to
-those who had entered, until his ammunition had run out, all the time
-firing at close quarters, when he seized a bayonet and charged again,
-killing three men and a German officer, who was just about to kill one of
-our officers. He then used a Lewis Gun on the enemy, killing many
-and enabling us to capture 33 prisoners. His prompt action saved the
-line and enabled us to stop the enemy advance."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Lieutenant Percy Valentine Storkey</span>,
-19th Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"Lieut. Storkey was in charge of a platoon which took part in the
-attack at <span class="smcap">Bois de Hangard</span> on morning of 7th April, 1918. On
-emerging from the wood, the enemy trench line was encountered, and
-Lieut. Storkey found himself with 6 men. While continuing his move
-forward, a large enemy party&mdash;about 80 to 100 strong&mdash;armed with
-several machine guns, was noticed to be holding up the advance of the
-troops on the right. Lieut. Storkey immediately decided to attack this
-party from the flank and rear, and while moving forward to the attack,
-was joined by Lieut. Lipscomb and four men. Under the leadership of
-Lieut. Storkey, this small party of 2 officers and 10 other ranks charged
-the enemy position with fixed bayonets, driving the enemy out, killing
-and wounding about 30 and capturing the remainder, viz.: 3 officers
-and 50 men, also one machine gun."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Lieutenant Clifford William King Sadlier</span>,
-51st Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"For conspicuous gallantry on the night of 24-25th April, 1918, during
-a counter-attack by his Battalion on strong enemy positions south of
-<span class="smcap">Villers-Bretonneux</span>, east of Amiens. Lieut. Sadlier's platoon, which
-was on the left of the Battalion, had to advance through a wood, where
-they encountered a strong enemy machine-gun post, which caused
-casualties and prevented the platoon from advancing. Although himself
-wounded, this officer at once collected his bombing section, and led them
-against the machine guns, succeeding in killing the crews and capturing
-two of the guns. By this time Lieut. Sadlier's party were all casualties,
-and he alone attacked a third enemy machine gun with his revolver,
-killing the crew of four and taking the gun. In doing so, he was again
-wounded, and unable to go on."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>No. 1914, <span class="smcap">Sergeant William Ruthven</span>,
-22nd Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"For most conspicuous bravery and daring in action during the attack
-at <span class="smcap">Ville-sur-Ancre</span>, near Albert, on 19th May, 1918. During the advance
-Sergeant Ruthven's Company suffered numerous casualties, and his
-Company Commander was severely wounded. He then assumed command
-of his portion of the assault, took charge of the Company Headquarters,
-and rallied the sections in his vicinity. As the leading wave
-approached its objective, it was subjected to heavy fire from an enemy
-Machine Gun at 30 to 40 yards' range, directly in front. This N.C.O.,
-without hesitation, at once sprang out, threw a bomb which landed
-beside the post, and immediately rushed the position, bayoneting one of
-the crew and capturing the gun. He then encountered some of the
-enemy coming out of a shelter. He wounded two, captured six others
-in the same position, and handed them over to an escort from the leading
-wave, which had now reached the objective. Sergeant Ruthven then
-reorganized our men in his vicinity, and established a post in the second
-objective. Enemy movement was then seen in a sunken road about 150
-yards distant. Without hesitation, and armed only with a revolver, he
-went over the open alone and rushed the position, shooting two Germans
-who refused to come out of their dug-out. He then single-handed
-mopped up this post, and captured the whole of the garrison, amounting
-in all to 32, and kept them until assistance arrived to escort them back
-to our lines. During the remainder of the day this gallant N.C.O. set
-a splendid example of leadership, moving up and down his position under
-fire, supervising consolidation and encouraging his men."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>No. 1327, <span class="smcap">Corporal Phillip Davey</span>, M.M.,
-10th Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"In a daylight operation against the enemy position near <span class="smcap">Merris</span>
-on June 28th, 1918, Corporal Davey's platoon advanced 200 yards and
-captured part of enemy line. While the platoon was consolidating, the
-enemy pushed a machine gun forward under cover of a hedge, and opened
-fire from close range, inflicting heavy casualties and hampering work.
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>Alone Corporal Davey moved forward in the face of a fierce point-blank
-fire, and attacked the gun with hand grenades, putting half the crew
-out of action. Having used all available grenades, he returned to the
-original jumping-off trench, secured a further supply and again attacked
-the gun, the crew of which had in the meantime been reinforced. He
-killed the crew, 8 in all, and captured the gun. This gallant N.C.O.
-then mounted the gun in the new post and used it in repelling a determined
-counter-attack, during which he was severely wounded in both
-legs, back and stomach."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>No. 3399, <span class="smcap">Private (Lance-Corporal) Thomas Leslie
-Axford</span>, M.M.,
-16th Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"For conspicuous gallantry and initiative during the operations
-against <span class="smcap">Vaire</span> and <span class="smcap">Hamel Woods</span>, east of Corbie, on the morning of the
-4th July, 1918. When the barrage lifted and the Infantry advance commenced,
-the platoon of which he is a member was able to reach the first
-enemy defences through gaps which had been cut in the wires. The
-adjoining platoon got delayed in uncut barbed wire. This delay enabled
-the enemy machine guns to get into action, and enabled them to inflict
-a number of casualties among the men struggling through the wires,
-including the Company Commander, who was killed. L.-Corporal
-Axford, with great initiative and magnificent courage, at once dashed
-to the flank, threw his bombs amongst the machine-gun crews; followed
-up his bombs by jumping into the trench, and charging with his bayonet.
-Unaided he killed ten of the enemy and took 6 prisoners; he threw
-the machine guns over the parapet, and called out to the delayed platoon
-to come on. He then rejoined his own platoon, and fought with it during
-the remainder of the operations. Prior to the incidents above-mentioned,
-he had assisted in the laying out of the tapes for the jumping-off position,
-which was within 100 yards of the enemy. When the tapes were laid, he
-remained out as a special patrol to ensure that the enemy did not discover
-any unusual movement on our side."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>No. 1936, <span class="smcap">Private Henry Dalziel</span>,
-15th Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"For his magnificent bravery and devotion to duty during operations
-near <span class="smcap">Hamel Wood</span>, east of Corbie, on 4th July, 1918. He was No. 2
-of a Lewis Gun Section, and at the commencement of our advance his
-Company met with determined resistance from Pear Trench strong
-point, which was strongly garrisoned and manned by numerous machine
-guns. This strong point, undamaged by our artillery fire, was protected
-by strong wire entanglements. A heavy concentration of machine-gun
-fire caused heavy casualties and held up our advance. His Lewis Gun
-came into action and silenced enemy guns in one direction, when another
-enemy gun opened up from another direction. Private Dalziel dashed
-at it, and with his revolver killed or captured the entire crew and gun,
-and allowed our advance to continue. He was severely wounded in the
-hand, but carried on and took part in the capture of the final objective.
-He twice went over open ground under heavy enemy artillery and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>machine-gun fire to where our aeroplanes had dropped some boxes of
-ammunition, and carried back a box on each occasion to his gun, and
-though suffering from considerable loss of blood, he filled magazines and
-served his gun until severely wounded through the head."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>No. 1689A, <span class="smcap">Corporal Walter Ernest Brown</span>, D.C.M.,
-20th Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"For gallant service on the morning of 6th July, 1918, north-east of
-<span class="smcap">Villers-Bretonneux</span>, east of Amiens. This N.C.O. was one of an
-advanced party from his Battalion making arrangements with the Battalion
-then in the line for relief by his own Battalion. As such he was
-under no obligation to participate in any offensive operations before
-his Battalion took over the line. During the night of 5th-6th July the
-Company to which he was attached carried out a minor operation resulting
-in the capture of a small system of enemy trench. Early on the
-morning of 6th July an enemy strong post, about 70 yards distant, caused
-the occupants of the newly-captured trench great inconvenience by
-persistent sniping. It was decided to rush this post. Hearing of this,
-Corporal Brown, on his own initiative, crept out along the shallow trench
-towards the enemy post, and then made a dash across No Man's Land
-towards this post. An enemy machine gun opened fire from another
-trench, and he had to take cover by lying down. He later made another
-dash forward, and succeeded in reaching his objective. With a Mills
-grenade in his hand, he stood at the door of a dug-out and called on the
-occupants to surrender. One of the enemy rushed out, a scuffle ensued,
-and Corporal Brown knocked him down with his fist. Loud cries of
-'Kamerad' were then heard, and from the dug-out an officer and
-eleven other ranks appeared. Driving them before him, Corporal Brown
-brought back the complete party as prisoners to our line."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Lieutenant Albert Chalmers Borella</span>, M.M.,
-26th Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"For exceptional gallantry in the attack near <span class="smcap">Villers-Bretonneux</span>,
-on the 17th-18th July, 1918. Whilst leading his platoon with the first
-wave, Lieut. Borella noticed an enemy machine gun firing through our
-barrage&mdash;he ran out ahead of his men into the barrage, shot two German
-machine gunners with his revolver, and captured the gun. He then led
-his party, now reduced to ten men and two Lewis Guns, further on,
-against <span class="smcap">Jaffa Trench</span>, which was very strongly held, but using his
-revolver, and later a rifle, with great effect, Lieut. Borella shot down
-the enemy right and left, and set such a splendid example, that the
-garrison were quickly shot and captured. Two large dug-outs were
-bombed here and thirty prisoners taken. After reorganization the
-enemy counter-attacked twice in strong force, on the second occasion
-outnumbering Lieut. Borella's platoon by ten to one; but he showed
-such coolness and determination, that the men put up an heroic resistance,
-and twice repulsed the enemy with very heavy loss. It is estimated
-that from 100 to 150 Germans were killed in this vicinity. When
-Lieut. Borella refused his left flank about 40 yards during the first counter-attack
-he sent his men back one at a time, and was himself the last to
-leave, under heavy fire."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Lieutenant Alfred Edward Gaby</span>,
-28th Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"During the attack east of <span class="smcap">Villers-Bretonneux</span>, near Amiens, on
-the morning of 8th August, 1918, this officer led his Company with great
-dash, being well in front. On reaching the wire in front of the enemy
-trench, strong opposition was encountered. The enemy were holding a
-strong point in force about 40 yards beyond the wire, and commanded
-the gap with four machine guns and rifles. The advance was at once
-checked. Lieut. Gaby found another gap in the wire, and entirely by
-himself approached the strong point, while machine guns and rifles were
-still being fired from it. Running along the parapet, still alone, and
-at point-blank range, he emptied his revolver into the garrison, drove
-the crews from their guns, and compelled the surrender of 50 of the enemy,
-with four machine guns. He then quickly reorganized his men and led
-them on to his final objective, which he captured and consolidated.
-On the morning of the 11th August, 1918, during an attack east of
-<span class="smcap">Framerville</span>, Lieut. Gaby again led his Company with great dash on to
-the objective. The enemy brought heavy rifle and machine-gun fire to
-bear upon the line, but in the face of this heavy fire Lieut. Gaby walked
-along his line of posts, encouraging his men to quickly consolidate the
-line. While engaged on this duty he was killed by an enemy sniper."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>No. 2742, <span class="smcap">Private Robert Matthew Beatham</span>,
-8th Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty during the attack
-north of <span class="smcap">Rosières</span> on 9th August, 1918. Private Beatham showed such
-heroism and courage, that he inspired all officers and men in his vicinity
-in a wonderful manner. When the advance was held up by heavy
-machine-gun fire, Private Beatham dashed forward and, assisted by one
-man, bombed and fought the crews of four enemy machine guns, killing
-ten of them and capturing ten others. The bravery of the action greatly
-facilitated the advance of the whole Battalion and prevented casualties.
-In fighting the crew of the first gun he was shot through the right leg,
-but continued in the advance. When the final objective was reached
-and fierce fighting was taking place, he again dashed forward and bombed
-the machine gun that was holding our men off, getting riddled with bullets
-and killed in doing so."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>No. 506, <span class="smcap">Sergeant Percy Clyde Statton</span>, M.M.,
-40th Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"For most conspicuous gallantry and initiative in action near <span class="smcap">Proyart</span>
-on 12th August, 1918. The platoon commanded by Sergeant Statton
-reached its objective, but the remainder of the Battalion was held up
-by heavy machine-gun fire. He skilfully engaged two machine-gun
-posts with Lewis Gun fire, enabling the remainder of his Battalion to
-advance. The advance of the Battalion on his left had been brought to
-a standstill by the heavy enemy machine-gun fire, and the first of our
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>assaulting detachments to reach the machine-gun posts were put out
-of action in taking the first gun. Armed only with a revolver, in broad
-daylight, Sergeant Statton at once rushed four enemy machine-gun posts
-in succession, disposing of two of them, killing five of the enemy. The
-remaining two posts retired and were wiped out by Lewis Gun fire. This
-N.C.O.'s act had a very inspiring effect on the troops who had been held
-up, and they cheered him as he returned. By his daring exploit he
-enabled the attacking troops to gain their objective. Later in the
-evening, under heavy machine-gun fire, he went out again and brought
-in two badly-wounded men."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Lieutenant Lawrence Dominic McCarthy</span>,
-16th Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"This officer is especially brought to notice for his wonderful gallantry,
-initiative and leadership on the morning of the 23rd August, 1918, when
-an attack was being made near <span class="smcap">Madame Wood</span>, west of Vernandivukkers.
-The objectives of this Battalion were attained without serious opposition.
-The Battalion on the left flank were less fortunate. Here several
-well-posted machine-gun posts were holding up the attack, and heavy
-fire was being brought to bear on our left flank. When Lieut. McCarthy
-realized the situation, he at once engaged the nearest machine-gun post;
-but still the attacking troops failed to get forward. This officer then
-determined to attack the nearest post. Leaving his men to continue the
-fire fight, he, with two others, dashed across the open and dropped into
-a disused trench which had been blocked. One of his two men was killed
-whilst doing this. He was now right under the block over which the
-enemy machine gun was firing. The presence of head cover prevented
-the use of bombs. He therefore tunnelled a hole through the bottom of
-the block, through which he inserted his head and one arm. He at
-once shot dead the two men firing the gun. He then crawled through
-the hole he had made, and by himself charged down the trench. He
-threw his limited number of Mills bombs among the German garrison
-and inflicted more casualties. He then came in contact with two German
-officers, who fired on him with their revolvers. One of these he shot
-dead with his revolver, the other he seriously wounded. He then charged
-down the trench, using his revolver and throwing enemy stick bombs,
-and capturing three more enemy machine guns. At this stage, some
-700 yards from his starting point, he was joined by the N.C.O., whom he
-had outdistanced when he crawled through the hole in the trench block
-mentioned above. Together they continued to bomb up the trench, until
-touch was established with the Lancashire Fusiliers, and in the meanwhile
-yet another machine gun had been captured. A total of 5 machine
-guns and 50 prisoners (37 unwounded and 13 wounded) was captured,
-while Lieut. McCarthy during his most amazing and daring feat had,
-single-handed, killed 20 of the enemy. Having cleared up a dangerous
-situation, he proceeded to establish a garrison in the line. Whilst doing
-this he saw a number of the enemy getting away from neighbouring
-trenches. He at once seized a Lewis Gun and inflicted further casualties
-on the enemy."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Lieutenant William Donovan Joynt</span>,
-8th Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty during the attack
-on <span class="smcap">Herleville Wood</span>, near Chuignes, on 23rd August, 1918. Early in
-the advance Lieut. Joynt's Company Commander was killed; he immediately
-took charge of the Company and led them with courage and skill.
-A great deal of the success of the operation in this portion of the sector
-was directly due to his magnificent work. When the advance was commenced
-the Battalion was moving into support to another Battalion.
-On approaching Herleville Wood, the troops of the leading Battalion lost
-all their officers and became disorganized. Under very heavy fire, and
-having no leaders, they appeared certain to be annihilated. Lieut. Joynt
-grasped the situation, and rushed forward in the teeth of very heavy
-machine-gun and artillery fire over the open. He got the remaining
-men under control, and worked them into a piece of dead ground, until
-he could reform them. He man&oelig;uvred his own men forward, and
-linked them up with the men of the other Battalion. He then made
-a personal reconnaissance, and found that the fire from the wood was
-holding the whole advance up, the troops on his flanks suffering very
-heavy casualties. Dashing out in front of his men, he called them on,
-and by sheer force of example inspired them into a magnificent frontal
-bayonet attack on the wood. The audacity of the move over the open
-staggered the enemy, and Lieut. Joynt succeeded in penetrating the wood
-and working through it. By his leadership and courage a very critical
-situation was saved, and on this officer rests to the greatest extent the
-success of the Brigade's attack. When the Battalion on our left was
-held up on Plateau Wood, and was suffering severe casualties, Lieut.
-Joynt, with a small party of volunteers, worked right forward against
-heavy opposition, and by means of hand-to-hand fighting forced his way
-round the rear of the wood, penetrating it from that side, and demoralizing
-the enemy to such an extent that a very stubborn and victorious defensive
-was changed into an abject surrender. He was always in the hardest
-pressed parts of the line, and seemed to bear a charmed life. He was
-constantly ready to run any personal risk and to assist flank units. He
-continually showed magnificent leadership, and his example to his men
-had a wonderful effect on them, causing them to follow him cheerfully
-in his most daring exploits. He continued to do magnificent work
-until he was badly wounded by shell fire in the legs."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>No. 23, <span class="smcap">Private (Lance-Corporal) Bernard Sydney
-Gordon</span>,
-41st Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"During the operations of the 26-27th August, 1918, east of <span class="smcap">Bray</span>,
-this N.C.O. showed most conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty in
-the face of the enemy. He led his section through heavy enemy shelling
-to its objective, which he consolidated. Then single-handed he attacked
-an enemy machine gun which was enfilading the Company on his right,
-killed the man on the gun, and captured the post, which contained one
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>officer (a Captain) and 10 men. After handing these over at Company
-Headquarters, he returned alone to the old system of trenches, in which
-were many machine guns; entered a trench and proceeded to mop it
-up, returning with 15 prisoners in one squad and 14 in another, together
-with two machine guns. Again he returned to the system, this time
-with a Trench Mortar gun and crew, and proceeded to mop up a further
-portion of the trench, bringing in 22 prisoners, including one officer
-and 3 machine guns. This last capture enabled the British troops on
-our left to advance, which they had not been able to do owing to machine-gun
-fire from these posts. His total captures were thus 2 officers and
-61 other ranks, together with 6 machine guns, and with the exception of
-the Trench Mortar assistance, it was absolutely an individual effort and
-done entirely on his own initiative."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>No. 726, <span class="smcap">Private George Cartwright</span>,
-33rd Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"For most conspicuous valour and devotion to duty. On the morning
-of the 31st August, 1918, during the attack on <span class="smcap">Road Wood</span>, south-west
-of Bouchavesnes, near Péronne, Private Cartwright displayed exceptional
-gallantry and supreme disregard for personal danger in the face
-of a most withering machine-gun fire. Two Companies were held up by
-a machine-gun firing from the south-western edge of the wood. Without
-hesitation, this man stood up, and walking towards the gun, fired his
-rifle from his shoulder. He shot the No. 1 Gunner; another German
-manned the gun, and he killed him; a third attempted to fire the gun
-and him he also killed. Private Cartwright then threw a bomb at the
-post, and on its exploding, he rushed forward, captured the gun and nine
-Germans. Our line then immediately rushed forward, loudly cheering
-him. This magnificent deed had a most inspiring effect on the whole
-line; all strove to emulate his gallantry. Throughout the operation
-Private Cartwright displayed wonderful dash, grim determination and
-courage of the highest order."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Lieutenant Edgar Thomas Towner</span>, M.C.,
-2nd Australian Machine Gun Battalion.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"On 1st September, 1918, in the attack on <span class="smcap">Mont St. Quentin</span>, near
-Péronne, this officer was in charge of 4 Vickers guns operating on a
-front of 1,500 yards. During the early stages of the advance an enemy
-machine gun was causing casualties to our advancing Infantry. Locating
-the gun, Lieut. Towner dashed ahead alone, and succeeded in killing the
-crew with his revolver, capturing the gun, and then, by turning it against
-the enemy, inflicted heavy casualties on them. Advancing then past
-a copse from which the enemy were firing, he brought his guns into
-action, placing his fire behind the enemy and cutting them off. On their
-attempting to retire before the advancing Infantry, and finding they were
-prevented by this machine-gun fire, the party of 25 Germans surrendered.
-He then reconnoitred alone over open ground exposed to heavy
-machine-gun and snipers' fire, and by the energy, foresight and the
-promptitude with which he brought fire to bear on further enemy groups,
-enabled the Infantry to reach a sunken road. On moving his guns up
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span>to the sunken road, he found himself short of ammunition, so went back
-across the open under heavy fire and obtained a German gun, and brought
-it and boxes of ammunition into the sunken road. Here he mounted and
-fired the gun in full view of the enemy, causing the enemy to retire
-further, and enabling Infantry on the flank, who were previously held up,
-to advance. Enemy machine gunners having direct observation, flicked
-the earth round and under this gun, and played a tattoo along the top
-of the bank. Though one bullet went into his helmet and inflicted a
-gaping scalp wound, he continued firing. Subsequently he refused to go
-out to have his wound attended to, as the situation was critical and his
-place was with his men. Later in the day the Infantry were obliged to
-retire slightly, and one gun was left behind. Lieut. Towner, seeing
-this, dashed back over the open, carried the gun back in spite of terrific
-fire, and brought it into action again. He continued to engage the
-enemy wherever they appeared, and put an enemy machine gun out of
-action. During the following night he insisted on doing his tour of duty
-along with the other officers, and his coolness and cheerfulness set an
-example which had a great effect on the men. To steady and calm the
-men of a small detached outpost, he crawled out among the enemy posts
-to investigate. He remained out about an hour, though enemy machine
-guns fired continuously on the sector, and the Germans were moving
-about him. He moved one gun up in support of the Infantry post, and
-patrolled the communication saps which ran off this post into the German
-line during the remainder of the night. Next morning, after his guns
-assisted in dispersing a large party of the enemy, he was led away utterly
-exhausted, 30 hours after being wounded."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>No. 2358, <span class="smcap">Sergeant Albert David Lowerson</span>,
-21st Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"At <span class="smcap">Mont St, Quentin</span>, north of Péronne, on the 1st September,
-1918, this N.C.O. displayed courage and tactical skill of the very highest
-order during the attack on this village. Very strong opposition was met
-with early in the attack, and every foot of ground was stubbornly contested
-by the enemy located in very strong positions. This N.C.O.'s
-example during the fighting was of the greatest value. He moved about,
-regardless of the heavy enemy machine-gun fire, directing his men,
-encouraging them to still greater effort, and finally led them on to the
-objective. On reaching the objective, he saw that the left attacking
-party had not met with success, and that the attack was held up by an
-enemy strong post, heavily manned with 12 machine guns. Under the
-heaviest sniping and machine gun fire Sergeant Lowerson rallied seven
-men around him into a storming party, and deployed them to attack
-the post from both flanks, one party of three being killed immediately.
-He himself then rushed the strong point, and, with effective bombing,
-inflicted heavy casualties on the enemy, and captured the post containing
-12 machine guns and 30 prisoners. Though severely wounded in the right
-thigh, he refused to leave the front line until the prisoners had been dispatched
-to the rear, and the organization and consolidation of the post
-by our men had been completed. When he saw that the position was
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>thoroughly secure, he returned to the rear, but refused to leave the Battalion
-until forced to evacuate two days later by the seriousness of his
-wound. This act was the culminating point of a series of most gallant
-performances by this N.C.O. during the fighting extending over a week."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>No. 1584<span class="smcap">A</span>, <span class="smcap">Private William Matthew Currey</span>,
-53rd Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"During the attack on <span class="smcap">Péronne</span>, on the morning of 1st September,
-1918, Private Currey displayed most conspicuous gallantry and daring.
-During the early stage of the advance the Battalion was suffering heavy
-casualties from a 77 mm. Field Gun, that was firing over sights at very
-close range. Private Currey, without hesitation, rushed forward, and
-despite a withering machine-gun fire that was directed on him from
-either flank, succeeded in capturing the gun single-handed after killing
-the entire crew. Later, when continuing the advance, an enemy strong
-point, containing 30 men and two machine guns, was noticed, which
-was holding up the advance of the left flank. Private Currey crept
-around the flank, and engaged the post with a Lewis Gun, causing many
-casualties. Finally, he rushed the post single-handed, killing four,
-wounding two, and taking one prisoner, the survivors running away.
-It was entirely owing to his gallant conduct that the situation was
-relieved, and the advance enabled to continue. After the final stage of
-the attack, it was imperative that one of the Companies that had become
-isolated should be withdrawn. This man at once volunteered to carry
-the message, although the ground to be crossed was very heavily shelled and
-continuously swept by machine-gun fire. He crossed the shell and bullet-swept
-area three times in the effort to locate the Company, and on one
-occasion his box respirator was shot through by machine-gun bullets,
-and he was gassed. Nevertheless, he remained on duty, and after
-finding the isolated Company, delivered the message, and returned with
-very valuable information from the Company Commander. Owing to
-the gas poisoning from which he was suffering Currey had shortly afterwards
-to be evacuated."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>No. 6939, <span class="smcap">Private Robert Mactier</span>,
-23rd Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"On the morning of 1st September, 1918, during the operation
-entailing capture of <span class="smcap">Mont St. Quentin</span>, this man stands out for the
-greatest bravery and devotion to duty. Fifteen minutes before zero
-two bombing patrols were sent to clear up several enemy strong points
-close to our line, but they met with very stubborn resistance and no
-success, and the Battalion was unable to move on to its Jumping Off
-Trench. Mactier, single-handed and in daylight, then jumped out of
-the trench from the leading Company, rushed past the block, closed with
-and killed the machine-gun garrison of 8 men with his revolver and
-bombs, and threw the enemy machine gun over the parapet. He rushed
-forward another 20 yards and jumped into another strong point held
-by a garrison of 6 men, who immediately surrendered. Continuing to
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span>the next block through the trench, an enemy gun, which had been
-enfilading our flank advancing troops, was swung on to him; but he
-jumped out of the trench into the open, and disposed of this third post
-and gun crew by bombing them from the rear. Before he could get into
-this trench, he was killed by enemy machine gun at close range. In the
-three posts which Mactier rushed, 15 of the enemy were found killed and
-30 taken prisoners."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>No. 1876, <span class="smcap">Corporal Alexander Henry Buckley</span>,
-54th Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"For most conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty at <span class="smcap">Péronne</span>
-during the operations on 1st-2nd September, 1918. After passing the
-first objective, his half Company and part of the Company on the flank
-were held up by an enemy machine-gun nest. With one man he rushed
-the post, shooting 4 of the occupants and taking 22 prisoners. Later
-on, reaching a moat, another machine-gun nest commanded the only
-available foot-bridge. Whilst this was being engaged from a flank, this
-N.C.O. endeavoured to cross the bridge and rush the post, but was killed
-in the attempt. Throughout the advance he had displayed great
-initiative, resource and courage, being a great inspiration to his men.
-In order to avert casualties amongst his comrades and to permit of their advance,
-he voluntarily essayed a task which practically meant certain death.
-He set a fine example of self-sacrificing devotion to duty and bravery."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>No. 2631, <span class="smcap">Corporal Arthur Charles Hall</span>,
-54th Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"For most conspicuous gallantry, brilliant leadership and devotion
-to duty during the operations at <span class="smcap">Péronne</span> on 1st and 2nd September, 1918.
-A machine-gun post in the enemy front line was holding up the advance;
-alone, this N.C.O. rushed the position, shot 4 of the occupants as he
-advanced, and captured 9 others and 2 machine guns. Then, crossing
-the objective with a small party, he reconnoitred the approaches to the
-town, covering the infiltration of the remainder of the Company. During
-the mopping up he continuously&mdash;in advance of the main party&mdash;located
-enemy posts of resistance, and then personally led parties to the assault.
-In this way he captured many small parties of prisoners and machine-guns.
-On the morning of 2nd September, during a heavy barrage on the
-newly consolidated position, a man of his platoon was severely wounded.
-Seeing that only immediate medical attention could save him, Corporal
-Hall volunteered and carried the man out of the barrage, handed him
-to a stretcher-bearer, and immediately returned to his post. This
-Company was heavily engaged throughout the day, only one Officer
-remaining unwounded."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>No. 1153, <span class="smcap">Private (Lance-Corporal) Laurence Carthage
-Weathers</span>,
-43rd Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"On the 2nd September, 1918, during operations north of <span class="smcap">Péronne</span>,
-Lance-Corporal Weathers was one of an advanced bombing party
-operating well forward of our attacking troops. Just before the attack
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span>reached its final objective it was held up by the enemy, who occupied a
-trench in great numbers. After an hour's continuous fighting Lance-Corporal
-Weathers went forward alone in face of heavy enemy fire and
-located a large body of them. He immediately attacked the enemy
-with bombs and killed the senior officer; then made his way back to our
-lines and, securing a further supply of bombs and taking three men with
-him, he went forward and again attacked under very heavy fire. On
-reaching the enemy position, he jumped up on the parapet of the trench
-and threw bombs among the Bosche. He then signalled for his comrades
-to come up, and the remainder of the enemy, seeing this, surrendered.
-When counted, the number of prisoners totalled 100 and 3 machine guns."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>No. 3244, <span class="smcap">Private James Park Woods</span>,
-48th Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty during the operations
-near <span class="smcap">Le Verguier</span>, north-west of St. Quentin, on the 18th September,
-1918. Woods formed one of a party of three to patrol the
-right flank. He encountered a very formidable enemy strong point,
-consisting of about 25 men with four heavy and two light machine guns.
-This strong point commanded the greater portion of our position, and it
-was of the utmost importance to us, insomuch as it gave us a commanding
-view of the whole canal system. The strong point was situated at the
-junction of four enemy fire trenches, apparently sited with a view to
-protecting the approaches to the village of Bellenglise. Private Woods,
-appreciating the great importance of this position, and realizing the
-necessity for its immediate capture, fearlessly attacked with his rifle
-and bayonet, capturing one of the enemy and wounding the second with
-his bayonet, forcing the remainder to retire. After the capture of the
-strong point, it was found that one of the party was wounded. Private
-Woods, although himself slightly gassed, stubbornly defended the post.
-The enemy ascertaining that only two men opposed them, immediately
-attempted to recapture the strong point. The counter-attack by the
-enemy was carried out with at least 30 men attacking up the three
-trenches and across the open ground. This meant that Private Woods
-was attacked from both flanks and the front. He fearlessly jumped on
-the parapet, and opened fire on the attacking enemy, inflicting several
-casualties. During this operation he was exposed to very heavy machine-gun,
-rifle fire and bombing, but with dogged determination he kept up his
-fire, thus holding up the enemy until help arrived, enabling the enemy
-counter-attack to be repulsed with heavy losses. The capture of this
-strong post was the means of securing our flank, which had previously been
-in the air, and also enabled us to get in touch with the troops on our flank."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>No. 6594, <span class="smcap">Sergeant Gerald Sexton</span>,
-13th Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"In the attack near <span class="smcap">Le Verguier</span>, north-west of St. Quentin, on the
-18th September, 1918, Sergeant Sexton displayed the most conspicuous
-bravery and performed deeds which, apart from their gallant nature,
-were in a great measure responsible for the Battalion's success. On the
-southern edge of the village of Le Verguier the enemy fought hard, and
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[312]</a></span>serious opposition had to be crushed. During the whole period of the
-advance, Sergeant Sexton was to the fore dealing with enemy machine
-guns by firing from the hip as he advanced, rushing enemy posts, and
-performing feats of bravery and endurance, which are better appreciated
-when one realizes that all the time he fired his Lewis Gun from the hip
-without faltering or for a moment taking cover. Immediately the attack
-commenced, Sergeant Sexton's Lewis Gun Section was confronted by
-an enemy machine gun. He called out to his section to follow, rushed
-the machine gun and killed the crew. He then called out to the rest
-of the Company to follow, but they had not gone far when they encountered
-some bombers and riflemen about 70 yards in front of the Company.
-Sexton rushed the trench, firing his gun from the hip, and killed or took
-prisoner all the members of the post. Continuing, he entered a copse, and
-killed or took prisoner another party of the enemy. The advance continued
-over the ridge at Le Verguier to where Sexton was met by Lieut.
-Price, who pointed out a party of the enemy manning a bank, and a
-field gun in action which was causing casualties and holding up a Company.
-There was also a trench mortar in action. Sergeant Sexton did
-not wait, but firing a few short bursts as he advanced, and calling out to
-his section to follow, rushed down the bank and killed the gunners on
-the field gun. Dashing out on to a flat under fire from two hostile
-machine guns directed on him, he killed 12 more of the enemy. Paying
-no heed to the machine-gun fire, he returned to the bank, and after firing
-down some dug-outs, induced about 30 of the enemy to surrender.
-Owing to his action the Company on the left of the Battalion was able
-to continue the advance where they had been definitely held up, and
-were suffering from the effects of the field gun. When the advance was
-continued from the first to the second objective, the Company was again
-held up by two machine guns on the right and one on the left. In conjunction
-with a Platoon, Sexton engaged the machine gun on the left,
-firing all the while from the upright position, a fearless figure which,
-according to eye-witnesses, inspired everyone. To have taken cover
-would have been more prudent, but Sexton realized that prompt action
-was essential, and did not wait to assume the prone position. Silencing
-this gun, he turned his attention to the two machine guns on the right
-and silenced them. He then moved forward into a trench, killing quite
-a number of the enemy and, advancing along a sap, took a few prisoners.
-Further on he was responsible for a few more small posts, and, on the
-final objective, being given a responsible post on the left of his Company,
-he engaged a machine gun which was firing across the Company front,
-and thus enabled his Company to dig in. This completed, he went
-forward down a sunken road and captured several more prisoners."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Major Blair Anderson Wark</span>, D.S.O.,
-32nd Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"During the period 29th September-1st October, 1918, in the operations
-against the <span class="smcap">Hindenburg Line</span> at <span class="smcap">Bellicourt</span>, and the advance
-through <span class="smcap">Nauroy</span>, <span class="smcap">Etricourt</span>, <span class="smcap">Magny la Fosse</span> and <span class="smcap">Joncourt</span>, Major
-Wark, in command of the 32nd Battalion, displayed most conspicuous
-gallantry and set a fine example of personal bravery, energy, coolness,
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[313]</a></span>and control under extremely difficult conditions. On 29th September,
-under heavy artillery and machine-gun fire at very close range from all
-sides and in a dense fog, Major Wark, finding that the situation was
-critical, moved quickly forward alone and obtained sufficient information
-regarding the situation in front to be able to lead his command forward.
-At this time American troops were at a standstill and disorganized, and
-Major Wark quickly organized more than 200 of them, and attached them
-to his leading Companies and pressed forward. By his prompt action
-in the early stages of the battle he narrowly averted what would have
-resulted in great confusion on the part of the attack-troops. Still
-moving fearlessly at the head of his leading Companies, and at most
-times far out in advance, attended only by a runner, he cheered his men
-on, and they swept through the Hindenburg defences towards Nauroy.
-Pushing quickly through Nauroy, and mopping up the southern portion
-of the village, the process yielding 50 prisoners, the Battalion swung
-towards Etricourt. Still leading his assaulting Companies, he observed
-a battery of 77 mm. guns firing point-blank into his rear Companies and
-causing heavy casualties. Calling on a few of his men to him he rushed
-the battery, capturing the 4 guns and 10 of the crew; the remainder of
-the crew fled or were killed. Moving rapidly forward with only two
-N.C.O.'s, he surprised and captured 50 Germans near Magny la Fosse.
-Quickly seizing this opportunity, he pushed one Company forward
-through the village and made good the position. Having captured his
-objectives for the day, and personally reconnoitring to see that his
-flanks were safe, he found his command in a very difficult and dangerous
-position, his left flank being exposed to the extent of 3,000 yards on
-account of the 31st Battalion not being able to advance. He, after a
-strenuous day's fighting, set about the selection and reorganization of a
-new position, and effected a junction with British troops on the right
-and 31st Battalion on the left, and made his line secure. At 6 a.m. on
-30th September, he again led his command forward to allow of the troops
-on the right being able to advance. The men were tired and had suffered
-heavily, but he personally led them, and his presence amongst them
-inspired them to further efforts. On October 1st, 1918, his Battalion
-was ordered to advance at very short notice. He gave his orders for the
-attack, and personally led his troops forward. A nest of machine guns
-was encountered, causing casualties to his men. Without hesitation
-and regardless of personal risk, he dashed forward practically into the
-muzzles of the guns and under an exceptionally heavy fire and silenced
-them, killing or capturing the entire crews. Joncourt and Mill Ridge
-were then quickly captured and his line consolidated. His men were
-practically exhausted after the three days' heavy fighting, but he moved
-amongst them from post to post, across country swept by heavy and
-continuous shell and machine-gun fire at point-blank range, urged them
-on and the line was made secure. Throughout he displayed the greatest
-courage and devotion to duty, coupled with great tact and skill, and his
-work, together with the reports based on his own personal observations,
-which he forwarded, were invaluable to the Brigade. It is beyond doubt
-that the success achieved by the Brigade during the heavy fighting on
-29th and 30th September and 1st October was due to this officer's gallantry,
-determination, skill and great courage."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[314]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>No. 1717, <span class="smcap">Private John Ryan</span>,
-55th Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty, and for saving a very
-dangerous situation under particularly gallant circumstances during
-an attack against the Hindenburg defences on 30th September, 1918.
-In the initial assault on the enemy's positions this soldier went forward
-with great dash and determination, and was one of the first men of his
-Company to reach the trench which was their objective. Seeing him rush
-in with his bayonet with such exceptional skill and daring, his comrades
-were inspired and followed his example. Although the enemy shell and
-machine-gun fire was extremely heavy, the enemy trench garrison was
-soon overcome. In the assault the attacking troops were weakened by
-casualties, and, as they were too few to cover the whole front of attack,
-a considerable gap was left between Private Ryan's Battalion's left and
-the unit on the flank. The enemy counter-attacked soon after the
-objective was reached, and a few succeeded in infiltrating through the
-gap, and taking up a position of cover in rear of our men, where they
-commenced bombing operations. The section of trench occupied by
-Private Ryan and his comrades was now under fire from front and rear,
-and for a time it seemed that the enemy was certain to force his way
-through. The situation was critical and necessitated prompt action by
-someone in authority. Private Ryan found that there were no officers
-or N.C.O.'s near; they had become casualties in the assault. Appreciating
-the situation at once, he organized the few men nearest him,
-and led them out to attack the enemy with bomb and bayonet. Some of
-his party fell victims to the enemy's bombs, and he finally dashed into the
-enemy position of cover with only 3 men. The enemy were three times
-their number, but by skilful bayonet work they succeeded in killing the
-first three Germans on the enemy's flank. Moving along the embankment,
-Private Ryan alone rushed the remainder of the enemy with
-bombs. It was while thus engaged he fell wounded, but his dashing
-bombing assault drove the enemy clear of our positions. Those who
-were not killed or wounded by his bombs fell victims to our Lewis Gunners
-as they retired across No Man's Land. A particularly dangerous
-situation had been saved by this gallant soldier, whose display of determined
-bravery and initiative was witnessed by the men of the two
-attacking Battalions, who, inspired and urged by it, fought skilfully and
-bravely for two days."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Lieutenant Joseph Maxwell</span>, M.C., D.C.M.,
-18th Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"On 3rd October, 1918, he took part as a Platoon Commander in an
-attack on the <span class="smcap">Beaurevoir-Fonsomme</span> Line near Estrées, north of St.
-Quentin. His Company Commander was severely wounded soon after
-the jump off, and Lieut. Maxwell at once took charge of the Company.
-When the enemy wire was reached, they were met by a hail of machine-gun
-fire, and suffered considerable casualties, including all other officers
-of the Company. The wire at this point was six belts thick, each belt
-being 20 to 25 feet wide. Lieut. Maxwell pushed forward single-handed
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[315]</a></span>through the wire, and attacked the most dangerous machine gun. He
-personally killed three of the crew, and the remaining four men in the
-post surrendered to him with a machine gun. His Company followed
-him through the wire and captured the trenches forming their objective.
-Later, it was noticed that the Company on his left was held up in the
-wire by a very strong force on the left flank of the Battalion. He at
-once organized a party and moved to the left to endeavour to attack
-the enemy from the rear. Heavy machine-gun fire met them. Lieut.
-Maxwell again dashed forward single-handed at the foremost machine
-gun, and with his revolver shot five of its crew, so silencing the gun.
-Owing to the work of this party, the left Company was then able to work
-a small force through the wire, and eventually to occupy the objective
-and mop up the trenches. In the fighting prior to the mopping up, an
-English-speaking prisoner, who was captured, stated that the remainder
-of the enemy were willing to surrender. Lieut. Maxwell and two men,
-with this prisoner, walked to a post containing more than twenty
-Germans. The latter at once seized and disarmed our men. Lieut.
-Maxwell waited his chance, and then with an automatic pistol which he
-had concealed in his box respirator, shot two of the enemy and with the
-two men escaped. They were pursued by rifle fire, and one was wounded.
-However, Lieut. Maxwell organized a small party at once, attacked and
-captured the post."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Second Lieutenant George Morby Ingram</span>, M.M.,
-24th Battalion, A.I.F.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"During the attack on <span class="smcap">Montbrehain</span>, east of Péronne, on 5th October,
-1918, this officer was in charge of a platoon. About 100 yards from
-the Jumping Off Trench severe enemy machine-gun fire was encountered
-from a strong post which had escaped our Artillery fire, and the advance
-was thus held up. Lieut. Ingram dashed out, and, under cover of the fire
-of a Lewis Gun, rushed the post at the head of his men. This post contained
-9 machine guns and 42 Germans, who fought until our men were
-within 3 yards of them. They were killed to a man&mdash;Lieut. Ingram
-accounting for no less than 18 of them. A number of enemy posts were
-then observed to be firing on our men from about 150 yards further
-forward, and the Company moved forward to attack them, but severe
-casualties were sustained. The Company Commander had been badly
-wounded, and the Company Sergeant-Major and several others, who
-attempted to lead the advance, were killed. Our barrage had passed on,
-and no Tanks were near. Lieut. Ingram quickly seized the situation,
-rallied his men in the face of murderous fire, and, with magnificent courage
-and resolution, led them forward. He himself rushed the first post,
-shot 6 of the enemy, and captured a machine gun, thus overcoming a
-very serious resistance. By this time the Company had been reduced
-from 90 to about 30 other ranks; but this officer, seeing enemy fire
-coming from a quarry, to his left front, again led his men forward and
-rushed the quarry. He jumped into the quarry amongst enemy wire,
-and his men followed and proceeded to mop up a large number of the
-enemy who were in bivouacs there. He then observed an enemy machine
-gun firing from the ventilator of a cellar, through a gap in the wall of
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[316]</a></span>a house about 20 yards away. Without hesitation and entirely alone
-he scrambled up the edge of the quarry, ran round the rear of the house,
-and entering from the far side, shot the enemy gunner through the ventilator
-of the cellar. He fired several more shots into the cellar, then,
-seeing some enemy jumping out of the window of the house, he burst
-open a door, rushed to the head of the stairs leading into the cellar, and
-forced 62 of the enemy to surrender. He now found he was out of touch
-with the Company on his left flank, so went out alone and made a personal
-reconnaissance under heavy fire, and succeeded in gaining touch with the
-left Company, which had lost all its officers. Having returned to his
-Company, he personally placed a post on his left flank to ensure its
-safety, and then reconnoitred and established two posts on his right flank.
-All this was done in the face of continuous machine-gun and shell fire."</p></blockquote>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_316fp.jpg" width="1200" height="758" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Australian Artillery&mdash;moving up to the front, through the Hindenburg wire, October 2nd, 1918.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 1200px;">
-<img src="images/i_b_317fp.jpg" width="1200" height="777" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>Advance during Battle&mdash;Third Division Infantry and Tanks advancing to the capture of Bony, October 1st, 1918.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[317]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>APPENDIX C<br />
-
-CORPS ORDERS FOR THE BATTLE OF AUGUST 8TH, 1918</h2>
-
-
-<p>The following were the complete orders issued by the Australian
-Army Corps for the Battle of August 8th, 1918. They form
-only a small part of the whole of the orders which were required
-for the operation. There were, in addition, detailed orders by
-the Corps Artillery Headquarters, the Heavy Artillery, the
-Chief Engineer, and each of the five Divisions and fifteen Brigades,
-and also by the Administrative Services of the Corps.</p>
-
-<p>On the question of the form of the orders, the most expedient
-course was found to be the one here adopted&mdash;namely, that of
-issuing a numbered series of Battle Instructions, each dealing
-comprehensively with a separate subject matter:</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Battle Instructions No. 1</span></p>
-
-<p>1. The Australian Corps will attack the enemy from the
-<span class="smcap">Villers-Bretonneux&mdash;Chaulnes</span> Railway exclusive to the
-River <span class="smcap">Somme</span>, inclusive, at a date and hour to be notified.</p>
-
-<p>The Canadian Corps will co-operate on the right, south of the
-railway (inclusive), and the Third Corps on the left, north of
-the <span class="smcap">Somme</span>.</p>
-
-<p>2. <i>General Method of Attack.</i>&mdash;The Australian Corps will
-attack on a two-division front. The attack will be carried out
-in three phases. Divisional boundaries and objectives are shown
-on the attached map.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(i) <i>First Phase.</i>&mdash;The 2nd and 3rd Australian Divisions
-will form up on a taped line prior to <span class="smcap">ZERO</span>, and will attack
-with Tanks under a creeping artillery barrage. Their
-objective is shown by a <span class="smcap">GREEN</span> line on the attached map.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[318]</a></span></p>
-<p>On arrival at their objective they will consolidate.</p>
-
-<p>(ii) <i>Second Phase.</i>&mdash;The 5th and 4th Australian Divisions,
-organized in brigade groups, will advance in open warfare
-formations, from the first objective passing through 2nd
-and 3rd Australian Divisions respectively. Their objective
-is shown in <span class="smcap">RED</span> on the map.</p>
-
-<p>(iii) <i>Third Phase.</i>&mdash;The 5th and 4th Australian Divisions
-will exploit their success and seize the old British line of
-Defences marked <span class="smcap">BLUE</span> on the map, and establish themselves
-defensively on this line.</p>
-
-<p>(iv) The 1st Australian Division will be in Corps Reserve.</p>
-
-<p>(v) A detailed programme of the action will be issued.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>3. <i>Assembly.</i>&mdash;In order to free as many troops from line duty
-as possible, 2nd and 3rd Australian Divisions will arrange to
-hold the front with one infantry brigade on each Divisional
-sector. This will be completed before daybreak on 5th August.</p>
-
-<p>To prevent any troops arriving at their objectives in an
-exhausted condition through a long march, troops detailed to
-the farthest objectives must be quartered nearest the starting
-line prior to <span class="smcap">ZERO</span>.</p>
-
-<p>The brigades of 2nd and 3rd Australian Divisions not holding
-the line will be quartered in rear of all brigades of 5th and 4th
-Australian Divisions respectively prior to <span class="smcap">ZERO</span> night. This will
-be completed before daybreak on 5th August.</p>
-
-<p>The allotment of areas for quartering during this stage will
-be made by mutual arrangement between Divisional Commanders
-concerned. The allotment of routes and times of movement
-in accordance with the Corps programme will be arranged
-similarly.</p>
-
-<p>On <span class="smcap">ZERO</span> night the brigades of 2nd and 3rd Australian Divisions
-not in the line will make their approach march to their
-tape lines through the area occupied by 5th and 4th Australian
-Divisions respectively.</p>
-
-<p>4. <i>Artillery.</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(i) The Artillery available consists of:</p>
-
-<p>
-18 Field Artillery Brigades.<br />
-12 Heavy Artillery Brigades.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[319]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>(ii) G.O.C., R.A., Aust. Corps, will command all artillery
-of the Corps during the first phase of the operation.</p>
-
-<p>(iii) For the second phase G.O.C., R.A., Aust. Corps,
-will allot:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) Three Field Artillery Brigades to 5th and 4th
-Aust. Divisions for distribution to infantry brigade
-groups. These will include the 5th and 4th Aust.
-Divisional Artillery respectively.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) Three brigades of Field Artillery and one battery
-of 60-pdr. Heavy Artillery allotted to each of the 5th
-and 4th Aust. Divisions for employment as may be
-ordered by the Divisional Commanders.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) The remainder of the Field Artillery and the
-Heavy Artillery to Corps Reserve.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>(iv) Heavy Artillery will be pushed forward by G.O.C.,
-R.A., to protect the troops in the second objective.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>5. <i>Tanks.</i>&mdash;Instructions for the distribution and employment
-of Tanks will be issued later.</p>
-
-<p>6. <i>Engineers.</i>&mdash;Engineers and Pioneers will be distributed for
-work as follows from midnight on 6th-7th instant:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>
-(i) Corps Pool under Chief Engineer&mdash;</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>
-1 Field Coy. from 4th Aust. Div.<br />
-1 Field Coy. from 5th Aust. Div.<br />
-2 Field Coys. from 2nd Aust. Div.<br />
-2 Field Coys. from 3rd Aust. Div.<br />
-3 Army Troops Coys. Engineers.<br />
-5th Aust. Pioneer Bn.<br />
-3rd Aust. Pioneer Bn.<br />
-</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>(ii) With Divisions:</p>
-
-<p>2nd Aust. Pioneer Bn. will serve 2nd and 3rd Aust.
-Divisions. 2 Coys. to each.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[320]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>4th Aust. Pioneer Bn. will serve 4th and 5th Aust.
-Divisions. 2 Coys. to each.</p>
-
-<p>Divisional Commanders will control:</p>
-
-<p>
-2nd Aust. Division&mdash;1 Field Coy. and 2nd Aust. Pioneer Bn. (less 2 Coys.).<br />
-3rd Aust. Division&mdash;1 Field Coy. and 2 Coys. 2nd Aust. Pioneer Bn.<br />
-4th Aust. Division&mdash;2 Field Coys. and 4th Aust. Pioneer Bn. (less 2 Coys.).<br />
-5th Aust. Division&mdash;2 Field Coys. and 2 Coys. 4th Aust. Pioneer Bn.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>Tunnellers will be detailed to each division for dug-out
-exploration.</p>
-
-<p>Chief Engineer, Aust. Corps, will arrange for the distribution
-in accordance with this.</p>
-
-<p>Chief Engineer will issue instructions for the withdrawal
-and storing of demolition charges of bridges for which the
-Corps is responsible, and for the return of engineer personnel
-employed on this work to their units.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>7. Deputy Director of Medical Services will arrange for the
-distribution of medical units.</p>
-
-
-<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Battle Instructions No. 2</span><br />
-SECRECY</div>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) It is of first importance that secrecy should be observed
-and the operation carried out as a surprise.</p>
-
-<p>Commanders will take all possible steps to prevent the scope
-or date of the operation becoming known except to those taking
-part. Any officer, N.C.O., or man discussing the operation in
-public, or communicating details regarding it to any person,
-either soldier or civilian, not immediately concerned, will be
-severely dealt with.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) All movement of troops and transport will take place by
-night, whether in the forward or back areas of the Australian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[321]</a></span>
-Corps, on and after 1st August, except where absolutely necessary
-to move by day.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) O.C., No. 3 Squadron, A.F.C., will arrange for aeroplanes
-to fly over the Australian Corps Army area during days when
-flying is possible, and to report to Corps H.Q. any abnormal
-movement of troops or transport within our lines.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>d</i>) Work on back lines will be continued as at present, so that
-there may be no apparent change in our attitude.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>e</i>) Commanders will ensure that the numbers of officers
-reconnoitring the enemy's positions is limited to those for whom
-such reconnaissance is essential.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing attracts attention to an offensive more than a large
-number of officers with maps looking over the parapet and
-visiting Observation Posts.</p>
-
-<p>Commanding Officers of units holding the front line should
-report at once to higher authority any disregard of these orders.</p>
-
-<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Battle Instructions No. 3</span><br />
-COMMUNICATIONS AND HEADQUARTERS</div>
-
-<p>1. Communications will be carefully organized to ensure the
-maintenance of communication throughout the advance and
-after its conclusion.</p>
-
-<p>2. (i) Headquarters of Divisions will be established as follows:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>
-2nd Australian Division&mdash;<span class="smcap">Glisy</span>.<br />
-5th Australian Division&mdash;<span class="smcap">Blangy-Tronville</span> Château. Advanced Headquarters in dug-outs at Railway cutting.<br />
-3rd Australian Division&mdash;<span class="smcap">Bussy</span>.<br />
-4th Australian Division&mdash;<span class="smcap">Corbie</span>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>(ii) Headquarters of Brigades and battalions will be
-selected in advance, as far as this can be done, and all
-concerned will be notified of their proposed locations.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>3. Report Centres in advance of the heads of buried cables
-will be selected in each Divisional Sector and details prepared
-for the organization of communications back to cable head.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[322]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>4. The following mounted troops are detailed to Divisions:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>
-To 2nd Australian Division&mdash;1 Troop 13th L.H.<br />
-3rd Australian Division&mdash;1 Troop 13th L.H.<br />
-4th Australian Division&mdash;2 Troops 13th L.H.<br />
-5th Australian Division&mdash;2 Troops 13th L.H.<br />
-</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>Divisions will inform O.C., 13th Light Horse, as to the time and
-place at which the Light Horse will report.</p>
-
-<p>The Cyclist Section now with Divisions will remain.</p>
-
-<p>5. The employment of wireless will be exploited to the full.</p>
-
-<p>6. Popham panels will be employed for communication between
-Infantry and Aeroplanes.</p>
-
-
-<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Battle Instructions No. 4</span><br />
-ARTILLERY</div>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) Ammunition will be dumped at or near gun positions as
-follows:</p>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="left">18-pdr.</td><td align="left">600 rounds.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">4.5" Howitzer</td><td align="left">500 rounds.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">60-pdr.</td><td align="left">400 rounds.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">6" guns</td><td align="left">400 rounds.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">6" Howitzers</td><td align="left">400 rounds.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">8" Howitzers</td><td align="left">400 rounds.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">9.2" Howitzers&nbsp;&nbsp;</td><td align="left">400 rounds.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">12" Howitzers</td><td align="left">200 rounds.</td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<p>Arrangements should be made to commence dumping this
-ammunition as soon as feasible. Echelons will be kept full.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) Boundaries between Corps as regards bombardment and
-counter-battery work coincide with the boundaries between
-Corps shown on map issued with Australian Corps "Battle
-Instructions No. 1," dated 1st August, 1918.</p>
-
-<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Battle Instructions No. 5</span><br />
-TANKS</div>
-
-<p>1. Tanks are available as follows:</p>
-
-<p><i>5<sup>th</sup> Tank Brigade.</i></p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>
-Mark V. Tanks&mdash;2nd Battalion&mdash;Lieut.-Col. <span class="smcap">E. D. Bryce</span>, D.S.O.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[323]</a></span><br />
-Mark V. Tanks&mdash;8th Battalion&mdash;Lieut.-Col. The Hon. <span class="smcap">J. D. Y. Bingham</span>, D.S.O.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 7em;">13th Battalion&mdash;Lieut.-Col. <span class="smcap">P. Lyon</span>.</span><br />
-Mark V. (Star) Tanks&mdash;15th Battalion&mdash;Lieut.-Colonel <span class="smcap">Ramsey-Fairfax</span>.<br />
-No. 1 G.C.Coy. (24 Carrying Tanks)&mdash;Major <span class="smcap">W. Partington</span>, M.C.<br />
-</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>2. <i>Mark V. Tanks</i> are allotted as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>13th Battalion (Lieut.-Col. <span class="smcap">Lyon</span>), less one company, to
-3rd Australian Division.</p>
-
-<p>2nd Battalion (Lieut.-Col. <span class="smcap">Bryce</span>), plus one company
-13th Battalion attached, to be employed with the
-two right Divisions&mdash;two companies to be allotted
-to each Division.</p>
-
-<p>8th Battalion (Lieut.-Col. The Hon. <span class="smcap">J. D. Y. Bingham</span>)
-to 4th Australian Division.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>One company of the 8th Battalion will be employed in support.
-It will be specially charged with the function of maintaining
-the attack at the junction of Divisions throughout the
-advance as far as the second objective.</p>
-
-<p>Command will be effected through Battalion Commanders in
-each case except that Lieut.-Col. <span class="smcap">Bryce</span> will be responsible for
-command of all Mark V. Tanks allotted to both 2nd and 5th
-Australian Divisions.</p>
-
-<p>3. After the capture of the first objective, Tanks detailed to
-2nd and 3rd Australian Divisions will rally and will be employed
-to support the advance of the 5th and 4th Australian Divisions
-respectively.</p>
-
-<p>4. After the capture of the second objective, Tanks will rally.
-One company will remain in close support in each divisional
-sector; the remainder will be withdrawn to positions to be
-arranged between Divisional and Tank Commanders.</p>
-
-<p>5. Mark V. (Star) Tanks are allotted as follows:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>
-1&frac12; companies (18 tanks) to the 5th Australian Division.<br />
-1&frac12; companies (18 tanks) to the 4th Australian Division.<br />
-</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>These tanks are allotted for the capture of the blue line.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[324]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><i>6. Carrying Tanks</i> are allotted as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>2nd and 3rd Australian Divisions&mdash;3 tanks each.</p>
-
-<p>4th and 5th Australian Divisions&mdash;9 tanks each.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>7. Orders for forming up and movement to the Start Line
-will be issued by G.O.C., 5th Tank Brigade.</p>
-
-<p>Battalion Commanders detailed to Divisions will be responsible
-for all liaison duty in connection with the Tanks.</p>
-
-<p>8. For tactical purposes Tanks will be placed under the command
-of Infantry Commanders to whose commands they are
-allotted.</p>
-
-<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Battle Instructions No. 5A</span><br />
-ASSEMBLY OF TANKS</div>
-
-<p><i>1. Preliminary Movement.</i></p>
-
-<p>Tanks will be assembled in concealed positions in the forward
-area under the orders of the 5th Tank Brigade prior to night
-Y/Z.</p>
-
-<p><i>2. Advance to Start Line.</i></p>
-
-<p>On night Y/Z the Tanks allotted to troops attacking the
-first objective will commence to move forward at 9.30 p.m. to
-the Tank Start Line. They will move with full engines to a line
-not nearer to the Tank Start Line than 3,000 yards. From there
-they will continue the movement forward to the Tank Start
-Line, moving at a slow rate and as quietly as possible. The
-Tank Start Line will be approximately 1,000 yards in rear of the
-Infantry taped line.</p>
-
-<p>Tanks will leave the Tank Start Line at such times as will
-allow them to catch up to the Infantry as the barrage lifts at
-zero plus three minutes.</p>
-
-<p><i>3. Concealment of Engine Noise.</i></p>
-
-<p>To conceal the noise of the engines during the advance of
-the Tanks, the 5th Brigade R.A.F. will arrange to have planes
-flying continuously over the Corps area from 9.30 p.m. until
-midnight on Y/Z night, and from zero minus one hour onward
-to zero.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[325]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><i>4. Tanks allotted to Second Objective.</i></p>
-
-<p>The Tanks allotted to the second objective will form up
-independently under the orders of the 5th Tank Brigade in consultation
-with G.O.'s C., 4th and 5th Australian Divisions.
-These Tanks will be formed up when the aeroplanes are in the
-air during the hours laid down in para. 3.</p>
-
-<p><i>5. Liaison Company.</i></p>
-
-<p>The company of the 8th Tank Battalion detailed to act in
-support, and to ensure liaison in the battle line at the junction of
-Divisions, will detail a half-company to each wave of Tanks,
-vide paras. 2 and 4 above.</p>
-
-<p>Divisions will detail special liaison parties of Infantry to work
-in co-operation with this company.</p>
-
-<p><i>6. Re-assembly.</i></p>
-
-<p>As soon as the blue line has been reached, G.O.C. 5th Australian
-Division will arrange to release the 2nd Tank Battalion,
-less the attached company. This battalion will then be withdrawn.
-The remainder of the Tanks, less one company allotted
-to remain in support of each of the 4th and 5th Australian
-Divisions, will be withdrawn when ordered by Divisional Commanders,
-vide Battle Instructions No. 5, para. 4.</p>
-
-<p><i>7. Smoke Grenades.</i></p>
-
-<p>Divisions will ensure that a proportion of smoke rifle grenades
-accompanies each Infantry detachment detailed to the blue line
-and which accompanies each of the Mark V. (Star) Tanks.</p>
-
-<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Battle Instructions No. 6</span><br />
-ARTILLERY</div>
-
-<p><i>1. Preparation.</i></p>
-
-<p>Active counter-battery work and harassing fire will be
-maintained.</p>
-
-<p>Such registration as is necessary will be carried out under
-cover of this fire. A detailed programme for this will be arranged
-in each divisional sector.</p>
-
-<p>The necessity for concealing the increase in the number of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[326]</a></span>
-guns on the front must be borne in mind, and on no account
-should a large number of guns be employed at any one time.
-Counter preparation and S.O.S. plans during the period of preparation
-for the attack will be drawn up accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>Normal fire should, so far as possible, be carried out from
-positions other than those in which batteries will be emplaced
-during the battle.</p>
-
-<p><i>2. Heavy Artillery.</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) In view of the nature of the enemy's defences, the fire
-of the majority of the heavy howitzers, employed for purposes
-other than counter-battery work, will be used during
-the barrage to engage special strong points or localities.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) Throughout the advance beyond the green line enemy
-centres of resistance will be kept under fire until such time
-as the progress of the Infantry renders this inadvisable. A
-map will be issued to show the times at which heavy
-artillery fire will cease on zones and special localities.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) At least two-thirds of the available Heavy Artillery
-will be employed for counter-battery purposes.</p>
-
-<p>Heavy concentrations of fire will be directed on the
-different groups of enemy artillery.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>3. G.O.C., R.A., will prepare plans for dealing with a heavy
-development of hostile fire on zero night. He will also prepare
-a plan to deal with any attempt at a deliberate gas bombardment
-of the <span class="smcap">Villers-Bretonneux</span> area on zero night.</p>
-
-<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Battle Instructions No. 7</span><br />
-PROGRAMME OF ACTION</div>
-
-<p><i>1. Capture of First Objective.</i></p>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) Forming-up troops detailed to the capture of the first
-objective will be deployed on the Forming-up Line one hour
-before zero hour.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) <i>Artillery Programme.</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(i) The field artillery 18-pdr. barrage will open at zero
-200 yards in advance of the forming-up line. At zero plus<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[327]</a></span>
-three minutes the barrage will commence to advance;
-lifts will be 100 yards at 2-minute intervals. There will
-be two lifts at this rate.</p>
-
-<p>The rate will then decrease to lifts of 100 yards every
-3 minutes. There will be eight lifts at this rate.</p>
-
-<p>From the eleventh lift inclusive until the green line is
-reached lifts will be of 100 yards each at 4-minute intervals.</p>
-
-<p>(ii) The 4.5" Howitzer barrage will move 200 yards in
-advance of the 18-pdr. barrage.</p>
-
-<p>(iii) A protective barrage will be maintained in front of the
-green line until zero plus four hours. During this period
-approximately fifty per cent. (50%) of the guns remaining
-in the barrage will be employed in a protective line barrage;
-the remainder will be employed to search and sweep deeply
-into the enemy's position. At zero plus four hours all
-barrage fire will cease.</p>
-
-<p>Barrage Maps will be issued later.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><i>2. Capture of Second and Third Objectives.</i></p>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) <i>Assembly.</i>&mdash;5th and 4th Australian Divisions will select
-and mark positions for the assembly of their troops.</p>
-
-<p>These areas will be selected in liaison with Tank Commanders
-and with the 2nd and 3rd Australian Divisions respectively, to
-prevent movement to them clashing with the approach march of
-these divisions and that of the Tanks.</p>
-
-<p>This requires careful co-ordination between each pair of
-Divisions and Tank Commanders.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) <i>Command.</i>&mdash;At zero plus four hours, responsibility for the
-battle front will pass to G.O.C., 5th Australian Division, in the
-right sector, and to G.O.C., 4th Australian Division, in the left
-sector.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) <i>The Advance.</i>&mdash;5th and 4th Australian Divisions will time
-their advance so that the leading troops cross the first objective
-(green line) at zero plus four hours.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>d</i>) From zero plus four hours the advance will be continued
-under the conditions of open warfare.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[328]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Battle Instructions No. 8</span><br />
-ROADS</div>
-
-<p>1. A map is forwarded herewith showing the organization of
-the road system in the captured territory.</p>
-
-<p>2. The Chief Engineer will issue the necessary instructions for
-the preparation of these roads for traffic.</p>
-
-<p>3. All light traffic which is capable of moving across country
-will do so and will avoid main roads.</p>
-
-<p>4. Mule tracks will be a divisional responsibility.</p>
-
-<p>5. Artillery advancing with the 5th and 4th Australian
-Divisions will carry forward a proportion of bridges. Arrangements
-should be made as soon as possible for the development of
-tracks, making use of the routes taken by the artillery over these
-bridges.</p>
-
-<p>6. The <span class="smcap">Amiens</span>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Longueau</span>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Villers-Bretonneux</span> main road,
-as far east as the cross roads in N.26.c., will be reserved for the
-exclusive use of the Cavalry Corps from 9.30 p.m. on Y/Z night
-until 8 a.m. on Z day. After 8 a.m. on Z day it will be available
-for the Australian and Cavalry Corps.</p>
-
-<p>Assistant Provost Marshal, Australian Corps, will arrange
-for the control of the traffic on this road throughout.</p>
-
-<p>Chief Engineer, Australian Corps, will prepare short avoiding
-roads at the cross roads at N.26.c. to cross the north-east or
-south-west corner to avoid congestion at this spot.</p>
-
-<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Battle Instructions No. 9</span><br />
-LIGHT SIGNALS, MESSAGE ROCKETS, SMOKE</div>
-
-<p><i>1. Light Signals.</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) <i>Australian Corps.</i></p>
-
-<p>The following Light Signals will be employed in the
-Australian Corps:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>S.O.S. Signal, No. 32 grenade&mdash;showing green over
-green over green. Allotment 500 per Division.</p>
-
-<p>Success Signal, No. 32 grenade&mdash;showing white over
-white over white. Allotment 600 per Division.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[329]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A small reserve of each of these grenades is held at Corps
-Headquarters.</p>
-
-<p>No other Light Signals will be laid down by Corps. There
-is no objection to the use within Divisions of a Very Light
-for the local indication of targets between Infantry and
-Tanks.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) <i>Other Formations.</i></p>
-
-<p>Light Signals of other formations are as follows:</p>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="center"><i>Formation.</i></td><td align="center"><i>Signal.</i></td><td align="center"><i>Meaning.</i></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(i) Cavalry Corps.</td><td align="left">White star turning</td><td align="left">"Advanced troops</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">to red on a parachute</td><td align="left">of Cavalry are</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">fired from</td><td align="left">here."</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">1&frac12;" Very pistol.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(ii) Third Corps.</td><td align="left">No. 32 grenade,</td><td align="left">"S.O.S."</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">green over green</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">over green.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">No. 32 grenade,</td><td align="left">"Success signal,</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">white over white</td><td align="left"><i>i.e.</i>, we have</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">over white.</td><td align="left">reached objective."</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">One white Very</td><td align="left">"Barrage is about</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">light.</td><td align="left">to lift."</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">(iii) Canadian Corps</td><td align="left">No. 32 grenade,</td><td align="left">"S.O.S." will also</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">red over red</td><td align="left">mean (<i>a</i>) "We are</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">over red.</td><td align="left">held up and cannot</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">advance without</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">help." (<i>b</i>) "Enemy</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">is counter-attacking."</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">No. 32 grenade,</td><td align="left">"(<i>a</i>) Lift your fire.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">green over green</td><td align="left">We are going to</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">over green.</td><td align="left">advance. (<i>b</i>) Stop</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">firing."</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">Three white Very</td><td align="left">"We have reached</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">lights in quick</td><td align="left">this point."</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">&nbsp;</td><td align="left">succession.</td></tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[330]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><i>Remark.</i>&mdash;In the case of (<i>a</i>) a smoke rocket (No. 27
-grenade) will also be fired in the direction of the obstruction
-to indicate its position.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) Special care must be taken by the Artillery on the
-right flank of the Corps that all officers and N.C.O.'s are
-acquainted with these signals, so that no mistake may arise
-as regards the difference in the S.O.S. Signals of the Australian
-and Canadian Corps.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>2. <i>Message-carrying Rockets.</i></p>
-
-<p>Allotment of Message-carrying Rockets is 80 per Division.</p>
-
-<p>3. <i>Smoke.</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>(<i>a</i>) Artillery smoke will be as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(<i>i</i>) 3 rounds per gun will be fired during the first three
-minutes of the artillery barrage.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>ii</i>) 3 rounds per gun will be fired in quick succession on
-the arrival of the field artillery barrage at the artillery
-halt line covering the first objective.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>iii</i>) In the event of wet weather a small proportion of
-smoke will be used in the barrage to replace the
-smoke and dust caused by the burst of the shells in
-dry weather. This will not be sufficient to confuse the
-effect with that of the smoke shells prescribed in
-paragraph 3 (<i>a</i>) (i) and (ii).</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) <i>Screening beyond the First Objective.</i></p>
-
-<p>15th Wing, Royal Air Force, will arrange to screen the
-advance of the Tanks and Infantry from special localities
-in advance of their first objective by dropping phosphorus
-bombs.</p>
-
-<p>Divisions and G.O.C., 5th Tank Brigade, will inform
-Australian Corps Headquarters as early as possible of the
-localities which they desire screened.</p>
-
-<p>A map will be issued showing times at which it is anticipated
-that the Infantry will make good certain zones.
-Phosphorus bombs will not be dropped within these zones
-at any time after it is anticipated that the Infantry will
-have occupied them.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[331]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Battle Instructions No. 10</span><br />
-INTELLIGENCE AND DISPOSAL OF PRISONERS OF WAR</div>
-
-
-<p>1. <i>Battalion Intelligence Police.</i></p>
-
-<p>One German speaker and two searchers will be allotted to
-each battalion for use as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) <i>German Speaker.</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(i) To secure immediate identifications quickly, so that
-identifications will reach Corps Headquarters as speedily
-as possible of enemy units on the battle front.</p>
-
-<p>(ii) To secure immediate information required by the
-Battalion Commander as regards enemy dispositions,
-assembly positions, orders for counter-attack, etc.</p>
-
-<p>(iii) To be in charge of the two searchers and separate
-important documents, orders, maps, etc., translate and
-convey information of moment to the immediate Commander.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) <i>Two Searchers.</i></p>
-
-<p>The two searchers under the German speaker systematically
-search the battlefield, enemy positions, suspected headquarters,
-dead, etc., for papers, documents, maps, etc.,
-have them packed in sandbags, and sent through the usual
-channels to the Corps Cage as quickly as possible.</p>
-
-<p>This personnel should carry torches and, besides rifles
-or revolvers, bombs are recommended as being useful for
-dealing with any of the enemy who may be found in
-dug-outs.</p></blockquote>
-
-
-<p>2. <i>Divisional Intelligence Officers.</i></p>
-
-<p>Divisional Intelligence Officers will go forward to an Advanced
-Divisional Collecting Cage, with a view to obtaining, as soon as
-possible, information of immediate tactical importance.</p>
-
-<p>The Cage will be connected by telephone to Divisional H.Q.,
-and important information obtained should be transmitted as
-quickly as possible to Divisional and Brigade H.Q.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[332]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The main points on which immediate information is required
-from prisoners are: The Order of Battle, Units seen, Distribution
-of the Enemy's Forces, Method of holding the Line, Assembly
-Positions, Counter-attack Orders and Intentions.</p>
-
-<p>This information will be wired to their respective Divisional
-Headquarters and repeated to Corps Headquarters and Corps
-Cage by Divisional Intelligence Officers.</p>
-
-<p>Divisional Intelligence Officers will not detain prisoners longer
-than is necessary to obtain this tactical information of immediate
-importance.</p>
-
-<p>In case a large number of prisoners are captured, they will
-detain only one or two from each regiment, and will not delay
-the passage of the remainder to the Corps Cage.</p>
-
-<p>Any further information required from prisoners by Divisions
-or lower formations can always be obtained by telephone from
-the Corps Cage.</p>
-
-<p>3. <i>Searching of Prisoners.</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) <i>Officers and N.C.O.'s.</i></p>
-
-<p>Officers and N.C.O.'s will be searched as soon as possible
-after capture by a responsible officer or N.C.O., and all
-documents taken from them sent back with them (in sacks,
-labelled by regiments, if a number are captured) to the
-Divisional Intelligence Officer, at such place as this officer
-has prearranged.</p>
-
-<p>It is left to the discretion of Divisional Intelligence
-Officers as to what documents, maps, etc., taken from
-prisoners they hold back for the information of Brigade
-and Divisional Commanders. When this is done, Corps
-"I" will be informed by wire, priority if necessary, of the
-nature of the documents, etc., held back, and of any
-points of immediate tactical importance they may
-contain.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as possible after information has been extracted
-from them, the documents will be forwarded on to the Corps
-Cage. Arrangements can be made by Corps, if notified that
-documents are ready to be sent on, to fetch them by motorcyclist
-or cycle.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[333]</a></span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) <i>Other Ranks.</i></p>
-
-<p>Prisoners other than officers and N.C.O.'s will be searched
-on their arrival at the Corps Cage. Their papers, etc.,
-will be taken from them and put into sacks labelled according
-to regiments.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) All ranks should understand that a prisoner's pay-book,
-identity disc, and personal belongings should not be
-taken from him. Escorts and guards will be warned to
-take special precautions to prevent prisoners from destroying
-papers.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>4. <i>Separation of Officers, N.C.O.'s and Men.</i></p>
-
-<p>Care will be taken that officers, N.C.O.'s and privates are all
-separated from one another at once, and are not allowed to
-communicate with one another. Prisoners who have been
-interrogated should not be allowed to mix with those who have
-not yet been interrogated.</p>
-
-<p>5. <i>Notification of Locality of Capture.</i></p>
-
-<p>It is essential that, when prisoners are sent back, information
-be sent with them which will show where they were captured.
-Information as to the battalion which made the capture is a
-useful indication.</p>
-
-<p>6. <i>Authorized Persons only to converse with Prisoners.</i></p>
-
-<p>It is most important that no officer or N.C.O., except those
-duly authorized, be allowed to interrogate or converse with
-prisoners.</p>
-
-<p>7. <i>Prisoners of War Cage.</i></p>
-
-<p>The Advanced Corps Cage will be situated at <span class="smcap">Vecquemont</span>,
-N.11.b.8.7. and the Rear Corps Cage at N.2.c.3.7.</p>
-
-<p>Intelligence Officers and personnel will be stationed here, and
-will carry out a more detailed interrogation and sort out captured
-documents.</p>
-
-<p>The Advanced Corps Cage will be connected by telephone to
-Corps H.Q.</p>
-
-<p>8. <i>Prisoners.</i></p>
-
-<p>The following procedure will be adopted for the disposal of
-prisoners:</p>
-
-<p>After capture they will be escorted to the Advanced Divisional<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[334]</a></span>
-Collecting Cage, for examination by the Divisional Intelligence
-Officer, who, after he has finished with them, will send them
-back to the Advanced Corps Cage.</p>
-
-<p>The sending back of prisoners should be carried out as quickly
-as possible, and several escorts should be arranged for them to
-be passed back without any unusual delay. Instructions should
-be issued to ensure that too many men are not employed on
-escort duty.</p>
-
-<p>In the forward area directing notices should be placed to show
-the route to be taken to the Advanced Divisional Collecting
-Cage.</p>
-
-<p>Traffic control personnel should be conversant with the method
-of disposing of prisoners.</p>
-
-<p>9. <i>Identifications.</i></p>
-
-<p>The importance of passing on all identifications as speedily
-as possible to Corps "I" cannot be too strongly impressed on
-all concerned. It is essential that special efforts be made to wire
-at once, as soon as identifications are made and the locality in
-which obtained.</p>
-
-<p>10.<i> Maps and Photographs.</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>The following maps are being issued:</p>
-
-<p>(i) A large issue of 1/20,000 No. 62.D. South-East regular
-series for distribution to all officers.</p>
-
-<p>(ii) 1/20,000 Map Message Form, for distribution down
-to N.C.O.'s.</p>
-
-<p>(iii) A small issue of 1/10,000 Maps of forward area
-only.</p>
-
-<p>(iv) 1/20,000 Barrage Map, for distribution down to
-Company Commanders.</p>
-
-<p>(v) 1/40,000 Organization Map, together with notes on
-the enemy.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The following special photographs are being issued:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) A Mosaic of each Divisional front, squared and contoured
-and freely annotated, for distribution down to
-N.C.O.'s.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) Oblique Photographs of each Divisional front, for distribution
-to all officers.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[335]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Battle Instructions No. 11</span><br />
-CO-OPERATION OF INFANTRY AND AIRCRAFT</div>
-
-<p>1. <i>Contact Aeroplanes.</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(i) <i>Indication of position by flares.</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) Red ground flares will be used to indicate the
-infantry positions to contact aeroplanes. They will
-be lit by infantry in the most advanced line only.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) A contact aeroplane will fly along the line of the
-first objective at zero plus 2 hours 30 minutes. Flares
-will be called for by the aeroplane sounding a succession
-of "A's" on the Klaxon horn and by firing a white Very
-Light. If the aeroplane fails to mark the line accurately,
-it will repeat its call ten minutes later.</p>
-
-<p>Should the infantry not have reached the line of the
-objective at the time laid down above, the contact
-aeroplane will return at half-hour intervals until flares
-are shown.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) A contact aeroplane will fly along the line of
-the second objective at zero plus 6 hours 30 minutes.
-It will call for flares, and the same procedure will be
-followed on this objective as on the first objective until
-the flares are seen.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>d</i>) A contact aeroplane will fly over third objective
-at zero plus 7 hours, when the procedure laid down for
-the first objective will be observed until the flares are
-shown.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>e</i>) Divisions will organize message-dropping stations in
-the vicinity of their Headquarters.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>(ii) <i>Other means of identifying the position of the Infantry.</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) <i>Rifles.</i>&mdash;Three or four rifles laid parallel across the
-top of the trench.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) <i>Metal Discs.</i>&mdash;Metal discs will be used as reflectors
-by flashing in the sun. This method has been successful
-even on days which have not been particularly bright.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[336]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The disc is most easily carried sewn to the Small Box
-Respirator, and can be used in this way without inconvenience.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>2. <i>Counter-attack Planes.</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) From zero hour counter-attack planes will be constantly
-in the air, with the object of observing hostile concentrations
-or abnormal movement.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) In the event of an enemy concentration indicating a
-counter-attack, the counter-attack aeroplane will signal
-this information to the Artillery by wireless. In the case of
-a counter-attack actually developing a white parachute
-flare will be fired by the aeroplane in the direction of the
-troops moving for the impending counter-attack, for the
-information of the Infantry.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>3. <i>Ammunition-carrying Aeroplanes.</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) Aeroplanes will be detailed to transport ammunition
-from zero plus 2 hours 30 minutes.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) Vickers guns will display a white "V" at the point
-where ammunition is to be dropped. The arms of the
-"V" to be 6 feet in length and 1 foot in width. The apex
-of the "V" to point towards the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) Ammunition aeroplanes will have the under-side of the
-lower planes painted black for a distance of 2&frac12; feet from the
-tips.</p>
-</blockquote>
-</blockquote>
-
-<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Battle Instructions No. 12</span><br />
-CONSOLIDATION</div>
-
-<p>1. <i>Divisions allotted to First Objective.</i></p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>(<i>a</i>) <i>Consolidation.</i>&mdash;As soon as the first objective has been
-captured troops will dig in.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) <i>Troops holding present front line.</i>&mdash;The brigades of 2nd and
-3rd Australian Divisions holding the line on the night prior to
-zero will remain in their battle positions until all troops detailed
-to the attack have passed through. They will then be organized
-and prepared to move to meet any emergency.</p>
-
-<p>2nd Australian Division will be prepared to detach its brigade<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[337]</a></span>
-to act in support of 5th Australian Division, and 3rd Australian
-Division to detach its brigade in support of 4th Australian
-Division.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) <i>Reorganization of Troops on First Objective.</i>&mdash;As soon as
-the whole of the troops detailed to the capture of second (red
-line) and third (blue line) objectives have passed through the
-line of the first objective, 2nd and 3rd Australian Divisions will
-organize the defence of their sectors on the first objective in
-depth in each brigade sub-sector. Units will be reorganized,
-and those not detailed to the defence of the line will be withdrawn
-into support and held in readiness for eventualities. At
-least one battalion in each brigade sub-sector should be withdrawn
-in this way.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>2. <i>Second Objective.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Consolidation.</i>&mdash;As soon as the second objective (the red line)
-has been captured, the position will be thoroughly consolidated.
-Arrangements will be made to ensure a supply of engineering
-material for this.</p>
-
-<p>3. <i>Main Line of Resistance.</i></p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>(<i>a</i>) When the third objective (the blue line) is attained, it will
-be organized and consolidated as the main line of resistance.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) If the enemy is able to develop an immediate counter-attack,
-or if he has a definite plan, and the troops available in
-close reserve for the defence of the blue line, it may not be
-possible to reach the third objective. In this case the second
-objective (red line) will become the main line of resistance, and
-will be consolidated and organized in depth accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) Definite plans will be prepared to deal with either case.
-The Corps must be prepared, as early as possible, to fight a stiff
-defensive battle on the main line of resistance.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Battle Instructions No. 13</span></div>
-
-<p>1. The 5th Australian Division will move into its assembly
-area by Brigade Groups as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"A" Brigade Group on the night 4th-5th August from
-<span class="smcap">Montières</span> to <span class="smcap">Camon</span> and <span class="smcap">Rivery</span> area. Quarters<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[338]</a></span>
-have been arranged for one brigade, less one battalion.
-Shelters will be drawn from Area Commandant,
-<span class="smcap">Camon</span>, for this battalion.</p>
-
-<p>"B" Brigade Group from <span class="smcap">Allonville</span> area to forward area.</p>
-
-<p>"C" Brigade Group from <span class="smcap">Vaux</span> area to <span class="smcap">Allonville</span> area.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>2. For the purposes of staging, <span class="smcap">Poulainville</span> will be included
-as one of the battalion areas of the <span class="smcap">Allonville</span> brigade area.</p>
-
-<p>The camp in <span class="smcap">Bois de Mai</span> has been allotted for the use of the
-5th Division nucleus.</p>
-
-<p>It is left to the discretion of the G.O.C., 5th Australian Division,
-as to whether the Battalion at <span class="smcap">Poulainville</span> moves on the
-night of 4th August.</p>
-
-<p>3. On the night 5th-6th August the 5th Australian Division will
-continue its move into its allotted assembly grounds in the
-forward area.</p>
-
-<p>4. Rear parties are to be left in charge of all camps until
-handed over to the Area Commandant.</p>
-
-<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Battle Instructions No. 14</span><br />
-ARMOURED CAR BATTALION</div>
-
-<p>1. The 17th Armoured Car Battalion has been placed at the
-disposal of the Australian Corps, and will join the 5th Tank
-Brigade shortly.</p>
-
-<p>2. This battalion is organized in two companies of eight (8)
-armoured cars each. Each armoured car carries one forward and
-one rear Hotchkiss gun.</p>
-
-<p>3. One and a half (1&frac12;) companies are allotted to the 5th
-Australian Division, and half (&frac12;) a company will remain in
-Corps Reserve.</p>
-
-<p>The half company detailed to remain in Corps Reserve will
-select a position of assembly in Square 0.26, and will occupy this
-position by 9.30 p.m. on Y/Z night. During the action its
-orders will be transmitted through the 5th Australian Divisional
-Signal Service. The Commander will arrange with the
-5th Australian Division accordingly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[339]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>4. As soon as the Battalion Commander or his representative
-reports to the 5th Tank Brigade, he will be instructed to report
-to the General Staff, Australian Corps, and then to Headquarters,
-5th Australian Division.</p>
-
-<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Battle Instructions No. 14a</span><br />
-ARMOURED CAR BATTALION</div>
-
-<p>1. The 17th Armoured Car Battalion is being given definite
-rôles in accordance with paragraph 3 of Battle Instructions No.
-14. The rôles assigned to this battalion may carry the cars
-forward for a considerable distance into enemy territory, and
-may necessitate their returning through other Divisional Sectors
-than that of the 5th Australian Division.</p>
-
-<p>2. British Armoured Cars can be recognized by the red and
-white band markings which are similar to those of the British
-Tanks.</p>
-
-<p>3. All troops will be warned of the possibility of our armoured
-cars coming into our own sector, and of the way in which they
-are marked.</p>
-
-<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Battle Instructions No. 15</span><br />
-ZERO HOUR&mdash;SYNCHRONIZATION OF WATCHES</div>
-
-<p>1. <i>Zero Hour.</i></p>
-
-<p>Zero hour will be notified in writing from Australian Corps
-Headquarters by noon on the day prior to zero.</p>
-
-<p>2. <i>Synchronization of Watches.</i></p>
-
-<p>Watches will be synchronized by officers detailed by Australian
-Corps Headquarters, who will visit Headquarters in the following
-order, leaving Corps Headquarters shortly after noon and
-6 p.m. on Y day:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) One officer to Headquarters Heavy Artillery, 3rd Australian
-Division and 4th Australian Division.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) One officer to 2nd Australian Division and 5th Australian
-Division.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[340]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Battle Instructions No. 16</span><br />
-AIRCRAFT</div>
-
-<p>1. The Air Forces which will operate on the Australian Corps
-front during the battle will be as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) Corps Squadron&mdash;3rd Australian Squadron.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) 5th Tank Brigade&mdash;8th Squadron.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) The 22nd Wing, consisting of eight Scout Squadrons,
-which will be exclusively employed in engaging ground
-targets by bombing and machine-gunning along the
-whole Army front.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>d</i>) One night-bombing squadron&mdash;101st Bombing Squadron.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>e</i>) One Reconnaissance Squadron&mdash;48th Squadron.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Four additional day-bombing squadrons and three additional
-night-bombing squadrons are being obtained from other Wings
-for co-operation with the above, making 19 Squadrons in all.</p>
-
-<p>2. <i>Low-flying Scouts.</i></p>
-
-<p>The low-flying scouts of the 22nd Wing are being detailed
-on an even distribution to the Corps front. They will operate
-in two phases, viz.:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) From zero to zero plus four hours eastward from the
-green line.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) From zero plus four hours onwards eastwards from the
-red line.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>In each phase favourable targets will be engaged in addition
-to the targets marked by the green and red lines.</p>
-
-<p>3. <i>Markings on Planes.</i></p>
-
-<p>The following will be the special markings of machines allotted
-to special duties:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) Contact patrol machines&mdash;Rectangular panels 2' by 1' on
-both lower planes about three feet from the fuselage.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) Machines working with Tanks&mdash;Black band on middle of
-right side of tail.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>4. <i>Ammunition-carrying Squadron.</i></p>
-
-<p>Aeroplanes carrying small arms ammunition will drop it at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[341]</a></span>
-points as laid down in Battle Instructions No. 11, para. 3 (b).
-The first ammunition-carrying planes will arrive over the battlefield
-at zero plus seven hours.</p>
-
-<p>5. <i>Aeroplane Smoke Screens.</i></p>
-
-<p>In addition to carrying small arms ammunition, this Squadron
-will be employed to drop phosphorus smoke bombs to obstruct
-the enemy's view. The areas to be screened and the time at
-which the screening in each case shall cease in order not to
-interfere with the advance of the Infantry will be shown on a
-map to be issued later.</p>
-
-<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Battle Instructions No. 17</span><br />
-ARTILLERY ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE LAST NIGHT BEFORE ZERO</div>
-
-<p>1. <i>S.O.S.</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(<i>i</i>) Each line division will arrange for four field artillery
-brigades, or an equivalent number of guns, to fire
-on S.O.S. lines at any time up to zero minus fifteen
-minutes.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>ii</i>) From zero minus fifteen minutes until zero hour S.O.S.
-arrangements will be inoperative.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>2. <i>Heavy Artillery.</i></p>
-
-<p>In the event of the enemy opening a gas bombardment on
-the <span class="smcap">Villers-Bretonneux</span> area, arrangements have been made
-for the co-operation of the Canadian Corps Heavy Artillery in an
-artillery counter-attack on enemy batteries. The Canadian
-Corps will deal with the enemy artillery about <span class="smcap">Wiencourt</span> and
-<span class="smcap">Marcelcave</span>. Fire will be opened, on application, direct
-between the two Corps Headquarters.</p>
-
-<p>G.O.C., R.A., Australian Corps, will arrange details with
-G.O.C., R.A., Canadian Corps.</p>
-
-<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Battle Instructions No. 18</span><br />
-These are not reproduced. They refer only to Wireless Code
-Calls prescribed for all units.</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[342]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Battle Instructions No. 19</span><br />
-LIAISON ARRANGEMENTS</div>
-
-<p>1. Officers are detailed for liaison duties as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) At Canadian Corps Headquarters&mdash;Capt. <span class="smcap">Shearman</span>, D.S.O.,
-M.C.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) At Third Corps Headquarters&mdash;Major <span class="smcap">R. Morrell</span>, D.S.O.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) With 1st Australian Division&mdash;To be notified.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>d</i>) With 2nd Australian Division&mdash;Major <span class="smcap">H. Page</span>, M.C.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>e</i>) With 3rd Australian Division&mdash;Lt.-Col. <span class="smcap">A. R. Woolcock</span>,
-D.S.O.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>f</i>) With 4th Australian Division&mdash;Major <span class="smcap">G. F. Dickinson</span>,
-D.S.O.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>g</i>) With 5th Australian Division&mdash;Lt.-Col. <span class="smcap">N. Marshall</span>,
-D.S.O.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>2. The main function of the liaison officer is to relieve the
-Staff of the fighting formation of the necessity of:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) Supplying information to Australian Corps Headquarters.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) Collecting information from Corps Headquarters for
-transmission to the formation for whom they are carrying
-out liaison duties. It is their function to save the Staff as
-far as possible, and not to get in the way. At the same time,
-they are expected to keep Corps Headquarters and the
-formation to which they are attached fully informed of
-events.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>3. Direct telephone lines exist between Australian Corps
-Headquarters and neighbouring Corps.</p>
-
-<p>For the battle there is a special General Staff switchboard
-with direct lines to 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th Australian Divisions.</p>
-
-<p>4. An information bureau will be established in a marquee to
-be erected on the lawn in front of the Headquarters offices.
-Major <span class="smcap">W. W. Berry</span> will be in charge of this bureau. It will be
-provided with a telephone, writing material, maps, etc.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[343]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Liaison officers from other formation at Australian Corps
-Headquarters will be accommodated in this marquee.</p>
-
-<p>During the battle officers whose business does not require
-them to visit the General Staff Office will make all inquiries at
-this office for information as to the progress of the operations.</p>
-
-<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Battle Instructions No. 20</span><br />
-CAVALRY</div>
-
-<p>1. The First Cavalry Brigade, plus one company of Whippet
-Tanks attached, comes under the command of the Australian
-Corps Commander at 9 p.m. on Y/Z night.</p>
-
-<p>2. Its function is to assist in carrying out the main Cavalry
-rôle by seizing any opportunity which may occur to push
-through this Corps front.</p>
-
-<p>3. The First Cavalry Brigade will operate north of the
-<span class="smcap">Amiens&mdash;Chaulnes</span> railway in conjunction with 5th Australian
-Division. It will move from its assembly position in Square
-n.32 under orders of G.O.C., 1st Cavalry Division, via the
-southern side of <span class="smcap">Bois de l'Abbé</span>.</p>
-
-<p>It will cross to the north side of the railway east of <span class="smcap">Villers-Bretonneux</span>.</p>
-
-<p>It will push forward patrols to keep in touch with 8th and
-15th Australian Brigades.</p>
-
-<p>After crossing the railway the main body of 1st Cavalry
-Brigade will march roughly parallel to it, keeping close touch
-with the remainder of 1st Cavalry Division to the south.</p>
-
-<p>4. If a break in enemy's resistance occurs, the remainder of
-the 1st Cavalry Division may be employed in support of 1st
-Cavalry Brigade.</p>
-
-<p>5. Command of 1st Cavalry Brigade will pass from Australian
-Corps to the 1st Cavalry Division when the Infantry reaches the
-red line unless the brigade is required in the area south of the
-Australian Corps to exploit success gained before that hour.
-This will be determined by G.O.C., 1st Cavalry Division, who
-will inform Australian Corps and 5th Australian Division, and
-issue orders direct to 1st Cavalry Brigade.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[344]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="center"><span class="smcap">Battle Instructions No. 21</span><br />
-NOTIFICATION OF DATE AND TIME OF BATTLE</div>
-
-<p>1. Reference paragraph 1 of General Staff Memo. No. AC/42,
-dated 7th instant, <span class="smcap">ZERO</span> will be 4.20 a.m. 8th instant.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[345]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>INDEX</h2>
-
-
-<p>
-Administrative Services, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Aeroplanes first used to carry small arms ammunition, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">As noise camouflage, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Air Force, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Albert, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Allied Offensive, Aug. 8th:<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Conference at Flexicourt, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Outline of plan, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>-<a href="#Page_80">80</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Three phases, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Disposition of brigades, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>-<a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Artillery calibration, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Tanks, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Armoured cars, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Intelligence Service, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Air Squadron, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Day before battle, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Zero hour, 4.20 a.m., <a href="#Page_120">120</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Guns begin, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">First phase completed, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"Outwards" telegrams, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Enemy completely surprised, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Third Corps failed to reach objective, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Armoured cars, sensational report, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Guns and booty captured, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ludendorff's comments, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">General meeting at Villers-Bretonneux, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">The King at Bertangles, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-American Army's first great attack, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">First offensive battle, Hamel, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Second Corps, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">To join Fourth British Army, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">1,200 taken prisoners, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">131st Regt., <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">27th Div., <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">30th Div., <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">33rd Div., <a href="#Page_52">52</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Amiens, defence of, <a href="#Page_26">26</a> <i>et seq.</i><br />
-<br />
-Anzac, First and Second Corps, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Corps, abolition of, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Day, 3rd anniversary, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Arcy Wood, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Armistice requested by enemy, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Army Corps improvised, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Constitution and scope, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Artillery barrage, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>-<a href="#Page_229">229</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Classification of, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Assevillers, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Aubigny, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[346]</a></span><br />
-Australian Army Corps constituted, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">United, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Australian Corps Headquarters, Bertangles, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Australian Soldier's high <i>moral</i>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Adaptability, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Instinct for "square deal," 292.</span><br />
-<br />
-Australian Staff watchword, "Efficiency," 295.<br />
-<br />
-Australia's five Divisions, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Authie, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Bapaume, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Basseux, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Battles on grand scale finished, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Beaurevoir, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Bell, Maj.-Gen. John, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Bellenglise, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Captured, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Bellicourt taken, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Bellicourt Tunnel, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Bertangles, Australian Corps H.Q., <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Biaches, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Bingham, Lt.-Col., <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Birdwood, Gen., <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Birdwood, Gen. Sir William:<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Commands First Anzac Corps, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Appointed Commander Australian Imperial Force, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Appointed Commander Fifth British Army, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Blamey, Brig.-Gen., <a href="#Page_296">296</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Bony captured, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Bouchavesnes, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Bourlon Wood, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Braithwaite, Lieut.-Gen., <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Brancourt, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Bray, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Brie, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Brigade reductions, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.<br />
-<br />
-British Fifth Army, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Brown, Corpl. W., captures officer and 11 men, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Bryce, Lt.-Col., <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Bussy, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Butler, Gen., Third Corps, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Byng, Gen., <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Calibration, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Cambrai, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Canadians, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Canadian Troops, fixed constitution, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Cannan, Brig.-Gen., <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Cappy, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Captive Balloon Service, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Carter, Lieut.-Col. E. J., <a href="#Page_108">108</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Cavalry first employed, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Cerisy, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Cessation of hostilities, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Chamier, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Château-Thierry, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">End of German offensive, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[347]</a></span>Chipilly, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Chuignes, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Churchill, Mr. Winston, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Clemenceau, M.:<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Speech to troops after Hamel battle, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">After Aug. 8th, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Cléry, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>-<a href="#Page_180">180</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Combles, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Commanders and Staffs, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>-<a href="#Page_17">17</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Congreve, Gen., his first order, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Contact aeroplanes, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Cook, Sir Joseph, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Corps Cavalry, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Corps Commander's responsibilities, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Corps Conferences, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Corps Signal Troops, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Corps Troops, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Couin, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Courage, Brig.-Gen., <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Couturelle, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Cox, Maj.-Gen. Sir H. W., <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Crossing the Somme, plan for, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Cummings, Brig.-Gen., <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Curlu, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Currie, Gen., <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Dernancourt, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Difficulties of Army in retreat, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Disorganized British retreat, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Division, the fighting unit, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Division I., <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Last fight, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Division II., <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Last fight, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Division III., <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Last fight, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Division IV., <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Last fight, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Division V., <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Last fight, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Doullens, population prepare to evacuate, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">First move, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>-<a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Dummy Tanks, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Efficient Army more potent than League of Nations, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Elles, Gen., <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.<br />
-<br />
-End of German offensive, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Enemy attack in the South, July 15th, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Comments on our successes, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>-<a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[348]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Discover our movement South, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Move from Russian to Western Front, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"On the run," <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Propaganda, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Reserves melting away, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Reserves absorbed, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Secure our "Recruiting</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cable," <a href="#Page_159">159</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Withdraws in disorder, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Engineers, Companies of, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Estries, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Eterpigny, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Etinehem, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Fairfax, Lieut.-Col. Ramsay-, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Farewell Order to Third Division, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Farewell Order, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Feuillancourt, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Feuillères, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Fifth Army defensive unduly attenuated, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Fifth British Army, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.<br />
-<br />
-First Australian Division, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.<br />
-<br />
-First British Army attack, Aug. 26th, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.<br />
-<br />
-First Order from 10th Corps, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Flamicourt, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Flanders' liquid mud, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Flexicourt Conference, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Foch, Marshal, appointed Supreme Commander, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>; <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Fontaine, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Foott, Brig.-Gen., <a href="#Page_196">196</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Forty-sixth Imperial Division, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Foucaucourt, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Fourth Army enlarged, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">British flank with French, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Fourth and Fifth Australian Divisions, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Framerville, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Franvillers, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Fraser, Brig.-Gen., <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.<br />
-<br />
-French Army's different outlook, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Frevent, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.<br />
-<br />
-"Fuse 106" as wire cutter, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Garenne Wood, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Gellibrand, Maj.-Gen., <a href="#Page_268">268</a>.<br />
-<br />
-German attack, March 21st, 1918, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Propaganda, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Withdrawal general on all fronts, Sept. 4th, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Germany's "Black Day," <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Crack regiments opposed to Australians, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Surrender due to military defeat, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Determining cause, breach of Hindenburg defences, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Gillemont Farm, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Glasgow, Maj.-Gen., <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Godley, Lieut.-Gen. Sir A., commands Second Anzac Corps, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[349]</a></span>Gouy, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Grimwade, Brig.-Gen., <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Haig, Brig.-Gen. Neil, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Field Marshal, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Hamel, proposed operation against, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>-<a href="#Page_48">48</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Battle of, planned, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Zero fixed, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Over in 93 minutes, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Official commentary, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Americans' first offensive battle, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">No gas shells used, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Congratulatory messages, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">M. Clemenceau's speech, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>-<a href="#Page_63">3</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Dinner at Amiens to celebrate victory, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>-<a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">End of British defensive, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Hamel Wood, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Hangard, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Hargicourt, Zero hour, 5.20 a.m. Sept. 8th, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Red line reached before 10 o'clock, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Outpost line captured, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Haut Allaines, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Hautcloque, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Hazebrouck, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Headquarters of Army Corps, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Hebuterne, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Heilly, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Hem, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Herleville, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Hill 90, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Hill 104, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Hindenburg Line, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Purpose of, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">St. Quentin-Cambrai section, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Germans' elaborate system of trenches, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hargicourt line, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Capture of plans of German defence scheme, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Plan for attacking, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Machine gun barrage, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Dummy tanks, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Tapes for Infantry start line, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Direction boards, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Plan for further advance, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>-<a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">America's Second Corps in battle front, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Australian and American Divisions, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mustard gas first used, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Destroying wire entanglements, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Disposition of Divisions, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Two phases, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Zero hour, 5.50 a.m. Sept. 29th, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Fifth Australians hung up, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Americans held up, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Forget to mop up, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Change of plan, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Enemy relinquish tunnel defences, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>.</span><br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[350]</a></span><span style="margin-left: 1em;">Collapse of the whole defences, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Hobbs, Maj.-Gen., <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Hughes, W. M., <a href="#Page_55">55</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Message from, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Hunn, Maj. A. S., <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Infantry advance behind barrage, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Infantry Brigade reductions, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.<br />
-<br />
-"Instantaneous" fuse, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Joncourt, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.<br />
-<br />
-July 18th, French and American counter-stroke, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Kavanagh, Gen., Cavalry Corps, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.<br />
-<br />
-King, the, at Bertangles, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Knob, the, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Knoll, the, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Labour Corps, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.<br />
-<br />
-La Flaque, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.<br />
-<br />
-La Neuville, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Last Australian battle in Great War, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>.<br />
-<br />
-La Verguier, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>.<br />
-<br />
-League of Nations less potent than efficient Army, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>.<br />
-<br />
-"Leap Frog" tactics, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Le Cateau, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Le Catelet, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Leslie, Brig.-Gen. W. B., <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Lewis, Maj.-Gen., <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Lewis Gun detachments, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.<br />
-<br />
-"Liaison Force," <a href="#Page_143">143</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Lihons, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Losses, comparison of, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Ludendorff's comments on Aug. 8th attack, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Lyon, Lt.-Col., <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Maclagan, Maj.-Gen., <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.<br />
-<br />
-McNicoll, Brig.-Gen., <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.<br />
-<br />
-March 22nd, 1918, first move, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Marett Wood, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Martin, Brig.-Gen., <a href="#Page_185">185</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Marwitz, Gen. von der, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Maurepas, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Max (Prince) of Baden, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Mechanical Transport, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Méricourt, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Mills's grenades, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Minor battles begun, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Result, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>-<a href="#Page_39">39</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Monash, Lieut.-Gen., Sir John:<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">In command First Australian Div., <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Third Australian Div., <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Australian Army Corps, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">17th Imperial Div., <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">32nd Imperial Div., <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">27th American Div., <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">30th American Div., <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Without orders, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Honoured by the King, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hands over command to General Read, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Mondicourt, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Monster German Naval 15-inch gun captured, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Montbrehain, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Last Australian battle, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[351]</a></span>Montgomery, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Mont St. Martin, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Mont St. Quentin, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Second Prussian Guards defend, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Captured, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Monument Wood, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Mopping up, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Result of neglecting, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Morain, M., entertains British and French Army officers after Hamel, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<i>Moral v.</i> material, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Motor Ambulance Corps, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Mound, the, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Mullens, Maj.-Gen., letter of appreciation, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Mustard gas, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Nauroy, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Nielles-lez-Blequin, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Noise camouflage, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Nollet, Gen., <a href="#Page_164">164</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Noyons, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Officers and men, relations between, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Ommiécourt, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>.<br />
-<br />
-O'Ryan Maj.-Gen., <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Partington, Major, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Pas, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Péronne, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Enemy defence of, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Taken, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Poulainville, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Prince Max of Baden, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Prisoners, treatment of, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Excuses for surrender, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cages, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"Pigeons" employed to gain information, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Proyart, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Prussian Guards hold Mont St. Quentin, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Quennemont Farm, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Ramicourt, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Ramsay-Fairfax, Lieut.-Col., <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Rawlinson, Gen. Lord, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>-<a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Read, Maj.-Gen. G. W., <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Reorganization of Brigades, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>-<a href="#Page_273">3</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Repatriation of Australian Forces, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Results, analysis of, <a href="#Page_284">284</a> <i>et seq.</i><br />
-<br />
-Rheims, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Robertson, Maj. P. R., <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Roisel, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Rosenthal, Brig.-Gen., <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Rosières, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Roye, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Sailly-Laurette, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Sailly-le-Sec, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Second Australian Division, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.<br />
-<br />
-"Set-piece" operations, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.<br />
-<br />
-"Siegfried Line," <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Skene, Brig.-Gen. P. G. M., <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[352]</a></span>Smoke shells, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Smyth, Sir N. M., V.C., <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Soissons, German withdrawal, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Somme Canal, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Line of, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Enemy retreat, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Somme, North, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Plan for crossing, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">South, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-St. Christ, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.<br />
-<br />
-St. Denis, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>.<br />
-<br />
-St. Gratien, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.<br />
-<br />
-St. Mihiel Salient attack, Sept. 11th, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.<br />
-<br />
-St. Quentin Canal, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Tanks, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Improved type, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Dummy, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">"Star," <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-Teamwork, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Third Australian Division, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Third British Army attack Aug. 21st, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Time-table for successive Army engagements impossible, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Tivoli Wood, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Toulorge, Gen., <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Treux Wood, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Tunnellers, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Underground shelters, galleries and dug-outs, German, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Vaire Wood, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Vaux, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Vauxvillers, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Verdun, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Vermandovillers, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Villers-Bretonneux, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Visitors to Corps, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Lord Milner, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mr. Winston Churchill, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Wackett, Capt., Australian Flying Corps, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Walker, Maj.-Gen. Sir H. B., <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Warneton, early 1918, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Whippet tanks, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Wiancourt, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Wilson, Sir Henry, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.<br />
-<br />
-Wisdom, Brig.-Gen., <a href="#Page_143">143</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Ypres, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.<br />
-<br />
-<br />
-Zero hour, Aug. 8th, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hamel, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hargicourt, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hindenburg Line, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<br />
-<i>Printed at The Chapel River Press, Kingston, Surrey.</i><br />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<h2>Transcriber's Note</h2>
-<p>Obvious errors of punctuation and diacritical markings were corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistent hyphenation was made consistent.</p>
-
-<p>P. 123: No correction made to "Sent at 2.5 p.m."</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE AUSTRALIAN VICTORIES IN FRANCE IN 1918***</p>
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Australian Victories in France in 1918,
-by Sir John Monash
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: The Australian Victories in France in 1918
-
-
-Author: Sir John Monash
-
-
-
-Release Date: February 10, 2016 [eBook #51163]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE AUSTRALIAN VICTORIES IN FRANCE
-IN 1918***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Brian Coe, Moti Ben-Ari, and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made
-available by Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries
-(https://archive.org/details/toronto)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations and maps.
- See 51163-h.htm or 51163-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/51163/51163-h/51163-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/51163/51163-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries. See
- https://archive.org/details/australianvictor00mona
-
-
-
-
-
-THE AUSTRALIAN VICTORIES IN FRANCE IN 1918
-
-
-[Illustration: Lieut.-General Sir John Monash, G.C.M.G., K.C.B., V.D.,
-D.C.L., LL.D.]
-
-
-THE AUSTRALIAN VICTORIES IN FRANCE IN 1918
-
-by
-
-LIEUTENANT-GENERAL SIR JOHN MONASH,
-G.C.M.G., K.C.B., V.D., D.C.L., LL.D.
-
-With 9 Folding Maps in Colour and 31 Illustrations
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-London: Hutchinson & Co.
-Paternoster Row
-
-
-
-
- DEDICATED
- to the
- AUSTRALIAN SOLDIER
- who by his military virtues, and by his deeds
- in battle, has earned for himself a
- place in history which none
- can challenge
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-The following pages, of which I began the compilation when still
-engaged in the arduous work of Repatriation of the Australian troops
-in all theatres of war, were intended to be something in the nature
-of a consecutive and comprehensive story of the Australian Imperial
-Force in France during the closing phases of the Great War. I soon
-found that the time at my disposal was far too limited to allow me to
-make full use of the very voluminous documentary material which I had
-collected during the campaign. The realization of such a project must
-await a time of greater leisure. So much as I have had the opportunity
-of setting down has, therefore, inevitably taken the form rather of
-an individual memoir of this stirring period. While I feel obliged to
-ask the indulgence of the reader for the personal character of the
-present narrative, this may not be altogether a disadvantage. Having
-regard to the responsibilities which it fell to my lot to bear, it may,
-indeed, be desirable that I should in all candour set down what was
-passing in my mind, and should attempt to describe the ever-changing
-external circumstances which operated to guide and form the judgments
-and decisions which it became my duty to make from day to day. It may
-be that hereafter my exercise of command in the field and the manner in
-which I made use of the opportunities which presented themselves will
-be the subject of criticism. I welcome this, provided that the facts
-and the events of the time are known to and duly weighed by the critic.
-
-My purpose has been to describe in broad outline the part played by
-the Australian Army Corps in the closing months of the war, and I have
-based upon that record somewhat large claims on behalf of the Corps. It
-would have overloaded the story to include in it any larger number of
-extracts from original documents than has been done. I may, however,
-assert with confidence that the statements, statistics and deductions
-made can be verified by reference to authoritative sources.
-
-The photographs have been selected from a very large number taken,
-during the fighting and often under fire, by Captain G. H. Wilkins,
-M.C. The maps have been prepared under my personal supervision, and are
-compiled from the official battle maps in actual use by me during the
-operations.
-
- JOHN MONASH.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAP. PAGE
- PREFACE v
- INTRODUCTION--THE AUSTRALIAN ARMY CORPS 1
- I.--BACK TO THE SOMME 18
- II.--THE DEFENCE OF AMIENS 36
- III.--HAMEL 51
- IV.--TURNING THE TIDE 69
- V.--THE BATTLE PLAN 81
- VI.--THE BATTLE PLAN (_continued_) 97
- VII.--THE CHASE BEGINS 115
- VIII.--EXPLOITATION 133
- IX.--CHUIGNES 148
- X.--PURSUIT 164
- XI.--MONT ST. QUENTIN AND PERONNE 182
- XII.--A LULL 198
- XIII.--HARGICOURT 214
- XIV.--AMERICA JOINS IN 235
- XV.--BELLICOURT AND BONY 254
- XVI.--MONTBREHAIN AND AFTER 271
- XVII.--RESULTS 284
- APPENDIX A 299
- APPENDIX B 300
- APPENDIX C 317
- INDEX 345
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF MAPS
-
-
- A--The Advances of the Third Division--March to
- May, 1918 _Facing page_ 32
- B--Battle of Hamel, July 4th, 1918 " 64
- C--Battle of August 8th, 1918 " 144
- D--Battle of Chuignes and Bray, August 23rd, 1918 " 160
- E--Peronne and Mont St. Quentin " 192
- F--Advances of Australian Corps, September 2nd to
- 17th, 1918 " 208
- G--Battle of September 18th, 1918 " 224
- H--Breaching of Hindenburg Defences " 272
- J--Australian Corps Campaign " 288
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF PHOTOGRAPHS
-
-
- Lieut.-General Sir John Monash, G.C.M.G.,
- K.C.B., V.D., D.C.L., LL.D. _Frontispiece_
- 1.--The Australian Corps Commander--with the
- Generals of his Staff _Facing page_ 14
- 2.--The Valley of the Somme--looking east towards
- Bray, which was then still in enemy hands " 15
- 3.--German Prisoners--taken by the Corps at
- Hamel, being marched to the rear " 40
- 4.--Visit of M. Clemenceau--group taken at Bussy,
- July 7th, 1918 " 41
- 5.--Railway Gun, 11.2-inch Bore--captured near
- Rosieres on August 8th, 1918 " 66
- 6.--German Depot of Stores--captured on August
- 8th, 1918 " 67
- 7.--Tanks marching into Battle " 96
- 8.--Morcourt Valley--the Australian attack swept
- across this on August 8th, 1918 " 97
- 9.--Dug-outs at Froissy-Beacon--being "mopped
- up" during battle " 112
- 10.--Peronne--barricade in main street " 113
- 11.--Burning Villages--east of Peronne " 128
- 12.--Dummy Tank Manufacture " 129
- 13.--The Canal and Tunnel at Bellicourt--looking
- north " 152
- 14.--The Hindenburg Line--a characteristic belt of
- sunken wire " 153
- 15.--Final Instructions to the Platoon--an incident
- of the battle of August 8th, 1918. The
- platoon is waiting to advance to Phase B of
- the battle " 176
- 16.--An Armoured Car--disabled near Bony, during
- the battle of September 29th, 1918 " 177
- 17.--The Hindenburg Line Wire--near Bony " 198
- 18.--The 15-inch Naval Gun--captured at Chuignes
- August 23rd, 1918 " 199
- 19.--Australian Artillery--going into action at
- Cressaire Wood " 218
- 20.--Battle of August 8th, 1918--German prisoners
- being brought out of the battle under the fire
- of their own Artillery " 219
- 21.--Mont St. Quentin--collecting Australian
- wounded under protection of the Red Cross
- flag, September 1st, 1918 " 240
- 22.--An Ammunition Dump--established in Warfusee
- village on August 8th, 1918, after its
- capture the same morning " 241
- 23.--Australian Light Horse--the 13th A.L.H.
- Regiment riding into action on August 17th, 1918 " 256
- 24.--The Sniper sniped--an enemy sniper disposed
- of by an Australian Sharp-shooter,
- August 22nd, 1918 " 257
- 25.--German Prisoners--captured at the battle of
- Chuignes, August 23rd, 1918 " 274
- 26.--Captured German Guns--Park of Ordnance,
- captured by the Australians during August, 1918 " 275
- 27.--The Toll of Battle--an Australian gun-team
- destroyed by an enemy shell, September 1st, 1918 " 294
- 28.--Inter-Divisional Relief--the 30th American
- and the 3rd Australian Divisions passing each
- other in the "Roo de Kanga," Peronne,
- during the "relief" after the capture of the
- Hindenburg Line, October 4th, 1918 " 295
- 29.--Australian Artillery--moving up to the front,
- through the Hindenburg wire, October 2nd, 1918 " 316
- 30.--Advance during Battle--Third Division Infantry
- and Tanks advancing to the capture of Bony,
- October 1st, 1918 " 317
-
-
-
-
-The Australian Victories in France in 1918
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-THE AUSTRALIAN ARMY CORPS
-
-
-The renown of the Australians as individual fighters, in all theatres
-of the Great War, has loomed large in the minds and imagination of the
-people of the Empire.
-
-Many stories of the work they did have been published in the daily
-Press and in book form. But it is seldom that any appreciation can be
-discovered of the fact that the Australians in France gradually became,
-as the war progressed, moulded into a single, complete and fully
-organized Army Corps.
-
-Seldom has any stress been laid upon the fact that because it thus
-became a formation fixed and stable in composition, fighting under a
-single command, and provided with all accessory arms and services, the
-Corps was able successfully to undertake fighting operations on the
-grandest scale.
-
-There can be little question, however, that it was this development
-which constituted the paramount and precedent condition for the
-brilliant successes achieved by these splendid troops during the summer
-and autumn of 1918--successes which far overshadowed those of any
-earlier period of the war.
-
-For a complete understanding of all the factors which contributed
-to those successes, and for an intelligent grasp of the course of
-events following so dramatically upon the outbreak of the great
-German offensive of March 21st of that year, I propose to trace, very
-briefly, the genesis and ultimate development of the Corps, as it
-became constituted when, on August 8th, it was launched upon its great
-enterprise of opening, in close collaboration with the Army Corps of
-its sister Dominion of Canada, that remarkable counter-offensive, which
-it maintained, without pause, without check, and without reverse, for
-sixty consecutive days--a period full of glorious achievement--which
-contributed, as I shall show in these pages, in the most direct and
-decisive manner, to the final collapse and surrender of the enemy.
-
-In the days before the war, there was in the British Service no
-recognized or authorized organization known as an Army Corps. When
-the Expeditionary Force was launched into the conflict in 1914, the
-Army Corps organization was hastily improvised, and consisted at first
-merely of an Army Corps Staff, with a small allotment of special Corps
-Troops and services, and of a fluctuating number of Divisions.
-
-It was the _Division_[1] and not the _Corps_, which was then the
-strategical unit of the Army. Even when the necessity for the formation
-of Army Corps was recognized, it was still a fundamental conception
-that it was the Division, and not the Army Corps, which constituted the
-fighting unit.
-
-To each Army Corps were allotted at first only two, but later as many
-as four Divisions, according to the needs and circumstances of the
-moment. But the component Divisions never, for long, remained the same.
-The actual composition of every Army Corps was subject to constant
-changes and interchanges, and it was rare for any given Division to
-remain for more than a few weeks in any one Army Corps.
-
-The disadvantages of such an arrangement are sufficiently obvious to
-require no great elaboration; at the same time, it has to be recognized
-that, during the first three years of the war, at any rate, the Army
-was undergoing a process of rapid expansion, and that, on grounds of
-expediency, it was neither possible nor desirable to adopt a policy of
-a fixed and immutable composition for so large a formation as an Army
-Corps.
-
-Moreover, the special conditions of trench warfare made it imperative
-to create, under the respective Armies, and in the respective zones
-of those Armies, a subordinate administrative and tactical authority
-with a more or less fixed geographical jurisdiction. Thus, the frontage
-held by each of the five British Armies became subdivided into a
-series of Corps frontages, and each Corps Commander had allotted to
-him a definite frontage, a definite depth and a definite area, for his
-administrative and executive direction.
-
-It was within this Corps area that he exercised entire control of all
-functions of a purely local and geographical character: such as the
-maintenance of all roads, railways, canals, telegraphs and telephones;
-the control of all traffic; the apportionment of all billeting and
-quartering facilities; the allocation and employment of all means of
-transport; the collection and distribution of all supplies, comprising
-food, forage, munitions and engineering materials; the conservation
-and distribution of all water supply; the sanitation of the area; the
-whole medical administration within, and the evacuation of sick and
-wounded from the area; the establishment and working of shops of all
-descriptions, both for general engineering and for Ordnance purposes;
-also of laundries, bathing establishments and rest camps; the creation
-of facilities for the entertainment and recreation of resting troops,
-and of schools for their military training and for the education of
-their leaders.
-
-The Corps Commander was, in addition, directly responsible to the Army
-Commander for the tactical defence of his whole area, for the creation
-and maintenance of the entire system of field defences covering his
-frontage, comprising trench systems in numerous successive zones and
-field fortifications of all descriptions; for preparations for the
-demolition of railways and bridges to meet the eventuality of an
-enforced withdrawal; and for detailed plans for an advance into the
-enemy's territory whenever the opportune moment should arrive.
-
-The extensive responsibilities thus imposed upon the Corps Commander,
-and upon the whole of his Staff, obviously demanded an intimate study
-and knowledge of the whole of the Corps area, such as could be acquired
-only by continuous occupation of one and the same area for a period
-extending over many months. It would therefore have been in the highest
-degree inconvenient to move such a complex organization as an Army
-Corps Staff from one area to another at short intervals of time. On the
-other hand, the several Divisions allotted to any given Corps for the
-actual occupation and maintenance of the defences could not be called
-upon to carry out without relief or rest, trench duty for continuous
-periods longer than a few weeks at a time.
-
-During the first three years the number of Divisions at the disposal
-of the British High Command was never adequate to provide each Army
-Corps in the front line with sufficient Divisions to permit of a
-regular alternation out of its own resources of periods of trench duty
-and periods of rest. For a Corps holding a two-Division frontage, for
-example, it would have been necessary to provide a permanent strength
-of at least four Divisions in order to permit of such a rotation.
-
-The expedient generally adopted, therefore, was to withdraw altogether
-from the Army Corps, each Division in turn, as it became due for a rest
-behind the line or was required for duty elsewhere, and to substitute
-some other available Division from G.H.Q. or Army Reserve. The broad
-result was that such an deal as that of a fixed composition for an Army
-Corps proved quite unattainable, and there was a constant interchange
-of nearly the whole of the Divisions of the Army, who served in
-succession, for short periods, in many different Corps, and under many
-different Commanders.
-
-To this general rule there was, from the outset of its formation, one
-striking exception, in the case of the Canadian Army Corps, consisting
-of the four Canadian Divisions, which, with rare exceptions, and these
-only for short periods and for quite special purposes, invariably
-fought as a complete Corps of fixed constitution.
-
-It is impossible to overvalue the advantages which accrued to the
-Canadian troops from this close and constant association of all the
-four Divisions with each other, with the Corps Commander and his Staff,
-and with all the accessory Corps services. It meant mutual knowledge
-of each other among all Commanders, all Staffs, all arms and services,
-and the mutual trust and confidence born of that knowledge. It was the
-prime factor in achieving the brilliant conquest of the Vimy Ridge by
-that Corps in the early spring of 1917.
-
-The consummation, so long and so ardently hoped for, of a similar
-welding together of all Australian units in the field in France into a
-single Corps was not achieved in its entirety until a full year later,
-and it will be interesting to trace briefly the steps by which such a
-result, strongly pressed as it was by the Australian Government, was
-finally brought about.
-
-Australia put into the field and maintained until the end, altogether
-five Divisions of Infantry, complete with all requisite Artillery,
-Engineers, Pioneers and all Supply, Medical and Veterinary Services, in
-full conformity with the Imperial War Establishments laid down for such
-Divisions. But the method and time of their formation and organization,
-the manner and circumstances of their war preparation, and their
-employment as part of a Corps varied considerably.
-
-The First Australian Division, together with the Fourth Infantry
-Brigade, which was then under my command and subsequently became the
-nucleus of the Fourth Australian Division, were raised in Australia
-in 1914, immediately after the outbreak of war, were transported to
-Egypt, where they underwent their war training in the winter of 1915,
-and ultimately formed, with the New Zealand Contingent, the body known
-as the "Anzac" Corps, which carried out, on April 25th, the memorable
-landing on the Gallipoli Peninsula.
-
-The Second Australian Division speedily followed, being raised in
-Australia during 1915, and the greater part of this Second Contingent
-joined the Anzac Corps in the later stages of the Dardanelles
-Expedition. Another independent Brigade (the Eighth) was also sent to
-Egypt in that year.
-
-The raising of the Third Australian Division, early in 1916, was the
-magnificent answer which Australia made when public men and the Press
-declared that the Australian people would resent the Evacuation from
-Gallipoli, and the seemingly fruitless sacrifices which it entailed.
-This Division was shipped direct to England, and assembled on Salisbury
-Plain during the summer of 1916, where I assumed the command of
-it. There it underwent its war training under conditions far more
-advantageous than those which confronted the First and Second Divisions
-in the Egyptian desert. The Third Division entered the theatre of war
-in France in November, 1916.
-
-In the meantime, the Evacuation of the Peninsula, in December, 1915,
-led to the assembly in Egypt of the First and Second Australian
-Divisions, the Fourth and Eighth independent Infantry Brigades and some
-thirty thousand reinforcements and convalescents.
-
-Out of this supply of fighting material it was then decided to
-constitute two additional complete Divisions, the Fourth Brigade
-forming the nucleus of the Fourth Australian Division, while the 8th
-Brigade formed that of the Fifth Australian Division; the remaining
-Brigades and the Divisional troops were drawn from reinforcements,
-stiffened by a considerable contribution of veterans taken from the
-four Infantry Brigades who had carried out the landing on Gallipoli.
-
-The Fourth and Fifth Divisions were thus formed in Egypt in February
-and March, 1916, and the conditions of their war training were
-even less satisfactory than those which had confronted the earlier
-Divisions. The hot season speedily arrived; equipment, munitions
-and animals materialized slowly; training equipment and suitable
-training grounds were of the most meagre character; and upon all
-these difficulties supervened the urgent obligation to undertake the
-strenuous toil of organizing and executing, on the Sinai desert, the
-field fortifications required for the defence of the Suez Canal zone.
-
-The method in which the Divisions then available in Egypt were to be
-grouped for the purposes of Corps Command was ripe for decision. It
-was then that the determination was reached to constitute two separate
-Army Corps, to be called respectively "First Anzac" and "Second Anzac."
-The former embodied the First, Second and Fifth Australian Divisions,
-under General Sir William Birdwood; the latter comprised the Fourth
-Australian and the New Zealand Divisions under Lieut.-General Sir
-Alexander Godley.
-
-This was the organization of the Australian troops when the time
-arrived, in May, 1916, for their transfer by sea from Egypt to the
-scene of the titanic conflict which had been for nearly two years
-raging on the soil of France and Belgium.
-
-This grouping did not, however, persist for more than a few weeks. The
-opening of the great Somme offensive in July 1916 found the First,
-Second and Fourth Divisions operating under First Anzac in the valley
-of the Somme, while the Fifth Australian and the New Zealand Division
-constituted the Second Anzac Corps in the Armentieres-Fleurbaix sector.
-There followed other interchanges as the campaign developed, and by
-November of 1916, the grouping stood with First Anzac employing the
-First, Second, Fourth and Fifth Divisions, while Second Anzac comprised
-the Third Australian, the New Zealand and the Thirty-Fourth British
-Divisions.
-
-The series of offensive operations opening with the great and
-successful battle of Messines on June 7th, 1917, found the Fourth
-Australian Division once again under the command of General Godley,
-only to be again withdrawn before the concluding phases of the
-Third Battle of Ypres, in September and October, 1917. The autumn
-offensive of 1917, aiming at the capture of the Passchendaele ridge,
-was the first occasion on which the whole of the five Divisions were
-simultaneously engaged in the same locality in a common enterprise;
-but even on that occasion they still remained distributed under two
-different Corps Commands, and had not yet achieved the long-desired
-unity of command and of policy.
-
-This constant interchange of these Divisions, unavoidable as it
-probably was, undoubtedly militated against the attainment of the
-highest standard of efficiency. Uniform in scope and purpose as
-military administration and tactical policy aims to be when considered
-on broad lines, yet in a thousand and one matters of detail, many of
-them of dominating importance, the personality and the individual
-idiosyncrasies of the Corps Commander and of his principal executive
-Staff Officers, are calculated to exercise a powerful influence upon
-the functioning of the whole Corps.
-
-Under each Corps Commander there grew up in course of time a particular
-code of rules, and policies, of technical methods and even of technical
-jargon--most of it in an unwritten form. This nevertheless tended
-towards efficiency so long as the whole of the component personnel of
-the Corps remained stable, but imposed many difficulties upon Divisions
-and other units which joined and remained under the Corps for a short
-period only.
-
-The result was that a Divisional Commander and his Staff, accustomed
-to work in one environment, often found great difficulty, and occupied
-some appreciable period of time, in accommodating themselves to a new
-environment, in which doctrines of attack or defence, counter-attack or
-trench routine, supply or maintenance were, some or all of them, widely
-different from those to which they had formerly become accustomed.
-
-But, in the case of Dominion troops, there was a motive far
-overshadowing the desire for a removal of difficulties of merely a
-technical nature. It was one founded upon a sense of Nationhood, which
-prompted the wish, vaguely formed early in the war, and steadily
-crystallizing in the minds both of the Australian people and of the
-troops themselves, that all the Australian Divisions should be brought
-together under a single leadership.
-
-This ideal was associated with the hope that the Commanders and Staffs
-should to as large an extent as possible, consist solely of Australian
-Officers, as soon as ever men sufficiently qualified became available.
-It is difficult to emphasize such a desire without appearing to display
-ingratitude to a number of brilliant General and other officers of
-the Imperial Regular Service. These men, at a time when Australia was
-still able to produce only few officers with the necessary training and
-experience to justify their appointment to the command of Divisions
-and Brigades, or to the senior Administrative and General Staffs,
-bore these burdens in a manner which reflected upon them the greatest
-credit, and earned for them the gratitude of the Australian people.
-
-I refer, among many others, particularly to General Sir W. Birdwood,
-Major-Generals Sir H. B. Walker, Sir N. M. Smyth, V.C. and Sir H. V.
-Cox and Brigadier-Generals W. B. Lesslie and P. G. M. Skene. But as the
-war went on, this aspect of the national aspiration became steadily
-realized; one by one, the senior commands and staff appointments were
-taken over by Australian Officers who had proved their aptitude and
-suitability for such responsibilities.
-
-The other ideal of unity of command and close association with each
-other of all Australian units, proved slower of realization. All
-concerned thought and hoped that it had been, at last, achieved in
-December, 1917, when it was decided to abolish the two "Anzac" Corps,
-and to constitute a single Australian Army Corps. This was effected
-by the transfer of the Third Australian Division from Second to First
-Anzac Corps, by altering the title of "Second Anzac" to "XXII. Corps,"
-and by substituting for the name "First Anzac" the name "Australian
-Army Corps," which name it bore until the termination of the war.
-
-The only regrettable feature of this development was the dissolution
-of the close comradeship which had existed between the troops from the
-sister Dominions of Australia and New Zealand.
-
-Even then all hopes were doomed to disappointment. For the next four
-months the Corps contained five Divisions in name only. Almost at once,
-the Fourth Australian Division was withdrawn to serve under the VII.
-Corps in connection with the operations before Cambrai. Not many weeks
-later, when the German avalanche was loosed, the whole five Divisions
-became widely scattered, and, for a time, the Third and Fourth
-Divisions served under the VII. British Corps, the Fifth Division under
-the III. Corps, and the First Division under the XV. Corps. It was not
-until April, 1918, that four out of the five Divisions again came
-together under the control of the Australian Corps Commander, at that
-time General Sir William Birdwood.
-
-About the middle of May, 1918, this popular Commander was appointed
-to the leadership of the Fifth British Army. In deference to his long
-association with the Australian Imperial Force, he was asked to retain
-his status as G.O.C., A.I.F. His responsibilities as the Commander of
-an Army, and its removal to quite a different area in the theatre of
-war, made it, however, impossible for him to take any active part in
-the direction of the further operations of the Australian Corps.
-
-Owing to the vacancy thus created, the Commander-in-Chief, with the
-concurrence of the Commonwealth Government, did me the great honour to
-appoint me to the command of the Australian Army Corps, a command which
-I took over during the closing days of May and retained until after the
-Armistice.
-
-At that juncture the First Australian Division was still involved in
-heavy fighting, under the XV. Corps, in the Hazebrouck sector, and no
-amount of pressure which I could bring to bear succeeded in prevailing
-upon G.H.Q. to release this Division. It was not until early in August,
-1918, on the very eve of the opening of the great offensive, that, at
-long last, all the five Australian Divisions became united into one
-Corps, never to be again separated. From that date onwards all five
-Divisions embarked (for the first time in their history) upon a series
-of combined offensive operations, the story of which I have set myself
-the task of unfolding in these pages.
-
-The Australian Army Corps had by that time evolved from a mere
-geographical organization into one which, over and above its component
-Infantry Divisions, had acquired a large number of accessory arms and
-services, called Corps Troops, which formed no part of a Division. It
-is desirable for the complete understanding of the battle plans of the
-offensive period, to consider the extent and nature of the whole of the
-fighting and maintenance resources of the Corps.
-
-These fell theoretically into two categories, comprising on the one
-hand those units properly designated as "Corps Troops," which possessed
-a fixed and unalterable constitution, and, on the other hand, those
-additional units, known as "Army Troops," whose number and character
-fluctuated in accordance with the varying needs of the situation, and
-with the requirements of the various operations.
-
-These Army Troops, whenever detailed to act under the orders of the
-Corps Commander, became an integral part of the Corps, and were
-to all intents and purposes Corps Troops, until such time as they
-had completed the tasks allotted to them. The Corps Troops were
-multifarious in character, and amounted in the aggregate to large
-numbers, occasionally exceeding 50,000, a number as great as that of
-three additional Divisions, whose normal strength in the closing phases
-of the war never exceeded 17,000.
-
-The Headquarters of the Army Corps comprised upwards of 300 Staff
-and assistant Staff Officers, clerks, orderlies, draughtsmen, motor
-drivers, grooms, batmen, cooks and general helpers. The Corps Cavalry
-consisted, in the case of the Australian Army Corps, of the 13th
-Regiment of Australian Light Horse, and was employed, in conjunction
-with the Australian Cyclist Battalion, for reconnaissance, escort and
-dispatch rider duty.
-
-The Corps Signal Troops were an extensive organization, and controlled
-the whole of the Signal communications throughout the Corps area
-(except within the Divisions themselves), being responsible for the
-establishment, upkeep and working of every method of communication,
-whether by telegraph, telephone, wireless, pigeons, messenger dogs,
-aeroplane, or dispatch rider. Apart from telegraphists, mechanics and
-electrical experts in considerable numbers, adequate for the very heavy
-signal traffic during battle, and even during periods of comparative
-quiet, Corps Signals also operated two Motor Air Line and two Cable
-Sections, for the laying out and maintenance of wires. Those within the
-Corps Area, at any one place and time, amounted to several hundreds of
-miles.
-
-The whole of the Mechanical Transport, consisting of hundreds of motor
-lorries, for the collection and distribution of ammunition, food,
-forage and ordnance stores of all descriptions, was also under the
-direct control of Corps Headquarters. So also were some half-dozen
-mobile Ordnance Workshops, for the repair of weapons and vehicles of
-all kinds. All these were permanent Corps Troops, but represented only
-a fraction of those serving under the orders of the Corps Commander.
-
-Among the Administrative Services there was a large contingent of the
-Labour Corps comprising some 20 Companies, for the construction and
-maintenance of all roads, and water supply installations, and for
-the handling, daily, of a formidable bulk and weight of Artillery
-ammunition; also two or more Motor Ambulance Convoys, for the
-evacuation of the sick and wounded out of the Corps area, and a number
-of Army Troops Companies of Engineers, as well as two Companies of
-Australian Tunnellers, who were usually employed upon the construction
-and maintenance of bridges, locks, water transport mechanism, deep
-dug-outs and battle stations.
-
-But the fighting units of the Corps Troops formed by far the
-largest proportion, and comprised Artillery, Heavy Trench Mortars,
-Air Squadrons and Tanks. The Artillery alone merits more detailed
-consideration. It comprised a vast array of many different classes
-of guns for many different purposes, and classified into various
-categories by reference either to their calibres, their mobility or
-their tactical purposes.
-
-Grouped according to calibre, all guns and howitzers of 41/2-inch bore
-or less were strictly considered as Field Artillery which, although
-administered by the Divisions, was almost invariably fought under the
-direct orders of the Corps Commander. All guns and howitzers of greater
-bore, up to the giant 15-inch, were known as Heavy and Siege Artillery.
-
-Regarded from the point of view of mobility, all field guns and that
-wonderfully useful weapon, the 60-pounder, were horse-drawn, the larger
-ordnance were tractor-drawn, and the very largest were mounted on
-railway trains and hauled by steam locomotive.
-
-Finally, as regards tactical utilization, some natures of ordnance
-were invariably employed for barrage or harassing fire, others for
-bombardment, others for counter-battery fighting, and yet others for
-anti-aircraft purposes.
-
-The total ordnance under the orders of the Australian Army Corps
-naturally fluctuated according to the daily battle requirements, but
-amounted at times, during the period of the war under consideration, to
-as many as 1,200 guns of all natures and calibres, grouped in Brigades
-each of four to six Batteries, each of four to six guns.
-
-This very formidable Artillery equipment far transcended in quantity
-and dynamic power anything that had been envisaged in the previous
-years of the war, or in any previous war, as possible of administrative
-or tactical control under a single Commander. It undoubtedly became
-a paramount factor in the victories which the Corps achieved. The
-Artillery of the Corps is entitled to the proud boast that it earned
-the confidence and gratitude of the Infantry.
-
-It must be left to the imagination to conceive the complexity of the
-task of keeping this enormous mass of Artillery regularly supplied
-with its ammunition, of multifarious types and in adequate quantities
-of each, of allocating to each Brigade and even to each Battery its
-appropriate task in the general plan, and of advancing the whole
-organization over half-ruined roads and broken bridges, in order to
-keep up with the Infantry as the battle moved forward from day to day.
-It would defy a detailed description intelligible to any but gunnery
-experts.
-
-The Air Force had, by the summer of 1918, also achieved a great
-development. The numerous Air Squadrons had embarked upon a policy of
-specialization in tactical employment, in accordance with the build
-and capacities of the aeroplanes with which they were equipped. Thus
-gradually the whole range of utilization became covered, from the
-small fast single-seater fighting scout, intended to engage and drive
-off enemy 'planes, to the slower two-seater reconnaissance machines,
-employed chiefly for photography and for the direction of Artillery
-fire, and the giant long-distance bombing machines.
-
-The Australian Corps had at its exclusive disposal at all times the
-No. 3 Squadron of the Australian Flying Corps, and employed the
-machines for reconnaissance prior to and after battle, and for contact
-and counter-attack work and Artillery observation during battle.
-But, whenever the scope of the operations rendered it necessary, the
-resources of the Corps in aircraft were enormously increased, and as
-many as a dozen squadrons were on occasions employed, during battle,
-in low flying pursuit of enemy infantry and transport, in production
-of smoke screens, in bombing, in ammunition carrying, and in dispatch
-bearing--over and above usual reconnaissance work designed to keep
-Corps and Divisional Headquarters rapidly and minutely informed, from
-moment to moment, of the situation of the Infantry in actual contact
-with the enemy.
-
-Another branch of the Air Force activities under the direct control
-of the Corps was the Captive Balloon Service. Some five large captive
-or kite balloons, carrying trained Artillery Observers, regularly
-ascended along the Corps front whenever the weather and the conditions
-of visibility permitted, to a height of from 2,000 to 3,000 feet, and
-with the aid of powerful telescopes and of telephone wires woven into
-the anchoring cables, kept the Artillery regularly notified of all
-visible enemy movement, and of the occurrence of all suitable targets
-of opportunity, such as the flashes from enemy guns in action.
-
-During battle one such balloon was invariably sent up well forward
-to observe as closely as possible the progress of the fighting, but
-the results were almost uniformly disappointing, because the smoke
-and dust of the barrage and the general murk of battle usually proved
-impenetrable to the air observer, tied as he was to a fixed position.
-The reports of these observers were usually confined to the laconic
-observation: "Can't see much, but all apparently going well."
-
-The last of the major fighting units of Corps Troops remaining to
-be mentioned are the Tanks. These extraordinary products of the war
-underwent a remarkable evolution during the two years which followed
-their first introduction on the battlefield in the Somme campaign of
-1916. The standard of efficiency which had been reached by the early
-summer of 1918, in the most developed types of these curious monsters,
-as far outclassed that of the earlier types in both mechanical and
-fighting properties as the modern service rifle compared with the old
-Brown Bess of the Peninsular War. The Tank crews had improved in like
-proportion, both in skill, enterprise and adaptability.
-
-[Illustration: The Australian Corps Commander--with the Generals of his
-Staff.]
-
-[Illustration: The Valley of the Somme--looking East towards Bray,
-which was then still in enemy hands.]
-
-Nothing can be more unstinted than the acknowledgment which the
-Australian Corps makes of its obligation to the Tank Corps for its
-powerful assistance throughout the whole of the great offensive.
-Commencing with the battle of Hamel, a large contingent of Tanks
-participated in every important "set-piece" engagement which the Corps
-undertook. The Tanks were organized into Brigades, each of three
-Battalions, each of three Companies, each of twelve Tanks. During the
-opening phases, early in August, the Tank contingent comprised a whole
-Brigade of Mark V. Tanks, a Battalion of Mark V. (Star) Tanks, and
-a Battalion of fast Armoured Cars; in the later phases, during the
-assault on the Hindenburg Line, a second Brigade of Mark V. Tanks and
-a Battalion of Whippets also co-operated.
-
-Such was the formidable array of fighting resources under the direct
-orders of the Australian Corps Commander, and, together with the five
-Australian Divisions, formed a fighting organization of great strength
-and solidarity. It became an instrument for offensive warfare, as has
-been said by a high authority, which for size and power excelled all
-Corps organizations which either this or any previous war had produced.
-It was an instrument which it was a great responsibility, as also a
-great honour, to wield in the task of shattering the still formidable
-military power of the enemy. For in the early summer of 1918, that
-power appeared to be still unimpaired, and still capable of inflicting
-serious reverses upon the Allied cause.
-
-Early in 1918, owing to the depletion of human material, the Imperial
-Divisions were reconstituted by a reduction of their Infantry Brigades
-from a four-battalion to a three-battalion basis, thus reducing the
-available infantry by twenty-five per cent. But in this reduction, the
-Australian Divisions during the fighting period shared only to a very
-small extent. In March the strength of the 15 Brigades of Australian
-Infantry in the field was still 60 Battalions. The heavy fighting of
-March and April compelled the extinction of 3 Battalions, one each
-respectively in the 9th, 12th and 13th Infantry Brigades; but the
-remaining 57 Battalions of Infantry remained intact until after the
-close of the actual fighting operations early in October. The Corps was
-therefore enabled to maintain an additional twelve battalions over and
-above the then prevailing corresponding Imperial organization.
-
-It was thus the largest of all Army Corps ever organized, in this or
-any other war, by any of the combatants--the largest both in point of
-numbers and of military resources of all descriptions, approaching, and
-in one case exceeding, a full Army command.
-
-But even these great resources and responsibilities were added to,
-during the course of the operations, by the allocation, at successive
-times, to the Australian Corps of the 17th Imperial Division, the 32nd
-Imperial Division and the 27th and 30th American Divisions. Thus,
-during the closing days of September, 1918, the Corps numbered a total
-of nearly 200,000 men, exceeding more than fourfold the whole of the
-British troops under the command of the Duke of Wellington at the
-Battle of Waterloo.
-
-Of this total about one-half comprised Australian troops, the Heavy
-Artillery and other Army units attached to the Corps consisting of
-Imperial troops. The Commanders and Staffs from June, 1918, until the
-end consisted almost entirely of Australian officers, among whom the
-following were the senior:
-
- Corps Commander Lieut.-General Sir J. Monash,
- G.C.M.G., K.C.B., V.D.
- Corps Chief-of-Staff Brigadier-General T. A. Blamey,
- C.M.G., D.S.O.
- Corps Artillery Commander Brigadier-General W. A. Coxen,
- C.B., C.M.G., D.S.O.
- Chief Engineer Brigadier-General C. H. Foott,
- C.B., C.M.G.
-
- 1st Div. Commander Major-General Sir T. W. Glasgow,
- K.C.B., D.S.O.
- General Staff Officer Lieut.-Colonel A. M. Ross, C.M.G.,
- D.S.O.
- Chief Admin. Officer Lieut.-Colonel H. G. Viney,
- C.M.G., D.S.O.
-
- 2nd Div. Commander Major-General Sir C. Rosenthal,
- K.C.B., C.M.G., D.S.O.
- General Staff Officer Lieut.-Colonel C. G. N. Miles,
- C.M.G., D.S.O.
- Chief Admin. Officer Lieut.-Colonel J. M. A. Durrant,
- C.M.G., D.S.O.
-
- 3rd Div. Commander Major-General Sir J. Gellibrand,
- K.C.B., D.S.O.
- General Staff Officer Lieut.-Colonel C. H. Jess, C.M.G.,
- D.S.O.
- Chief Admin. Officer Lieut.-Colonel R. E. Jackson,
- D.S.O.
-
- 4th Div. Commander Major-General E. G. Sinclair-Maclagan,
- C.B., D.S.O.
- General Staff Officer Lieut.-Colonel J. D. Lavarack,
- C.M.G., D.S.O.
- Chief Admin. Officer Lieutenant-Colonel R. Dowse,
- D.S.O.
-
- 5th Div. Commander Major-General Sir J. J. T. Hobbs,
- K.C.B., K.C.M.G., V.D.
- General Staff Officer Lieut.-Colonel J. H. Peck, C.M.G.,
- D.S.O.
- and later Lieut.-Colonel J. T. McColl,
- O.B.E., M.C.
- Chief Admin. Officer Colonel J. H. Bruche, C.B., C.M.G.
-
-All the above were Australian Officers, and most of them were of
-Australian birth. There were also two senior staff officers of the
-Regular Army, Brigadier-General R. A. Carruthers, C.B., C.M.G., who
-was Chief of the Administrative Services, and Brigadier-General L.
-D. Fraser, C.B., C.M.G., who was in immediate command of the Heavy
-Artillery of the Corps.[2]
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] A _Division_ consists of three Infantry Brigades, Divisional
-Artillery, three Field Companies of Engineers, three Field Ambulances,
-a Pioneer Battalion, a Machine Gun Battalion, together with Supply,
-Sanitary and Veterinary Services. Its nominal strength is 20,000.
-
-An _Infantry Brigade_ consists of four Infantry Battalions, each of
-1,000 men, and a Light Trench Mortar Battery.
-
-Divisional Artillery comprises two Brigades each of four batteries,
-each of six guns or howitzers, also one Heavy and three medium Trench
-Mortar Batteries, and the Divisional Ammunition Column.
-
-This composition of a Division was modified in detail during the course
-of the war.
-
-[2] For grouping of Australian Brigades into Divisions, see Appendix
-"A."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-BACK TO THE SOMME
-
-
-The early days of the year 1918 found the Australian Corps consisting
-of the First, Second, Third and Fifth Australian Divisions, while
-the Fourth had been transferred far south to co-operate in the later
-developments of the Cambrai fighting. The Corps was then holding,
-defensively, a sector of the line in Flanders, which had in the
-previous years of the war become, at various times, familiar to all
-our Divisions, and which extended from the river Lys at Armentieres,
-northwards, as far as to include the southern half of the Messines
-Ridge.
-
-It was, indeed, that very stretch of country, which in June, 1917,
-had been captured by our Third Division, in co-operation with the New
-Zealanders. Opposite its centre lay the town of Warneton, still in the
-hands of the enemy. Excepting for a small area of undulating ground in
-the extreme north of the Corps sector, the country was a forbidding
-expanse of devastation, flat and woebegone, with long stretches of
-the front line submerged waist deep after every freshet in the river
-Lys, and with the greater part of our trench system like nothing but a
-series of canals of liquid mud.
-
-This unsavoury region formed, however, the most obvious line of
-approach for an enemy who, debouching from the direction of Warneton,
-aimed at the high land between us and the Channel Ports; so that,
-tactically useless as were these mud flats, it was imperative that
-they should be strongly defended, in order to protect from capture
-the important heights of Messines, Kemmel, Hill 63, Mont des Cats and
-Cassel.
-
-During the fighting of the preceding summer and early autumn, which
-gave the Australian troops possession of this territory, the locality
-was dry, practicable for movement, and reasonably comfortable for the
-front line troops. Now it was water-logged, often ice-bound, bleak
-and inhospitable. The precious months of dry weather, between August
-and October, 1917, had been allowed to pass without any comprehensive
-attempt on the part of those Divisions which had relieved the Second
-Anzac Corps after its capture of this ground to perfect the defences of
-the newly-conquered territory. At any rate, there was little to show
-for any work that may have been attempted.
-
-Now, in the very depth of the worst season of the year, the demand
-came to prepare the region for defence and resistance to the last;
-for the threat of a great German offensive in the opening of the
-1918 campaigning season was already beginning to take shape. It was
-the Australian Corps which was called upon to answer that demand.
-There followed week after week of heart-breaking labour, much of it
-necessarily by night, in draining the flat land, in erecting acre upon
-acre of wire entanglements, in constructing hundreds of strong points,
-and concrete machine gun emplacements. Trenches had to be dug, although
-the sides collapsed unless immediately revetted with fascines or sheet
-iron; roads had to be repaired, and vain attempts were made to provide
-the trench garrisons with dry and bearable underground living quarters.
-
-The monotony of all this labour, which long after--when the Australians
-had disappeared from the scene and were again fighting on the
-Somme--proved to have been undertaken all in vain, was relieved only
-by an occasional raid, undertaken by one or other of our front line
-Divisions, for the purpose of molesting the enemy and gathering
-information. The Corps front was held by two Divisions in line, one in
-support, and one resting in a back area; the rotation of trench duty
-gave each Division about six weeks in the line.
-
-My own command at that juncture still comprised the Third Australian
-Division, which I had organized and trained in England, eighteen
-months before. Although this Division had never been on the Somme,
-it had seen a great deal of fighting in Flanders during 1917. During
-this period, therefore, and until the outbreak of the storm in the
-last days of March, 1918, my interest centred chiefly in the doings of
-the Third Division, although for a very short period I had the honour
-of commanding the Corps during the temporary absence of Sir William
-Birdwood.
-
-The information at our disposal led to the inevitable conclusion that,
-during January and February, the enemy was busy in transferring a great
-mass of military resources from the Russian to the Western Front. No
-one capable of reading the signs entertained the smallest doubt that he
-contemplated taking the offensive, in the spring, on a large scale. The
-only questions were, at what point would he strike? and what tactics
-would he employ?
-
-Every responsible Australian Commander, accordingly, during those
-months, applied himself diligently to these problems, formulated his
-doctrines of obstinate defence, and of the defensive offensive; and saw
-to it that his troops received such precognition in these matters as
-was possible at such a time and in such an environment. The principles
-of defence in successive zones, of the rapid development of Infantry
-and Artillery fire power, of the correct distribution of machine guns,
-of rearguard tactics, and questions of the best equipment for long
-marches and rapid movement were debated and resolved upon, in both
-official and unofficial conferences of officers.
-
-All this discussion bore good fruit. Among the possible roles which
-the Australian Divisions might be called upon to fill, when the great
-issue was joined, were those which involved these very matters. And so
-the event proved; and the Australians then approached their new and
-unfamiliar tasks, not wholly unprepared by training and study for the
-difficulties involved.
-
-It was on March 8th that the Third Division bade a last but by no
-means a regretful farewell to the mud of Flanders and Belgium--regions
-which it had inhabited almost continuously for the preceding sixteen
-months. The Division moved back for a well-earned rest, to a pleasant
-countryside at Nielles-lez-Blequin, not far from Boulogne. It was lying
-there, enjoying the first signs of dawning spring when, on March 21st,
-the curtain was rung up for a great drama, in which the Australian
-troops were destined to play no subordinate part.
-
-There followed many weeks of crowded and strenuous days, and the
-story of this time must, of necessity, assume the form of a personal
-narrative. Events followed one upon the other so rapidly, and the
-centre of interest changed so quickly from place to place and from hour
-to hour, that no recital except that of the future historian writing
-with a wealth of collected material at his disposal, could take upon
-itself any other guise than that of a record of individual experience.
-
-The Germans attacked the front of the Fifth British Army on March
-21st. The information which was at the disposal of our High Command
-was not of such a nature that the promulgation of it would have been
-calculated to elevate the spirits of the Army; consequently Divisions
-situated as we were, in Reserve, and, for the time being, entirely out
-of the picture, had to depend for our news partly upon rumour, which
-was always unreliable, and partly upon severely censored communiques,
-framed so as to allay public anxiety. Nothing definite emerged from
-such sources, except that things were going ill and that fighting was
-taking place on ground far behind what had been our front line near
-St. Quentin. This hint was enough to justify the expectation that my
-Division would not be left for long unemployed; and on the same day,
-March 21st, instructions were issued for all units to prepare for a
-move, to dump unessential baggage, to fill up all mobile supplies, and
-to stand by in readiness to march at a few hours' notice.
-
-Orders came to move on March 22nd. The Division was to move _east_,
-that is, back into Flanders, and not south to the Somme Valley, as all
-had hoped. The prescribed move duly started, but by March 24th had
-been arrested, for orders had come to cancel the move and await fresh
-orders. Advanced parties, for billeting duty, were to proceed next
-morning by motor lorry to Doullens, and there await orders. Later came
-detailed instructions that the Division was to be transferred from the
-Australian Corps to the Tenth Corps, which latter was to be G.H.Q.
-Reserve, and that the whole Division was to be moved the next night to
-the Doullens[3] area, the dismounted troops by rail, and the Artillery
-and other mounted units by route-march.
-
-It was evident that the plans of the High Command were the subject
-of rapid changes, in sympathy, probably, with fluctuations in the
-situation, which were not ascertainable by me. There followed a night
-and day of strenuous activity, during which arrangements were completed
-to entrain the three Infantry Brigades and the Pioneers at three
-different railway stations, to start off the whole of the mounted units
-on their long march by road, and to ensure that all fighting troops
-were properly equipped with munitions, food and water, all ready for
-immediate employment. It was well that my Staff responded capably to
-the heavy demands made upon them, and that all this preparatory work
-was efficiently done.
-
-The entrainments commenced at midnight on the 25th and continued all
-night. At break of day on the 26th, after assuring myself that everyone
-was correctly on the move, I proceeded south by motor-car, in the
-endeavour to find the Tenth Corps Headquarters, and to report to them
-for orders. My fruitless search of that forenoon revealed to me the
-first glimpse of the true reason for that far-reaching disorganization
-and confusion which confronted me during the next twenty-four hours.
-
-Over three years of trench warfare had accustomed the whole Army to
-fixed locations for all Headquarters, and to settled routes and lines
-of inter-communication. The powerful German onslaught and the recoil of
-a broad section of our fighting front had suddenly disturbed the whole
-of this complex organization. The Headquarters of Brigades, Divisions,
-and even Corps, ceased to have fixed locations where they could be
-found, or assured lines of telegraph or telephone communications, by
-which they could be reached. Everything was in a state of flux, and the
-process of getting into personal contact with each other suddenly took
-responsible leaders hours where it had previously taken minutes.
-
-In its broad result, this disorganization affected most seriously
-the retiring troops, by depriving them of the advantages of rapidly
-disseminated orders for properly co-ordinated action by a large number
-of Corps and Divisions withdrawing side by side. The consequence
-was, I am convinced, that the recoil--which may have been inevitable
-at first by reason of the intensity of the German attack, and
-because the defensive organization of the Fifth Army had been unduly
-attenuated--was allowed to extend over a much greater distance, and to
-continue for longer, in point of time, than ought to have been the case.
-
-Between Albert and St. Quentin there were in existence several lines
-of defence, which by reason of their topographical features, or the
-existence of trenches and entanglements, were eminently suitable for
-making a stand. Yet no stand was made, at any rate on a broad front,
-because there was no co-ordination in the spasmodic attempts to do so.
-I subsequently learned of more than one instance where Brigades of
-Infantry or of Artillery found themselves perfectly well able to hold
-on, but were compelled to a continued retirement by the melting away of
-the units on their flanks.
-
-I sought the Tenth Corps at Hautcloque, where they were to be. They
-were not there. I proceeded to Frevent, where they were said to have
-been the night before. They had already left. In despair, I proceeded
-to Doullens, resolved at least to ensure the orderly detrainment of my
-Division and their quartering for the following night, and there to
-await further orders. A despatch rider was sent off to G.H.Q. to report
-my whereabouts, and the fact that I was without orders.
-
-Arriving at Doullens, I tumbled into a scene of indescribable
-confusion. The population were preparing to evacuate the town _en
-masse_, and an exhausted and hungry soldiery was pouring into the
-town from the east and south-east, with excited tales that the German
-cavalry was on their heels. Influenced by the persistency of these
-reports, I determined to make, immediately, dispositions to cover the
-detrainment of my troops, so that some show of resistance could be made.
-
-In the midst of all this stress and anxiety, I was favoured by a run
-of good luck. Within half an hour of my reaching Doullens, the first
-of my railway trains arrived, bringing Brigadier-General Rosenthal
-and a battalion of the 9th Brigade, sufficient troops, at any rate,
-to furnish a strong outpost line for covering the eastern approaches
-of Doullens, while the remainder of the Brigade should arrive. These
-arrangements made, I motored to Mondicourt, where almost immediately
-afterwards a train arrived, bringing Brigadier-General McNicoll and the
-first battalion of the 10th Brigade.
-
-There also arrived, almost simultaneously, that rumour with the
-ridiculous _denouement_, that German armoured motor-cars were
-approaching along the road from Albert and were within three miles of
-that point. Those Armoured Cars proved ultimately to be a train of
-French agricultural implements which a wheezy and rumbling traction
-engine was doing its best to salve. McNicoll likewise received orders
-to put out a line of outposts to cover Mondicourt railway station.
-
-At this point, too, endless streams of dust-begrimed soldiers were
-straggling westwards. McNicoll collected many hundreds of them, and did
-not omit, by very direct methods, to prevail upon all of them who had
-not yet lost their rifles and essential equipment, to call a halt and
-join his own troops in the defensive dispositions which he was making.
-
-My next business was to select a suitable central point at which to
-establish my Headquarters, preferably where I could find a still intact
-telephone service. Again by good luck I found a most suitable location
-in a small chateau at Couturelle, whose owner hospitably provided a
-much needed meal.
-
-It was there, soon after my arrival, that I learned of the presence
-in the neighbourhood of Major-General Maclagan; this news, implying
-as it did the presence also of some at least of the Fourth Australian
-Division, was a gleam of sunshine in an otherwise gloomy prospect.
-Report said that he was at Basseux, and thither I proceeded, in order
-to arrange, by personal conference with him, some plan for co-ordinated
-action.
-
-Basseux rests on the main road from Doullens to Arras, which lies
-roughly parallel to the line along which, as subsequently transpired,
-the vanguard of the enemy was endeavouring to advance at that part of
-the front. That main road I found packed, for the whole of the length
-which I had to traverse, with a steadily retreating collection of
-heterogeneous units, service vehicles and guns of all imaginable types
-and sizes, intermingled with hundreds of civilian refugees, and farm
-waggons, carts, trollies and barrows packed high with pathetic loads of
-household effects. The retrograde movement was orderly and methodical
-enough, and there was nothing in the nature of a rout, but it was
-nevertheless a determined movement to the rear which evidenced nothing
-but a desire to keep moving.
-
-I found Maclagan at about four o'clock. His Division had already been
-on the move, by bus and route march, for three days without rest. The
-position to the east and south-east of him was obscure, and he also had
-posted a line of outposts in the supposed direction of the enemy, and
-was arranging to despatch his 4th Brigade to Hebuterne (which the enemy
-was reported to have entered), with orders to recapture that town. That
-the enemy was not very far away became evident from the fact that the
-vicinity of the hut in which we were conferring presently came under
-desultory long-range shell-fire.
-
-There was nothing to be done except to arrange jointly to keep up
-an effective and as far as possible continuous line of outposts
-towards the south-east, and to await developments. Having made these
-arrangements I returned along the same crowded road, which was now also
-being leisurely shelled by the enemy, to Couturelle. There I found that
-the principal officers of my Staff had arrived.
-
-Thereupon orders were issued for the concentration, after detrainment,
-of my three Brigades in the following areas, each with due outpost
-precautions, viz.: 9th Brigade at Pas, 10th Brigade at Authie, and 11th
-Brigade at Couin. My Artillery was still distant a full day's march by
-road.
-
-About nine o'clock that evening I received, by telephone, my first
-order from the Tenth Corps. It ran as follows: "A Staff Officer has
-left some time ago on his way to you, carrying instructions for you to
-report personally at once to Corbie for orders. We have since heard
-that you are to go to Montigny instead."
-
-It was nearly an hour before the Staff Officer arrived, having been
-delayed on the road by congestion of traffic. The instructions he
-carried transferred my Division from the Tenth to the Seventh Corps,
-to whom I was to report personally, without delay, at Corbie. It was
-evident from the later telephone message that the Seventh Corps had
-been compelled to withdraw from Corbie, and was proceeding to Montigny.
-
-This was the second stroke of good luck that day; for if the telephone
-message above recited had not overtaken the Staff Officer, it is quite
-probable that I should have already started for a wrong destination,
-and have had to waste valuable time at a most critical juncture. Had
-I failed to find General Congreve, the Seventh Corps Commander, _that
-same night_, it is almost certain that my Division would have arrived
-on the Somme too late to prevent the capture of Amiens.
-
-Setting out from Couturelle shortly after ten o'clock that night,
-accompanied by four of my Staff and two despatch-riders, with two
-motor-cars and two motor cycles, in black darkness, on unfamiliar roads
-congested with refugee traffic, I did not reach Montigny until after
-midnight. I found General Congreve in the corner of a bare salon of
-stately proportions, in a deserted chateau by the roadside, seated
-with his Chief of Staff at a small table, and examining a map by the
-flickering light of a candle. The rest of the chateau was in darkness,
-but heaps of hastily dumped Staff baggage impeded all the corridors.
-
-General Congreve was brief and to the point. What he said amounted to
-this: "At four o'clock to-day my Corps was holding a line from Albert
-to Bray, when the line gave way. The enemy is now pushing westwards
-and if not stopped to-morrow will certainly secure all the heights
-overlooking Amiens. What you must try and do is to get your Division
-deployed across his path. The valleys of the Ancre and the Somme offer
-good points for your flanks to rest upon. You must, of course, get as
-far east as you can, but I know of a good line of old trenches, which
-I believe are still in good condition, running from Mericourt-l'Abbe
-towards Sailly-le-Sec. Occupy them, if you can't get further east."
-
-At that juncture General Maclagan arrived and received similar crisp
-orders to bring his Division into a position of support on the high
-land in the bend of the Ancre to the west of Albert. I gleaned further
-that the Seventh Corps was now the south flank Corps of the Third Army,
-and that as the Fifth Army, south of the Somme, had practically melted
-away, while the French were retiring south-westerly and leaving an
-hourly increasing gap between their north flank and the Somme, General
-Byng had resolved to make every effort not only to maintain the flank
-of his Third Army on the Somme, but also to prevent it being turned
-from the south, while the Commander-in-Chief was taking other measures
-to attempt next day to fill the gap above alluded to.
-
-It was already 1 a.m. of March 27th, and I had left my Division twenty
-miles away. Everything depended now on quick decision and faultless
-executive action. It was fortunate that a telephone line to G.H.Q.
-had been found in good working order, and that the services of three
-large motor bus convoys could be arranged for to proceed at once to
-the Doullens area, in order to transport my Infantry during the night
-to the place appointed. I worked with my Staff till nearly break of
-day, considering and settling all detailed arrangements, and we then
-separated in various directions to our appointed tasks.
-
-I proceeded myself a little after dawn, with one Staff Officer, to
-Franvillers, which had been decided upon as the point for leaving the
-buses. There was yet no sign of any Australian troops, and the village
-was being hastily evacuated by the terror-stricken inhabitants. But
-there were ample and visible signs, far away on the high plateau beyond
-the Ancre Valley, that the German line of skirmishers was already on
-the move, slowly driving back the few troops of British Cavalry who
-were, most valiantly, trying to delay their advance.
-
-The next hour was one of intense suspense and expectancy; but my
-anxiety was relieved when there rolled into the village from the
-north, a motor bus convoy of thirty vehicles, crowded with good
-staunch Australian Infantry of the 11th Brigade, and bringing also
-Brigadier-General Cannan and some of his Brigade Staff. It was not the
-first time in the war that the London motor-bus--after abandoning the
-population of the great metropolis to enforced pedestrianism--had
-helped to save a most critical situation.
-
-Almost immediately after, there arrived McNicoll, with a battalion of
-his 10th Brigade. Hour after hour a steady stream of omnibus convoys
-came in. No time was lost in assembling the troops, and in directing
-the Infantry--company after company--down the steep, winding road to
-the little village of Heilly, and thence across the Ancre, to deploy on
-the selected line of defence indicated in the orders above recited.
-
-The spectacle of that Infantry will be ever memorable to me, as one
-of the most inspiring sights of the whole war. Here was the Third
-Division--the "new chum" Division, which, in spite of its great
-successes in Belgium and Flanders, had never been able to boast, like
-its sister Divisions, that it had been "down on the Somme"--come into
-its own at last, and called upon to prove its mettle. And then there
-was the thought that they were going to measure themselves, man to man,
-against an enemy who, skulking behind his field works, had for so long
-pounded them to pieces in their trenches, poisoned them with gas, and
-bombed them as they slept in their billets.
-
-That, at any rate, was the point of view of the private soldier, and no
-one who saw those battalions, in spite of the fatigue of two sleepless
-nights, marching on that crisp, clear spring morning, with head erect
-and the swing and precision of a Royal review parade, could doubt
-that not a man of them would flinch from any assault that was likely
-to fall upon them. Nor was there a man who did not fully grasp that
-upon him and his comrades was about to fall the whole responsibility
-of frustrating the German attempt to capture Amiens and separate the
-Allied Armies.
-
-By midday, the situation was already well in hand, and by four o'clock
-I was able to report to the Seventh Corps that no less than six
-Battalions were already deployed, astride of the triangle formed by the
-Ancre and the Somme, on the line Mericourt--Sailly-le-Sec, distributed
-in a series of "localities" defended by rifles and Lewis guns. As yet
-no Artillery was available.
-
-The 11th Brigade occupied this line to the south of the main road from
-Corbie to Bray, the 10th Brigade continued it to the north of the road,
-while the 9th Brigade was leaving the buses and assembling in the
-neighbourhood of Heilly.
-
-So far, the pressure of the enemy upon my front had not been serious.
-It was obvious that he had, as yet, very little Artillery at his
-disposal. We had not, however, found our front totally devoid of
-defenders. During the forenoon, a few troops of our cavalry, and a
-force under Brigadier-General Cummings, comprising about 1,500 mixed
-infantry, the remnants of a large number of different units of the
-Third Army, were slowly withdrawing under pressure from the advancing
-German patrols. These valiant "die-hards," deserving of the greatest
-praise in comparison with the many thousands of their comrades who had
-withdrawn from any further attempt to stem the onflowing tide, were now
-ordered to retire through my outpost line, thus leaving the Australian
-Infantry at last face to face with the enemy.
-
-These dispositions were completed only in the nick of time. All that
-afternoon the enemy appeared over the sky-line in front of us, both in
-lines of skirmishers and in numerous small patrols, endeavouring to
-work forward in the folds of the ground, and to sneak towards us in the
-gullies. But all of them were received with well directed rifle fire
-and the enemy suffered many losses. Towards nightfall the attempts to
-continue his advance died away.
-
-That was, literally, the end of the great German advance in this part
-of the field, and although, as will be told later, the enemy renewed
-the attempt on several subsequent occasions to reach Amiens, he gained
-not a single inch of ground, but, on the contrary, was compelled in
-front of us to undertake a slow but steady retrograde movement.
-
-Our reconnoitring patrols discovered, however, that the enemy already
-had possession of the village of Sailly-Laurette, and of Marett and
-Treux Woods, but that he was not yet in great strength on the crest
-of the plateau. Orders were issued to perfect the organization of our
-defensive line, put out wire entanglements, dig-in machine guns, and
-rest the troops in relays during the coming night, but not to attempt
-any forward movement until the next night.
-
-My Artillery and other mounted units were still half a day's march
-away; but Brigadier-General Grimwade, their Commander, had been
-instructed to push on in advance, with the whole of the Commanders of
-his Brigades and Batteries. They arrived on the scene in sufficient
-time to enable the whole situation to be examined in the daylight, and
-for detailed action to be decided upon. The Artillery kept coming in
-during the whole of the following night, and although men and horses
-were almost exhausted after two days of forced marching, their spirits
-were never higher. Next morning found the guns already in action, and
-engaging all bodies of the enemy who dared to expose themselves to view.
-
-I must now turn to the Fourth Australian Division. They had been less
-fortunate in several respects. Maclagan was directed to leave behind
-his 4th Brigade, which had on the 26th speedily become committed to
-important operations under the 62nd Division in front of Hebuterne,
-from which village this Brigade had driven the enemy. This left him
-with only two Brigades, the 12th and 13th. He was faced with the
-obligation of bringing his already over-tired infantry, by route march,
-down from the Basseux area, to the high ground west and south-west of
-Albert. That town had fallen and the situation there had, by the 26th,
-also become very critical.
-
-This march was, however, accomplished in strict accordance with orders,
-and was a remarkable feat of endurance by the troops of the 12th and
-13th Brigades. There can be no doubt, however, that the effort was more
-than justified, for the mere presence, in a position of readiness,
-of these two Australian Brigades, did much to steady the situation
-opposite Albert, by heartening the line troops and stimulating their
-Commanders to hang on for a little longer. It was this last effort
-which brought to a standstill the German advance north of the Ancre, as
-the entry of the Third Division had stopped that to the south of that
-river.
-
-After his two Brigades had had only four hours' rest, Maclagan
-took over, with them, the control of the fighting front, opposite
-Dernancourt and Albert, which the Seventh Corps had allotted to him.
-
-Thus, by the night of the 27th, as the result of the rapid movements
-which I have described and the ready response of the troops, there was
-already in position the nucleus of a stout defence by five Australian
-Brigades, stretching almost continuously from Hebuterne to the Somme,
-while another Australian Brigade, the 9th, remained still uncommitted.
-
-But the situation south of the Somme gave cause for the gravest
-anxiety. The north flank of the French was hourly retiring in a
-south-westerly direction, and the ever widening gap was filled only by
-a scratch force of odd units supported and assisted by a few elements
-of the First Cavalry Division. The right flank of our Third Army,
-therefore, lay exposed to the danger of being turned, if the enemy
-should succeed in pressing his advantage as far west as Corbie, and in
-crossing the river at or west of that town.
-
-It was for this reason that, after a conference with General Congreve,
-late in the day, I decided to deploy my 9th Brigade along the Somme
-from Sailly-le-Sec westward as far as Aubigny,[4]--far too extended a
-front for one Brigade, but at least an effort to dispute the passage by
-the enemy of the existing bridges and lock-gates over the Somme.
-
-The two following days were full of toil and hard travelling in
-establishing touch with Divisional Headquarters to the north and south
-of me, in arranging for co-ordinated action with them, and in gleaning
-all possible information as to the situation, and as to the number and
-condition of other troops available in an emergency.
-
-It was an especial pleasure for the Australian troops to find
-themselves fighting in these days in close association with famous
-British Cavalry Regiments, and that these feelings were reciprocated
-may be gathered from the following letter from Major-General Mullens,
-who commanded the First Cavalry Division, which was devoting its
-energies to covering the gap between the Somme and the French flank:
-
- "MY DEAR MONASH,
-
- "I was hoping to have come to see you, when the battle allowed, to
- thank you, your Artillery Commander, and your Brigadiers who were
- alongside of my Division, for your most valuable and encouraging
- support and assistance, especially on the 30th March, when we
- had a hard fight to keep the Bosche out of our position. I was
- very much struck by the courtesy of yourself and your officers
- in coming to see me personally, and for your own and their keen
- desire to do everything in their power to help. As you know, we
- had a curious collection of units to deal with, and it was a very
- real relief to know that I had your stout-hearted fellows on my
- left flank and that all worry was therefore eliminated as to the
- safety of my flanks. Your order for the placing of your heavy guns
- and batteries so as to cover my front was of very real assistance,
- and incidentally they killed a lot of Huns, and what they did was
- much appreciated by us all. Will you convey to all concerned my own
- appreciation, and that of all ranks of the 1st Cavalry Division. It
- was a pleasure and an honour to be fighting alongside troops who
- displayed such magnificent _moral_. I only hope we may have the
- chance of co-operating with you again, and under more favourable
- circumstances.
-
- "Yours sincerely,
- (Sgnd.) "R. L. MULLENS."
-
-On the night of March 29th I advanced my line, pivotting on my right,
-until my left rested on the Ancre east of Buire, an extreme advance of
-over 2,000 yards, meeting some opposition and taking a few prisoners.
-This deprived the enemy of over a mile of valuable vantage ground on
-the crest of the plateau along which ran the main road from Corbie to
-Bray.
-
-[Illustration: MAP A.]
-
-By that time it was apparent that the enemy's Artillery resources
-were hourly accumulating, and on the next afternoon he delivered a
-determined attack along my whole front, employing two Divisions. The
-attack was completely repelled, with an estimated loss to the enemy of
-at least 3,000 killed. My Artillery were firing over open sights and
-had never in their previous experience had such tempting targets.
-
-On the previous day, however, the situation between the Somme and
-Villers-Bretonneux, and still further to the south, had become
-desperate; and much to my discomfiture I was ordered to hand over my
-9th Brigade (Rosenthal) for duty with the 61st Division, in order to
-reinforce that dissolving sector. My importunity as to the necessity
-for maintaining the defence of my river flank, however, led the
-Seventh Corps Commander to let me have, in exchange, the 15th Brigade
-(Elliott), which was the first Brigade of the Fifth Australian Division
-to arrive from Flanders on the present scene of operations. This
-interchange of Brigades was completed by the 30th.
-
-That day was further marked by a concentrated bombardment of the
-village of Franvillers, in which I had established my Headquarters.
-Although no serious loss was suffered, the responsible work of my Staff
-was disturbed. On reporting the occurrence to General Congreve, he
-insisted upon my moving my Headquarters back to St. Gratien, which move
-was completed the next day.
-
-On April 4th the enemy attacked, in force, south of the Somme, and the
-village of Hamel was lost to us by the rout of the remnants of a very
-exhausted British Division which had been sent in the night before to
-defend it. This success gave the enemy a footing upon a portion of Hill
-104, and brought him to the eastern outskirts of Villers-Bretonneux.
-Three months later it cost the Australian Corps a concentrated effort
-to compel him to surrender these advantages.
-
-One last and final attempt to break through the Australian phalanx
-north of the Somme was made by the enemy on April 5th. The full weight
-of this blow fell chiefly upon the gallant Fourth Australian Division.
-The battle of Dernancourt will live long in the annals of military
-history as an example of dogged and successful defence. The whole day
-long the enemy expended Division after Division in the vain endeavour
-to compel two weak Australian Brigades to loosen their hold on the
-important high ground lying west of Albert. He well knew that the
-capture by him of these heights involved the inevitable withdrawal of
-the Third Australian Division also, and that thereby the path to Amiens
-would again lie open.
-
-The great German blow against the important railway centre of Amiens
-had been parried, and from this time onwards interest in this sphere
-of operations rapidly waned. It blazed up again for a few hours only
-when, three weeks later, the enemy made his final attempt to reach
-his goal, on this occasion by way of Villers-Bretonneux. North of
-the Somme, his activity quickly died down, and the attitude of both
-combatants gradually assumed the old familiar aspect of trench warfare,
-with its endless digging of trenches, line behind line, its weary
-trench routine, and its elaborate installation of permanent lines of
-communication and of administrative establishments of all descriptions.
-
-South of the Somme, the Fifth Australian Division came into the line on
-April 5th, relieving a Cavalry Division on a frontage of about 5,000
-yards, and thereby obviating any further necessity for the maintenance
-of my flank river defence. This duty had been performed for me in
-succession by the 15th Australian, the 104th Imperial and the 13th
-Australian Brigades (the latter then under Glasgow). My 9th Brigade
-still remained detached from me, operating under both the 18th and 61st
-British Divisions, and performed prodigies of valorous fighting in a
-series of desperate local attacks and counter-attacks, which took place
-between Villers-Bretonneux and Hangard, where the French northern flank
-then lay. In this service the 9th Brigade received gallant co-operation
-from the 5th Australian Brigade (of the 2nd Australian Division), which
-was now also arriving in this area, after having been relieved from
-trench garrison duty in the Messines--Warneton sector in Flanders.
-
-The Fifth Division and these two detached Brigades were, during
-this period, serving under the Third Corps (Butler), which had been
-reconstituted to fill the gap between the Somme and the flank of
-the French Army. The First Australian Division was already well on
-the way to follow the Second Division, when, on April 11th, it was
-hurriedly re-transferred to Flanders to assist in stemming the new
-German flood which was inundating the whole of that region, and which
-was not arrested until it had almost reached Hazebrouck. This task the
-First Australian Division performed most valiantly, thereby upholding
-the reputation already earned by its younger sister Divisions for a
-capacity for rapid, ordered movement and decisive intervention at a
-critical juncture.
-
-For some days there had been rumours that the Australian Corps
-Headquarters would shortly be transferred to the Amiens area, and
-would once again gather under its control the numerous elements of
-the four Australian Divisions which were by now widely scattered, and
-had been fighting under the orders of three different Army Corps.
-There was the still more interesting and pregnant rumour that General
-Lord Rawlinson--relinquishing his post of British representative on
-the Supreme War Council at Versailles--was soon to arrive and to form
-and command a reconstituted Fourth British Army,[5] which was to be
-composed of the Australian and the Third (British) Army Corps.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[3] The majority of the place-names mentioned in the remainder of this
-chapter will be found on Maps A or J.
-
-[4] Two miles west of Corbie.
-
-[5] The Fourth Army had disappeared when, in 1917, General Rawlinson
-went to Versailles. The Fifth Army was not revived until June, 1918.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE DEFENCE OF AMIENS
-
-
-The Australian Corps Headquarters, under General Birdwood, commenced
-its activities at Villers-Bocage on April 7th, but soon after removed
-to the handsome seventeenth-century Chateau at Bertangles, with its
-pleasant grounds and spacious parks. One by one the detached Australian
-Brigades rejoined their Divisions, and the Divisions themselves came
-back under the orders of their own Corps.
-
-The comparative calm which had supervened upon all the excitement of
-the closing days of March and the first weeks of April was rudely
-broken when, before daybreak on April 24th, the enemy began a furious
-bombardment of the whole region extending from opposite Albert to a
-point as far south as Hangard. It was certain that this demonstration
-was the prelude of an infantry attack in force, but it was not until
-well after midday that the situation clarified, and it became known
-that the attack had been confined to the country south of the Somme,
-that it had struck the southern flank of the Fifth Australian Division,
-which had stood firm and had thereby saved the loss of the remainder of
-the tactically important Hill 104. But the town of Villers-Bretonneux,
-lying beyond the Australian sector, had fallen and the Germans were in
-possession of it.
-
-It was imperative to retrieve this situation, or at least to make an
-attempt to do so. The nearest available reserve Brigades of Infantry
-were Australian, the 13th under Glasgow, and the 15th under Elliott.
-They were placed under the orders of the Third Corps, and by them
-directed to recapture the town.
-
-Both Brigades had to make long marches to reach the battleground. It
-was already dark before they had deployed on the appointed lines of
-departure. The details of this enthralling and wonderful night attack
-form too lengthy a story to find a place in this brief narrative;
-suffice it to say that when the sun rose on the third Anniversary of
-Anzac Day, it looked down upon the Australians in full possession of
-the whole town, and standing upon our original lines of twenty-four
-hours before, with nearly 1,000 German prisoners to their credit.
-
-In this summary fashion, the last German attempt to split in two the
-Allied Armies failed ignominiously, and the attempt was never again
-renewed.
-
-A comprehensive rearrangement of the whole Front in this much-contested
-region then took place. The appointment of Marshal Foch as Supreme
-Commander on the Western Front bore, as one of its first fruits, a
-clear decision as to the final point of junction between the French and
-the British Armies. This was fixed just south of Villers-Bretonneux,
-and not at the Somme Valley, as was thought desirable by some of the
-British Commanders.
-
-The new Fourth Army became the flank British Army in contact with the
-French. The Australian Corps became the south flank of that Army. Its
-sector extended, from the point named, northwards as far as the Ancre.
-The Third Corps was transferred to the north of the Ancre, opposite
-Albert, and those two Corps comprised, for some time to come, the whole
-of the Fourth Army resources.
-
-The Australian Corps now organized its front with three Divisions in
-line and one in reserve. My occupation, with the Third Australian
-Division, of the original sector between the Ancre and the Somme
-remained undisturbed, and my front line remained for a time stationary
-on the alignment gained on March 29th.
-
-But the Third Division had had enough of stationary warfare, and
-the troops were athirst for adventure. They were tired of raids,
-which meant a mere incursion into enemy territory, and a subsequent
-withdrawal, after doing as much damage as possible.
-
-Accordingly, I resolved to embark upon a series of minor battles,
-designed not merely to capture prisoners and machine guns, but also
-to hold on to the ground gained. This would invite counter-attacks
-which I knew could only enhance the balance in our favour, and would
-seriously disorganize the enemy's whole defensive system, while wearing
-out his nerves and lowering the _moral_ of his troops.
-
-Four such miniature battles[6] were fought in rapid succession, on
-April 30th and May 3rd, 6th and 7th, by the 9th and 10th Brigades, who
-were then in line. These yielded most satisfactory results. Not only
-did we capture several hundred prisoners and numerous machine guns, but
-also advanced our whole line an average total distance of a mile. This
-deprived the enemy of valuable observation, and forced back his whole
-Artillery organization.
-
-But these combats, and the numerous offensive patrol operations, which
-were also nightly undertaken along my whole front, did a great deal
-more. They yielded a constant stream of prisoners, who at this stage of
-the war had become sufficiently demoralized by their disappointments to
-talk freely, and impart a mass of valuable information as to movements
-and conditions behind the German lines.
-
-The following list of 41 separate identifications, covering a total
-of over 300 prisoners, represents the fruits of these efforts during
-the period from March 27th to May 11th. From these it will be seen
-that during these six weeks I had been confronted by no less than six
-different German Divisions:
-
- _No._ _Date._ _Identification._
- 1 28.3.18 3 Gren. R. 1st Div.
- 2 " 13 I.R. 13 "
- 3 " 3 Gren. R. 1st "
- 4 " 1 I.R. 1st "
- " 13 I.R. 13 "
- 5 " 86 Fus. R. 18 "
- 6 " 1 I.R. 1st "
- 7 30.3.18 13 I.R. 13 "
- 8 " 31 I.R. 18 "
- 9 31.3.18 18 "
- 10 1.4.18 20 Foot Arty.
- 11 2.4.18 3 " "
- 12 2/3.4.18 1 R.R.Bav. Ft. Arty.
- 13 " 13 I.R. 13 Div.
- 14 4/5.4.18 1 M.W.Coy. 1st Div.
- 15 6/7.4.18 3 Jaeger Bn.
- 16 9/10.4.18 31 I.R. 18 "
- 17 11/12.4.18 31 I.R. 18 "
- 18 13/14.4.18 86 Fus. R. 18 "
- 19 " 31 I.R. 18 "
- 20 14/15.4.18 85 I.R. 18 "
- 21 " 31 I.R. 18 "
- 22 17/18.4.18 229 R.I.R. 30 "
- 23 18/19.4.18 231 R.I.R. 50 "
- 24 " 85 I.R. 18 "
- 25 19/20.4.18 85 I.R. 18 "
- 26 25/26.4.18 246 R.I.R. 54 Res. Div.
- 27 27/28.4.18 229 R.I.R. 50 " "
- 28 28/29.4.18 247 R.I.R. 54 " "
- 29 30/1.5.18 247 R.I.R. 54 " "
- 30 3/4.5.18 357 I.R. 199 Div.
- 31 4/5.5.18 114 I.R. 199 "
- 32 " 31 I.R. 18 "
- 33 5/6.5.18 237 R.I.R. 199 "
- 34 " 114 I.R. 199 "
- 35 6/7.5.18 237 R.I.R. 199 "
- 36 7/8.5.18 114 I.R. 199 "
- 37 8/9.5.18 114 I.R. 199 "
- 38 " 237 R.I.R. 199 "
- 39 " 31 I.R. 18 "
- 40 " 357 I.R. 199 "
- 41 " 357 I.R. 199 "
-
- I.R.=Infantry Regiment; R.I.R.=Reserve ditto.
-
-While I was thus exerting a steady pressure on the enemy and gaining
-ground easterly, the Australian Corps line south of the Somme remained
-stationary, and each successive advance north of the river served only
-to accentuate the deep re-entrant which had been formed on the day when
-the loss of Hamel forced the British front line back along the Somme as
-far as Vaire-sous-Corbie.
-
-While this was not very serious from the point of view of observation,
-because I was in possession of much the higher ground, and was able to
-look down, almost as upon a map, on to the enemy in the Hamel basin,
-yet I was beginning to feel very seriously the inconvenience of having,
-square on to my flank, such excellent concealed Artillery positions as
-Vaire and Hamel Woods, which the enemy did not long delay in occupying.
-
-Moreover, the whole of the slopes of the valley on my side of the river
-remained useless to me, because they were exposed to the full view of
-the enemy, so long as he was permitted to occupy the Hamel salient,
-which he had on April 5th driven into the very middle of what was now
-the Corps front. I therefore made more than one attempt to persuade the
-then Corps Commander to undertake an operation for the elimination in
-whole or in part of this inconvenient bend, but, for reasons doubtless
-satisfactory at that time, he declined to accept the suggestion. It
-fell to my lot myself to carry out this operation nearly two months
-later.
-
-The Third Division was, however, relieved in the line by our Second
-Division on May 11th, and was withdrawn for a short but well-earned
-rest after six weeks of trench duty, following its first fateful rush
-into the thick of the battle.
-
-It was on May 12th that I received the first intimation from General
-Sir William Birdwood that he was to be appointed to the command of a
-new Fifth Army, which the British War Council had decided to form, and
-that, upon his taking up these new duties, the task of leading the
-Australian Army Corps would devolve upon me.
-
-In consequence of this and other changes, it was shortly afterwards
-decided, in consultation, that Glasgow should take over the command of
-the First Division, then still fighting at Hazebrouck, that Rosenthal
-should command the Second Division, and that Gellibrand should succeed
-me at the head of the Third Division.
-
-Far, therefore, from being permitted a little respite from the
-strenuous labours of the preceding six weeks, I found myself confronted
-with responsibilities which, in point of numbers alone, exceeded
-sixfold those which I had previously had to bear, but which, in point
-of difficulty, involved an even higher ratio.
-
-There were numerous Arms and Services, under the Corps, with whose
-detailed functions and methods of operation I had not been previously
-concerned. The other Divisional Commanders had hitherto been my
-colleagues, and I was now called upon to consider their personalities
-and temperaments as my subordinates. There was a vastly increased
-territory for whose administration and defence I would become
-responsible. I had to be prepared to enter an atmosphere of policy
-higher and larger than that which surrounded me as the Commander of a
-Division. And finally there was the selection of my new Staff.
-
-[Illustration: German Prisoners--taken by the Corps at Hamel, being
-marched to the rear.]
-
-[Illustration: Visit of Monsieur Clemenceau--group taken at Bussy on
-July 7th, 1918.]
-
-My last executive work with the Third Division was the process
-of putting this Division back into the line, this time in the
-Villers-Bretonneux sector of our front. After handing over the Division
-and all its outstanding current affairs to Major-General Gellibrand,
-I assumed command of the Australian Army Corps on May 30th, with
-Brigadier-General Blamey as my Chief-of-Staff.[7]
-
-I very soon became aware that, as Corps Commander, I was privileged to
-have access to a very large body of interesting secret information,
-which was methodically distributed daily by G.H.Q. Intelligence. This
-comprised detailed information of the true facts of all happenings
-on the fronts of all the Allies, the gist of the reports of our
-Secret Service, and very full particulars from which the nature and
-distribution of the enemy's military resources could be deduced with
-fair accuracy.
-
-The numberings and locations of all his Corps and Divisions actually
-in the front line, on all the Allied fronts, was, of course, quite
-definitely known from day to day. The numberings of all Formations
-lying in Reserve were known with equal certainty, although their actual
-positions on any date were largely a matter of deduction by expert
-investigators. Of particular importance were the further deductions
-which could be drawn as to the condition of readiness or exhaustion
-of such reserve Divisions, from known facts as to their successive
-appearance and experiences on any active battle front.
-
-Our experts were thus able to classify the enemy Divisions, and to
-determine from day to day the probable number, and even the probable
-numberings, of fit Divisions actually available (after one, or after
-two, or after three days) to reinforce any portion of the front which
-was to be the object of an attack by us. They could also compute the
-number of fit Divisions which the enemy had at his disposal at any time
-for launching an offensive against us.
-
-All such data had a very direct bearing, not only on the probable
-course of the campaign in the immediate future, but also upon the
-responsibility which always weighed upon a Corps Commander of keeping
-his own sector in preparedness to meet an attack or to prevent such an
-attack from coming upon him as a surprise. He must therefore be alert
-to watch the signs and astute to read them aright.
-
-One striking feature of the information at our disposal during the
-early part of June was the steady melting away of the enemy reserves
-as the consequence of his resultless, even if locally successful,
-assaults during the preceding two and a half months, against Amiens,
-in Flanders, and on the Chemin des Dames. But it was apparent that he
-still held formidable Reserves of Infantry, and a practically intact
-Artillery, which he was bound to employ for at least one great and
-final effort to gain a decision.
-
-The junction of the French and British Armies still offered a tempting
-point of weakness. As mine was now the flank British Corps, in
-immediate contact with General Toulorge's 31st French Corps, I could
-not afford to relax any of the precautions of vigilance or preparation
-which had been initiated by my predecessor for meeting such an attack.
-Consequently, during June, 1918, I ordered on the part of all my line
-Divisions a maintenance of their energetic efforts to perfect the
-defensive organizations. I also undertook out of other Corps labour
-resources the development of further substantial rear systems of
-defence, so that Amiens need not, in the event of a renewed attack, be
-abandoned to its fate without a prolonged struggle.
-
-The First Australian Division was not yet a part of my new Command,
-its continued presence in the Hazebrouck and Merris area, under the
-Fifteenth Corps, being still considered indispensable. My Corps front
-now extended over a total length of ten miles, and I had but four
-Divisions at my disposal to defend it. Three Divisions held the line,
-one to the north and two to the south of the Somme. Only one Division
-at a time could therefore be permitted a short rest, and this Division
-formed my only tactical reserve.
-
-All this added to the anxieties of the situation, and focussed the
-energies of the whole command on a constant scrutiny of all signs and
-symptoms that the enemy might be preparing to deliver his next blow
-against us. Active patrolling was maintained and continued to yield
-a steady stream of prisoners. A well conceived and planned minor
-enterprise by the Second Division, which was carried out on June 10th,
-and was Rosenthal's first Divisional operation, gave us possession
-of a further slice of the important ridge between Sailly-Laurette
-and Morlancourt. It gained us 330 prisoners and 33 machine guns. But
-no sign of any preparations on the part of the enemy for an attack
-upon us, in this zone, emerged from the careful investigations which
-followed this operation.
-
-The days passed and evidences increased that the enemy was now
-beginning to devote his further attentions to the French front far to
-the south of us. At any rate, he continued to leave us unmolested, and
-the interrogations of our numerous prisoners all confirmed the absence
-of any preparations for an attack.
-
-The defensive attitude which the situation thus forced upon us did
-not for long suit the present temper of the Australian troops, and
-I sought for a promising enterprise on which again to test their
-offensive power, on a scale larger than we had yet attempted in the
-year's campaign. There had been no Allied offensive, of any appreciable
-size, on any of our fronts, in any of the many theatres of war, since
-the close of the Passchendaele fighting in the autumn of 1917.
-
-It was high time that the anxiety and nervousness of the public, at
-the sinister encroachments of the enemy upon regions which he had
-never previously trodden, should be allayed by a demonstration that
-there was still some kick left in the British Army. It was high time,
-too, that some Commanders on our side of No Man's Land should begin to
-"think offensively," and cease to look over their shoulders in order to
-estimate how far it still was to the coast.
-
-I was ambitious that any such kick should be administered, first,
-at any rate, by the Australians. A visit which I was privileged to
-pay to General Elles, Commander of the Tank Corps, when he gave me
-a demonstration of the capacities of the newer types of Tanks, only
-confirmed me in this ambition. Finally, the Hamel re-entrant had for
-two months been, as I have already explained, a source of annoyance and
-anxiety to me. It was for these reasons that I resolved to propose an
-operation for the recapture of Hamel, conditional upon being supplied
-with the assistance of Tanks, a small increase of my Artillery and an
-addition to my air resources.
-
-I thereupon set about preparing a general plan for such a battle,
-which was to be my first Corps operation. Having mentioned the matter
-first verbally to Lord Rawlinson, he requested me to submit a concrete
-proposal in writing. The communication is here reproduced, and will
-serve to convey an idea of the complexities involved in even so
-relatively small an undertaking:
-
- Australian Corps.
- 21st June, 1918.
-
- _Fourth Army._
-
- HAMEL OFFENSIVE
-
-1. With reference to my proposal for an offensive operation on the
-front of the "A" and "B" Divisions of this Corps, with a view to
-the capture of HAMEL Village and VAIRE and HAMEL WOOD, etc., the
-accompanying map shows, in blue, the proposed ultimate objective
-line. This line has been chosen as representing the minimum
-operation that would appear to be worth undertaking, while offering
-a prospect of substantial advantages.
-
-2. These advantages may be briefly summarized thus:
- (a) Straightening of our line.
- (b) Shortening of our line.
- (c) Deepening our forward defensive zone, particularly east of Hill
- 104.
- (d) Improvement of jumping-off position for future operations.
- (e) Advancement of our artillery, south of the SOMME.
- (f) Denial to enemy of observation of ground near VAUX-SUR-SOMME,
- valuable for battery positions.
- (g) Facilitating subsequent further minor advances north of the
- SOMME.
- (h) Disorganization of enemy defences.
- (i) Disorganization of possible enemy offensive preparations.
- (j) Inflicting losses on enemy personnel and material.
- (k) Improvement of our observation.
- (l) Maintenance of our initiative on this Corps front.
-
-3. The disadvantages are those arising from the necessity of bringing
-into rapid existence a new defensive system on a frontage of 7,000
-yards and also the particular incidence, at the present juncture, of
-the inevitable losses, small or large, of such an operation in this
-Corps.
-
-4. In view of the unsatisfactory position of Australian reinforcements,
-any substantial losses would precipitate the time when the question of
-the reduction in the number of Australian Divisions would have to be
-seriously considered. It is for higher authority to decide whether a
-portion of the present resources in Australian man-power in this Corps
-would be more profitably ventured upon such an operation as this, which
-is in itself a very attractive proposition, rather than to conserve
-such resources for employment elsewhere.
-
-5. Detailed plans can only be prepared after I have had conferences
-with representatives of all Arms and Services involved, but the
-following proposals are submitted as the basis of further elaboration:
-
- (a) The operation will be primarily a Tank operation--at least one
- and preferably two Battalions of Tanks to be employed.
- (b) The whole battle front will be placed temporarily under command
- of one Divisional Commander--by a temporary readjustment of
- inter-Divisional boundaries.
- (c) The infantry employed will comprise one Division plus a
- Brigade, _i.e._, 4 Infantry Brigades, totalling, say, 7,500
- bayonets; about one-half of this force to be employed in the
- advance and the other half to hold our present front defensively,
- taking over the captured territory within 48 hours after Zero.[8]
- (d) The action will be designed on lines to permit of the Tanks
- effecting the capture of the ground; the roles of the Infantry
- following the Tanks will be:
- (i) to assist in reducing strong points and localities.
- (ii) to "mop up."
- (iii) to consolidate the ground captured.
- (e) Apart from neutralizing all enemy artillery likely to engage our
- troops, our artillery will be employed to keep under fire enemy
- centres of resistance and selected targets--in front of the advance
- of the Tanks. Artillery detailed for close targets will work on a
- prearranged and detailed time-table which will be adjusted to the
- time-table of the Tank and Infantry advance. Sufficient "silent"
- field artillery supplied before the battle should be emplaced in
- advanced positions, to ensure an effective protective barrage
- to cover consolidation on the blue line,[9] and to engage all
- localities from which enemy counter-attacks can be launched. It is
- estimated that, in addition to the resources of the Corps, four
- Field Artillery Brigades will be required for, say, four days in
- all.
- (f) Engineer stores in sufficient quantities to provide for the
- complete organization of the new defences will require to be dumped
- beforehand as far forward as practicable.
- (g) No additional machine guns, outside of Corps resources, will be
- required,
- (h) Contact and counter-attack planes and low-flying bombing planes
- prior to and during advance must be arranged for.
- (i) Artillery and mortar smoke to screen the operations from view of
- all ground north of the Somme in the SAILLY-LAURETTE locality are
- required.
-
-6. As to the date of the operations, the necessary preparations will
-occupy at least seven days after authority to proceed has been given.
-As an inter-Divisional relief is planned to occur on June 28th-29th and
-29th-30th, it would seem that this operation cannot take place earlier
-than the first week in July. The postponement of this relief would not
-be desirable for several reasons.
-
-7. Valuable training in the joint action of Tanks and Infantry can be
-arranged, probably in the territory west of the HALLUE Valley--provided
-that one or two Tank Companies can be detached for such a purpose.
-Thorough liaison prior to and during the operation between all Tank
-and all Infantry Commanders would have to be a special feature. For
-this reason only Infantry units not in the line can be considered as
-available to undergo the necessary preparation.
-
- (Sgd.) JOHN MONASH,
- Lieut.-General.
- Cmdg. Australian Corps.
-
-Approval to these proposals was given without delay; the additional
-resources were promised, and preparations for the battle were
-immediately put in hand. As I hope, in a later context, to attempt to
-describe the evolution of a battle plan, and the comprehensive measures
-which are associated with such an enterprise, it will not be necessary
-to do so here.
-
-It was the straightening of the Corps front, as an essential
-preliminary to any offensive operations on a still larger scale, to
-be undertaken when the opportune moment should arrive, that made the
-Hamel proposal tactically attractive; it was the availability of an
-improved type of Tank that gave it promise of success, without pledging
-important resources, or risking serious losses.
-
-The new Mark V. Tank had not previously been employed in battle. It
-marked a great advance upon the earlier types. The epicyclic gearing
-with which it was now furnished, the greater power of its engines,
-the improved balance of its whole design gave it increased mobility,
-facility in turning and immunity from foundering in ground even of the
-most broken and uneven character. It could be driven and steered by one
-man, where it previously took four; and it rarely suffered suspended
-animation from engine trouble.
-
-But, above all, the men of the Tank Corps had, by the training which
-they had undergone, and by the spirited leadership of Generals Elles,
-Courage, Hankey and other Tank Commanders, achieved a higher standard
-of skill, enterprise and moral; they were now, more than ever, on their
-mettle to uphold the prestige of the Tank Corps.
-
-All the same, the Tanks had become anathema to the Australian troops.
-For, at Bullecourt more than a year before, they had failed badly,
-and had "let down" the gallant Infantry, who suffered heavily in
-consequence; a failure due partly to the mechanical defects of the
-Tanks of those days, partly to the inexperience of the crews, and
-partly to indifferent staff arrangements, in the co-ordination of the
-combined action of the Infantry and the Tanks.
-
-It was not an easy problem to restore to the Australian soldier his
-lost confidence, or to teach him the sympathetic dependence upon the
-due performance by the Tanks of the roles to be allotted to them, which
-was essential to a complete utilization of the possibilities which were
-now opening up. That the Tanks, appropriately utilized, were destined
-to exert a paramount influence upon the course of the war, was apparent
-to those who could envisage the future.
-
-This problem was intensified because the battalions of the Fourth
-Division who were to carry out the Infantry tasks at Hamel were the
-very units who had undergone that unfortunate experience at Bullecourt.
-But, on the principle of restoring the nerves of the unseated rider by
-remounting him to continue the hunt, it was especially important to
-wean the Fourth Division from their prejudices.
-
-Battalion after battalion of the 4th, 6th and 11th Brigades of Infantry
-was brought by bus to Vaux, a little village tucked away in a quiet
-valley, north-west of Amiens, there to spend the day at play with the
-Tanks. The Tanks kept open house, and, in the intervals of more formal
-rehearsals of tactical schemes of attack, the Infantry were taken
-over the field for "joy rides," were allowed to clamber all over the
-monsters, inside and out, and even to help to drive them and put them
-through their paces. Platoon and Company leaders met dozens of Tank
-officers face to face, and they argued each other to a standstill upon
-every aspect that arose.
-
-Set-piece manoeuvre exercises on the scale of a battalion were designed
-and rehearsed over and over again; red flags marked enemy machine-gun
-posts; real wire entanglements were laid out to show how easily the
-Tanks could mow them down; real trenches were dug for the Tanks to
-leap and straddle and search with fire; real rifle grenades were fired
-by the Infantry to indicate to the Tanks the enemy strong points
-which were molesting and impeding their advance. The Tanks would throw
-themselves upon these places, and, pirouetting round and round, would
-blot them out, much as a man's heel would crush a scorpion.
-
-It was invaluable as mere training for battle, but the effect upon the
-spirits of the men was remarkable. The fame of the Tanks, and all the
-wonderful things they could do, spread rapidly throughout the Corps.
-The "digger" took the Tank to his heart, and ever after, each Tank
-was given a pet name by the Company of Infantry which it served in
-battle, a name which was kept chalked on its iron sides, together with
-a panegyric commentary upon its prowess.
-
-There remained, however, much to be arranged, and many difficult
-questions to be settled, as regards the tactical employment of the
-Tanks. I can never be sufficiently grateful to Brigadier-General
-Courage, of the 5th Tank Brigade, for his diligent assistance, and
-for his loyal acceptance of the onerous conditions which the tactical
-methods that I finally decided upon imposed upon the Tanks.
-
-These methods involved two entirely new principles. Firstly, each
-Tank was, for tactical purposes, to be treated as an Infantry weapon;
-from the moment that it entered the battle until the objective had
-been gained it was to be under the exclusive orders of the Infantry
-Commander to whom it had been assigned.
-
-Secondly, the deployed line of Tanks was to advance, _level with the
-Infantry_, and pressing close up to the barrage. This, of course,
-subjected the Tanks, which towered high above the heads of the
-neighbouring infantry, to the danger of being struck by any of our own
-shells which happened to fall a little short. Tank experts, consulted
-beforehand, considered therefore that it was not practicable for Tanks
-to follow close behind an artillery barrage. The battle of Hamel proved
-that it was.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[6] See Map A.
-
-[7] A farewell order to the Third Division was issued in the following
-terms:
-
-"As I am about to take up other duties the time has come when I must
-relinquish the command of the Division.
-
-"Closely associated with you as I have been, since the days of your
-first assembly and War Training in ENGLAND, and, later, throughout all
-your magnificent work during the past nineteen months in the war zone,
-it is naturally a severe wrench for me to part from you.
-
-"I find it quite impossible to give adequate expression to my feelings
-of gratitude towards all ranks for the splendid and loyal support which
-you have, at all times, accorded to me. I am deeply indebted to my
-Staff, to all Commanders and to the officers and troops of all Arms and
-Services for a whole-hearted co-operation upon which, more than upon
-any other factor, the success of the Division has depended.
-
-"It is my earnest hope, and also my sincere conviction, that the fine
-spirit and the high efficiency of the Division will be maintained
-under the leadership of my successor, Brigadier-General Gellibrand;
-and if the men of the Division feel, as I trust they do, an obligation
-to perpetuate for my sake the traditions built up by them during the
-period of my command, they can do so in no better way than by rendering
-to him a service as thorough and a support as loyal as I have been
-privileged to enjoy at their hands.
-
-"In formally wishing the Division good-bye and good luck, I wish
-simply, but none the less sincerely, to thank each and all of you, for
-all that you have done.
-
- "(Signed) JOHN MONASH,
- Major-General."
-
-[8] "Zero" refers to the day and hour, not yet determined, on which the
-battle is to begin.
-
-[9] "Blue Line," arbitrarily so called, because this line was drawn on
-the accompanying map in blue. It was to be the final objective for the
-day.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-HAMEL
-
-
-The larger questions relating to the employment of the Tanks at the
-battle of Hamel having been disposed of, the remaining arrangements
-for the battle presented few novel aspects. Their manner of execution,
-however, brought into prominence some features which became fundamental
-doctrines in the Australian Corps then and thereafter.
-
-Although complete written orders were invariably prepared and issued by
-a General Staff whose skill and industry left nothing to be desired,
-very great importance was attached to the holding of conferences, at
-which were assembled every one of the Senior Commanders and heads of
-Departments concerned in the impending operation. At these I personally
-explained every detail of the plan, and assured myself that all present
-applied an identical interpretation to all orders that had been issued.
-
-Questions were invited; difficulties were cleared up; and the
-conflicting views of the different services on matters of technical
-detail were ventilated. The points brought to an issue were invariably
-decided on the spot. The battle plan having been thus crystallized,
-no subsequent alterations were permissible, under any circumstances,
-no matter how tempting. This fixity of plan engendered a confidence
-throughout the whole command which facilitated the work of every
-Commander and Staff Officer. It obviated the vicious habit of
-postponing action until the last possible moment, lest counter orders
-should necessitate some alternative action. It was a powerful factor
-in the gaining of time, usually all too short for the extensive
-preparations necessary.
-
-The final Corps Conference for the battle of Hamel was held at
-Bertangles on June 30th, and the date of the battle itself was fixed
-for July 4th. This selection was prompted partly by the desire to allow
-ample time for the completion of all arrangements; but there were also
-sentimental grounds, because this was the anniversary of the American
-national holiday, and a considerable contingent of the United States
-Army was to co-operate in the fight.
-
-For some weeks previously the 33rd American Division, under
-Major-General John Bell, had been training in the Fourth Army area,
-and its several regiments had been distributed, for training and
-trench experience, to the Australian and the III. Corps. I had applied
-to the Fourth Army and had received approval to employ in the battle
-a contingent equivalent in strength to two British battalions, or a
-total of about 2,000 men, organized in eight companies. The very proper
-condition was attached, however, that these Americans should not be
-split up and scattered individually among the Australians, but should
-fight at least as complete platoons, under their own platoon leaders.
-
-All went well until three days before the appointed date, when General
-Rawlinson conveyed to me the instruction that, the matter having been
-reconsidered, only 1,000 Americans were to be used. Strongly averse,
-as I was, from embarrassing the Infantry plans of General Maclagan, to
-whom I had entrusted the conduct of the actual assault, it was not then
-too late to rearrange the distribution.
-
-The four companies of United States troops who, under this decision,
-had to be withdrawn were loud in their lamentations, but the remaining
-four companies were distributed by platoons among the troops of the
-three Australian Brigades who were to carry out the attack--each
-American platoon being assigned a definite place in the line of battle.
-The dispositions of the main body of Australian infantry were based
-upon this arrangement.
-
-In the meantime, somewhere in the upper realms of high control, a
-discussion must have been going on as to the propriety of after
-all allowing any American troops at all to participate in the
-forthcoming operations. Whether the objections were founded upon
-policy, or upon an under-estimate of the fitness of these troops for
-offensive fighting, I have never been able to ascertain; but, to my
-consternation, I received about four o'clock on the afternoon of July
-3rd, a telephone message from Lord Rawlinson to the effect that it had
-now been decided that _no_ American troops were to be used the next day.
-
-I was, at the moment, while on my daily round of visits to Divisions
-and Brigades, at the Headquarters of the Third Division, at Glisy, and
-far from my own station. I could only request that the Army Commander
-might be so good as to come at once to the forward area and meet me at
-Bussy-les-Daours, the Headquarters of Maclagan--he being the Commander
-immediately affected by this proposed change of plan. In due course we
-all met at five o'clock, Rawlinson being accompanied by Montgomery, his
-Chief-of-Staff.
-
-It was a meeting full of tense situations--and of grave import. At that
-moment of time, the whole of the Infantry destined for the assault at
-dawn next morning, including those very Americans, was already well
-on its way to its battle stations; the Artillery was in the act of
-dissolving its defensive organization with a view to moving forward
-into its battle emplacements as soon as dusk should fall; I well knew
-that even if orders could still with certainty reach the battalions
-concerned, the withdrawal of those Americans would result in untold
-confusion and in dangerous gaps in our line of battle.
-
-Even had I been ready to risk the success of the battle by going ahead
-without them, I could not afford to take the further risk of the
-occurrence of something in the nature of an "international incident"
-between the troops concerned, whose respective points of view about the
-resulting situation could be readily surmised. So I resolved to take a
-firm stand and press my views as strongly as I dared; for even a Corps
-Commander must use circumspection when presuming to argue with an Army
-Commander.
-
-However, disguised in the best diplomatic language that I was able to
-command, my representations amounted to this: firstly, that it was
-already too late to carry out the order; secondly, that the battle
-would have to go on either with the Americans participating, or not
-at all; thirdly, that unless I were expressly ordered to abandon the
-battle, I intended to go on as originally planned; and lastly, that
-unless I received such a cancellation order before 6.30 p.m. it would
-in any case be too late to stop the battle, the preliminary phases of
-which were just on the point of beginning.
-
-As always, Lord Rawlinson's charming and sympathetic personality made
-it easy to lay my whole case before him. He was good enough to say
-that while he entirely agreed with me, he felt himself bound by the
-terms of a clear order from the Commander-in-Chief. My last resource,
-then, was to urge the argument that I felt perfectly sure that the
-Commander-in-Chief when giving such an order could not have had
-present to his mind the probability that compliance with it meant the
-abandonment of the battle, and that, under the circumstances, it was
-competent for the senior Commander on the spot to act in the light of
-the situation as known to him, even to the extent of disobeying an
-order.
-
-Rawlinson agreed that this view was correct provided the
-Commander-in-Chief was not accessible for reference. Repeated attempts
-to raise General Headquarters from Bussy eventually elicited the
-information that the Field Marshal was then actually on his way from
-Versailles, and expected to arrive in half an hour. Thereupon Rawlinson
-promised a decision by 6.30, and we separated to rejoin our respective
-Headquarters.
-
-In due course, the Army Commander telephoned that he had succeeded
-in speaking to the Field Marshal, who explained that he had directed
-the withdrawal of the Americans in deference to the wish of General
-Pershing, but that, as matters stood, he now wished everything to go on
-as originally planned. And so--the crisis passed as suddenly as it had
-appeared. For, to me it had taken the form of a very serious crisis,
-feeling confident as I did of the success of the forthcoming battle,
-and of the far-reaching consequences which would be certain to follow.
-It appeared to me at the time that great issues had hung for an hour or
-so upon the chance of my being able to carry my point.
-
-An interesting episode, intimately bound up with the story of this
-battle, was the visit to the Corps area on July 2nd of the Prime
-Minister of the Commonwealth, Mr. W. M. Hughes, and Sir Joseph Cook,
-the Minister of the Navy. They arrived all unconscious of the impending
-enterprise, but only by taking them fully into my confidence could I
-justify my evident preoccupation with other business of first-class
-importance. Most readily, however, did they accommodate themselves to
-the exigencies of the situation.
-
-Both Ministers accompanied me that afternoon on a tour of inspection
-of the eight battalions who were then already parading in full battle
-array, and on the point of moving off to the assembly positions from
-which next day they would march into battle. The stirring addresses
-delivered to the men by both Ministers did much to hearten and
-stimulate them. As they were on their way to an Inter-Allied War
-Council at Versailles, the personal contact of the Ministers with the
-actual battle preparations had the subsequent result of focussing upon
-the outcome of the battle a good deal of interest on the part of the
-whole War Council.
-
-The fixing of the exact moment for the opening of a battle has always
-been the subject of much controversy. As in many other matters, it
-becomes in the end the responsibility of one man to make the fatal
-decision. The Australians always favoured the break of day, as this
-gave them the protection of the hours of darkness for the assembly of
-the assaulting troops in battle order in our front trenches. But there
-must be at least sufficient light to see one's way for two hundred
-yards or so, otherwise direction is lost and confusion ensues.
-
-The season of the year, the presence and altitude of the moon, the
-prospect of fog or ground mist, the state of the weather, and the
-nature and condition of the ground are all factors which affect the
-proper choice of the correct moment. To aid a decision, careful
-observations were usually made on three or four mornings preceding the
-chosen day. A new factor on this occasion was the strong appeal by the
-Tanks for an extra five minutes of dawning light, to ensure a true line
-of approach upon the allotted objective, whether a ruined village, or
-a thicket, or a field work.
-
-The decision actually given by me was that "Zero" would be ten minutes
-past three, and every watch had been carefully synchronized to the
-second, to ensure simultaneous action. A perfected modern battle plan
-is like nothing so much as a score for an orchestral composition, where
-the various arms and units are the instruments, and the tasks they
-perform are their respective musical phrases. Every individual unit
-must make its entry precisely at the proper moment, and play its phrase
-in the general harmony. The whole programme is controlled by an exact
-time-table, to which every infantryman, every heavy or light gun, every
-mortar and machine gun, every tank and aeroplane must respond with
-punctuality; otherwise there will be discords which will impair the
-success of the operation, and increase the cost of it.
-
-The morning of July 4th was ushered in with a heavy ground mist.
-This impeded observation and made guidance difficult, but it greatly
-enhanced the surprise. The unexpected occurrence of this fog lessened
-the importance of the elaborate care which had been taken to introduce
-into the Artillery barrage a due percentage of smoke shell, and to form
-smoke screens by the use of mortars on the flanks of the attack. But
-the fog largely accounted for the cheap price at which the victory was
-bought.
-
-No battle within my previous experience, not even Messines, passed off
-so smoothly, so exactly to time-table, or was so free from any kind of
-hitch. It was all over in ninety-three minutes. It was the perfection
-of team work. It attained all its objectives; and it yielded great
-results. The actual assault was delivered, from right to left, by two
-battalions of the 6th Brigade, three battalions of the 4th Brigade,
-and three battalions of the 11th Brigade. It was also part of the plan
-that advantage was taken by a battalion of the 15th Brigade to snatch
-from the enemy another slice of territory far away in the Ancre Valley,
-opposite Dernancourt, and so, by extending the battle front, further to
-distract him.
-
-The attack was a complete surprise, and swept without check across the
-whole of the doomed territory. Vaire and Hamel Woods fell to the 4th
-Brigade, while the 11th Brigade, with its allotted Tanks, speedily
-mastered Hamel Village itself. The selected objective line was reached
-in the times prescribed for its various parts, and was speedily
-consolidated. It gave us possession of the whole of the Hamel Valley,
-and landed us on the forward or eastern slope of the last ridge, from
-which the enemy had been able to overlook any of the country held by us.
-
-Still more important results were that we gathered in no less than
-1,500 prisoners, and killed and disabled at least as many more, besides
-taking a great deal of booty, including two field guns, 26 mortars
-and 171 machine guns--at a cost to us of less than 800 casualties
-of all kinds, the great majority of whom were walking wounded. The
-Tanks fulfilled every expectation, and the suitability of the tactics
-employed was fully demonstrated. Of the 60 Tanks utilized, only 3 were
-disabled, and even these 3 were taken back to their rallying points
-under their own power the very next night. Their moral effect was also
-proved, and, with the exception of a few enemy machine-gun teams,
-who bravely stood their ground to the very last, most of the enemy
-encountered by the Tanks readily surrendered.
-
-Shortly after the battle, G.H.Q. paid the Australian Corps the
-compliment of publishing to the whole British Army a General Staff
-brochure,[10] containing the complete text of the orders, and a
-full and detailed description of the whole of the battle plans and
-preparations, with an official commentary upon them. The last paragraph
-of this document, which follows, expresses tersely the conclusions
-reached by our High Command:
-
- "81. The success of the attack was due:
-
- (a) To the care and skill as regards every detail with which the
- plan was drawn up by the Corps, Division, Brigade and Battalion
- Staffs.
- (b) The excellent co-operation between the infantry, machine
- gunners, artillery, tanks and R.A.F.
- (c) The complete surprise of the enemy, resulting from the manner
- in which the operation had been kept secret up till zero hour.
- (d) The precautions which were taken and successfully carried out
- by which no warning was given to the enemy by any previous activity
- which was not normal.
- (e) The effective counter-battery work and accurate barrage.
- (f) The skill and dash with which the tanks were handled, and the
- care taken over details in bringing them up to the starting line.
- (g) Last, but most important of all, the skill, determination and
- fine fighting spirit of the infantry carrying out the attack."
-
-Of the extent to which the tactical principles, and the methods of
-preparation which had been employed at Hamel, came to be utilized by
-other Corps in the later fighting of 1918 no reliable record is yet
-available to me. But within the Corps itself this comparatively small
-operation became the model for all enterprises of a similar character,
-which it afterwards fell to the lot of the Corps to carry out.
-
-The operation was a small one, however, only by contrast with the
-events which followed, although not in comparison with some of the
-major operations which had preceded it--by reference to the number
-of troops engaged, although not to the extent of territory or booty
-captured. Although only eight Battalions (or the equivalent of less
-than one Division) were committed in the actual assault, the territory
-recovered was more than four times that which was, in the pitched
-battles of 1917, customarily allotted as an objective to a single
-Division. The number of prisoners in relation to our own casualties was
-also far higher than had been the experience of previous years. Both
-of these new standards which had thus been set up may be regarded as
-flowing directly from the employment of the Tanks.
-
-Among other aspects of this battle which are worthy of mention is the
-fact that it was the first occasion in the war that the American
-troops fought in an offensive battle. The contingent of them who joined
-us acquitted themselves most gallantly and were ever after received by
-the Australians as blood brothers--a fraternity which operated to great
-mutual advantage nearly three months later.
-
-This was the first occasion, also, on which the experiment was made of
-using aeroplanes for the purpose of carrying and delivering small-arms
-ammunition. The "consolidation" of a newly-captured territory implies,
-in its broadest sense, its organization for defence against recapture.
-For such a purpose the most rapidly realizable expedient had been
-found to be the placing of a predetermined number of machine guns in
-previously chosen positions, arranged chequer-wise over the captured
-ground. According to such a plan, suitable localities were selected by
-an examination of the map and a specified number of Vickers machine-gun
-crews were specially told off for the duty of making, during the
-battle, by the most direct route, to the selected localities, there
-promptly digging in, and preparing to deal with any attempt on the part
-of the enemy to press a counter-attack.
-
-The main difficulty affecting the use of machine guns is the
-maintenance for them of a regular and adequate supply of ammunition.
-Heretofore this function had to be performed by infantry ammunition
-carrying parties. It required two men to carry one ammunition box,
-holding a thousand rounds, which a machine gun in action could easily
-expend in less than five minutes. Those carrying parties had to travel
-probably not less than two to three miles in the double journey across
-the open, exposed both to view and fire. Casualties among ammunition
-carriers were always substantial.
-
-It was therefore decided to attempt the distribution of this class of
-ammunition by aeroplane. Most of the machines of the Corps Squadron
-were fitted with bomb racks and releasing levers. It required no great
-ingenuity to adapt this gear for the carrying by each plane of two
-boxes of ammunition simultaneously, and to arrange for its release,
-by hand lever, at the appropriate time. It remained to determine, by
-experiment, the correct size and mode of attachment for a parachute for
-each box of ammunition, so that the box would descend from the air
-slowly, and reach the ground without severe impact.
-
-It was Captain Wackett, of the Australian Flying Corps, who perfected
-these ideas, and who trained the pilots to put them into practice. Each
-machine-gun crew, upon reaching its appointed locality, spread upon
-the ground a large V-shaped canvas (V representing the word "Vickers")
-as an intimation to the air of their whereabouts, and that they needed
-ammunition. After a very little training, the air-pilots were able
-to drop this ammunition from a height of at least 1,000 feet to well
-within 100 yards of the appointed spot. In this way, at least 100,000
-rounds of ammunition were successfully distributed during this battle,
-with obvious economy in lives and wounds. The method thus initiated
-became general during later months.
-
-The Corps also put into practice, on this occasion, a stratagem which
-had frequently on a smaller scale been employed in connection with
-trench raids. Our Artillery was supplied with many different types
-of projectile, but among them were both gas shell and smoke shell.
-The latter were designed to create a very palpable smoke cloud, to be
-employed for the purpose of screening an assault, but were otherwise
-harmless. The former burst, on the other hand, with very little
-evolution of smoke, but with a pronounced and easily recognized smell,
-and their gas was very deadly.
-
-My practice was, therefore, during the ordinary harassing fire in
-periods between offensive activities, always to fire both classes of
-shell _together_, so that the enemy became accustomed to the belief
-at the least that our smoke shells were invariably accompanied by gas
-shell, even if he did not believe that it was the smoke shell which
-alone gave out the warning smell. The effect upon him of either belief
-was, however, the same; for it compelled him in any case to put on his
-gas mask in order to protect himself from gas poisoning.
-
-On the actual battle day, however, we fired smoke shell _only_, as we
-dared not vitiate the air through which our own men would shortly pass.
-But the enemy had no rapid means of becoming aware that we were firing
-only harmless smoke shell. He would, therefore, promptly don his gas
-mask, which would obscure his vision, hamper his freedom of action,
-and reduce his powers of resistance. On July 4th both the 4th and 11th
-Brigades accordingly took prisoner large numbers of men who were found
-actually wearing their gas masks. The stratagem had worked out exactly
-as planned.
-
-The battle was over, and when the results were made known there
-followed the inevitable flow of congratulatory messages from superiors,
-and colleagues and friends, from all parts of the Front and from
-England. The following telegrams received from the Commonwealth Prime
-Minister were particularly gratifying:
-
- 1. "On behalf of Prime Minister of Britain, and also of Prime
- Ministers of Canada, New Zealand and Newfoundland, attending
- VERSAILLES Council, I am commissioned to offer you our warmest
- congratulations upon brilliant success of Australian Forces under
- your command, and to say that the victory achieved by your Troops
- is worthy to rank with greatest achievements of Australian Armies."
-
- 2. "My personal congratulations and those of the Government of
- Commonwealth on brilliant success of battle. Please convey to
- Officers and Men participating in attack warmest admiration of
- their valour and dash and manner in which they have maintained
- highest traditions of Australian Army. I am sure that achievement
- will have most considerable military and political effect upon
- Allies and neutrals, and will heighten _moral_ of all Imperial
- Forces."
-
- 3. "In company with Mr. Lloyd George and General Rawlinson to-day
- saw several hundred of prisoners taken by Australian Troops in
- battle before Hamel. Rawlinson expressed to me the opinion that
- the operation was a brilliant piece of work. Please convey this to
- troops."
-
-The following message transmitted to me by the Commander of the Fourth
-Army was also received from the Field Marshal Commanding-in-Chief:
-
- "Will you please convey to Lieutenant-General Sir John Monash and
- all Ranks under his command, including the Tanks and the detachment
- of 33rd American Division, my warm congratulations on the success
- which attended the operation carried out this morning, and on the
- skill and gallantry with which it was conducted.
-
- "D. HAIG."
-
-A steady stream of visitors also set in, including numbers of General
-Staff Officers, who had been sent down from other Corps and Armies to
-gather information as to the methods employed. Everyone, of course,
-recognized that there was only one War, and that it was to the mutual
-benefit of all that all expedients calculated to accelerate the end of
-it should become the common property of all. My Staff were accordingly
-kept busy for many days with maps and diagrams explaining the lines on
-which the enterprise had been carried out.
-
-The most distinguished and most welcome of all our visitors, however,
-was Monsieur Clemenceau, the veteran statesman of France, who, in spite
-of the physical effort, immediately after the sitting of the Versailles
-War Council had closed, made haste to travel to the Amiens area, and
-to visit the Corps for the special purpose of thanking the troops. He
-arrived on July 7th, and a large assemblage of Australian soldiers who
-had participated in the battle, and who were resting from their labours
-near General Maclagan's Headquarters at Bussy, were privileged to hear
-him address them in English in the following terms:
-
- "I am glad to be able to speak at least this small amount of
- English, because it enables me to tell you what all French people
- think of you. They expected a great deal of you, because they have
- heard what you have accomplished in the development of your own
- country. I should not like to say that they are surprised that you
- have fulfilled their expectations. By that high standard they judge
- you, and admire you that you have reached it. We have all been
- fighting the same battle of freedom in these old battlegrounds.
- You have all heard the names of them in history. But it is a great
- wonder, too, in history that you should be here fighting on the old
- battlefields, which you never thought, perhaps, to see. The work of
- our fathers, which we wanted to hand down unharmed to our children,
- the Germans tried to take from us. They tried to rob us of all
- that is dearest in modern human society. But men were the same in
- Australia, England, France, Italy, and all countries proud of being
- the home of free people. That is what made you come; that is what
- made us greet you when you came. We knew you would fight a real
- fight, but we did not know that from the very beginning you would
- astonish the whole Continent with your valour. I have come here
- for the simple purpose of seeing the Australians and telling them
- this. I shall go back to-morrow and say to my countrymen: 'I have
- seen the Australians; I have looked into their eyes. I know that
- they, men who have fought great battles in the cause of freedom,
- will fight on alongside us, till the freedom for which we are all
- fighting is guaranteed for us and our children.'"
-
-The French inhabitants of the Amiens district were also highly elated
-at the victory. The city itself had been, for some weeks, completely
-evacuated, by official order. Not only had it become the object of
-nightly visitations by flights of Gothas; but also, somewhere in the
-east and far beyond the reach of my longest range guns, the enemy had
-succeeded in emplacing a cannon of exceptionally large calibre, range
-and power, which took its daily toll of the buildings of this beautiful
-city.
-
-The anniversary of the French national fete was approaching, and the
-Prefect of the Department of the Somme, Monsieur Morain--appreciating
-the significance of the Hamel victory as a definite step towards the
-ultimate disengagement of the city from the German terror--determined
-to make the celebration of this fete not only a compliment to the
-Australian Corps, but also a proof of the unquenchable fortitude of the
-people of his Department.
-
-Accordingly, in the Hotel de Ville, in the very heart of the deserted
-city, amidst the crumbling ruins of its upper stories, and of the
-devastation of the surrounding city blocks, he presided at a humble
-but memorable repast, which had been spread in an undamaged apartment,
-inviting to his board a bare twenty representatives of the French and
-British Armies, and of the city of Amiens. While we toasted the King
-and the Republic, and voiced the firm resolve of both Allies to see
-the struggle through to the bitter end, the enemy shells were still
-thundering overhead.
-
-But other matters than rejoicings in a task thus happily accomplished
-compelled my chief attention during the remaining days of this July. I
-had to study and gauge accurately the tactical and strategical results
-of the victory of Hamel, and to lose no time in using the advantage
-gained. The moral results both on the enemy and on ourselves were far
-more important, and deserve far more emphasis than do the material
-gains.
-
-It was, as I have said, the first offensive operation, on any
-substantial scale, that had been fought by any of the Allies since the
-previous autumn. Its effect was electric, and it stimulated many men
-to the realization that the enemy was, after all, not invulnerable, in
-spite of the formidable increase in his resources which he had brought
-from Russia. It marked the termination, once and for all, of the purely
-defensive attitude of the British front. It incited in many quarters an
-examination of the possibilities of offensive action on similar lines
-by similar means--a changed attitude of mind, which bore a rich harvest
-only a very few weeks later.
-
-But its effect on the enemy was even more startling. His whole front
-from the Ancre to Villers-Bretonneux had become unstable, and was
-reeling from the blow. It was only the consideration that I had still
-to defend a ten-mile front, and had still only one Division in reserve
-in case of emergency, that deterred me from embarking at once upon
-another blow on an even larger scale. But I seized every occasion to
-importune the Army Commander either to narrow my front, or to let the
-First Division from Hazebrouck join my command, or both; but so far
-without result.
-
-[Illustration: MAP B.]
-
-The only course that remained open to me was to initiate immediate
-measures for taking the fullest advantage of the enemy's demoralization
-by exploiting the success obtained to the utmost possible extent. No
-later than on the afternoon of the battle of Hamel itself, orders were
-issued to all three line Divisions to commence most vigorous offensive
-patrolling all along the Corps front, with a view not merely to prevent
-the enemy from re-establishing an organized defensive system, but
-also ourselves to penetrate the enemy's ground by the establishment
-therein of isolated posts, as a nucleus for subsequent more effective
-occupation.
-
-Enterprise of such a nature appeals strongly to the sporting instinct
-of the Australian soldier. Divisions, Brigades and Battalions vied
-with each other in predatory expeditions, even in broad daylight, into
-the enemy's ground, and a steady stream of prisoners and machine guns
-flowed in. On the nights of July 5th and 6th, the Fifth Division, now
-in the sector between the Ancre and the Somme, possessed themselves
-with very little effort of a strip of some three hundred acres of
-hostile positions, bringing our front line so near to Morlancourt as to
-make that village no longer tenable by the enemy.
-
-On the same nights, and again on July 8th and 9th, the Second and
-Fourth Divisions advanced their lines by an average of two hundred to
-three hundred yards along their respective fronts, and this advance
-was, in the case of the Second Division, particularly valuable in
-carrying our front line over the crest of the plateau of Hill 104, and
-giving us clear and unbroken observation far into the enemy's country,
-in the directions of Warfusee and Marcelcave.
-
-It was a period replete with instances of individual enterprise and
-daring adventure. One incident, characteristic of the varied efforts
-of these days, was the capture, single-handed, and in broad daylight,
-by Corporal W. Brown, V.C., of the 20th Battalion, Second Division, of
-an officer and eleven men of the German Army, whom he stalked as they
-lay skulking in a trench dug-out not far from his observation post, and
-terrorized into submission by the threat of throwing a bomb at them.
-
-But perhaps the best testimony of the successful activities of my
-troops during this period, and of the serious impression which
-they made upon the enemy, can be gathered by extracts from his own
-documents, a number of which were captured during this and subsequent
-fighting. Of these, the following, issued by the Second German Army
-Headquarters (Von der Marwitz), are among the more interesting:
-
- "The enemy has in his minor enterprises again taken prisoner a
- complete front line battalion and part of a support battalion. The
- reason is our faulty leadership."
-
- "The enemy penetrated the forward zone of the 108th Division
- by means of large patrols at midnight, on July 8th, 1918,
- without any artillery preparation, and again on the same
- night at 11 p.m., with artillery preparation, astride of the
- Marcelcave--Villers-Bretonneux railway. He occupied the trenches
- where our most advanced outposts lay, and took the occupants,
- comprising fifteen men, prisoner. The larger part of the forward
- zone has been lost."
-
- "In the case of the present trench Division, it has often happened
- that _complete_ picquets have disappeared from the forward zone
- without a trace."
-
-All the above refers to the period between July 4th and 12th. We read
-again under date July 13th:
-
- "During the last few days the Australians have succeeded in
- penetrating, or taking prisoner, single posts or picquets. They
- have gradually--sometimes even in daylight--succeeded in getting
- possession of the majority of the forward zone of a whole Division."
-
- "Troops must fight. They must not give way at every opportunity and
- seek to avoid fighting, otherwise they will get the feeling that
- the enemy are superior to them."
-
-[Illustration: Railway Gun, 11.2-inch Bore--captured near Rosieres on
-August 8th, 1918.]
-
-[Illustration: German Depot of Stores--captured on August 8th, 1918.]
-
-One last extract from these interesting papers:
-
- "The best way to make the enemy more careful in his attempt to
- drive us bit by bit out of the outpost line and forward zone is to
- do active reconnaissance and carry out patrol encounters oneself.
- In this respect absolutely nothing seems to have been done. If the
- enemy can succeed in scoring a success without any special support
- by artillery or assistance from special troops, we must be in a
- position to do the same."
-
-Our line in front of Villers-Bretonneux had for months run very close
-to the eastern outskirts of that town, a circumstance which cramped and
-embarrassed our defence of it. The enemy could peer into its streets
-and sweep them with machine guns. He had held in strength a locality
-known as Monument Wood, the ruins of a once prosperous orchard, and his
-possession of it had been a source of annoyance both to us and to the
-French, for it lay just opposite the international boundary posts.
-
-The time seemed opportune for a set-piece operation designed to
-advance our line opposite the town by 1,000 yards, on a broad front,
-to dislodge the enemy from Monument Wood, gain valuable elbow room,
-and obtain mastery of the remainder of the plateau on which the town
-was built. I had actually completed the draft of a plan for such an
-operation, and had held a preliminary conference with my Staff to
-discuss it, when it became apparent that the nightly encroachments
-which the Second Division were effecting in this region would, in
-the course of a few days, achieve the capture of the whole of this
-territory without any special organized effort at all.
-
-And so it proved; for before the middle of July, Rosenthal had
-succeeded in possessing himself, by such a process of "peaceful
-penetration," of the whole of the coveted area. It was a further
-evidence of the serious demoralization which our aggressive attitude of
-the preceding months had wrought among the German forces opposed to us.
-
-The era of minor aggression by the Australian Corps was, however, about
-to draw to a close, and the situation was rapidly beginning to shape
-itself for greater events.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[10] Staff-Sheet No. 218: "Operations of the Australian Corps against
-Hamel, etc.," published July, 1918.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-TURNING THE TIDE
-
-
-The course of events during June and July pointed to the conclusions,
-firstly, that the enemy contemplated no further offensive operations in
-the Somme Valley, and, secondly, that the condition of the whole German
-Second Army, astride of the Somme, offered every temptation to us to
-seize the initiative against it.
-
-So far as the Australian Corps was concerned, however, my total
-frontage, which had been increased (as the result of our exploitation)
-to over eleven miles, precluded the possibility, with only four
-Divisions at my disposal, of maintaining, even if I could succeed in
-initiating, an ambitious offensive. The time was nevertheless ripe for
-action on a scale far more decisive than had become orthodox in the
-British Army in the past. Efforts on that method had been confined to a
-thrust, limited in point both of distance and of time, and followed by
-a period of inaction; they had often given the enemy ample leisure to
-recover, and to reorganize his order of battle.
-
-To maintain an offensive, day after day, indefinitely, would require
-sufficient resources, particularly in infantry, to allow Divisions to
-be used alternatingly. Only in such a way, by having rested Divisions
-always available to alternate with tired Divisions, could a continuous
-pressure be maintained.
-
-I took every opportunity of pressing these views upon the Army
-Commander, and expressed the readiness of the Australian Corps to
-undertake and maintain a long sustained offensive, provided that
-arrangements could be made to shorten my frontage from a three to a
-two-Division battle front, and to increase my resources, from the
-present four, to five or even six Divisions. It was further essential
-that in any advances attempted by us, other Corps must co-operate on
-both flanks.
-
-It would be bad tactics to drive into the enemy's front a salient
-with a narrow base, for such a salient would make our situation worse
-instead of better, affording to the enemy the opportunity of artillery
-attack upon it from both its flanks as well as from its front. The
-salient must therefore be broad based in relation to its depth, and the
-base must ever widen as the head of the salient advances.
-
-This principle implied that a large-scale operation of such a nature
-must be begun on a whole Army front, and that, even at its inception,
-at least three Corps must co-operate, to be aided by the entry of
-additional Corps on the outer flanks as the central depth developed. In
-other words, it was a project implying a large commitment of resources,
-and the urgent question was whether the time was yet ripe for taking
-the risks involved.
-
-The matter, however, now became a subject at least worthy of practical
-discussion, and, during the days which followed Hamel, the Staffs of
-both the Corps and Army were kept busy with the investigation of data,
-maps, and information, while the availability of additional resources
-in guns, tanks and aeroplanes became the subject of anxious inquiry.
-
-A circumstance which troubled me sorely was the fact that my Corps
-stood on the flank of the British Army, and that the troops on my right
-belonged to the French Army. The relations between the Australian
-troops and the Tirailleurs and Zouaves of the 31st French Corps
-(General Toulorge) had always been the very friendliest, and the joint
-"international" posts had been the scenes of hearty fraternization and
-of the evolution of a strange common vernacular.
-
-This comradeship of "poilu" with "digger" did not, however, lessen
-the difficulties incidental to the joint conduct of a major Operation
-of War by two Corps of different nationalities, speaking different
-languages, with diverse tactical conceptions, and, above all, of
-substantially divergent temperaments. The French are irresistible in
-attack as they are dogged in defence, but whether they will attack or
-defend depends greatly on their temperament of the moment. In this
-they are totally unlike the British or Australian soldier who will at
-any time philosophically accept either role that may be prescribed for
-him.
-
-In short, it was not possible to hope for an effective co-ordination
-of effort, controlled particularly by the minute observance of a
-time-table, on the part of the Australian and its adjacent French
-Corps, and I felt quite unprepared to count upon it. It was for
-this reason that I expressed to the Army Commander the hope that a
-British Corps might be obtainable to operate on my right flank in any
-undertaking that should be decided upon. Understanding that the greater
-part of the Canadian Corps was then unemployed, resting in a back area,
-I ventured to hope that this Corps might be made available, in the
-event of a decision that the proposal should be proceeded with.
-
-My hesitation to accept the French as colleagues in such a battle
-was based not altogether on theoretical or sentimental grounds.
-The steady progress in mopping up enemy territory to the east of
-Villers-Bretonneux, which had been made by my south flank Division
-(the Second) as the aftermath of Hamel, soon produced a contortion of
-the Allied front line at this point which bade fair to prove just as
-troublesome to me as had been the great re-entrant opposite Hamel,
-which that battle had been specially undertaken to eliminate.
-
-No persuasions on my part, or on that of my flank Division, could
-induce the adjacent French Division to extend any co-operation in these
-advances or to adopt any measures to flatten out the re-entrant which,
-growing deeper every day, threatened to expose my right flank. I am
-convinced that such hesitation was based upon no timidity, but was the
-result wholly of an entirely different outlook and policy from those
-which the Australian Corps was doing its best to interpret. But the
-experience of it made the prospect of punctual co-operation on their
-part in much more serious undertakings distinctly less encouraging.
-
-The proposed offensive involved, therefore, far-reaching
-redispositions, comprising a substantial displacement southwards of
-the inter-Allied boundary, a lengthening by several miles of the whole
-British Western front, and an entire rearrangement of the respective
-fronts of the Third and Fourth British Armies. It is not surprising
-that a decision was deferred, while the project was being critically
-investigated from every point of view.
-
-Then, suddenly, a new situation arose. On July 15th, the enemy opened
-a fresh attack against the French in the south. The scale on which
-he undertook it immediately made it patent to all students of the
-situation that he was probably employing his whole remaining reserves
-of fit, rested Divisions; that he meant this to be his decisive blow;
-and that whether he gained a decision or not, it would be his last
-effort on the grand scale.
-
-It did not succeed; for just as he had once again reached the line
-of the Marne and had on July 17th achieved his "furthest south" at
-Chateau-Thierry, a beautifully timed counter-stroke by the French and
-Americans upon the western face of the salient, extending from Soissons
-to the Marne, resulted on July 18th in the capture by the Allies on
-that day alone, of 15,000 prisoners and 200 guns.
-
-It was the end of German offensive in the war. Their mobile reserves
-were exhausted, and they were compelled slowly to recede from the
-Chateau-Thierry salient. The appropriate moment, for which Foch and
-Haig had doubtless been waiting for months, had at last arrived to
-begin an Allied counter offensive, and it was only a question of
-deciding at what point along the Franco-British front the effort should
-be made, and on what date it should open.
-
-Doubtless influenced by the reasons already discussed, the choice
-fell upon that portion of the front of the Fourth Army which lay
-south of the Somme; in other words upon the southern portion of the
-Australian Corps front. The date remained undecided, but the requisite
-redisposition of Armies and Corps was so extensive that no time was to
-be lost in making a beginning.
-
-It was on July 21st that General Rawlinson first called together the
-Corps Commanders who were to be entrusted with this portentous task.
-The strictest secrecy was enjoined, and never was a secret better kept;
-with the exception of the Field Marshal and his Army Commanders, none
-outside of the Fourth Army had any inkling of what was afoot until the
-actual moment for action had arrived.
-
-Yet an observant enemy agent, if any such there had been in the
-vicinity, might well have drawn a shrewd conclusion that some
-mischief was brewing, had he happened along the main street of the
-prettily-situated village of Flexicourt, on the Somme, on that
-bright summer afternoon, and had observed in front of a pretentious
-white mansion, over which floated the black and red flag of an Army
-Commander, a quite unusual procession of motor-cars, ostentatiously
-flying the Canadian and Australian flags and the red-and-white pennants
-of two other Corps Commanders.
-
-There were present at that conference, General Currie, the Canadian,
-General Butler, of the Third Corps, General Kavanagh, of the Cavalry
-Corps, and myself, while senior representatives of the Tanks and Air
-Force also attended. Rawlinson unfolded the outline of the whole Army
-plan, and details were discussed at great length in the light of
-the views held by each Corps Commander as to the tasks which he was
-prepared to undertake with the resources in his hands or promised to
-him.
-
-The conditions which I had sought in my previous negotiations with
-the Army Commander were, I found, conceded to me almost to the full
-extent. My battle front was to be reduced from eleven miles to a little
-over 7,000 yards. It would, in fact, extend from the Somme, as the
-northern, to the main Peronne railway, as the southern flank. And--what
-was equally important, and profoundly welcome--the First Australian
-Division was shortly to be relieved in Flanders, and would at last join
-my Corps, thus for the first time in the war bringing all Australian
-field units in France under one command.
-
-The Canadians were to operate on my right, and further south again the
-First French Army (Debenay) was to supply a Corps to form a defensive
-flank for the Canadians. The Third British Corps was to carry out for
-me a similar function on my northern flank. Thus, four Corps in line
-were to operate, the two central Corps carrying out the main advance,
-while the two outer flank Corps would be employed further to broaden
-the base of the great salient which the operation would create.
-
-The Cavalry Corps would appear in the battle area also, with all
-preparations made for a rapid exploitation of any success achieved.
-The utility of the Cavalry in modern war, at any rate in a European
-theatre, has been the subject of endless controversy. It is one into
-which I do not propose to enter. There is no doubt that, given suitable
-ground and an absence of wire entanglements, Cavalry can move rapidly,
-and undertake important turning or enveloping movements. Yet it has
-been argued that the rarity of such suitable conditions negatives any
-justification for superimposing so unwieldy a burden as a large body
-of Cavalry--on the bare chance that it _might_ be useful--upon already
-overpopulated areas, billets, watering places and roads.
-
-I may, however, anticipate the event by saying that the First Cavalry
-Brigade was duly allotted to me, and did its best to prove its utility;
-but I am bound to say that the results achieved, in what proved to be
-very unsuitable country beyond the range of the Infantry advance, did
-not justify the effort expended either by this gallant Brigade or by
-the other arms and services upon whom the very presence of the Cavalry
-proved an added burden.
-
-For the full understanding of subsequent developments both during and
-after the battle it becomes of special importance to consider the
-proposed role of the Third Corps in relation to my left flank. It is
-to be remembered that the Fourth Army decided that the River Somme was
-to be the tactical boundary between the two Northern Corps. It was not
-competent for me to criticize this decision at the time, but I am free
-now to say that I believed such a boundary to have been unsuitable, and
-the event speedily proved that it was.
-
-It is always, in my opinion, undesirable to select any bold natural
-or artificial feature--such as a river, ravine, ridge, road or
-railway--as a boundary. It creates, at once, a divided responsibility,
-and necessitates between two independent commanders, and at a critical
-point, a degree of effective co-operation which can rarely be hoped
-for. It is much better boldly to place a unit, however large or small,
-_astride_ of such a feature, so that both sides of it may come under
-the control of one and the same Commander.
-
-This was especially the case in this part of the Somme Valley which
-is broad, and has an ill-defined central line, tortuous, and with
-the slopes on either side tactically interdependent; but most of all
-because, as I have already described, the high plateau on the north
-completely overlooks the relatively lower flats on the south of the
-river. The point I am trying to make should be borne in mind, for I
-believe it has been fully borne out by subsequent events.
-
-The decision standing, however, as it did, it fell to the task of
-the Third Corps to make an assault (concurrently with that of the
-Australian Corps south of the river) for the capture of the whole of
-that reach of the river known as the Chipilly Bend, and of all the high
-ground on the spur which that bend enfolds. The object was to deprive
-the enemy of all ground from which he could look down upon my advancing
-left flank, or from which he could bring rifle or artillery fire to
-bear upon it.
-
-The Third Corps was to operate on the front of one Division, the 58th,
-which, pivoting its left upon the Corbie--Bray road, was to advance
-its right--in sympathy with the advance of the left of the Australian
-Corps--until it rested upon the river about one mile downstream from
-Etinehem. It was a movement the success of which was rendered promising
-by the nature of the ground and the disorganized condition of the enemy
-between the Ancre and the Somme.
-
-As regards my right flank, this was to rest as stated upon the main
-railway. The Canadian Corps, of four Divisions, would take over from
-the French a frontage of about 6,000 yards and deliver a thrust
-parallel to and south of the railway, in the direction of Caix and
-Beaucourt, and would aim at the seizure of the important Hill 102,
-immediately to the west of the latter locality. At no time did any
-question of the security of my right flank furnish me with any cause
-for anxiety; the prowess of the Canadian Corps was well known to all
-Australians, and I knew that, to use his own expressive vernacular, it
-was General Currie's invariable habit to "deliver the goods."
-
-The comprehensive project thus outlined at the conference of July 21st
-involved, as a preliminary step, a far-reaching redisposition of very
-large bodies of troops over a very wide front. With the readjustment of
-the boundaries between the Third and Fourth British Armies we are not
-particularly concerned, because this affected a region, north of the
-Ancre, which lay well outside of the battle area. Nor did the internal
-readjustment of the northern part of the Fourth Army front present
-any difficulty, as it meant nothing more than a routine "relief" by
-the 58th Division of the Fifth Australian Division which was at this
-juncture holding that part of my Corps sector which lay between the
-Somme and the Ancre.
-
-But the southern half was a very different matter. The First French
-Army was to give up to the British a section of about four miles,
-extending from Villers-Bretonneux to Thennes. This was ultimately to
-be taken over by the Canadian Corps as a battle front, but that Corps
-still had two of its Divisions in the line in the neighbourhood of
-Arras.
-
-Moreover, it was of the utmost importance to conceal from the enemy
-until the last possible moment any change in our dispositions. This
-meant concealing them from our own troops also, because the loss by us
-of a single talkative prisoner would have been sufficient to disclose
-to the enemy at least the suspicion, if not the certainty, that an
-attack was in preparation.
-
-After examining the problem and discussing several alternative
-solutions, it was ultimately decided at this conference that, five
-or six days before the date fixed for the attack, the French would
-be relieved in this sector by a Division, not of Canadians, but of
-Australians; that under cover of and behind this Australian Division,
-the Canadian Corps would come in from the north, and would proceed
-to carry out its battle preparations; and finally that the actual
-appearance of Canadian troops in the front line would not ensue until
-three days before the battle.
-
-During the preceding two days, the Australian troops would be gradually
-withdrawn from the sector, leaving only one Brigade in occupation of
-the line, to be backed up by the incoming Canadians in the unexpected
-contingency of an attack by the enemy. This last Brigade would quietly
-melt away, leaving the Canadians in full possession of the field.
-
-It was hoped that, during the days of the temporary Australian
-occupation of the sector, nothing would happen which might disclose
-to the enemy that the French had left it; and even if we were to have
-the misfortune to lose from this sector any Australian prisoners to
-the enemy, it was further hoped that, if kept in total ignorance of
-the inflow of Canadians, such prisoners would be unable to make any
-embarrassing disclosures. The _denouement_, which will be told later,
-showed that this judgment of possibilities was a shrewd one, and that
-such precautions were not taken in vain.
-
-At this period of the war, large numbers of Americans had already
-arrived in France, but only few of them were yet ready to take their
-places in the line of battle. The time had not yet arrived, therefore,
-when, by taking over large sections of the Western front they could
-help to shorten the French and British frontages. The British front
-was, therefore, still so extended that the mobile reserve Divisions at
-the disposal of the Field Marshal were few.
-
-This consideration made the contemplated reliefs and interchanges
-of Corps and Divisions, and their transference from one part of our
-front to another a matter of great complexity, and one which required
-time to execute. Each stage of the process was contingent upon the
-due completion of a previous stage. It is, moreover, a process which
-cannot be unduly hastened, without serious discomfort and fatigue to
-the troops and animals concerned.
-
-Troops destined for battle must be kept in the highest physical
-condition. This means good feeding, comfortable housing, and adequate
-rest. A couple of weary days and sleepless nights spent in crowded
-railway trains, with cold food and little exercise, are sufficient to
-play havoc with the fighting trim of even a crack battalion. So, the
-daily stages of the journey must be short, and comfortable billets must
-be in readiness for each night's halt. The day's supplies must arrive
-punctually and at the right railhead, to ensure hot, well-cooked meals.
-
-With the very limited number of serviceable railway lines which
-remained available behind the British front--and with the congestion
-of traffic resulting from the daily transportation of many thousands
-of tons of artillery ammunition and other war stores--it was not
-surprising that as the result of the deliberations of the conference
-it was resolved to advise the Commander-in-Chief that it would take
-not less than five days to rearrange our order of battle on the lines
-decided upon, and another five days, after Corps and Divisions had
-taken over their battle fronts, to enable them to complete their
-preparations.
-
-Thus, the Fourth Army could be ready at ten days' notice, and the
-conference broke up, pledged to secrecy and complete inaction, until
-formal approval had been given to the proposals and a date fixed for
-their realization.
-
-The remainder of July passed with no very startling occurrences. In the
-south the German withdrawal from the Soissons salient and the Marne
-continued steadily, with the French and Americans on their heels; but
-it was a methodical retreat, which would bring about a substantial
-shortening of the German line, and so release Divisions to rest and
-refit, which might conceivably become available for a fresh assault
-elsewhere.
-
-But there was still no sign of any such design upon that always tender
-spot, the Allied junction at Villers-Bretonneux. On the contrary, my
-second Division still continued to make free with the enemy's advanced
-patrols, and in a very brilliant little infantry operation by the 7th
-Brigade captured the "Mound," a long spoilbank beside the railway at a
-point about a mile east of the town, which dominated the landscape in
-every direction. The ardour of his troops was only enhanced when they
-heard that General Rosenthal himself, while reconnoitring from the
-Mound, had been sniped at and had received a nasty wound in the arm.
-
-The enemy attempted nothing in the way of infantry retaliation. But
-whenever he had been thoroughly angered, he treated my front to a
-liberal drenching of mustard gas, fired by his artillery. His supplies
-of mustard gas shell seemed inexhaustible, and he would frequently
-expend as many as 10,000 of them in a single night upon the half-ruined
-town of Villers-Bretonneux or on the Bois l'Abbe and other woods which
-he suspected were sheltering my reserve infantry.
-
-These gas attacks were annoying and troublesome, in the extreme. During
-the actual bombardments, troops wore their gas masks as a matter of
-course, but doffed them when the characteristic smell of the gas
-had disappeared. But it was warm weather, and as the sun rose, the
-poisonous liquid, which had spattered the ground over immense areas,
-would volatilize, and rise in sufficient volume still to attack all
-whose business took them to and fro across this ground. In this way
-hundreds of our men became incapacitated; although there were a few
-serious cases, most of the men would be fit to rejoin in two or three
-weeks. But this form of attack, and the constant dread of it, made life
-in the forward areas anything but endurable.
-
-I was beset by quite another trepidation also. Prisoners captured
-during the German withdrawal from the Marne, which was then in
-progress, told tales of contemplated withdrawals on other fronts, and
-some even asserted that a withdrawal opposite my own front was being
-talked of. Judged by subsequent events, it is more than probable that
-these stories were stimulated by the many articles which were at
-that time appearing in the German newspapers from the pens of press
-strategists, who, in order to allay public anxiety, were representing
-these withdrawals as deliberate, and as a masterpiece of strategy,
-compelling the Allies to a costly pursuit over difficult and worthless
-ground.
-
-Opposite Albert, signs that such a withdrawal was actually in progress
-also began to appear, although it subsequently transpired that, in its
-early stages, this procedure was merely prompted by a purely local
-consideration, namely, the desire of the enemy to improve his tactical
-position by abandoning the outposts, which he had been maintaining in
-the valley of the Ancre, and transferring them to the higher and better
-ground on the east of that river.
-
-It was only natural that those of us who knew of the impending attack,
-and of the immense effort which its preparation would involve, felt
-nervous lest the enemy might forestall us by withdrawing his whole
-line to some methodically prepared position of defence in the rear,
-just as he had done once before in 1917 on so large a scale in the
-Bapaume region. It would probably have been a sound measure of
-military policy, but it would assuredly, at that juncture, have had
-as disastrous an effect upon the _moral_ of the German people as his
-enforced withdrawal, which was soon to begin, actually produced not
-long after.
-
-The order to prepare the attack, and fixing the date of it for August
-8th, came in the closing days of July, and at once all was bustle and
-excitement in the Australian Corps. Commanders, Staff Officers, and
-Intelligence Service, the Artillery, the Corps Flying Squadron, the
-map and photography sections spent busy days in reconnaissance, and
-toilsome nights in office work. The vast extent of the detailed work
-involved, particularly upon the administrative services, can only be
-appreciated by a study of the plan for the battle, which it fell to my
-lot, as Corps Commander, first to formulate, and then to expound to a
-series of conferences which were held at Bertangles on July 30th, and
-on August 2nd and 4th.
-
-It is, therefore, perhaps appropriate that I should now attempt to
-repeat, in non-technical language, an exposition of the outlines of
-that plan.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-THE BATTLE PLAN
-
-
-My plan for the impending battle involved the employment of four
-Divisions in the actual assault, with one Division in reserve. The
-Reserve Division was to be available for use in one of two ways; either
-as a reserve of fresh troops to exploit any successes gained upon the
-first day, or else to take over and hold defensively the ground won, if
-the assaulting Divisions should have become too exhausted to be relied
-upon for successful resistance to a counter-attack in force.
-
-The frontage allotted to the Corps was 7,000 yards, and this extent of
-front accommodated itself naturally to the employment of two first-line
-Divisions, each on a 3,500 yard front, each Division having two
-Brigades in the front line, with one Brigade in reserve.
-
-As four Divisions were available to me for immediate use in the
-battle, I decided to undertake, for the first time in the war, on
-so comprehensive a scale, the tactical expedient of a "leapfrog" by
-Divisions over each other.
-
-This term had, long before, passed into the homely phraseology of the
-war, in order to describe a procedure by which one body of troops,
-having reached its objective, was there halted, as at a completed task,
-while a second body of troops, of similar order of importance, but
-under an entirely separate Commander, advanced over the ground won,
-reached the foremost battle line, took over the tactical responsibility
-for the fighting front, and after a prescribed interval of time
-continued the advance to a further and more distant objective.
-
-This conception of an advance by a process of "leapfrog" had been
-evolved early in 1917 in connection with a method of assault on
-successive lines of trenches. It was intended at the outset to be
-applied only to very small bodies of infantry, such as platoons. A
-normal battle plan for a company of infantry of four platoons was for
-the first two platoons to capture and hold the front line trench,
-while the next two following platoons would leap over this trench and
-over the troops who had gained it, and then pass beyond to the capture
-of the second, or support trench. The method was used, for the first
-time, on such a modest scale, at the battle of Messines, in June, 1917,
-and later on in the same year was adopted for bodies as large even
-as Battalions, in the fighting for the Broodseinde and Passchendaele
-heights.
-
-But on no previous occasion had such a principle been applied to whole
-Divisions. It is true that at the battle of Messines, the Fourth
-Australian Division passed through the New Zealand Division after the
-latter had completed the capture of the main Messines ridge, but this
-was really exploitation, undertaken in order to take advantage of the
-temporary confusion of the enemy, and for the purpose of gaining ground
-upon the eastern slopes of the captured ridge. It was not a movement
-which was really part of the main assault, and it was confined to a
-single Division.
-
-On the present occasion my purpose was to carry out a clear and
-definite process of "leapfrogging," not only simultaneously by two
-Divisions side by side, but also as an essential part of the time-table
-programme for the main battle, and before the exploitation stage of
-the fighting was timed to be reached. It was, undeniably, a daring
-proposal, involving very definite risks, enormously increasing the
-labour of preparation and the mass of detailed precautions which had to
-be undertaken in order to obviate the possibility of great confusion.
-
-The preparations necessary for a single Division proposing to advance
-alone, to a prescribed distance, over country much of which was usually
-visible to us from our front line, are sufficiently complex, relating
-as they do, not only to the establishment of numerous protected
-headquarters for Brigades and Battalions, of miles upon miles of buried
-and ground cables, of dumps of all kinds of supplies, and of dressing
-stations and medical aid posts; but also to the disposition, in
-concealed positions, of all the assaulting units, down to the smallest
-of them, of Infantry Engineers and Pioneers. All these preparations
-assume a tenfold complexity when a second Division has to make
-arrangements exactly similar in character, variety and extent, using
-exactly the same territory for the purpose and at the same time, and
-planning to advance over more distant country, entirely beyond visual
-range and preliminary reconnaissance.
-
-The project also involved a much greater crowding of troops into
-the areas immediately behind our line of departure, and, therefore,
-enormously increased the risk of premature detection by the enemy,
-both from ground and from air observation, of unusual movement and of
-other symptoms which presaged the possibility of an attack by us. The
-plan also necessitated the closest possible co-ordination of effort,
-and mutual sympathy and understanding, between the Commanders and
-Staffs of the twin Divisions having a common jurisdiction over one
-and the same area of preparation, and one and the same battle front.
-This was a degree of co-operation which could not have been looked
-for unless the personnel concerned had already established, from long
-and close association with each other, the most cordial personal
-relations. And dominating all other difficulties were those involved
-in the proposal to execute this difficult and untried operation of a
-Divisional leapfrog, not singly but in a duplex manner, necessitating
-the assurance of exactly similar simultaneous action, similarly timed
-in every stage, both before and during battle, by each of two separate
-pairs of Divisions.
-
-These threatening difficulties were surely formidable enough, but I
-knew that I could rely upon the goodwill of the Divisions towards each
-other, and upon the loyal support of them all. This seemed to me to
-justify the attempt, and to minimize the risks; having regard above all
-else to the results which I stood to gain if the operation could be
-executed as planned.
-
-On no previous occasion in the war had an attempt ever been made to
-effect a penetration into the enemy's defences at the first blow, and
-on the first day, greater than a mile or two. Rarely had any previous
-set-piece attack succeeded in reaching the enemy's line of field-guns.
-The result had been that the bulk of his Artillery had been withdrawn
-at his leisure, and his losses had been confined to a few hundred acres
-of shattered territory. But the task I had set myself was not only
-to reach, at the first onslaught, the whole of the enemy's Artillery
-positions, but greatly to overrun them with a view to obliterating, by
-destruction or capture, the whole of his defensive organizations and
-the whole of the fighting resources which they contained, along the
-full extent of my Corps front.
-
-To achieve this object I prepared my plans upon the basis of a total
-advance, on the first day, of not less than 9,000 yards. This was to be
-divided into three separate stages, as follows:
-
- Phase A--Set-piece attack with barrage, 3,000 yards.
- Phase B--Open-warfare advance, 4,500 "
- Phase C--Exploitation, 1,500 "
- -----
- Total distance to final objective, 9,000 yards.
- -----
-
-The opening phase involved no novel or unusual features so far as
-the infantry were concerned, and was conceived on lines with which
-the fighting of 1917 had familiarized me, modified further by the
-accumulated experience gained from earlier mistakes in the technical
-details of such an enterprise. The recent battle of Hamel became
-the model for this phase, the conditions of that battle being now
-reproduced on a much enlarged scale.
-
-But there was one very important feature which distinguished the
-present undertaking from the battles of Messines and Broodseinde, and
-that was in regard to the frontage allotted for attack to a single
-Division. At Messines, the Divisional battle front was 2,000 yards;
-in the third battle of Ypres it differed but little from the same
-standard. For the present battle, I adopted a battle front of two miles
-for each assaulting Division, or a mile for each of the four assaulting
-Brigades.
-
-This innovation seemed to me to be justified by four principal
-factors. The first of these was that the weather, which was dry, and
-the state of the ground, which was hard, made the "going" easy and the
-stress upon the infantry comparatively light. Next, the condition of
-the enemy's defensive works was undeveloped and stagnant, as clearly
-disclosed by the air photographs which the Corps Air Squadron produced
-in great numbers on every fine day. No doubt this was due to the
-encroachments we had made on his forward works during the fighting
-at Hamel and in the remaining weeks of July. Thirdly, the powerful
-assistance anticipated from a contingent of four Battalions of Tanks
-which General Rawlinson had arranged to place under my orders led me
-to estimate that I might greatly reduce the number of men per yard of
-front. Lastly, the plan was justified by the known distribution of the
-enemy's infantry and guns along the frontage under attack. For all
-these reasons, I felt prepared to impose on the infantry a task which,
-computed solely upon the factor of frontage, was more than twice that
-demanded by me on any previous occasion.
-
-At the same time, so extended a frontage involved the employment of a
-much higher ratio of barrage artillery to the number of battalions of
-Infantry actually engaged. Success depended more upon the efficiency of
-the fire power of the barrage than upon any other factor, and I could
-not afford to incur any risk by weakening the density of the barrage.
-For this reason, I adhered to the standard which previous experience
-of several major battles and many minor raids had shown to be adequate
-for covering the assaulting infantry, and for keeping down the enemy's
-fire. This standard never fluctuated widely from one field-gun per
-twenty yards of front, and involved the employment, on this occasion,
-of some 432 field-guns in the barrage alone. This result could not have
-been achieved if the Fourth Army authorities had not seen their way to
-place at my disposal five additional Brigades of Field Artillery over
-and above the thirteen Australian Brigades which formed a permanent
-part of the whole Artillery of the Corps.
-
-Phase A, as already stated, involved a penetration of 3,000 yards,
-and the objective line for this phase, which came to be known as the
-"green" line (from the colour employed to delineate it upon all the
-fighting maps propounded by the Corps), was chosen, after an exhaustive
-study of all aeroplane photographs, and of the results of numerous
-observations, by many diverse means, of the locations of the enemy's
-Artillery, so as to make certain that during this phase the whole mass
-of the enemy's forward Artillery would be overrun, and captured or put
-out of action.
-
-The green line was, in fact, located along the crest of the spur
-running north-easterly from Lamotte-en-Santerre in the direction of
-Cerisy-Gailly, with the object of carrying the battle well to the east
-of the Cerisy valley, in which large numbers of the enemy's guns had
-been definitely located. This would give us, by the capture of this
-valley, suitable concealed positions in which the Infantry destined
-for Phase B could rest for a short "breather;" and would land the
-Infantry of the original assault in a position from which they could
-detect and forestall any attempt on the part of the enemy to launch a
-counter-attack before the time for the opening of Phase B had arrived.
-
-The task of executing Phase A of the battle fell to the Second and
-Third Australian Divisions, in that order from south to north, the
-southern flank of the Second Division resting upon the main railway
-line from Amiens to Peronne, and being there in contact with the
-Canadian Corps, under General Currie. The northern flank of the Third
-Division rested on the River Somme, and was there in contact with the
-Third British Corps under General Butler, while the inter-divisional
-boundary was at the southern edge of the Bois-d'Accroche.
-
-These two Divisions were the line Divisions during the period
-immediately preceding the battle, and had been holding the line each
-with two Brigades in line and one Brigade in support. Three days prior
-to the battle, however, it was arranged that each Division should hold
-its front with only one Brigade, thereby making available two Brigades
-each for the actual carrying out of Phase A of the attack. These
-assaulting Brigades were the 7th, 5th, 9th and 11th, in that order from
-south to north, each Brigade having its due allotment of Tanks and
-machine guns, etc.
-
-The total estimated time for the completion of Phase A was to be 143
-minutes after the opening of the barrage at "zero" hour; and there was
-then to be a pause of 100 minutes to allow time for the advance and
-deployment into battle order of the succeeding two Divisions, who were
-to carry out the process of "leapfrogging" and to execute Phases B and
-C of the battle.
-
-The planning of Phase B, or the advance from the "green" to the "red"
-line, involved a totally different tactical conception and the adoption
-of a type of warfare which had almost entirely disappeared from the
-Western theatre of war since those far-off days in the late autumn of
-1914, when the German Army first dug itself in, in France and Belgium,
-and committed both combatants to the prolonged agony of over three
-years of stationary warfare. I allude to the moving battle, or as it
-is called in text-book language, "open warfare;" a type of fighting in
-which few of the British Forces formed since the original Expeditionary
-Force had any experience except on the manoeuvre ground under peace
-conditions--a disability which applied equally to the Australian
-troops. Confident, however, in their adaptability and in their power
-of initiative under novel conditions, I did not hesitate to prescribe,
-for this second phase of the battle, the adoption of the principles and
-methods of open warfare.
-
-In two very important respects in particular, this type of fighting
-involved conditions to which the troops had not been accustomed,
-and under which they had no previous experience in battle. In
-trench warfare, and in a deliberate attack on entrenched defences,
-the positions of all headquarters, medical aid posts, supply dumps
-and signal stations remained fixed and immovable. The whole of the
-internal communications by telegraph and telephone could, therefore,
-be completely installed beforehand, down to the last detail, and the
-transmission of all messages, reports, orders and instructions, during
-the course of the battle, was rapid and assured. But in a moving
-battle no such comprehensive or stable signalling arrangements are
-possible, and reliance must be placed upon the much slower and much
-more uncertain methods of transmission by flag and lamp signalling, by
-dispatch riders, pigeons and runners.
-
-Divisional Headquarters would, therefore, almost as soon as the battle
-commenced, fall out of touch with Brigades, and they in turn with their
-Battalions; information as to the actual situation at the fighting
-front would travel slowly, and would reach those responsible for making
-consequential decisions often long after an entire alteration in the
-situation had removed the need for action. Thus, a greatly enhanced
-responsibility would come to be imposed upon subordinate leaders to
-decide for themselves, without waiting for guidance or orders from
-higher authority, and to grasp the initiative by taking all possible
-action on the spot in the light of the circumstances and situation of
-the moment.
-
-Again, the nature of the Artillery action is, in the moving battle,
-fundamentally different from that which prevails during trench warfare.
-To begin with, only that portion of the Artillery which is in the
-strictest sense mobile can participate to any extent in open warfare.
-The employment of Artillery is, therefore, confined to a few and to
-the smaller natures of Ordnance, namely, the 18-pounder field-gun, the
-41/2-inch field howitzer and the 60-pounder, which are all horse drawn
-and which are capable of being moved off the roads and across all but
-the most broken country. Heavier guns, from 6-inch upwards, are in
-practice confined to roads, and are too slow and cumbersome to keep
-pace with the Infantry. The Artillery fire action is also intrinsically
-different, because the guns can be sighted directly upon their targets,
-while in trench warfare they are always laid by indirect methods, with
-the use of the map and compass, and without observation, at any rate by
-the crew of the gun, of the objects fired at.
-
-The decision which I had to take of carrying out the second phase of
-this great battle on the principles of open warfare was, therefore,
-one which also involved a certain element of risk. But it was a risk
-which I felt justified in taking, in spite of the fact that the German
-High Command had more than once expressed itself in contemptuous
-terms of the capacity of any British troops successfully to undertake
-any operation of open warfare. My justification lay primarily in my
-confidence in the ability of the subordinate commanders and troops to
-work satisfactorily under these novel conditions--a confidence which
-the event abundantly justified. But I was placed in the position of
-having either to accept this risk, or else abandon altogether the
-project of a quite unprecedented penetration of enemy country to be
-completed on the first day. It would have been clearly impossible to
-continue the advance beyond the green line without an interval of at
-least forty-eight hours, which would have been necessary to enable the
-Artillery to be redisposed for barrage fire in forward positions and
-provided with the necessary supplies of ammunition for such a purpose.
-
-The Divisions which were told off to carry out the "leapfrog"
-enterprise and to execute Phase B of the battle were the Fifth
-Australian Division on the south and the Fourth Australian Division on
-the north, the outer flanks of the attack remaining as before, _i.e._,
-the Peronne Railway on the south and the River Somme on the north.
-Each of these Divisions was directed to deploy, on its own frontage,
-two Infantry Brigades. Its third Brigade was to be kept intact and to
-advance during Phase B at some distance behind, as a support to the
-fighting line, and to be employed in the subsequent phase, if it were
-found that Phase B could be completed without calling upon this spare
-Brigade. The actual dispositions of the Brigades finally proposed by
-the respective Divisional Commanders and approved by me brought about
-the arrangement that the four first-line mobile Infantry Brigades were
-successively, from south to north, the 15th, 8th, 12th and 4th, while
-the 14th and 1st Brigades followed as supports in a second line.
-
-To each of these Infantry Brigades I allotted a Brigade of Field
-Artillery, to be employed under the direct orders of the Infantry
-Brigade Commander, and, in addition, three Artillery Brigades as
-well as one Battery of 60-pounders, to each Divisional Commander. As
-my resources in Artillery were not unlimited, the twelve Artillery
-Brigades, so disposed of, were necessarily drawn from the original
-eighteen Brigades which were to fire the covering Artillery barrage
-for Phase A of the battle. The orders to that portion of the Field
-Artillery which was to become mobile in pursuance of this plan,
-accordingly, were that immediately upon the completion of their
-original tasks, by the capture of the green line, they were to "pull
-out of the barrage."
-
-This meant, in effect, that all the teams, limbers, battery wagons,
-and ammunition wagons of these twelve Brigades, waiting in their wagon
-lines far in rear, fully harnessed up and hooked in at the opening of
-the battle, had to advance during the progress of the first phase,
-so as to reach their guns just at the right time, but no earlier,
-to enable these guns to be limbered up, and the batteries to become
-completely mobile in order to join and advance with the Infantry of the
-second phase.
-
-This was an operation which required the greatest nicety in timing,
-and the greatest accuracy in execution. No Australian Artillery had
-ever previously undertaken such an operation, except perhaps on the
-manoeuvre ground, and then only on the very limited scale of a Brigade
-or two at a time. That this rapid transition from the completely
-stationary to the completely mobile battle was carried out, during the
-very crisis of a great engagement, without the slightest hitch, and
-with only the trifling loss of two or three gun horse teams from shell
-fire, reflects the very highest credit upon every officer and man of
-the Australian Field Artillery.
-
-The open warfare Infantry Brigades were also to be provided, out of
-their own divisional resources, each with a Company of Engineers,
-a Company of Machine Guns, a Field Ambulance, and a detachment of
-Pioneers, so that, in the most complete sense, they became a Brigade
-Group of all arms, capable of dealing, out of their own resources
-and on their own ground, with any situation that might arise during
-their advance of nearly three miles from the green to the red line. A
-detachment of nine tanks completed the fighting equipment of each of
-the four front line Brigades destined to capture the red line.
-
-I must now briefly describe the nature of Phase C, the third and last
-stage in this ambitious and complex battle programme. This phase was
-to consist of "exploitation," which implies that it was a provisional
-preparation, which was to be carried out only if complete success
-attended the two preceding phases. The objective of Phase C was the
-"blue" line, which I had located about one mile to the east of the red
-line, along a system of old French trenches extending from the river at
-a point near Mericourt, and running southerly to the railway at a point
-a little to the south-east of Harbonnieres. This line gave promise of
-furnishing a good defensive position in which to deal with any possible
-counter-attack. It also gave a good line of departure for subsequent
-operations, and provided ideal artillery positions in a series of
-valleys, running parallel and a little to the west of the line itself.
-
-The troops earmarked for this Exploitation Phase were the two second
-line Brigades of the two Divisions which were to capture the red line,
-namely, the 14th and 1st Brigades, and the orders to the Divisional
-Commanders were that if the red line was reached without mishap,
-without undue loss of time, and without involving the Reserve Brigades,
-but not otherwise, these Reserve Brigades were to push on with the
-utmost determination to secure and hold the blue line until such time
-as they could be reinforced.
-
-Each of these exploitation Brigades was equipped similarly to the red
-line Brigades in all respects except that they were provided with
-a special contingent of 18 Mark V. (Star) Tanks of the very latest
-design. These differed from the Mark V. Tank employed at Hamel and in
-the other stages of the present operation, in that they were longer
-and had sufficient internal space to carry, as passengers, over and
-above their own crews, two complete infantry Lewis gun detachments
-each. It was expected that this infantry fire power, added to the fire
-power from the machine guns carried by these 36 Tanks themselves and
-operated by the Tank crews, would go far to compensate for the somewhat
-attenuated line of probably tired Infantry spread in two Brigades over
-an ultimate frontage of over 10,000 yards.
-
-No definite time-table was laid down for the closing phases of the
-battle, except for the regulation of the times when our Heavy Artillery
-should "lift off" designated targets--such as villages, farms, and
-known gun positions--and lengthen its range so as not to obstruct the
-further advance of our own Infantry. But it was estimated that, from
-the opening of the battle, the green line would be reached in two and
-a half hours, the red line in six hours, and the blue line in eight
-hours. As the battle was to open at the first streak of dawn, it would,
-if all went well, be completed according to plan by about midday.
-
-In every battle plan, whether great or small, it is necessary first of
-all to map out the whole of the intended action of the Infantry, at any
-rate on the general lines indicated above. When that has been done the
-next step is to work backwards, and to test the feasibility of each
-body of infantry being able to reach its allotted point of departure,
-punctually, without undue stress on the troops, and without crossing
-or impeding the line of movement of any other body of infantry. It is
-often necessary to test minutely, by reference to calculations of time
-and space, more than one alternative plan for marshalling the Infantry
-prior to battle, and for the successive movements, day by day, and from
-point to point, of every battalion engaged.
-
-The present case was no exception, and, indeed, presented quite special
-difficulties. The whole of the area for a depth of many thousands of
-yards behind our then front line was open rolling country, devoid of
-any cover, and (except in the actual valley of the Somme) with every
-village, hamlet, farmhouse, factory and wood obliterated. The plan
-involved the assembly, in this confined area, fully exposed by day to
-the view of any inquisitive enemy aircraft, of no less than 45 Infantry
-Battalions, with all their paraphernalia of war; not to speak of our
-600 guns of all calibres, their wagon lines, horse lines and motor
-parks, together with Engineers, Pioneers, Tanks, Medical and Supply
-Units amounting to tens of thousands of men and animals.
-
-A new factor which, however, ultimately controlled the final decision
-which I had to make as to the nature of the dispositions prior to
-battle, lay in the consideration of the maximum distances which would
-have to be covered by the foot soldiers in such a far-flung battle. I
-had little difficulty in coming to the conclusion that the obvious and
-normal arrangement was on this occasion a totally wrong arrangement.
-If the assaulting Brigades had been arranged, from front to rear, in
-their assembly areas prior to battle, in the same order as that in
-which they would have to come into action, this would have involved
-that the individual man, who was to be required to march and fight his
-way furthest into enemy country, and, therefore, was to be the last to
-enter the fight, would also be called upon to march furthest from his
-rearmost position of assembly before even reaching the battle zone. The
-maximum distance to be traversed on the day of battle by infantry would
-have amounted, according to such a plan, to over ten miles. While this
-is an easy day's march on a good road, under tranquil conditions, it
-would have been an altogether unreasonable demand upon any infantryman
-during the stress and nervous excitement of battle. It would have been
-courting a breakdown from over-fatigue, among the very troops upon whom
-I had to rely most to defend the captured territory against any serious
-enemy reaction.
-
-I therefore adopted the not very obvious course of completely reversing
-the normal procedure, and of disposing the Brigades in depth, from
-front to rear, in exactly the _reverse_ of the order in which, in point
-of time, they would enter the battle.
-
-The following represents, diagrammatically, the disposition of all
-twelve Brigades after having been fully _deployed_ in the actual course
-of the battle:
-
- ^ (4th Division) | (5th Division)
- | Direction 4 -- 12 | 8 -- 15
- | of North 1 Inter- 14 South
- | enemy. (3rd Division) Divisional (2nd Division)
- | 11 -- 9 Boundary. 5 -- 7
- | | Our front line
- |----------------------------------+---------------------------------
- | | before battle
- | 10 (in our trenches) | 6 (in our trenches)
-
-The next diagram shows how the twelve Brigades were disposed while
-Phase A of the battle was in progress, and before the second Phase had
-begun:
-
- (3rd Division) | (2nd Division)
- 11 -- 9 | 5 -- 7
- Inter- Our front line
- --------------------------------Divisional---------------------------
- Boundary. before battle
- 10 (in our trenches) | 6 (in our trenches)
- (4th Division) | (5th Division)
- 4 -- 12 | 8 -- 15
- 1 | 14
-
-But the following diagram represents, in a similar manner, the order
-of disposition of the same Brigades, in the territory under our own
-occupation, immediately _prior_ to the battle:
-
- ^ (3rd Division) | (2nd Division)
- | | Our front line
- |-----------------------------------+---------------------------------
- | Direction Inter- before battle
- | of 10 (in our trenches) Divisional 6 (in our trenches)
- | enemy. (4th Division) Boundary. (5th Division)
- | 4 -- 12 | 8 -- 15
- | North 1 | 14 South
- | (3rd Division) | (2nd Division)
- | 11 -- 9 | 5 -- 7
-
-A little consideration will show that this apparently paradoxical
-procedure brought about the desired result of more nearly equalizing
-the stress upon the whole of the Infantry engaged, in point, at least,
-of the maximum distance to be traversed in the day's operations. But it
-produced something else, also, of much greater concern, which was that
-the scheme involved a leapfrogging of Divisions during the approach
-march into the battle, in addition to a second leapfrogging, to which
-I was already committed, to occur at a later stage during the battle
-itself.
-
-Thus I was confronted with the dilemma that the only scheme of
-disposition which promised success for the subsequent battle was
-also that scheme which made the greatest possible demands upon the
-intelligence of the troops and the sympathetic, loyal and efficient
-co-operation of my own Corps Staff, and those of the Commanders acting
-under me. Influenced once again by the confidence which I felt in my
-whole command, I did not hesitate to increase the complexity of the
-plans for the Infantry action by calling upon the four Divisions to
-execute a manoeuvre which is unique in the history of war, namely, a
-"double leapfrog," simultaneously carried out by two separate pairs of
-Divisions, operating side by side. The first leap was to take place
-during the approach to the battle, the second during the progress of
-the battle itself.
-
-This expedient, which I finally decided to adopt, in spite of the
-dangers involved in its complexity and in the absence of any precedent,
-was, however, as logical analysis and the event itself proved, the very
-keynote of the success of the entire project. The whole plan, thanks to
-an intelligent interpretation by all Commanders and Staffs concerned,
-worked like a well-oiled machine, with smoothness, precision and
-punctuality, and achieved to the fullest extent the advantages aimed at.
-
-On the one hand, the stress upon the troops was reduced to a minimum.
-By the reduction of physical fatigue, it conserved the energies
-of whole Divisions in a manner which permitted of their speedy
-re-employment in subsequent decisive operations. And on the other
-hand, by the great depth of penetration which it rendered possible, it
-ensured a victory which amounted to so crushing a blow to the enemy
-that its momentum hurled him into a retrograde movement, not only
-along the whole front under attack, but also for many miles on either
-flank. This recoil he was never able to arrest, as we followed up our
-victory by blow after blow delivered while he was still reeling from
-the effects of the first onslaught of August 8th.
-
-But, so far, I have written of the Infantry plan only; and much remains
-to be told of the simultaneous action designed to be taken by all the
-other arms, which rendered possible and emphasized the success of the
-Infantry. No one can rival me in my admiration for the transcendant
-military virtues of the Australian Infantryman, for his bravery, his
-battle discipline, his absolute reliability, his individual resource,
-his initiative and endurance. But I had formed the theory that the true
-role of the Infantry was not to expend itself upon heroic physical
-effort, nor to wither away under merciless machine-gun fire, nor to
-impale itself on hostile bayonets, nor to tear itself to pieces in
-hostile entanglements--(I am thinking of Pozieres and Stormy Trench and
-Bullecourt, and other bloody fields)--but, on the contrary, to advance
-under the maximum possible protection of the maximum possible array of
-mechanical resources, in the form of guns, machine guns, tanks, mortars
-and aeroplanes; to advance with as little impediment as possible; to
-be relieved as far as possible of the obligation to _fight_ their
-way forward; to march, resolutely, regardless of the din and tumult
-of battle, to the appointed goal; and there to hold and defend the
-territory gained; and to gather in the form of prisoners, guns and
-stores, the fruits of victory.
-
-It is my purpose, therefore, to emphasize particularly the extent to
-which this theory was realized in the battle under review, by the
-achievement of a great and decisive victory at a trifling cost. That
-result was due primarily to the very ample resources in mechanical
-aids which the foresight and confidence of the Fourth Army Commander,
-General Rawlinson, entrusted to me; but it was due partly, also, to the
-manner in which those resources were employed. And that is why I shall
-attempt to describe the remainder of the Corps plan.
-
-[Illustration: Tanks marching into Battle.]
-
-[Illustration: Morcourt Valley--the Australian attack swept across this
-on August 8th, 1918.]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-The battle plan (_continued_)
-
-
-Surprise has been, from time immemorial, one of the most potent weapons
-in the armoury of the tactician. It can be achieved not merely by
-doing that which the enemy least anticipates, but also by acting at
-a time when he least expects any action. It was a weapon which had
-been employed only rarely in the previous greater battles of this war.
-The offensive before Cambrai, planned by General Sir Julian Byng, and
-the battle of Hamel, were rare exceptions to our general procedure of
-heralding the approach of an offensive by feverish and obvious activity
-on our part, and by a long sustained preliminary bombardment of the
-enemy's defences, designed to destroy his works and impair his _moral_.
-
-The situation on the Fourth Army front, early in August, 1918, offered
-a rare opportunity for the employment of surprise tactics on the
-boldest scale. The incessant "nibbling" activities of the Australian
-troops during the preceding three months had been of such a consistent
-nature as to suggest that our resources were not equal to any greater
-effort upon such an extended front as we were then holding, from the
-Ancre down to and beyond Villers-Bretonneux. On the other hand, the
-passivity of the first French Army, to the south of the latter town,
-conveyed no suggestion of any offensive enterprise on the part of our
-Ally in this region.
-
-The problem, therefore, was to convert an extensive front from a state
-of passive defence to a state of complete preparedness for an attack on
-the largest scale, and to keep the enemy--who, as always, was alert and
-observant both from the ground and from the air--in complete ignorance
-of every portion of these extensive preparations, until the very moment
-when the battle was to burst upon him. It was, of course, a question
-not merely of deceiving the enemy troops in their trenches immediately
-opposed to us, but also of arousing in the minds of the German High
-Command no suspicions which might have prompted them to hold in a
-state of readiness, or to put into motion towards the threatened zone,
-any of the reserve Divisions forming part of their still considerable
-resources.
-
-The following memorandum, which was issued to the whole of the senior
-commanders in the Australian Corps on August 1st, gives in outline some
-of the measures adopted to this end:
-
-"SECRECY.
-
-"1. The first essential to success is the maintenance of secrecy.
-The means to be adopted are as follows:
-
- (i) No person is to be told or informed in any part or way until
- such time as the development of the plan demands action from him.
- This is the main principle and will be pursued throughout, down to
- the lowest formation.
-
- (ii) Divisional Commanders will work out their reliefs in such a
- way as will ensure that the troops in the line know nothing of
- the proposed operation until the last possible moment. This will
- apply in particular to any troops who may be employed in the area
- south of the AMIENS--VILLERS-BRETONNEUX railway.
-
-"2. In order to conceal the intention to carry out a large operation on
-this front the following plan has been adopted:
-
-"The Australian Corps has been relieved of one divisional sector by
-the Third Corps, and takes over a divisional sector from the French
-Corps. The object of this is to lead the enemy, and our own people,
-too, to believe that the action of the French in the SOISSONS salient
-has been so costly as to demand that further French troops had to be
-made available, and that this is the apparent cause of the extension of
-the Australian Corps front to the south.
-
-"3. (a) The idea is being circulated that the Canadian Corps is being
-brought to the south to take over the role of Reserve Corps at the
-junction of the British and French Armies in replacement of the 22nd
-Corps, which occupied that role until it was ordered to the CHAMPAGNE
-front. In order that the enemy may be deceived as to the destination
-of the Canadian Corps in the event of his discovering that it has been
-withdrawn from the ARRAS front, Canadian wireless personnel has been
-sent to the Second Army area,[11] where they have taken over certain
-wireless zones.
-
-"(b) To prevent the enemy from discovering the arrival of the Canadian
-Corps in this region, they will not take over from the 4th Australian
-Division until 'Y' night. This will necessitate a proportion of the
-troops of the Fourth Australian Division remaining in the line in this
-sector until 'Y' night. As the Fourth Australian Division will be
-required to participate in the attack it is proposed to distribute one
-brigade to hold the whole of the line from 'W' night onwards. This will
-enable the remaining two Brigades to be withdrawn, given a day or two's
-rest, and allow of their part in the operation being fully explained to
-them. The place of these two Brigades in rear of the line Brigade will
-be taken over by Canadian Divisions.
-
-"(c) In order to deceive our own troops as to the cause of the coming
-down here of the Canadians, a rumour is going abroad that the Canadian
-Corps is being brought down with the object of relieving the Australian
-Corps in the line. To most of the Australian Corps this would appear to
-be an obvious reason for their coming, as the idea has been mooted on
-former occasions. While it is not intended that this rumour should be
-promulgated, it is not desired that anyone should disclose the actual
-facts. This idea, together with the idea put forth in paragraph 3 (a),
-should do much to prevent the real facts from becoming known."[12]
-
-The references to "W," "X," "Y" and "Z" days and nights in the above
-memo, are to the successive days preceding Zero day--known briefly as
-"Z" day, on which the battle was to open. The actual _date_ of "Z"
-day was kept a close secret by the Army Commander and the three Corps
-Commanders concerned, until a few days before the actual date; while
-the actual moment of assault, or "Zero" hour, was not determined or
-made known until noon on the day preceding the battle, after a close
-study of the conditions of visibility before and after break of day, on
-the three preceding mornings.
-
-But these arrangements were directed only towards the prevention of
-a premature disclosure of our intention to attack to the enemy, to
-our own troops, and through them to the civilian public, and to enemy
-agents, whose presence among us had always to be reckoned with. It
-still remained to carry out our battle preparations in a manner which
-would preclude the possibility of detection by enemy aircraft, either
-through direct observation, or by the help of photography.
-
-Accordingly I issued orders that all movements of troops and of
-transport of all descriptions, should take place only during the
-hours of darkness, whether in the forward or in the rear areas; and
-in order to keep an effective control over the faithful execution of
-these difficult orders, I arranged for relays of "police" aeroplanes,
-furnished by our No. 3 Squadron, to fly continuously, by day, over
-the whole of the Corps area, in order to detect and report upon any
-observed unusual movement.
-
-At the same time, the normal work on the construction of new lines of
-defence, covering Amiens, in my rear areas, which had been continuously
-in progress for many weeks and was still far from complete, was to
-continue, with a full display of activity; so that the enemy should
-be unable to infer, from a stoppage of such works, any change in our
-attitude.
-
-Orders were also given to discourage the usual stream of officers who
-ordinarily visited our front trenches prior to an operation, and who
-often, thoughtlessly, made a great display of unusual activity, under
-the very noses of the enemy front line observers, by the flourishing
-of maps and field-glasses, and by bobbing up above our parapets
-to catch fleeting glimpses of the country to be fought over. Such
-reconnaissance, however desirable, was to be confined to a few senior
-Commanders and Staff Officers. All subordinates were to rely upon
-the very large number of admirable photographs, taken regularly from
-the air, both vertically and obliquely, by the indefatigable Corps
-Air Squadron. These served excellently as a substitute for visual
-observation from the ground.
-
-The prohibition against the movement of any transport in the daylight
-naturally very seriously hampered the freedom of action of the troops
-of all arms and services, but was felt in quite a special degree by the
-whole of the Artillery. Over 600 guns of all natures had to be dragged
-to and emplaced in their battle positions, and there camouflaged,
-each gun involving the concurrent movement of a number of associated
-vehicles. A full supply of ammunition had to be collected from
-railhead, distributed by mechanical transport to great main dumps, and
-thence taken by horsed vehicles for distribution to the numerous actual
-gun-pits.
-
-As the amount of ammunition to be held in readiness for the opening of
-the battle averaged 500 rounds per gun, it became necessary to handle
-a total of about 300,000 rounds of shells and a similar number of
-cartridges of all calibres, from 31/2 to 12 inches, not to mention fuses
-and primers, or the immense bulk and weight of infantry and machine-gun
-ammunition, bombs, flares, rockets, and the like, for the supply of all
-of which the artillery was equally responsible.[13] The great amount of
-movement involved in the handling and dumping of all these munitions,
-and the deterrent difficulties of carrying out all such work only
-during the short hours of darkness, must be left to the imagination.
-
-The artillery was, however, confronted, for the first time, with a
-difficulty of quite a different nature. In the previous years of the
-war every gun, _after_ being placed in its fighting pit or position,
-had to be carefully "registered," by firing a series of rounds at
-previously identified reference points, and noting the errors in line
-or range due to the instrumental error of the gun, which error varied
-with the gradual wearing-out of the gun barrel. By these means, battery
-commanders were enabled to compute the necessary corrections to be
-applied to any given gun, at any one time or place, so as to ensure
-that the gun would fire true to the task set.
-
-Such registration naturally involved, for a large number of guns, a
-very considerable volume of Artillery fire, the extent of which would
-speedily disclose to the enemy the presence of a largely increased mass
-of Artillery, and would inevitably lead him to the conclusion that
-some mischief was afoot. Fortunately, however, the rapid evolution
-during the war of scientific methods had by this juncture placed at my
-disposal a means of ascertaining the instrumental error of the guns
-on a testing ground located many miles behind the battle zone. This
-method was known as "calibration," and consisted of the firing of the
-gun through a series of wired screens, placed successively at known
-distances from the muzzle of the gun. The whole elements of the flight
-of the projectile could then be accurately determined by recording the
-intervals of time between its passage through the respective screens.
-From these data could be deduced the muzzle velocity, the jump, the
-droop and the lateral error of each gun.
-
-Simple and obvious as was the principle of such an experiment, the
-merit of the new process of calibration lay in the remarkable rapidity
-and accuracy with which the electric and photographic mechanism
-employed made the necessary delicate time observations, correct to
-small fractions of a second, and automatically deduced the mathematical
-results required. The calibration hut, in which this mechanism was
-housed, became one of the show spots to which visitors to the Corps
-area were taken to be overawed by the scientific methods of our gunners.
-
-In the early days of August the calibration range of the Australian
-Corps was a scene of feverish activity. All day long, battery after
-battery of guns could be seen route-marching to the testing ground,
-going through the performance of firing six rounds per gun, and then
-route-marching back again the same night to its allotted battle
-position. So rapid was the procedure that long before he had reached
-his destination the Battery Commander had received the full error sheet
-of every one of his guns, and by means of it was enabled to go into
-action whenever required without any previous registration whatever.
-This great advance in the art of gunnery contributed in the most direct
-manner to the result that when these 600 guns opened their tornado of
-fire upon the enemy at daybreak on August 8th, the very presence in
-this area of most of them remained totally unsuspected.
-
-The manner of the employment of the ponderous mass of Heavy Artillery
-at my disposal will be referred to later. The action of that portion of
-the Field Artillery which was to become mobile in the concluding phases
-of the battle has already been dealt with. It remains only to describe,
-in outline, the arrangements made for the normal barrage fire of the
-Field Artillery during the first phase.
-
-It has been my invariable practice to reduce the barrage plan to
-the simplest possible elements, avoiding in every direction the
-over-elaboration so frequently encountered. By following these
-principles not only is the actual preparatory work of the Artillery
-greatly reduced in bulk and simplified in quality, but also the
-liability to mistake and to erratic shooting of individual batteries or
-guns, and consequent risks of damage to our own Infantry, are greatly
-diminished. These advantages are bought at the small price of calling
-upon the Infantry to undertake, before the battle, such rectifications
-and adjustments of our front line as would accommodate themselves to
-a straight and simple barrage line. This is in sharp contrast to the
-much more usual procedure which prevailed (and persisted in other
-Corps to the end of the war) of complicating the barrage enormously
-in an attempt to make it conform to the tortuous configuration of our
-Infantry front line.
-
-For the present battle it was accordingly arranged that the barrage
-should open on a line which was _dead straight_ for the whole 7,000
-yards of our front, and the Infantry tape lines,[14] which were to mark
-the alignment of the Infantry at the moment of launching the assault,
-were to be laid exactly 200 yards in rear of this Artillery "start
-line." The barrage was to advance, in exactly parallel lines, 100 yards
-at a time, at equal rates along the whole frontage. These rates were
-100 yards every 3 minutes, for the first 24 minutes, and thereafter 100
-yards every 4 minutes, until the conclusion of the time-table at 143
-minutes after Zero. By such a simple plan every one of the 432 field
-guns engaged was given a task of uniform character.
-
-Great as was the care necessary to conceal all Artillery preparations,
-it required still greater thought and consideration to keep entirely
-secret the presence behind the battle front of some 160 Tanks, and
-particularly to conceal their approach march into the battle. To both
-combatants, the arrival of a Tank, or anything that could be mistaken
-on an air photograph for a Tank, had for long been regarded as a sure
-indication of coming trouble. And, therefore, imputing to the enemy the
-same keenness to detect, in good time, the presence of Tanks, and the
-same nervousness which we had been accustomed to feel when prisoners'
-tales of the coming into the war of enormous hordes of German monsters
-had been crystallized by the reports of some excited observer into a
-definite suspicion that the fateful hour had arrived, I considered
-it wise to repeat on a much elaborated scale all the precautions of
-secrecy first employed for this purpose at Hamel.
-
-It is quite easy to detect from an air photograph the broad, corrugated
-track made by a Tank, if the ground be soft and muddy enough to record
-such an impression. Consequently, Tanks were forbidden to move across
-ploughed fields or marshy land, and were confined to hard surface.
-They moved only in small bodies, and only at night, and were carefully
-stabled, during the daylight, in the midst of village ruins, or under
-the deep shade of woods and thickets. Thus, by daily stages, and by
-cautious bounds, each Tank or group of Tanks ultimately reached its
-appointed assembly ground, from which it was to make its last leap into
-the thick of the battle, where it would arrive precisely at Zero hour.
-
-But that last leap was just the whole difficulty. For the Tank is
-a noisy brute, and it was just as imperative to make him inaudible
-as to make him invisible. By a fortunate chance, the noise and buzz
-made by the powerful petrol engines of a Tank are so similar to
-those of the engines of a large-sized bombing plane, as for example
-of the Handley-Page type, especially if the latter be flying at a
-comparatively low altitude, that from a little distance off it is quite
-impossible to distinguish the one sound from the other.
-
-It was therefore possible to adopt the conjurer's trick of directing
-the special attention of the observer to those things which do not
-particularly matter, in order to distract his attention from other
-things which really do matter very much. In other words, a flight of
-high-power bombing planes was kept flying backwards and forwards over
-the battle front during the whole of that very hour, just before dawn,
-during which our 160 Tanks were loudly and fussily buzzing their way
-forward, along carefully reconnoitred routes, marked by special black
-and white tapes, across that last mile of country which brought them up
-level with the infantry at the precise moment when the great battle was
-ushered in by the belching forth of a volcano of Artillery fire.
-
-The subterfuge succeeded to perfection, as was obvious to observers and
-confirmed by the subsequent narratives of prisoners. The German trench
-garrisons and trench observers were fully occupied in listening to the
-hum of the bombing planes, in watching their threatened visitation for
-their customary "egg" dropping performances, in engaging them with
-rifle fire, and in holding themselves in readiness to duck for cover
-should they come too near. They never suspected for a moment that this
-was merely a new stratagem of "noise camouflage," and that the real
-danger was stalking steadily and relentlessly towards them over the
-whole front, upon the surface of the ground, instead of in the air.
-
-But the trick would not have succeeded so well, or would perhaps have
-failed altogether, if the employment of those planes had been confined
-to the morning of the battle. Such an unusual demonstration might have
-aroused vague suspicions sufficient to justify a "stand to arms" and
-a preparedness for some further activity on our part. And what we had
-most to fear was the danger of "giving the show away" in the last ten
-minutes. For it would have taken much less than that time for nervous
-German trench sentries, by the firing of signal rockets, to bring down
-upon our front line trenches, crowded as they were with expectant
-fighters, a murderous fire from the German Artillery.
-
-Consequently the puzzled enemy was treated to the spectacle of an
-early morning promenade by these same bombing planes on every morning,
-for an hour before dawn, during several mornings preceding the actual
-battle day. Doubtless the first morning's exhibition of such apparently
-aimless air activity in the darkness really startled him. After two
-or three repetitions, it merely earned his contempt. By the time
-the actual date arrived he treated it as negligible. All prisoners
-interrogated subsequently agreed that neither the presence nor the
-noisy approach of so mighty a phalanx of Tanks had been in the least
-suspected up to the very moment when they plunged into view out of the
-darkness, just as day was breaking.
-
-The force of Tanks placed at my disposal for the purposes of this
-battle comprised the 2nd, 8th and 13th Tank Battalions, commanded
-respectively by Lieut.-Colonels Bryce, Bingham and Lyon, all under the
-5th Tank Brigade, commanded by Brigadier-General Courage. All these
-Tanks were of the Mark V. type, as used at Hamel; but there were also
-attached to the same Brigade a Battalion of Mark V. (Star) Tanks, of
-still later design, under Lieut.-Colonel Ramsay-Fairfax, and also
-a full Company of 24 Carrying Tanks, under Major Partington. These
-Carrying Tanks were not employed in fighting, but were of wonderful
-utility in the rapid transport of stores of all descriptions across the
-battle zone; and in carrying the wounded out of the battle on their
-return journey. I am confident that each of these Tanks was capable of
-doing the work of at least 200 men, with an almost complete immunity
-from casualty.
-
-There were thus available to me 168 Tanks in all, and their
-dispositions have been already indicated in sufficient detail in
-Chapter V. It was a definite feature of the whole plan of battle that
-the combined Tank and Infantry tactics which had proved so successful
-in the Hamel operation, and which have been described in Chapter II.,
-were to be employed and exploited to their utmost. Each Tank became
-thereby definitely associated with a specified body of Infantry, and
-acted during the actual battle under the immediate orders of the
-Commander of that body: the working rule was "one Tank, one Company."
-
-To this was added the second working principle of "one Tank, one task,"
-which rules meant, in their practical application, that no individual
-Tank was to be relied upon to serve more than one body of Infantry, nor
-to carry out more than one phase of the battle. Elementary as this may
-sound, it involved this striking advantage that, in the event of any
-one Tank becoming disabled, its loss would impair no portion of the
-battle plan other than that fraction of it to which that Tank had been
-allotted.
-
-Thus, the whole of the Infantry operating in Phases B and C of the
-battle had each their own adequate equipment of Tanks, which would
-be certain to be available to them, even if the whole of the Tanks
-employed during Phase A had been knocked out. At the same time clear
-orders were issued, and due arrangements were made, that all Tanks
-which survived Phase A, and whose crews were not by then too exhausted,
-were to rally (during the 100 minutes' pause on the green line) in
-order to co-operate in the succeeding phases of the fight.
-
-There was still another Unit, coming under the jurisdiction of the Tank
-Corps, which proved of wonderful utility to me, and which deserved
-quite special mention. This was the 17th Armoured Car Battalion,
-organized into two companies of eight cars each. Each car carried one
-forward and one rear Hotchkiss gun. It was heavily armoured, and the
-crew operating the guns, as also the car driver, were protected from
-all except direct hits by Artillery. The cars had a speed of 20 miles
-per hour, either forwards or backwards. The Battalion was under the
-command of Lieut.-Colonel E. J. Carter, an officer of the British
-Cavalry. I allotted 12 cars to the use of the 5th Australian Division,
-under Major-General Hobbs, who would be likely to find specially useful
-employment for them, in scouring the network of roads beyond his final
-objective; and retained four cars in Corps reserve for a special
-reconnaissance enterprise.
-
-Full of promise of usefulness as were the speed and armament of these
-cars, they suffered from one serious disability. Their top hamper was
-so heavy compared to their light chassis that they could not be relied
-upon to travel without premature breakdown across country, or indeed
-on anything but moderately good roads. Now, such roads were certainly
-available, as was evident from aeroplane photographs, in the enemy's
-back country, after a zone for a mile or two immediately behind his
-front line was passed; but all the subsidiary roads in that zone had
-been practically obliterated by shell-craters, and even the great main
-road from Villers-Bretonneux to Saint Quentin, which is a Roman Road
-and substantially constructed throughout, was known to have been cut up
-and traversed by numerous trenches both on our side and on the enemy's
-side of "No Man's Land." There was also every expectation that the few
-remaining trees which flanked this great road would be felled by our
-bombardment, and some of them would surely fall across and obstruct the
-roadway.
-
-That road was, however, the only possible outlet into enemy country for
-the armoured cars, and I resolved upon a special programme, and the
-allotment of a special body of troops for its execution. The object
-was to ensure that the cars could be taken across the impracticable
-and obstructed stretch of roadway already described, and launched at
-the enemy at its eastern extremity, at the earliest possible moment of
-time. Then, before the numerous enemy Corps and Divisional Headquarters
-and all their rear organization had time to get clear intelligence of
-what was happening at the front, or to recover from the first shock of
-surprise, these Armoured Cars would fall upon them, and, travelling
-hither and thither at great speed, would spread death, destruction and
-confusion in all directions.
-
-A whole Battalion of Pioneers, and detachments of other technical
-troops, with an adequate amount of road-repairing material, were got
-ready, under the direct orders of my Chief Engineer, to carry out this
-special task. All trenches in that portion of the road lying within our
-own zone of occupation were bridged or filled in and all obstructions
-cleared away before the day of the battle. But as to the more distant
-stretch of the road, still in the hands of the enemy, elaborate
-preparations were made, by a careful and detailed distribution of tasks
-to small gangs of men, and by a fully worked-out time-table. The plan
-was that from the moment of the opening of the battle, this road repair
-work was to commence, and its advance was to synchronize with the
-advance of the Artillery barrage and Infantry skirmishing line.
-
-A pilot armoured car was to follow the working gangs in order to test
-the sufficiency of the repair work, and arrangements were made for
-sending back signals to the remainder of the cars, lying waiting in
-readiness in the shelter of Villers-Bretonneux. It was planned that the
-first two miles of road would, by these means, be cleared and repaired
-to a sufficient width, within four hours after the opening of the
-battle.
-
-I am tempted to anticipate the narrative of the battle by saying that
-the whole plan worked out with complete success to the last detail. The
-cars got through punctually to time, and the story of their subsequent
-adventures, as told later, reads like a romance. As indicating the
-importance which I attached to this little enterprise, which in
-magnitude was quite a small "side-show," but which in its results had
-the most far-reaching consequence, I reproduce below the full text
-(omitting merely formal portions) of one of the several orders issued
-by me on this subject:
-
- Australian Corps,
- 7th August, 1918.
-
- 1. The detachment of the 17th Armoured Car Battalion held in Corps
- Reserve (2 sections each of 2 cars), will be employed on the
- special duty of long distance reconnaissance on "Z" day.
-
- 2. These sections will be sent forward under the orders of the
- C.O., 17th Armoured Car Battalion, passing the green line as soon
- as practicable after Zero plus four hours, and proceeding eastward,
- following the lifts of our Heavy Artillery bombardment, so as to
- pass the blue line at or after Zero plus five hours.
-
- 3. The area to be reconnoitred lies in the bend of the Somme, north
- of the Villers-Bretonneux--Chaulnes Railway; but the old Somme
- battlefield lying N.E. of Chaulnes need not be entered.
-
- 4. Information is required as to presence, distribution and
- movement of enemy supporting and reserve troops, and his defensive
- organizations within this area.
-
- 5. While the primary function of this detachment is to reconnoitre
- and not to fight, except defensively, advantage should be taken of
- every opportunity to damage the enemy's telephonic and telegraphic
- communications.
-
- 6. The following information as to enemy organizations is thought
- to be reliable:
-
- Vauvillers Billets and Detraining point.
- Proyart Divisional H.Q. and billets.
- Chuignolles Divisional H.Q. and billets.
- Framerville Corps H.Q.
- Rainecourt Billets.
- Cappy Aerodrome and dumps.
- Foucaucourt Corps H.Q., dump, billets.
- Chaulnes Important railway junction.
- Ommiecourt Dumps.
- Fontaine Aerodrome, Div. H.Q. and dump.
-
-The Heavy Artillery of the Corps was divided, for this battle as
-normally, into two distinct groups, of which the one, or Bombardment
-Group, was to devote its energies to destructive attack, throughout the
-course of the battle, upon known enemy centres of resistance, suspected
-Headquarters, and telephone or telegraph exchanges, villages believed
-to be housing support and reserve troops, railway junctions and the
-like. The selection of all such targets depended upon a judicious
-choice of many tempting objectives disclosed by the very comprehensive
-records of the highly efficient Intelligence Officers belonging to my
-Heavy Artillery Headquarters. After that selection was made, all that
-remained was to draw up a time-table for the action of all bombardment
-guns which would ensure that they would lift off any given target just
-before our own Infantry would be likely to reach it, and then to apply
-their fire to a more distant locality.
-
-The second group of Heavy Guns was known as the Counter-battery Group,
-and was at all times under the direction of a special staff, especially
-skilled in all the scientific means at our disposal for determining the
-position and distribution of the enemy's Artillery, and in the methods
-and artifices for silencing or totally destroying it. Just as it was
-the special role of the Tanks to deal with the enemy machine guns, so
-it was the special role of our Counter-battery Artillery to deal with
-the enemy's field and heavy guns and howitzers. These--the guns and the
-machine guns--were the only things that troubled us; because, for the
-German soldier individually, our Australian infantryman is and always
-has been more than a match.
-
-Very special care was, therefore, devoted to the whole of the
-arrangements, first for carefully ascertaining beforehand the actual or
-probable position of every enemy gun that could be brought to bear on
-our Infantry, and then for allocating as many heavy guns as could be
-spared, each with a task appropriate to its range and hitting-power, to
-the destruction or suppression of the selected target. For it served
-the immediate purpose of eliminating the causes of molestation to our
-advancing Infantry equally well, whether the enemy gun was merely
-silenced by a sustained fire of shrapnel or high explosives which drove
-off the gun detachment, or by a flood of gas which compelled them to
-put on their gas masks, or whether it was actually destroyed by a
-direct hit and rendered permanently useless.
-
-The days before the battle were of supreme interest in this particular
-aspect. Each day I visited the Counter-battery Staff Officer, in his
-modest shanty, hidden away in the interior of a leafy wood, where
-in constant touch, by telephone, with all balloons, observers and
-sound-ranging stations, and surrounded by an imposing array of maps,
-studded with pins of many shapes and colours, he made his daily report
-to me of the enemy gun positions definitely identified or located, or
-found to have been vacated. And here again there was an opportunity for
-the display of a modest little stratagem. Having suspected or verified
-the fact that the enemy had altered the location of any given battery,
-leaving the empty gun pits as a tempting bait to us, fruitlessly to
-expend our energies and ammunition upon them--it would have been the
-worst of folly to prove to him that he had failed to fool us, by
-engaging his battery in its new position.
-
-On the contrary, we deliberately allowed ourselves to be fooled; and
-for several days before the great battle we intentionally committed
-the stupid error of methodically engaging all his empty gun positions.
-No doubt the German gunners laughed consumedly as they watched, from a
-safe distance, our wasted efforts; but they did not, doubtless, laugh
-quite so heartily when at dawn on the great day, the whole weight of
-our attack from over a hundred of my heaviest Counter-battery guns
-fells upon them in the new positions, which they believed that we had
-failed to detect.
-
-The Intelligence Service of the Corps was an extensive and highly
-organized department, whose jurisdiction extended throughout all the
-Divisions, Brigades and Battalions. Its routine work comprised the
-collection and collation of the daily flow of information from a
-large staff of observers in the forward zone, from the interrogation
-of prisoners, from the examination of documents and maps, and from
-neighbouring Corps and Armies. Before and during battle, however, a
-greatly added burden fell upon the shoulders of the Intelligence Staff.
-
-Closely associated with this branch of the Staff work were two
-activities of quite special interest. The Australian Corps organized a
-Topographical Section, manned by expert draftsmen and lithographers,
-who compiled and printed all the maps required throughout the whole
-Corps, and it was their business to keep all battle maps, barrage maps
-and topographical data recorded and corrected up to date. This alone
-proved a heavy task when pace had to be kept with a rapid advance. At
-such times the maps prepared on one day became obsolete two or three
-days later.
-
-[Illustration: Dug-outs at Froissy Beacon--being "mopped up" during
-battle.]
-
-[Illustration: Peronne--barricade in main street.]
-
-The issue of such maps was not confined to Commanders and Staffs. For
-all important operations, large numbers of handy sectional maps were
-struck off, so that they could be placed in the hands even of the
-subordinate officers and non-commissioned officers. These maps not only
-enabled the most junior leaders to study their objectives and tasks
-in detail before every battle, but also became a convenient vehicle
-for sending back reports as to the positions reached or occupied by
-front-line troops or detached parties. On occasions as many as five
-thousand of such maps would be struck off for the use of the troops, in
-a single operation.
-
-There was also a branch of the Intelligence Staff attached to the
-No. 3 Australian Air Squadron. Its special business was to print and
-distribute large numbers of photographs, both vertical and oblique,
-taken from the air over the territory to be captured--showing trenches,
-wire, roads, hedges and many other features of paramount interest to
-the troops. Thousands of such photographs were distributed before every
-battle.
-
-The important considerations, in regard both to maps and photographs,
-were that on the one hand, they were of priceless value to all who
-understood how to read and use them, and on the other hand, the event
-proved that their issue was in no sense labour in vain, for the keen
-interest taken, even by the private soldiers, in these facilities
-contributed powerfully to the success and precision with which all
-battle orders were carried out, and this more than repaid us for the
-additional trouble involved. It was inspiriting to me to see, on the
-eve of every great battle, as I made my round of the troops, numerous
-small groups of men gathered around their sergeant or corporal,
-eagerly discussing these maps and the photographs and the things they
-disclosed, the lie of the land, the wire, the trenches, the probable
-machine-gun posts, the dug-outs and the suspected enemy strong points.
-
-My account of the details prepared for the battle of August 8th is not
-nearly complete; but the demands of space forbid any more informative
-reference to numerous other essential ingredients of the plan than a
-mere recital of some of them. Thus, for example, it was necessary to
-decide the action of all Machine Guns, both those used collectively
-under Corps control, and those left to be handled by the Divisions;
-the employment of Smoke Tactics, by the use of smoke screens created
-both by mortars from the ground and by phosphorus bombs dropped from
-the air; the use to be made of all the technical troops (Engineers
-and Pioneers) in bridging, road and railway repairs and field
-fortifications; the arrangements for the medical evacuation of the
-wounded, and for the collection and safe-keeping of the anticipated
-haul of prisoners, the synchronization of watches throughout the whole
-command, so that action should occur punctually at a common clock time;
-and last, but not least, the establishment of the machinery of liaison
-internally between all the numerous formations of the Australian Corps,
-and also externally with my flank Corps, the Canadians, under Currie,
-on my right, and the British Third Corps, under Butler, on my left.
-
-Such, in outline, were my battle plans and my preparations for what I
-hoped would prove an operation of decisive influence upon the future
-of the campaign. The immediate results, which could be estimated on
-the spot and at the time, and the admissions of Ludendorff, which came
-to light only many months afterwards, combine to show that I was not
-mistaken.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[11] This was in Flanders and Belgium.
-
-[12] The secret was, indeed, so well kept, and the "camouflage" stories
-circulated proved so effective, that the King of the Belgians forwarded
-a strong protest to Marshal Foch because the Canadians were about to
-deliver an attack in his country, without his having been consulted
-or made aware of the plans; and the Canadian Headquarters in London
-complained to the War Office that the Canadian Forces were being
-divided, and were being sent by detachments to different parts of the
-front, instead of being always kept together as the Canadian Government
-desired. It is said that even Mr. Lloyd George knew nothing of the
-intention to attack until late on the day before the battle.
-
-[13] The weight of supplies of all kinds exceeded 10,000 tons.
-
-[14] See Chapter XIII.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE CHASE BEGINS
-
-
-The preliminary movements of Divisions were duly carried out without
-special difficulty. The Fifth Australian Division was relieved on
-August 1st by a Division of the Third Corps, in that part of the Corps
-front which lay north of the Somme, and passed into Corps Reserve, in a
-rear area, there to undergo training with Tanks, and to prepare itself
-for the work which it had to do.
-
-The Fourth Australian Division, from Corps Reserve, took over the
-French front, as far south as the Amiens--Roye road on August 2nd, and
-on the next night took over from the Second Australian Division all
-that part of its front which lay south of the railway, thus disposing
-itself upon what was ultimately to become the battle front of the
-Canadian Corps.
-
-On the same night, the Second and Third Divisions, who had thus been
-left in sole occupation of the sector which was to be the Australian
-Corps battle front, carried out a readjustment of their own mutual
-boundary, which would place each of these two Divisions upon its own
-proper battle front.
-
-On the night of August 4th, the Second and Third Divisions rearranged
-their defensive dispositions so that each of them deployed only a
-single Brigade for the passive defence of its front, and withdrew to
-its rear area its remaining two Brigades, who were thus afforded three
-clear days to complete their internal preparations.
-
-The Canadian Corps commenced to arrive, and on August 4th two Canadian
-Brigades relieved two Brigades of the Fourth Division, thereby
-releasing them so that they also might commence to prepare for the
-battle. It was originally intended that the last Brigade of the Fourth
-Division should also be relieved by Canadians on August 6th, when
-an untoward incident happened, which caused considerable alarm and
-speculation; and it led to a modification of this part of the plan.
-
-The 13th Australian Brigade (of the Fourth Division) was on August 4th
-spread out upon a front of over six thousand yards. It had no option
-but to leave the greater part of the front-line trenches unoccupied,
-and to defend its area with a series of small, but isolated, posts.
-On that night, one of these posts, in the vicinity of the road to
-Roye,[15] was raided by the enemy, and the whole of its occupants,
-comprising a sergeant and four or five men, were surrounded and taken
-prisoner.
-
-It was an unusual display of enterprise on the part of the enemy, at
-this point of time and in this locality. Whether it had been inspired
-by sneering criticisms from behind his line of the nature which have
-been quoted, or whether signs of unusual movement or a changed attitude
-on the part of our trench garrison had instigated a suspicion that
-something was happening which required investigation, could only be
-surmised. But the fact remained that five Australians had been taken,
-at a place several miles south of the southernmost point hitherto
-occupied by "the English."
-
-The side-stepping of the Australian Corps southwards had thereby become
-known to the enemy, and it was necessary to estimate the deductions
-which he would be likely to draw from that discovery. Much depended
-upon the behaviour of these prisoners. Would they talk? and, if so,
-what did they know? That Australian captives would not volunteer
-information likely to imperil the lives of their comrades, might be
-taken for granted, but German Intelligence Officers had means at their
-disposal to draw from prisoners, unwittingly, anything they might know.
-
-We could only hope, under the circumstances, that these men really did
-know nothing of our intention to attack; and that, if they had become
-aware of the presence of Canadian troops in the rear areas, they would
-believe the story which we had sedulously spread, that the Canadians
-were merely coming to relieve the Australian Corps, so that it might
-have a long rest after its heroic labours.
-
-Not many weeks afterwards it was my good fortune to capture a German
-Headquarters, in which were found Intelligence Reports containing a
-narrative of this very incident. The importance of the capture of these
-men had been recognized, and they had been taken far behind the lines
-for an exhaustive examination. But, despite all efforts of the German
-Intelligence Staff, they had refused to disclose anything whatever but
-their names and units--which they were bound to do under the rules
-of war. The report went on to praise their soldierly bearing and
-loyal reticence, and held up these brave Australians as a model to be
-followed by their own men, adding that such a demeanour could only earn
-the respect of an enemy.
-
-The alarm which this untoward happening created on our side of the line
-led to a determination to redouble our precautions. The Army Commander
-proposed, and I agreed, that the relief of the 13th Brigade by
-Canadians, _prior_ to the eve of the battle, was out of the question,
-as being too risky. It was decided that the 13th Brigade must remain in
-the line until the very last.
-
-This decision deprived General Maclagan of one of his three Brigades,
-and as it would be asking too much of the Fourth Division to carry out
-the role which had been allotted to it in the battle, with only two
-Brigades, I decided that the only thing to be done was to transfer to
-the Fourth Division, temporarily, one of the Brigades of the First
-Division, which was to arrive from the north in the course of the next
-three days.
-
-Urgent telegrams were therefore despatched to accelerate the arrival
-of one of the Brigades of the First Division. In due course the First
-Australian Brigade (Mackay) arrived by four special trains on the
-night of August 6th, in sufficient time to enable it to take its place
-in General Maclagan's order of battle, in substitution for the 13th
-Brigade. The 13th Brigade was destined to have some further stirring
-adventures before it again joined its own Division.
-
-The day preceding the great battle arrived all too soon. The prospect
-of an advance had sent a thrill through all ranks and expectation
-became tense. The use of the telephone had been ordered to be
-restricted, especially in the forward areas; for it was known that the
-enemy was in possession of listening apparatus, similar to our own, by
-which conversations on the telephone could be tapped, and unguarded
-references to the impending operations could be overheard.
-
-Final inspections had, therefore, to be made, and final injunctions
-administered, by Commanders and Staffs traversing long distances over
-the extensive Corps area by motor car and horse, and even on foot. A
-strange and ominous quiet pervaded the scene; it was only when the
-explosion of a stray enemy shell would cause hundreds of heads to peer
-out from trenches, gun-pits and underground shelters, that one became
-aware that the whole country was really packed thick with a teeming
-population carefully hidden away.
-
-Later in the afternoon of that last day came another note of alarm. To
-the Fourth and Fifth Australian Divisions had been allotted eighteen
-Store and Carrying Tanks. These had been brought the night before,
-into a small plantation lying about half a mile to the north of
-Villers-Bretonneux, loaded to their utmost capacity with battle stores
-of all descriptions: reserves of food and water, rifle ammunition, and
-a large reserve of Stokes Mortar bombs; also considerable supplies of
-petrol, to satisfy the ravenous appetites of the Tanks themselves.
-
-This locality suddenly became the object of the closest attention by
-the enemy's Artillery. He began to deluge it with such a volume of fire
-that in less than half an hour a great conflagration had been started,
-which did not subside until fifteen of the Tanks and all their valuable
-cargo had been reduced to irretrievable ruin.
-
-Had some unusually keen enemy observer perceived the presence of
-Tanks in our area, and would that knowledge have disclosed to him
-our jealously guarded secret? Fortunately, my Artillery Commander,
-Brigadier-General Coxen, making his last rounds of the Battery
-positions, was an eye-witness of the whole occurrence, and was able
-to reassure me. A chance shell--the last of a dozen fired entirely at
-random into our area--fell into the very centre of this group of Tanks,
-and set fire to some of the petrol. The resulting cloud of smoke became
-a signal to the enemy that something was burning which our men would
-probably attempt to salve; and in consonance with an entirely correct
-Artillery procedure, he at once concentrated a heavy fire upon the spot.
-
-That incident is typical of the perturbations through which all
-responsible Commanders have to pass on such occasions. The occurrence
-was explained as accidental, and implied no premature discovery by the
-enemy. Nothing remained but to repair the damage, and make special
-arrangements to replenish the Stores which these Divisions had lost.
-
-On the forenoon of the day before the battle, the following message was
-promulgated to all the troops:
-
- Corps Headquarters,
- August 7th, 1918.
-
- TO THE SOLDIERS OF THE AUSTRALIAN ARMY CORPS.
-
- For the first time in the history of this Corps, all five
- Australian Divisions will to-morrow engage in the largest and most
- important battle operation ever undertaken by the Corps.
-
- They will be supported by an exceptionally powerful Artillery, and
- by Tanks and Aeroplanes on a scale never previously attempted. The
- full resources of our sister Dominion, the Canadian Corps, will
- also operate on our right, while two British Divisions will guard
- our left flank.
-
- The many successful offensives which the Brigades and Battalions
- of this Corps have so brilliantly executed during the past four
- months have been but the prelude to, and the preparation for, this
- greatest and culminating effort.
-
- Because of the completeness of our plans and dispositions, of the
- magnitude of the operations, of the number of troops employed, and
- of the depth to which we intend to overrun the enemy's positions,
- this battle will be one of the most memorable of the whole war;
- and there can be no doubt that, by capturing our objectives, we
- shall inflict blows upon the enemy which will make him stagger, and
- will bring the end appreciably nearer.
-
- I entertain no sort of doubt that every Australian soldier will
- worthily rise to so great an occasion, and that every man, imbued
- with the spirit of victory, will, in spite of every difficulty
- that may confront him, be animated by no other resolve than grim
- determination to see through to a clean finish, whatever his task
- may be.
-
- The work to be done to-morrow will perhaps make heavy demands upon
- the endurance and staying powers of many of you; but I am confident
- that, in spite of excitement, fatigue, and physical strain, every
- man will carry on to the utmost of his powers until his goal is
- won; for the sake of AUSTRALIA, the Empire and our cause.
-
- I earnestly wish every soldier of the Corps the best of good
- fortune, and a glorious and decisive victory, the story of which
- will re-echo throughout the world, and will live for ever in the
- history of our home land.
-
- JOHN MONASH,
- Lieut.-General.
- Cmdg. Australian Corps.
-
-Not many days afterwards a copy of this order fell into the hands
-of the enemy, and the use he tried to make of it, to his own grave
-discomfiture, as the event proved, is an interesting story which will
-be told in due course.
-
-Zero hour was fixed for twenty minutes past four, on the morning
-of August 8th. It needs a pen more facile than I can command to
-describe, and an imagination more vivid to realize the stupendous
-import of the last ten minutes. In black darkness, a hundred thousand
-infantry, deployed over twelve miles of front, are standing grimly,
-silently, expectantly, in readiness to advance, or are already crawling
-stealthily forward to get within eighty yards of the line on which the
-barrage will fall; all feel to make sure that their bayonets are firmly
-locked, or to set their steel helmets firmly on their heads; Company
-and Platoon Commanders, their whistles ready to hand, are nervously
-glancing at their luminous watches, waiting for minute after minute
-to go by--and giving a last look over their commands--ensuring that
-their runners are by their sides, their observers alert, and that the
-officers detailed to control direction have their compasses set and
-ready. Carrying parties shoulder their burdens, and adjust the straps;
-pioneers grasp their picks and shovels; engineers take up their stores
-of explosives and primers and fuses; machine and Lewis gunners whisper
-for the last time to the carriers of their magazines and belt boxes
-to be sure and follow up. The Stokes Mortar carrier slings his heavy
-load, and his loading numbers fumble to see that their haversacks of
-cartridges are handy. Overhead drone the aeroplanes, and from the
-rear, in swelling chorus, the buzzing and clamour of the Tanks grows
-every moment louder and louder. Scores of telegraph operators sit by
-their instruments with their message forms and registers ready to
-hand, bracing themselves for the rush of signal traffic which will set
-in a few moments later; dozens of Staff Officers spread their maps
-in readiness, to record with coloured pencils the stream of expected
-information. In hundreds of pits, the guns are already run up, loaded
-and laid on their opening lines of fire; the sergeant is checking the
-range for the last time; the layer stands silently with the lanyard in
-his hand. The section officer, watch on wrist, counts the last seconds:
-"A minute to go"--"Thirty seconds"--"Ten seconds"--"Fire."
-
-And, suddenly, with a mighty roar, more than a thousand guns begin
-the symphony. A great illumination lights up the Eastern horizon;
-and instantly the whole complex organization, extending far back to
-areas almost beyond earshot of the guns, begins to move forward; every
-man, every unit, every vehicle and every Tank on their appointed
-tasks and to their designated goals; sweeping onward relentlessly and
-irresistibly. Viewed from a high vantage point and in the glimmer of
-the breaking day, a great Artillery barrage surely surpasses in dynamic
-splendour any other manifestation of collective human effort.
-
-The Artillery barrage dominates the battle, and the landscape. The
-field is speedily covered with a cloak of dust, and smoke and spume,
-making impossible any detailed observation, at the time, of the course
-of the battle as a whole. The story can only be indifferently pieced
-together, long after, by an attempted compilation of the reports of
-a hundred different participants, whose narratives are usually much
-impaired by personal bias, by the nervous excitement of the moment, and
-by an all too limited range of vision. That is why no comprehensive
-account yet exists of some of the major battles of the war, and why
-those partial narratives hitherto produced are so often in conflict.
-
-In so great a battle as this, only the broad facts and tangible results
-can be placed on record without danger of controversy. The whole
-immense operation proceeded according to plan in every detail, with a
-single exception, to which I must specially refer later on. The first
-phase, controlled as it was by the barrage time-table, necessarily
-ended punctually, and with the whole of the green line objective in our
-hands. This success gave us possession of nearly all the enemy's guns,
-so that his artillery retaliation speedily died down.
-
-The captures in this phase were considerable, and few of the garrisons
-of the enemy's forward offensive zone escaped destruction or capture.
-The Second and Third Divisions had a comparative "walk over," and they
-had come to a halt, with their tasks completed, before 7 a.m.
-
-The "open warfare" phase commenced at twenty minutes past eight,
-and both the red and the blue lines were captured in succession
-half-an-hour ahead of scheduled time. This capture covered the whole
-length of my front except the extreme left, where a half expected
-difficulty arose, but one which exercised no influence upon the day's
-success.
-
-The Canadians, on my right, had a similar story to tell; they had
-driven far into the enemy's defences, exactly as planned. In spite of
-the difficulties of observation, the recurrence of a ground mist of the
-same nature as we had experienced at Hamel, and the long distances over
-which messages and reports had to travel--the stream of information
-which reached me, by telegraph, telephone, pigeon and aeroplane was so
-full and ample that I was not left for a moment out of touch with the
-situation.
-
-The "inwards" messages are, naturally, far too voluminous for
-reproduction; but a brief selection from the many "outwards" messages
-telegraphed during that day to the Fourth Army Headquarters, and which,
-on a point of responsibility, I made it an invariable rule to draft
-myself, will give some indication of the course of events as they
-became known:
-
- _Sent at 7 a.m._: "Everything going well at 6.45 a.m. Heavy ground
- mist facilitating our advance, but delaying information. Infantry
- and Tanks got away punctually. Our attack was a complete surprise.
- Gailly Village and Accroche Wood captured. Enemy artillery has
- ceased along my whole front. Flanks Corps apparently doing well."
-
- _Sent at 8.30 a.m._: "Although not definitely confirmed, no doubt
- that our first objective green line captured along whole Corps
- front including Gailly, Warfusee, Lamotte and whole Cerisy Valley.
- Many guns and prisoners taken. Infantry and Artillery for second
- phase moving up to green line."
-
- _Sent at 10.55 a.m._: "Fifteenth Battalion has captured Cerisy with
- 300 prisoners. Advance to red line going well."
-
- _Sent at 11.10 a.m._: "Have taken Morcourt and Bayonvillers and
- many additional prisoners and guns. We are nearing our second
- objective and have reached it in places. My Cavalry Brigade has
- passed across our red line. We are now advancing to our final
- objective blue line."
-
- _Sent at 12.15 p.m._: "Hobbs has captured Harbonnieres and reached
- blue line final objective on his whole front."
-
- _Sent at 1.15 p.m._: "Australian flag hoisted over Harbonnieres
- at midday to-day. Should be glad if Chief would cable this to our
- Governor-General on behalf of Australian Corps."
-
- _Sent at 2.5 p.m._: "Total Australian casualties through dressing
- stations up to 12 noon under 600. Prisoners actually counted exceed
- 4,000. Many more coming in."
-
- _Sent at 4.40 p.m._: "Captured enemy Corps H.Q. near Framerville
- shortly after noon to-day." (This was the 51st German Corps).
-
- _Sent at 8 p.m._: "Corps captures will greatly exceed 6,000
- prisoners, 100 guns, including heavy and railway guns, thousands of
- machine guns, a railway train, and hundreds of vehicles and teams
- of regimental transport. Total casualties for whole Corps will not
- exceed 1,200."
-
-The vital information, which it is imperative for the Corps Commander
-to have accurately and rapidly delivered throughout the course of a
-battle, is that relating to the actual position, at any given moment
-of time, of our front line troops; showing the locations which they
-have reached, and whether they are stationary, advancing or retiring.
-For it has to be remembered that the whole Artillery resources of the
-Corps were pooled and kept under his own hand; and it was imperative
-that any changes in the Artillery action or employment must be quickly
-made, so as to extend the utmost help to any Infantry which might get
-into difficulties.
-
-Thus, for example, the failure of any body of Infantry to enter and
-pass beyond a wood or a village, would be a sure indication that
-such locality was still held in strength by the enemy, and it would
-be appropriate to "switch" Artillery fire upon it, in order to drive
-him out. But such a proceeding would be anything but prudent if the
-information on which such action was to be based were already an hour
-old.
-
-Transmission of messages from the front line troops to the
-nearest telephone terminal is usually slow and uncertain, and the
-retransmission of such messages, in succession, by Battalions,
-Brigades and Divisions only prolongs the delay. The normal process is
-in consequence far too dilatory for the exigencies of actual battle
-control.
-
-A vastly superior method had therefore to be devised, and recourse
-was had to the use of aeroplanes. The No. 3 Australian Squadron soon
-acquired great proficiency in this work. They were equipped with
-two-seater planes, carrying both pilot and observer, and the work was
-called "Contact Patrol."
-
-The "plane" flying quite low, usually at not more than 500 feet, the
-observer would mark down by conventional signs on a map the actual
-positions of our Infantry, of enemy Infantry or other facts of prime
-importance, and he often had time to scribble a few informative notes
-also. The "plane" then flew back at top speed to Corps H.Q., and the
-map, with or without an added report, was dropped in the middle of an
-adjacent field, wrapped in a weighted streamer of many colours. It was
-then brought by cyclists into the Staff Office.
-
-Relays of Contact planes were on such service all day on every battle
-day, and although it was a hazardous duty few planes were lost. The
-total time which elapsed between the making of the observation at the
-front line and the arrival of the information in the hands of the Corps
-Staff was seldom more than ten minutes.
-
-There can be no doubt that the whole operation was a complete surprise
-both to the troops opposed to us and to the German High Command.
-It became abundantly clear, in the following days, that no proper
-arrangements existed for rapidly reinforcing this part of the front in
-the event of an attack by us, but that these had to be extemporized
-after the event. This discovery points to the conclusion that the
-enemy had once again come to regard the British Army as a negligible
-quantity, a mistake for which he paid an even heavier price than when
-he made it in the early days of the war.
-
-As an indication that even the Divisions in the line whose duty it
-primarily was to know, had no suspicions of an impending attack, comes
-the story of a German medical officer who was captured in his pyjamas
-in Warfusee village, and who confessed that being awakened by our
-bombardment and thinking it was merely a raid, he left his dug-out to
-see what was afoot, and thought he must be still dreaming when he saw
-our Pioneers a few hundred feet away, busily at work repairing the main
-road.
-
-There was only one blemish in the whole day's operations. Not serious
-in relation to the whole, it nevertheless gravely hampered the work
-of the left Brigade of the Fourth Division. In short, the Third Corps
-Infantry failed to reach their ultimate objective line, and the enemy
-remained in possession of the Chipilly spur and of all the advantages
-which that possession conferred upon him.
-
-The advance of my left flank, from the green to the red line, along the
-margin of the plateau bordering the Somme, was left exposed to his full
-view, while the river valley itself remained under the domination of
-his rifle fire, at quite moderate ranges. But worse than all, a battery
-of his Field Artillery emplaced just above the village of Chipilly
-remained in action, and one after another, six of the nine Tanks which
-had been allotted to the 4th Brigade were put out of action by direct
-hits from these guns.
-
-The possibility was one which had been considered and measures to meet
-it were promptly taken. Maclagan, whose right Brigade in due course
-reached the blue line according to programme, making in its progress a
-splendid haul of prisoners and guns, took immediate steps to "refuse"
-his left flank, _i.e._, to bend it back towards Morcourt, and to
-establish, with a reserve battalion, a flank defence along the river,
-facing north from Cerisy to Morcourt.
-
-Both these villages were, however, successfully captured, and "mopped
-up," which meant that all the enemy and machine guns lurking in them
-were accounted for. But the river valley was not captured, and became,
-until the situation was ultimately cleared up, a kind of No Man's Land
-between the enemy still holding the Chipilly spur on the north, and the
-Fourth Division on the south of the river.
-
-The ultimate conquest of the Chipilly Bend forms no part of that
-day's story. What were the reasons for the failure of the Third Corps
-to complete its allotted task may have been the subject of internal
-inquiry, but the result of any such was not made known. The official
-report for the day was to the effect that the enemy on this front
-had resisted strongly, that fighting had been fierce, and that no
-progress could be made. But one is compelled to recognize that
-such language was often an euphemistic method of describing faulty
-Staff co-ordination, or faulty local leadership. There would be no
-justification, however, for questioning the bravery of the troops
-themselves.
-
-It has already been foreshadowed that the experiences on that day of
-the contingent of sixteen Armoured Motor-cars under Lieutenant-Colonel
-Carter would form sensational reading, and the story of August 8th
-would not be complete without at least a brief reference to their
-exploits.
-
-It was nearly midnight when Carter, with a Staff Officer, got back to
-Corps H.Q. to render their report. They were scarcely recognizable,
-covered as they were from head to feet, with grime and grease. They had
-had a busy time. The substance of what they had to tell was taken down
-at the time almost verbatim, and reads as follows:
-
- "Got Armoured Cars through to Warfusee-Abancourt. When we reached
- the other side of No Man's Land we found that the road was good
- but a number of trees (large and small) had been shot down and
- lay right across it in places. Obstacles removed by chopping up
- the smaller trees and hauling off the big ones by means of a
- Tank. Pioneers helped us to clear the road all the way down. We
- did not come up to our advancing troops until they were almost
- near the Red Line. When we got past our leading Infantry we came
- upon quite a number of Huns and dealt with them. Had then to wait
- a little on account of our barrage, but went through a light
- barrage. When we got to Blue Line we detached three sections to
- run down to Framerville. When they got there they found all the
- Boche horse transport and many lorries drawn up in the main road
- ready to move off. Head of column tried to bolt in one direction
- and other vehicles in another. Complete confusion. Our men killed
- the lot (using 3,000 rounds) and left them there; four Staff
- Officers on horseback shot also. The cars then ran down to the
- east side of Harbonnieres, on the south-east road to Vauvillers,
- and met there a number of steam wagons; fired into their boilers
- causing an impassable block. Had a lot of good shooting around
- Vauvillers. Then came back to main road. Two sections of cars went
- on to Foucaucourt and came in contact with a Boche gun in a wood
- north-east of Foucaucourt. This gun blew the wheels off one car and
- also hit three others. However, three of the cars were got away.
- Two other cars went to Proyart and found a lot of troops billeted
- there having lunch in the houses. Our cars shot through the windows
- into the houses, killing quite a lot of the enemy. Another section
- went towards Chuignolles and found it full of German soldiers.
- Our cars shot them. Found rest billets and old trenches also with
- troops in them. Engaged them. Had quite a battle there. Extent of
- damage not known, but considerable. Cars then came back to main
- road. We were then well in advance of Blue Line. Everything was now
- perfectly quiet--no shell-fire of any kind.
-
- "I went a quarter of a mile beyond La Flaque. There was a big dump
- there, and Huns kept continually coming out and surrendering, and
- we brought quite a lot of them back as prisoners. It was then
- about 10.30 a.m. A party of Hun prisoners was detailed to tow back
- my disabled car. I saw no sign of any wired system anywhere. Old
- overgrown trenches but no organized trench system. I proceeded to
- some rising ground near Framerville. Did not go into Framerville,
- but could see that the roofs of the houses were intact. Saw no
- trace of any organized system of defence of any kind and no troops.
- My people saw no formed bodies of troops of any kind during the day
- coming towards us, but very large numbers of fugitives hastening in
- the opposite direction. Engaged as many of them as could be reached
- from the roads. I saw, from the hill, open country with a certain
- amount of vegetation on it."
-
-The consternation and disorganization caused by the sudden onslaught of
-these cars, at places fully ten miles behind the enemy's front line of
-that morning, may be left to the imagination. It was a feat of daring
-and resolute performance, which deserves to be remembered.
-
-[Illustration: The Burning Villages--east of Peronne.]
-
-[Illustration: Dummy Tank Manufacture.]
-
-Throughout the whole day, surrenders by the enemy, particularly of
-troops in rear or reserve positions, were on a wholesale scale. The
-total number of live prisoners actually counted up to nightfall in
-the Divisional and Corps Prisoner-of-War Cages exceeded 8,000 and the
-Canadians had gathered in at least as many more.
-
-The Australian Corps also captured 173 guns capable of being hauled
-away, not counting those which had been blown to pieces. These captures
-included two "railway" guns, one of 9-inch and the other of 11.2-inch
-bore. The latter was an imposing affair. The gun itself rested on
-two great bogie carriages, each on eight axles; it was provided
-with a whole train of railway trucks fitted some to carry its giant
-ammunition, others as workshops, and others as living quarters for the
-gun detachment. The outfit was completed by a locomotive to haul the
-gun forward to its daily task of shelling Amiens, and hauling it back
-to its garage when its ugly work was done.
-
-The captures of machine guns and of trench mortars of all types and
-sizes were on so extensive a scale that no attempt was ever made to
-make even an approximate count of them. They were ultimately collected
-into numerous dumps, and German prisoners were employed for many weeks
-in cleaning and oiling them for transport to Australia as trophies of
-war.
-
-But the booty comprised a large and varied assortment of many other
-kinds of warlike stores. The huge dumps of engineering material at
-Rosieres and La Flaque served all the needs of the Corps for the
-remainder of the war. There were horses, wagons, lorries and tractors
-by the hundred, including field searchlights, mobile pharmacies, motor
-ambulances, travelling kitchens, mess carts, limbers, and ammunition
-wagons, and there were literally hundreds of thousands of rounds of
-artillery ammunition scattered all over the captured territory in dumps
-both large and small.
-
-For the next two days all roads leading from the battle area back
-towards the Army Cage at Poulainville, where railway trains were
-waiting to receive them, were congested with column after column of
-German prisoners, roughly organized into companies--tangible evidences
-to the civilians of the district, as to our own troops, that a great
-victory had been won.
-
-The tactical value of the victory was immense, and has never yet been
-fully appreciated by the public of the Empire, perhaps because our
-censorship at the time strove to conceal the intention to follow it up
-immediately with further attacks. But no better testimony is needed
-than that of Ludendorff himself, who calls it Germany's "black day,"
-after which he himself gave up all hope of a German victory.
-
-Ludendorff in his "Memoirs," republished in the _Times_ of August 22nd,
-1919, writes:
-
- "August 8th was the black day of the German Army in the history
- of the war. This was the worst experience I had to go through....
- Early on August 8th, in a dense fog that had been rendered still
- thicker by artificial means, the British, mainly with Australian
- and Canadian Divisions, and French, attacked between Albert and
- Moreuil with strong squadrons of Tanks, but for the rest with
- no great superiority. They broke between the Somme and the Luce
- deep into our front. The Divisions in line allowed themselves
- to be completely overwhelmed. Divisional Staffs were surprised
- in their Headquarters by enemy Tanks" [_sic_, our armoured cars
- were meant].... "The exhausted [_sic_] Divisions that had been
- relieved a few days earlier and that were lying in the region
- south-west of Peronne were immediately alarmed and set in motion
- by the Commander-in-Chief of the Second Army. At the same time
- he brought forward towards the breach all available troops. The
- Rupprecht Army Group dispatched reserves thither by train. The
- 18th Army threw its own reserves directly into the battle from the
- south-east.... On an order from me, the 9th Army too, although
- itself in danger, had to contribute. Days of course elapsed before
- the troops from a further distance could reach the spot.... It
- was a very gloomy situation.... Six or seven Divisions that were
- quite fairly to be described as effective had been completely
- battered.... The situation was uncommonly serious. If they
- continued to attack with even comparative vigour, we should no
- longer be able to maintain ourselves west of the Somme.... The
- wastage of the Second Army had been very great. Heavy toll had
- also been taken of the reserves which had been thrown in.... Owing
- to the deficit created our losses had reached such proportions
- that the Supreme Command was faced with the necessity of having
- to disband a series of Divisions, in order to furnish drafts....
- The enemy had also captured documentary material of inestimable
- value to him.... The General Staff Officer whom I had dispatched to
- the battlefield on August 8th, gave me such an account that I was
- deeply confounded.... August 8th made things clear for both Army
- Commands, both for the German and for that of the enemy."
-
-A hole had been driven on a width of nearly twelve miles, right through
-the German defence, and had blotted out, at one blow, the whole of
-the military resources which it had contained. The obligation which
-was thereby cast upon the enemy to throw into the gap troops and guns
-hastily collected from every part of his front, imposed upon him also
-an increased vulnerability at every other point which had to be so
-denuded.
-
-It was no part of our programme to rest content upon our oars, and
-allow the enemy time to collect himself at leisure. The resources of
-the Australian Corps had suffered scarcely any impairment as the result
-of that glorious day. Such small losses as had been incurred were more
-than counter-balanced by the elation of these volunteer troops at this
-further demonstration of their moral and physical superiority over the
-professional soldiers of a militarist enemy nation.
-
-On that very day all necessary measures were taken to maintain the
-battle without pause. But, in order not to interrupt the continuity of
-the story of subsequent developments, it will be convenient to mention,
-in this place, two events which cannot be dissociated from the great
-battle, and which will be memorable to those who participated in them.
-
-The first was an accidental meeting together of a number of
-the most distinguished figures in the war. On August 11th, the
-Commander-in-Chief was to come to congratulate the Corps and to
-thank the troops through their Commanders. I called the Divisional
-Generals together at the Red Chateau at Villers-Bretonneux to meet him
-that afternoon. In the meantime General Rawlinson invited his Corps
-Commanders to meet him in the same village for a battle conference,
-and chose the same hour and a spot in the open, under a spreading
-beech, where his Generals sat informally around the maps spread upon
-the grass. At this meeting were Rawlinson, Currie, Kavanagh, Godley,
-myself, Montgomery and Budworth. The Field Marshal, with Laurence,
-the Chief of his General Staff, on their way to the Red Chateau, soon
-arrived. Shortly after Sir Henry Wilson, happening to pass in his car,
-also joined the party; and not many moments afterwards there arrived,
-again entirely without previous arrangement, Clemenceau and his Finance
-Minister Klotz.
-
-Villers-Bretonneux, only three days before reeking with gas and
-unapproachable, and now delivered from its bondage, was the lodestone
-which had attracted the individual members of this remarkable
-assemblage; and the more serious business in hand was perforce
-postponed while Rawlinson, Currie and I had to listen to the generous
-felicitations of all these great war leaders.
-
-The second event was the visit of His Majesty the King, on August 12th,
-to Bertangles, when he conferred on me the honour of Knighthood, in
-the presence of selected detachments of five hundred of the men who
-had fought in the battle, a hundred from each of my Five Divisions.
-A representative collection of guns and other war trophies had been
-hauled in from the battlefield to line the avenues by which the King
-approached. His Majesty was particularly interested in the German
-transport horses, expressing the hope that they would soon learn the
-Australian language; a pleasantry which he well remembered when I had
-the honour of an audience with him, on the anniversary of that very
-day.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[15] See Map J.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-EXPLOITATION
-
-
-The Fourth British Army had opened the great Allied counter-offensive
-with a brilliant stroke. It remained to see in what fashion the Allied
-High Command would proceed to exploit the victory. Would the Fourth
-Army be called upon, with added resources, at once to thrust due east,
-with the object of drawing upon itself the German reserves, and dealing
-with them as they arrived; or would blows now be delivered on other
-fronts with a view to keeping those reserves dispersed?
-
-The immediate decision, communicated to me by the Army Commander on
-the afternoon of August 8th, was that, while the whole situation was
-being considered, and troop movements were in progress to enable the
-necessary concentrations to be made elsewhere, the Fourth Army would
-continue its advance forthwith; but that, instead of driving due east,
-the thrust was to be made in a south-easterly direction.
-
-The object was to aim at Roye, and either by the capture of that
-important railway centre, or at least by the threat of its capture,
-to precipitate a withdrawal by the enemy from the great salient which
-he had in his April and May advances pressed into the French front
-opposite Moreuil and Montdidier, a salient which could be kept supplied
-by that railway alone.
-
-The Australian Corps front on the evening of August 8th lay roughly
-on a north and south line, just east of Mericourt and just west of
-Vauvillers. But the Canadian Corps front bent back sharply from the
-latter point in a south-westerly direction. The Canadians were,
-therefore, to advance between the railway and the Amiens--Roye road to
-the general line Lihons-Le Quesnoy. The role of the Australian Corps
-was to make a defensive flank to this advance, by pivotting its left
-on the Somme in the vicinity of Mericourt, but advancing its right
-along the railway, in the direction of Lihons.
-
-It was a decision which was unpalatable to me, for it condemned me to
-leaving the whole of the great bend of the Somme, on which lay Bray,
-Peronne and Brie, in the undisturbed possession of the enemy; and in
-view of the reports sent in from the front and confirmed later by the
-Armoured Cars, it appeared to me that the resumption of a vigorous
-advance due east next day would give us, without fighting, possession,
-or at least command, of the whole of this bend; while if we allowed the
-enemy to take breath and recover from his shock, he would probably have
-time to rally the fugitives, and turn again to face us.
-
-This same great bend of the river had been the scene of two years
-of sedentary warfare, in 1915 and 1916, when the French and German
-artillery had converted it into a barren wilderness. It was, in
-its eastern part, scored with trenches, and bristled with wire
-entanglements in every direction; it was devoid of villages, woods, or
-any kind of shelter--a forbidding expanse of devastation.
-
-But between our front lines of that day and the western edge of this
-wilderness, there still lay a belt of some six or seven miles of
-practically unharmed country over which the retreat of our Fifth Army
-in March had carried them without much fighting. I should have welcomed
-an order to push on the next morning, in open warfare formation, to
-gain possession of the whole of this belt, and force the enemy to make
-any attempt to reorganize his line on the inhospitable ground which lay
-beyond.
-
-The order stood, however; and instructions were issued for the First
-Australian Division to be drawn into the fight, and to take upon
-themselves the task of conforming to the advance of the Canadians along
-the railway. The first phase of this advance was to have been carried
-out at 11 a.m. on August 9th by the First Division passing through the
-right Brigade of the Fifth Division.
-
-The 1st Brigade of the First Australian Division had, as already
-related, arrived from the North in time to participate in the fighting
-of the day before; but the remaining two Brigades arrived so late,
-and had to perform so long a march from their detraining station near
-Amiens to our now greatly advanced battle front, that it soon became
-evident that they could not arrive at the line of departure in time to
-synchronize with the Canadian advance.
-
-In consequence, the Fifth Division was instructed to detail its right
-line Brigade to begin this duty; and in due course the 15th Brigade
-carried out the first part of the task and advanced our line to
-include the capture of Vauvillers, an operation which was successfully
-completed by midday.
-
-It will be remembered that the Second and Third Divisions had been
-given a task for the previous day which was limited in time, though
-not in difficulty, and that this task had been completed, as it proved
-with very little stress, by 7 a.m. These Divisions had thus had a whole
-day in which to rest and reorganize. The Second Division was therefore
-placed under orders to participate in the advance of August 9th.
-
-In due course, the First Division arrived at our fighting front, and
-that afternoon both the First and Second Divisions advanced in battle
-order, the former passing through the right Brigade of the Fifth
-Division, and the latter through its left Brigade. This operation
-carried our front line in this part of the field to the foot of
-the Lihons hill, and gave us complete possession of the village of
-Framerville. It also incidentally released the Fifth Division from
-further line duty.
-
-The opposition met with during this day's operations varied
-considerably along the battle front, which extended in this part of
-the field over about 6,000 yards. The Lihons ridge was found to be
-strongly held, and much fire both from field guns and machine guns was
-encountered. It was evident that, over-night, the enemy had succeeded
-in organizing sufficient troops for the local defence of this important
-point.
-
-Upon the front of the Second Division, however, there was little
-opposition and the enemy gave up Framerville almost without a
-struggle. Three Battalions of Tanks co-operated in the day's fighting,
-but several of them were disabled by direct fire from Lihons. The task
-assigned to the Corps for that day was, none the less, carried out in
-its entirety, and by nightfall contact had been made with the Second
-Canadian Division on the railway about a mile east of Rosieres.
-
-The situation on the left flank of the Australian Corps was, however,
-anything but satisfactory. The Chipilly spur was still in the hands of
-the enemy, all the efforts over-night on the part of the 58th Division
-(Third Corps) to dislodge them having failed. General Butler, the Corps
-Commander, in pursuance of arrangements come to some days before, was
-to proceed on sick leave, as he had for some time been far from well;
-and General Godley (my former chief of the 22nd Corps) was temporarily
-to take his place. I therefore persuaded the Army Commander to avail
-himself of this change to allow me to take in hand the situation at
-Chipilly, and to give me, for this purpose, a limited jurisdiction over
-the north bank of the Somme. This was merely getting in the thin edge
-of the wedge; and not many hours later, I found myself where I had so
-strongly desired to be from the first, namely, astride of the Somme
-valley.
-
-Accordingly, the 13th Australian Brigade, after a day's rest from the
-anxious duty of acting as a screen for the Canadians on the eve of the
-main battle, were told off to deal with the Chipilly spur. Before,
-however, they could reach the locality, and in the late afternoon of
-August 9th, the 131st American Regiment (of Bell's Division), which was
-still under the orders of the Third Corps, very gallantly advanced in
-broad daylight and took possession practically of the whole spur.
-
-In the meantime the 13th Brigade arrived, sending a Battalion across
-the Somme at Cerisy, and, joining the Americans, helped to clear up
-the whole situation. This made my left flank more secure, and enabled
-Maclagan to withdraw the defensive flank which he had deployed along
-the river from Cerisy to Morcourt. That night I took over the 131st
-American Regiment from the Third Corps, attached it, as a temporary
-measure, to the Fourth Division, and placed Maclagan in charge of the
-newly captured front, which extended north of the river as far as the
-Corbie--Bray road.
-
-The day ended with Divisions in the line from south to north in the
-following order, viz.:--First, Second and Fourth, the last named having
-been augmented by an American Regiment, having had its own 13th Brigade
-restored to it, and having in exchange yielded up to the First Division
-the 1st Brigade of the latter.
-
-The Fourth Division had had comparatively much the worst of it, up to
-this stage, of any of my Divisions, and I felt that they were due for
-a short rest. Accordingly, I issued orders that same night for the
-Third Division, which, like the Second, had been resting since the
-previous forenoon, to relieve the Fourth Division on that part of the
-front which lay between the Somme and the main St. Quentin road on the
-following day, but for the time being leaving the newly captured ground
-north of the Somme still in Maclagan's hands.
-
-After an examination of the ground and a study of the situation, the
-opportunity for a further immediate local operation, certain to gain
-valuable tactical ground, and likely also to yield a good number of
-prisoners, presented itself to me. A further attraction was that it
-would permit of a useful advance of my left flank on the south of the
-Somme. This project, being of some tactical interest, demands a short
-explanatory reference to the terrain.
-
-The river Somme, from Cerisy as far east as Peronne, flows in a
-tortuous valley which describes a succession of bends, almost uniform
-in size and regular in disposition. These bends face with their bases
-alternately north and south, and average a depth of two miles, by a
-width across the base of about a mile and a half. Each came to be known
-to us by the name of one of the villages which reposed in its folds,
-such as Chipilly, Etinehem, Bray, Cappy, Feuilleres, and Ommiecourt;
-all these have become names to be remembered in the subsequent conquest
-of this part of the Somme valley.
-
-The valley itself is in this region a mile broad; its sides are steep
-and often precipitous, and the adjoining plateaus rise some 200 feet
-above its bed. Through this valley winds, in ordered curves, the canal
-for barge traffic; it is flanked by vast stretches of backwaters and
-heavily grassed morasses, in which the river loses itself. The valley
-can be traversed only by the few bridges and the lock gates of the
-canal, and the causeways leading to them from either bank.
-
-It would be difficult country for a fight on a general scale, but ideal
-for guerilla warfare. The whole succession of villages clinging to
-the sides of the valley were in the hands of the enemy, and in use by
-him for the housing and shelter of his troops. To attack and overcome
-them one by one, by fighting up the winding valley, would have been a
-costly business. But it suggested itself that they might all be won by
-a species of investment.
-
-Taking any one of these U-shaped bends singly, by drawing a cordon
-across its base, the whole of any enemy forces who might be occupying
-the bend would be denied escape from it, except by _crossing_ the river
-into the adjacent bend. But if a semi-cordon had been simultaneously
-drawn across the base of that next bend also, even that loophole would
-be closed, and moreover such troops as inhabited the second bend would
-find themselves surrounded also.
-
-Immediately before my left flank lay the Mericourt bend on the south of
-the river and the Etinehem bend to the north of it. Both were held by
-the enemy, doubtless fugitives from the great battle, who had sought
-food, water and underground shelter in the numerous dug-outs which
-honeycombed the sides of the valley. The design was to capture the
-whole of these with little effort. It was a good plan, and only an
-unforeseen accident prevented its full realization.
-
-Early on the morning of the 10th, I summoned a conference at Maclagan's
-Headquarters in Corbie, which was attended by the Commanders and
-certain Brigadiers of the Third and Fourth Divisions. It was arranged
-that on the north of the river, the 13th Brigade would that night get
-astride of the Etinehem spur on the north, while simultaneously the
-10th Brigade, by making a side sweep skirting Proyart, would advance
-our line till its left rested on the river a mile east of Mericourt.
-
-Columns were to move along defined routes, leaving the objectives
-well to the flanks, and then to encircle the enemy positions. Each
-column was to be accompanied by Tanks and was to move in an easterly
-direction and then wheel in towards the Somme. Although Tanks had never
-previously been used at night, as their utility was uncertain, it was
-thought that the effect of the noise they made would lead to the speedy
-collapse of the defence.
-
-The plan succeeded to perfection on the north of the river, and the
-Etinehem spur and village with all its defenders fell to us almost
-without a blow. Four Tanks amused themselves by racing up and down the
-main Corbie--Bray road at top speed, and the clamour they made cleared
-the path for the marching infantry.
-
-On the south, however, just after nightfall, a sudden onslaught by a
-flight of enemy bombing planes, threw the head of the 10th Brigade
-column into confusion, and its Commander was killed. Two of the
-Tanks were also disabled by direct hits from Artillery. This delayed
-the progress of the operation, and the next day broke with the task
-uncompleted. The 9th and 11th Brigades were, however, at once sent up
-to reinforce, and during the following day all three Brigades completed
-the operation by possessing themselves of the villages of Mericourt and
-Proyart and the woods adjoining the river.
-
-This series of local operations yielded some 300 prisoners, and
-entirely cleared up the confused and unsatisfactory situation which had
-existed on my left flank, as the aftermath of the Chipilly spur failure
-of the first day. It also brought my line up more square to the Somme,
-and so somewhat shortened my already expanding front. But my left flank
-was at last quite secure.
-
-I must now turn to the extreme right flank, which was, on this same
-day, also the scene of very severe fighting. I have related the
-progress of the First Division to the foot of the Lihons ridge the
-night before. On August 10th and 11th the advance was continued by the
-First and Second Divisions in sympathy with the advance of the Canadian
-Corps on the south of the railway. There were only a few Tanks left
-available to assist in this advance; and the resistance of the enemy in
-the neighbourhood of Lihons had stiffened considerably.
-
-The devastated area had already been reached by us in this part of
-the field, and the terrain was a labyrinth of old trenches, and a sea
-of shell-holes; the remains of old wire entanglements spread in every
-direction, and the whole area had been covered by a rank growth of
-thistles and brambles. It furnished numerous harbours for machine-guns,
-and it was country over which it was difficult to preserve the
-semblance of an organized battle formation during an advance.
-
-The enemy fought hard and determinedly to retain Lihons, and in some
-parts of the line the battle swayed to and fro. But before the morning
-was well advanced, we had taken possession of the whole of the Lihons
-Knoll, of Auger Wood, and of the villages of Lihons and Rainecourt,
-while the Canadians had passed through Chilly just south of the
-railway. All that afternoon the enemy made repeated counter-attacks,
-particularly directed against Lihons and Rainecourt; but they were all
-successfully driven off by rifle and machine-gun fire without the loss
-of any ground.
-
-It was a great feat to the credit of the First Australian Division, and
-ranks among its best performances during the war. Some 20 field-guns
-and hundreds of machine-guns were captured. Such a battle, with such
-results, would, in 1917, have been placarded as a victory of the first
-magnitude. Now, with the new standards set up by the great battle of
-August 8th, it was reckoned merely as a local skirmish.
-
-General Currie, operating on my right, had had a similar experience
-of slow, although definite, progress, against hourly stiffening
-opposition, and the fighting by the methods of open warfare was growing
-daily more costly. The enemy had recovered from his first surprise,
-our resources in Tanks had been greatly diminished, and much of our
-heavy Artillery had not yet had time to get into its forward positions.
-In other words, the possibility of further cheap exploitation of the
-success of August 8th had come to an end.
-
-It was decided, therefore, to recommend to the Army Commander that a
-temporary halt should be called on the line thus reached, and that
-rested troops should be brought up to relieve the line Divisions.
-He concurred and decided that we should prepare for the delivery on
-August 15th of another combined "set-piece" blow, which would have the
-probable effect of again putting the enemy on the run, so that the
-moving battle could be resumed.
-
-This plan was never actually carried into effect, for reasons which
-did not at once appear. But it transpired later that General Currie
-had made very strong private representations to the Fourth Army
-against the plan. He questioned the wisdom of expending the resources
-of the Canadian Corps upon an attempt to repeat, over such broken
-country, covered as it was with entanglements and other obstacles,
-the great success of August 8th. He urged that the Canadian Corps
-should be transferred back to the Arras district--which they knew so
-well. It was country lending itself admirably to operations requiring
-careful organization, which none understood better than Currie and his
-admirable Staff.
-
-It was an issue in which I was not greatly concerned, for my share
-in the proposed operation of August 15th was to be quite subsidiary.
-It was to consist merely in once again advancing my right flank, in
-sympathy with the Canadian advance, as far as to include Chaulnes Hill
-and the very important railway junction at that town. In ignorance of
-the fact that the matter was under discussion, I prepared complete
-plans for the co-operation of the Australian Corps, and detailed the
-Fourth and Fifth Australian Divisions to carry them out. Fortunately,
-before any actual executive action had been initiated, orders came that
-the project was to be abandoned.
-
-It soon became known that still larger questions were being discussed.
-The British front, which in July reached south as far only as
-Villers-Bretonneux, had now been extended to the latitude of Roye.
-The Field Marshal was urging reduction, so as to liberate Divisions
-for offensive operations elsewhere, and Marshal Foch agreed that, as
-by the elimination of the Soissons salient the French front had been
-shortened, this could be done. In due course confidential announcements
-were made that, as soon as it could be arranged, the Canadians would be
-withdrawn from the line, and their places taken by French troops. This
-would once again make my Corps the south flank Corps of the British
-Army, and I would junction with the French on the Lihons Hill.
-
-The halt thus called gave me breathing time to consider a thorough
-reorganization of my whole Corps front. This had, by August 12th, again
-grown to a total length of over 16,000 yards. This increase had been
-the result, firstly, of my having, as narrated, taken over ground to
-the north of the Somme, secondly, by reason of the fact that during
-the advances of the last four days my right had hugged the railway,
-while my left had continued to rest on the Somme, two lines which were
-rapidly diverging from each other, and thirdly, because my front line
-now lay sharply oblique to my general line of advance.
-
-Even with a fifth Division, which I now had at my disposal, a front of
-16,000 yards was far too attenuated for Corps operations on the grand
-scale, and even for more localized operations, by one or two Divisions
-at a time, there was little opportunity to provide the troops with
-adequate intervals of rest. I therefore strongly urged upon General
-Rawlinson either a shortening of my front, or a further increase in my
-resources.
-
-He chose the latter alternative, and on August 12th placed under my
-orders, provisionally, the 17th British Division (Major-General P. R.
-Robertson), coupled with the condition that while it might be employed
-as a line Division, it was not to be used for offensive operations. The
-reason, confidentially given, was that it was shortly to be employed in
-a large scale offensive in course of preparation by the Third British
-Army.
-
-It was, for me, a most opportune measure of relief from a difficult
-situation; for the Third Australian Division was now also badly in need
-of a rest. Prior to the great advance, it had been longest of any of
-the Divisions in the line, and had subsequently had a hard time in
-fighting its way forward from Mericourt to Proyart. It was therefore
-relieved in the line on August 13th by the 17th Division and went into
-Corps Reserve.
-
-On the same day I put into effect a project of organization which the
-necessities of the case forced upon me. North of the river stood the
-13th Australian Brigade, and the 131st American Regiment, both still
-under the command of General Maclagan, the remainder of whose Division
-was resting, and this Division might be required at short notice for
-operations at a totally different part of the front. (I had, in fact,
-earmarked it for the proposed attack on August 15th to which I have
-referred.)
-
-To overcome this anomalous position, I decided to constitute, for a
-brief period, an independent force, composed of the two units north
-of the river which I have named, to appoint to the command of it
-Brigadier-General Wisdom (of the 7th Brigade), and to supply him with
-a nucleus Staff, some Artillery, and supply and signal services. It
-became, in fact, to all intents and purposes, an additional Division
-with a Headquarters directly responsible to me.
-
-This force received the name of "Liaison Force" and continued in
-existence for about eight days. Its functions were to keep tactical
-touch and liaison with the Third Corps, to protect my left flank
-by guarding the Etinehem spur from recapture, and to act as a kind
-of loose link between the two Corps, advancing its northern or its
-southern flanks, or both, in sympathy with any forward movement to
-be made by either Corps. While, during its existence as a separate
-force, no operations of first magnitude took place, yet the Liaison
-Force served me well in the very useful function of a custodian of my
-tactical ownership of the Somme valley, an ownership which I succeeded
-in retaining to the immense advantage of the operations of the Corps
-less than three weeks later.
-
-By August 13th, therefore, my responsibilities included the control
-of seven separate Divisions as well as all the Corps Troops, and Army
-Troops attached. The next week was occupied in local operations by
-the front line Divisions to straighten our front, and to dispose of
-a number of strong points, small woods, and village ruins which, so
-long as they were in enemy hands, were a source of annoyance to us. The
-attitude of the enemy was alert but not aggressive, and an important
-point was that he showed every desire to stand his ground, and to
-contest our further advance. There was as yet no indication of any
-comprehensive withdrawal out of the great river bend. Each day brought
-its useful toll of prisoners, all of whom, however, corroborated the
-view that the enemy meant to hold on, and that the troops opposing us
-were more than a mere rearguard intended to delay our advance.
-
-The period from August 13th to 20th was also occupied in carrying
-out a number of inter-divisional reliefs--events of merely technical
-interest to the student of military history, but imposing an immense
-amount of detailed work upon the Staff of the Corps and upon the
-Commanders and Staffs of the Divisions concerned. It was my own special
-responsibility, and one which I could not delegate, to decide the date
-of the relief of each Division and by which other Division it should be
-relieved. Such decisions involved a close inquiry into, and a just and
-humane appreciation of the condition of the troops, almost from hour
-to hour every day, a duty in the discharge of which I was able to rely
-upon the loyal help of the Divisional Commanders and Brigadiers.
-
-The time that had elapsed since last they had rested, the marching
-they had since done, the fighting they had undertaken and its nature,
-the mental and physical stress which they had undergone, and the
-probable nature and date of their future employment were all factors
-which had to be weighed carefully, and set against the advantages or
-disadvantages of cutting short the period of rest of the troops who
-were available to relieve them. It was a function which had to be
-exercised, at all times, with the greatest circumspection, and the
-strictest justice; for troops are very ready to acquire the impression
-that they are being called upon to do more than their fair share.
-
-[Illustration: MAP C.]
-
-An actual inter-divisional relief usually occupied two nights and the
-intervening day. Incoming units, both fighting and technical, had to
-be shown all over the sector, to be taught the dispositions and the
-exact situation in front of us; maps, orders and photographs had to be
-explained and handed over; stores and dumps had to be inventoried and
-receipts passed; while on the other hand the outgoing troops expected
-to find their billets, offices, stables, wagon lines, bathing-places
-and entertainment rooms in the rear area all allocated and ready for
-their occupation.
-
-Each such mutual relief meant the movement of upwards of 20,000 men,
-and separate roads had to be allotted for their use. Frequently in
-so large a Corps as this, two such inter-divisional reliefs would
-synchronize or overlap, and the danger of congestion and the Staff work
-necessary to avoid it would be thereby more than doubled. And all this
-work would have to go on smoothly even if the Corps front were in the
-throes of an actual battle at the time.
-
-Although much of the routine of such reliefs, which had become almost a
-ritual during the preceding years of trench warfare, was now scrapped,
-it is a matter of pride to the Australian Corps and its Divisions, that
-all such relief operations, even amid all the stress of these busy
-fighting months of August and September, were, until the end, carried
-out with precision, freedom from irritating hitches, and a minimum of
-stress on the troops.
-
-The decisions which had to be given regarding the times and
-alternations of these Divisional reliefs became from now on really of
-basic importance, and affected the main framework of the whole of my
-future plans. It was no longer merely a question of earmarking certain
-Divisions for a specified single operation; but of planning, many
-days ahead, the rotation in which the Divisions were to be employed
-in a continuous series of operations. I regarded it as a fundamental
-principle to employ whenever possible absolutely fresh and rested
-troops for an operation of any magnitude or importance. To carry such a
-principle into effect involved the necessity of making the best surmise
-that was possible as to the course of events a week or even two weeks
-ahead.
-
-As I shall endeavour to make clear in the course of the following
-pages, the really outstanding and exceptional features of the work
-of the Corps in its last sixty days were the sustained vigour of its
-fighting, and the unbroken continuity of its collective effort. Those
-results would clearly depend more on the manner in which the resources
-in troops were manipulated than upon any other factor. Each Division
-had to be kept employed until the last ounce of effort, consistent with
-speedy recovery, had been yielded, and each Division had to rest a
-sufficient time to enable it fully to recover its spirit and tone, and
-yet had to be ready by the time it was wanted.
-
-The fulfilment of such conditions involved, as a little reflection
-will show, a great deal more than a mere mechanical rotation of
-employment; for the problem was, always to have available an adequate
-supply of sufficiently rested troops for a prospective demand which,
-although varying always in accordance with the changing situation, had
-nevertheless to be predicted or conjectured.
-
-August 21st found our front line much about the same as that of August
-13th, although generally more advanced and straightened out. The Corps
-frontage was still over 16,000 yards, and upon the completion of the
-series of reliefs to which I have alluded the dispositions of the Corps
-were as follows: The Fourth Australian Division from Lihons to just
-south of Herleville, the 32nd British Division opposite Herleville, the
-Fifth Australian Division in front of Proyart, and the Third Australian
-Division on the north of the river. The First and Second Divisions were
-in Corps Reserve, the former having by then had a good rest from its
-Lihons fighting. The Liaison Force had been broken up; and the 32nd
-British Division (Major-General T. S. Lambert) had joined my command in
-substitution for the 17th Division, which had been withdrawn to join
-the Third Army.
-
-Such was the situation of the Australian Corps, when on August 21st
-the short period of comparative inactivity came to a close, and it
-was destined soon to go forward to further decisive events. On the
-previous day the French opened a great attack in the south, which
-yielded 10,000 prisoners on the first day, and on the day in question
-the Third British Army delivered north of Albert the attack which
-had been expected for some days. Thus the enemy would have his hands
-full in endeavouring to parry those fresh blows; and the time seemed
-appropriate for another stroke on the front of the Fourth Army.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-CHUIGNES
-
-
-Allusion has been made to the great bend which occurs in the course of
-the River Somme. It is indeed a geographical circumstance which must be
-borne in mind, if the phraseology current at this epoch in the war is
-to be clearly comprehended.
-
-The river flows in an almost due northerly direction from the
-neighbourhood of Roye as far as Peronne, and then bends quite sharply,
-at that locality, in a western direction, past Bray, Corbie and Amiens,
-towards the sea, beyond Abbeville. In the story of the fighting of
-the period from March to August we have been concerned only with that
-portion of the river valley which ran parallel to our line of advance;
-but interest will henceforth focus itself largely upon that other reach
-of the Somme which runs on a north and south line, upstream, from the
-town of Peronne.
-
-This latter stretch of the river lies squarely athwart the direction in
-which the Corps had been advancing, and the obstacle to that advance
-which the river would presently constitute was continued in a northerly
-direction from Peronne by an unfinished work of a great canalization
-scheme to be called the "Canal du Nord." This canal was already wide
-and deep, and formed a tactical obstacle of some significance, for the
-excavations incidental to this project had been almost completed before
-the war.
-
-The "line of the Somme," as it was understood in the tactical
-discussions of the period now to be dealt with, meant, in short, the
-line formed by that part of the river which lay upstream (_i.e._, to
-the south of Peronne), and the continuation northwards of that line
-by the Canal du Nord. Both features being military obstacles, they
-and the highlands to the east of them together afforded an eminently
-suitable continuous line on which the enemy might, if he were permitted
-to do so, establish himself in a defensive attitude in order to bar our
-eastward progress.
-
-The autumn was upon us; not more than another eight or nine weeks of
-campaigning weather could be relied upon. A quite definite possibility
-existed that the enemy might be able to put forth so powerful an effort
-to contest our further advance, inch by inch, that he would gain
-sufficient time to prepare the line of the Somme for a stout defence,
-and hold us up until the arrival of winter compelled a suspension of
-large operations.
-
-There were at that time, indeed, some who contended that as we had
-apparently succeeded in putting an end to the German offensive we
-should rest content with the year's work; that our soundest strategy
-would be to permit the enemy to take up such a line of defence;
-and then quietly to wait over the winter until 1919 for the full
-development of the American effort, now only in its inception.
-
-So far, the enemy had given no indication of any readiness to undertake
-a precipitate withdrawal from the great bend west of the Somme. On the
-contrary, his resistance had stiffened to such an extent that little
-further progress was to be hoped for from the methods of open warfare
-which I had employed since August 8th.
-
-If, however, another powerful blow could be delivered, to be followed
-by energetic exploitation, it was quite possible that the enemy might
-be hustled across the Somme, that this might be achieved at such a rate
-that I could gain a firm footing on the east bank, and that thereby the
-value to him of the line of the Somme, as a winter defence, might be
-destroyed.
-
-This was the very project on which I now embarked. The First Division
-was in Corps Reserve, had rested and was fresh. The 32nd Division had
-only just come into the line. By handing over a substantial sector to
-the French, my frontage south of the Somme was about to be shortened
-to 7,000 yards, a very suitable front for a deliberate attack by two
-Divisions.
-
-I held a conference at Fouilloy, near Corbie, in the afternoon of
-August 21st to announce the plan, and to settle all details with the
-Commanders and services concerned. The Infantry assault was to be
-entrusted to Glasgow and Lambert, attacking side by side; but the
-former had allotted to him much the larger share of the battle front,
-at the northern end, the corollary role of the 32nd Division being to
-seize Herleville and carry our line just to the east of it.
-
-The date of the attack was fixed for August 23rd, and the Second and
-Fifth Divisions were warned to be in readiness to come into the line
-a day or two after the battle, in order to commence immediately the
-process of keeping the enemy on the run, and hustling him clean out of
-the river bend and across the line of the Somme.
-
-The conference of that day was of special interest, in that I had to
-deal with two Divisions which had not participated in any of those
-Corps Conferences, previously held, which had initiated a fully
-organized Corps operation. The Commanders and Staffs were strangers
-to each other and, some of them, to me and my Staff. Nearly all of
-them were yet unfamiliar with the special methods of the Corps. The
-conference was therefore a lengthy one, for many problems of tactical
-mechanism, which had been settled in connection with the preceding
-battles of Hamel and August 8th, had to be reopened and elucidated.
-
-These regular battle conferences were in the Australian Corps an
-innovation from the time the command of it devolved upon me. They
-proved a powerful instrument for the moulding of a uniformity of
-tactical thought and method throughout the command. They brought
-together men who met face to face but seldom, and they permitted
-of an exhaustive and educative interchange of views. They led to a
-development of "team-work" of a very high order of efficiency.
-
-The work of preparing for, and the actual conduct of, these conferences
-was always a very arduous business; but they more than repaid me for
-the effort they entailed. They served two paramount purposes. They
-enabled me to apply the requisite driving force to all subordinates
-collectively, instead of individually, and thereby created a
-responsive spirit which was competitive. In addition, each Commander or
-Service had the advantage not only of receiving instructions regarding
-his own action, but also of hearing in full detail the instructions
-conveyed to his colleagues. He knew, not merely what his colleagues had
-to do, but also knew that they had been told what to do; and he had an
-opportunity of considering the effect of their action on his own.
-
-The senior representative of the Heavy Artillery, Tank and Air Services
-invariably attended, and listened to all the points discussed with the
-Divisions, and the Divisional Commanders heard all matters arranged
-with these services. In this way, each arm acquired in the most direct
-manner a steadily expanding knowledge of the technology of all the
-other arms.
-
-My reason for emphasizing these matters in the present context is that,
-on this particular occasion, an attempt was to be made to carry out a
-major Corps operation at little more than thirty-six hours' notice; and
-the Division which was to have assigned to it the principal role was
-still in Corps Reserve and a day's march from the battle front.
-
-That, in spite of these handicaps, the battle proved brilliantly
-successful is a testimony to the valuable part which these Corps
-conferences played in securing rapid and efficiently co-ordinated
-action; a result which would, I am confident, have been unattainable
-under the stated conditions by the mere issue of formal written orders.
-
-Although only two out of the seven Divisions of the Corps were to
-participate in this operation, it was my intention to employ, for
-the full assistance of the Infantry, the whole resources of the
-Corps in Artillery, Tanks and Aircraft. That was a principle which I
-always regarded as fundamental, and one from which I never permitted
-any exception to be made, although the pressure upon me to rest a
-substantial portion of these ancillary services was always very great.
-
-The general plan for the battle ran briefly as follows. The 32nd
-Division would attack with one Infantry Brigade, under a barrage, on
-a frontage of 1,000 yards; the capture of the village of Herleville,
-which was still strongly held, being its principal objective.
-
-The 1st Australian Division would attack on a frontage of 4,500 yards,
-with two Brigades in line, and one Brigade in reserve. The attack would
-be carried out in three phases.
-
-The first phase was a normal assault, under an Artillery barrage, and
-with the assistance of Tanks, to a predetermined line, which would
-carry us beyond the Chuignes Valley; the second phase was in the nature
-of exploitation by the two line Brigades, but was expressly limited to
-a maximum distance of 1,000 yards beyond the main first objective.
-
-The third phase was to be contingent upon the complete success of
-the preceding phases, and would consist of an advance by the Reserve
-Brigade for a further exploitation of success, by the seizure of the
-whole of the Cappy bend of the river, including the towering hill close
-to the Somme Canal known as Froissy Beacon.
-
-All arrangements for the forthcoming battle having thus been completed,
-the First Division duly relieved the Fifth Division on the night of
-August 21st, and hastened forward its preparations for the attack,
-which had been fixed for 4.45 a.m. on August 23rd.
-
-In the meantime, the first attack which any British Army other than the
-Fourth had made since August 8th was at last launched on August 21st
-along the whole front of the Third British Army, northwards from Albert.
-
-It has come to be an article of faith that the whole of the successive
-stages of the great closing offensive of the war had been the subject
-of most careful timing, and of minute organization on the part of the
-Allied High Command, and of our own G.H.Q. Much eulogistic writing
-has been devoted to an attempted analysis of the comprehensive and
-far-reaching plans which resulted in the delivery of blow upon blow,
-in a prescribed order of time and for the achievement of definite
-strategical or tactical ends.
-
-[Illustration: The Canal and Tunnel at Bellicourt--looking north.]
-
-[Illustration: The Hindenburg Line--a characteristic belt of sunken
-wire.]
-
-All who played any part in these great events well know that it
-was nothing of the kind; that nothing in the nature of a detailed
-time-table to control so vast a field of effort was possible. All
-Commanders, and the most exalted of them in a higher degree even
-than those wielding lesser forces, became opportunists, and bent
-their energies, not to the realization of a great general plan for a
-succession of timed attacks, but upon the problem of hitting whenever
-and wherever an opportunity offered, and the means were ready to hand.
-
-In these matters it was the force of circumstances which controlled
-the sequence of events, and nothing else. An elaborate time-table
-controlled by definite dates and sequences for the successive
-engagement of a series of Armies would have been quite impossible of
-realization. Even a Corps Commander had difficulty in forecasting
-within a day or two when he would be ready to launch an attack on any
-given part of the front. For an Army Commander it was a matter of a
-week or even two.
-
-All attempted time-tables were controlled by our Artillery
-requirements; both the assembling of the necessary guns--often drawn
-from distant fronts--and the accumulating of the requisite "head" of
-ammunition to see a battle through, were processes whose duration could
-only be very roughly forecasted.
-
-The dumping, in the gun pits and in ammunition stores, of the necessary
-500 or 600 rounds per gun meant days of labour in collection and
-distribution on the part of the railways and motor lorries. The
-breakdown of a few motor lorries at a critical time, or the dropping
-of a single bomb upon an important railway junction, were disturbing
-factors quite sufficient to have arrested the flow of ammunition, and
-to have postponed, indefinitely, any programme based upon its prompt
-delivery.
-
-It will be obvious, therefore, that no reliance could be placed, days
-or weeks beforehand, upon a given attack taking place on a given day;
-therefore no plans could be made which depended upon such attacks
-taking place in a predetermined sequence.
-
-Shortly put, therefore, the decisions of the High Command were
-confined to questions such as where an attack should be made, in
-what direction, and by what forces. The date was always a matter of
-uncertainty, and the only control that could be exercised was by
-postponement, and never by acceleration.
-
-For the greater part of the offensive period it was therefore
-necessarily left to the Commanders of the Armies to conform to a
-general policy of attack, the time and method being left to their
-own decision or recommendation. And they, in turn, relied upon their
-Corps Commanders to seize the initiative in the pursuit of such a
-policy. Naturally, the Army at all times made every effort to secure
-co-ordinated action by its several Corps; but it rarely happened that
-more than one Corps at a time carried through the main effort--the
-other Corps performing subsidiary roles. The great battle of September
-29th to October 1st, which completed the final rupture of the
-Hindenburg line, was, however, a signal exception to this rule.
-
-The attack by the Third British Army on August 21st is a case which
-illustrates the delays inseparable from battle preparations. The
-project of such an attack had already been mooted on August 11th, when
-General Byng (Third Army) paid me a visit to discuss my battle plan
-of August 8th, and I gathered on that occasion that he hoped to begin
-within four or five days. The event showed that the operation actually
-took ten days to materialize. No criticism is suggested. The conditions
-of transport of troops and munitions doubtless made its earlier
-realization quite impossible.
-
-The attack coming when it did, however, considerably eased the
-situation of the Fourth Army, upon whose front Ludendorff had flung all
-his available reserves, drawn from all parts of the German front, in
-his endeavours to bring the Australians and Canadians to a halt.
-
-He was now suddenly confronted with the prospect of another "break
-through" in a different part of his line, and the German people had
-been taught by their press correspondents to believe that a "break
-through" was the one thing most to be resisted by the German Supreme
-Command, and the one thing impossible of achievement by us.
-
-There can be no doubt, therefore, that the success of the Third Army
-on August 21st, although not comparable in its results with the battle
-of August 8th, did materially assist the prospects of my own success in
-the operations upon which I was then embarking.
-
-The immediate effect of it was already felt the very next day. For the
-Third Corps, which was still the left flank Corps of the Fourth Army,
-and which had made very little progress since August 8th, was enabled
-to advance its line a little past Albert and Meaulte.
-
-The Third Australian Division, which, it will be remembered, had
-taken over the front and the role of the now disbanded Liaison Force,
-participated, by arrangement, in this attack and, swinging up its left,
-brought my front line, north of the river, square to the Somme Valley,
-and just to the forward slopes of the high plateau overlooking Bray
-and La Neuville. The Third Pioneer Battalion at once got to work on
-restoring the broken crossings over the Somme, to the south of Bray,
-and put out a series of advanced posts upon the left bank of the river,
-which gave us practical control of the great island on which stands La
-Neuville.
-
-Meanwhile, on the left flank of the 9th Brigade, which had carried
-out the Third Divisional attack, there was serious trouble. The enemy
-counter-attacked in the late afternoon. The 9th Brigade stood firm;
-but the 47th Division (of the Third Corps) yielded ground, leaving the
-flank of the 9th Brigade in the air. A chalk pit, which we had seized,
-formed a welcome redoubt which enabled the 33rd Battalion to hang on
-for sufficiently long to permit of the 34th Battalion coming up to form
-a defensive flank, facing north.
-
-In this way the gallant 9th Brigade (Goddard) was able to retain the
-whole of its gains of that day; but the risk of an immediate further
-advance was too great while the situation to the north remained obscure
-and unsatisfactory. The capture of the village of Bray, which was still
-strongly held by the enemy, had, therefore, to be postponed, although
-it had been part of my plan to capture it that same day as a measure of
-precaution, seeing that I calculated upon being able the next day to
-advance my line south of the Somme to a point well to the east of Bray.
-
-The great attack by the First Division supported by the 32nd Division,
-which has come to be known as the battle of Chuignes, was launched at
-dawn on August 23rd, and was an unqualified success.
-
-The main valley of the Somme in this region is flanked by a number of
-tributary valleys, which run generally in a north and south direction,
-extending back from the river four or five miles. They are broad,
-with heavily-wooded sides, and harbour a number of villages, such as
-Proyart, Chuignolles, Herleville and Chuignes, which cluster on their
-slopes.
-
-One such valley, larger and longer than any of those which, in our
-previous advances, we had yet crossed, lay before our front line of
-that morning, and square across our path. It ran from Herleville,
-northwards, past Chuignes, to join the Somme in the Bray bend. It
-was the most easterly of all the tributary valleys to which I have
-referred, and it was also the last piece of habitable country before
-the devastated area of 1916 was reached, just a mile to the east of it.
-
-The valley afforded excellent cover for the enemy's guns, and the
-expectation was that some of them would be overrun by our attack. It
-was also ideal country for machine-gun defence, for the numerous woods,
-hedges and copses afforded excellent cover, and had in all probability
-been amply fortified with barbed wire. It was a formidable proposition
-to attack such a position on such a frontage with only two Brigades.
-
-The 2nd Brigade (Heane) attacked on the right, the 1st Brigade (Mackay)
-on the left, and the first phase was completed to time-table, with the
-green objective line, located on the east side of the long valley,
-in our possession. The only temporary hitch in the advance along the
-whole front was at Robert Wood, where the enemy held out, and had to be
-completely enveloped from both flanks before surrendering.
-
-Then came the second phase, and no difficulty was experienced in
-advancing our line 1,000 yards east of the green line, nor in
-establishing there a firm line of outposts for the night.
-
-The third phase presented a great deal more difficulty than I had
-anticipated. It was to have been undertaken by the 3rd Brigade
-(Bennett) pushing without delay through the 1st Brigade, and advancing
-in open warfare formation north-easterly towards Cappy, for the seizure
-of Hill 90, overlooking that village and on the south-west of it, and
-terminating at its northern extremity in the high bluff of Froissy
-Beacon.
-
-There was, however, some unexplained delay in the initiation of this
-advance, and it was not until about 2 o'clock that the 3rd Brigade
-moved forward to the assault of the long slope of the Chuignes Valley,
-which still lay before them in this part of the field. The enemy, under
-the impression that our attack had spent itself, had occupied the
-plateau in great strength, and at first little progress could be made.
-
-Mobile Artillery was, however, promptly pushed up, and this proved
-of great assistance to the infantry. Garenne Wood, on the top of the
-plateau, into which large numbers of the enemy had withdrawn, proved
-a difficult obstacle, and incapable of capture by frontal attack.
-It, too, was conquered by enveloping tactics, and with its fall the
-resistance of the enemy rapidly subsided, and the 3rd Brigade had the
-satisfaction of hunting the fugitives clean off the plateau into the
-Cappy Valley.
-
-The whole of this phase of the battle was an especially fine piece
-of work on the part of the Regimental Officers. It was open warfare
-of the most complete character, and the victory was won by excellent
-battle control on the part of the Battalion Commanders, by splendid
-co-operation between the four Battalions of the Brigade, and by
-intelligent and gallant leadership on the part of the Company and
-Platoon Commanders.
-
-Beset as I had been by many anxieties during the early afternoon as
-to how the Third Brigade would fare in the difficult task which had
-been given it, rendered more difficult by the delay of which I have
-spoken, I had the satisfaction that night of contemplating a victory
-far greater than I had calculated upon.
-
-For the 32nd Division had successfully captured Herleville, and the
-First Division had seized the whole country for a depth of 11/2 miles
-up to a line extending from Herleville to the western edge of Cappy.
-The whole Chuignes Valley was ours. By its capture the enemy had been
-despoiled of all habitable areas, and had been relegated to a waste of
-broken and ruined country between us and the line of the Somme.
-
-We took that day 21 guns and over 3,100 prisoners from ten different
-regiments. The slaughter of the enemy in the tangled valleys was
-considerable, for our Infantry are always vigorous bayonet fighters.
-They received much assistance from the Tanks in disposing of the
-numerous machine gun detachments which held their ground to the last.
-
-It was a smashing blow, and far exceeded in its results any previous
-record in my experience, having regard to the number of troops engaged.
-Its immediate result, the same night, was the capture of Bray by the
-Third Division, north of the river, thus completing the work of that
-Division which the failure of the 47th Division on their left the day
-before had compelled them to leave unfinished. The 40th Battalion took
-200 prisoners, with trifling loss to themselves.
-
-A more remote result, which made itself apparent in the next few days,
-was that it compelled the enemy to abandon all hope of retaining a hold
-of any country west of the line of the Somme; it impelled him at last
-to an evacuation of the great bend of the river, a process which he
-began in a very few days.
-
-Such was the battle of Chuignes. Much of the success of this brilliant
-engagement was due to the personality of the Divisional Commander,
-Major-General Glasgow. He had commenced his career in the war as a
-Major of Light Horse, and had participated in the earliest stages of
-the fighting on the Gallipoli Peninsula.
-
-Speedily gaining promotion during that campaign, his outstanding merits
-as a leader gained him an appointment to the command of the 13th
-Brigade, when the latter was formed in Egypt in the spring of 1916. For
-two years he led that Brigade through all its arduous experiences on
-the Somme, at Messines and in the third battle of Ypres.
-
-This fine record was but the prelude to the history-making
-performances of the 13th Brigade in 1918 at Dernancourt and
-Villers-Bretonneux, and Glasgow seemed easily the most promising, among
-all the Brigadiers of that time, as a prospective Divisional Commander:
-a judgment which fully justified itself.
-
-Of strong though not heavy build and of energetic demeanour, Glasgow
-succeeded not so much by exceptional mental gifts, or by tactical
-skill of any very high order, as by his personal driving force and
-determination, which impressed themselves upon all his subordinates.
-He always got where he wanted to get--was consistently loyal to the
-Australian ideal, and intensely proud of the Australian soldier.
-
-The number of prisoners captured on this day, and the total numbers of
-the enemy encountered in the course of an advance which was relatively
-small, pointed to a disposition of troops which was unusual on the part
-of the enemy.
-
-According to the principles so strongly emphasized by Ludendorff,
-in instructions which he had issued, and copies of which duly fell
-into my hands, there was to be, in his scheme of defensive tactics,
-a "fore-field" relatively lightly held by outposts and machine guns.
-The main line of resistance was to be well in rear, and there the main
-concentration of troops was to be effected.
-
-Why had this dictum been so widely disregarded on this occasion? It was
-a question worthy of close inquiry, and two German Battalion Commanders
-who were captured by us on that day supplied the answer.
-
-Reference has already been made to the message which I issued to the
-Corps on the eve of the great opening battle; and to the fact that a
-copy of this message had fallen into the hands of the enemy, probably
-by the capture of an officer in the close fighting which took place at
-Lihons on August 9th and 10th.
-
-In due course the substance of this message was published in the German
-wireless news, and in the German press of the time, but cleverly
-mistranslated to convey a colouring desirable for the German public.
-
-It so happened that not long before the opening of our offensive I
-had, at the request of the authorities, sent to Australia a recruiting
-cable, which appealed to the Australian public for a maintenance of
-supplies of fighting men.[16] That the full text of this cable also
-became speedily known to the enemy is a testimony to the far-flung
-alertness of their Intelligence Service. It, also, was published in
-their press.
-
-Basing their editorial comments on this material, the _Berliner
-Tageblatt_ of August 17th, 1918, a copy of which I captured, and
-another journal whose name was not ascertainable, because in the copy
-captured the title had been torn off, both indulged in arguments, which
-were long, and intended to be convincing, to prove to the German people
-that I had promised my troops a "break-through;" that I had failed, and
-that, admittedly, the "proud" Australian Corps had been shattered, had
-come to the end of its resources and was no longer to be taken into
-calculation as an instrument of attack by the "English."
-
-It was perfectly legitimate, if clumsy, propaganda. But it was a
-curious example of a propaganda which recoiled upon the heads of its
-propounders. The Battalion Commanders, who, like all German officers
-whom we captured, were always voluble in excuses for their defeat,
-pleaded that they had been deceived by the utterances of their own
-journals into believing that the Australian offensive effort had come
-to an end, once and for all, and that no further attack by this Corps
-was possible.
-
-[Illustration: MAP D]
-
-It was this belief which, they said, had prompted their respective
-Divisions (for each of them represented a separate one) to disregard
-Ludendorff's prescription; their Divisional Generals had felt justified
-in availing themselves of the very excellent living quarters which
-existed in the Chuignes Valley, near the German front line of August
-22nd, to quarter all their support and reserve Battalions.
-
-It was there that we found them--increasing the population of the front
-zone far beyond that which we had been accustomed to find. Was there
-ever a more diverting example of a propaganda which recoiled upon those
-who uttered it? Intended to deceive the German public, it ended in
-deceiving the German front line troops, to their own lamentable undoing.
-
-Among the captures of the battle of Chuignes, which, as usual,
-comprised a large and varied assortment of warlike stores, including
-another great dump of engineering materials near Froissy Beacon, and
-two complete railway trains, was the monster naval gun of 15-inch bore,
-which had been so systematically bombarding the city of Amiens, and had
-wrought such havoc among its buildings and monuments.
-
-It was first reached by the 3rd Australian Battalion (1st Brigade)
-during a bayonet charge which cleared Arcy Wood, in the shelter of
-which the giant gun had been erected. An imposing amount of labour had
-been expended upon its installation, and the most cursory examination
-of the effort involved was sufficient to make it evident that the enemy
-entertained no expectation of ever being hurled back from the region
-which it dominated.
-
-The gun with its carriage, platform and concrete foundations weighed
-over 500 tons. It was a naval gun, obviously of the type in use on
-the German Dreadnoughts, and never intended by its original designers
-for use on land. It had a range of over twenty-four miles, fired a
-projectile weighing nearly a ton, and the barrel was seventy feet long.
-
-It had been installed with the elaborate completeness of German
-methods. A double railway track, several miles long, had been built
-to the site, for the transport of the gun and its parts. It was
-electrically trained and elevated. Its ammunition was handled and
-loaded by mechanical means. The adjacent hill-side had been tunnelled
-to receive the operating machinery, and the supplies of shells,
-cartridges and fuses.
-
-The gun and its mounting, when captured, were found to have been
-completely disabled. A heavy charge of explosive had burst the chamber
-of the gun, and had torn off the projecting muzzle end, which lay with
-its nose helplessly buried in the mud. The giant carriage had been
-burst asunder, and over acres all around was strewn the debris of the
-explosion.
-
-For some time, some of my gunner experts favoured the theory that the
-gun had burst accidentally, but the view which ultimately prevailed was
-that the demolition had been intentional. Many months afterwards, the
-full story of the gun and its performances was elicited from a prisoner
-who had belonged to the No. 4 (German) Heavy Artillery Regiment, and it
-was circumstantial enough to be credible.
-
-The story is worthy of repetition, not only because no authentic
-account of this wonderful trophy has yet been published, but also
-because the history of this gun curiously illuminates the enemy's
-plans, intentions and expectations between the dates of his onslaught
-in March and his recoil in August.
-
-The substance of the story is as follows: The gun came from Krupp's.
-Work on the position was started early in April, 1918--only a few days
-after the site had fallen into the enemy's hands. It was completed
-and ready for action on the morning of June 2nd. Its maximum firing
-capacity was twenty-eight rounds per day. It fired continuously until
-June 28th. By this time the original gun was worn out, having fired
-over 350 rounds at Amiens. A new piece was ordered from Krupp's. It
-arrived on August 7th, and was ready to fire by 7 p.m. It fired its
-first round on August 8th at 2 a.m. and kept on firing till August
-9th, firing thirty-five rounds in all. At 7 a.m. on August 9th, all
-hands were ordered to remove everything that was portable and of value.
-Demolition charges were laid and fired about 9 a.m. on August 9th. The
-crew returned to Krupp's.
-
-It is to be inferred from this narrative that the enemy's defeat at
-Hamel on July 4th did not deter him from his enterprise of replacing
-the original worn gun, but that after August 8th, he quite definitely
-accepted the certainty that he would be allowed no time to remove the
-gun intact, and so he destroyed it in order that we might not be able
-to use it against him.
-
-This is the largest single trophy of war won by any Commander during
-the war, and it was a matter of great regret to me that the cost of its
-transportation to Australia was prohibitive. The gun, as it stands,
-was, therefore, fenced in, and it has been formally presented to the
-City of Amiens as a souvenir of the Australian Army Corps.
-
-So long as any Australian soldiers remained in France, this spot was
-a Mecca to which thousands of pilgrims wandered; and soon there was,
-over the whole of the immense structure, not one square inch upon which
-the "diggers" had not inscribed their names and sentiments. There, in
-the shade of Arcy Wood, the great ruin rests, a memorial alike of the
-sufferings of Amiens and of the great Australian victory of Chuignes.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[16] The cablegram in question was dated July 13th, and was in the
-following terms:
-
-"Since the opening of the German offensive in March every Division
-of the Australian Army in France has been engaged and always with
-decisive success. The men of Australia, wherever and whenever they
-have entered this mighty conflict, have invariably brought the enemy
-to a standstill, and have made him pay dearly for each futile attempt
-to pass them on the roads to Amiens and to the Channel Ports. Their
-reputation as skilful, disciplined and gallant soldiers has never
-stood higher throughout the Empire than it does to-day. Those who are
-privileged to lead in battle such splendid men are animated with a
-pride and admiration which is tempered only by concern at their waning
-numbers. Already some battalions which have made historic traditions
-have ceased to exist as fighting units, and others must follow unless
-the Australian nation stands by us and sees to it that our ranks are
-kept filled. We refuse to believe that the men and women of Australia
-will suffer their famous Divisions to decay, or that the young manhood
-still remaining in our homeland will not wish to share in the renown
-of their brothers in France. Nothing matters now but to see this job
-through to the end, and we appeal to every man to come, and come
-quickly, to help in our work, and to share in our glorious endeavour.
-
- "MONASH, Lieutenant-General."
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-PURSUIT
-
-
-The design which I had formed after the battle of August 8th of driving
-the enemy completely out of the bend of the Somme--but which I was
-obliged to abandon for the time being because of the decision of the
-Fourth Army to thrust in a south-easterly direction--was now about to
-be realized. The effect of the battle of Chuignes, following so closely
-upon the advance of the Third Army two days before, made it probable
-that the enemy would decide upon a definite withdrawal to the line of
-the Somme.
-
-It now became my object to ensure, if he should attempt to do so,
-firstly, that his withdrawal should be more precipitate than would
-be agreeable to him, and, secondly, that when he reached that line
-he should be accorded no breathing time to establish upon it a firm
-defence from which he could hold us at bay for the remainder of the
-fine weather.
-
-The French Army took over from me on the night of the 23rd August the
-whole of that portion of my front which still extended south of Lihons.
-General Nollet, Commander of the 36th French Corps (34th and 35th
-French Divisions), became my southern neighbour, displacing my Fourth
-Division, and also a Canadian Division, for whose sector I had become
-responsible since the departure of General Currie, a few days before.
-
-During these redispositions, probably induced to do so by evidences
-patent to him that large troop movements were in progress, the enemy
-carried out a very heavy gas bombardment and maintained it for some
-hours over the whole of the front which was being taken over by the
-French.
-
-The wind blowing from the south, the gas, which was unusually dense,
-drifted over the whole areas both of the Fourth Australian and the 32nd
-British Divisions, and caused a large number of gas casualties, which
-weakened the available garrisons of these sectors.
-
-The Second and Fifth Divisions were brought up on the night of August
-26th to relieve the First Division, which had worthily earned a rest,
-and by these redispositions my whole frontage, which, in spite of the
-reduction effected, still exceeded nine miles, was organized to be
-held by four Divisions, counting from south to north as follows: 32nd
-Division, Fifth Division, Second Division and Third Division, the
-latter lying north of the River Somme.
-
-The First and Fourth Divisions were each sent back, the former to
-a pleasant reach of the Somme near Chipilly, and the latter to the
-neighbourhood of Amiens, there to have a long rest and to recuperate
-after their strenuous labours. These two Divisions were, I had
-resolved, to be kept in reserve for any _tour de force_, the need
-for which might arise later. This disposition was based on intuition
-rather than on reasoning; but the event proved that it was a fortunate
-decision; for, at a juncture, three weeks later, when a great
-opportunity presented itself, these two Divisions, then fully rested,
-proved of priceless value.
-
-The Third Division held my front north of the Somme, and their presence
-there ensured my unchallenged tactical control of that important
-river valley. Numerous crossings had been systematically destroyed
-by the enemy, as he was being driven back from bend to bend, and as
-systematically repaired by my indefatigable engineer and pioneer
-services, as fast as the ground passed under our control.
-
-Reconstruction of bridges and culverts is as tedious a business as
-their demolition is expeditious. A charge of gun-cotton, placed in the
-right spot, a primer, a short length of fuse, or an electric lead to
-a press button are all that are needed, and a single sapper standing
-by with a match, to be lighted at the last moment, can do all that is
-necessary to provide three days' work for a whole Company of Engineers.
-
-Nevertheless, the control of the river valley was of inestimable
-advantage, for it enabled me to carry out a policy of continuous and
-rapid repair. Consequently, during the whole of our subsequent advance,
-every means of traversing the valley from south to north, which had
-been tampered with, was soon restored, as fast as my infantry had made
-good their advance beyond the ruined crossing.
-
-This facility was to have an important bearing upon my freedom of
-action, not many days later, when the Corps came head on to the north
-and south stretch of the Somme, and found every bridge gone. That
-circumstance alone would have proved an irretrievable misfortune, if
-I had not had already available numerous restored crossings upon the
-east and west reach of the river. For by that means, my ability to
-pass troops and guns rapidly from one bank of the Somme to the other
-remained unimpaired.
-
-Before leaving the line, the First Division had captured Cappy and
-advanced its line on the right to the western outskirts of Foucaucourt,
-while the Third Division had possessed itself of Suzanne. This was
-the situation when, on the night of August 26th, the Second and Fifth
-Divisions came into the line. Conferences with the four line Divisions
-were held both on the 25th and 26th August, in order to ensure
-co-ordinate action for the process of hustling the enemy across the
-Somme.
-
-I was, at this stage, sorely perplexed by the uncertain attitude of
-the Fourth Army. I was all for pushing on energetically, and received
-General Rawlinson's approval to do so on August 24th; but on the very
-next day he enunciated a diametrically opposite policy, which greatly
-embarrassed me.
-
-The gist of the Army attitude on the 25th may be thus expressed. The
-presence of a new German Division, the 41st, of whom we had taken many
-prisoners in Cappy, pointed to an intention on the part of the enemy
-to reinforce. This negatived any intention to undertake a withdrawal.
-This conclusion justified a revision of the Fourth Army policy. The
-Army had done its fair share; it had drawn in upon its front all the
-loose German reserves. Its resources in Tanks had been depleted, and
-it would take a month to replace them. Other Armies would now take up
-the burden, and the Fourth Army would now mark time, and await events
-elsewhere. There was no object in hastening the enemy's evacuation of
-the bad ground in the bend of the Somme, or in our taking possession
-of it. There was a possibility of the French taking over more frontage
-from us, and the Australian Corps front might in consequence be reduced
-to a three-Division front, with three Divisions in Corps Reserve.
-
-The course of events, in the next seven days, convinced me that the
-results which were then achieved were totally unexpected by the Fourth
-Army, and very vitally influenced the whole subsequent course of the
-campaign. In point of fact, Lord Rawlinson quite frankly conceded to
-me as much in express terms a week later. The appreciation made at
-the time was doubtless an intentionally conservative one, but it did
-not take into account the reserve of striking power which remained in
-the Australian Corps, even after the past eighteen days of continuous
-fighting, and even without the assistance of the Tanks.
-
-There was only one saving clause in the Army attitude, and this
-fortunately gave all the loophole necessary for the continued activity
-which I desired to pursue. It was this: "Touch must be kept with
-the enemy." This was of course a mere formality of tactics, and was
-intended as no more than such. But it was sufficient to justify an
-aggressive policy on my part.
-
-As the result of my redispositions, completed by the night of August
-27th, and of my conferences with the line Divisions, each Division
-stood on that morning on a single Brigade front, with its two remaining
-Brigades arranged in depth behind it. My orders were that in the event
-of the enemy giving way, the line Brigade was to push on energetically,
-and was to be kept in the line until it had reached the limits of its
-endurance. The other two Brigades were to follow up more leisurely, but
-to be prepared, each in turn, to relieve the line Brigade.
-
-I had calculated that, by this method, each Brigade should be able to
-function for at least two days on the frontage allotted; and that,
-therefore, the present line Divisions could continue for at least six
-days; and if the stress upon the troops had not been severe, they could
-carry out a second rotation of Brigades for a second tour of six days.
-The calculation was, in general terms, fully realized; and all of the
-four line Divisions of that day did actually carry on for twelve days,
-and two of them for an additional six days.
-
-The Artillery resources of the Corps were throughout the whole of this
-period fully maintained at the standard of the early days of August.
-I still had at my disposal eighteen Brigades of Field Artillery; and
-so was able to allot four Brigades of Artillery to each line Division,
-while keeping two in Corps Reserve.
-
-Early on the morning of August 27th, a policy of vigorous patrolling
-all along our front was initiated. At several points, enemy posts which
-were known to have been strongly held the night before were found to be
-now unoccupied. Although reports varied along my front, they so fully
-confirmed my anticipations, that without waiting to make any reference
-to the Army, I ordered an immediate general advance along my whole
-front.
-
-There followed a merry and exciting three days of pursuit; for the
-enemy was really on the run, and by nightfall on August 29th, not
-a German who was not a prisoner remained west of the Somme between
-Peronne and Brie.
-
-In previous years, during the enemy's retreat from Bapaume to the
-Hindenburg Line, we had had experience of his methods of withdrawal.
-Then they were deliberate, and his rearguards so methodically and
-resolutely held up the British advance, that the enemy had been able
-not only to remove from the evacuated area every particle of his
-warlike stores, which were of any value, but also to carry out a
-systematic devastation of the whole area, even to the felling of all
-the fruit trees, and the tearing up of all the railways for miles.
-
-The present withdrawal was of a very different character. To begin
-with, it had been forced upon him by the battle of Chuignes, and he
-had to undertake it precipitately and without adequate preparation.
-Secondly, he had an impassable river behind him, which could be crossed
-only at three points, Brie, Eterpigny, and Peronne. Thirdly, he had in
-front of him a Corps flushed with its recent victories, while he had
-been suffering a succession of defeats and heavy losses.
-
-Nevertheless, he put up a good fight, and employed well-considered
-tactics. The German Machine Gun Corps was much the best of all his
-services. The manner in which the machine gunners stood their ground,
-serving their guns to the very last, and defying even the Juggernaut
-menace of the Tanks, won the unstinted admiration of our men. During
-these three days of retreat the enemy used his machine guns to the best
-advantage, and they constituted the only obstacle to our rapid advance.
-
-These tactics were not unexpected by me, and I had an answer ready.
-Defying the whole traditions of Artillery tactics in open warfare, I
-insisted upon two somewhat startling innovations. The first was to
-break up battery control, by detaching even sections (two guns), to
-come under the direct orders of Infantry Commanders for the purpose of
-engaging with direct fire any machine-gun nest which was holding them
-up.
-
-The second was to insist that all batteries should carry 20 per cent.
-of smoke shell. This elicited a storm of protest from the gunners.
-Every shell carried which was not a high explosive or shrapnel shell
-meant a shell less of destructive power, and, therefore, a shell
-wasted. That had been the Gunnery School doctrine. But I imagine that
-the test made at this epoch of the liberal use of smoke shell against
-machine guns will lead to a revision of that doctrine.
-
-Smoke shell proved of inestimable value in blinding the German machine
-gunners. A few rounds judiciously placed screened the approach of our
-Infantry, and many a machine-gun post was thereby rushed by us from
-the flanks or even from the rear. General Hobbs (Fifth Division) and
-General Rosenthal (Second Division), both of whom had formerly been
-gunners, proved the strongest advocates for these smoke tactics.
-
-By such means an energetic and successful pursuit was launched and
-maintained. By the night of August 27th, our line already lay to the
-east of the villages of Vermandovillers, Foucaucourt (on the main road)
-and Fontaine. We also mastered the whole of the Cappy bend, including
-the crossings of the Somme at Eclusier. The Fifth Division had a
-particularly hard fight at Foucaucourt, which did not fall to us until
-we had subjected it to a considerable bombardment. Tivoli Wood was the
-chief obstacle encountered that day by the Second Division. The advance
-of the 32nd Division also progressed smoothly.
-
-During August 28th our advance was continued methodically,
-and by that night the Corps front had reached the line
-Genermont--Berry-en-Santerre--Estrees--Frise.
-
-On August 29th the line of the Somme was reached, and all three
-Divisions south of the Somme stood upon the high ground sloping down to
-the Somme, with the river in sight from opposite Clery, past Peronne
-and as far south as St. Christ.
-
-In the meantime the Third Division north of the Somme had marched
-forward, in sympathetic step with the southern advance, successively
-seizing Suzanne, Vaux, Curlu, Hem and Clery. The Third Corps on my left
-had followed up the general advance, though always lagging a little in
-rear, thus keeping my left flank secure; and beyond the Third Corps,
-the Third Army was approaching the line of the Canal du Nord, which
-lay, as explained, in prolongation of the south-north course of the
-Somme.
-
-The war correspondents of this time were given to representing the
-progress of the Australian Corps during these three days as a leisurely
-advance, regulated in its pace by the speed of the retiring enemy. But
-it was nothing of the kind.
-
-On the contrary, it was his withdrawal which was regulated by the speed
-of our advance. There was not a foot of ground which was not contested
-by all the effort which the enemy was able to put forth. It is quite
-true that his withdrawal was intentional; but it is not true that it
-was conducted at the deliberate rate which was necessary to enable him
-to withdraw in good order.
-
-He was compelled to fight all the time and to withdraw in disorder. He
-was forced to abandon guns and huge quantities of stores. The amount
-of derelict artillery ammunition found scattered over the whole of
-this considerable area alone reached hundreds of thousands of rounds,
-distributed in hundreds of dumps and depots, as well as scores of tons
-of empty artillery cartridge-cases, the brass of which had become of
-priceless value to the enemy.
-
-Regimental and even Divisional Headquarters were abandoned as they
-stood, with all their furniture and mess equipment left intact. Signal
-wire and telephone equipment remained installed in all directions,
-hospitals and dressing-stations were left to their fate. The advance
-yielded to us over 600 prisoners, some half-dozen field-guns, and large
-numbers of smaller weapons.
-
-The last two days of the advance led us across a maze of trenches and
-the debris of the 1916 campaign. The weather was unfavourable, there
-was much rain and an entire absence of any kind of shelter. As a result
-the line Brigades had to put forth all their powers of endurance and
-reached the Somme in a very tired condition.
-
-In the meantime my air squadron had an exceptionally busy time. Contact
-patrols were maintained throughout every hour of daylight. Difficult as
-it was to identify the positions reached by our leading troops during
-an organized battle, where their approximate positions and ultimate
-objective lines were known beforehand, it was doubly so when no guide
-whatever existed as to the probable extent of each day's advance, or as
-to the amount of resistance likely to be encountered at different parts
-of the front.
-
-Yet it was just under these circumstances that rapid and reliable
-information as to the progress of the various elements of our front
-line troops was more important than ever, and no means for obtaining
-such information was so expeditious as the Contact Aeroplane.
-
-To assist the air observer in identifying our troops, the latter were
-provided with flares, of colours which were varied from time to time
-in order to minimize the risk of imitation by the enemy. The method of
-their employment, whether singly or in pairs, or three at a time, was
-also frequently varied.
-
-These flares on being lit gave out a dense cloud of coloured smoke,
-easily distinguishable from a moderate height. The contact plane, which
-would carry coloured streamers so that the infantry could identify it
-as flying on that particular duty, would, when ready to observe, blow
-its horn and thereupon the foremost infantry would light their flares.
-
-It was a method of inter-communication between air and ground, which,
-after a little practice, came to be well understood and intelligently
-carried out. By its means a Divisional or Brigade Commander was kept
-accurately informed, with great promptitude, of the progress of each of
-his front line units, in relation to the various woods, ruined mills,
-and other obstacles which lay spread across their path.
-
-But the Air Force had another interesting duty, which was to watch
-the roads leading back from the enemy's front line to his rear areas.
-During tranquil times little movement could ever be seen on the enemy's
-roads in the hours of daylight, for the very good reason that he took
-care to carry out all his transportation to and from his front zone
-under cover of darkness.
-
-Now, however, his needs pressed sorely upon him; and our air reports,
-from this time onwards, became almost monotonous in their iteration of
-the fact that large columns of transport were to be seen moving back in
-an easterly direction. These were his retiring batteries or his convoys
-of wagons carrying such stores as he was able to salve.
-
-Occasionally, too, came reports of convoys, which looked like motor
-lorries or buses, moving hurriedly westward towards the German front.
-These were generally diagnosed by us as reinforcements which were being
-continually hurried forward to replace his human wastage, which was
-considerable both by direct losses from death, wounds and capture and
-by reason of the fatigue of such a strenuous and nerve-racking retreat.
-
-All this movement in the enemy's rearward areas was a legitimate object
-of interest to my Artillery. But, unfortunately, most of it lay well
-beyond the range of my lighter Ordnance. The mobile Field Artillery
-was effective at no greater range than about four miles. The longer
-range 60-pounders found it a formidable task to traverse such broken
-country, while the still heavier tractor-drawn 6-inch guns found it
-quite impossible.
-
-The latter, and all the Heavy and Super-Heavy guns and howitzers were
-tied down to the roads, and it proved a tremendous business to advance
-them in sufficient time and numbers to make their influence felt upon
-the present situation. I have nothing but praise for the admirable
-manner in which Brigadier-General Fraser and his Heavy Artillery
-Headquarters carried out the forward moves of the whole of his
-extensive Artillery equipment and organization from August 8th onwards
-to August 23rd. But the rapid advance of the battle line during the
-last week of August left the great bulk of Heavy Artillery far behind.
-
-This was not entirely or even appreciably a question of the rate of
-movement of the great lumbering steam or motor-drawn heavy guns.
-They could quite easily march their eight or ten miles a day if they
-could have a clear road upon which to do it. But it was this question
-of roads that dominated the whole situation during this period, and
-subsequently until the end of the campaign of the Corps.
-
-The construction and upkeep of roads throughout the Corps area had
-been, even in the days of stationary warfare, a difficult problem. At a
-time like the present, when the battle was moving forward from day to
-day, it became one of the first magnitude.
-
-The rate of our advance was controlled almost as much by the speed with
-which main and secondary roads could be made practicable for traffic
-as by the degree of resistance offered by the enemy. Obstacles had to
-be removed, the debris of war cleared to one side, shell holes solidly
-filled in, craters of mine explosions bridged or circumvented, culverts
-repaired and drains freed of obstructions.
-
-The road surfaces, speedily deteriorating under the strain and wear
-of heavy motor lorry traffic, had to be kept constantly under repair.
-The transportation of the necessary road stone for this purpose alone,
-imposed a heavy burden upon the roads and impeded other urgent traffic.
-The amount of road construction and reconstruction actually in hand
-within the Corps area, at any one time, far exceeded that normally
-required in peace time for any great city district.
-
-The traffic on the roads was always of the most dense and varied
-character. For the proper maintenance and supply of a large Army Corps
-at least three good main roads, leading back to our sources of supply,
-would have been no more than adequate; but I seldom had at my disposal
-more than one such main road, which had often to be shared with an
-adjoining Corps.
-
-There was ever an endless stream of traffic, labouring slowly along
-in both directions. On such a road as that leading east from Amiens
-towards the battle front, the congestion was always extreme. Ammunition
-lorries, regimental horsed transport, motor dispatch riders, marching
-infantry, long strings of horses and mules going to and from water,
-traction engines, convoy after convoy of motor buses, supply wagons,
-mess carts, signal motor tenders, complete batteries of Artillery,
-motor tractors, tanks, Staff motor cars and gangs of coolie labourers
-surged steadily forward, in an amazing jumble, with never a moment's
-pause.
-
-Such were some of the difficulties with which I was beset in the rear
-of my battle line. They were negligible compared with those which now
-loomed in front of it.
-
-The reach of the Somme which runs northerly from Ham past Brie to
-Peronne and there turns westerly, differs entirely in its topographical
-features from that picturesque Somme Valley along both of whose banks
-the Corps had been fighting its way forward. The steep banks have
-disappeared, and for a mile or so on either side the ground slopes
-gently towards the river bed.
-
-The river itself is not less than 1,000 yards wide, being, in fact, a
-broad marsh, studded with islets which are overgrown with rushes, while
-the stream of the river threads its way in numerous channels between
-them. The marsh itself is no more than waist-deep, but the flowing
-water is too deep to be waded.
-
-Along the western side of this marsh runs the canalized river, or, as
-it is here known, the Somme Canal, flowing between masonry-lined banks.
-The construction of a crossing of such a marsh was, even in peace time,
-a troublesome business. It meant, to begin with, a causeway solidly
-founded upon a firm masonry bed sunk deep into the mud of the valley
-bed. The canal itself and each rivulet required its separate bridge, in
-spans varying from thirty to sixty feet.
-
-What, therefore, came to be known as the Brie Bridge, situated on the
-line of the main road from Amiens to St. Quentin, really consisted of
-no less than eight separate bridges disposed at irregular intervals
-along the line of the causeway, between the western and eastern banks
-of the valley. The demolition of even the smallest of these eight
-bridges would render the whole causeway unusable, and would prohibit
-all traffic.
-
-There exists an almost exactly similar arrangement of bridges at St.
-Christ, about two miles to the south of Brie, but no other traffic
-crossing to the north of Brie until Peronne is reached. There, both the
-main road and the railway, which cross side by side, are provided with
-large span lattice girder bridges, over the main canal, while the marsh
-has been reclaimed where the town has encroached upon it. The river
-overflow is led through the town in several smaller canals or drains,
-all of them liberally bridged where crossed by roads and streets.
-
-The Peronne bridges are, therefore, no less indispensable, and no less
-easily rendered useless than those at Brie. Should such crossings be
-denied to me, it would be just possible to pass infantry across the
-valley, by night, by wading and swimming, or by the use of rafts,
-always provided that no opposition were to be met with. But to pass
-tanks or heavy guns, or even vehicles of the lightest description
-across the marsh, would have been quite impossible.
-
-The Somme threatened, therefore, to be a most formidable obstacle to my
-further advance. It was incumbent upon me to assume that at the very
-least one of each series of bridges would be demolished by the enemy in
-his retreat. It would have been criminal folly on his part were it to
-have been otherwise; and I had had previous evidence of the efficiency
-of his engineer services.
-
-Reconnaissances pushed out on the night of August 29th speedily
-verified the assumption that some at least of the bridges had been
-wrecked. It was ultimately ascertained that every single bridge
-in every one of the crossings named had been methodically and
-systematically blown to pieces.
-
-There was only one tactical method by which such an obstacle could be
-forced by a frontal operation. By bringing up sufficient Artillery to
-dominate the enemy's defences on the east bank of the river valley,
-it might have been possible to pass across sufficient infantry to
-establish a wide bridge-head, behind which the ruined crossings could
-be restored, probably under enemy Artillery fire.
-
-But it would have been a costly enterprise, and fraught with every
-prospect of failure, should the enemy be prepared to put up any sort of
-a fight to prevent it.
-
-The value to me of the possession of the whole of the Somme Valley from
-Clery westwards, and the rapid repair of the bridges therein which I
-had been able to effect, will now become apparent. For it permitted the
-crystallizing into action of a project for dealing with the present
-situation, which had been vaguely forming in my mind ever since the day
-when I took over the Chipilly spur.
-
-This was the plan of turning the line of the Somme from the north,
-instead of forcing it by direct assault from the west.
-
-It may be argued that such a plan would have been equally practicable,
-even if the left flank of the Australian Corps had hitherto remained
-and now still lay south of the Somme, instead of well to the north
-of it. In that case other Corps on the north would have carried out
-that identical plan, which ultimately did achieve this important and
-decisive result.
-
-I very much doubt it.
-
-I had also had some experience of the futility of relying too much upon
-the sympathetic action of flank Corps, who usually had their hands full
-enough with their own problems, and had little time to devote to the
-needs of their neighbours. It would, moreover, have been disagreeable
-and inexpedient in the extreme to seek a right of way through the
-territory over which another Corps held jurisdiction. Corps Commanders
-were inclined to be jealous of any encroachment upon their frontiers,
-or upon the tactical problems in front of them.
-
-Moreover, I wanted, more than anything else, that this should be an
-exclusively Australian achievement.
-
-The situation being as it was, I possessed freedom of action, elbow
-room, and control not only of all the territory which I should require
-to use, but also of all the Somme crossings west of Clery.
-
-[Illustration: Final Instructions to the Platoon--an incident of the
-battle of August 8th, 1918. The platoon is waiting to advance to Phase
-B of the battle.]
-
-[Illustration: An Armoured Car--disabled near Bony, during the battle
-of September 29th, 1918.]
-
-The strategic object in view was to make the line of the Somme useless
-to the enemy as a defensive line, and thereby render probable his
-immediate further enforced retreat to the Hindenburg line.
-
-The tactical process by which this was to be achieved was to be an
-attack upon and the seizure of the key position of the whole line, the
-dominating hill of Mont St. Quentin.
-
-But the paramount consideration was that the attack must be delivered
-_without delay_ and that the enemy should not be allowed a single hour
-longer than necessary to establish himself upon that hill.
-
-Often since those days, wondering at the success which came to the
-Australian Corps at Mont St. Quentin, I have tried justly to estimate
-the causes which won us that success. And I have always come back
-to the same conclusion, that it was due firstly and chiefly to the
-wonderful gallantry of the men who participated, secondly to the
-rapidity with which our plans were put into action, and thirdly to the
-sheer daring of the attempt.
-
-Mont St. Quentin lies a mile north of Peronne. It stands as a sentinel
-guarding the northern and western approaches to the town, a bastion of
-solid defence against any advance from the west designed to encircle
-it. The paintings and drawings of many artists who have visited the
-historic spot will familiarize the world with its gentle contours.
-
-Viewed from the west, from the vantage point of the high ground near
-Biaches in the very angle of the bend of the river, Mont St. Quentin
-constitutes no striking feature in the landscape. But standing upon the
-hill itself one speedily realizes how fully its possession dominates
-the whole of the approaches to it. So placed that both stretches
-of the river can from it be commanded by fire, and giving full and
-uninterrupted observation over all the country to the west and north
-and south of it, the hill is ringed around with line upon line of wire
-entanglements, and its forward slopes are glacis-like and bare of
-almost any cover.
-
-Estimated by the eye of an expert in tactics, it would surely be
-reckoned as completely impregnable to the assault, unaided by Tanks, of
-any infantry that should attempt it.
-
-It was the seizure, by a sudden attack, of this tactical key that
-was the kernel of the plan which now had to be evolved. The capture
-of the town of Peronne was consequential upon it, though little less
-formidable a task. The effect of both captures would be completely to
-turn the whole line of the Somme to the south, and the line of the
-Canal du Nord; to open a wide gate through which the remainder of the
-Fourth and Third Armies could pour, so as to roll up the enemy's line
-in both directions.
-
-In view of the historical importance of the occasion, and the
-controversies which have already risen regarding the genesis of the
-conception of these plans, I make no apology for reproducing, _in
-extenso_, a literal copy of the notes used at the conference which I
-held in the late afternoon of August 29th at the Headquarters of the
-Fifth Division, then situated in a group of bare sheds--but recently
-vacated by the enemy--on the main east and west road, just south of
-Proyart. The conference was attended by Lambert (32nd Division), Hobbs
-(Fifth Division), Rosenthal (Second Division), and Gellibrand (Third
-Division). Neither "Tanks" nor "Heavy Artillery" attended as they could
-not, in any event, co-operate in the execution of the plan.
-
- 29. 8. 18.
-
- PLAN FOR CROSSING THE SOMME
-
- A. ALTERATION OF FRONTAGES.
-
- _Defensive Front_: 32nd Division to take over on 30th from Fifth
- Division front as far north as Ferme Lamire, total 7,500 yards, to
- hold same defensively, place outposts on river line, demonstrate
- actively as if aiming to cross Somme; if no resistance, endeavour
- establish posts on far bank; otherwise demonstrate only. Use only
- one Brigade; remainder of Division to rest and refit.
-
- _Offensive Frontages_: Fifth Division to extend along canal bank
- from Ferme Lamire to Biaches, frontage 4,000 yards. Second
- Division to extend from Biaches for 4,700 yards to bridge at
- Ommiecourt. Third Division: present front north of river.
-
- B. OBJECTIVES.
-
- All Divisions to continue eastward advance. Each Division to have
- an immediate and an ultimate objective, thus:
-
- Third Division: Immediate: High ground north-east of Clery.
- Ultimate: Bouchavesnes Spur.
-
- Second Division: Immediate: Bridge Head at Halle. If
- crossing there impossible
- then cross behind front
- of Third Division.
- Ultimate: Mont St. Quentin.
-
- Fifth Division: Immediate: Force crossing at Peronne
- Bridges; if bridges gone,
- follow Second Division
- and aim at high ground
- south of Peronne.
- Ultimate: Wooded spur east of Peronne.
-
- Whichever Division first succeeds in crossing Somme Valley, the
- other Divisions to have right of way over the same crossings.
-
- Each Division to employ only one Brigade until a satisfactory
- footing is established on immediate objective.
-
- Second Division to lead the north-east movement.
-
- Artillery to stand as at present allotted, but liable to
- re-allotment by me as operation develops.
-
-The above brief notes require but little elucidation. It is to
-be remembered that at the time they were prepared, no definite
-information had yet been received as to the condition of any of the
-Somme crossings, because at that hour the river bank had not yet been
-reached, and fighting on the west bank of the Somme was still going on.
-
-It has also to be remembered that these notes were only for my own
-guidance in verbally expounding the plan, and were not actually issued
-as written orders. Naturally many details, left unexpressed by the
-notes, were filled in during the conference. Moreover I anticipated
-that the whole operation would be one of a nature in which I would have
-to intervene as the battle proceeded, in accordance with the varying
-situation from time to time, and this actually proved to be necessary.
-
-It will be noted that on August 29th I had already reached the definite
-decision not to attempt to force the passage of the Somme south of
-Peronne; the 32nd Division was, however, instructed to make every
-demonstration of a desire to attempt it, the object being to divert the
-attention of the enemy from the real point of attack.
-
-This was to be launched from the direction of Clery. In preparation for
-it, the Second Division sent its reserve Brigade, the 5th (Martin), to
-cross the river at Feuilleres, on August 30th, to pass through the area
-and front of the Third Division, and secure a bridge head on the Clery
-side of the river, opposite to the Ommiecourt bend. The object was to
-exploit the possibility of using the Ommiecourt crossing, and if it
-were found to be intact to use it for the purpose of crossing with the
-remaining two Brigades that same night.
-
-This move was successfully accomplished, although the 5th Brigade found
-portion of the village of Clery still occupied, and that the trench
-systems to the east of it were still held in strength. After much
-skilful fighting, the Brigade reached its allotted destination, with
-slight casualties, capturing seven machine guns and 120 prisoners.
-
-The bridge at Ommiecourt was found to be damaged, but repairable so
-as to be usable by infantry on foot, and this work was at once put
-in hand. The same night the rearrangement of the fronts of all four
-Divisions in the line was carried out, and all was in readiness for the
-daring attempt to break the line of the Somme.
-
-During the afternoon of August 30th, General Rawlinson came to see me,
-and I unfolded to him the details of the operations contemplated and
-the arrangements made for the next day. I have already referred to the
-pleasant and attractive personality of this distinguished soldier. His
-qualities of broad outlook, searching insight, great sagacity, and
-strong determination, tempered by a wise restraint, never failed to
-impress me deeply. He always listened sympathetically, and responded
-convincingly. On this occasion he was pleased to be pleasantly
-satirical. "And so you think you're going to take Mont St. Quentin with
-three battalions! What presumption! However, I don't think I ought to
-stop you! So, go ahead, and try!--and I wish you luck!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-MONT ST. QUENTIN AND PERONNE
-
-
-From early dawn on Saturday, August 31st, until the evening of
-September 3rd, three Divisions of the Australian Corps engaged in a
-heroic combat which will ever be memorable in Australian history.
-
-At its conclusion we emerged complete masters of the situation. Mont
-St. Quentin, the Bouchavesnes spur, the large town of Peronne, and the
-high ground overlooking it from the east and north-east, were in our
-possession. A wide breach had been driven into the line of defence
-which the enemy had endeavoured to establish on the series of heights
-lying to the east of the Somme and of the Canal du Nord.
-
-From the edges of this breach, the flanks of that portion of his line
-which were still intact were being threatened with envelopment. For
-him there was nothing for it, but finally to abandon the line of the
-Somme, and to resume his retreat helter-skelter to the hoped-for secure
-protection of the great Hindenburg Line.
-
-The extraordinary character of this Australian feat of arms can best be
-appreciated by a realization of the supreme efforts which the enemy put
-forward to prevent it.
-
-The shower of blows which he had received on the front of his
-Second Army from August 8th onwards, had wrought upon it a grievous
-disorganization. The battered remnants of his line Divisions had been
-reinforced from day to day by fresh units, scraped up from other parts
-of his front, and thrown into the fight as fast as they could be made
-available.
-
-Sometimes they were complete Divisions from Reserve, often single
-reserve Regiments of Divisions already deeply involved, and
-sometimes even single Battalions torn from other Regiments--Pioneer
-Battalions, units of the Labour Corps, Army Troops, Minenwerfer
-Companies had all been thrown in, indiscriminately.
-
-This brought about a heterogeneous jumble of units, and of German
-nationalities, for Prussians, Bavarians, Saxons and Wuertembergers were
-captured side by side. The tactical control of such mixed forces,
-during a hasty and enforced retreat, and their daily maintenance, must
-have presented sore perplexities to the Headquarters of the German
-Second Army in those fateful days.
-
-To meet the crisis with which Ludendorff was now confronted, he
-determined to throw in one of the finest of the reserve Divisions still
-left at his disposal. The Second Prussian Guards Division was sent
-forward to occupy the key position of Mont St. Quentin, and to hold it
-at all costs.
-
-This famous Division comprised among its units, the Kaiserin Augusta
-and the Kaiser Alexander Regiments, almost as famous in history and
-rich in tradition as are our own Grenadiers and Coldstreams. There is
-no doubt that this celebrated Division fought desperately to obey its
-instructions.
-
-For the defence of Peronne, the enemy command went even further, and
-called for volunteers, forming with them a strong garrison of picked
-men drawn from many different line Regiments, to man the ramparts which
-surround the town. Dozens of machine guns were posted in vantage points
-from which the approaches could be swept.
-
-All over the river flats lying in the angle of the Somme between
-Clery, Mont St. Quentin and Peronne ran line upon line of barbed wire
-entanglements, a legacy from the 1916 fighting, and much of this was
-still intact, although breaches had been made in many places both
-by the French in 1917 and by the Germans themselves, to facilitate
-movement over the ground, during their respective re-occupations of
-this territory.
-
-The terrain, which was in greater part open, and exposed in every
-direction to full view from the heights, sloped gently upwards
-towards the commanding knoll. Cover was scarce, and the few ruins of
-brickfields and sugar refineries which dotted the landscape had also
-been garrisoned by the enemy as centres of resistance, designed to
-break up and dislocate any general attack.
-
-Our infantry was deprived of the assistance of any Tanks, for the heavy
-casualties which had been suffered by this Arm made it imperative to
-allow the Tank Corps time for repairs, renewals and the training of
-fresh crews. Nor was any appreciable quantity of Heavy Artillery yet
-available, since the congested and dilapidated condition of the roads
-prevented the advance of all but a few of the lighter varieties of
-heavy guns.
-
-The fighting of these four days was, therefore, essentially a pure
-infantry combat, assisted only by such mobile Artillery of lesser
-calibres as was available.
-
-Such was the formidable nature of the task, and of the disabilities
-under which the Second, Third and Fifth Divisions approached it.
-That they overcame all obstacles, gained all their objectives, and
-captured nearly 2,000 prisoners, mainly from crack Prussian regiments,
-constitutes an achievement memorable in military annals and standing to
-the everlasting glory of the troops who took part in it.[17]
-
-It is difficult to write a connected and consecutive account of the
-details of the fighting which took place. The most that is possible
-in the brief space available is to indicate on general lines the
-successive stages of the battle. Indeed, a minute account of the action
-of each of the 35 Battalions engaged would only prove wearisome and
-confusing. The best method of presenting a general picture of the
-course of the engagement is to follow the fortunes of each Brigade in
-turn.
-
-First in order of time, and of most importance in relation to its
-immediate results, was the action of the Second Division. It was the
-5th Brigade (Martin) which Major-General Rosenthal had detailed to open
-the attack. The remaining two Brigades of the Divisions (6th and 7th)
-received orders to rest the troops as much as possible, but to be in
-readiness to move at the shortest notice.
-
-A Machine Gun Company (16 guns) was placed at the disposal of
-Brigadier-General Martin, while the Artillery at the disposal of
-the Division, comprising five Brigades of Field Artillery and one
-Brigade of Heavy Artillery, remained under the personal control of the
-Divisional Commander.
-
-The attack opened with three Battalions of the 5th Brigade in the
-first line, and one Battalion in support. The total strength of the
-assaulting Infantry of this whole Brigade was on this day not more than
-70 Officers and 1,250 other ranks. The centre Battalion was directed
-straight at the highest knoll of Mont St. Quentin, while the right
-Battalion prolonged the line to the right. The left Battalion had
-assigned to it as an immediate objective the ruins of the village of
-Feuillaucourt, from which it was hoped that a flank attack upon the
-Mount could be developed.
-
-The advance began at 5 a.m. It was a dull morning and still quite dark.
-The two right Battalions advanced with as much noise as possible, a
-ruse which secured the surrender of numbers of the enemy lying out in
-advanced outpost positions. A nest of seven Machine Guns was rushed and
-captured without any loss to us.
-
-At the appointed hour, our Artillery opened on selected targets, the
-ranges being lengthened from moment to moment in sympathy with the
-advance of the Infantry. Although during the advance a great deal of
-machine gun fire was encountered, all went well. The centre and left
-Battalions gained a footing respectively in Feuillaucourt and on the
-main hill, but the progress of the right Battalion was arrested by
-heavy machine gun fire from St. Denis. This was the site of a ruined
-sugar refinery, and lay on the main road between Peronne and Mont
-St. Quentin. It was a strong point that presented a great deal of
-difficulty and held out to the last.
-
-The centre Battalion had by 7 a.m. passed through the ruins of Mont
-St. Quentin village and had crossed the main road from Peronne to
-Bouchavesnes. It now had to receive the full brunt of a determined
-counter attack, at a moment when it was still disorganized and
-breathless from its difficult assault. The Battalion was therefore
-withdrawn across the road and firmly established itself in an old
-trench system to the west of it.
-
-In this position it beat off five successive counter attacks,
-inflicting most severe losses upon the enemy. The Brigade maintained
-its position until nightfall. Its losses for the day were 380.
-
-In the meantime the 6th Brigade (Robertson) of the Second Division had
-been ordered to cross the Somme and move up behind the 5th Brigade,
-in readiness to carry on the attack, and obtain possession of the
-remainder of the main spur of Mont St. Quentin. As this Brigade only
-entered into the fight at a later hour, I must revert to the events of
-the forenoon of August 31st.
-
-It was about 8 a.m. that I was able to report to General Rawlinson,
-by telephone, that we had obtained a footing on Mont St. Quentin
-itself. He was at first totally incredulous, but soon generously
-congratulatory, proclaiming that the event was calculated to have a
-most important influence upon the immediate future course of the war.
-He expressed the hope that we should be able to hold on to all that we
-had gained.
-
-To this task I now had to bend myself, and I found it necessary to put
-a severe strain upon the endurance and capacity of the troops. Great as
-had always been my concern in the pitched battles of the days recently
-passed to reduce to very definite limits the demands made upon the
-physical powers of the Infantry soldier, a juncture had arrived and
-a situation had been created, which demanded the utmost rapidity in
-decision and action, and a relentless insistence upon prompt response
-by the troops.
-
-The 5th Brigade had been thrust out nearly two miles beyond our
-general line. Its flanks were in the air. It was undoubtedly fatigued.
-Everything must be done and done promptly to render it adequate
-support, to take advantage of its success, and to ensure that its
-effort had not been in vain.
-
-It will be remembered that the Fifth and Second Divisions had both been
-instructed to endeavour to secure a crossing over the river. Whichever
-Division first succeeded was to accord right of way to its neighbour.
-No success had yet attended the efforts of the Fifth Division, the main
-Peronne bridges being still inaccessible from the south. The bridge
-sites were under the enemy's fire, which precluded the possibility of
-repair; and the approaches to them were also swept by Machine Gun fire.
-
-The Second Division, on the other hand, had during the past 48 hours
-succeeded in making the Feuilleres bridge traffickable for guns and
-vehicles, and those at Buscourt and Ommiecourt for foot traffic. It
-transpired later that the enemy, rightly suspecting that I would
-attempt to use this latter crossing, kept it under heavy Artillery fire
-all day.
-
-As soon as I had formed a judgment on the situation, about 8.30 a.m.
-(August 31st), I issued instructions to General Hobbs immediately to
-put in motion his reserve Brigade, the 14th (Stewart). He was to direct
-it towards the Ommiecourt crossing, and later in the day to pass it
-across the river and through the ground won that morning by the 5th
-Brigade, with a view to developing at the earliest possible moment an
-attack in a south-easterly direction upon the town of Peronne itself.
-The ultimate objective was still to be the high ground south and east
-of Peronne. His 8th Brigade was also to be held ready to move at the
-shortest notice.
-
-It was a serious performance to demand, and it was fraught with many
-risks. There was no time to assemble responsible Commanders concerned,
-separated as they were by long distances over bad and congested roads.
-In the absence of properly co-ordinated action, there was every chance
-of confusion, and cross-purposes, and even of collision of authority
-arising from the troops of one Division passing over ground under the
-tactical control of another Division.
-
-But the only alternative was to do nothing and attempt nothing. That
-would have been the worst of bad generalship, and it was an occasion
-when risks must be taken.
-
-The course of subsequent events fully demonstrated that the only true
-solution was the one chosen, for the whole of the defences of Peronne
-were thereby taken with a rush, while they were still being organized
-by the enemy. The delay of only a day or two would have meant that
-the capture of Peronne would have been many times more costly than it
-actually proved to be.
-
-The 14th Brigade had before it a march of some seven miles to
-bring it into a position in which it could deploy for an attack on
-Peronne. Working according to text book such a march could have been
-accomplished in something under three hours. It took the Brigade over
-ten hours. For the line of march lay across the very worst of the
-shell-torn, tangled country enclosed in the great bend of the Somme,
-and progress was most difficult and exhausting. Frequent halts were
-necessary to rest the men, and restore order to the struggling columns.
-
-Discovering the impossibility of crossing the river at Ommiecourt, the
-Brigade made a wide detour to cross by the newly established bridge at
-Buscourt. It arrived there just at the same time as the 7th Brigade
-(Wisdom), which Rosenthal had also directed to the same point for the
-same purpose. This occurrence illustrates the nature of the risks of
-a hastily developed tactical plan. However, the good sense of the
-Commanders on the spot obviated any serious confusion and the 7th
-Brigade gave the 14th Brigade the right of way.
-
-The 14th Brigade completed its march during the hours of falling
-darkness and, passing through Clery, came up on the right of the 6th
-Brigade, in readiness for the combined attack by the two Divisions at
-dawn on September 1st.
-
-The night that followed was a stressful one for all Commanders.
-Divisional Generals had to co-ordinate all action between their
-Brigadiers, and their Artillery. The Brigadiers in turn had afterwards
-to assemble their Battalion Commanders, and decide on detailed plans
-of action for each separate unit. Distances were long, the country was
-strange, roads were few and unfamiliar; so that it is not surprising
-that the last conferences did not break up until well into the small
-hours of September 1st. There was no sleep that night for any senior
-officer in the battle area.
-
-September 1st was a day full of great happenings and bloody hand to
-hand fighting. The assault by the 6th Brigade passing over the line
-won the day before by the 5th Brigade carried it well over the crest
-of Mont St. Quentin, and confirmed for good and all our hold on that
-imperious fortress. Few prisoners were taken, for it was bayonet work
-over every inch of the advance, and the field was strewn all over with
-enemy dead. The impetus of the 6th Brigade assault carried our line 600
-yards to the east of the summit of the knoll.
-
-It is difficult to allocate, in due proportion, the credit for the
-capture of this important stronghold between the two gallant Brigades
-concerned. It is true that the 6th Brigade did on September 1st achieve
-the summit of the Mount; but it is equally true that it only completed
-what the 5th Brigade had so wonderfully begun the day before. No one
-will grudge to either of the two Brigades their share of the honour
-that is due to both.
-
-The action of the Second Division on that day was completed by the
-bringing up of the 7th Brigade into a position of support behind the
-6th Brigade, thereby relieving the 5th Brigade from further line duty.
-
-Although the action of the individual Brigades of all the three battle
-Divisions must necessarily be narrated separately and with some
-attempt at a proper chronological sequence, yet it would be a mistake
-to suppose that their actions were independent of each other. On the
-contrary, they all operated as part of a comprehensive battle plan,
-which necessarily took full account of the interdependence of the
-course of events in different parts of the field.
-
-Thus the advance on this day of the 6th Brigade materially assisted
-the attack on Peronne by the 14th Brigade, while the progress of the
-latter removed much trouble from the southern flank of the 6th Brigade.
-
-The men of the 14th Brigade that day had their mettle up to a degree
-which was astonishing. On the occasion of the great attack of August
-8th, and ever since, it had been the cruel fate of this Brigade to be
-the reserve unit of its Division on every occasion when there was any
-serious fighting in hand. The Brigade felt its position very keenly.
-As one Company Commander, who distinguished himself in that day's
-fighting, afterwards picturesquely put it: "You see! We'd been trying
-to buy a fight off the other fellows for a matter of three weeks. On
-that day we got what we'd been looking for, and we made the most of
-it."[18]
-
-The 14th Brigade advanced to the assault at 6 a.m. concurrently with
-the eastern thrust of the 6th Brigade. One Battalion, with two others
-in support, was directed against St. Denis, while the fourth made
-a direct attack on Peronne. Many belts of wire had to be struggled
-through. There was much machine gun fire, from front and flanks, and
-it looked as if further progress would be impossible. Nevertheless,
-this gallant Brigade, by persistent effort, made itself master of the
-western half of Peronne.
-
-The attack on St. Denis at first made very slow progress, the enemy
-holding out resolutely in the ruins of that hamlet, and in the adjacent
-brickfields. During the day, the 15th Brigade made spirited attempts to
-effect the crossing of the river, and to co-operate from the south.
-
-The records of the events of these three days are confused and
-discontinuous. Many of the men who could have filled in the gaps of the
-story were unfortunately killed or evacuated as casualties. But from
-the mass of reports, the salient facts emerge clearly.
-
-The 15th Brigade succeeded, on September 2nd, in putting a Battalion
-across the river, and this assisted the 14th Brigade to "mop up" the
-remainder of the town of Peronne. Later the rest of the 15th Brigade
-and two Battalions of the 8th Brigade (Tivey) were also drawn into the
-fighting. St. Denis and the brickfields fell to us during this period.
-
-Although the situation, from the point of view of the advance
-eastwards, remained almost stationary, it was a time of fierce local
-fighting. Many deeds of valour and sacrifice adorn the story.
-
-It was late on September 3rd that the effects of this long-sustained
-struggle became apparent. The whole of Peronne and most of the high
-ground in its vicinity were, by then, definitely in our hands, and
-although the little suburb of Flamicourt held out determinedly for
-another day, the further resistance of the enemy began to fade away.
-
-Doubtless the loss of Mont St. Quentin was a controlling factor in the
-decision which was forced upon him to undertake a retreat, for with
-that eminence in our possession, he could not have maintained himself
-for many days in the town, nor would its retention have been of any
-tactical value to him.
-
-As an immediate result, the high ground of the Flamicourt spur just
-south of Peronne fell into our hands on September 3rd, and the enemy
-outposts spread along the banks of the marsh in front of the 32nd
-Division sought safety from complete envelopment by a hasty withdrawal;
-a number of their isolated posts were, however, left unwarned of this
-retreat, so that these were, later on, captured by us from the rear.
-
-I must now briefly turn to the doings of the Third Australian Division
-during these four epic days. Its three Brigades (9th, 10th and 11th)
-daily performed prodigies of valour. The Division carried our line,
-inexorably, up the Bouchavesnes spur in a north-easterly direction. The
-seizure of this very important ground not only powerfully aided but
-also strongly confirmed our seizure of Mont St. Quentin.
-
-The Division, having been given its general role, was necessarily left
-to a large extent to decide for itself its detailed action from day to
-day, seeing that it still had to perform the function, inevitable for a
-flank Division, of a link with my neighbouring Corps. Fortunately the
-arrival of a new, fresh Division (the 74th) from the Eastern theatre
-of war, which came into the Third Corps and was promptly thrown in,
-enabled that Corps to keep up fairly well with the general advance.
-
-The British Third Army, too, was now beginning to make its pressure
-felt, and was approaching the line of the Canal du Nord over a wide
-front. The Third Division was therefore free to conform its forward
-movement to that of the rest of the Australian Corps; its energetic
-action gave me elbow room for the manoeuvring of so many Brigades in
-the region of Clery, and its capture of so much valuable ground east of
-the Canal du Nord served greatly to widen the breach.
-
-By the night of September 3rd, the main tactical purposes on which
-the Corps had been launched on August 29th had been achieved in their
-entirety. Their execution furnishes the finest example in the war
-of spirited and successful Infantry action conducted by three whole
-Divisions operating simultaneously side by side.
-
-Lord Rawlinson has more than once referred to the operation as the
-finest single feat of the war. Inevitably the dramatic and unlooked
-for success of the Second Division in the rapid storming of the Mount
-enthrals the imagination and overshadows all the other noteworthy
-incidents of these pregnant days. But none will begrudge the rain of
-congratulations which fell upon the head of Major-General Rosenthal.
-A massive man, whose build belies his extraordinary physical energy,
-he always was an egregious optimist, incapable of recognizing the
-possibility of failure. That is why he invariably succeeded in all
-that he undertook, and often embarked upon the apparently impossible.
-An architect before the war, he served for the first two years as an
-Artillery officer, both as a Brigade Commander and as a General of
-Divisional Artillery. He gained his Infantry experience as Commander
-of the 9th Brigade, and so was well qualified by versatile service to
-assume the command of the Second Division. His leadership of the latter
-contributed in no small measure to the fame which it has won.
-
-The text of the congratulatory message issued on this occasion by the
-Fourth Army read as follows:
-
- "The capture of Mont St. Quentin by the Second Division is a feat
- of arms worthy of the highest praise. The natural strength of the
- position is immense, and the tactical value of it, in reference
- to Peronne and the whole system of the Somme defences, cannot be
- over-estimated. I am filled with admiration at the gallantry and
- surpassing daring of the Second Division in winning this important
- fortress, and I congratulate them with all my heart.
-
- "RAWLINSON."
-
-[Illustration: MAP E]
-
-I am concerned nevertheless that the fine performance of the Fifth
-Division should not be underrated. The circumstances under which
-General Hobbs was called upon to intervene in the battle, at very short
-notice, imposed upon him, personally, difficulties of no mean order. I
-am prepared to admit quite frankly that the demands which I had to make
-upon him, his Staff and his Division were severe.
-
-Following upon four days of arduous pursuit, his troops were called
-upon to undertake a long and difficult march over a most broken
-country, to be followed by three days of intensive fighting of the most
-severe character.
-
-General Hobbs was, first and foremost, a lover of the Australian
-soldiers, and their devoted servitor. He belonged to that type of
-citizen-soldier who, before the war, had spent long years in preparing
-himself for a day when his country would surely require his military
-services. Like several of the most successful of Australia's generals,
-he had specialized in Artillery, and was, in fact, selected as the
-senior Artillery Commander of Australia's first contingent. That
-fact alone was the stamp of his ability. While he would be the last
-to lay claim to special brilliance, or outstanding military genius,
-he nevertheless succeeded fully as the Commander of a Division, by
-his sound common sense, and his sane attitude towards every problem
-that confronted him. He possessed also the virtue of a large-hearted
-sympathy for all subordinate to him; and that gave him a loyal
-following, which carried him successfully through several great crises
-in the affairs of the Fifth Division.
-
-This period was one of those crises. When, late on the afternoon of
-August 31st, he urged upon me with much earnestness the stress upon his
-troops, and repeated the anxious representations of his Brigadiers--I
-was compelled to harden my heart and to insist that it was imperative
-to recognize a great opportunity and to seize it unflinchingly. His
-response was loyal and whole-hearted. His Division followed the lead
-which he thus gave them, and he led them to imperishable fame.
-
-Considerable redispositions followed upon the transfer of my battle
-front to the country east of the Somme. These, and the reasons which
-governed their nature, chief among which was the resumption of the
-enemy's rearward movement, I shall deal with in due course.
-
-Battle problems on the grand scale were, for the moment, relegated to
-the background, and there now arose a multitude of other problems,
-almost equally burdensome, relating to the supply and maintenance of
-the Corps.
-
-Every Corps must be based upon a thoroughly reliable and efficient line
-of supply, and for this a railway in first-class operating condition is
-a prime essential. Every kind of requisite must be carried by rail to
-some advanced distribution point called a "railhead." Thence supplies
-are distributed by motor lorry to the areas still further forward.
-
-The appropriate distance of the railhead behind the battle front is
-conditioned by the available supply of motor lorries, and their range
-of action. If the distance be too great the stress upon the mechanical
-transport becomes so severe that it rapidly deteriorates, and an undue
-proportion of lorries daily falls out of service. As the facilities
-for repair in the mobile workshops are strictly limited, an excessive
-rate of wastage among these vehicles soon dislocates the whole supply
-arrangements.
-
-The experience hitherto gained had demonstrated that a railhead could
-not conveniently be allowed to fall behind our advance more than ten or
-twelve miles. This limit had already been reached when the Corps front
-arrived on the west bank of the Somme, and the strain upon the lorry
-service was already great.
-
-For a further deep advance of the whole Corps in pursuit of the enemy
-towards the Hindenburg Line, still distant another fifteen miles, it
-became imperative, therefore, that the railway service to Peronne
-and beyond should be speedily reopened, or some equally efficient
-alternative provided. The great lattice girder railway bridge at
-Peronne had been irretrievably demolished. Engineers estimated that it
-would take two months to restore it, and at least a month to provide
-even a temporary deviation and crossing. Nevertheless, the work was put
-in hand without delay.
-
-An alternative possibility was to construct a new line of railway to
-connect the existing military line at Bray to the Peronne railway
-station, a length of new construction amounting to some six miles. It
-was estimated that such a link could be built in a fortnight, and this
-work also was commenced forthwith.
-
-There was a third possibility. This was speedily to repair that
-portion of the railway which lay west of the Somme, and to establish
-a railhead near Peronne, but on the opposite bank of the river. This
-proposal involved only a few days' work, for extensive sidings already
-existed on the west bank, and had been left more or less undamaged by
-the enemy. But it also involved the complete restoration of all road
-traffic bridges, both at Peronne and at Brie, for the service of the
-intense traffic which would ensue across the Somme from such a point of
-departure.
-
-The rebuilding of the crossings was, in any case, a matter of urgent
-necessity. By this time all my heaviest guns had already been brought
-up to the vicinity of the west bank of the Somme, and had there
-perforce to wait; for a long detour, on the densely-crowded roads, to
-cross the Somme, say as far back as Corbie, where bridges were strong
-and grades were easy, was out of the question.
-
-The problem, therefore, involved a stable and comprehensive
-reconstruction; half measures would not meet the case. But half
-measures were an inevitable necessity of the situation, to begin
-with, because troops had to be fed, and their supplies could be
-carried in no lighter way, in adequate quantities, than in the normal
-horse-transport wagons.
-
-The order of procedure had, therefore, to be, firstly, hastily to
-reconstruct some sort of bridging, based generally upon the wreckage
-of the original bridge, and strong enough to carry loads up to those
-of horsed wagons; next to stay, strut and strengthen these temporary
-bridges to fit them for the passage of the lighter guns, and finally to
-reconstruct them in their entirety for the heaviest loads.
-
-At a point such as the southern entrance to Peronne, where the
-approaches could not be conveniently deviated, the difficulties of
-such successive reconstructions, while the flow of traffic had to be
-maintained, can hardly be fully realized.
-
-For many days, in the early part of September, Brie, Eterpigny and
-Peronne were scenes of feverish activity. Every available technical
-unit that could be spared from other urgent duty was concentrated upon
-this vital work. Most of the Engineer Field Companies, three of the
-five Pioneer Battalions, both Tunnelling Companies, and all the Army
-Troops Companies, laboured in relays, night and day.
-
-Hundreds of tons of steel girders, of all lengths and sections, were
-hurried up, by special lorry service. Pile-driving gear was hastily
-improvised. The wreckage of the original bridges was overhauled for
-sound, useful timbers. The torn and twisted steelwork was dragged out
-of the way by horse or steam power, and tumbled in a confused mass into
-the river bed. Hammer, saw and axe were wielded with a zest and vigour
-rarely seen in peace-time construction. The whole work was supervised
-by my Chief Engineer, Brigadier-General Foott, and was later, when the
-advance of the Corps was resumed, completed by the Army authorities.
-The speed and punctuality with which the first temporary viaducts were
-completed and ready for use were exemplary, and reflect every credit
-upon Foott and his helpers. Within forty-eight hours bridges usable for
-ordinary supplies and for field guns became available, and thereafter
-were rapidly strengthened by successive stages.
-
-The whole work of restoration, in which the Australian technical
-services played so prominent a part, won the highest praise from the
-Field Marshal, who expressed his appreciation in a special message of
-thanks to these services.
-
-The congestion of traffic at the Peronne bottleneck was, however,
-serious. Blocks occurred, reminiscent of those which are familiar in
-the heart of London when the dense traffic is temporarily held up by
-a passing procession. Marching troops always had the right of way;
-and a Division on the move up to or back from the line meant a severe
-super-load upon the already overtaxed road capacity.
-
-Sometimes a block of traffic would occur for an hour at a time, and a
-motley collection of vehicles, stretching back for miles, would pile up
-on the roads. The capabilities of a very able road and traffic control
-service, numbering hundreds of officers and men, acting under the
-direction of my Provost Marshal, were often severely tested. More than
-once my own motor car was unavoidably held up at this bottleneck for
-half an hour at a time, on occasions, too, when the situation required
-my urgent presence at some important meeting.
-
-All these minor embarrassments arising from the passage by the
-Australian Corps of a great military obstacle such as the Somme were,
-however, soon dissipated. The Somme had loomed large, for many days, in
-the minds of all of us--first as a problem of tactics, and next as a
-problem of engineering. Before the end of the first week of September
-the Somme had ceased to hold our further interest. It had become a
-thing that was behind us, both in thought and in actuality.
-
-The enemy was once more on the move, and it became our business to
-press relentlessly on his heels.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[17] The following telegram, selected at random from the files of
-September 1st, indicates the extraordinary mixture of units which the
-enemy had collected to defend this vital point:
-
- "To Australian Corps Intelligence from 2nd Division--sent September
- 1st at 7 p.m. Identifications from prisoners examined since noon:
- 28th R.I.R.; 65th I.R.; 161st I.R.; 94th I.R.; 95th I.R.; 96th
- I.R.; Alexander Regt.; Augusta Regt.; 4th Bav. I.R.; 8th Bav. I.R.;
- 25th Bav. I.R.; 447th I.R.; 2nd G. Guard F.A.R.; 221st F.A.R.; 2nd
- Co. M.G. Corps; 67th Pioneer Co.; 3rd Army Troops; 102nd Pioneer
- Bn. of 2nd Guards Div.; 402nd M.W.Co.; 185th R.I.R. A pioneer of
- the 23rd Co. has been retained for 5th Aust. Div. to remove charges
- from bridges not yet blown. Prisoner 96th I.R. says Regt. came
- up for counter-attack night 31-1 to retake Mt. St. Quentin, but
- counter-attack did not come off, owing to attack expected from
- us. All prisoners interrogated agree that line was to be held
- at all costs. Regiments are now considerably intermingled and
- disorganized."
-
-(NOTE.--I.R.--Infanterie Regiment; R.I.R.--Reserve Infanterie Regiment;
-M.W.Co.--Minenwerfer Compagnie; Bav.--Bavarian.)
-
-[18] Mr. Hughes, the Commonwealth Prime Minister, visited the
-battlefield of Mont St. Quentin, with a distinguished company, on
-September 14th. The officer in question, standing near the summit
-of the hill, was about to relate his experiences, and this was his
-preamble.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-A LULL
-
-
-During the closing days of August events had commenced to move rapidly;
-for the offensive activities initiated by the Fourth Army, three weeks
-earlier, began to spread in both directions along the Allied front.
-
-The Third British Army had entered the fray on August 21st; the First
-British Army was ready with its offensive on August 26th, on which
-date the Canadian Corps, restored to its old familiar battleground,
-delivered a great attack opposite Arras.
-
-The French, who, on my right flank, had along their front followed up
-the enemy retirement begun after the battle of Chuignes, reached Roye
-on August 27th, and Noyon on August 28th. Their line, however, still
-bore back south-westerly from the vicinity of the river near Brie and
-St. Christ.
-
-By August 29th the line of the First Army had reached and passed
-Bapaume, and that of the Third Army cut through Combles. The Third
-Corps, on my immediate left, had made good its advance as far as
-Maurepas.
-
-Thus, the thrust of the Australian Corps beyond the Canal du Nord, on
-August 31st to September 3rd, formed the spearhead which pierced the
-Somme line, and the Corps was still leading the advance both of the
-French and the British.
-
-From the morning of September 4th the evidences of the enemy's
-resolution to withdraw to the Hindenburg Line became hourly more
-unmistakable. His Artillery fire died down considerably, particularly
-that from his long range and high velocity guns. These were probably
-already on the move to the rear, in order to clear the roads for his
-lighter traffic.
-
-[Illustration: The Hindenburg Line Wire--near Bony.]
-
-[Illustration: The 15-inch Naval Gun--captured at Chuignes, August
-23rd, 1918.]
-
-The high ground near Biaches (west of Peronne) provided a vantage point
-from which an extensive view of the whole country could be obtained.
-There lay before us, beyond the Somme, a belt about eight miles deep,
-which had scarcely suffered at all from the ravages of the previous
-years of war.
-
-It was gently undulating country, liberally watered, and heavily
-wooded, especially in the minor valleys, in which snuggled numerous
-villages still almost intact and habitable, although, of course,
-entirely deserted by the civilian population.
-
-Beyond this agreeable region there began again an area of devastation,
-which grew in awful thoroughness as the great Hindenburg Line was
-approached some six miles further on. For, through the autumn and
-winter of 1917, and up to the moment of the German offensive in March,
-1918, it was there that the British Fifth Army had faced the enemy in
-intensive trench fighting.
-
-In all directions over this still habitable belt there were now signs
-of unusual life and activity. Columns of smoke began to rise in the
-direction of all the villages. Sounds of great explosions rent the air.
-These were sure indications that the enemy was burning the stores which
-he could not hope to salve, and was destroying his ammunition dumps
-lest they should fall into our hands.
-
-A vigorous pursuit was now the policy most to be desired. But my troops
-in the line were very tired from the exertions of a great struggle,
-and many of the units, by reason of their battle losses, required time
-to reorganize and refit. It was also essential that no rapid advance
-should be attempted until the arrangements for supply, depending upon
-the completion of the Somme crossings, had been assured.
-
-The general line of advance of the Corps had, during August, been in a
-due easterly direction. The operations about Peronne had necessitated
-a drive north-easterly, and the advance of my Third Division up the
-Bouchavesnes spur had carried them square across the line of advance of
-the Third Corps.
-
-The first step was to restore our original Corps boundaries, and to
-resume the original line of advance. By arrangement with General
-Godley, his 74th Division took over the ground captured by my Third
-Division, which was thereby released and enabled to concentrate, for a
-couple of days' rest, in the Clery region. The Second Division employed
-its 7th Brigade on September 2nd and 3rd to advance our line beyond
-Haut Allaines, another two miles east of Mont St. Quentin, routing from
-the trenches of that spur the strong rearguards which the enemy had
-posted for the purpose of delaying us.
-
-On the night of September 4th the 74th Division took over the Haut
-Allaines spur also, thereby releasing my Second Division, and the
-latter was withdrawn to the Cappy area for a thorough and well-deserved
-rest.
-
-Meanwhile, the 32nd Imperial Division, availing itself of the temporary
-crossings which had hastily been effected over the Somme, brought its
-front up, on the eastern bank of the river, level with the line which
-had by September 4th been reached by the Fifth Australian Division.
-
-On September 5th, therefore, I had, east of the Somme, two Divisions in
-the line, the 32nd on the right or south, the Fifth Australian on the
-left or north, each operating on a frontage of two Brigades, with one
-Brigade in reserve. This was, however, quite a temporary arrangement,
-devised merely to allow time for the Third Division to reorganize and
-resume its place in the front line of the general advance.
-
-The general withdrawal of the enemy, over a very wide front, now began
-to effect a very substantial reduction of the length of frontage which
-he had to defend. The enemy communiques and wireless propaganda of that
-time busied themselves with the explanation that the withdrawals in
-progress were being deliberately carried out for the very purpose of
-releasing forces from the line to form a great strategic reserve.
-
-These protestations did not deceive us, nor did we on our part fail
-also to take full advantage of the steady shortenings of the Allied
-front. Marshal Foch decided once again to readjust the international
-boundary, and my own front was thereby considerably shortened. The
-French took over from the 32nd Division all ground south of the main
-Amiens--St. Quentin road; and that road henceforth became my southern
-boundary.
-
-This, coupled with the readjustment of the northern boundary with the
-Third Corps, as already narrated, reduced the total frontage for which
-I remained responsible to about ten thousand yards, an extent which
-was never again exceeded. It was still, however, in my judgment, too
-long a frontage for an effective pursuit by only two Divisions, and
-arrangements were initiated on the same day to bring back the Third
-Division into line.
-
-During September 5th I advanced my front to the line Athies--Le
-Mesnil--Doingt--Bussu. Severe fighting took place near Doingt.
-Opposition came mainly from machine guns; but isolated field-guns
-also gave us trouble. We captured that day about a hundred and fifty
-prisoners.
-
-Next day my Third Division came into the line on the north. I divided
-my frontage equally between the three Divisions, placing each on a
-single Brigade front. This was, in fact, a repetition of the order of
-battle which had carried us so successfully and rapidly up to the Somme.
-
-Each front line Brigade took up the role of Advanced Guard to its
-Division. The 11th Brigade led the Third Division; the 8th Brigade led
-the Fifth Division, while the 97th Brigade covered the 32nd Imperial
-Division.
-
-For the first time in the war I found an opportunity of employing
-my Corps Cavalry (13th Australian Light Horse) on other than their
-habitual duty of carrying despatches, or providing mounted escorts to
-convoys of prisoners of war. Here at last was a chance for bold mounted
-tactics, as the county was mainly open and free of wire and trenches.
-
-To each Division I therefore allotted a squadron of Light Horse for
-vanguard duty, together with detachments of the Australian Cyclist
-Battalion. These troops more than justified their employment by
-bold, forward reconnaissance, and energetic pressure upon the enemy
-rearguards.
-
-So promising, indeed, was the prospect of the useful employment of
-cavalry, that I prevailed upon the Army Commander to endeavour to
-secure for my use a whole Cavalry Brigade. Brigadier-General Neil Haig
-(cousin of the Field Marshal) was actually sent for and placed under
-my orders. I duly arranged a plan of action with him, but before the
-1st Cavalry Brigade, stationed many miles away, had completed its
-long march into my area, the situation had already changed, and the
-employment of Cavalry on the Fourth Army front had to be postponed
-until a much later date.
-
-A juncture had arrived when it became imperative for me to consider the
-possibility of affording some relief to the three line Divisions; all
-of them had been fighting without respite since August 27th. The troops
-were so tired from want of sleep and physical strain that many of them
-could be seen by the roadside, fast asleep. These three Divisions had
-almost reached the limits of their endurance.
-
-It was essential, however, that they should be called upon to yield
-up the last particle of effort of which they were capable. Every mile
-by which they could approach nearer to the Hindenburg defences meant
-a saving of effort on the part of the fresh waiting Divisions, whom
-I had earmarked for the first stage of our contemplated assault upon
-that formidable system; a system which I knew to be too deep to be
-overwhelmed in a single operation.
-
-It was for this reason that I was compelled to disregard the evident
-signs of overstrain which were brought to my notice by the Divisional
-Generals and their Brigadiers, and which were patent to my own
-observation of the condition of the troops. I arranged, however, two
-measures of immediate relief, the first being to set a definite limit
-of time for the further demands to be made upon the line Divisions.
-This was fixed for September 10th. The second was to issue orders that
-the rate of our further advance was to be controlled by consideration
-for the well-being of our own troops, and not by the rate of the
-enemy's retreat. If, in consequence, any gap should eventuate, touch
-with the enemy was to be kept by the mounted troops and cyclists.
-
-The preliminary steps for effecting the reliefs thus promised for
-September 10th were begun on September 5th. The Corps was, as stated,
-on a three Division front. I had only two fit Divisions in Corps
-Reserve (_i.e._, the First and Fourth), the Second Division being
-not yet rested. My representations to the Army Commander on this
-matter bore immediate fruit; for he placed under my orders the Sixth
-(Imperial) Division (one of the first seven Divisions of the original
-Expeditionary Force). Before, however, I could take advantage of
-this windfall, the constitution of the Fourth Army underwent a vital
-alteration, of which more will be told later.
-
-The First and Fourth Divisions had been resting since August 26th. They
-had had time to reorganize their units, to reclothe and refit their
-troops, to receive and absorb reinforcements, and to fill vacancies
-among leaders. Staffs had been able to deal with a mass of arrears. The
-men had enjoyed a pleasant holiday in the now peaceful Somme Valley,
-far in rear, a holiday devoted to games and aquatic sports. Horse and
-man, alike, were refreshed, and had been inspired by the continued
-successes of the remainder of the Corps.
-
-They were however, by now, far in rear; and it was out of the question
-to tax their restored energies by calling upon them to march back to
-the battle zone. The Fourth Army, as always, extended its sympathetic
-help; two motor bus convoys, each capable of dealing with a Brigade
-group a day, were speedily materialized from the resources of G.H.Q.
-
-The completion of the moves of these two Divisions from the back area
-to within easy marching distance of the battle front therefore occupied
-three days. The use of mechanical transport for the execution of troop
-movements has now entirely passed the experimental stage, and in future
-wars, calculations of time and space will be vitally affected, whenever
-an ample supply of lorries or buses and suitable roads are available
-for the rapid concentration or dispersal of large bodies of troops.
-
-The Australian soldier is individually philosophic and stoical, but
-in the mass he is sensitive to a degree; and he is intelligent enough
-to realize how he is used or misused. It was the subject of complaint
-among the troops during the earlier years of the war, that while they
-were indulgently carried by lorries into the battle at a time when they
-were fresh and fit, they were invariably left to march long distances,
-out of the battle, when they were on the verge of exhaustion. I
-therefore tried, whenever possible, to provide tired troops with the
-means of transport to their rest areas, a facility which was always
-highly appreciated by them.
-
-By the time the First and Fourth Divisions had thus been assembled in
-the forward areas, ready to relieve the Third and Fifth Divisions,
-these latter, together with the 32nd Division, had advanced our front
-approximately to the line Vermand--Vendelles--Hesbecourt, carrying
-it to within three miles of the front line of the Hindenburg defence
-system.
-
-There can be no doubt, however, that the rate of our advance, retarded
-as it had been for the reasons already explained, had proceeded much
-more rapidly than suited the enemy.
-
-A steady stream of prisoners kept pouring in, captured in twos and
-threes, all along my front, by my energetic patrols. Numerous machine
-guns were taken; and in the vicinity of Roisel, fully three hundred
-transport vehicles and much engineering material were captured, which
-the enemy had been compelled to abandon in haste.
-
-At this juncture the British High Command arrived at the important
-decision to enlarge the Fourth Army, by adding another Corps; doubtless
-contemplating the possibility of operations on a large scale against
-the Hindenburg defences in the near future.
-
-A new Corps Headquarters, the Ninth, was to be reconstituted under
-Lieut.-General Braithwaite, and he was to become my neighbour on my
-southern flank, interposed between me and the French. Braithwaite
-had been Chief of Staff to Sir Ian Hamilton during the Dardanelles
-Expedition, and I had seen much of him there. I was to have the
-advantage, therefore, of having old Gallipoli comrades on either flank,
-Braithwaite on the south, and Godley on the north.
-
-The immediate result of this decision, which came into effect early on
-September 12th, was that the 32nd Division, which had been under my
-orders for nearly four weeks, passed over to the Ninth Corps. Lambert,
-his Staff and his Division had served me well and efficiently, and I
-was sorry to lose them out of my Corps.
-
-With the impending further shortening of my front, I had no
-justification for pressing to be permitted to retain this Division. On
-the contrary, my representations to General Rawlinson had always been
-in favour of shortening my frontage to the effective battle standard
-of August 8th, so that the Corps might at any time be in a position to
-embark on a major operation, with its whole resources in Artillery and
-Infantry concentrated, as on that occasion, upon a relatively narrow
-objective. My greatly extended front, and the direct control of the
-affairs of six separate Divisions, had been a heavy burden, involving
-great and manifold responsibilities.
-
-According to my promises to the remaining two line Divisions, the Fifth
-and Third, these were duly relieved on September 10th by the First and
-Fourth Divisions, the former on the north, the latter on the south.
-Each Division had a frontage of about four thousand yards, but this was
-to diminish rapidly, if the advance of the Corps continued, by reason
-of the fact that my southern boundary now became the Omignon River,
-whose course ran obliquely from the north-east.
-
-While all these changes in dispositions were being effected, there
-was breathing time to give attention to a heavy mass of arrears of
-work; for there could be no question of undertaking an attack on the
-Hindenburg defences without most careful and exhaustive preparation.
-
-For this the time was not yet ripe. It would still take some days to
-bring forward the remainder of my heaviest Artillery, to advance the
-railheads, to replenish the ammunition depots and supply dumps, and to
-re-establish telegraph and telephone communications.
-
-Another good reason for a more leisurely policy on the front of the
-Fourth Army lay in the events on other portions of the Allied fronts.
-By September 4th the German withdrawal had become general on all fronts.
-
-It had become clear that the enemy's retirement to his former position
-of March, 1918, was not to be confined to those fronts on which he had
-been receiving such punishment. All evidence pointed to the fact that
-his present strategy was to take up as speedily as possible a strong
-defensive attitude, behind the great system of field works, which had
-already served him so well during 1917, at a time when a considerable
-proportion of his military resources was still involved on the Russian
-and Roumanian fronts.
-
-His retirement before the First and Third British Armies was proceeding
-methodically, and on September 5th the French were crossing the Vesle,
-between Rheims and Soissons. All was going well; and those in the
-confidence of our High Command knew that, on any day now, news might be
-expected of the first great attack to be made by the American Army, to
-be directed against the St. Mihiel Salient on the Alsace front.
-
-This latter attack actually opened on September 11th, and it was
-clearly sound military policy to wait for a few days, in order
-correctly to diagnose the effect of these operations upon the enemy's
-distribution of forces.
-
-Information as to the locations and movements of all the enemy
-Divisions was in these days voluminous, accurate and speedy. Prisoners
-and documents were daily falling into the hands of the Allies over the
-whole length of the Western Front. His Divisions in the front line were
-identified daily by actual contact. As to those resting or refitting
-or in reserve, accurate deductions could be made from the mass of
-information at our disposal.
-
-It was at this time that it began to be made clear to us that the
-enemy's mobile reserves had been almost completely absorbed into the
-front line. One Division after another, particularly among those which
-had been engaged against the Australian Corps in August, was being
-disbanded. Among these were the 109th, 225th, 233rd, 54th Reserve, and
-14th Bavarian Divisions.
-
-The strength of the enemy's remaining Divisions was also rapidly
-diminishing. From prisoners we learned that many Battalions now
-had only three Companies instead of four, many Regiments only two
-Battalions instead of three, and even the Company strengths were at a
-low ebb.
-
-We could well afford to approach the immediate future with greater
-deliberation.
-
-Since August 8th, the Corps front had already advanced twenty-five
-miles, and it was not long before I had to abandon the luxurious
-chateau of the Marquis de Clermont-Tonnere, at Bertangles, whose
-spacious halls and spreading parks had formed so pleasant a habitation
-for the whole of my Corps Headquarters.
-
-The scale of comfort possible for all senior Commanders and Staffs
-rapidly declined as the advance developed. Generals of Corps, Divisions
-and Brigades had to be content with living and office quarters in a
-steadily descending gradation of convenience. From chateau to humbler
-dwelling house, and thence into bare wooden huts, and later still into
-mere holes hollowed out in the sides of quarries or railway cuttings,
-were the stages of progress in this downward scale.
-
-My Headquarters moved from Bertangles to a group of village houses at
-Glisy on August 13th; thence on August 31st to Mericourt, where the
-best had to be made of a derelict, much battered and almost roofless
-chateau, which the Germans had rifled of every stick of furniture, and
-even of all doors and windows, in order to equip a large collection of
-dug-outs in a neighbouring hill-side.
-
-Again on September 8th I moved into the very centre of the devastated
-area lying in the Somme bend, on to a small rise near Assevillers,
-where a number of tiny wooden huts served us as bedrooms by night and
-offices by day. Only one hut, more pretentiously brick-walled and
-evidently built for the use of some German officer of high rank, was
-available to fulfil the duties of hospitality.
-
-In spite of such discomforts, the daily life at Corps Headquarters
-flowed on uninterruptedly in its several quite distinct activities. On
-the one hand, there was the grim business of fighting, the detailed
-conduct of the battle of to-day, the troop and artillery movements
-for that of to-morrow, the planning of the one to be undertaken still
-later; rounds of conferences and consultations; visits to Divisions and
-Brigades, and to Artillery; reconnaissances to the forward zone; and an
-intent and ceaseless study of maps and Intelligence summaries.
-
-Hourly contact with Headquarters of Fourth Army and of flank
-Corps had to be maintained. Then, following the day's strenuous
-activities out of doors, there was at nights a never-diminishing mass
-of administrative work, disciplinary questions, honours, awards,
-appointments, promotions, and a formidable correspondence which must
-not be allowed to fall into arrear.
-
-Again, in the back areas there were the unemployed Divisions of
-the Corps, who must be regularly visited, both at training and at
-play. There were medals and ribbons to be distributed to the gallant
-winners; addresses to be delivered; and the work of reorganizing
-and refitting the resting units to be supervised. Still further in
-rear, demonstrations of new experiments in tactics or in weapons, or
-in mechanical warfare, had frequently to be attended, for study and
-criticism.
-
-And lastly there was the social life of the Corps; for its performances
-were beginning to attract attention beyond the limited, if select,
-circles of the Fourth Army. A steady stream of visitors began to set
-in. It was a necessary burden that suitable arrangements for their
-reception and entertainment had to be maintained.
-
-The duties of hospitality had been simple at a time when Corps
-Headquarters was still housed in palatial chateaux, situated in country
-hitherto untouched by the war, and within easy reach of all supplies.
-It was a very different matter to offer even reasonable comfort to a
-visitor at a time when Government rations constituted the backbone of
-our fare, when there were only bare floors to sleep upon for those who
-were not fortunate enough to possess a camp bed or valise, and when
-even an extra blanket or pillow or towel was at a premium.
-
-Yet we were always most glad to see visitors, and those of them who
-were soldiers had, of course, a full understanding of our limitations.
-It was not always so with others who, in the earlier years of the war,
-when all Corps had a fixed location and had achieved a high standard of
-domestic comfort, had been accustomed to an adequate reception.
-
-Upon the whole, our guests were indulgent, and understood that the
-stress of current events placed a very strict limit upon the amount of
-time that the members of my Staff or I could devote to them.
-
-[Illustration: MAP F]
-
-Among many other distinguished men whom I had the honour to receive
-were members of the War Cabinet, such as Lord Milner, then Secretary of
-State for War, and Mr. Winston Churchill, the Minister of Munitions;
-public men, such as Sir Horace Plunkett and Robert Blatchford; eminent
-authors, such as Sir Conan Doyle, Sir Gilbert Parker and Ian Hay;
-famous artists, such as Louis Raemakers, Streeton and Longstaff;
-celebrated journalists, like Viscount Burnham, Thomas Marlowe and Cope
-Cornford; together with many representatives of the Royal Navy, and of
-the armies of our Allies, and Attaches from all the Allied Embassies.
-
-The Commander-in-Chief, Field Marshal Haig, was a frequent caller, and
-never departed without leaving a stimulating impression of his placid,
-hopeful and undaunted personality, nor without a generous recognition
-of the work which the Corps was doing.
-
-General Birdwood, also, the former Corps Commander, who now commanded
-the Fifth Army, paid several visits to the Corps, travelling long
-distances in order to speak a few encouraging words to the Commanders
-and troops with whom he had formerly been so long and so closely
-associated. He, too, was always a most welcome visitor. Although since
-the previous May he had ceased to control the fighting activities of
-the Corps, this did not lessen the intense pride which he took in its
-daily successes.
-
-Many of our civilian visitors thirsted for the noise and tumult
-of battle, and were most keen to get under fire, even if only of
-long-range artillery fire. This was a constant source of anxiety to
-me, for it was an unwritten law that the responsibility of their safe
-sojourn in the Corps area rested with me. More often than not they
-had to be dissuaded from visiting the forward zone, and induced to
-spend their available time in inspecting some of our show spots in the
-rearward areas, such as the Calibration ranges, or the Corps central
-telegraph station, or the Tank park, or even the Prisoner of War Cages,
-and the numerous depots of captured guns and war trophies.
-
-The Corps prisoners' cage was always, throughout the period of our
-active fighting, a scene both of great interest and much activity.
-Although all prisoners of war had to be evacuated to the rear usually
-within about twenty-four hours of their admission, and every day a
-batch marched out under escort, yet the Corps cage between July and
-October was never empty.
-
-When early in July the stream of prisoners began to flow in, and
-thereafter grew steadily stronger, my Intelligence Service, headed by
-Major S. A. Hunn, rose thoroughly to the occasion. Among our troops
-sufficient numbers of all ranks proficient in the German language
-were speedily found. After a little training they learned to deal
-expeditiously with the lengthy searchings and interrogations which
-followed the arrival of all new-comers.
-
-Documents of every description found upon prisoners excepting their
-pay-books, were seized and examined. The German soldier is an
-inveterate sender and recipient of picture postcards. It was surprising
-how much information of an invaluable character could be gleaned from
-a postcard. A date, a place name, the number of a Unit or Regiment,
-the name of a Commander, reference to a train journey or a fight, are
-often sufficient, when read by an expert in relation to the context,
-to furnish definite information of the whereabouts of a Division, or
-of the fact that it has been or is about to be disbanded, or of its
-intended movement to some other part of the front, or of the losses
-which it has suffered.
-
-All these scraps of information, when compared with similar items
-gathered on other fronts, soon enabled the whole story of all movement
-that was going on behind the enemy's lines to be deduced from day to
-day with wonderful completeness.
-
-So, also, maps, sketches, copies of orders, or of battle instructions,
-and the contents of note-books and of personal diaries always repaid
-the closest scrutiny. Such study produced results which, even if not of
-immediate value to me, were nevertheless passed on to the Army, and by
-them broadly promulgated, in daily summaries, for the benefit of all
-our other Corps.
-
-The oral interrogation of the prisoners, particularly of officers,
-often produced results of first-class importance. Information as
-to dispositions, intentions, new tactical methods or new weapons
-frequently emerged from these inquiries. It was rare that prisoners
-refused to talk, and rarer still for them to attempt to mislead with
-false information. If they did attempt it, the interrogating officer
-was usually sufficiently well-informed upon the subject of inquiry to
-be able to detect the inconsistency.
-
-As the prisoners were invariably examined separately, it was never
-difficult to discriminate between the true, upon which the majority of
-them were in agreement, and the false, upon which the minority never
-agreed.
-
-Should the prisoner prove uncommunicative or deceitful, then if he
-were of sufficient education to make it worth while, the Intelligence
-Officer had yet another method, besides direct questioning, at his
-disposal.
-
-For a certain number of our own men, who could speak German fluently,
-and who had been carefully tutored in their role, were provided with
-enemy uniforms, and allowed to grow a three-days' beard, so as to
-impersonate prisoners of war. These men, so equipped, were called
-"pigeons." A pigeon would be ostentatiously brought under escort
-into the prisoners' cage, and would sojourn for a day or more in a
-compartment of it among the specially selected genuine prisoners. He
-would indicate by a secret sign the time when he should himself be led
-to the Intelligence Office for interrogation. It was seldom that he
-came away empty-handed.
-
-The demeanour of our captives, on reaching the cages, varied widely,
-according to the stress which they had undergone. Some wore an air of
-abject misery, and were thoroughly cowed and subservient. Others were
-defiant, sulky and even arrogant.
-
-Our treatment of them was firm, but humane. Physically, they had
-nothing to complain of; they were fed and quartered on the same
-standard as our own men. But they were given to understand from the
-very outset that we would stand no nonsense, and that they must do
-exactly what they were told. Few of them ever gave us any real trouble.
-
-The subsequent employment of prisoners of war did not come under my
-jurisdiction, and it was seldom that any prisoner working parties were
-available to me. My Corps area rarely extended sufficiently far back
-from the front line to carry it beyond the zone in which, by agreement
-between the belligerents, the employment of prisoners of war was
-forbidden.
-
-Australian soldiers are nothing if not sportsmen, and no case ever
-came under my notice of brutality or inhumanity to prisoners. Upon the
-contrary, when once a man's surrender had been accepted, and he had
-been fully disarmed, he was treated with marked kindness. The front
-line troops were always ready to share their water and rations with
-their prisoners, and cigarettes were distributed with a liberal hand.
-
-On the other hand, the souvenir-hunting instinct of the Australian
-led him to help himself freely to such mementos as our orders had not
-forbidden him to touch. Prisoners rarely got as far as the Corps cage
-with a full outfit of regimental buttons, cockades, shoulder-straps,
-or other accoutrements. Personal trinkets, pay-books, money and other
-individual belongings were, however, invariably respected; unless, as
-often happened, the prisoners themselves were anxious to trade them
-away to their captors, or escorts, for tobacco, chocolates, or other
-luxuries.
-
-Before I leave the subject of prisoners I should mention my impression
-of the German officers, particularly of those who were more senior in
-rank. Whenever a Regimental or Battalion Commander was captured, and
-time permitted, he was brought before me for a further interrogation.
-It was an experience which was almost universal that such officers were
-willing to give me little information which might injure their cause;
-on the other hand, they exhibited an altogether exaggerated air of
-wounded pride at their capture, and at the defeat of the troops whom
-they had commanded.
-
-It was that feeling of professional pique which dominated their whole
-demeanour. They were always volubly full of excuses, the weather, the
-fog, the poor _moral_ of their own men, the unexpectedness of our
-attack, the Tanks, errors in their maps--anything at all but a frank
-admission of their own military inferiority.
-
-There were two amusing exceptions to this experience. The day after
-the fighting for Peronne, when a large batch of the prisoners then
-taken was being got ready to march out of the Corps cage, officers in
-one enclosure, other ranks in another, the senior German officer, a
-Regimental Commander, formally requested permission to address some
-eighty other officers present in the cage. This request was granted.
-
-He told them that they had fought a good fight, that their capture was
-not to their discredit, and that he would report favourably upon them
-to his superiors at the first opportunity. He then went on to say that
-on his own and on their behalf he desired to tender to the Australians
-an expression of his admiration for their prowess, and to make a frank
-acknowledgment to them that he fully recognized that on this occasion
-his garrison had been outclassed, out-manoeuvred, and out-fought. The
-whole assembly expressed their acquiescence in these observations by
-collectively bowing gravely to the small group of my Intelligence
-Officers who were amused spectators of the scene.
-
-On another occasion--it was just after the battle of September 18th--I
-was asking a German Battalion Commander whether he could explain why it
-was that his men had that day surrendered in such large numbers without
-much show of resistance. "Well, you see," said he, with a twinkle in
-his eye, "they are dreadfully afraid of the Australians. So they are of
-the Tanks. But when they saw both of them coming at them _together_,
-they thought it was high time to throw up their hands."
-
-But this story is slightly anticipatory. The short breathing-space
-which had been afforded by our more leisurely advance towards the
-Hindenburg system was over. By September 12th I was once again immersed
-in all the perplexities of shaping means to ends. I had to decide, in
-collaboration with the Army Staff and the Corps on my flanks, first,
-the extent of the resources which would be required, and second, the
-successive stages which would offer promise of success in overthrowing
-the last great defensive system of all those which the enemy had
-created upon the tortured soil of France.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-HARGICOURT
-
-
-The great Hindenburg system, by which name it has come to be known
-to English readers, or the "Siegfried Line," as it is called by the
-Germans, was brought into existence during the winter of 1916 and early
-spring of 1917 in order to fulfil a very definite strategic purpose.
-This was to put into effect, on a stupendous scale, a very elementary
-principle of minor tactics, namely, that field works are constructed
-for the purpose of reducing the number of men required to defend a
-given front or locality.
-
-In themselves, field fortifications have, of course, no offensive value
-whatever, but their use permits a reduced number of men to defend one
-place, in order that a greater number of men may be available to attack
-another place.
-
-The German High Command proceeded to make use of this principle on a
-scale previously unknown in history. The whole of the Western front,
-in Belgium and France, was to be held defensively throughout 1917. The
-military resources required to defend that front were to be reduced
-to a minimum, by the provision of a line of defences protected by
-powerful field works, believed to be impregnable. This would liberate
-the greatest possible resources for the Eastern front, where an end
-could be made of the Russians and Roumanians there. As soon as these
-were disposed of, those troops, guns and aeroplanes could again be
-transferred to the West, in order similarly to dispose of the remainder
-of our Alliance.
-
-This great strategic plan was carried out in its entirety until the
-middle of 1918. It was the great Hindenburg line which had been the
-kernel of the whole conception, and, until the days which we are now
-approaching, it had remained, practically over its whole length, an
-impregnable barrier against the assaults of the French and British.
-
-It is to be remembered that the very basis which justified the
-expenditure of such enormous labour on the creation of these defences
-was the saving in man-power. It is an accepted principle of tactics
-that in any given battle the advantage always rests heavily on the side
-of the defence. Where numbers, resources and _moral_ are equal, no
-attack can hope to succeed.
-
-If, in the teachings before the war, it was correct to say that a
-Commander should hesitate to attack unless he had a preponderance
-of men and guns of at least two to one, such a dictum assuredly did
-not take into account field defences of the permanent and elaborate
-character of the Hindenburg Line. I should hardly venture to fix a
-ratio of relative strength appropriate in such circumstances.
-
-But this much is clear. The Germans had once already relied
-successfully upon the impregnability of this great work. They had every
-justification for believing that it would once again serve them to
-keep us at bay for just a few weeks longer. Winter was very near, and
-the Entente peoples might not have been able to hold together to face
-another year of war.
-
-We, on our part also, had as much justification for the resolve that
-every sacrifice must be made to overthrow these defences before the end
-of 1918, and for believing that it would require a great, concerted and
-intense effort to succeed in this.
-
-It is quite necessary, for a due appreciation of the magnitude of the
-effort which was actually made, and of the wonderful success with which
-it was rewarded, that the nature of the defences of the Hindenburg Line
-should be clearly understood. This can best be done, I think, by making
-an endeavour to realize the sense of security which the possession of
-such a line of defence must have afforded to the enemy. We are here
-interested only in that portion of the line which extends from St.
-Quentin northwards towards Cambrai.
-
-Between these two cities the country is higher than that adjoining
-it on the north and the south. It forms, therefore, a watershed,
-dividing the basin of the Somme from that of the Scheldt. Early in
-the nineteenth century, Napoleon realized the ambitious project of
-connecting these two river systems by a great Canal scheme, cutting
-right through this high country from south to north.
-
-The canal is called, in its southern reaches, Canal de St. Quentin.
-Before Cambrai is reached it merges into the Canal de l'Escaut.
-Throughout the whole of that portion which concerns us, it runs in a
-deep cutting, reaching, for great stretches, a depth of 50 to 60 feet.
-In certain places where the ground rises still higher, the canal passes
-through in great tunnels. The southernmost, or Le Tronquoy Tunnel,
-near St. Quentin, is but short; the northern boasts of the imposing
-length of 6,000 yards, and extends from Bellicourt,[19] at its southern
-portal, to Le Catelet at its northern one. From that point northwards
-the canal flows in "open cut" which gradually becomes shallower as
-Cambrai is approached.
-
-The canal excavation--except where the tunnels occur--itself affords
-an excellent military obstacle, the passage of which could be stoutly
-contested by resolute troops well dug in on its eastern banks, for
-the descent and ascent of the slopes could be obstructed by wire
-entanglements, and swept with fire. The water alone, which is too deep
-to be waded, would seriously impede infantry, while the passage of
-tanks, guns and vehicles would be impossible once the few high level
-bridges over the canal had been destroyed.
-
-Such an obstacle would not, however, of itself fulfil the requirements
-of modern war, with its searching and destructive Artillery fire.
-It was to be regarded more as the foundation upon which a complete
-system of defences could be built, and as a last line of resistance _a
-outrance_.
-
-The canal had been, naturally, located by its engineers, in the lowest
-ground available, so that its course closely follows the lines of the
-minor valleys and depressions of the ground. On both sides, therefore,
-the canal is flanked by somewhat higher ground, from which its
-immediate banks can be overlooked. On the western side particularly,
-there is a regular line of such higher plateaux on which the villages
-of Villeret, Hargicourt and Ronssoy once stood.
-
-It was clearly desirable both to deprive a besieger of such vantage
-ground, and also to provide the canal defences with a stout outpost
-defence. For these reasons, the Germans had constructed an elaborate
-system of trenches on a line generally parallel to and on the average
-a full mile west of the canal. These trenches had been perfected with
-dug-outs, concrete machine gun and mortar emplacements, and underground
-shelters. They were protected by belt after belt of barbed wire
-entanglements, in a fashion which no one understood better, or achieved
-more thoroughly, than the Germans.
-
-But much more remained. Deep communication trenches led back to the
-canal banks, in the sides of which tier upon tier of comfortable living
-quarters for the troops had been tunnelled out. Here support and
-reserve troops could live in safety and defy our heaviest bombardments.
-They could be secretly hurried to the front trenches whenever danger
-threatened.
-
-There was, indeed, a perfect tangle of underground shelters and
-passages. Roomy dug-outs were provided with tunnelled ways which led to
-cunningly hidden machine-gun posts, and the best of care was taken to
-provide numerous exits, so that the occupants should not be imprisoned
-by the blocking of one or other of them by our bombardment. But it was
-the barbed wire which formed the groundwork of the defence. It was
-everywhere, and ran in all directions, cleverly disposed so as to herd
-the attackers into the very jaws of the machine guns.
-
-The stretch of 6,000 yards of the canal which had been tunnelled was,
-however, both a hindrance and a benefit to the perfection of the
-scheme. On the one hand, the advantage of the open cut, as a last
-obstacle, was lost. Its place had to be taken by a second complete
-system of trench and wire defences, roughly following the line of the
-tunnel, but of course far above the latter. On the other hand, the
-tunnel itself afforded secure living accommodation for a substantial
-garrison.
-
-The Germans had collected large numbers of canal barges, and had towed
-them into the interior of the tunnel, mooring them end to end. They
-served as living quarters and as depots for stores and munitions. It
-was no great business to provide electric lighting for the tunnel.
-Indeed, the leads for this purpose had been in existence before the
-war. Here, again, underground shafts and ways were cut to enable the
-troops rapidly to man the trenches and machine guns, and as rapidly to
-seek a safe asylum from the heaviest shell fire.
-
-The whole scheme produced, in fact, a veritable fortress--not one,
-in the popular acceptation of the term, consisting of massive walls
-and battlements, which, as was proved in the early days of the war
-at Liege and Namur, can speedily be blown to pieces by modern heavy
-artillery--but one defying destruction by any powers of gunnery, and
-presenting the most formidable difficulties to the bravest of Infantry.
-
-Even this was not all. On the east side of the St. Quentin Canal and
-parallel to it were built still two further trench lines, both fully
-protected by wire entanglements, and capable of determined defence. The
-first of these is the Le Catelet line, about one mile distant from the
-canal. It skirts and embraces the villages of Nauroy and Le Catelet,
-while two miles still further east is the Beaurevoir line, the last or
-most easterly of all the prepared defences which the Germans had in
-France.
-
-Neither of these latter trench systems was nearly so formidably
-prepared as the main systems previously described, but together with
-them they go to make up the whole Hindenburg defensive system. In this
-region that system runs generally due north and south, with many minor
-convolutions in its line. It is altogether some 41/2 miles across from
-west to east.
-
-As its overthrow could not be attempted in a single operation, it is
-necessary for clearness of description to give definite names to each
-of the successive lines of trenches which go to form the whole defence
-system. Taking them in the order in which we attacked them, from west
-to east, they will be referred to as:
-
- The Hindenburg Outpost line (known also in this part of
- the field as the Hargicourt
- line).
- The Hindenburg main line (_i.e._, the Canal and Tunnel line).
- The Le Catelet line.
- The Beaurevoir line.
-
-[Illustration: Australian Artillery--going into action at Cressaire
-Wood.]
-
-[Illustration: Battle of August 8th, 1918--German prisoners being
-brought out of the battle under the fire of their own artillery.]
-
-During the winter of 1917-1918 the British Fifth Army and the Germans
-had faced each other in this region for many months. On our side, also,
-a system of field defences had been developed. They fell far short,
-indeed, of the completeness and ingenuity of the German works, because
-the latter had been constructed at leisure, long before, while ours had
-been built under the very fire of the German guns.
-
-For months the opposing Artilleries had pounded the country to pieces,
-effaced every sign of civilization, and churned up the ground in all
-directions over a belt some three miles wide. Heaps of broken bricks
-marked the sites of once prosperous villages. Broken telegraph poles,
-charred tree trunks, twisted rails, a chaos of mangled machinery, were
-the only remains of what had once been gardens, orchards, railways
-and factories. The whole territory presented the aspect of a rolling,
-tumbled desert from which life itself had been banished.
-
-This was the region whose western verge the vanguard of the Australian
-advance approached on September 11th, on a frontage of about 8,000
-yards, the northern extremity directed on Bellicourt, the southern on
-Bellenglise. That is to say, if our further advance had but continued
-unimpeded in the same due easterly direction, it would have brought us
-square upon the open excavation of the canal, and just clear and to the
-south of the Bellicourt--Le Catelet tunnel. Some significance attached
-to this circumstance, as will later appear.
-
-Now, some little time before, an event of peculiar interest had
-occurred. This was the capture, on another front, of a very
-ordinary-looking transport vehicle loaded high with miscellaneous
-baggage. Little escaped the inquisitive eyes of the British
-Intelligence Service, which speedily discovered that among this baggage
-there safely reposed a large collection of maps and documents. On
-examination these proved to be nothing less than the complete Defence
-Scheme of the whole "Siegfried" system, in that very sector which now
-lay before the Australian Corps.
-
-These papers were carefully overhauled and arranged. There were
-dozens of accurately drawn detailed maps, and minute descriptions of
-every tactical feature of the defences. The position of every gun
-emplacement was given; every searchlight, machine-gun pit, observation
-post, telephone exchange, command station and mortar emplacement was
-clearly marked; the topographical and tactical features of the ground
-were discussed in minute detail, and plans for the action of every
-individual unit of the garrisons were fully displayed.
-
-Naturally, an army of translators and copying clerks was set to work
-upon this precious find, and my Intelligence Service was kept busy for
-many days in making for me digests of those items likely to prove of
-special interest. It had, of course, to be remembered that the Defence
-Scheme had been brought into operation for the campaign of 1917, and it
-remained to be seen to what extent it might by now have become obsolete.
-
-It was hardly to be expected that the enemy would adhere to it in its
-entirety, especially if he were aware, as I was bound to assume that
-he was, that all this information had fallen into our hands. But the
-Scheme contained a full exposition of many important topographical
-facts which it was in any case beyond his power to alter, and which it
-was of priceless value for me to know.
-
-Although I had to devote hour upon hour to a concentrated study of
-these papers, it proved to be in greater part labour in vain so far
-as the Australian Corps was concerned, because it ultimately came
-about that although I did carry out the attack upon the Hindenburg
-outpost line in my present sector, the attack upon the Hindenburg
-main line, which I was, later, called upon to make, took place in the
-next adjoining sector to the north, _i.e._, the Bellicourt tunnel
-sector, to which these captured documents only incidentally referred.
-Nevertheless, the Ninth Corps, under Braithwaite, ultimately got the
-full benefit of these discoveries.
-
-The production of these documents on September 10th formed the
-starting point of the discussions which were now initiated in the
-Fourth Army upon the question of the series of operations necessary
-to overthrow the Hindenburg defences. General Rawlinson, on September
-13th, asked his three Corps Commanders (Butler, now restored to
-health and back at duty, Braithwaite and myself) to meet him at my
-newly-installed hutted camp at Assevillers. There, quite informally,
-over a cup of afternoon tea, the great series of operations took birth
-which so directly helped to finish the war.
-
-It was decided that the operation must necessarily be divided into
-two main phases--separated in point of time by an interval of several
-days for further preparation. All of us recognized the impossibility
-of overrunning, in a single day, so deep and formidable a system of
-defences, in such tortured country, and in weather which was already
-becoming unsettled.
-
-The first phase was to be an attempt to capture the Hindenburg outpost
-line, along the whole Army front. The French and the Third British
-Armies were to be asked to make a synchronized attack on the same
-objective. The three Corps of the Fourth Army were to attack upon the
-frontages and in the sectors on which they then stood. The date was
-left undecided, but all were to be ready at three days' notice.
-
-One important consideration was the meagre supply of Tanks available.
-The operations of August had been costly, not to say extravagant, in
-Tanks, and General Elles' repair workshops, manned largely by very
-competent Chinese coolie mechanics, had been working night and day ever
-since to repair the minor damages, and new Tanks were steadily arriving
-from England to replace those damaged beyond repair. But no large
-contingent of Tanks was to be expected until towards the end of the
-month. The upshot was that I was to be content with only eight Tanks
-for use in the contemplated operation.
-
-Late the same afternoon I communicated to Generals Maclagan and Glasgow
-an outline of the probable role of their respective Divisions in the
-very near future.
-
-In the meantime, the front-line troops had not been idle. My orders
-were that the First and Fourth Divisions were to carry the line
-forward as far as possible towards the Hindenburg outpost line, without
-committing the Corps to an organized attack. They were to operate by
-vigorous patrol action against enemy points of resistance, for the
-enemy had evidently no intention of quietly giving up the ground which
-lay between us and the Hindenburg outpost line. On the contrary, he
-had posted strong rearguards on every point of tactical value, and did
-his best to keep us as long as possible at arm's length, and beyond
-striking distance of his first great line of defence.
-
-These orders were entirely to the taste of the two Divisions now in the
-line. The First Division had served its apprenticeship to that very
-kind of fighting in the Merris area in the previous spring, and the
-Fourth Division did not mean to be a second best. Each Division stood
-on a one-Brigade front, being ordered to keep its other two Brigades
-well out of harm's way and resting, for any great effort that might be
-required.
-
-The next few days witnessed some daring exploits on the part of the
-13th Brigade of the Fourth Division and the 2nd Brigade of the First
-Division in the capture of tactical points, and in the bloody repulse
-of all attempts by the enemy to recapture them. In this way our line
-was carried up to and a little beyond what had been the old British
-reserve line of trenches of March, 1918, which lay within 5,000
-yards of the final objective of the first phase of the contemplated
-operations.
-
-On September 16th I called together the whole of the Commanders
-who were to participate in the next great battle, Maclagan (Fourth
-Division), Glasgow (First Division), Courage (Tanks), Chamier (Air
-Force), Fraser (Heavy Artillery), and the four Generals of my own
-Staff. The conference took place in a Y.M.C.A. marquee erected near
-Maclagan's Headquarters, and I was able to announce that the date had
-been fixed for September 18th.
-
-The contemplated battle presented only a few novel features. The
-methods of the Corps were becoming stereotyped, and by this time we
-all began to understand each other so well that most of what I had to
-say could almost be taken for granted. Each Commander was ready to
-anticipate the action that would be required of him, almost as soon as
-I had unfolded the general plan.
-
-The shortage of Tanks was a source of much anxiety to me. I felt that
-it would mean a heavier risk to the Infantry, and the contemplation
-of losses among our splendid men, which might be lessened by the
-more liberal use of mechanical aids, always sorely troubled me. I
-endeavoured to meet the situation by adopting two unusual expedients.
-
-The first was to _double_ the machine-gun resources of the two battle
-Divisions. This was effected by bringing up the complete machine-gun
-battalions of the Third and Fifth Divisions, and adding them to those
-of the line Divisions. This gave me a total of 256 Vickers Machine Guns
-on a frontage now reduced to 7,000 yards. It enabled me to deliver
-so dense a machine-gun barrage, advancing 300 yards ahead of the
-infantry, that to quote the words of a German Battalion Commander who
-was captured on September 18th: "The small-arms fire was absolutely too
-terrible for words. There was nothing to be done but to crouch down in
-our trenches and wait for you to come and take us."
-
-The other expedient was amusing, although no less effective. This was
-to make up for the shortage of real Tanks by fabricating a number of
-dummy ones. As soon as the word went round Engineers and Pioneers vied
-with each other in rapid "Tank" manufacture. Dumps and stores were
-clandestinely robbed of hessian, paint, wire nails, and battens, and
-some weird monstrosities were produced. The best and most plausible of
-them were selected, and actually used on the day of the battle. Four
-men dragged out each dummy, before dawn, into a position from which
-it was bound to be seen by the enemy and there abandoned it. There
-is little doubt that this trick contributed its share to the day's
-astonishing success.
-
-Once again, also, I put into practice the principle of an Artillery
-barrage plan reduced to the utmost simplicity. This, as already
-described, consisted in having the line, on which were to fall the
-shells from the whole of the barrage guns employed, perfectly straight
-across the whole front, so as to avoid all complexities in fire
-direction.
-
-The first line on which the barrage fell was called the Artillery
-"Start Line," and from such a line the barrage advanced, by regular
-leaps or "lifts" of 100 yards at a time, in perfectly parallel lines,
-until the final objective was reached. Now, experience had shown that
-such a start line for the Artillery should be at least 200 yards in
-advance of the line on which the Infantry were to form up ready for
-the assault. A liberal margin of space had to be allowed, in order to
-minimize the risks to our own Infantry.
-
-The Artillery "Start Line" was defined on our fighting maps. The guns
-were laid upon it by methods which depended upon accurate surveys,
-on the ground, of the exact position of every gun. When that had
-been determined, the map and compass helped to decide the range and
-alignment upon which the gun should open fire.
-
-On the map, also, was drawn another line 200 yards short of, or on our
-side of the Artillery "Start Line," and this was called the Infantry
-"Start Line." It then became necessary to determine, upon the actual
-ground, the position of this Infantry Start Line, and to mark it in
-such a way that the Infantry would be enabled to take up their correct
-positions. This would ensure that the Infantry would know that the fall
-of our opening barrage would be 200 yards in advance of the line so
-marked.
-
-This delicate work of marking out of the Infantry Start Line on the
-ground was invariably entrusted to the Engineers attached to the
-Brigades co-operating in the attack. The marking was done by laying out
-and pegging down broad tapes of white linen, which could be recognized
-in the dim light of early dawn. The whole work, had, of course, to be
-done unobserved by the enemy, and it was always a dangerous task.
-
-Only the fact that we were in possession of reliable large scale
-maps, recording every feature of the ground, made it possible for
-the Engineers, resourceful as they were, to do this delicate work
-with reasonable accuracy. The battered condition of the country was
-always a difficulty; for it was never easy to recognize, on the
-ground, reference points, such as a road intersection, or the corner
-of a field, or a crucifix or similar land mark, which might aid the
-surveyors in getting their bearings.
-
-[Illustration: MAP G]
-
-The Infantry Start Line had, naturally, to be located so that the
-ground upon which the tapes were to be pegged down was ground which
-was already within our possession, or accessible to us without coming
-dangerously near the enemy. It was a necessary consequence that
-portions of our always irregular front line of posts or trenches would
-lie beyond or on the enemy's side of the tape line.
-
-It was always a rule of our practice, therefore, that any Infantry
-posted in advance of the taped line should be withdrawn, behind the
-tapes, an hour before the time of Zero. It was also customary to order
-that all assaulting troops should be spread, in their appropriate
-dispositions, along the tape line, also one hour before Zero.
-
-The result of these arrangements was that for the last hour before the
-actual opening of the battle, all Infantry intended to take part in
-the assault was deployed along the tapes in a perfectly straight line,
-all along the battle front, while no troops previously in occupation
-of posts or trenches in advance of the tapes were left out in front,
-exposed to the risk of either being hit by our own Artillery, or
-mistaken, in the half light of dawn, for enemies by our own Infantry.
-
-Complex and difficult as these arrangements may appear from this
-description, they worked out in actual practice with the utmost
-smoothness. The resulting simplification of the Artillery plans, in
-this as in similar previous battles, more than justified their adoption.
-
-A liberal use was also made of direction boards, which marked the
-routes by which each separate body of assaulting Infantry should,
-during the last night, march from its place of assembly to the taped
-line or "jumping off" line, and also to mark the position which it was
-to take up upon that line. Each board had painted upon it the name of
-the unit to which it referred. Such preparatory measures, troublesome
-as they were, greatly reduced the risk of any confusion or mistake, and
-lessened the fatigue of the assaulting troops.
-
-The moon would set, on the morning of the battle, at 3.37 a.m., and the
-sun would rise at 6.27 a.m. Zero hour, for the opening of the attack,
-was therefore fixed for twenty minutes past five.
-
-Operations began inauspiciously. A soaking rain set in some two hours
-before, and made movement over the broken, clayey surface anything but
-pleasant. Although the troops were soon drenched to the skin, this did
-not in any way damp their spirits. It probably added much to the misery
-of the enemy, who could hardly fail to realize that, on any morning, a
-fresh attack might break upon him.
-
-Modern war is in many ways unlike the wars of previous days, but in
-nothing so much as in the employment of what I have more than once
-referred to as "set-piece" operations. The term is one which should
-convey its own meaning. It is the direct result of the great extension,
-which this war has introduced, of mechanical warfare. It is a
-"set-piece" because the stage is elaborately set, parts are written for
-all the performers, and carefully rehearsed by many of them. The whole
-performance is controlled by a time-table, and, so long as all goes
-according to plan, there is no likelihood of unexpected happenings, or
-of interesting developments.
-
-The Artillery barrage advances from line to line, in regular leaps, at
-regulated intervals of time, determined beforehand, and incapable of
-alteration once the battle has begun. Should the rate prove too slow
-and the Infantry could have advanced more quickly, it cannot be helped,
-and no great harm is done. On the other hand, if there be any risk of
-the barrage rate being too fast, one or two halts of ten or fifteen
-minutes are often introduced into the time-table to allow the infantry
-line, or any part of it which may be hung up for any reason, to catch
-up.
-
-Following the barrage, comes line upon line of infantry in skirmishing
-order, together with the line of Tanks when such are used. The foremost
-lines advance to capture and hold the ground, the lines in rear to "mop
-up" and deal with the enemy either showing fight or hiding underground,
-the rearmost lines collect prisoners or our own wounded, or carry
-supplies, tools and ammunition.
-
-In a well-planned battle of this nature, fully organized, powerfully
-covered by Artillery and Machine Gun barrages, given a resolute
-Infantry and that the enemy's guns are kept successfully silenced by
-our own counter-battery Artillery, nothing happens, nothing can happen,
-except the regular progress of the advance according to the plan
-arranged. The whole battle sweeps relentlessly and methodically across
-the ground until it reaches the line laid down as the final objective.
-
-Such a set-piece battle lasts usually, from first to last, for 80 to
-100 minutes; seldom for more. When the Artillery programme is ended
-the battle is either completely won, or to all intents and purposes
-completely lost. If the barrage for any reason gets away from our
-Infantry, and they are relegated to hand to hand fighting in order
-to complete their advance, the battle immediately assumes a totally
-different character, and is no longer a set-piece affair.
-
-It will be obvious, therefore, that the more nearly such a battle
-proceeds according to plan, the more free it is from any incidents
-awakening any human interest. Only the externals and only the large
-aspects of such battles can be successfully recorded. It is for this
-reason that no stirring accounts exist of the more intimate details of
-such great set-pieces as Messines, Vimy, Hamel and many others. They
-will never be written, for there is no material upon which to base
-them. The story of what did take place on the day of battle would be a
-mere paraphrase of the battle orders prescribing all that was to take
-place.
-
-On the other hand battles such as the second phase of August 8th,
-the battle for Mont St. Quentin, and the later battles of Bony and
-Beaurevoir were not set-piece operations. Therefore the developments
-from hour to hour, and even from moment to moment, are full of intense
-human interest, and replete with tales of individual courage and
-initiative. Some day, when all the material has been gathered, an abler
-pen than mine will write their story.
-
-If the reader will bear in mind all these considerations, with special
-reference to the battle of Hargicourt on September 18th he will
-realize that, in describing the dispositions, the objectives, the
-time-table and the preparations for the battle, I have told practically
-all that there is to tell of the course it took, except only as regards
-the results actually achieved, in ground won and prisoners taken.
-
-It has been difficult, nevertheless, to refrain from dwelling in detail
-upon the performances and experiences in battle of the individual
-fighting men. Any attempt to do so would, however, prove hopelessly
-inadequate. The numbers engaged were always so large, their activities
-so varied, the conditions of each battle so different in detail, that
-to do adequate justice and avoid unfair discrimination would make
-impossible demands upon the space available to me.
-
-Popular interest naturally centres upon the Infantry, not only because
-they are the most numerous, but also because they are invariably in
-the forefront of the battle and often in immediate contact with the
-enemy. Without the slightest disparagement to the important role of the
-Infantryman and to the valour which its performance demands, it must
-never be forgotten that the work of the Artillery, Engineers, Pioneers,
-Machine Gunners, Trench Mortars, Air Service and Tanks is in every way
-equally important and essential to the success of any battle operation.
-Yet it is equally true that no battle can be won without the Infantry.
-
-In a deliberately prepared battle it is not too much to say that the
-role of the Infantry is not, as a rule, the paramount one, provided
-that all goes well and that there is no breakdown in any part of the
-battle plan. That does not, however, imply that the Infantry task makes
-no high demand upon courage and resolution. On the contrary, these
-are the essentials upon which the success of the Infantry role and
-therefore of the whole battle depends.
-
-The primary duty of the Infantry, in an assault covered by an Artillery
-barrage, is to follow up the barrage closely. The barrage is nothing
-more nor less than a steady shower of shells, bursting over the very
-heads of the leading lines of Infantry, and striking the ground some 80
-to 120 yards in front of them. This shower is usually so dense that
-three to four shells per minute fall on every twenty yards of frontage.
-It is so intense a fire that no enemy, however courageous, could remain
-exposed to it. It falls on one line for three or four minutes, while
-the Infantry lie down flat. Suddenly, the barrage "lifts" or advances
-100 yards. At a signal from the platoon or company commander the whole
-line rises and rushes at top speed to catch up to the barrage, again to
-throw itself flat upon the ground.
-
-So long as no enemy are encountered, these successive rushes may go
-on without check for hundreds of yards. If during the course of any
-rush, trenches or strong points are met with and they contain enemy
-who do not immediately surrender, prompt use must be made of rifle and
-bayonet. But it is the primary business of the leading line of Infantry
-to push on and not to delay by engaging in close combat. The second and
-third lines of Infantry are there to "mop up," that is, to dispose, by
-destruction or capture, of any enemy overrun or ignored by the leading
-line. Where Tanks co-operate that is also their special business, and
-when it has been attended to they go forward at top speed to rejoin the
-leading line.
-
-In such a methodical way the advance continues until the final
-objective is reached. This event can be recognized by the Infantry
-in any of three ways, firstly by reference to the clock time; for
-the arrival of the barrage at any line on the map or ground occurs
-in pursuance of a definite time-table; secondly by the topographical
-features, and thirdly by the expedient of maintaining the barrage
-stationary at the final objective for fifteen to thirty minutes. In
-some battles, I also adopted the device of firing from every gun in the
-barrage, three rounds of smoke shell in rapid succession, as a signal
-to the Commanders of the leading line of Infantry to call the final
-halt, to select a good line for trenches, and to dig-in rapidly, a
-process technically called "consolidation."
-
-It would be too much to hope that in an attack covering a front of four
-or five miles, every part of the line should be able to advance without
-any check whatever up to the final halting place. But the expectation
-always is that by far the greater part of the whole line will be able
-to do so. If, here and there along the front, platoons or even whole
-companies were to be held up or delayed by special difficulties or
-obstacles such as thickets, or copses strongly manned by the enemy, or
-by belts of wire, or village ruins, such breaks in the general line of
-advance would matter but little to the success of the operations as a
-whole. The gaps discovered in the leading line of Infantry, when it
-had come to a halt at the final objective, would be speedily filled by
-supporting troops from both flanks of the gap, and thereby the enemy
-holding out further back, would be completely enveloped. His surrender
-would follow as soon as he realized his position, and that he had been
-cut off from any contact with his friends in his rear.
-
-Such is the normal course of the Infantry action in a pitched battle.
-It makes great demands upon the iron resolution of the Infantryman to
-push on vigorously against all obstacles, and to put forth his utmost
-physical powers to keep up with the barrage, especially when the ground
-is wet and sticky, or when uncut wire has to be crawled through. All
-this he must do, utterly regardless of the enemy fire which may be
-directed against him, whether from Artillery or machine guns. His best
-hope of immunity is always to make his rush rapidly and determinedly,
-and to get to ground immediately that he reaches the halting place,
-close up to the barrage, when signalled by his officer.
-
-Very different from such a stereotyped procedure is the action of the
-Infantry in any operation or any part of an operation which partakes
-of the character of open warfare. The main tactical purpose is still,
-as before, to advance to the seizure of an appointed objective, but
-there is no barrage, no time-table, no fixity of route, no prescribed
-formation or procedure. Everything must be left to the judgment,
-initiative and enterprise of the leader on the spot.
-
-The tactical unit of Infantry is the platoon. The action of a whole
-battalion is compounded merely of the separate actions of its sixteen
-platoons, each performing the separate role, in a general plan, that
-may be laid down by the Battalion Commanders, some to advance and
-fight, some to act in support, some to lie in reserve, some to engage
-in a flank attack, others to fetch and carry food, water and munitions.
-
-The platoon is commanded by a Lieutenant and comprises four sections,
-each under a Sergeant or Corporal. There are two sections of riflemen,
-a Lewis gun section and a section of rifle grenadiers. Each section may
-consist of from five to eight men. Let it be supposed that it is the
-business of the platoon to capture a small farmhouse which the enemy
-has fortified and in which he is holding out. Always supposing that the
-enemy garrison is not of a strength requiring more than one platoon
-for its capture the normal action of the attacking platoon would be
-somewhat as follows. The Lewis gun section would, from a concealed
-position, on one flank, keep the place under steady fire. The rifle
-grenadiers from the same or another flank would fire smoke grenades to
-make a smoke screen. One section of riflemen would endeavour to sneak
-up depressions and ditches or along hedges, so as to get well behind
-the farm and threaten it by fire from the rear. The other section of
-riflemen would choose some direct line of attack, over ground which
-offered concealment to them until they were close enough to take the
-objective with a rush.
-
-Such in very bare outline is merely an imaginary example, but it is
-sufficient to show the amount of skill, resource and energy required on
-the part not only of the leader, but also of every man in the platoon.
-The secret of success of the Australian open fighting lay in the
-extraordinary vigour, judgment and team-work which characterized the
-many hundreds of little platoon battles which were fought on just such
-lines as I have tried to suggest in this example.
-
-It will be readily seen that no comprehensive description is possible
-which would present an adequate picture of the widely varying
-activities of the Australian Infantryman in this campaign. There is
-only one source from which reliable narratives of individual fighting
-can be gathered, and that source is so voluminous that space forbids
-any but a meagre attempt to supply extracts from it. I refer to
-the recommendations made by Commanders for honours and rewards for
-individual acts of gallantry. A very small selection of these has been
-made and is presented in an appendix to this book.[20]
-
-But to return to my narrative of September 18th. On that day each
-Division attacked on a frontage of two Brigades. No serious opposition
-was encountered except at La Verguier, which was not far from our
-start line. Nevertheless, the whole of the "red" line, which was the
-objective of the "set-piece" phase of the day's battle, was in our
-possession, throughout the whole length of the Corps front, well before
-10 o'clock.
-
-This gave us complete possession of the old British front line of
-March, 1918; but the Hindenburg outpost line yet lay before us, still
-distant another 1,500 to 2,000 yards. This latter line was to be the
-ultimate or exploitation objective of the day's operations, and I could
-hardly have dared to hope that a trench system of such considerable
-strength, which had defied the Fifth Army for so long, would fall into
-our hands so easily as it did.
-
-Glasgow's Division pushed on without pause, and before nightfall had
-overwhelmed the garrison of the Hindenburg outpost line along its
-front. Maclagan's Division also fought its way forward to within
-500 yards of that line. But the troops were by then very exhausted;
-all movement was in full view of the enemy; and the ground was very
-difficult. After a consultation with Maclagan I decided to rest the
-troops, and to make an attempt to reach the final objective (blue line)
-that same night.
-
-Advantage was taken of this pause to advance the Artillery, so that
-the enemy's defences could be thoroughly bombarded before the final
-assault. At 11 o'clock the same night, the Fourth Division again
-attacked, and after severe fighting also captured the whole of the
-objective trench system.
-
-It was a great victory. The Hindenburg outpost line had been
-vanquished. From it we could now look down upon the St. Quentin Canal,
-and sweep with fire the whole of the sloping ground which lay between
-us and the Canal, denying the use of that ground to the enemy, and
-making it impossible for him to withdraw the guns and stores which
-littered the area.
-
-The overwhelming nature of the success can best be realized by the
-following almost incredible analysis of the material results of the
-day's fighting. The First Division attacked with a total strength of
-2,854 Infantry. They suffered only 490 casualties (killed and wounded).
-They captured 1,700 prisoners, apart from the large numbers who were
-killed, and the wounded enemy who made good their escape.
-
-The Fourth Division had a total assaulting strength of 3,048 of all
-ranks, of whom 532 became casualties. Their captures of live prisoners
-amounted to 2,543.
-
-In addition, the Corps gathered in upwards of 80 guns, which had been
-overrun, and had to be abandoned by the enemy.
-
-There is no record in this war of any previous success on such a scale,
-won with so little loss.
-
-The Corps on either flank of me had successes of varying quality. The
-Ninth Corps on the south had reached the red line, but the exploitation
-phase of the operation was not pressed until a later day. The Third
-Corps, on my left, however, made indifferent progress. Their line still
-bent back sharply from my left flank, and none of the enemy's outpost
-system had been gained. This portion of the Army front was that which
-lay square opposite the Bellicourt tunnel, and the fact that in this
-part of the field the Fourth Army had not yet mastered the Hindenburg
-outpost system was to be fraught with very serious difficulties for me,
-not many days later.
-
-The general plan propounded by General Rawlinson on September 13th had
-been realized in part, although not in its entirety. The successes
-gained on September 18th were nevertheless sufficiently important and
-decisive to justify immediate preparations for working out the plan
-for a great, combined and final effort to sweep the enemy out of the
-remainder of the last lines of defence which he had established in
-France.
-
-The First and Fourth Australian Divisions had, however, as it turned
-out, fought their last fight in the war. Their long and brilliant
-fighting career, which had been opened three and a half years before,
-the one on the cliffs of Gallipoli, and the other in the desert of
-Egypt, thus ended in a blaze of glory. Although a number of the
-officers and non-commissioned officers of both these Divisions were
-called upon, very shortly after, to render one more valuable service to
-the Australian Corps, the Divisions themselves were destined, because
-of the termination of hostilities, not again to make their appearance
-on any battle front. Their labours ended, the troops were taken by
-motor bus and railway to a coastal district lying to the south-west of
-Amiens, there to rest and recuperate in the contemplation of a noble
-past devoted to the service of the Empire.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[19] See Map H.
-
-[20] See Appendix B.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-AMERICA JOINS IN
-
-
-I had foreseen that the battle to be fought on September 18th was the
-last in which the First and Fourth Divisions could be called upon
-to participate during the remainder of the 1918 campaigning season.
-The wastage of their Battalions had gone on faster than the inflow
-of fresh drafts, or the return of convalescent sick and wounded.
-These two Divisions contained the original sixteen Battalions who had
-immortalized themselves, in 1915, in the landing on Gallipoli. I was
-strongly averse from disbanding any one of them to furnish drafts for
-the remainder. My hope then was that, if these Divisions could be
-allowed to rest over the winter, they could be sufficiently replenished
-by the spring of 1919 to be able to maintain all sixteen Battalions at
-a satisfactory fighting strength.
-
-Of the remaining three Divisions, the Third and Fifth required at least
-another week's rest; and I had promised the Second Division that after
-their heroic efforts at Mont St. Quentin, they would not be again
-called upon until towards the end of September. I would thus be left
-with insufficient resources to maintain an immediate continuance of the
-pressure upon the enemy.
-
-On explaining the situation to General Rawlinson, he suggested the
-interesting possibility of being able to obtain, very shortly, the
-services of the Second American Corps of two Divisions, and asked me
-whether I would be prepared to accept the responsibility of taking this
-large force under my command for the continuance of the operations.
-
-I had no reason to hesitate. My experience of the quality of the
-American troops, both at the battle of Hamel and on the Chipilly spur,
-had been eminently satisfactory. It was true that this new American
-Corps had no previous battle service, but measures were possible to
-supply them with any technical guidance which they might lack.
-
-I therefore accepted the suggestion, and Rawlinson then asked me
-to submit a proposal for a joint operation to take place towards
-the end of the month by these two American and the remaining three
-Australian Divisions, with the object of completing the task, so well
-begun, of breaking through the Hindenburg defences. I was to propose
-my objectives, to show how I intended to employ each of the five
-Divisions, and also to set out my requirements in Artillery, Tanks and
-other services.
-
-It was anything but an easy task, and it had to be undertaken at a time
-when the preparations for the battle of Hargicourt were uppermost in
-my mind. Much time also had to be devoted to numerous distinguished
-visitors.
-
-The outcome was a letter to the Fourth Army which foreshadowed, almost
-in its entirety, the battle plan which subsequently was actually
-employed. The substance of this letter is here reproduced. The text has
-been modified only by the omission of the reference letters to a large
-coloured map which accompanied it:
-
- Corps Headquarters,
- 18th September, 1918.
-
- _Fourth Army._
-
-1. I beg to submit the outlines of a plan for a series of
-operations for the capture of the Hindenburg Line in the Sector
-Bellicourt-Vendhuille, based upon the expectation that two American
-Divisions will be available immediately to supplement this Corps.
-
-2. The resources of the Corps in Infantry, which will be available,
-are exclusive of the First and Fourth Australian Divisions,
-although the Artillery, Technical Troops and Machine Gun Battalions
-of those Divisions will continue to be available.
-
-3. The plan is based upon the assumption that the objective Blue
-Line of the operations of September 18th is in our possession all
-along the Army Front, or can be seized in the very near future.
-
-4. The accompanying Map shows the coloured lines referred to in the
-following description, as also the reference letters in blue.
-
-5. This plan is in outline only, and the various objective lines
-and boundaries suggested are merely tentative, to form the basis
-for a general plan.
-
-6. The Blue Line is the line of eventual exploitation for the
-operations of September 18th.
-
-7. The present Corps front on the Blue Line extends a distance of
-6,000 yards. It is suggested, either that the Corps front should be
-extended to a total frontage of 10,000 yards, or that it should be
-side-slipped northwards to a frontage of 6,000 yards. The latter
-would obviously be preferable, so far as the Corps is concerned,
-as enabling all its resources to be concentrated upon a smaller
-frontage.
-
-8. The major outlines of the plan are as follows:
-
- (a) An attack by two American Divisions for the capture of the
- Green Line.
-
- (b) A subsequent attack by two Australian Divisions for the capture
- of the Red Line.
-
- (c) Exploitation by the Cavalry from the Red Line, in an Easterly
- and north-easterly direction.
-
- (d) A turning movement by the Ninth Corps, through Bellicourt
- and Nauroy to turn the Canal defences, operating from north to
- south--or alternatively.
-
- (e) A turning movement by the Third Corps, operating through Le
- Catelet northwards.
-
-9. The details of the above plan will run on the following lines:
-
- (a) The new Corps front to be taken over at the earliest possible
- moment by two American Divisions, each Division deploying for this
- purpose only one Regiment of one Brigade. This will place in Line
- six Battalions on the Corps front, giving each Battalion about
- 1,000 yards. These troops will hold the line defensively, and
- will, with the assistance of technical troops, prepare the battle
- front.
-
- (b) The battle troops of the two American Divisions will thus
- comprise three Regiments or nine Battalions for each Division. The
- allocation of objectives to these troops will be as follows:
-
- (i) One Brigade (two Regiments) of the right Division to advance
- 4,500 yards on a frontage of 3,000 yards. This Brigade (six
- Battalions) would attack with four Battalions in Line (750 yards
- frontage each) and two Battalions in support for "mopping up"
- duties. Its principal objective, apart from the main trench
- systems, is Bellicourt.
-
- (ii) Similarly, one Brigade (two Regiments) of the left Division,
- with similar dispositions. Its principal objective, apart from the
- main trench systems, is Catelet.
-
- (iii) The odd Regiment of the right Division to be responsible for
- forming the south defensive flank.
-
- (iv) The odd Regiment of the left Division to be responsible for
- forming the north defensive flank.
-
- (c) It will be noted that the Green Line has been drawn so as to
- include all ground giving good observation northward, eastward and
- southwards, and to deny observation to the enemy. It is probable that
- the Field Artillery barrage will not be able to penetrate to the
- extreme limits of this proposed objective along the whole battle front
- without moving forward some of the batteries, particularly in the
- Northern Divisional Sector. This will probably necessitate a halt of
- an hour or an hour and a half, to enable Artillery to be advanced.
-
- (d) Assuming that the battle opens about 6 a.m., the Green Line should
- be reached by 10 a.m. or earlier. By mobilizing ample resources in
- technical troops, both American and Australian, and ample tools and
- engineering material, it should be easily possible to construct not
- less than four roads, sufficiently developed for horse transport, from
- the Blue Line to the Green Line, by 2 p.m. These roads would be
- located so as to make use of existing roads, and trench crossings
- would be made by filling in with earth and not by bridging. It is
- estimated, therefore, that Mobile Artillery could move forward not
- later than 2 p.m. on Zero day.
-
- (e) The Australian Infantry of two Divisions would move at such an hour
- as would enable them to reach and be deployed upon the Green Line by 2
- p.m., shortly after which hour they would be joined by the necessary
- Mobile Artillery. This phase of the operation would also involve the
- capture of the Beaurevoir Line. It is assumed that Tanks would be
- available to deal with the crossing of the wire entanglements covering
- this line.
-
- (f) The completion of the defensive flanks would be allocated to
- American troops.
-
- (g) As soon as the Australian Infantry had passed the Green Line, the
- four American Regiments who had participated in the capture of the
- Green Line, would be concentrated, refitted and rested for operations
- eastwards.
-
-10. The following considerations should be kept in view, in connection
-with this plan.
-
- (a) There should be sufficient Field Artillery, not merely to
- provide an effective barrage for the time-table advance to the
- Green Line and its flanks, but also, in addition, sufficient
- Mobile Field Artillery, not employed in the barrage, to enable the
- Australian Infantry to be provided with at least six Artillery
- Brigades for the exploitation phase of the operation.
-
- (b) There should be at least 60 Tanks available for the first
- phase, in order absolutely to guarantee the breaching of the main
- Hindenburg trench systems. There should, in addition, be available
- not less than 30 Tanks to assist the Australian Infantry through
- the Beaurevoir Line.
-
-11. There should be a systematic destructive bombardment of the
-whole of the Hindenburg trench system on the battle front, lasting
-at least four days, in order not merely to destroy the defensive
-organization, but also to demoralize and starve the trench garrisons.
-This destructive bombardment should extend a considerable distance to
-the north and south of the battle front.
-
-12. The rapid construction of usable roads, both for horse transport
-and mechanical transport, across the Canal tunnel, would have to be a
-special feature of the organization, so that the whole of our battle
-organization could be rapidly carried forward to maintain the battle
-eastward of the Red Line. This would involve the mobilization of a
-large amount of mechanical transport, ready loaded with road-stone,
-so that road-making can commence after Zero hour without any delay.
-For these works, there would be available the greater part of the
-Australian and American technical troops of seven Divisions, as well as
-Army Troops Companies.
-
- JOHN MONASH,
- Lieut.-General.
- Commanding Australian Corps.
-
-Some comment is necessary upon this proposal. The composition of the
-American Divisions, following the French and not the British precedent,
-differed materially from my own Divisions. The American Division
-consisted of two Brigades, each of two Regiments, each of three
-Battalions. Its total strength was nearly double that of an English
-Division.
-
-It will be noted that my proposal involved a concentrated attack, not
-upon the canal, but upon that sector of 6,000 yards which lay over the
-Bellicourt-Catelet tunnel. This zone at that time lay clear of and to
-the north of my Corps area, and that is what involved the necessity of
-"side-slipping" the Corps front to the north.
-
-[Illustration: Mont St. Quentin--Collecting Australian wounded under
-the protection of the Red Cross flag, September 1st, 1918.]
-
-[Illustration: An Ammunition Dump--established in Warfusee village on
-August 8th, 1918, after its capture the same morning.]
-
-Moreover, I put forward no suggestion that the Canal sector, then in
-front of me, should be the subject of a frontal attack at all. My
-proposal was that it should be taken by envelopment, through the breach
-to be made over the tunnel. At the time I regarded it as unlikely that
-the deep canal itself could be stormed except at great cost. I was not
-prepared to commit any Australian troops under my command to such an
-enterprise, and therefore naturally hesitated to propose that any other
-Corps should attempt it. For this reason I submitted an alternative
-plan of envelopment.
-
-This was, however, a matter for the Army Commander to decide. My
-business was merely to show that the proposed action of my own Corps
-permitted of the co-operation of the other Corps of the Army in a
-specified way.
-
-General Rawlinson's decisions were given on September 19th, at a
-conference which he assembled at my Headquarters. My plan for the
-action of the Australian and American Corps was to be adopted in its
-entirety, with the sole exception that the capture of the Beaurevoir
-line, on the first day of battle, was not to be included in the plan.
-It was to be left to await the results of the prior stages. In this
-modification I could readily concur.
-
-As regards the action of the flank Corps, General Rawlinson held the
-view that a direct assault on the canal itself ought to be attempted,
-and that this should be entrusted to the Ninth Corps. He was doubtless
-influenced, in this view, by the knowledge, disclosed to us for the
-first time on that day, that he intended to propose that the attack on
-the Hindenburg Line would, if undertaken, extend over the front of at
-least three Armies, the French on the south, and the Fourth and Third
-British Armies. Such a simultaneous attack, over a very wide front,
-would naturally increase the prospects of success for every Corps
-participating.
-
-As to the Third Corps, it was to take part only in the preliminaries of
-the battle, and not in the battle itself. Another Corps, the Thirteenth
-(Lieut.-General Sir T. L. N. Morland) was to join the Fourth Army.
-If the Australian Corps succeeded in effecting the breach of the
-Hindenburg Line as I had proposed to do, it was to be the Thirteenth
-Corps, and not the Third Corps, which, pouring through the breach, was
-to envelop the flank of the Hindenburg Line towards the north.
-
-The main consideration that affected me was the approval of my plan for
-the action of the two American and three Australian Divisions. I was
-able to begin immediately the development in detail of that plan, a
-task which proved at once the most arduous, the most responsible, and
-the most difficult of any that I have had to undertake throughout the
-whole of the war.
-
-The first step was to get the American Divisions into the line opposite
-their prospective battle fronts, and the next was to hand over what had
-hitherto been the Australian Corps front to the Ninth Corps.
-
-The Ninth Corps battle front was to extend from Bellenglise to
-Bellicourt, mine from opposite Bellicourt to opposite Le Catelet.
-
-The necessary troop movements and inter-divisional reliefs required
-nearly a week for their completion. By the evening of September 23rd,
-the last of the two Australian Divisions had been relieved by the
-Americans and the Ninth Corps, and on that night these stood on their
-respective battle frontages. I took over command of this new front,
-thus manned by Americans, in the forenoon of September 25th.
-
-It is a somewhat noteworthy circumstance, but one which attracted no
-attention at the time, that between September 25th and September 29th,
-there was a period of five days during which _no_ Australian troops
-were in the front line in any part of the French theatre of war. This
-was a situation which had never arisen since the first contingent of
-Australians arrived from Egypt in April, 1916. For nearly two and
-a half years, there had never previously been a moment when some
-Australians had not been confronting the enemy, somewhere or other in
-the long battle front in France.
-
-I have said that I had been called upon to undertake the responsibility
-of directing in a great battle two Divisions (the 27th and 30th) of
-United States troops, numbering altogether some 50,000 men. These had
-been organized into a Corps, called the Second American Corps, and
-commanded by Major-General G. W. Read. It was certainly anomalous
-that a whole organized Corps should pass under the orders of a Corps
-Headquarters of another nationality, but in authorizing such an
-arrangement, General Rawlinson relied upon the good sense and mutual
-forbearance of the Corps Commanders concerned.
-
-I am bound to say that the arrangement caused me no anxiety or
-difficulty. General Read and his Staff most readily adapted themselves
-to the situation. He established his Headquarters quite close to my
-own, and gave me perfect freedom of action in dealing direct with his
-two Divisional Commanders, so far as I found it necessary to do so.
-Read was a man of sound common sense and clear judgment, a reserved but
-agreeable and courteous personality. His only desire was the success of
-his Divisions, and he very generously took upon himself the role of an
-interested spectator, so that I might not be hampered in issuing orders
-or instructions to his troops. At the same time, I am sure that in his
-quiet, forceful way he did much to ensure on the part of his Divisional
-Commanders and Brigadiers a sympathetic attitude towards me and the
-demands I had to make upon them.
-
-The Australian Corps had specialized in comprehensive and careful
-preparations for battle. Its methods had been reduced to a quite
-definite code of practice, with which every Staff Officer and Battalion
-Adjutant had, by experience, become intimately familiar. All this
-procedure was a closed book to the American troops, and they were
-severely handicapped accordingly.
-
-I therefore proposed to General Read, and he gratefully accepted, the
-creation of an "Australian Mission" to his Corps, whose role would
-be to act as a body of expert advisers on all questions of tactical
-technique, and of supply and maintenance. This idea once accepted was
-worked out on a fully elaborated scale.
-
-To the head of this Mission I appointed Major-General Maclagan, not
-only to command the personnel of the Mission itself, but also to live
-with and act as adviser to General Read's own Staff. The Mission
-comprised a total of 217 men, chosen from the First and Fourth
-Australian Divisions, and consisted of specially selected and very
-experienced officers and N.C.O.'s. The American Corps Headquarters
-was provided with a Major-General, assisted by one General Staff, one
-Administrative, one Signal, one Intelligence, and one Machine Gun
-Staff Officer. Each American Division had assigned to it an Australian
-Brigadier-General, assisted by several Staff Officers; each American
-Brigade had an Australian Battalion Commander and Signal Officer; and
-so on down the chain. Each American Battalion, even, had four highly
-expert Warrant or Non-commissioned officers to advise on every detail
-of supply, equipment and tactical employment of the troops.
-
-By such an arrangement it became possible to talk to the whole American
-Corps in our own technical language. This saved me and my Staff a vast
-amount of time and energy, because the members of this Mission acted
-as interpreters of the technical terms and usages customary in the
-orders and maps of the Australian Corps, which were necessarily quite
-unfamiliar to the American troops.
-
-Maclagan was a man eminently fitted for this task. In appearance and in
-temperament he is every inch a soldier. Of all my Divisional Commanders
-he was the only one who, immediately before the war, was a professional
-soldier of the Imperial Army. Although not Australian born, he was
-whole-heartedly Australian, for he had spent some years as Director of
-Military Training at the Royal Military College at Duntroon. On the
-outbreak of war he received the command of the 3rd Australian Brigade,
-and with it carried out the most difficult preliminary phase of the
-landing on the Gallipoli peninsula. He commanded the Fourth Australian
-Division from the autumn of 1917 until the conclusion of hostilities.
-His characteristic attitude of mind, so strongly in contrast to that
-of Rosenthal, was pessimistic. But that was not because he looked for
-difficulties, but because he preferred squarely to recognize and face
-all the difficulties there were. Yet he never failed in performance,
-and invariably contrived to do what he had urged could not be done. One
-could not afford to take him at his own modest estimate of himself.
-Both he and his Division always bettered any promise they gave.
-
-I entertain no kind of doubt that it was only because of the creation
-of this Australian Mission to the Americans, and of Maclagan's tact,
-industry and judgment in controlling it, that the combined action of
-the two Corps in the great battle of the closing days of September
-proved as successful as it did. Under no other conditions would it have
-been possible to bring about any reasonable degree of co-operation
-between two forces whose war experiences, outlook, attitude towards
-their problems, training and temperament were so fundamentally
-different.
-
-It is not necessary to indulge in either a panegyric or a condemnation
-of these American Divisions. Neither would be deserved or appropriate.
-They showed a fine spirit, a keen desire to learn, magnificent
-individual bravery, and splendid comradeship. But they were lacking in
-war experience, in training, and in knowledge of technique. They had
-not yet learned the virtues of unquestioning obedience, of punctuality,
-of quick initiative, of anticipating the next action. They were, many
-of them, unfamiliar with the weapons and instruments of fighting, with
-the numerous kinds of explosive materials, or with the routine of
-preparing and promulgating clear orders. They seriously underrated the
-necessity for a well-organized system of supply, particularly of food
-and water, to the battle troops. They hardly, as yet, appreciated the
-tactical expedients available for reducing losses in battle.
-
-Yet all these shortcomings were the results only of inexperience,
-and it is perhaps unfair to contrast them with the Australian troops
-who had seen front-line service in France for two and a half years
-continuously, and whose leaders, high and low, had served a long and
-graduated apprenticeship in every branch of their duties.
-
-The Australian Mission assisted greatly to minimize these difficulties.
-Although its members were vested with no executive powers, their advice
-and help were eagerly sought, and zealously adopted. In many ways,
-large and small, their assistance must have proved invaluable. How to
-interpret orders from above and how to issue them to those below, how
-to draw stores and how to distribute them, how to organize the signal
-service and how to ensure a flow of information--these ranked among the
-greater matters. In quite small things also, help was needed, such as
-the way to detonate mortar bombs, to equip the infantryman for battle,
-to organize and use the messenger (_i.e._, runner) service, and to keep
-battle stations clear of people who had no urgent business there.
-
-It is not, of course, intended to convey that all these defects were
-present in every regiment. Some, however, were met with, by the
-officers of the Australian Mission, in all of them.
-
-It greatly added to the burden cast upon the American Divisions that
-they were called upon to fight almost as soon as they had taken up duty
-in the line. The necessity for this was really a legacy from the Third
-Corps, whom they had relieved, and it is essential for an understanding
-of the course of events during these days to narrate them in proper
-chronological order.
-
-I have explained that as the result of the battle of Hargicourt, the
-Australian Corps had succeeded in mastering the whole of the Hindenburg
-outpost line opposite its front, as far as a point a little north of
-and opposite to Bellicourt. The advance of the Third Corps, however,
-had failed to reach the same line, and had stopped short of it by an
-average distance of nearly a thousand yards. On my pointing out that
-the front I had taken over did not comply with the stipulations which I
-had made in my battle plan,[21] the Army Commander decided that prior
-to the main attack, the northern of the two American Divisions should
-make good this shortage, by an attack aiming at the capture of the
-remainder of the Hindenburg outpost line opposite the tunnel sector.
-
-I must now anticipate an explanation of the main outlines of the plan
-which I had prepared for the great battle, by a brief reference to the
-situation and disposition of troops on September 25th. The two American
-Divisions were respectively the 30th, commanded by Major-General Lewis,
-on the right or south, and the 27th, commanded by Major-General O'Ryan,
-on the left or north, each lying on a frontage of three thousand yards.
-These two Divisions comprised, in all, eight regiments, each of three
-battalions. I had instructed each of them to place one regiment in the
-line, and to keep the remaining three, _i.e._, six in all, in reserve,
-for the main operation.
-
-My first Corps conference dealing with the forthcoming operations
-was held at my Headquarters at Assevillers, on September 23rd. The
-American Generals Read, Lewis and O'Ryan, with their respective Staffs,
-attended, as also did the Australian Generals Maclagan, Brand and
-Mackay, who were members of the Australian Mission to the American
-Corps. None of the Australian Commanders destined to take part in the
-operations attended on this day, for two reasons, firstly, because I
-intended to confine myself entirely to that portion of the operation
-which concerned the American troops only, and secondly, because the
-date of the battle had not then been decided, and I wished to run no
-risk of confusing executive action by any premature announcements to
-the Australians, which subsequent events might modify.
-
-The American role, had, however, sufficiently crystallized to enable
-me to explain it to the assembled Generals in great detail. As
-will subsequently appear, it was a plan which had, intentionally,
-been reduced to the simplest possible elements. It was to be a
-straightforward trench to trench attack, from a perfectly straight
-"jumping off" line to a perfectly straight objective line, under a
-dense Artillery and Machine-Gun barrage, and with the assistance of a
-large contingent of Tanks.
-
-The advance was to be at a deliberate pace, and if due regard were had
-to a few elementary precautions, should prove a simple task for the
-American Infantry. It was, indeed, on quite stereotyped lines, such as
-had so often carried the Australian Infantry to victory in set-piece
-battles such as Messines, Broodseinde, Hamel and the first phase of
-August 8th.
-
-It was, however, borne in upon me, very soon after this Conference
-opened, that I was now confronted with quite a different proposition
-from that to which I had been accustomed in the conferences attended by
-my own Divisional Generals. The exposition of the plan itself was brief
-and simple, but it elicited such a rain of questions, that in the end
-I found myself compelled to embark upon a very detailed exposition of
-the fundamental principles of my battle practice.
-
-With blackboard and chalk, maps and diagrams, I had to speak for more
-than three hours in an endeavour to explain methods and reasons,
-mistakes and remedies, dangers and precautions, procedures and
-expedients. The proceedings left me with no doubt that the American
-Generals became fully informed as to the tasks and duties allotted to
-them, and fully understood them.
-
-In the light of after events, I am not so sure that they succeeded in
-passing on the information to their subordinates--not by reason of any
-shortcomings on their own part, for they impressed me as able, strong
-men--but because their Divisions had not yet learned the methods and
-machinery of effectively and rapidly conveying instructions to large
-bodies of troops.
-
-In one particular, subordinate though vital, there certainly was a
-serious failure to reach the troops. The enemy had, during 1916, met
-our assault tactics with an answer which proved disastrously effective
-against us until we had learned how to meet it. He provided his trench
-systems with many and roomy shell-proof dug-outs. Whenever our barrage
-fell upon his trenches, his garrisons promptly took cover in these
-dug-outs. When our assaulting infantry reached the enemy trenches they
-found but few of the enemy there, and they rushed headlong forward to
-the next objective trenches. From out of their dug-outs streamed the
-enemy, faced about, attacked our assaulting lines in rear and withered
-them with fire. Many an attack by the British on the Somme failed for
-just such reasons.
-
-In 1917 we evolved, and applied for the first time at the battle of
-Messines, an effective answer to such tactics. Close on the heels of
-our first line of assaulting troops came a second line, whose role
-was to occupy the captured trench immediately, and to "mop it up."
-This meant the killing or disarming of all enemy found in hiding, the
-picketing of the entrances and exits of all dug-outs, and laying siege
-to them until their occupants surrendered, a course to which they were
-encouraged by a liberal use of phosphorus bombs or Mills's grenades.
-
-This process of "mopping up" became an integral part of our attack
-procedure. Australian infantry soon learned its importance, and
-practised the method with a thoroughness and efficiency to which I
-remember no exception. Even a junior sergeant commanding a dozen men
-could be relied on to take all measures necessary to ensure that no
-enemy was ever left in hiding and unguarded behind his little party as
-they advanced.
-
-In the forthcoming attack upon the Hindenburg defences, the process of
-"mopping up" became of supreme importance, because of the very fact,
-of which we had become well aware, that the whole defensive system
-had been provided, on quite an exceptional scale, with underground
-shelters, galleries, passages and dug-outs. I made the most of this
-knowledge in my talks to the Americans, emphasized the dangers as
-strongly as I was able, insisted that the "mopping up" organization of
-their infantry must be absolutely perfected, and ordered that of the
-total Infantry participating in the assault, not less than one-half
-should have the special role of safeguarding all underground exits and
-entrances.
-
-The great fear was, of course, that these new troops, eager to show
-their mettle, would be carried away in the excitement of the moment,
-and would rush headlong forward, regardless of the dangers that
-lurked behind them. It is, after all, no small demand to make upon
-the discipline of an Infantry soldier, to expect him patiently and
-obediently to stand guard over some dug-out entrance, allowing the
-battle to sweep on, and his comrades to go forward to the excitement
-and glory of achieving the final objectives.
-
-So indeed it happened. The American Infantry had either not been
-sufficiently tutored in this important matter, or the need of it had
-not penetrated their understanding. In the attacks carried out by these
-troops, while under my command, the "mopping up" was always badly done,
-even in the few cases where it was attempted. The result was failure
-to achieve a clean success, and a great addition to their own casualty
-list. This criticism will be fully borne out by the narrative of the
-great battle itself.
-
-A second and much larger conference was held at my Headquarters on
-September 26th, for the really complete and final co-ordination of the
-whole of the procedure for the forthcoming battle. It was attended not
-only by the American Divisional Generals and Brigadiers, but also by
-the Commanders of the Second, Third and Fifth Australian Divisions,
-their Staffs, the Tanks, Air Force and Cavalry.
-
-It was much the largest and was also destined to be the last of any
-assemblage of Commanders that it had been my privilege to call together
-in the course of this memorable campaign.
-
-No one present will soon forget the tense interest and confident
-expectancy which characterized that meeting. America, a great
-English-speaking democracy on one shore of the Pacific, was to
-co-operate with Australia, its younger sister democracy on the opposite
-shore, in what was the greatest and what might be the most decisive
-battle of the great European War. Few present doubted that, if we were
-successful, the war could not last much longer--because the loss of
-the Hindenburg system would inevitably mean for the enemy his final
-enforced withdrawal from France.
-
-While the conference was in full swing, the Field Marshal himself paid
-me a call. He had come to wish me success in the task before me. He was
-interested to find so many Divisional Commanders assembled, and was
-persuaded to address a few words to the gathering.
-
-The conduct of the proceedings of this conference was a heavy strain.
-The main battle was to take place on September 29th, or within
-seventy-two hours, and part of my front line still stood a thousand
-yards west of the Hindenburg outpost lines. General Rawlinson had
-decided that this defect was to be made good prior to the main
-operation, and the attempt to do so had been timed to take place on
-September 27th, the day after the conference.
-
-I had, therefore, to complete my organization upon the basis of a set
-of precedent conditions which had not yet been entirely realized.
-It was a new and a difficult situation. The whole of the powerful
-Artillery at my disposal for the battle, amounting now to over a
-thousand guns, was naturally clamouring for final decisions, so that
-final barrage maps could be submitted for my approval, printed by my
-very diligent and competent body of lithographic draughtsmen, and
-circulated to all the batteries and Infantry.
-
-To await the result of the operation of the next day would have allowed
-insufficient time to complete the necessary maps and to distribute them
-before nightfall on September 28th. There was no option but to assume
-that General O'Ryan (27th American Division) would succeed in capturing
-the northern section of the outpost line still in enemy hands, and upon
-that assumption to fix the Artillery "start line" as falling to the
-east of that objective. For the first time I had to gamble on a chance.
-It was contrary to the policy which had governed all my previous battle
-plans, in which _nothing_ had been left to chance.
-
-At 5.30 a.m. next morning the 27th American Division carried out the
-attack, under a barrage, and assisted by Tanks. The principal objective
-points in the trench system under attack were Quennemont Farm and
-Gillemont Farm. Every trace of these once prosperous homesteads and
-plantations had, of course, long since disappeared. The names alone
-remained as memories of the fighting there of 1917.
-
-What happened on that day will never be accurately known. For once,
-the information from the air did not harmonize with the claims made
-on behalf of the assaulting troops, perhaps because the troops, being
-untrained in the use of flares, or having been left unsupplied with
-them, failed to assist the aeroplanes in identifying their correct
-positions. However that may be, it became sufficiently clear, as the
-day proceeded, that no proper success for the operation could be
-claimed.
-
-There remained no doubt that some enemy were still left in occupation
-of trenches on our side of the objective for that day, and such
-American troops as may have gained their objective could not therefore
-be reached. It appeared afterwards that small parties of Americans
-had reached the vicinity of their objectives and had very gallantly
-maintained themselves there, although surrounded on all sides, until
-relieved by the Australians on September 29th.
-
-The non-success of this operation of September 27th appeared
-undoubtedly to be due to a failure to carry out "mopping up" duties
-satisfactorily. It considerably embarrassed the preparations for the
-main attack on the 29th. The knowledge that a number of American
-wounded were still lying out in front, and the suspicion that some of
-the American troops had succeeded in reaching Gillemont Farm, precluded
-any alteration of the Artillery plans for September 29th, even if there
-had still been time to do so without creating untold confusion. To have
-brought the Artillery start line, proposed for September 29th, back to
-the start line of September 27th would have brought our own barrage
-down upon these forward troops of ours.
-
-I hastened to the Army Commander to put the position before him,
-stating that I felt grave concern for the success of the main
-operation, in view of the fact that my Artillery barrage would have to
-come down fully a thousand yards in front of what was still the front
-of the 27th Division. I suggested a postponement for a day to give this
-Division, which had ample resources in troops, another opportunity
-of retrieving the position. He explained, however, that it was now
-too late to alter the programme, because three whole Armies were
-committed to the date first appointed. He said that he was, under the
-circumstances, quite prepared for a partial failure at this point, and
-requested me to do my best to pursue the original plan, in spite of
-this difficult situation.
-
-He agreed, however, to my further request, that additional Tanks, out
-of Army reserves, should be placed at my disposal, so that I might
-allot them to the 27th Division, to assist them in passing over the
-thousand yards which would bring them up level with the Artillery
-barrage. I hoped that this would enable the Division to catch up with
-the southern half of the battle line.
-
-It was an unsatisfactory expedient, and gave no promise of certain
-success. It proved futile, and gravely affected the actual course,
-although not the ultimate success, of the battle still to come. It
-was the only occasion in the campaign on which I was compelled to
-accept preliminary arrangements which were not such as would absolutely
-guarantee success.
-
-The genesis of the difficulty thus created had, however, been the
-failure of the Third Corps to complete their programme of September
-18th. It had been confirmed by the subsequent failure of the 27th
-American Division to make up the deficiency on September 27th. I still
-think, as I then urged, that I should have been allowed to accept the
-situation as I found it on taking over this front on September 25th,
-and that the 27th Division should not have been called upon, at the
-eleventh hour, to endeavour to establish that new situation which had
-been originally assumed as the basis for the battle plan of September
-29th. My original proposal of September 18th, in my letter of that
-date, paragraph 3 (see above), had, of course, been made before I could
-foresee that the Third Corps would fail to capture the start line
-contemplated in my first plan.
-
-Of course, all is well that ends well. But, for an anxious and
-turbulent period of twenty-four hours on September 29th and 30th,
-the issue of the battle hung in grave doubt. The operation, although
-successful, did _not_ proceed "according to plan" in its entirety, and
-it was due to the wonderful gallantry and skilful leading of the Third
-Australian Division that a very ugly situation was retrieved, a result
-to which the Fifth Australian Division also contributed in no small
-degree.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[21] See paragraph 3 of same.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-BELLICOURT AND BONY
-
-
-A full account of the battle plan for the forcing of the main
-Hindenburg Line, on the front of the Australian Corps, would alone fill
-a volume. Nothing but brief references to the main outlines of the plan
-can be attempted here.
-
-The forces now at my disposal, for immediate use, were greater than I
-had ever before committed to a single operation. They comprised, in
-all, five Divisions, of which two were American and three Australian,
-besides the whole of the Corps troops. The total personnel employed
-on that occasion, under my orders in one capacity or another, almost
-reached 200,000 men.
-
-Besides 58 Battalions of Infantry, there were over 20,000 technical
-troops, including Engineers, Pioneers and Signallers, upwards of 1,000
-guns of all calibres, more than 500 Machine Guns, over 200 Tanks, a
-Brigade of Cavalry, a Battalion of Armoured Cars, and numerous Air
-Squadrons. The subsidiary services made an imposing array, comprising
-observation balloons, supply trains, ammunition columns, auxiliary
-horse transport, ambulances, motor convoys and mechanical transport,
-together with railway, veterinary, sanitary and labour units.
-
-It was no small task correctly to apportion to each fighting unit and
-to each service its appropriate place in the general scheme, so that
-these great resources should be employed to the best advantage, without
-overtaxing the capacity of any one of them. I had also to secure the
-greatest measure of co-operation between them all, and the punctual
-performance by each of the work prescribed.
-
-In contrast with the great battle of August 8th, there was on this
-occasion no possibility of securing any advantage from surprise.
-The enemy command was bound to know quite as well as we did that we
-intended to deliver an attack on a gigantic scale, and there is no
-doubt that they put forth their utmost efforts, and marshalled their
-fullest resources in men and guns, to meet it.
-
-There was, therefore, no object to be served by any measures of
-concealment, and our task could not be made any the harder through
-heralding the approach of the actual attack by adequate Artillery
-preparation.
-
-The programme, therefore, began on the night of September 26th. There
-was an intense Artillery action, extending over some sixty hours, with
-every gun that could be brought to bear. This does not, of course,
-imply that every individual gun or battery remained in action during
-the whole of this period; ammunition supplies were not inexhaustible,
-and gun detachments required periods of rest. But the programme of
-times and targets was so arranged, and the tasks were so distributed
-over the available batteries, that throughout this period there was no
-respite for the enemy in any part of the field.
-
-For some days prior to the opening of this bombardment, railway trains
-and motor lorries had been working at the highest possible pressure, to
-enable gunners to accumulate at their gun pits and in all their dumps
-a sufficient supply of Artillery ammunition for this purpose. In the
-short period which had elapsed since the forcing of the Somme, in the
-early days of September, the railway diversion from Bray to Peronne had
-been completed. The railway from Peronne to Roisel, although seriously
-damaged by the enemy in many places, had been restored, and Roisel had
-become the railhead for the delivery of ammunition. It was a noteworthy
-performance, for all the Corps services concerned, to carry out the
-whole supply of this battle in so smooth and expeditious a manner.
-
-The first phase of this bombardment was of a novel character. For over
-two years the enemy had been using a shell containing an irritant
-and poisonous gas known to us as "mustard" gas. It was so called
-only because of the smell. For a long time we had been promised that
-the British Artillery service would shortly be supplied with a gas
-shell, of similar character, but even more potent. It was, moreover,
-anticipated that the German gas mask would prove no adequate protection
-against this kind of gas.
-
-At last the new shell was forthcoming, and the first shipment from
-England, amounting to some fifty thousand rounds, was placed at the
-disposal of the Australian Corps. My Artillery action, therefore,
-opened with a concentrated gas bombardment for twelve hours, attacking
-probable living quarters, occupied defences, and all known or suspected
-approaches to them. Apart from being the first occasion, I believe that
-it was also the only occasion during the war when our "mustard" gas
-shell was used. No suitable opportunity for further use occurred before
-the close of hostilities.
-
-The gas bombardment was followed by forty-eight hours' destructive
-bombardment with high explosive shell. This was directed partly against
-the enemy's Artillery, as far as the short time available had permitted
-us to locate his batteries.
-
-Another part of the bombardment was devoted to the approaches from
-the enemy's rear to his forward defences. The object was to render
-his roads and tracks unusable, and thereby to prevent the delivery
-of rations, or, at any rate, of hot food to his garrisons, or of
-ammunition to his guns. By these means we expected, by partially
-starving him out, to impair the enemy's _moral_.
-
-The main weight of the bombardment was, however, devoted to the
-destruction of the enemy's defences, of which his barbed wire
-entanglements were for us the most formidable feature. Much of this
-wire was disposed in concealed positions, either in depressions of the
-ground, or in sunken moats, artificially prepared. It was, therefore,
-difficult to locate, and still more difficult for my gunners to direct
-their fire upon it. Nevertheless, there was a considerable quantity of
-wire which was plainly visible, and every band of entanglements through
-which breaches could be blown was so much to the good, in clearing the
-path for the Infantry assault.
-
-[Illustration: Australian Light Horse--the 13th A.L.H. Regiment riding
-into action on August 17th, 1918.]
-
-[Illustration: The Sniper sniped--an enemy sniper disposed of by an
-Australian Sharp-shooter, August 22nd, 1918.]
-
-In earlier years it had been the custom to attack barbed wire with our
-lighter guns, using shrapnel shell. This shell is, however, essentially
-a "man-killing" projectile, and has no great destructive power against
-field works. On the other hand, our heavier guns were scarcely more
-useful for wire cutting, because the great craters which were made by
-the explosion of their shells destroyed the wire only very locally,
-and, by upheaving the ground, increased rather than reduced the
-difficulties of the Infantry.
-
-This was due to the employment of fuses, which permitted the
-projectile, after striking, to bury itself in the ground for a small
-fraction of time before igniting the explosive charge which it
-contained. Hence the great shell craters. It was a very proper fuse to
-use for destroying trenches, dug-outs, gun-pits and emplacements, but
-of little use for cutting wire.
-
-In due course the British service evolved an "instantaneous" fuse,
-which became known to the gunners as the "106 Fuse." This had the merit
-of being perfectly safe to handle, up to the moment of firing the gun,
-but by means of a most ingenious mechanism it became highly sensitive
-while the projectile was in flight between the gun and the target. The
-result was that the very slightest obstacle met with, even a strand of
-wire, was sufficient to set off the fuse and explode the shell. Even
-if the shell met no obstacle before striking the earth, the explosion
-would take place above instead of below the surface of the ground, and
-would exert so great a horizontal force in all directions that great
-bands of wire entanglements would be bodily uprooted, over considerable
-areas, and literally blown to one side in a jumbled mass.
-
-Our heavy guns, therefore, using 106 Fuses, became ideal wire cutters,
-and it was in this way that much of the Artillery action during the
-forty-eight hours prior to the battle was applied.
-
-The Infantry and Field Artillery plan, which I prepared, was very
-similar in its general character to the battle plan of August 8th.
-It differed only in subordinate details due to local topographical
-variations from the former conditions.
-
-Of the five Divisions available, one--the Second Australian--was to
-remain in Corps reserve, but handy. For that purpose it was brought up
-from its rest near Cappy, by motor bus, to the vicinity of Peronne,
-the move being completed by nightfall on September 27th.
-
-The battle Divisions and their prior dispositions were as follows:
-
-_Line Divisions:_
-
- On the right, the 30th American Division, to attack with the
- 60th Brigade, and to employ the 59th Brigade to form a southern
- defensive flank in the event of the failure of the Ninth Corps to
- cross the Canal.
-
- On the left, the 27th American Division, to attack with the
- 54th Brigade, and to employ the 53rd Brigade to form a northern
- defensive flank, until such time as the Thirteenth Corps was ready
- to pass through in a north-easterly direction.
-
-_"Exploitation" Divisions:_
-
- On the right, the 5th Australian Division, with the 8th and 15th
- Brigades in the first line and the 14th Brigade following in
- support.
-
- On the left, the Third Australian Division, with the 10th and 11th
- Brigades in the first line and the 9th Brigade following in support.
-
-The total frontage was equally divided between the two pairs of
-Divisions, being about 3,500 yards to each. The battle was to be
-divided into two phases, the first to be executed by the Americans,
-under a timed barrage, the second, under open warfare conditions, by
-the Australians. It was intended that the Americans should penetrate to
-the "green line," an average distance of 3,500 yards, which took in the
-villages of Bellicourt, Nauroy, Bony and Gouy.
-
-The Australians were to exploit eastward, but were limited to a further
-advance of 4,000 yards, overrunning Joncourt, Estrees and Beaurevoir.
-Should they reach that objective on the first day, they would have
-passed the last-known wired line, and the country beyond would be
-suitable for Cavalry. Accordingly, I allotted to the 5th Cavalry
-Brigade, which had been placed under my orders, the role of passing
-through the Australian Divisions, and carrying the exploitation still
-further east, in the direction of Montbrehain and Brancourt.
-
-As it turned out, the whole of the objectives named were in our
-possession only on the forenoon of October 5th, instead of, as planned,
-by September 30th. The actual battle developed on totally different
-lines from those which I had planned, for reasons which I shall
-relate in due course. Little object would therefore be served in an
-explanation of the considerable mass of detailed arrangements which the
-original plan involved; these would also, by reason of their technical
-character, be more suitable for a text-book on tactics.
-
-Suffice it to say that elaborate arrangements were made--and also
-partly utilized--for the rapid construction of four main roads from
-west to east, through the full width of the Hindenburg system. This
-work was to follow on the heels of the advance. The roles assigned
-to the Tanks, the Barrage Artillery, the Mobile Artillery, the Heavy
-Artillery and the Armoured Cars were similar in character, although
-differing in detail from those carried out by them on August 8th.
-
-On no previous occasion had the labour of preparation and the stress
-upon all Commanders and Staffs been so heavy, but all responded nobly.
-There were none who did not count the hours till zero hour, which was
-fixed for 5.50 a.m. on September 29th.
-
-In appraising the long sustained fighting on the front of the Fourth
-Army which began on that day, and lasted a full week, regard must be
-had to contemporary events. The American First Army attack on St.
-Mihiel on September 11th had wrought fresh dislocation to the enemy's
-resources, and had created another sore spot on his long front. On
-September 26th the Americans and French again successfully attacked
-between Verdun and Rheims. On September 27th, the First and Third
-British Armies opened a great attack on a front of thirteen miles
-before Cambrai and the magnificent Canadian Corps captured Bourlon Wood
-and advanced to within a mile of Cambrai city. On September 28th, the
-Second British Army and the Belgians attacked between Ypres and the
-sea. All British Armies, except the Fifth, had, therefore, by that time
-developed active battle fronts. On September 29th the first French Army
-would co-operate with us, and on that day the battle front was to cover
-a total length of twenty-five miles.
-
-The simultaneous engagement of so large a portion of the enemy's
-line in Belgium and France during the preceding three days had
-piled difficulty upon difficulty for him, and it was therefore not
-unreasonable to entertain two expectations--firstly, that our task
-would be rendered easier by the wide dispersion of the enemy's
-defensive energies, and, secondly, that he could hardly hope to survive
-a definite breach in his great defensive line at so critical a place as
-the Bellicourt tunnel. If that went he would be secure nowhere, and his
-next possibility of making a stand would be on the line of the Meuse,
-even if not the line of the Rhine.
-
-The day broke with a familiar mist, and the attack was launched
-punctually at the appointed time. Quite early in the day news came
-in that the Ninth Corps on my right hand had achieved an astonishing
-success, that Bellenglise had been captured, and that the deep canal
-had been successfully crossed in several places. It was the 46th
-Imperial Division to which this great success was chiefly due, a
-success achieved by most careful preparation and gallant execution.
-Lifebelts, rafts, boats, mats, portable bridges, and every device
-which ingenuity could suggest had been prepared beforehand for the
-actual crossing of the water in the canal. There can be no doubt
-that this success, conceived at first as a demonstration to distract
-attention from the Australian Corps front, materially assisted me in
-the situation in which I was placed later on the same day.
-
-The first reports from my own front were in every way satisfactory,
-and it looked as if everything were going strictly to schedule. That
-morning the stream of messages pouring into my Headquarters office,
-from special observers, from the air, from the line divisions, from
-the Artillery, and from my liaison officers with neighbouring Corps,
-exceeded in volume and import anything I had met with in my previous
-war experience. I have the typewritten precis of the "inwards" signal
-traffic before me as I write. Those received and laid before me on that
-day cover thirty closely typewritten foolscap pages.
-
-The burden of the earlier messages all pointed to the same conclusion:
-"30th Division crossed the Canal on time;" "1,000 prisoners, all going
-well;" "Bony captured;" "Tanks fighting round Bellicourt at 9 a.m.;"
-"Bellicourt taken."
-
-Those, omitting formal parts, were the burden of all the telegrams up
-to 10 a.m. They continued in such a favourable strain during the whole
-of the time that the two American Divisions had command of the battle
-front.
-
-The time for their arrival at the first objective--_i.e._, the "green"
-line--had been computed to be at 9 a.m. The Australian Divisions were
-to cross the green line at 11 a.m., and at the same hour to take over
-the command on the front of the battle. Two telegrams then came in
-which caused me serious anxiety. It may be of interest to set them out
-in detail:
-
-Received at 11.10 a.m. from 30th American Division:
-
- "Fighting in Bellicourt, owing to Germans having come down along
- the Canal from the north. Fifth Australian Division hung up."
-
-Received at 11.12 a.m. from Third Australian Division:
-
- "We are dug in on west side of tunnel. Americans are held up in
- front of us."
-
-These were only the first symptoms of a miscarriage of the plans.
-Evidences rapidly multiplied that all was not going well. But,
-concurrently, there came a stream of messages from the air that our
-troops and some of our Tanks were east of both Bellicourt and Le
-Catelet.
-
-The situation was therefore confused and uncertain, and it had to be
-diagnosed without delay. I hastened forward with all possible speed
-to get into personal touch with the situation and the Divisional
-Commanders. I soon formed the conclusion that probably both American
-Divisions had successfully followed our barrage, and that numbers of
-their troops had really reached the green line, but that, once again,
-the "mopping up" procedure had been neglected. The enemy had reappeared
-in strength from underground _behind_ the Americans, and was holding up
-the advance of the two Australian Divisions to the second phase of the
-operation.
-
-Subsequent developments and further inquiries entirely bore out these
-conclusions. On the front of the 27th American Division there had been
-difficulty from the start. A number of Tanks allotted to that Division
-had been put out of action, some by direct hits from Artillery, others
-by land mines. It was currently believed that these were not enemy
-mines, but some which had been laid months before by our own Fifth Army
-as a measure of protection against the possible use of Tanks by the
-enemy.
-
-This had given the 27th Division a bad start. Only two out of its
-six assaulting Battalions had managed to catch up with and follow
-the barrage. The remainder could not get forward as far even as the
-Artillery start line. Those Americans who did follow the barrage
-apparently forgot all about "mopping up." They reached Le Catelet and
-Gouy and entered those villages, only to find themselves surrounded on
-all sides by the enemy. A German officer prisoner informed us next day
-that 1,200 of these Americans had been taken prisoner.
-
-The 30th American Division did not fare so badly. They got a good start
-with the barrage, but the broken condition of the ground, the intricate
-trench system and the confusion of wire and dug-outs brought about a
-loss of cohesion and of control. By the time Bellicourt was reached,
-the attacking troops had fallen some distance behind the barrage, and
-most of the weight had gone out of the attack.
-
-Meanwhile, in this part of the field also, the enemy had reappeared
-from underground, and was still in strength on the west side of
-Bellicourt, now in the hands of the Americans, when the advanced guard
-of the Fifth Australian Division came upon them.
-
-It was an unexpected situation for the Fifth Division. But without a
-moment's hesitation the leading troops took its measure. They deployed
-from the Artillery formation[22] in which they had been previously
-advancing into lines of skirmishers. After hard fighting in the face
-of most vigorous resistance, they cleared away all opposition which
-lay between them and Bellicourt, and, sweeping forward through that
-village, carefully "mopping up" as they went, carried with them
-considerable numbers of the Americans whom they found there.
-
-While this was happening, the Third Australian Division, deprived of
-the assistance either of Artillery or of Tanks, and in broad daylight,
-found themselves confronted with the difficult problem of carrying out
-the whole of the task which had been set for the 27th Division, because
-the reappearance of the enemy upon the ground successfully passed over
-by some of the Americans earlier in the day nullified all the value of
-that success.
-
-It was about 2 p.m. before I had succeeded in gathering sufficient
-reliable information about the situation to enable me to arrive at
-a decision how to deal with it. By that hour the Fifth Division had
-advanced through Nauroy, and had passed across the Le Catelet line
-in that vicinity. The Third Division had managed to get obliquely
-astride of the line of the tunnel, its right being well across the
-main Hindenburg wire, while its left was still in the vicinity of the
-American start line of that morning. They had, however, succeeded in
-finally capturing Quennemont Farm. The whole of their advance into such
-a position had been hotly contested.
-
-My troops were therefore, to all intents and purposes, astride of the
-Hindenburg main line, one Division wholly on the east and the other
-Division mainly on the west of it. The southern end of the tunnel was
-in my possession, the northern end was not.
-
-My decision was forthwith to abandon the original plan which had taken
-so many days and so much labour to prepare, to take immediate measures
-for securing our gains for the day, and to organize a continuation of
-the battle next day on totally different lines. These were to conquer
-the remainder of the main Hindenburg trench system, in which the ruin
-of the village of Bony was the key position, by attacking it from the
-south towards the north, instead of from the west towards the east.
-
-The first step in this plan was to ensure effective tactical contact
-between the right flank of the Third Division and the left flank of
-the Fifth Division. I framed an order that both Divisions should take
-immediate steps to such an end. Telephone communication with both
-Gellibrand and Hobbs being momentarily interrupted, I was about to
-forward written orders by dispatch rider to each of them to the effect
-mentioned.
-
-Before the messenger had time to leave, however, messages came in from
-both Divisional Commanders, each reporting that he had just secured
-tactical touch with the other in exactly the way which I wanted. I
-consider this a remarkable example of unity of thought. Each, without
-being able to consult the other or myself, had taken the very course
-which each correctly anticipated that I should decide to have taken.
-The German General Staff used to boast in their writings that no other
-Army approached theirs in this capacity for initiative by subordinates
-on lines in thorough unison with each other and with the policies of
-the higher command.
-
-That the situation on my front, now held exclusively by Australians,
-would have been secure that night against a determined counter-attack
-I did not doubt, even though the fourteen Australian Battalions now
-holding a line of some 9,000 yards would scarcely average 400 rifles
-apiece. However, nothing more than small local counter-attacks was
-attempted, and the hold which I had gained upon the main defences was
-not slackened. I feel sure, nevertheless, that the success of the
-Ninth Corps on my right in swarming across the canal from Bellenglise
-to Bellicourt had much to do with my immunity from interference; the
-enemy probably found himself with quite enough to do there in trying
-to re-establish his line further in rear, and this forbade him to
-materialize sufficient troops for any general counter-attack.
-
-While I have felt obliged to state the facts in regard to the partial
-failure of the two American Divisions to carry out their part of my
-battle plan, I desire, nevertheless, to do full justice to these
-troops. I have no hesitation in saying that they fought most bravely,
-and advanced to the assault most fearlessly; that the leaders, from the
-Divisional Generals downwards, did the utmost within their powers to
-ensure success. Nor must the very bad conditions under which the 27th
-Division had to start be forgotten. Our American Allies are, all things
-considered, entitled to high credit for a fine effort.
-
-But it is, nevertheless, true that in this battle they demonstrated
-their inexperience in war, and their ignorance of some of the
-elementary methods of fighting employed on the French front. For these
-shortcomings they paid a heavy price. Their sacrifices, nevertheless,
-contributed quite definitely to the partial success of the day's
-operations, and although the comprehensive plan, which was to have
-carried my front beyond Beaurevoir on the very first day, had to be
-abandoned, the day's fighting ended with the two Australian Divisions
-in quite a satisfactory position for a continuance of the operations on
-the next day.
-
-To this there was, however, one important qualification. Air observers
-continued to report the presence of American troops between the
-Hindenburg Line and Le Catelet, and also in the latter village. Late
-that night an Australian Artillery liaison officer managed to make his
-way back into our lines with the story that he had actually advanced
-with a battalion of Americans into Le Catelet, and that they were still
-there, although practically surrounded.
-
-The 27th Division made many attempts to get into communication with
-them, but without avail. Beyond the report previously alluded to that
-they had subsequently been made prisoner, I have no information of
-their ultimate fate; but when patrols of the Third Division entered the
-village forty-eight hours later, there was no longer any sign of them.
-A number of small parties of Americans were, however, encountered and
-relieved as the further advance of the Third Division progressed during
-the next two days.
-
-The situation was profoundly embarrassing. With the mass of Artillery
-at my disposal, it would have been a simple matter to cover the further
-advance of the Third Division so amply as to make it easy to master the
-northern half of the tunnel defences, especially if attacked end on.
-But so long as American troops or wounded were presumed to be lying out
-in front, I dared not use Artillery at all, except on a very restricted
-scale. I felt justified, however, in bombarding isolated localities
-which patrols had definitely ascertained to be still in enemy hands;
-but nothing in the shape of adequate artillery support to the Infantry
-could be attempted.
-
-During the night of September 29th orders were issued to the Second
-American Corps to withdraw all advanced troops that could be reached,
-and to concentrate their regiments for rest and reorganization, so as
-to be ready as soon as possible for re-employment. Very considerable
-numbers of American soldiers had become mixed up with the Australian
-Battalions, and, in their eagerness, had gone forward with them,
-regardless of the particular roles or objectives which had been
-originally assigned to them. It was found to be a matter of some
-difficulty to induce these men to withdraw from the fighting and to
-rejoin their own units, so keen were they to continue their advance.
-
-I also ordered the Second Australian Division to be brought up by bus
-from the Peronne area, and to take up a position of readiness just west
-of the Hindenburg Line. I foresaw that with the nature of the fighting
-before the Third and Fifth Divisions, it would not be very long before
-they would have to be relieved, and there was still the Beaurevoir
-line of trenches to be overcome before the Hindenburg system could be
-claimed as taken in its entirety. This move was duly carried out, and
-the Second Division became available by the evening of October 1st in
-close support of the battle front.
-
-The orders to the two line Divisions for September 30th were to attack
-generally in a north-easterly direction. The immediate objectives
-of the Third Division were Bony village, the "Knob" and the northern
-entrance to the tunnel. The flanks of the two Divisions were to meet
-on the Railway Spur, and the right of the Fifth Division was to swing
-forward in the direction of Joncourt, in sympathy with any advance made
-by the Ninth Corps to the south of them.
-
-There was, as explained, no possibility of attempting anything like
-a methodical advance covered by a co-ordinated Artillery barrage.
-Progress would depend upon the tenacity and skilful leading of the
-front-line troops, and reliance must be had more upon the bayonet and
-the bomb than upon external aids. It was, in a peculiar degree, a
-private soldier's battle.
-
-The night of September 29th brought steady rain, and everybody was
-drenched to the skin. September 30th was a day of intense effort, slow
-and methodical hand-to-hand fighting, in a perfect tangle of trenches,
-with every yard of the advance vigorously contested; but by nightfall
-the line of the Third Division had advanced fully 1,000 yards. Its
-left had pivoted on the "Knoll," to the west of the Hindenburg Line.
-Gillemont Farm was by then securely in their hands; they had reached
-the southern outskirts of Bony village. Their right was well across the
-line of the canal, and joined the left flank of the Fifth Division on
-the Railway Spur. The Fifth Division had cleared the Le Catelet trench
-line of the enemy, and its right was by now well to the east of Nauroy.
-
-Another day's fighting was still before both Divisions, but the effect
-of the successful efforts of September 30th was speedily felt on
-October 1st. Overnight the enemy must have made up his mind that it
-was hopeless to try to retain any further hold upon the tunnel line,
-and his further resistance melted rapidly away. On October 1st events
-moved quickly; by 10 a.m. the Fifth Division reported the capture of
-Joncourt. By midday the whole of the village of Bony was in our hands,
-and at the same hour the air observers reported our patrols rapidly
-approaching the "Knob" and Le Catelet village.
-
-By nightfall of October 1st the whole operation had been successfully
-completed. The northern entrance to the tunnel, the "Knob" and the
-whole of the Railway Spur were in our hands; our line ran just west of
-Le Catelet and east of Estrees and Joncourt; all isolated parties of
-Americans and all American wounded had been gathered in, and the whole
-situation had been satisfactorily cleared up from an Artillery point of
-view.
-
-Later the same night our patrols entered Le Catelet, which lay in a
-hollow below us, and found the village deserted except for a number of
-enemy wounded. The enemy, during that day, relinquished his last hold
-upon the famous tunnel defences, and withdrew precipitately eastwards
-to the Beaurevoir hill and northwards towards Aubencheul. Our total
-captures during the three days' operations amounted to 3,057 prisoners
-and 35 guns.
-
-It had been a stiff fight, and the endurance of the Infantry had
-been highly tested. The skill displayed by the Third Division in the
-course of the close trench fighting of September 30th was particularly
-noteworthy. The stress upon Major-General Gellibrand and his Staff
-and Infantry Brigadiers had been severe. The several Brigades and
-Battalions had unavoidably become seriously mixed up. Control became
-very difficult, but was never completely lost.
-
-This was illustrated by the following incident of the day's fighting. I
-had ascertained that the whole of the Infantry of the Division had been
-committed, and there were no reserves in the hands of the Divisional
-Commander. One Battalion of the 9th Brigade was fighting under the
-orders of the 11th Brigade, another under that of the 10th Brigade.
-I took exception to this, and directed that a Divisional reserve
-should be immediately reconstituted. In spite of the difficulties of
-communication, Gellibrand contrived to carry this intricate order into
-effect during the very climax of the fight.
-
-Gellibrand was a man of interesting personality, more a philosopher
-and student than a man of action. His great personal bravery and his
-high sense of duty compensated in a great measure for some tendency to
-uncertainty in executive action. He had been a professional soldier,
-but before the war had retired into civil life. When the call came,
-he received a junior Staff appointment with the First Division, but
-his outstanding merits soon gained him promotion. As a Brigadier, he
-had, during 1916 and 1917, successfully led several of the Australian
-Brigades. His command of the Third Division during the last five months
-of active fighting was characterized by complete success in battle. His
-temperament and methods sometimes involved him in embarrassments on the
-administrative side of his work; but he succeeded in retaining to the
-last the whole-hearted confidence of his troops.
-
-I feel certain from my close observation of the course of events on
-September 30th and October 1st, that much of the success of the battle
-was due to Gellibrand's personal tenacity, and the assiduous manner
-in which he kept himself in personal touch from hour to hour with the
-forward situation and progress of his troops.
-
-Immediately upon the conclusion of the fighting I issued the following
-message:
-
- "Please convey to all Commanders, Staffs and troops of the Third
- and Fifth Australian Divisions my sincere appreciation of and
- thanks for their fine work of the past three days. Confronted at
- the outset of the operations with a critical situation of great
- difficulty, and hampered by inability to make full use of our
- Artillery resources, these Divisions succeeded in completely
- overwhelming a stubborn defence in the most strongly fortified
- sector of the Western Front. This was due to the determination
- and resource of the leaders and the grit, endurance and fighting
- spirit of the troops. Nothing more praiseworthy has been done by
- Australian troops in this war."
-
-The operations entrusted to the Corps had, by the night of October 1st,
-been substantially completed. Although the Beaurevoir defence line
-still lay to the east of us, the main canal defences, as far as the
-Le Catelet line, had been pierced, and a way had been opened for the
-Thirteenth Corps to pass across the line of the tunnel to be launched
-upon its task of turning the enemy out of the northern continuation of
-the Hindenburg Line by envelopment from the south.
-
-It was impossible to call upon the Third and Fifth Divisions for any
-further effort. Their work had been most exhausting. Furthermore,
-the steady drain upon their resources, after sixty days of almost
-continuous battle activity, had so reduced their fighting strength,
-that a very drastic reorganization had become necessary. This could
-only be effected by a complete withdrawal from the fighting zone.
-
-Accordingly, arrangements were put in hand for the immediate relief of
-these two Divisions. The Fifth Australian was relieved by the Second
-Australian Division, and the Third Australian Division by a Division
-of the Thirteenth Corps. Both the relieved Divisions, in the course of
-the next few days, followed the First and Fourth Australian Divisions
-into the grateful rest area which had been provided to the west and
-south-west of Amiens, and before they were again called upon for
-further front-line service hostilities had ended.
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[22] "Artillery Formation" is an advance in numerous small infantry
-columns irregularly spaced both in frontage and depth. "Line of
-Skirmishers" is an advance in successive lines of men, the intervals
-between the men being from two to five paces, and between the lines
-from 50 to 100 paces.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-MONTBREHAIN AND AFTER
-
-
-The successive withdrawals of the First, Fourth, Third and Fifth
-Australian Divisions from the battle zone during the period from
-September 22nd to October 2nd had been arranged with the Fourth
-Army Commander about the middle of September. The Corps had been
-continuously employed on front-line duty since April, and had already
-accomplished a considerable advance, for every inch of which it had
-been obliged to fight.
-
-This consideration alone had earned for the Corps a period of rest. But
-other important questions arose which affected the situation.
-
-I have mentioned that early in 1918 all Brigades of the Imperial
-Service had, owing to failing man-power, been reduced from four to
-three Battalions each. In this reduction the Australian Brigades
-participated only to a small extent during the fighting period.
-Every one of the Australian battalions had created great traditions;
-regimental _esprit_ and pride of unit were very strong. The private
-soldier valued his Battalion colour patch almost more than any other
-decoration.
-
-My predecessor in the Corps Command had, during May, 1918, directed the
-disbandment of one Battalion each of the 9th, 12th and 13th Brigades.
-This was due to the wastage resulting from the heavy fighting by
-these Brigades on the Villers-Bretonneux front. The residues of the
-disbanded battalions were used as drafts to replenish the remaining
-three Battalions of each Brigade. It was doubtless a measure directed
-by necessity, as the flow of reinforcements was steadily diminishing.
-
-Much lamentation was, however, caused among the officers and men who
-thus lost their battalion identity, both among those remaining in the
-field and those convalescing from wounds and sickness, who were thereby
-deprived of the hope of rejoining their former units.
-
-Through all these events I became fully alive to the difficulties which
-would present themselves when the evil day should arrive on which the
-fate of still other battalions would have to be decided. It was a day
-whose advent I was anxious to stave off until the last possible moment.
-
-Throughout the summer and autumn it became incumbent upon me to keep
-a close watch upon the fighting strengths of all the 57 Australian
-Infantry Battalions in the field. I had to consider the numbers
-actually present with the unit, the numbers likely to join from time
-to time from convalescent camps and hospitals, and the flow of new
-recruits from the Australian Depots in England. Almost daily forecasts
-had to be made as to the probable strengths available on a given date
-in all the Battalions likely to be employed in a given operation.
-
-The full official strength of a Battalion of Infantry was 1,000 at the
-outbreak of the war, but a reduction to 900 had been authorized in
-July, 1918. No battalion in the Army was ever for long able to maintain
-itself at a strength of 900. Indeed, experience went to show that so
-long as the strength did not fall below 600, a unit could quite well
-carry out, in battle, a normal battalion task, provided that frequent
-periods of short rest could be assured.
-
-Towards the middle of September, 1918, the successful course of the
-fighting, and the moderate rate of net wastage--by which I mean
-the excess of battle losses over replenishments from the rear--had
-convinced me that there was every reason to hope that the strengths of
-the 57 battalions could be maintained at a useful standard until the
-end of the campaigning season of that year. If the war were to go on
-into 1919, and provided that the Australian Corps could be kept out
-of the line over the three winter months, thereby avoiding the daily
-wastage of trench duty, I felt able to guarantee that by the spring of
-1919 the whole of these battalions would again have become replenished
-to a sufficient extent for a spring campaign.
-
-[Illustration: MAP H]
-
-It may have been an optimistic view; it may have savoured of a desire
-to postpone the evil day. But I felt assured that the disbandment of
-a number of additional battalions would seriously impair the fighting
-spirit of the whole Australian Corps. I was prepared to take the chance
-of being able to carry on until the end of 1918 with the whole 57
-battalions retained intact.
-
-But I was not permitted to do so. At various times during the period
-June to August, 1918, an unimaginative department at G.H.Q. kept
-harassing me with inquiries as to when it was proposed to conform to
-the new Imperial organization in which all Brigades were to be reduced
-to three Battalions each. These inquiries were at first ignored, but
-early in September the Adjutant-General became insistent for a reply.
-
-I set out the whole position as I saw it, and strongly urged a
-postponement of the question until the Corps should have completed the
-vitally important series of fighting operations on which it was then
-engaged. Looking back upon the course of events of that time, it is
-hardly credible now that, having regard to the reasons given, these
-representations should have been ignored. I procrastinated. Suddenly
-I received instructions from the War Office that some 6,000 men of
-the Corps, who had served continuously since 1914, were to be given
-six months' furlough to Australia, and that they were to be held in
-readiness to entrain en route for Australia at forty-eight hours'
-notice.
-
-These orders were received only two days before the battle of
-Hargicourt. The First and Fourth Divisions, destined to fight in that
-battle, were those most affected by such a withdrawal of men, because
-these Divisions contained the battalions and batteries which had been
-longest in the field. I could not, obviously, take up any attitude
-which would postpone the well-earned furlough of these veterans; nor
-had I the smallest inclination to do so. My case against the main
-proposal for an immediate extinction of additional battalions, was,
-however, weakened thereby.
-
-The responsible authorities overruled my objections, and on September
-19th I received peremptory instructions to disband eight additional
-battalions forthwith. With many misgivings, I had no option but to
-comply. I called my Divisional Commanders together, and with them
-decided which battalions should suffer extinction.
-
-It was a difficult choice, and created a situation of great difficulty.
-The whole of the personnel affected raised a very subordinate but
-none the less determined protest. One battalion after another very
-respectfully but very firmly took the stand that they did not wish to
-disband, and would prefer not to fight as dismembered and scattered
-portions of other battalions.
-
-This attitude, perhaps, bordered upon insubordination, but it was
-conceived for a very worthy purpose. It was a pathetic effort, and
-elicited much sympathy from the senior Commanders and myself.
-
-On the eve of the great operations for the overthrow of the Hindenburg
-Line I found myself, therefore, in a sea of troubles, and threatened
-with the possibility of internal disaffection. To outsiders who could
-have no understanding of the situation this might imperil the fair fame
-and prestige of the Australian Army Corps.
-
-Up to this stage the Fourth Army Commander had been in no way concerned
-in the matter. The pressure upon me had come from the War Office and
-the Adjutant-General's Department. Lord Rawlinson's interests, however,
-now became vitally involved. I submitted the whole position to him. I
-pointed out how inopportune the time was for risking trouble of this
-nature. The order for disbandment, having been given, must of course
-stand, and obedience must be insisted upon; but a postponement of
-further action for fourteen days was desirable, if the opportunity
-of a decisive blow against the enemy was not to be imperilled by an
-impairment of the fighting spirit and goodwill of the Australian Corps.
-
-Rawlinson accepted my views in their entirety, and used his authority
-and influence with the Commander-in-Chief. A postponement of action
-was authorized, and all the Battalions which had been threatened with
-extinction, with one exception, were permitted to remain intact during
-the remainder of the fighting period. The exception was made in the
-case of the 59th and 60th Battalions (of the 15th Brigade), whose men
-most loyally made no demur at the immediate amalgamation of the two
-battalions for the purposes of the forthcoming operations.
-
-[Illustration: German Prisoners--captured at the battle of Chuignes,
-August 23rd, 1918.]
-
-[Illustration: Captured German Guns--Park of Ordnance captured by the
-Australians during August, 1918.]
-
-By the end of September, therefore, three separate factors were
-operating to make a short withdrawal of the Corps from the battle zone
-desirable.
-
-These were, the long unbroken period of line service, the orders for
-the reorganization of the Brigades on a three-Battalion basis, and the
-granting of Australian furlough to the veterans.
-
-These were the reasons which brought about the decision that the whole
-of the Australian Corps should be sent for a period of rest in a
-coastal area as soon as the battle operations on which it had embarked
-had been brought to a successful conclusion.
-
-Those operations were, on October 1st, almost completed. Only the
-Beaurevoir line still remained to be mastered, and the Second
-Australian Division, which had been resting since its successes at
-Mont St. Quentin, was available to undertake that task. For the next
-three days the Australian Corps became, therefore, reduced to only one
-Division (the Second Australian) in the line, with the 27th and 30th
-American Divisions in support.
-
-The Second Division occupied the night of October 1st and the greater
-part of October 2nd in the process of taking over line duty from the
-Fifth Division, and in preparing for an attack timed for the next
-morning upon the Beaurevoir defences. I handed over the northern part
-of what had been the Australian Corps front, on the day previous, to
-the 50th Division (of the Thirteenth Corps), which had by now effected
-the passage of the tunnel line, and had deployed upon my left, facing
-north and north-east.
-
-After these adjustments were made, the Corps front, on the night
-of October 2nd, extended from Mont St. Martin through the eastern
-outskirts of Estrees and Joncourt, where I joined with the 32nd
-Division (now belonging to the Ninth Corps). It was a frontage of
-nearly 6,000 yards, an extraordinary length for the battle front of a
-single Division. Our line lay parallel to and about 1,000 yards to the
-west of the Beaurevoir line, and the attack for next day was designed
-to be delivered in a north-easterly direction. If the Beaurevoir
-line itself were captured, the attack was to be pushed on beyond, in
-the endeavour to sweep the enemy off the prominent hill on which was
-situated the village of Beaurevoir. Concurrently the Thirteenth Corps
-would attack Prospect Hill, lying to the north-east of Gouy village.
-
-The Beaurevoir line was a fully-developed defensive system, with front,
-support and communication trenches, thoroughly traversed, well wired
-in, and still in good condition. In 1917 it would have been considered
-impossible to capture such a line of defence by such a force on such a
-frontage.
-
-The Second Division deployed two of its Brigades, the 5th on the right
-and the 7th on the left, with the 6th Brigade in reserve. The 5th
-Tank Brigade, now greatly reduced in numbers, and some Whippet Tanks
-co-operated in the attack. The assault was launched at 6.5 a.m. under
-a Field Artillery barrage. Considerable opposition was met with. The
-trenches were found strongly held, particularly with machine guns, and
-the uncut wire seriously impeded the Infantry.
-
-The frontal attack of the 5th Brigade, nevertheless, achieved almost
-immediate success, although in some parts of the line there were
-centres of resistance which had to be enveloped before they yielded.
-The performance of the Tanks on this day was disappointing. Most of the
-heavier Tanks were disabled by Artillery fire, while the Whippets found
-the Beaurevoir trench lines too wide to straddle. Nevertheless, the
-spirited action of the Artillery made up for the loss of the assistance
-of the Tanks, and by 11 a.m. the whole of the Beaurevoir line in front
-of the 5th Brigade had been captured.
-
-Further to the north, the 7th Brigade found the trenches almost end on
-to the direction of their advance, and the battle here speedily took
-on the form of pure trench fighting with bomb and bayonet, a type of
-fighting in which the Australian excels. Steady progress northwards was
-made.
-
-The whole of the Beaurevoir line over the full extent of the Corps
-front was taken before midday, and although already very tired, the
-assaulting Brigades pushed on beyond, to the ascent of the Beaurevoir
-spur. On a knoll at its south-western extremity stood the stone base of
-the now wrecked Beaurevoir Mill, a prominent landmark visible for miles.
-
-The spur and the vicinity of the Mill were found to be strongly held,
-probably by fugitives driven out that morning from the Beaurevoir
-trenches. The weight of our attack spent itself on the slopes of the
-spur. The 6th Brigade was therefore launched at Beaurevoir Mill and
-village. Although some portion of our attack passed the Mill and
-reached the village, our available Infantry strength was not sufficient
-to mop it up satisfactorily, and the Brigadier decided to establish for
-the night a secure line about 1,000 yards south-west of the village.
-
-The total captures by the Second Division on this day exceeded a
-thousand prisoners and many machine guns--an astonishing performance
-for three weak brigades, fighting under open and exposed conditions.
-
-The attack on Beaurevoir hill had been undertaken chiefly to keep the
-enemy engaged and on the move, while an additional Division of the
-Thirteenth Corps could be brought across the line of the tunnel and
-deployed into the battle line. The direction of the attack had been
-to the north-east. It now became necessary to readjust the general
-easterly line of advance by redistributing the Army front between the
-three Corps now in line. The greater part of October 4th was occupied
-in carrying out these arrangements, and the Second Division availed
-itself of the period to improve its line and the positions of parts of
-it by local attacks and the capture of tactical points along its front.
-On this day the Division gathered in a further 800 prisoners and five
-guns.
-
-By nightfall on October 4th the Corps front, now reduced to 4,000
-yards, ran generally north and south, well east of Wiancourt and
-just east of Ramicourt. The task of the Second Division and of the
-Australian Corps was completed, and in pursuance of arrangements
-previously made, the initial steps were taken on that day to hand
-over the Australian Corps front to the 27th and 30th American
-Divisions, which had, in the days intervening since September 29th,
-been reorganized and rested. They were to be given a place in the front
-battle line under the direct orders of their own Corps Headquarters
-(General Read).
-
-To cover the interval of time necessary to enable the first of the
-American Divisions (30th) to move up into line, General Rawlinson
-desired me to retain control of the battle front for one day longer,
-and avail myself of the time to make an endeavour to advance our line
-still further to the east.
-
-I selected as a suitable objective the village of Montbrehain, which
-stood on a plateau that dominated any further advance.
-
-The Second Division was instructed to carry out this attack early on
-October 5th, and I allotted to them one company of Tanks, which was all
-that could be materialized in fighting trim at such short notice.
-
-Rosenthal launched his attack at five minutes past six in the morning
-of October 5th. It was the 6th Brigade which led it. The village was
-full of machine guns, but the gallant Brigade dashed in with the
-bayonet, and methodically worked its way through the village to its
-eastern outskirts. A counter-attack developed about noon, and for a
-time about 400 yards of ground had to be yielded, but our foremost line
-was speedily restored with the assistance of a battalion of the 5th
-Brigade.
-
-By nightfall our line ran completely around the eastern outskirts of
-the village of Montbrehain, the whole of which was in our possession.
-We took from it over 600 prisoners belonging to nine different German
-regiments.
-
-What was even more interesting was that we came for the first time in
-the war upon French civilians, who had been under the domination of
-the enemy since the autumn of 1914. These unfortunate folk were found
-hidden away in cellars and underground shelters, and their joy at their
-deliverance from foreign bondage was pathetic. It was evident that the
-enemy had not had time to carry out the evacuation of the civilians,
-as had been his practice throughout the whole area over which the
-Australian Corps had hitherto advanced.
-
-By the night of October 5th the Corps had, by the victory of
-Montbrehain, advanced its line to a point six miles to the east of the
-Bellicourt Tunnel, and had thereby confirmed the irretrievable collapse
-of the whole of the Hindenburg defences.
-
-This achievement is, above everything else, an illustration, which
-should become classic, of the maxim that in war the _moral_ is to the
-material as three to one. The enemy had all the advantages of position,
-of carefully prepared field works, of highly-organized defences, of
-detailed acquaintance with our lines of approach from the west, and of
-all the other tactical benefits of the defence.
-
-Yet we had the advantage of moral factors. For the past nine weeks
-the enemy had suffered defeat after defeat. He had at one time been
-surprised and overwhelmed. He had at another time been driven from
-strong positions under conditions when surprise played no part. He had
-been defeated in gunnery, in the air, and in close Infantry fighting.
-The _moral_ of his troops had steadily declined. They no longer hoped
-for victory, but anticipated defeat. They knew that they were a beaten
-army.
-
-The victory won in the series of battles from September 29th to October
-5th was a victory of _moral_, the resolute determination of our troops
-to overcome all obstacles prevailing against the failing spirits of
-the defenders. It was a signal illustration that no defences, however
-powerful, can resist an energetically pressed assault, unless the
-defenders meet the attack with equal resolution. Verdun and the cliffs
-of Gallipoli are examples of resolute defence. Port Arthur and the
-Hindenburg line are equally striking instances of the collapse of
-formidable field works through failure of the _moral_ of the defenders.
-
-Montbrehain was the last Australian battle in the Great War, and the
-fighting career of the Australian Army Corps had, as events turned out,
-come to an end. On that same day my Second Division was relieved by the
-30th American Division, and I handed over command of the battle front
-to General Read. I had borne continuous responsibility, as a Corps
-Commander, for a section of the battle front in France varying from
-four to eleven miles for 128 consecutive days without a break.
-
-On that same day, too, Prince Max of Baden accepted the programme
-of the President of the United States of America, and requested him
-to take in hand the restoration of peace. On behalf of the German
-Government he also asked for an immediate Armistice on Land, Water and
-in the Air.
-
-The long-drawn-out negotiations which followed need only a brief
-reference. It was first necessary for the Entente Powers to agree
-upon a common line of action; then followed negotiations between the
-plenipotentiaries of the belligerents, and hostilities did not actually
-cease until after the conditions of the Armistice had been signed in
-the early morning of November 11th.
-
-During this period of five weeks, however, fighting went on. It was of
-an altogether different character from that in which the Australian
-Corps had been engaged. The enemy had no line of defence left in
-France. He was compelled to a retreat which became general along
-his whole front, and gathered momentum day by day. He gave up Lens,
-Armentieres and the Aubers Ridge without a struggle, thus enabling the
-Second and Fifth Armies to advance to the occupation of Lille and the
-adjacent industrial centres.
-
-A great army recoiling rapidly upon itself is beset with even greater
-difficulties than an army sweeping rapidly forward. If its retreat
-is not to be converted into a rout, time must be allowed for the
-methodical withdrawal, in proper sequence, of the whole complex
-organization in rear of the battle front. Headquarters and hospitals,
-workshops and aerodromes, depots and supplies must be dismantled,
-packed and re-established further in rear; guns, transport and reserve
-troops must be withdrawn stage by stage, and, last of all, the fighting
-line must fall back in sympathy with the rate of withdrawal of all in
-rear.
-
-Every hour's delay is an hour gained. Roads become congested, bridges
-overtaxed, cohesion and discipline are imperilled. An enforced
-withdrawal on so large a scale is one of the most difficult operations
-of war.
-
-The enemy's tactics during this period were, therefore, purely those
-of delay, achieved by the methodical destruction of bridges, tearing
-up of railways, and the blowing of great craters at every important
-road intersection. These methods impeded the advance of our armies
-quite as much as his rearguards, who invariably yielded to the smallest
-demonstration of force.
-
-Battles on the grand scale were now a thing of the past, and from the
-completion of the capture of the Hindenburg defences up to the signing
-of the Armistice there was no event in France of outstanding military
-importance.
-
-The pursuit of the enemy towards the eastern frontiers of France and
-Belgium was, however, exhausting to the British and American troops
-on the front which the Australian Corps had vacated. It was only a
-question of time for the Corps to be again called upon, this time to
-take its share of pursuit. The Armistice negotiations were dragging
-out, and it was uncertain that they would be satisfactorily concluded.
-The Australian Corps had had a month for a pleasant rest along the
-banks of the Somme, between Amiens and Abbeville. It had had time to
-carry out the extensive reorganizations required by the War Office. On
-November 5th orders came for the Corps once again to move up to the
-front.
-
-The First and Fourth Divisions led the return to the battle zone. The
-remaining three Divisions were to follow. My Corps Headquarters, on
-November 10th, commenced its move to Le Cateau, to occupy the very
-chateau which had been inhabited by General von der Marwitz, the
-Commander of the Second German Army, against whom the Australian Corps
-had for so long been operating. I was actually on the way there on
-November 11th when the order arrived for the cessation of hostilities.
-
-The Australian Army Corps was therefore not again employed, either in
-the final stages of pursuing the enemy out of France, or as part of the
-Army of Occupation on German territory.
-
-The Prime Minister of Australia forwarded to me, the day after my
-arrival at Le Cateau, the following message:
-
- The Government and the people of Australia extend their heartiest
- congratulations on the triumphant conclusion of your great
- efforts. I am specially requested to convey to you their heartfelt
- thanks and deep admiration for your brilliant and great leadership,
- and for the way in which you and the brave men associated with
- you have borne the sufferings and trials of the past four
- years, and in common with the troops of all the Allied Nations
- brought the civilized peoples of the world through adversity to
- victorious peace. On behalf of the Government and the people of the
- Commonwealth, I assure you, and every Australian soldier in the
- field, that the Commonwealth is full of pride and admiration of
- their endurance and sacrifice. The Australian soldiers are entitled
- to, and shall receive, not only the thanks of a grateful people,
- but that treatment which their great services deserve.
-
- W. M. HUGHES.
-
-Not long after the conclusion of hostilities I was called upon by
-my Government to undertake the organization and direction of a
-special department to carry out the repatriation of the whole of the
-Australian Imperial Force, in Europe, Egypt, Salonika and Mesopotamia.
-This compelled me to sever, with much regret, my close and intimate
-association with the personnel of the Army Corps.
-
-Before proceeding to England to establish the new department, I issued
-the following Farewell Order:
-
- Upon relinquishing the command of the Australian Army Corps,
- in order to take up the important and difficult work of the
- Repatriation and Demobilization of the Australian Imperial Force,
- which has been entrusted to me by the Commonwealth Government, I
- desire to offer to all ranks of the Corps a heartfelt expression of
- my gratitude to all for the splendid and loyal support which they
- have rendered to me during the past six months.
-
- It has been the period during which the Corps has attained its
- highest development, as a fighting organism, of cohesion and
- efficiency. This has been brought about alike by the valour of
- the troops of all arms and services, and by the splendid devotion
- of Commanders, Staffs, and Regimental Officers, and has resulted
- in the series of brilliant victories which have contributed in so
- high a measure to the overthrow and utter collapse of our principal
- enemy.
-
- For the remainder of the period during which the Corps will
- continue to act as a military body, held in readiness for any
- emergency that may arise during the peace negotiations, I am
- confident that every man will strive to do all in his power to
- uphold the great renown which the Corps has so worthily won.
-
- But, having completed our task in the main object which brought
- us from our distant homeland, and having thereby safeguarded the
- future of our Nation by the conquest of our most formidable enemy,
- we are now faced with another and an equally important task,
- namely, to prepare ourselves to resume our duties of citizenship
- and to assist individually and collectively in the reconstruction
- of the Australian Nation. Our numbers and our prestige place
- this opportunity in our hands, and impose upon us this great
- responsibility.
-
- I feel sure that every man in the Corps will in this also worthily
- respond to the call of duty, and will co-operate loyally and
- self-sacrificingly in the realization of all plans and projects
- which will be developed to so worthy an end.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-RESULTS
-
-
-The time has arrived when it is proper to take stock of gains and
-losses, and to endeavour to appraise, at its true value, the work done
-by the Australian Army Corps during its long-sustained effort of the
-last six months of its fighting career.
-
-It has become customary to regard the actual captures of prisoners and
-guns as a true index of the degree of success which has attended any
-series of battle operations. Every soldier knows, however, that such a
-standard of judgment, applied alone, would render but scant justice.
-The actual captures in any engagement depend more upon the state of
-_moral_ of the enemy and the temperament of the attacking troops than
-upon the military quality of the battle effort considered as a whole.
-While large captures necessarily imply great victories, it does not by
-any means follow that small captures imply the reverse.
-
-Nevertheless, judged by such a purely arbitrary standard, the
-performances of the Australian Army Corps during the period under
-review are worthy of being set out in particular detail.
-
-From March 27th, when Australian troops were for the first time
-interposed to arrest the German advance, until October 5th, when they
-were finally withdrawn from the line, the total captures made by them
-were:
-
- Prisoners 29,144
- Guns 338
-
-No accurate record was ever kept of the capture of machine guns,
-trench mortars, searchlights, vehicles and travelling kitchens or
-pharmacies, nor of the quantity of Artillery ammunition, which alone
-must have amounted to millions of rounds.
-
-During the advance, from August 8th to October 5th, the Australian
-Corps recaptured and released no less than 116 towns and villages.
-Every one of these was defended more or less stoutly. This count of
-them does not include a very large number of minor hamlets, which
-were unnamed on the maps, nor farms, brickfields, factories, sugar
-refineries, and similar isolated groups of buildings, every one of
-which had been fortified and converted by the enemy into a stronghold
-of resistance.
-
-Although the amount of territory reoccupied, taken by itself, is
-ordinarily no criterion of value, the whole circumstances of the
-relentless advance of the Australian Corps make it a convenient
-standard of comparison. The total area of all the ground fought over,
-from the occupation of which the enemy was ejected, amounted in the
-period under consideration to 394 square miles.
-
-A much more definite and crucial basis for evaluating the military
-successes of the Corps is the number of enemy Divisions actually
-engaged and defeated in the course of the operations. Very accurate
-records of these have been kept, and every one of them was identified
-by a substantial contribution to the list of prisoners taken. An
-analysis of this investigation produced the following results:
-
-The total number of separate enemy divisions engaged was thirty-nine.
-Of these, twenty were engaged once only, twelve were engaged twice,
-six three times, and one four times. Each time "engaged" represents
-a separate and distinct period of line duty for the enemy Division
-referred to.
-
-Up to the time of the Armistice we had definitely ascertained that
-at least six of these thirty-nine enemy Divisions had been entirely
-disbanded as the result of the battering which they had received.
-Their numberings have already been given. It is more than probable
-that several other Divisions shared the same fate, by reason of the
-number of prisoners actually taken, and the other casualties known to
-have been inflicted. Up to the time when the signing of the Armistice
-precluded further inquiries, absolutely conclusive evidence of their
-disappearance had not been obtained.
-
-In such an analysis it is possible to go even further, and to compare
-the tangible results achieved with the relative strength of the forces
-engaged. The Australian Army Corps of five Divisions represented 91/2
-per cent. of the whole of the remaining 53 Divisions of the British
-Army engaged on the Western Front. Its captures in prisoners, by the
-same comparison, and within the period reviewed--_i.e._, March 27th to
-October 5th--was 23 per cent., in guns 231/2 per cent., and in territory
-reoccupied was 211/2 per cent. of the whole of the rest of the British
-Army.
-
-The ratio, therefore, of the results to the strengths, as between the
-five Australian Divisions and the whole of the rest of the British
-Army, was as follows:
-
- Prisoners 2.42 times.
- Territory 2.24 "
- Guns 2.47 "
-
-It is not, however, by the mere numerical results disclosed by such a
-comparison that the work of the Australian Army Corps should be judged.
-If a broad survey be made of the whole of the 1918 campaign, I think
-that the decisive part which the Corps took in it will emerge even more
-convincingly.
-
-Such a survey will show that the whole sequence of events may be
-divided into five very definite and clearly-marked stages. The first
-was the arrest and bringing to naught of the great German spring
-offensive; the second was the conversion of the enemy's offensive
-strategy into a distinct and unqualified defensive. Next followed the
-great, initial and irredeemable defeat of August 8th, which, according
-to the enemy's own admissions, was the beginning of the end. Then came
-the denial to the enemy of the respite which he sought on the line of
-the Somme, which might well have helped him to recover himself for
-another year of war; and, finally, there was the overthrow of his great
-defensive system, on which he relied as a last bulwark to safeguard his
-hold upon French soil, a hold which would have enabled him to bargain
-for terms.
-
-It must never be forgotten that whatever claims may be made to the
-contrary, Germany's surrender was precipitated by reason of her
-military defeat in the field. Her submarine campaign, disappointing to
-her expectations as it had been, was still a potent weapon. Her fleet
-was yet intact. Our blockade was grievous, but she did in fact survive
-it, even though it continued in force for a full eight months after
-her surrender. The defection of Bulgaria and the collapse of Turkey
-might conceivably be a source of increased military strength, even if
-one of greater political weakness. Had she been able to hold us at bay
-in France and Belgium for but another month or six weeks, she could
-have been assured of a respite of three months of winter in which to
-organize a levy en masse. Who can say that the stress of another winter
-and the prospect of another year of war might not have destroyed the
-Entente combination against her?
-
-On these grounds I believe that the real and immediate reason for the
-precipitate surrender of Germany on October 5th, 1918, was the defeat
-of her Army in the field. It followed so closely upon the breaching
-of the Hindenburg defences on September 29th to October 4th, that it
-cannot be dissociated from that event as a final determining cause.
-
-Whether this view be correct or not, I think that the claim may fairly
-be made for the Australian Army Corps, that in each of the stages of
-the operations which led to this military overthrow, the Corps played
-an important, and in some of them a predominating, part. No better
-testimony for such a conclusion can be adduced than the admissions of
-Ludendorff himself.
-
-Narrowing our survey of the closing events of the campaign to a
-consideration of the fighting activities of the Australian Corps,
-I would like to emphasize the remarkable character of that effort.
-Deprived of the advantage of a regular inflow of trained recruits,
-and relying practically entirely for any replenishments upon the
-return of its own sick and wounded, the Corps was able to maintain
-an uninterrupted fighting activity over a period of six months. For
-the last sixty days of this period the Corps maintained an unchecked
-advance of thirty-seven miles against the powerful and determined
-opposition of a still formidable enemy, who employed all the mechanical
-and scientific resources at his disposal.
-
-Such a result alone, considered in the abstract and quite apart from
-any comparison with the performances of other forces, is a testimony,
-on the one hand, to the pre-eminent fighting qualities of the
-Australian soldier considered individually, and, on the other hand, to
-the collective capacity and efficiency of the military effort made by
-the Corps. I doubt whether there is any parallel for such a performance
-in the whole range of military history.
-
-As regards the troops themselves, the outstanding feature of the
-campaign was their steadily rising _moral_. Always high, it was, in
-spite of fatigue and stress, never higher than in the closing days. A
-stage had been reached when they regarded their adversary no longer
-with cautious respect but with undisguised contempt.
-
-On the part of the troops it was a remarkable feat of physical and
-mental endurance to face again and yet again the stress of battle. To
-the infantry a certain measure of periodical rest was accorded, but
-the Artillery and technical services had scarcely any respite at all.
-Almost every day of the whole period they worked and fought, night and
-day, under the fire of the enemy's batteries, and under his drenching,
-suffocating gas attacks, for our battery positions were the favourite
-targets for his gas bombardments.
-
-On the part of the staffs it was a period of ceaseless toil, both
-mental and physical. The perfection of the staff work, its precision,
-its completeness, its rapidity, its whole-souled devotion to the
-service of the troops, were the necessary conditions for the victories
-which were won.
-
-Another outstanding feature was the uniformity of standard achieved
-by all the five Divisions, as well as the wonderful comradeship which
-they displayed towards each other. Omitting altogether the performances
-of any one of them in the previous years of the war, it is noteworthy
-that all so fully seized the opportunities that presented themselves,
-that each could boast of outstanding achievements during this
-period--the First Division for its capture of Lihons and the battles of
-Chuignes and Hargicourt, the Second Division for Mont St. Quentin and
-Montbrehain, the Third for Bray, Bouchavesnes and Bony, the Fourth for
-Hamel and Hargicourt, and the Fifth for Peronne and Bellicourt.
-
-[Illustration: MAP J.]
-
-I must also pass in brief review the losses which the Corps suffered
-during its advance. From August 8th to October 5th the total battle
-casualties were as follows:
-
- Killed 3,566
- Died of wounds 1,432
- Wounded 16,166
- Missing 79
- ------
- Total 21,243
-
-Averaging these losses over all five Divisions for the whole period,
-they amount to a wastage from all causes of seventy men per Division
-per day, which must be regarded as extraordinarily moderate, having
-regard to the strenuous nature of the fighting, the great results
-achieved, and the much higher rate of losses incurred by Australian
-troops during the previous years of the war. Even during periods of
-sedentary trench warfare the losses averaged forty per Division per day.
-
-The total losses of the Army Corps during this period were, indeed,
-only a small fraction of Australia's contribution to the casualty roll
-for the whole period of the war. It was the least costly period, for
-Australia, of all the fighting that her soldiers underwent. Had it been
-otherwise, the effort could not have been maintained for so long, nor
-could the spirit of the troops have been sustained. It was the low cost
-of victory after victory which spurred them on to still greater efforts.
-
-Of the causes which contributed to so gratifying a result, much credit
-must be given to the great development in 1918 of mechanical aids, in
-the form of Tanks, and to a considerable augmentation of aeroplanes,
-Artillery and Lewis guns. Of all these the Corps proved eager to avail
-itself to the full.
-
-But the main cause is, after all, the recognition of a principle of
-text-book simplicity, which is that a vigorous offensive is in the
-long run cheaper than a timorous defensive. No war can be decided by
-defensive tactics. The fundamental doctrine of the German conception of
-war was the pursuit of the unrelenting offensive; it was only when the
-Entente Armies, on their part, were able and willing themselves to put
-such a doctrine into practice that our formidable enemies were overcome.
-
-It may be that hereafter I may be charged with responsibility for
-so relentlessly and for so long committing the troops of the Corps
-to a sustained aggressive policy. Such criticisms have already been
-whispered in some quarters. But I am sure that they will not be shared
-by any of the men whom it was my privilege to command. They knew that
-an offensive policy was the cheapest policy, and the proof that they
-accepted it as the right one was their ever-rising _moral_ as the
-campaign developed.
-
-"Feed your troops on victory," is a maxim which does not appear in
-any text-book, but it is nevertheless true. The aim and end of all
-the efforts and of all the heavy sacrifices of the Australian nation
-was victory in the field. Nothing that could be done could lead more
-swiftly and more directly to its fulfilment than an energetic offensive
-policy. The troops themselves recognized this. They learned to believe,
-because of success heaped upon success, that they were invincible. They
-were right, and I believe that I was right in shaping a course which
-would give them the opportunity of proving it.
-
-There are some aspects of the Australian campaign to which, before
-closing this memoir, I should like to make brief reference. Success
-depended first and foremost upon the military proficiency of the
-Australian private soldier and his glorious spirit of heroism. I do
-not propose to attempt here an exhaustive analysis of the causes
-which led to the making of him. The democratic institutions under
-which he was reared, the advanced system of education by which he was
-trained--teaching him to think for himself and to apply what he had
-been taught to practical ends--the instinct of sport and adventure
-which is his national heritage, his pride in his young country, and the
-opportunity which came to him of creating a great national tradition,
-were all factors which made him what he was.
-
-Physically the Australian Army was composed of the flower of the
-youth of the continent. A volunteer army--the only purely volunteer
-army that fought in the Great War--it was composed of men carefully
-selected according to a high physical standard, from which, happily,
-no departure was made, even although recruiting began to fall off in
-the last year of the war, and there were some who had proposed a more
-lenient recruiting examination. The cost to Australia of delivering
-each fighting man, fully trained, to the battle front was too great to
-permit of any doubt whether the physical quality of the raw material
-would survive the wear and tear of war.
-
-Mentally, the Australian soldier was well endowed. In him there was a
-curious blend of a capacity for independent judgment with a readiness
-to submit to self-effacement in a common cause. He had a personal
-dignity all his own. He had the political sense highly developed, and
-was always a keen critic of the way in which his battalion or battery
-was "run," and of the policies which guided his destinies from day to
-day.
-
-His intellectual gifts and his "handiness" made him an apt pupil. It
-was always a delight to see the avidity with which he mastered the
-technique of the weapons which were placed in his hands. Machine guns,
-Lewis guns, Mills' bombs, Stokes' mortars, rifle grenades, flares,
-fuses, detonators, Very lights, signal rockets, German machine guns,
-German stick bombs, never for long remained a mystery to him.
-
-At all schools and classes he proved a diligent scholar, and astonished
-his instructors by the speed with which he absorbed and bettered his
-instruction. Conservatism in military methods was no part of his creed.
-He was always mentally alert to adopt new ideas and often to invent
-them.
-
-His adaptability spared him much hardship. He knew how to make himself
-comfortable. To light a fire and cook his food was a natural instinct.
-A sheet of corrugated iron, a batten or two, and a few strands of wire
-were enough to enable him to fabricate a home in which he could live at
-ease.
-
-Psychologically, he was easy to lead but difficult to drive. His
-imagination was readily fired. War was to him a game, and he played
-for his side with enthusiasm. His bravery was founded upon his sense
-of duty to his unit, comradeship to his fellows, emulation to uphold
-his traditions, and a combative spirit to avenge his hardships and
-sufferings upon the enemy.
-
-Taking him all in all, the Australian soldier was, when once
-understood, not difficult to handle. But he required a sympathetic
-handling, which appealed to his intelligence and satisfied his instinct
-for a "square deal."
-
-Very much and very stupid comment has been made upon the discipline
-of the Australian soldier. That was because the very conception and
-purpose of discipline have been misunderstood. It is, after all, only
-a means to an end, and that end is the power to secure co-ordinated
-action among a large number of individuals for the achievement of a
-definite purpose. It does not mean lip service, nor obsequious homage
-to superiors, nor servile observance of forms and customs, nor a
-suppression of individuality.
-
-Such may have been the outward manifestations of discipline in times
-gone by. If they achieved the end in view, it must have been because
-the individual soldier had acquired in those days no capacity to act
-intelligently and because he could be considered only in the mass. But
-modern war makes high demands upon the intelligence of the private
-soldier and upon his individual initiative. Any method of training
-which tends to suppress that individuality will tend to reduce his
-efficiency and value. The proverbial "iron discipline" of the Prussian
-military ideal ultimately broke down completely under the test of a
-great war.
-
-In the Australian Forces no strong insistence was ever made upon the
-mere outward forms of discipline. The soldier was taught that personal
-cleanliness was necessary to ensure his health and well-being, that a
-soldierly bearing meant a moral and physical uplift which would help
-him to rise superior to his squalid environment, that punctuality meant
-economy of effort, that unquestioning obedience was the only road to
-successful collective action. He acquired these military qualities
-because his intelligence taught him that the reasons given him were
-true ones.
-
-In short, the Australian Army is a proof that individualism is the
-best and not the worst foundation upon which to build up collective
-discipline. The Australian is accustomed to team-work. He learns it
-in the sporting field, in his industrial organizations, and in his
-political activities. The team-work which he developed in the war was
-of the highest order of efficiency. Each man understood his part and
-understood also that the part which others had to play depended upon
-the proper performance of his own.
-
-The gunner knew that the success of the infantry depended upon his own
-punctilious performance of his task, its accuracy, its punctuality,
-its conscientious thoroughness. The runner knew what depended upon
-the rapid delivery at the right destination of the message which he
-carried. The mule driver knew that the load of ammunition entrusted
-to him must be delivered, at any sacrifice, to its destined battery;
-the infantryman knew that he must be at his tape line at the appointed
-moment, and that he must not overrun his allotted objective.
-
-The truest test of battle discipline was the confidence which every
-leader in the field always felt that he could rely upon every man to
-perform the duty which had been prescribed for him, as long as breath
-lasted, and that he would perform it faithfully even when there was no
-possibility of any supervision.
-
-Thus the sense of duty was always very high, and so also was the
-instinct of comradeship. A soldier, a platoon, a whole battalion would
-sooner sacrifice themselves than "let down" a comrade or another unit.
-There was no finer example of individual self-sacrifice, for the
-benefit of comrades, than the Stretcher-bearer service, which suffered
-exceedingly in its noble work of succouring the wounded, and exposed
-itself unflinchingly to every danger.
-
-The relations between the officers and men of the Australian Army were
-also of a nature which is deserving of notice. From almost the earliest
-days of the war violence was done to a deep-rooted tradition of the
-British Army, which discouraged any promotion from the ranks, and
-stringently forbade, in cases where it was given, promotion in the same
-unit. It was rare to recognize the distinguished service of a ranker;
-it was impossible for him to secure a commission in his own regiment.
-
-The Australian Imperial Force changed all that. Those privates,
-corporals and sergeants who displayed, under battle conditions, a
-notable capacity for leadership were earmarked for preferment. If their
-standard of education was good, they received commissions as soon as
-there were vacancies to fill; if not, they were sent to Oxford or
-Cambridge to be given an opportunity of improving both their general
-and their special military knowledge.
-
-As a general rule, they came back as commissioned officers to the very
-unit in which they had enlisted or served. They afforded to all its men
-a tangible and visible proof of the recognition of merit and capacity,
-and their example was always a powerful stimulus to all their former
-comrades.
-
-There was thus no officer caste, no social distinction in the whole
-force. In not a few instances, men of humble origin and belonging
-to the artisan class rose, during the war, from privates to the
-command of Battalions. The efficiency of the force suffered in no
-way in consequence. On the contrary, the whole Australian Army
-became automatically graded into leaders and followers according
-to the individual merits of every man, and there grew a wonderful
-understanding between them.
-
-The duties and responsibilities of the officers were always put upon
-a high plane. They had, during all military service with troops, to
-dress like the men, to live among them in the trenches, to share their
-hardships and privations, and to be responsible for their welfare. No
-officer dared to look after his own comfort until every man or horse
-or mule had been fed and quartered, as well as the circumstances of
-the moment permitted. The battle prowess of the Australian regimental
-officer and the magnificent example he set have become household words.
-
-[Illustration: The Toll of Battle--an Australian gun-team destroyed by
-an enemy shell, September 1st, 1918.]
-
-[Illustration: Inter-Divisional Relief--The 30th American and the 3rd
-Australian Divisions passing each other in the "Roo de Kanga," Peronne,
-during the "relief" after the capture of the Hindenburg Line, October
-4th, 1918.]
-
-Then there must be a word of recognition of the work of the devoted and
-able Staffs. It was upon them, after all, that the principal burden of
-the campaign rested. Upon them, their skill and industry, depended the
-adequacy of all supplies and their proper distribution, the precision
-of all arrangements for battle, the accuracy of all maps, orders and
-instructions, the clearness of messages and reports, the completeness
-of the information on which the Commander must base his decisions, and
-the correct calculations of time and space for the movement of troops,
-guns and transport. Their watchword was "efficiency."
-
-"The Staff Officer is the servant of the troops." This was the ritual
-pronounced at the initiation of every Staff Officer. It was a doctrine
-which contributed powerfully to the success of the staff work as a
-whole. It meant that the Staff Officer's duties extended far beyond
-the mere transmission of orders. It became his business to see that
-they were understood, and rightly acted upon, and to assist in removing
-every kind of difficulty in their due execution. The importance of
-accurate and reliable staff work can be understood when it is realized
-that no mistake can happen without ultimately imposing an added stress
-upon the most subordinate and most helpless of all the components of an
-Army--the private soldier. An error in a clock time, the miscarriage
-of a message, the neglect to issue an instruction, a misreading of an
-order, an omission from a list of names, a mistake in a computation,
-an incomplete inventory, are bound in the long run to involve an added
-burden somewhere upon some private soldier.
-
-The Staff of the Australian Army Corps, its Divisions and Brigades,
-consisted during the last six months almost entirely of Australians,
-many of them belonging to the permanent military forces of the
-Commonwealth, but more still men who, before the war, followed civilian
-occupations. Among both categories the quality of the staff work
-steadily grew in efficiency, speed and accuracy, and during the last
-period of active fighting it reached a very high standard indeed.
-
-Had it been otherwise, I could not have carried out either the rapid
-preparations for several of the greater battles, or the frequent and
-complex interchanges of Divisions which alone rendered it possible
-for me to keep up a continuous pressure on the enemy, or the
-readjustments throughout the whole of the very large area always under
-my jurisdiction which became necessary as the advance proceeded.
-
-No reference to the staff work of the Australian Corps during the
-period of my command would be complete without a tribute to the work
-and personality of Brigadier-General T. A. Blamey, my Chief of Staff.
-He possessed a mind cultured far above the average, widely informed,
-alert and prehensile. He had an infinite capacity for taking pains.
-A Staff College graduate, but not on that account a pedant, he was
-thoroughly versed in the technique of staff work, and in the minutiae of
-all procedure.
-
-He served me with an exemplary loyalty, for which I owe him a debt of
-gratitude which cannot be repaid. Our temperaments adapted themselves
-to each other in a manner which was ideal. He had an extraordinary
-faculty of self-effacement, posing always and conscientiously as the
-instrument to give effect to my policies and decisions. Really helpful
-whenever his advice was invited, he never obtruded his own opinions,
-although I knew that he did not always agree with me.
-
-Some day the orders which he drafted for the long series of
-history-making military operations upon which we collaborated will
-become a model for Staff Colleges and Schools for military instruction.
-They were accurate, lucid in language, perfect in detail, and always
-an exact interpretation of my intention. It was seldom that I thought
-that my orders or instructions could have been better expressed, and no
-Commander could have been more exacting than I was in the matter of the
-use of clear language to express thought.
-
-Blamey was a man of inexhaustible industry, and accepted every task
-with placid readiness. Nothing was ever too much trouble. He worked
-late and early, and set a high standard for the remainder of the large
-Corps Staff of which he was the head. The personal support which he
-accorded to me was of a nature of which I could always feel the real
-substance. I was able to lean on him in times of trouble, stress and
-difficulty, to a degree which was an inexpressible comfort to me.
-
-To the Commanders of the Five Divisions I have already made detailed
-allusion. They were all renowned leaders. To all the Brigadiers of
-Infantry and Artillery and to the Heads of the Administrative Services
-who laboured under them, the limitations of space forbid my making any
-individual reference. But they were all of them men to whose splendid
-services Australia owes a deep debt of gratitude. In their hands the
-honour of Australia's fighting men and the prestige of her arms were in
-safe keeping.
-
-None but men of character and self-devotion could have carried the
-burden which they had to bear during the last six months of the war.
-In spite of stress and difficulty, unremitting toil and wasted effort,
-weary days and sleepless nights, fresh task piling upon the task but
-just begun, labouring even harder during periods of so-called rest
-than when their troops were actually in the line, this gallant band of
-leaders remained steadfast of purpose, never faltered, never lost their
-faith in final victory, never failed to impress their optimism and
-their unflinching fighting spirit upon the men whom they commanded.
-
-It may be appropriate to end this memoir on a personal note. I have
-permitted myself a tone of eulogy for the triumphant achievements of
-the Australian Army Corps in 1918, which I have endeavoured faithfully
-to portray. Let it not be assumed on that account that the humble part
-which it fell to my lot to perform afforded me any satisfaction or
-prompted any enthusiasm for war. Quite the contrary.
-
-From the far-off days of 1914, when the call first came, until the
-last shot was fired, every day was filled with loathing, horror, and
-distress. I deplored all the time the loss of precious life and the
-waste of human effort. Nothing could have been more repugnant to me
-than the realization of the dreadful inefficiency and the misspent
-energy of war. Yet it had to be, and the thought always uppermost was
-the earnest prayer that Australia might for ever be spared such a
-horror on her own soil.
-
-There is, in my belief, only one way to realize such a prayer. The
-nation that wishes to defend its land and its honour must spare no
-effort, refuse no sacrifice to make itself so formidable that no enemy
-will dare to assail it. A League of Nations may be an instrument for
-the preservation of peace, but an efficient Army is a far more potent
-one.
-
-The essential components of such an Army are a qualified Staff, an
-adequate equipment and a trained soldiery. I state them in what I
-believe to be their order of importance, and my belief is based upon
-the lessons which this war has taught me. In that way alone can
-Australia secure the sanctity of her territory and the preservation of
-her independent liberties.
-
-Such a creed is not militarism, but is of the very essence of national
-self-preservation. For long years before the war it was the creed of a
-small handful of men in Australia, who braved the indifference and even
-the ridicule of public opinion in order to try to qualify themselves
-for the test when it should come. Four dreadful years of war have
-served to convince me of the truth of that creed, and to confirm me in
-the belief that the men of the coming generation, if they love their
-country, must take up the burden which these men have had to bear.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX A
-
- GROUPING INTO AUSTRALIAN DIVISIONS OF ARTILLERY AND
- INFANTRY BRIGADES, DURING THE PERIOD MAY TO OCTOBER,
- 1918, AND THE GENERAL OFFICERS COMMANDING THEM.
-
-FIRST DIVISION (Glasgow):
-
- _Artillery_, 1st and 2nd Brigades (Anderson).
- _Infantry_, 1st Brigade (Mackay).
- 2nd " (Heane).
- 3rd " (Bennett).
-
-SECOND DIVISION (Rosenthal):
-
- _Artillery_, 4th and 5th Brigades (Phillips).
- _Infantry_, 5th Brigade (Martin).
- 6th " (Robertson).
- 7th " (Wisdom).
-
-THIRD DIVISION (Gellibrand):
-
- _Artillery_, 7th and 8th Brigades (Grimwade).
- _Infantry_, 9th Brigade (Goddard).
- 10th " (McNicoll).
- 11th " (Cannan).
-
-FOURTH DIVISION (Maclagan):
-
- _Artillery_, 10th and 11th Brigades (Burgess).
- _Infantry_, 4th Brigade (Brand).
- 12th " (Leane).
- 13th " (Herring).
-
-FIFTH DIVISION (Hobbs):
-
- _Artillery_, 13th and 14th Brigades (Bessel-Browne).
- _Infantry_, 8th Brigade (Tivey).
- 14th " (Stewart).
- 15th " (Elliott).
-
-The 3rd, 6th and 12th Artillery Brigades were Corps Troops not forming
-part of any Division. The 9th Artillery Brigade was disbanded at the
-end of 1916.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX B
-
-
-In order to illustrate the nature of the individual fighting carried
-out by the Australian Corps, during the period covered by this book,
-the following very small selection has been made from the official
-records of deeds of gallantry by individual soldiers. In every one of
-these twenty-nine cases, the VICTORIA CROSS has been awarded by His
-Majesty the King:
-
- No. 4061, SERGEANT STANLEY ROBERT MACDOUGALL, 47th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "At DERNANCOURT, on morning of 28th March, 1918, the enemy
- attacked our line, and his first wave succeeded in gaining an
- entry. Sergt. MacDougall, who was at a post in a flank company,
- realized the situation, and at once charged the enemy's second
- wave single-handed with rifle and bayonet, killing 7 and capturing
- Machine Gun which they had. This he turned on to them, firing
- from the hip, causing many casualties, and routing that wave. He
- then turned his attention to those who had entered, until his
- ammunition had run out, all the time firing at close quarters, when
- he seized a bayonet and charged again, killing three men and a
- German officer, who was just about to kill one of our officers. He
- then used a Lewis Gun on the enemy, killing many and enabling us to
- capture 33 prisoners. His prompt action saved the line and enabled
- us to stop the enemy advance."
-
-LIEUTENANT PERCY VALENTINE STORKEY, 19th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "Lieut. Storkey was in charge of a platoon which took part in
- the attack at BOIS DE HANGARD on morning of 7th April, 1918. On
- emerging from the wood, the enemy trench line was encountered, and
- Lieut. Storkey found himself with 6 men. While continuing his move
- forward, a large enemy party--about 80 to 100 strong--armed with
- several machine guns, was noticed to be holding up the advance of
- the troops on the right. Lieut. Storkey immediately decided to
- attack this party from the flank and rear, and while moving forward
- to the attack, was joined by Lieut. Lipscomb and four men. Under
- the leadership of Lieut. Storkey, this small party of 2 officers
- and 10 other ranks charged the enemy position with fixed bayonets,
- driving the enemy out, killing and wounding about 30 and capturing
- the remainder, viz.: 3 officers and 50 men, also one machine gun."
-
- LIEUTENANT CLIFFORD WILLIAM KING SADLIER, 51st Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For conspicuous gallantry on the night of 24-25th April, 1918,
- during a counter-attack by his Battalion on strong enemy positions
- south of VILLERS-BRETONNEUX, east of Amiens. Lieut. Sadlier's
- platoon, which was on the left of the Battalion, had to advance
- through a wood, where they encountered a strong enemy machine-gun
- post, which caused casualties and prevented the platoon from
- advancing. Although himself wounded, this officer at once collected
- his bombing section, and led them against the machine guns,
- succeeding in killing the crews and capturing two of the guns. By
- this time Lieut. Sadlier's party were all casualties, and he alone
- attacked a third enemy machine gun with his revolver, killing the
- crew of four and taking the gun. In doing so, he was again wounded,
- and unable to go on."
-
-No. 1914, SERGEANT WILLIAM RUTHVEN, 22nd Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For most conspicuous bravery and daring in action during the
- attack at VILLE-SUR-ANCRE, near Albert, on 19th May, 1918.
- During the advance Sergeant Ruthven's Company suffered numerous
- casualties, and his Company Commander was severely wounded. He then
- assumed command of his portion of the assault, took charge of the
- Company Headquarters, and rallied the sections in his vicinity.
- As the leading wave approached its objective, it was subjected to
- heavy fire from an enemy Machine Gun at 30 to 40 yards' range,
- directly in front. This N.C.O., without hesitation, at once sprang
- out, threw a bomb which landed beside the post, and immediately
- rushed the position, bayoneting one of the crew and capturing the
- gun. He then encountered some of the enemy coming out of a shelter.
- He wounded two, captured six others in the same position, and
- handed them over to an escort from the leading wave, which had now
- reached the objective. Sergeant Ruthven then reorganized our men in
- his vicinity, and established a post in the second objective. Enemy
- movement was then seen in a sunken road about 150 yards distant.
- Without hesitation, and armed only with a revolver, he went over
- the open alone and rushed the position, shooting two Germans who
- refused to come out of their dug-out. He then single-handed mopped
- up this post, and captured the whole of the garrison, amounting in
- all to 32, and kept them until assistance arrived to escort them
- back to our lines. During the remainder of the day this gallant
- N.C.O. set a splendid example of leadership, moving up and down his
- position under fire, supervising consolidation and encouraging his
- men."
-
-No. 1327, CORPORAL PHILLIP DAVEY, M.M., 10th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "In a daylight operation against the enemy position near MERRIS on
- June 28th, 1918, Corporal Davey's platoon advanced 200 yards and
- captured part of enemy line. While the platoon was consolidating,
- the enemy pushed a machine gun forward under cover of a hedge,
- and opened fire from close range, inflicting heavy casualties and
- hampering work. Alone Corporal Davey moved forward in the face of
- a fierce point-blank fire, and attacked the gun with hand grenades,
- putting half the crew out of action. Having used all available
- grenades, he returned to the original jumping-off trench, secured
- a further supply and again attacked the gun, the crew of which had
- in the meantime been reinforced. He killed the crew, 8 in all, and
- captured the gun. This gallant N.C.O. then mounted the gun in the
- new post and used it in repelling a determined counter-attack,
- during which he was severely wounded in both legs, back and
- stomach."
-
-No. 3399, PRIVATE (LANCE-CORPORAL) THOMAS LESLIE AXFORD, M.M., 16th
-Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For conspicuous gallantry and initiative during the operations
- against VAIRE and HAMEL WOODS, east of Corbie, on the morning
- of the 4th July, 1918. When the barrage lifted and the Infantry
- advance commenced, the platoon of which he is a member was able
- to reach the first enemy defences through gaps which had been cut
- in the wires. The adjoining platoon got delayed in uncut barbed
- wire. This delay enabled the enemy machine guns to get into action,
- and enabled them to inflict a number of casualties among the men
- struggling through the wires, including the Company Commander,
- who was killed. L.-Corporal Axford, with great initiative and
- magnificent courage, at once dashed to the flank, threw his bombs
- amongst the machine-gun crews; followed up his bombs by jumping
- into the trench, and charging with his bayonet. Unaided he killed
- ten of the enemy and took 6 prisoners; he threw the machine
- guns over the parapet, and called out to the delayed platoon to
- come on. He then rejoined his own platoon, and fought with it
- during the remainder of the operations. Prior to the incidents
- above-mentioned, he had assisted in the laying out of the tapes for
- the jumping-off position, which was within 100 yards of the enemy.
- When the tapes were laid, he remained out as a special patrol to
- ensure that the enemy did not discover any unusual movement on our
- side."
-
-No. 1936, PRIVATE HENRY DALZIEL, 15th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For his magnificent bravery and devotion to duty during operations
- near HAMEL WOOD, east of Corbie, on 4th July, 1918. He was No. 2
- of a Lewis Gun Section, and at the commencement of our advance his
- Company met with determined resistance from Pear Trench strong
- point, which was strongly garrisoned and manned by numerous machine
- guns. This strong point, undamaged by our artillery fire, was
- protected by strong wire entanglements. A heavy concentration of
- machine-gun fire caused heavy casualties and held up our advance.
- His Lewis Gun came into action and silenced enemy guns in one
- direction, when another enemy gun opened up from another direction.
- Private Dalziel dashed at it, and with his revolver killed or
- captured the entire crew and gun, and allowed our advance to
- continue. He was severely wounded in the hand, but carried on and
- took part in the capture of the final objective. He twice went
- over open ground under heavy enemy artillery and machine-gun fire
- to where our aeroplanes had dropped some boxes of ammunition,
- and carried back a box on each occasion to his gun, and though
- suffering from considerable loss of blood, he filled magazines and
- served his gun until severely wounded through the head."
-
-No. 1689A, CORPORAL WALTER ERNEST BROWN, D.C.M., 20th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For gallant service on the morning of 6th July, 1918, north-east
- of VILLERS-BRETONNEUX, east of Amiens. This N.C.O. was one of an
- advanced party from his Battalion making arrangements with the
- Battalion then in the line for relief by his own Battalion. As
- such he was under no obligation to participate in any offensive
- operations before his Battalion took over the line. During the
- night of 5th-6th July the Company to which he was attached
- carried out a minor operation resulting in the capture of a small
- system of enemy trench. Early on the morning of 6th July an enemy
- strong post, about 70 yards distant, caused the occupants of the
- newly-captured trench great inconvenience by persistent sniping.
- It was decided to rush this post. Hearing of this, Corporal Brown,
- on his own initiative, crept out along the shallow trench towards
- the enemy post, and then made a dash across No Man's Land towards
- this post. An enemy machine gun opened fire from another trench,
- and he had to take cover by lying down. He later made another dash
- forward, and succeeded in reaching his objective. With a Mills
- grenade in his hand, he stood at the door of a dug-out and called
- on the occupants to surrender. One of the enemy rushed out, a
- scuffle ensued, and Corporal Brown knocked him down with his fist.
- Loud cries of 'Kamerad' were then heard, and from the dug-out an
- officer and eleven other ranks appeared. Driving them before him,
- Corporal Brown brought back the complete party as prisoners to our
- line."
-
-LIEUTENANT ALBERT CHALMERS BORELLA, M.M., 26th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For exceptional gallantry in the attack near VILLERS-BRETONNEUX,
- on the 17th-18th July, 1918. Whilst leading his platoon with the
- first wave, Lieut. Borella noticed an enemy machine gun firing
- through our barrage--he ran out ahead of his men into the barrage,
- shot two German machine gunners with his revolver, and captured the
- gun. He then led his party, now reduced to ten men and two Lewis
- Guns, further on, against JAFFA TRENCH, which was very strongly
- held, but using his revolver, and later a rifle, with great effect,
- Lieut. Borella shot down the enemy right and left, and set such a
- splendid example, that the garrison were quickly shot and captured.
- Two large dug-outs were bombed here and thirty prisoners taken.
- After reorganization the enemy counter-attacked twice in strong
- force, on the second occasion outnumbering Lieut. Borella's platoon
- by ten to one; but he showed such coolness and determination, that
- the men put up an heroic resistance, and twice repulsed the enemy
- with very heavy loss. It is estimated that from 100 to 150 Germans
- were killed in this vicinity. When Lieut. Borella refused his left
- flank about 40 yards during the first counter-attack he sent his
- men back one at a time, and was himself the last to leave, under
- heavy fire."
-
- LIEUTENANT ALFRED EDWARD GABY, 28th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "During the attack east of VILLERS-BRETONNEUX, near Amiens, on the
- morning of 8th August, 1918, this officer led his Company with
- great dash, being well in front. On reaching the wire in front of
- the enemy trench, strong opposition was encountered. The enemy were
- holding a strong point in force about 40 yards beyond the wire, and
- commanded the gap with four machine guns and rifles. The advance
- was at once checked. Lieut. Gaby found another gap in the wire,
- and entirely by himself approached the strong point, while machine
- guns and rifles were still being fired from it. Running along the
- parapet, still alone, and at point-blank range, he emptied his
- revolver into the garrison, drove the crews from their guns, and
- compelled the surrender of 50 of the enemy, with four machine guns.
- He then quickly reorganized his men and led them on to his final
- objective, which he captured and consolidated. On the morning of
- the 11th August, 1918, during an attack east of FRAMERVILLE, Lieut.
- Gaby again led his Company with great dash on to the objective. The
- enemy brought heavy rifle and machine-gun fire to bear upon the
- line, but in the face of this heavy fire Lieut. Gaby walked along
- his line of posts, encouraging his men to quickly consolidate the
- line. While engaged on this duty he was killed by an enemy sniper."
-
-No. 2742, PRIVATE ROBERT MATTHEW BEATHAM, 8th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty during the attack
- north of ROSIERES on 9th August, 1918. Private Beatham showed
- such heroism and courage, that he inspired all officers and men
- in his vicinity in a wonderful manner. When the advance was held
- up by heavy machine-gun fire, Private Beatham dashed forward and,
- assisted by one man, bombed and fought the crews of four enemy
- machine guns, killing ten of them and capturing ten others. The
- bravery of the action greatly facilitated the advance of the whole
- Battalion and prevented casualties. In fighting the crew of the
- first gun he was shot through the right leg, but continued in the
- advance. When the final objective was reached and fierce fighting
- was taking place, he again dashed forward and bombed the machine
- gun that was holding our men off, getting riddled with bullets and
- killed in doing so."
-
-No. 506, SERGEANT PERCY CLYDE STATTON, M.M., 40th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For most conspicuous gallantry and initiative in action near
- PROYART on 12th August, 1918. The platoon commanded by Sergeant
- Statton reached its objective, but the remainder of the Battalion
- was held up by heavy machine-gun fire. He skilfully engaged two
- machine-gun posts with Lewis Gun fire, enabling the remainder of
- his Battalion to advance. The advance of the Battalion on his left
- had been brought to a standstill by the heavy enemy machine-gun
- fire, and the first of our assaulting detachments to reach the
- machine-gun posts were put out of action in taking the first gun.
- Armed only with a revolver, in broad daylight, Sergeant Statton at
- once rushed four enemy machine-gun posts in succession, disposing
- of two of them, killing five of the enemy. The remaining two posts
- retired and were wiped out by Lewis Gun fire. This N.C.O.'s act had
- a very inspiring effect on the troops who had been held up, and
- they cheered him as he returned. By his daring exploit he enabled
- the attacking troops to gain their objective. Later in the evening,
- under heavy machine-gun fire, he went out again and brought in two
- badly-wounded men."
-
-LIEUTENANT LAWRENCE DOMINIC MCCARTHY, 16th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "This officer is especially brought to notice for his wonderful
- gallantry, initiative and leadership on the morning of the 23rd
- August, 1918, when an attack was being made near MADAME WOOD, west
- of Vernandivukkers. The objectives of this Battalion were attained
- without serious opposition. The Battalion on the left flank were
- less fortunate. Here several well-posted machine-gun posts were
- holding up the attack, and heavy fire was being brought to bear on
- our left flank. When Lieut. McCarthy realized the situation, he at
- once engaged the nearest machine-gun post; but still the attacking
- troops failed to get forward. This officer then determined to
- attack the nearest post. Leaving his men to continue the fire
- fight, he, with two others, dashed across the open and dropped
- into a disused trench which had been blocked. One of his two men
- was killed whilst doing this. He was now right under the block
- over which the enemy machine gun was firing. The presence of head
- cover prevented the use of bombs. He therefore tunnelled a hole
- through the bottom of the block, through which he inserted his head
- and one arm. He at once shot dead the two men firing the gun. He
- then crawled through the hole he had made, and by himself charged
- down the trench. He threw his limited number of Mills bombs among
- the German garrison and inflicted more casualties. He then came
- in contact with two German officers, who fired on him with their
- revolvers. One of these he shot dead with his revolver, the other
- he seriously wounded. He then charged down the trench, using his
- revolver and throwing enemy stick bombs, and capturing three more
- enemy machine guns. At this stage, some 700 yards from his starting
- point, he was joined by the N.C.O., whom he had outdistanced when
- he crawled through the hole in the trench block mentioned above.
- Together they continued to bomb up the trench, until touch was
- established with the Lancashire Fusiliers, and in the meanwhile
- yet another machine gun had been captured. A total of 5 machine
- guns and 50 prisoners (37 unwounded and 13 wounded) was captured,
- while Lieut. McCarthy during his most amazing and daring feat
- had, single-handed, killed 20 of the enemy. Having cleared up a
- dangerous situation, he proceeded to establish a garrison in the
- line. Whilst doing this he saw a number of the enemy getting away
- from neighbouring trenches. He at once seized a Lewis Gun and
- inflicted further casualties on the enemy."
-
- LIEUTENANT WILLIAM DONOVAN JOYNT, 8th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty during the attack
- on HERLEVILLE WOOD, near Chuignes, on 23rd August, 1918. Early
- in the advance Lieut. Joynt's Company Commander was killed; he
- immediately took charge of the Company and led them with courage
- and skill. A great deal of the success of the operation in this
- portion of the sector was directly due to his magnificent work.
- When the advance was commenced the Battalion was moving into
- support to another Battalion. On approaching Herleville Wood,
- the troops of the leading Battalion lost all their officers and
- became disorganized. Under very heavy fire, and having no leaders,
- they appeared certain to be annihilated. Lieut. Joynt grasped
- the situation, and rushed forward in the teeth of very heavy
- machine-gun and artillery fire over the open. He got the remaining
- men under control, and worked them into a piece of dead ground,
- until he could reform them. He manoeuvred his own men forward,
- and linked them up with the men of the other Battalion. He then
- made a personal reconnaissance, and found that the fire from the
- wood was holding the whole advance up, the troops on his flanks
- suffering very heavy casualties. Dashing out in front of his men,
- he called them on, and by sheer force of example inspired them into
- a magnificent frontal bayonet attack on the wood. The audacity
- of the move over the open staggered the enemy, and Lieut. Joynt
- succeeded in penetrating the wood and working through it. By his
- leadership and courage a very critical situation was saved, and
- on this officer rests to the greatest extent the success of the
- Brigade's attack. When the Battalion on our left was held up on
- Plateau Wood, and was suffering severe casualties, Lieut. Joynt,
- with a small party of volunteers, worked right forward against
- heavy opposition, and by means of hand-to-hand fighting forced his
- way round the rear of the wood, penetrating it from that side, and
- demoralizing the enemy to such an extent that a very stubborn and
- victorious defensive was changed into an abject surrender. He was
- always in the hardest pressed parts of the line, and seemed to
- bear a charmed life. He was constantly ready to run any personal
- risk and to assist flank units. He continually showed magnificent
- leadership, and his example to his men had a wonderful effect on
- them, causing them to follow him cheerfully in his most daring
- exploits. He continued to do magnificent work until he was badly
- wounded by shell fire in the legs."
-
-No. 23, PRIVATE (LANCE-CORPORAL) BERNARD SYDNEY GORDON, 41st Battalion,
-A.I.F.
-
- "During the operations of the 26-27th August, 1918, east of BRAY,
- this N.C.O. showed most conspicuous gallantry and devotion to
- duty in the face of the enemy. He led his section through heavy
- enemy shelling to its objective, which he consolidated. Then
- single-handed he attacked an enemy machine gun which was enfilading
- the Company on his right, killed the man on the gun, and captured
- the post, which contained one officer (a Captain) and 10 men.
- After handing these over at Company Headquarters, he returned alone
- to the old system of trenches, in which were many machine guns;
- entered a trench and proceeded to mop it up, returning with 15
- prisoners in one squad and 14 in another, together with two machine
- guns. Again he returned to the system, this time with a Trench
- Mortar gun and crew, and proceeded to mop up a further portion of
- the trench, bringing in 22 prisoners, including one officer and
- 3 machine guns. This last capture enabled the British troops on
- our left to advance, which they had not been able to do owing to
- machine-gun fire from these posts. His total captures were thus 2
- officers and 61 other ranks, together with 6 machine guns, and with
- the exception of the Trench Mortar assistance, it was absolutely an
- individual effort and done entirely on his own initiative."
-
-No. 726, PRIVATE GEORGE CARTWRIGHT, 33rd Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For most conspicuous valour and devotion to duty. On the morning
- of the 31st August, 1918, during the attack on ROAD WOOD,
- south-west of Bouchavesnes, near Peronne, Private Cartwright
- displayed exceptional gallantry and supreme disregard for
- personal danger in the face of a most withering machine-gun
- fire. Two Companies were held up by a machine-gun firing from
- the south-western edge of the wood. Without hesitation, this man
- stood up, and walking towards the gun, fired his rifle from his
- shoulder. He shot the No. 1 Gunner; another German manned the gun,
- and he killed him; a third attempted to fire the gun and him he
- also killed. Private Cartwright then threw a bomb at the post, and
- on its exploding, he rushed forward, captured the gun and nine
- Germans. Our line then immediately rushed forward, loudly cheering
- him. This magnificent deed had a most inspiring effect on the whole
- line; all strove to emulate his gallantry. Throughout the operation
- Private Cartwright displayed wonderful dash, grim determination and
- courage of the highest order."
-
-LIEUTENANT EDGAR THOMAS TOWNER, M.C., 2nd Australian Machine Gun
-Battalion.
-
- "On 1st September, 1918, in the attack on MONT ST. QUENTIN, near
- Peronne, this officer was in charge of 4 Vickers guns operating on
- a front of 1,500 yards. During the early stages of the advance an
- enemy machine gun was causing casualties to our advancing Infantry.
- Locating the gun, Lieut. Towner dashed ahead alone, and succeeded
- in killing the crew with his revolver, capturing the gun, and
- then, by turning it against the enemy, inflicted heavy casualties
- on them. Advancing then past a copse from which the enemy were
- firing, he brought his guns into action, placing his fire behind
- the enemy and cutting them off. On their attempting to retire
- before the advancing Infantry, and finding they were prevented by
- this machine-gun fire, the party of 25 Germans surrendered. He then
- reconnoitred alone over open ground exposed to heavy machine-gun
- and snipers' fire, and by the energy, foresight and the promptitude
- with which he brought fire to bear on further enemy groups, enabled
- the Infantry to reach a sunken road. On moving his guns up to
- the sunken road, he found himself short of ammunition, so went
- back across the open under heavy fire and obtained a German gun,
- and brought it and boxes of ammunition into the sunken road. Here
- he mounted and fired the gun in full view of the enemy, causing
- the enemy to retire further, and enabling Infantry on the flank,
- who were previously held up, to advance. Enemy machine gunners
- having direct observation, flicked the earth round and under this
- gun, and played a tattoo along the top of the bank. Though one
- bullet went into his helmet and inflicted a gaping scalp wound, he
- continued firing. Subsequently he refused to go out to have his
- wound attended to, as the situation was critical and his place
- was with his men. Later in the day the Infantry were obliged to
- retire slightly, and one gun was left behind. Lieut. Towner, seeing
- this, dashed back over the open, carried the gun back in spite of
- terrific fire, and brought it into action again. He continued to
- engage the enemy wherever they appeared, and put an enemy machine
- gun out of action. During the following night he insisted on doing
- his tour of duty along with the other officers, and his coolness
- and cheerfulness set an example which had a great effect on the
- men. To steady and calm the men of a small detached outpost, he
- crawled out among the enemy posts to investigate. He remained out
- about an hour, though enemy machine guns fired continuously on the
- sector, and the Germans were moving about him. He moved one gun up
- in support of the Infantry post, and patrolled the communication
- saps which ran off this post into the German line during the
- remainder of the night. Next morning, after his guns assisted in
- dispersing a large party of the enemy, he was led away utterly
- exhausted, 30 hours after being wounded."
-
-No. 2358, SERGEANT ALBERT DAVID LOWERSON, 21st Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "At MONT ST, QUENTIN, north of Peronne, on the 1st September,
- 1918, this N.C.O. displayed courage and tactical skill of the
- very highest order during the attack on this village. Very strong
- opposition was met with early in the attack, and every foot of
- ground was stubbornly contested by the enemy located in very
- strong positions. This N.C.O.'s example during the fighting was
- of the greatest value. He moved about, regardless of the heavy
- enemy machine-gun fire, directing his men, encouraging them to
- still greater effort, and finally led them on to the objective.
- On reaching the objective, he saw that the left attacking party
- had not met with success, and that the attack was held up by an
- enemy strong post, heavily manned with 12 machine guns. Under the
- heaviest sniping and machine gun fire Sergeant Lowerson rallied
- seven men around him into a storming party, and deployed them to
- attack the post from both flanks, one party of three being killed
- immediately. He himself then rushed the strong point, and, with
- effective bombing, inflicted heavy casualties on the enemy, and
- captured the post containing 12 machine guns and 30 prisoners.
- Though severely wounded in the right thigh, he refused to leave the
- front line until the prisoners had been dispatched to the rear, and
- the organization and consolidation of the post by our men had been
- completed. When he saw that the position was thoroughly secure,
- he returned to the rear, but refused to leave the Battalion until
- forced to evacuate two days later by the seriousness of his wound.
- This act was the culminating point of a series of most gallant
- performances by this N.C.O. during the fighting extending over a
- week."
-
-No. 1584A, PRIVATE WILLIAM MATTHEW CURREY, 53rd Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "During the attack on PERONNE, on the morning of 1st September,
- 1918, Private Currey displayed most conspicuous gallantry and
- daring. During the early stage of the advance the Battalion was
- suffering heavy casualties from a 77 mm. Field Gun, that was
- firing over sights at very close range. Private Currey, without
- hesitation, rushed forward, and despite a withering machine-gun
- fire that was directed on him from either flank, succeeded in
- capturing the gun single-handed after killing the entire crew.
- Later, when continuing the advance, an enemy strong point,
- containing 30 men and two machine guns, was noticed, which was
- holding up the advance of the left flank. Private Currey crept
- around the flank, and engaged the post with a Lewis Gun, causing
- many casualties. Finally, he rushed the post single-handed,
- killing four, wounding two, and taking one prisoner, the survivors
- running away. It was entirely owing to his gallant conduct that
- the situation was relieved, and the advance enabled to continue.
- After the final stage of the attack, it was imperative that one of
- the Companies that had become isolated should be withdrawn. This
- man at once volunteered to carry the message, although the ground
- to be crossed was very heavily shelled and continuously swept by
- machine-gun fire. He crossed the shell and bullet-swept area three
- times in the effort to locate the Company, and on one occasion his
- box respirator was shot through by machine-gun bullets, and he was
- gassed. Nevertheless, he remained on duty, and after finding the
- isolated Company, delivered the message, and returned with very
- valuable information from the Company Commander. Owing to the gas
- poisoning from which he was suffering Currey had shortly afterwards
- to be evacuated."
-
-No. 6939, PRIVATE ROBERT MACTIER, 23rd Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "On the morning of 1st September, 1918, during the operation
- entailing capture of MONT ST. QUENTIN, this man stands out for
- the greatest bravery and devotion to duty. Fifteen minutes before
- zero two bombing patrols were sent to clear up several enemy
- strong points close to our line, but they met with very stubborn
- resistance and no success, and the Battalion was unable to move on
- to its Jumping Off Trench. Mactier, single-handed and in daylight,
- then jumped out of the trench from the leading Company, rushed past
- the block, closed with and killed the machine-gun garrison of 8 men
- with his revolver and bombs, and threw the enemy machine gun over
- the parapet. He rushed forward another 20 yards and jumped into
- another strong point held by a garrison of 6 men, who immediately
- surrendered. Continuing to the next block through the trench, an
- enemy gun, which had been enfilading our flank advancing troops,
- was swung on to him; but he jumped out of the trench into the open,
- and disposed of this third post and gun crew by bombing them from
- the rear. Before he could get into this trench, he was killed by
- enemy machine gun at close range. In the three posts which Mactier
- rushed, 15 of the enemy were found killed and 30 taken prisoners."
-
-No. 1876, CORPORAL ALEXANDER HENRY BUCKLEY, 54th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For most conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty at PERONNE
- during the operations on 1st-2nd September, 1918. After passing
- the first objective, his half Company and part of the Company on
- the flank were held up by an enemy machine-gun nest. With one man
- he rushed the post, shooting 4 of the occupants and taking 22
- prisoners. Later on, reaching a moat, another machine-gun nest
- commanded the only available foot-bridge. Whilst this was being
- engaged from a flank, this N.C.O. endeavoured to cross the bridge
- and rush the post, but was killed in the attempt. Throughout the
- advance he had displayed great initiative, resource and courage,
- being a great inspiration to his men. In order to avert casualties
- amongst his comrades and to permit of their advance, he voluntarily
- essayed a task which practically meant certain death. He set a fine
- example of self-sacrificing devotion to duty and bravery."
-
-No. 2631, CORPORAL ARTHUR CHARLES HALL, 54th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For most conspicuous gallantry, brilliant leadership and devotion
- to duty during the operations at PERONNE on 1st and 2nd September,
- 1918. A machine-gun post in the enemy front line was holding up
- the advance; alone, this N.C.O. rushed the position, shot 4 of the
- occupants as he advanced, and captured 9 others and 2 machine guns.
- Then, crossing the objective with a small party, he reconnoitred
- the approaches to the town, covering the infiltration of the
- remainder of the Company. During the mopping up he continuously--in
- advance of the main party--located enemy posts of resistance, and
- then personally led parties to the assault. In this way he captured
- many small parties of prisoners and machine-guns. On the morning
- of 2nd September, during a heavy barrage on the newly consolidated
- position, a man of his platoon was severely wounded. Seeing that
- only immediate medical attention could save him, Corporal Hall
- volunteered and carried the man out of the barrage, handed him to
- a stretcher-bearer, and immediately returned to his post. This
- Company was heavily engaged throughout the day, only one Officer
- remaining unwounded."
-
-No. 1153, PRIVATE (LANCE-CORPORAL) LAURENCE CARTHAGE WEATHERS, 43rd
-Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "On the 2nd September, 1918, during operations north of PERONNE,
- Lance-Corporal Weathers was one of an advanced bombing party
- operating well forward of our attacking troops. Just before the
- attack reached its final objective it was held up by the enemy,
- who occupied a trench in great numbers. After an hour's continuous
- fighting Lance-Corporal Weathers went forward alone in face of
- heavy enemy fire and located a large body of them. He immediately
- attacked the enemy with bombs and killed the senior officer; then
- made his way back to our lines and, securing a further supply of
- bombs and taking three men with him, he went forward and again
- attacked under very heavy fire. On reaching the enemy position,
- he jumped up on the parapet of the trench and threw bombs among
- the Bosche. He then signalled for his comrades to come up, and the
- remainder of the enemy, seeing this, surrendered. When counted, the
- number of prisoners totalled 100 and 3 machine guns."
-
-No. 3244, PRIVATE JAMES PARK WOODS, 48th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty during the
- operations near LE VERGUIER, north-west of St. Quentin, on the 18th
- September, 1918. Woods formed one of a party of three to patrol
- the right flank. He encountered a very formidable enemy strong
- point, consisting of about 25 men with four heavy and two light
- machine guns. This strong point commanded the greater portion of
- our position, and it was of the utmost importance to us, insomuch
- as it gave us a commanding view of the whole canal system. The
- strong point was situated at the junction of four enemy fire
- trenches, apparently sited with a view to protecting the approaches
- to the village of Bellenglise. Private Woods, appreciating the
- great importance of this position, and realizing the necessity
- for its immediate capture, fearlessly attacked with his rifle and
- bayonet, capturing one of the enemy and wounding the second with
- his bayonet, forcing the remainder to retire. After the capture of
- the strong point, it was found that one of the party was wounded.
- Private Woods, although himself slightly gassed, stubbornly
- defended the post. The enemy ascertaining that only two men opposed
- them, immediately attempted to recapture the strong point. The
- counter-attack by the enemy was carried out with at least 30 men
- attacking up the three trenches and across the open ground. This
- meant that Private Woods was attacked from both flanks and the
- front. He fearlessly jumped on the parapet, and opened fire on
- the attacking enemy, inflicting several casualties. During this
- operation he was exposed to very heavy machine-gun, rifle fire
- and bombing, but with dogged determination he kept up his fire,
- thus holding up the enemy until help arrived, enabling the enemy
- counter-attack to be repulsed with heavy losses. The capture of
- this strong post was the means of securing our flank, which had
- previously been in the air, and also enabled us to get in touch
- with the troops on our flank."
-
-No. 6594, SERGEANT GERALD SEXTON, 13th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "In the attack near LE VERGUIER, north-west of St. Quentin, on
- the 18th September, 1918, Sergeant Sexton displayed the most
- conspicuous bravery and performed deeds which, apart from their
- gallant nature, were in a great measure responsible for the
- Battalion's success. On the southern edge of the village of Le
- Verguier the enemy fought hard, and serious opposition had to
- be crushed. During the whole period of the advance, Sergeant
- Sexton was to the fore dealing with enemy machine guns by firing
- from the hip as he advanced, rushing enemy posts, and performing
- feats of bravery and endurance, which are better appreciated when
- one realizes that all the time he fired his Lewis Gun from the
- hip without faltering or for a moment taking cover. Immediately
- the attack commenced, Sergeant Sexton's Lewis Gun Section was
- confronted by an enemy machine gun. He called out to his section
- to follow, rushed the machine gun and killed the crew. He then
- called out to the rest of the Company to follow, but they had not
- gone far when they encountered some bombers and riflemen about 70
- yards in front of the Company. Sexton rushed the trench, firing
- his gun from the hip, and killed or took prisoner all the members
- of the post. Continuing, he entered a copse, and killed or took
- prisoner another party of the enemy. The advance continued over the
- ridge at Le Verguier to where Sexton was met by Lieut. Price, who
- pointed out a party of the enemy manning a bank, and a field gun
- in action which was causing casualties and holding up a Company.
- There was also a trench mortar in action. Sergeant Sexton did not
- wait, but firing a few short bursts as he advanced, and calling
- out to his section to follow, rushed down the bank and killed the
- gunners on the field gun. Dashing out on to a flat under fire from
- two hostile machine guns directed on him, he killed 12 more of the
- enemy. Paying no heed to the machine-gun fire, he returned to the
- bank, and after firing down some dug-outs, induced about 30 of the
- enemy to surrender. Owing to his action the Company on the left
- of the Battalion was able to continue the advance where they had
- been definitely held up, and were suffering from the effects of the
- field gun. When the advance was continued from the first to the
- second objective, the Company was again held up by two machine guns
- on the right and one on the left. In conjunction with a Platoon,
- Sexton engaged the machine gun on the left, firing all the while
- from the upright position, a fearless figure which, according to
- eye-witnesses, inspired everyone. To have taken cover would have
- been more prudent, but Sexton realized that prompt action was
- essential, and did not wait to assume the prone position. Silencing
- this gun, he turned his attention to the two machine guns on the
- right and silenced them. He then moved forward into a trench,
- killing quite a number of the enemy and, advancing along a sap,
- took a few prisoners. Further on he was responsible for a few more
- small posts, and, on the final objective, being given a responsible
- post on the left of his Company, he engaged a machine gun which
- was firing across the Company front, and thus enabled his Company
- to dig in. This completed, he went forward down a sunken road and
- captured several more prisoners."
-
-MAJOR BLAIR ANDERSON WARK, D.S.O., 32nd Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "During the period 29th September-1st October, 1918, in the
- operations against the HINDENBURG LINE at BELLICOURT, and the
- advance through NAUROY, ETRICOURT, MAGNY LA FOSSE and JONCOURT,
- Major Wark, in command of the 32nd Battalion, displayed most
- conspicuous gallantry and set a fine example of personal bravery,
- energy, coolness, and control under extremely difficult
- conditions. On 29th September, under heavy artillery and
- machine-gun fire at very close range from all sides and in a dense
- fog, Major Wark, finding that the situation was critical, moved
- quickly forward alone and obtained sufficient information regarding
- the situation in front to be able to lead his command forward. At
- this time American troops were at a standstill and disorganized,
- and Major Wark quickly organized more than 200 of them, and
- attached them to his leading Companies and pressed forward. By
- his prompt action in the early stages of the battle he narrowly
- averted what would have resulted in great confusion on the part
- of the attack-troops. Still moving fearlessly at the head of his
- leading Companies, and at most times far out in advance, attended
- only by a runner, he cheered his men on, and they swept through the
- Hindenburg defences towards Nauroy. Pushing quickly through Nauroy,
- and mopping up the southern portion of the village, the process
- yielding 50 prisoners, the Battalion swung towards Etricourt.
- Still leading his assaulting Companies, he observed a battery of
- 77 mm. guns firing point-blank into his rear Companies and causing
- heavy casualties. Calling on a few of his men to him he rushed the
- battery, capturing the 4 guns and 10 of the crew; the remainder of
- the crew fled or were killed. Moving rapidly forward with only two
- N.C.O.'s, he surprised and captured 50 Germans near Magny la Fosse.
- Quickly seizing this opportunity, he pushed one Company forward
- through the village and made good the position. Having captured
- his objectives for the day, and personally reconnoitring to see
- that his flanks were safe, he found his command in a very difficult
- and dangerous position, his left flank being exposed to the extent
- of 3,000 yards on account of the 31st Battalion not being able
- to advance. He, after a strenuous day's fighting, set about the
- selection and reorganization of a new position, and effected a
- junction with British troops on the right and 31st Battalion on the
- left, and made his line secure. At 6 a.m. on 30th September, he
- again led his command forward to allow of the troops on the right
- being able to advance. The men were tired and had suffered heavily,
- but he personally led them, and his presence amongst them inspired
- them to further efforts. On October 1st, 1918, his Battalion was
- ordered to advance at very short notice. He gave his orders for the
- attack, and personally led his troops forward. A nest of machine
- guns was encountered, causing casualties to his men. Without
- hesitation and regardless of personal risk, he dashed forward
- practically into the muzzles of the guns and under an exceptionally
- heavy fire and silenced them, killing or capturing the entire
- crews. Joncourt and Mill Ridge were then quickly captured and his
- line consolidated. His men were practically exhausted after the
- three days' heavy fighting, but he moved amongst them from post
- to post, across country swept by heavy and continuous shell and
- machine-gun fire at point-blank range, urged them on and the line
- was made secure. Throughout he displayed the greatest courage and
- devotion to duty, coupled with great tact and skill, and his work,
- together with the reports based on his own personal observations,
- which he forwarded, were invaluable to the Brigade. It is beyond
- doubt that the success achieved by the Brigade during the heavy
- fighting on 29th and 30th September and 1st October was due to this
- officer's gallantry, determination, skill and great courage."
-
-No. 1717, PRIVATE JOHN RYAN, 55th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "For conspicuous gallantry and devotion to duty, and for saving a
- very dangerous situation under particularly gallant circumstances
- during an attack against the Hindenburg defences on 30th September,
- 1918. In the initial assault on the enemy's positions this
- soldier went forward with great dash and determination, and was
- one of the first men of his Company to reach the trench which
- was their objective. Seeing him rush in with his bayonet with
- such exceptional skill and daring, his comrades were inspired and
- followed his example. Although the enemy shell and machine-gun fire
- was extremely heavy, the enemy trench garrison was soon overcome.
- In the assault the attacking troops were weakened by casualties,
- and, as they were too few to cover the whole front of attack, a
- considerable gap was left between Private Ryan's Battalion's left
- and the unit on the flank. The enemy counter-attacked soon after
- the objective was reached, and a few succeeded in infiltrating
- through the gap, and taking up a position of cover in rear of
- our men, where they commenced bombing operations. The section of
- trench occupied by Private Ryan and his comrades was now under fire
- from front and rear, and for a time it seemed that the enemy was
- certain to force his way through. The situation was critical and
- necessitated prompt action by someone in authority. Private Ryan
- found that there were no officers or N.C.O.'s near; they had become
- casualties in the assault. Appreciating the situation at once, he
- organized the few men nearest him, and led them out to attack the
- enemy with bomb and bayonet. Some of his party fell victims to the
- enemy's bombs, and he finally dashed into the enemy position of
- cover with only 3 men. The enemy were three times their number,
- but by skilful bayonet work they succeeded in killing the first
- three Germans on the enemy's flank. Moving along the embankment,
- Private Ryan alone rushed the remainder of the enemy with bombs.
- It was while thus engaged he fell wounded, but his dashing bombing
- assault drove the enemy clear of our positions. Those who were not
- killed or wounded by his bombs fell victims to our Lewis Gunners
- as they retired across No Man's Land. A particularly dangerous
- situation had been saved by this gallant soldier, whose display of
- determined bravery and initiative was witnessed by the men of the
- two attacking Battalions, who, inspired and urged by it, fought
- skilfully and bravely for two days."
-
-LIEUTENANT JOSEPH MAXWELL, M.C., D.C.M., 18th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "On 3rd October, 1918, he took part as a Platoon Commander in an
- attack on the BEAUREVOIR-FONSOMME Line near Estrees, north of St.
- Quentin. His Company Commander was severely wounded soon after the
- jump off, and Lieut. Maxwell at once took charge of the Company.
- When the enemy wire was reached, they were met by a hail of
- machine-gun fire, and suffered considerable casualties, including
- all other officers of the Company. The wire at this point was six
- belts thick, each belt being 20 to 25 feet wide. Lieut. Maxwell
- pushed forward single-handed through the wire, and attacked the
- most dangerous machine gun. He personally killed three of the crew,
- and the remaining four men in the post surrendered to him with a
- machine gun. His Company followed him through the wire and captured
- the trenches forming their objective. Later, it was noticed that
- the Company on his left was held up in the wire by a very strong
- force on the left flank of the Battalion. He at once organized a
- party and moved to the left to endeavour to attack the enemy from
- the rear. Heavy machine-gun fire met them. Lieut. Maxwell again
- dashed forward single-handed at the foremost machine gun, and
- with his revolver shot five of its crew, so silencing the gun.
- Owing to the work of this party, the left Company was then able
- to work a small force through the wire, and eventually to occupy
- the objective and mop up the trenches. In the fighting prior to
- the mopping up, an English-speaking prisoner, who was captured,
- stated that the remainder of the enemy were willing to surrender.
- Lieut. Maxwell and two men, with this prisoner, walked to a post
- containing more than twenty Germans. The latter at once seized and
- disarmed our men. Lieut. Maxwell waited his chance, and then with
- an automatic pistol which he had concealed in his box respirator,
- shot two of the enemy and with the two men escaped. They were
- pursued by rifle fire, and one was wounded. However, Lieut. Maxwell
- organized a small party at once, attacked and captured the post."
-
-SECOND LIEUTENANT GEORGE MORBY INGRAM, M.M., 24th Battalion, A.I.F.
-
- "During the attack on MONTBREHAIN, east of Peronne, on 5th October,
- 1918, this officer was in charge of a platoon. About 100 yards
- from the Jumping Off Trench severe enemy machine-gun fire was
- encountered from a strong post which had escaped our Artillery
- fire, and the advance was thus held up. Lieut. Ingram dashed out,
- and, under cover of the fire of a Lewis Gun, rushed the post at
- the head of his men. This post contained 9 machine guns and 42
- Germans, who fought until our men were within 3 yards of them.
- They were killed to a man--Lieut. Ingram accounting for no less
- than 18 of them. A number of enemy posts were then observed to be
- firing on our men from about 150 yards further forward, and the
- Company moved forward to attack them, but severe casualties were
- sustained. The Company Commander had been badly wounded, and the
- Company Sergeant-Major and several others, who attempted to lead
- the advance, were killed. Our barrage had passed on, and no Tanks
- were near. Lieut. Ingram quickly seized the situation, rallied his
- men in the face of murderous fire, and, with magnificent courage
- and resolution, led them forward. He himself rushed the first post,
- shot 6 of the enemy, and captured a machine gun, thus overcoming a
- very serious resistance. By this time the Company had been reduced
- from 90 to about 30 other ranks; but this officer, seeing enemy
- fire coming from a quarry, to his left front, again led his men
- forward and rushed the quarry. He jumped into the quarry amongst
- enemy wire, and his men followed and proceeded to mop up a large
- number of the enemy who were in bivouacs there. He then observed an
- enemy machine gun firing from the ventilator of a cellar, through a
- gap in the wall of a house about 20 yards away. Without hesitation
- and entirely alone he scrambled up the edge of the quarry, ran
- round the rear of the house, and entering from the far side, shot
- the enemy gunner through the ventilator of the cellar. He fired
- several more shots into the cellar, then, seeing some enemy jumping
- out of the window of the house, he burst open a door, rushed to
- the head of the stairs leading into the cellar, and forced 62 of
- the enemy to surrender. He now found he was out of touch with the
- Company on his left flank, so went out alone and made a personal
- reconnaissance under heavy fire, and succeeded in gaining touch
- with the left Company, which had lost all its officers. Having
- returned to his Company, he personally placed a post on his left
- flank to ensure its safety, and then reconnoitred and established
- two posts on his right flank. All this was done in the face of
- continuous machine-gun and shell fire."
-
-[Illustration: Australian Artillery--moving up to the front, through
-the Hindenburg wire, October 2nd, 1918.]
-
-[Illustration: Advance during Battle--Third Division Infantry and Tanks
-advancing to the capture of Bony, October 1st, 1918.]
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX C
-
-CORPS ORDERS FOR THE BATTLE OF AUGUST 8TH, 1918
-
-
-The following were the complete orders issued by the Australian Army
-Corps for the Battle of August 8th, 1918. They form only a small part
-of the whole of the orders which were required for the operation. There
-were, in addition, detailed orders by the Corps Artillery Headquarters,
-the Heavy Artillery, the Chief Engineer, and each of the five Divisions
-and fifteen Brigades, and also by the Administrative Services of the
-Corps.
-
-On the question of the form of the orders, the most expedient course
-was found to be the one here adopted--namely, that of issuing a
-numbered series of Battle Instructions, each dealing comprehensively
-with a separate subject matter:
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 1
-
-1. The Australian Corps will attack the enemy from the
-VILLERS-BRETONNEUX--CHAULNES Railway exclusive to the River SOMME,
-inclusive, at a date and hour to be notified.
-
-The Canadian Corps will co-operate on the right, south of the railway
-(inclusive), and the Third Corps on the left, north of the SOMME.
-
-2. _General Method of Attack._--The Australian Corps will attack on a
-two-division front. The attack will be carried out in three phases.
-Divisional boundaries and objectives are shown on the attached map.
-
- (i) _First Phase._--The 2nd and 3rd Australian Divisions will form
- up on a taped line prior to ZERO, and will attack with Tanks under
- a creeping artillery barrage. Their objective is shown by a GREEN
- line on the attached map.
-
- On arrival at their objective they will consolidate.
-
- (ii) _Second Phase._--The 5th and 4th Australian Divisions,
- organized in brigade groups, will advance in open warfare
- formations, from the first objective passing through 2nd and 3rd
- Australian Divisions respectively. Their objective is shown in RED
- on the map.
-
- (iii) _Third Phase._--The 5th and 4th Australian Divisions will
- exploit their success and seize the old British line of Defences
- marked BLUE on the map, and establish themselves defensively on
- this line.
-
- (iv) The 1st Australian Division will be in Corps Reserve.
-
- (v) A detailed programme of the action will be issued.
-
-3. _Assembly._--In order to free as many troops from line duty as
-possible, 2nd and 3rd Australian Divisions will arrange to hold the
-front with one infantry brigade on each Divisional sector. This will be
-completed before daybreak on 5th August.
-
-To prevent any troops arriving at their objectives in an exhausted
-condition through a long march, troops detailed to the farthest
-objectives must be quartered nearest the starting line prior to ZERO.
-
-The brigades of 2nd and 3rd Australian Divisions not holding the line
-will be quartered in rear of all brigades of 5th and 4th Australian
-Divisions respectively prior to ZERO night. This will be completed
-before daybreak on 5th August.
-
-The allotment of areas for quartering during this stage will be made
-by mutual arrangement between Divisional Commanders concerned. The
-allotment of routes and times of movement in accordance with the Corps
-programme will be arranged similarly.
-
-On ZERO night the brigades of 2nd and 3rd Australian Divisions not in
-the line will make their approach march to their tape lines through the
-area occupied by 5th and 4th Australian Divisions respectively.
-
-4. _Artillery._
-
- (i) The Artillery available consists of:
-
- 18 Field Artillery Brigades.
- 12 Heavy Artillery Brigades.
-
- (ii) G.O.C., R.A., Aust. Corps, will command all artillery of the
- Corps during the first phase of the operation.
-
- (iii) For the second phase G.O.C., R.A., Aust. Corps, will allot:
-
- (_a_) Three Field Artillery Brigades to 5th and 4th Aust. Divisions
- for distribution to infantry brigade groups. These will include the
- 5th and 4th Aust. Divisional Artillery respectively.
-
- (_b_) Three brigades of Field Artillery and one battery of 60-pdr.
- Heavy Artillery allotted to each of the 5th and 4th Aust. Divisions
- for employment as may be ordered by the Divisional Commanders.
-
- (_c_) The remainder of the Field Artillery and the Heavy Artillery
- to Corps Reserve.
-
- (iv) Heavy Artillery will be pushed forward by G.O.C., R.A., to
- protect the troops in the second objective.
-
-5. _Tanks._--Instructions for the distribution and employment of Tanks
-will be issued later.
-
-6. _Engineers._--Engineers and Pioneers will be distributed for work as
-follows from midnight on 6th-7th instant:
-
- (i) Corps Pool under Chief Engineer--
- 1 Field Coy. from 4th Aust. Div.
- 1 Field Coy. from 5th Aust. Div.
- 2 Field Coys. from 2nd Aust. Div.
- 2 Field Coys. from 3rd Aust. Div.
- 3 Army Troops Coys. Engineers.
- 5th Aust. Pioneer Bn.
- 3rd Aust. Pioneer Bn.
-
- (ii) With Divisions:
-
- 2nd Aust. Pioneer Bn. will serve 2nd and 3rd Aust. Divisions. 2
- Coys. to each.
-
- 4th Aust. Pioneer Bn. will serve 4th and 5th Aust. Divisions. 2
- Coys. to each.
-
-Divisional Commanders will control:
-
- 2nd Aust. Division--1 Field Coy. and 2nd Aust. Pioneer
- Bn. (less 2 Coys.).
-
- 3rd Aust. Division--1 Field Coy. and 2 Coys. 2nd Aust.
- Pioneer Bn.
-
- 4th Aust. Division--2 Field Coys. and 4th Aust. Pioneer
- Bn. (less 2 Coys.).
-
- 5th Aust. Division--2 Field Coys. and 2 Coys. 4th Aust.
- Pioneer Bn.
-
-Tunnellers will be detailed to each division for dug-out exploration.
-
-Chief Engineer, Aust. Corps, will arrange for the distribution in
-accordance with this.
-
-Chief Engineer will issue instructions for the withdrawal and storing
-of demolition charges of bridges for which the Corps is responsible,
-and for the return of engineer personnel employed on this work to their
-units.
-
-7. Deputy Director of Medical Services will arrange for the
-distribution of medical units.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 2
-
-SECRECY
-
-(_a_) It is of first importance that secrecy should be observed and the
-operation carried out as a surprise.
-
-Commanders will take all possible steps to prevent the scope or date of
-the operation becoming known except to those taking part. Any officer,
-N.C.O., or man discussing the operation in public, or communicating
-details regarding it to any person, either soldier or civilian, not
-immediately concerned, will be severely dealt with.
-
-(_b_) All movement of troops and transport will take place by night,
-whether in the forward or back areas of the Australian Corps, on and
-after 1st August, except where absolutely necessary to move by day.
-
-(_c_) O.C., No. 3 Squadron, A.F.C., will arrange for aeroplanes to
-fly over the Australian Corps Army area during days when flying is
-possible, and to report to Corps H.Q. any abnormal movement of troops
-or transport within our lines.
-
-(_d_) Work on back lines will be continued as at present, so that there
-may be no apparent change in our attitude.
-
-(_e_) Commanders will ensure that the numbers of officers reconnoitring
-the enemy's positions is limited to those for whom such reconnaissance
-is essential.
-
-Nothing attracts attention to an offensive more than a large number of
-officers with maps looking over the parapet and visiting Observation
-Posts.
-
-Commanding Officers of units holding the front line should report at
-once to higher authority any disregard of these orders.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 3
-
-COMMUNICATIONS AND HEADQUARTERS
-
-1. Communications will be carefully organized to ensure the maintenance
-of communication throughout the advance and after its conclusion.
-
-2. (i) Headquarters of Divisions will be established as follows:
-
- 2nd Australian Division--GLISY.
-
- 5th Australian Division--BLANGY-TRONVILLE Chateau.
- Advanced Headquarters in
- dug-outs at Railway cutting.
-
- 3rd Australian Division--BUSSY.
-
- 4th Australian Division--CORBIE.
-
-(ii) Headquarters of Brigades and battalions will be selected in
-advance, as far as this can be done, and all concerned will be notified
-of their proposed locations.
-
-3. Report Centres in advance of the heads of buried cables will be
-selected in each Divisional Sector and details prepared for the
-organization of communications back to cable head.
-
-4. The following mounted troops are detailed to Divisions:
-
- To 2nd Australian Division--1 Troop 13th L.H.
-
- 3rd Australian Division--1 Troop 13th L.H.
-
- 4th Australian Division--2 Troops 13th L.H.
-
- 5th Australian Division--2 Troops 13th L.H.
-
-Divisions will inform O.C., 13th Light Horse, as to the time and place
-at which the Light Horse will report.
-
-The Cyclist Section now with Divisions will remain.
-
-5. The employment of wireless will be exploited to the full.
-
-6. Popham panels will be employed for communication between Infantry
-and Aeroplanes.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 4
-
-ARTILLERY
-
-(_a_) Ammunition will be dumped at or near gun positions as follows:
-
- 18-pdr. 600 rounds.
- 4.5" Howitzer 500 rounds.
- 60-pdr. 400 rounds.
- 6" guns 400 rounds.
- 6" Howitzers 400 rounds.
- 8" Howitzers 400 rounds.
- 9.2" Howitzers 400 rounds.
- 12" Howitzers 200 rounds.
-
-Arrangements should be made to commence dumping this ammunition as soon
-as feasible. Echelons will be kept full.
-
-(_b_) Boundaries between Corps as regards bombardment and
-counter-battery work coincide with the boundaries between Corps shown
-on map issued with Australian Corps "Battle Instructions No. 1," dated
-1st August, 1918.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 5
-
-TANKS
-
-1. Tanks are available as follows:
-
- _5th Tank Brigade._
-
- Mark V. Tanks--2nd Battalion--Lieut.-Col. E. D.
- BRYCE, D.S.O.
-
- Mark V. Tanks--8th Battalion--Lieut.-Col. The Hon.
- J. D. Y. BINGHAM,
- D.S.O.
-
- 13th Battalion--Lieut.-Col. P. LYON.
-
- Mark V. (Star) Tanks--15th Battalion--Lieut.-Colonel
- RAMSEY-FAIRFAX.
-
- No. 1 G.C.Coy. (24 Carrying Tanks)--Major W. PARTINGTON,
- M.C.
-
-
-2. _Mark V. Tanks_ are allotted as follows:
-
- 13th Battalion (Lieut.-Col. LYON), less one company, to 3rd
- Australian Division.
-
- 2nd Battalion (Lieut.-Col. BRYCE), plus one company 13th Battalion
- attached, to be employed with the two right Divisions--two
- companies to be allotted to each Division.
-
- 8th Battalion (Lieut.-Col. The Hon. J. D. Y. BINGHAM) to 4th
- Australian Division.
-
-One company of the 8th Battalion will be employed in support. It will
-be specially charged with the function of maintaining the attack at
-the junction of Divisions throughout the advance as far as the second
-objective.
-
-Command will be effected through Battalion Commanders in each case
-except that Lieut.-Col. BRYCE will be responsible for command of all
-Mark V. Tanks allotted to both 2nd and 5th Australian Divisions.
-
-3. After the capture of the first objective, Tanks detailed to 2nd and
-3rd Australian Divisions will rally and will be employed to support the
-advance of the 5th and 4th Australian Divisions respectively.
-
-4. After the capture of the second objective, Tanks will rally. One
-company will remain in close support in each divisional sector; the
-remainder will be withdrawn to positions to be arranged between
-Divisional and Tank Commanders.
-
-5. Mark V. (Star) Tanks are allotted as follows:
-
- 11/2 companies (18 tanks) to the 5th Australian Division.
- 11/2 companies (18 tanks) to the 4th Australian Division.
-
-These tanks are allotted for the capture of the blue line.
-
-_6. Carrying Tanks_ are allotted as follows:
-
- 2nd and 3rd Australian Divisions--3 tanks each.
-
- 4th and 5th Australian Divisions--9 tanks each.
-
-7. Orders for forming up and movement to the Start Line will be issued
-by G.O.C., 5th Tank Brigade.
-
-Battalion Commanders detailed to Divisions will be responsible for all
-liaison duty in connection with the Tanks.
-
-8. For tactical purposes Tanks will be placed under the command of
-Infantry Commanders to whose commands they are allotted.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 5A
-
-ASSEMBLY OF TANKS
-
-_1. Preliminary Movement._
-
-Tanks will be assembled in concealed positions in the forward area
-under the orders of the 5th Tank Brigade prior to night Y/Z.
-
-_2. Advance to Start Line._
-
-On night Y/Z the Tanks allotted to troops attacking the first objective
-will commence to move forward at 9.30 p.m. to the Tank Start Line. They
-will move with full engines to a line not nearer to the Tank Start Line
-than 3,000 yards. From there they will continue the movement forward to
-the Tank Start Line, moving at a slow rate and as quietly as possible.
-The Tank Start Line will be approximately 1,000 yards in rear of the
-Infantry taped line.
-
-Tanks will leave the Tank Start Line at such times as will allow them
-to catch up to the Infantry as the barrage lifts at zero plus three
-minutes.
-
-_3. Concealment of Engine Noise._
-
-To conceal the noise of the engines during the advance of the Tanks,
-the 5th Brigade R.A.F. will arrange to have planes flying continuously
-over the Corps area from 9.30 p.m. until midnight on Y/Z night, and
-from zero minus one hour onward to zero.
-
-_4. Tanks allotted to Second Objective._
-
-The Tanks allotted to the second objective will form up independently
-under the orders of the 5th Tank Brigade in consultation with G.O.'s
-C., 4th and 5th Australian Divisions. These Tanks will be formed up
-when the aeroplanes are in the air during the hours laid down in para.
-3.
-
-_5. Liaison Company._
-
-The company of the 8th Tank Battalion detailed to act in support, and
-to ensure liaison in the battle line at the junction of Divisions, will
-detail a half-company to each wave of Tanks, vide paras. 2 and 4 above.
-
-Divisions will detail special liaison parties of Infantry to work in
-co-operation with this company.
-
-_6. Re-assembly._
-
-As soon as the blue line has been reached, G.O.C. 5th Australian
-Division will arrange to release the 2nd Tank Battalion, less the
-attached company. This battalion will then be withdrawn. The remainder
-of the Tanks, less one company allotted to remain in support of each of
-the 4th and 5th Australian Divisions, will be withdrawn when ordered by
-Divisional Commanders, vide Battle Instructions No. 5, para. 4.
-
-_7. Smoke Grenades._
-
-Divisions will ensure that a proportion of smoke rifle grenades
-accompanies each Infantry detachment detailed to the blue line and
-which accompanies each of the Mark V. (Star) Tanks.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 6
-
-ARTILLERY
-
-_1. Preparation._
-
-Active counter-battery work and harassing fire will be maintained.
-
-Such registration as is necessary will be carried out under cover of
-this fire. A detailed programme for this will be arranged in each
-divisional sector.
-
-The necessity for concealing the increase in the number of guns on the
-front must be borne in mind, and on no account should a large number
-of guns be employed at any one time. Counter preparation and S.O.S.
-plans during the period of preparation for the attack will be drawn up
-accordingly.
-
-Normal fire should, so far as possible, be carried out from positions
-other than those in which batteries will be emplaced during the battle.
-
-_2. Heavy Artillery._
-
- (_a_) In view of the nature of the enemy's defences, the fire of
- the majority of the heavy howitzers, employed for purposes other
- than counter-battery work, will be used during the barrage to
- engage special strong points or localities.
-
- (_b_) Throughout the advance beyond the green line enemy centres of
- resistance will be kept under fire until such time as the progress
- of the Infantry renders this inadvisable. A map will be issued to
- show the times at which heavy artillery fire will cease on zones
- and special localities.
-
- (_c_) At least two-thirds of the available Heavy Artillery will be
- employed for counter-battery purposes.
-
- Heavy concentrations of fire will be directed on the different
- groups of enemy artillery.
-
-3. G.O.C., R.A., will prepare plans for dealing with a heavy
-development of hostile fire on zero night. He will also prepare a
-plan to deal with any attempt at a deliberate gas bombardment of the
-VILLERS-BRETONNEUX area on zero night.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 7
-
-PROGRAMME OF ACTION
-
-_1. Capture of First Objective._
-
-(_a_) Forming-up troops detailed to the capture of the first objective
-will be deployed on the Forming-up Line one hour before zero hour.
-
-(_b_) _Artillery Programme._
-
- (i) The field artillery 18-pdr. barrage will open at zero 200 yards
- in advance of the forming-up line. At zero plus three minutes
- the barrage will commence to advance; lifts will be 100 yards at
- 2-minute intervals. There will be two lifts at this rate.
-
- The rate will then decrease to lifts of 100 yards every 3 minutes.
- There will be eight lifts at this rate.
-
- From the eleventh lift inclusive until the green line is reached
- lifts will be of 100 yards each at 4-minute intervals.
-
- (ii) The 4.5" Howitzer barrage will move 200 yards in advance of
- the 18-pdr. barrage.
-
- (iii) A protective barrage will be maintained in front of the green
- line until zero plus four hours. During this period approximately
- fifty per cent. (50%) of the guns remaining in the barrage will
- be employed in a protective line barrage; the remainder will be
- employed to search and sweep deeply into the enemy's position. At
- zero plus four hours all barrage fire will cease.
-
- Barrage Maps will be issued later.
-
-_2. Capture of Second and Third Objectives._
-
-(_a_) _Assembly._--5th and 4th Australian Divisions will select and
-mark positions for the assembly of their troops.
-
-These areas will be selected in liaison with Tank Commanders and with
-the 2nd and 3rd Australian Divisions respectively, to prevent movement
-to them clashing with the approach march of these divisions and that of
-the Tanks.
-
-This requires careful co-ordination between each pair of Divisions and
-Tank Commanders.
-
-(_b_) _Command._--At zero plus four hours, responsibility for the
-battle front will pass to G.O.C., 5th Australian Division, in the right
-sector, and to G.O.C., 4th Australian Division, in the left sector.
-
-(_c_) _The Advance._--5th and 4th Australian Divisions will time their
-advance so that the leading troops cross the first objective (green
-line) at zero plus four hours.
-
-(_d_) From zero plus four hours the advance will be continued under the
-conditions of open warfare.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 8
-
-ROADS
-
-1. A map is forwarded herewith showing the organization of the road
-system in the captured territory.
-
-2. The Chief Engineer will issue the necessary instructions for the
-preparation of these roads for traffic.
-
-3. All light traffic which is capable of moving across country will do
-so and will avoid main roads.
-
-4. Mule tracks will be a divisional responsibility.
-
-5. Artillery advancing with the 5th and 4th Australian Divisions will
-carry forward a proportion of bridges. Arrangements should be made
-as soon as possible for the development of tracks, making use of the
-routes taken by the artillery over these bridges.
-
-6. The AMIENS--LONGUEAU--VILLERS-BRETONNEUX main road, as far east as
-the cross roads in N.26.c., will be reserved for the exclusive use of
-the Cavalry Corps from 9.30 p.m. on Y/Z night until 8 a.m. on Z day.
-After 8 a.m. on Z day it will be available for the Australian and
-Cavalry Corps.
-
-Assistant Provost Marshal, Australian Corps, will arrange for the
-control of the traffic on this road throughout.
-
-Chief Engineer, Australian Corps, will prepare short avoiding roads at
-the cross roads at N.26.c. to cross the north-east or south-west corner
-to avoid congestion at this spot.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 9
-
-LIGHT SIGNALS, MESSAGE ROCKETS, SMOKE
-
-_1. Light Signals._
-
- (_a_) _Australian Corps._
-
- The following Light Signals will be employed in the Australian
- Corps:
-
- S.O.S. Signal, No. 32 grenade--showing green over green over green.
- Allotment 500 per Division.
-
- Success Signal, No. 32 grenade--showing white over white over
- white. Allotment 600 per Division.
-
-A small reserve of each of these grenades is held at Corps Headquarters.
-
-No other Light Signals will be laid down by Corps. There is no
-objection to the use within Divisions of a Very Light for the local
-indication of targets between Infantry and Tanks.
-
- (_b_) _Other Formations._
-
- Light Signals of other formations are as follows:
-
- _Formation._ _Signal._ _Meaning._
-
- (i) Cavalry Corps. White star turning "Advanced troops
- to red on a parachute of Cavalry are
- fired from here."
- 11/2" Very pistol.
-
- (ii) Third Corps. No. 32 grenade, "S.O.S."
- green over green
- over green.
- No. 32 grenade, "Success signal,
- white over white _i.e._, we have
- over white. reached objective."
- One white Very "Barrage is about
- light. to lift."
-
- (iii) Canadian Corps No. 32 grenade, "S.O.S." will also
- red over red mean (_a_) "We are
- over red. held up and cannot
- advance without
- help." (_b_) "Enemy
- is counter-attacking."
- No. 32 grenade, "(_a_) Lift your fire.
- green over green We are going to
- over green. advance. (_b_) Stop
- firing."
- Three white Very "We have reached
- lights in quick this point."
- succession.
-
- _Remark._--In the case of (_a_) a smoke rocket (No. 27 grenade)
- will also be fired in the direction of the obstruction to indicate
- its position.
-
- (_c_) Special care must be taken by the Artillery on the right
- flank of the Corps that all officers and N.C.O.'s are acquainted
- with these signals, so that no mistake may arise as regards the
- difference in the S.O.S. Signals of the Australian and Canadian
- Corps.
-
- 2. _Message-carrying Rockets._
-
- Allotment of Message-carrying Rockets is 80 per Division.
-
- 3. _Smoke._
-
- (_a_) Artillery smoke will be as follows:
-
- (_i_) 3 rounds per gun will be fired during the first three minutes
- of the artillery barrage.
-
- (_ii_) 3 rounds per gun will be fired in quick succession on the
- arrival of the field artillery barrage at the artillery halt line
- covering the first objective.
-
- (_iii_) In the event of wet weather a small proportion of smoke
- will be used in the barrage to replace the smoke and dust caused by
- the burst of the shells in dry weather. This will not be sufficient
- to confuse the effect with that of the smoke shells prescribed in
- paragraph 3 (_a_) (i) and (ii).
-
-(_b_) _Screening beyond the First Objective._
-
-15th Wing, Royal Air Force, will arrange to screen the advance of the
-Tanks and Infantry from special localities in advance of their first
-objective by dropping phosphorus bombs.
-
-Divisions and G.O.C., 5th Tank Brigade, will inform Australian Corps
-Headquarters as early as possible of the localities which they desire
-screened.
-
-A map will be issued showing times at which it is anticipated that the
-Infantry will make good certain zones. Phosphorus bombs will not be
-dropped within these zones at any time after it is anticipated that the
-Infantry will have occupied them.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 10
-
-INTELLIGENCE AND DISPOSAL OF PRISONERS OF WAR
-
-
-1. _Battalion Intelligence Police._
-
-One German speaker and two searchers will be allotted to each battalion
-for use as follows:
-
- (_a_) _German Speaker._
-
- (i) To secure immediate identifications quickly, so that
- identifications will reach Corps Headquarters as speedily as
- possible of enemy units on the battle front.
-
- (ii) To secure immediate information required by the Battalion
- Commander as regards enemy dispositions, assembly positions, orders
- for counter-attack, etc.
-
- (iii) To be in charge of the two searchers and separate important
- documents, orders, maps, etc., translate and convey information of
- moment to the immediate Commander.
-
-(_b_) _Two Searchers._
-
-The two searchers under the German speaker systematically search the
-battlefield, enemy positions, suspected headquarters, dead, etc., for
-papers, documents, maps, etc., have them packed in sandbags, and sent
-through the usual channels to the Corps Cage as quickly as possible.
-
-This personnel should carry torches and, besides rifles or revolvers,
-bombs are recommended as being useful for dealing with any of the enemy
-who may be found in dug-outs.
-
-2. _Divisional Intelligence Officers._
-
-Divisional Intelligence Officers will go forward to an Advanced
-Divisional Collecting Cage, with a view to obtaining, as soon as
-possible, information of immediate tactical importance.
-
-The Cage will be connected by telephone to Divisional H.Q., and
-important information obtained should be transmitted as quickly as
-possible to Divisional and Brigade H.Q.
-
-The main points on which immediate information is required from
-prisoners are: The Order of Battle, Units seen, Distribution of the
-Enemy's Forces, Method of holding the Line, Assembly Positions,
-Counter-attack Orders and Intentions.
-
-This information will be wired to their respective Divisional
-Headquarters and repeated to Corps Headquarters and Corps Cage by
-Divisional Intelligence Officers.
-
-Divisional Intelligence Officers will not detain prisoners longer
-than is necessary to obtain this tactical information of immediate
-importance.
-
-In case a large number of prisoners are captured, they will detain only
-one or two from each regiment, and will not delay the passage of the
-remainder to the Corps Cage.
-
-Any further information required from prisoners by Divisions or lower
-formations can always be obtained by telephone from the Corps Cage.
-
-3. _Searching of Prisoners._
-
- (_a_) _Officers and N.C.O.'s._
-
- Officers and N.C.O.'s will be searched as soon as possible after
- capture by a responsible officer or N.C.O., and all documents taken
- from them sent back with them (in sacks, labelled by regiments, if
- a number are captured) to the Divisional Intelligence Officer, at
- such place as this officer has prearranged.
-
- It is left to the discretion of Divisional Intelligence Officers as
- to what documents, maps, etc., taken from prisoners they hold back
- for the information of Brigade and Divisional Commanders. When this
- is done, Corps "I" will be informed by wire, priority if necessary,
- of the nature of the documents, etc., held back, and of any points
- of immediate tactical importance they may contain.
-
- As soon as possible after information has been extracted from them,
- the documents will be forwarded on to the Corps Cage. Arrangements
- can be made by Corps, if notified that documents are ready to be
- sent on, to fetch them by motorcyclist or cycle.
-
- (_b_) _Other Ranks._
-
- Prisoners other than officers and N.C.O.'s will be searched on
- their arrival at the Corps Cage. Their papers, etc., will be taken
- from them and put into sacks labelled according to regiments.
-
- (_c_) All ranks should understand that a prisoner's pay-book,
- identity disc, and personal belongings should not be taken from
- him. Escorts and guards will be warned to take special precautions
- to prevent prisoners from destroying papers.
-
-4. _Separation of Officers, N.C.O.'s and Men._
-
-Care will be taken that officers, N.C.O.'s and privates are all
-separated from one another at once, and are not allowed to communicate
-with one another. Prisoners who have been interrogated should not be
-allowed to mix with those who have not yet been interrogated.
-
-5. _Notification of Locality of Capture._
-
-It is essential that, when prisoners are sent back, information be sent
-with them which will show where they were captured. Information as to
-the battalion which made the capture is a useful indication.
-
-6. _Authorized Persons only to converse with Prisoners._
-
-It is most important that no officer or N.C.O., except those duly
-authorized, be allowed to interrogate or converse with prisoners.
-
-7. _Prisoners of War Cage._
-
-The Advanced Corps Cage will be situated at VECQUEMONT, N.11.b.8.7. and
-the Rear Corps Cage at N.2.c.3.7.
-
-Intelligence Officers and personnel will be stationed here, and will
-carry out a more detailed interrogation and sort out captured documents.
-
-The Advanced Corps Cage will be connected by telephone to Corps H.Q.
-
-8. _Prisoners._
-
-The following procedure will be adopted for the disposal of prisoners:
-
-After capture they will be escorted to the Advanced Divisional
-Collecting Cage, for examination by the Divisional Intelligence
-Officer, who, after he has finished with them, will send them back to
-the Advanced Corps Cage.
-
-The sending back of prisoners should be carried out as quickly as
-possible, and several escorts should be arranged for them to be passed
-back without any unusual delay. Instructions should be issued to ensure
-that too many men are not employed on escort duty.
-
-In the forward area directing notices should be placed to show the
-route to be taken to the Advanced Divisional Collecting Cage.
-
-Traffic control personnel should be conversant with the method of
-disposing of prisoners.
-
-9. _Identifications._
-
-The importance of passing on all identifications as speedily as
-possible to Corps "I" cannot be too strongly impressed on all
-concerned. It is essential that special efforts be made to wire at
-once, as soon as identifications are made and the locality in which
-obtained.
-
-10._ Maps and Photographs._
-
- The following maps are being issued:
-
- (i) A large issue of 1/20,000 No. 62.D. South-East regular series
- for distribution to all officers.
-
- (ii) 1/20,000 Map Message Form, for distribution down to N.C.O.'s.
-
- (iii) A small issue of 1/10,000 Maps of forward area only.
-
- (iv) 1/20,000 Barrage Map, for distribution down to Company
- Commanders.
-
- (v) 1/40,000 Organization Map, together with notes on the enemy.
-
-The following special photographs are being issued:
-
- (_a_) A Mosaic of each Divisional front, squared and contoured and
- freely annotated, for distribution down to N.C.O.'s.
-
- (_b_) Oblique Photographs of each Divisional front, for
- distribution to all officers.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 11
-
-CO-OPERATION OF INFANTRY AND AIRCRAFT
-
-1. _Contact Aeroplanes._
-
- (i) _Indication of position by flares._
-
- (_a_) Red ground flares will be used to indicate the infantry
- positions to contact aeroplanes. They will be lit by infantry in
- the most advanced line only.
-
- (_b_) A contact aeroplane will fly along the line of the first
- objective at zero plus 2 hours 30 minutes. Flares will be called
- for by the aeroplane sounding a succession of "A's" on the Klaxon
- horn and by firing a white Very Light. If the aeroplane fails to
- mark the line accurately, it will repeat its call ten minutes later.
-
- Should the infantry not have reached the line of the objective at
- the time laid down above, the contact aeroplane will return at
- half-hour intervals until flares are shown.
-
- (_c_) A contact aeroplane will fly along the line of the second
- objective at zero plus 6 hours 30 minutes. It will call for flares,
- and the same procedure will be followed on this objective as on the
- first objective until the flares are seen.
-
- (_d_) A contact aeroplane will fly over third objective at zero
- plus 7 hours, when the procedure laid down for the first objective
- will be observed until the flares are shown.
-
- (_e_) Divisions will organize message-dropping stations in the
- vicinity of their Headquarters.
-
- (ii) _Other means of identifying the position of the Infantry._
-
- (_a_) _Rifles._--Three or four rifles laid parallel across the top
- of the trench.
-
- (_b_) _Metal Discs._--Metal discs will be used as reflectors by
- flashing in the sun. This method has been successful even on days
- which have not been particularly bright.
-
- The disc is most easily carried sewn to the Small Box Respirator,
- and can be used in this way without inconvenience.
-
-2. _Counter-attack Planes._
-
- (_a_) From zero hour counter-attack planes will be constantly in
- the air, with the object of observing hostile concentrations or
- abnormal movement.
-
- (_b_) In the event of an enemy concentration indicating a
- counter-attack, the counter-attack aeroplane will signal this
- information to the Artillery by wireless. In the case of a
- counter-attack actually developing a white parachute flare will be
- fired by the aeroplane in the direction of the troops moving for
- the impending counter-attack, for the information of the Infantry.
-
-3. _Ammunition-carrying Aeroplanes._
-
- (_a_) Aeroplanes will be detailed to transport ammunition from zero
- plus 2 hours 30 minutes.
-
- (_b_) Vickers guns will display a white "V" at the point where
- ammunition is to be dropped. The arms of the "V" to be 6 feet in
- length and 1 foot in width. The apex of the "V" to point towards
- the enemy.
-
- (_c_) Ammunition aeroplanes will have the under-side of the lower
- planes painted black for a distance of 21/2 feet from the tips.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 12
-
-CONSOLIDATION
-
-1. _Divisions allotted to First Objective._
-
-(_a_) _Consolidation._--As soon as the first objective has been
-captured troops will dig in.
-
-(_b_) _Troops holding present front line._--The brigades of 2nd and
-3rd Australian Divisions holding the line on the night prior to zero
-will remain in their battle positions until all troops detailed to the
-attack have passed through. They will then be organized and prepared to
-move to meet any emergency.
-
-2nd Australian Division will be prepared to detach its brigade to act
-in support of 5th Australian Division, and 3rd Australian Division to
-detach its brigade in support of 4th Australian Division.
-
-(_c_) _Reorganization of Troops on First Objective._--As soon as the
-whole of the troops detailed to the capture of second (red line) and
-third (blue line) objectives have passed through the line of the
-first objective, 2nd and 3rd Australian Divisions will organize the
-defence of their sectors on the first objective in depth in each
-brigade sub-sector. Units will be reorganized, and those not detailed
-to the defence of the line will be withdrawn into support and held in
-readiness for eventualities. At least one battalion in each brigade
-sub-sector should be withdrawn in this way.
-
-2. _Second Objective._
-
-_Consolidation._--As soon as the second objective (the red line)
-has been captured, the position will be thoroughly consolidated.
-Arrangements will be made to ensure a supply of engineering material
-for this.
-
-3. _Main Line of Resistance._
-
-(_a_) When the third objective (the blue line) is attained, it will be
-organized and consolidated as the main line of resistance.
-
-(_b_) If the enemy is able to develop an immediate counter-attack, or
-if he has a definite plan, and the troops available in close reserve
-for the defence of the blue line, it may not be possible to reach
-the third objective. In this case the second objective (red line)
-will become the main line of resistance, and will be consolidated and
-organized in depth accordingly.
-
-(_c_) Definite plans will be prepared to deal with either case.
-The Corps must be prepared, as early as possible, to fight a stiff
-defensive battle on the main line of resistance.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 13
-
-1. The 5th Australian Division will move into its assembly area by
-Brigade Groups as follows:
-
- "A" Brigade Group on the night 4th-5th August from MONTIERES
- to CAMON and RIVERY area. Quarters have been arranged for one
- brigade, less one battalion. Shelters will be drawn from Area
- Commandant, CAMON, for this battalion.
-
- "B" Brigade Group from ALLONVILLE area to forward area.
-
- "C" Brigade Group from VAUX area to ALLONVILLE area.
-
-2. For the purposes of staging, POULAINVILLE will be included as one of
-the battalion areas of the ALLONVILLE brigade area.
-
-The camp in BOIS DE MAI has been allotted for the use of the 5th
-Division nucleus.
-
-It is left to the discretion of the G.O.C., 5th Australian Division,
-as to whether the Battalion at POULAINVILLE moves on the night of 4th
-August.
-
-3. On the night 5th-6th August the 5th Australian Division will
-continue its move into its allotted assembly grounds in the forward
-area.
-
-4. Rear parties are to be left in charge of all camps until handed over
-to the Area Commandant.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 14
-
-ARMOURED CAR BATTALION
-
-1. The 17th Armoured Car Battalion has been placed at the disposal of
-the Australian Corps, and will join the 5th Tank Brigade shortly.
-
-2. This battalion is organized in two companies of eight (8) armoured
-cars each. Each armoured car carries one forward and one rear Hotchkiss
-gun.
-
-3. One and a half (11/2) companies are allotted to the 5th Australian
-Division, and half (1/2) a company will remain in Corps Reserve.
-
-The half company detailed to remain in Corps Reserve will select a
-position of assembly in Square 0.26, and will occupy this position
-by 9.30 p.m. on Y/Z night. During the action its orders will be
-transmitted through the 5th Australian Divisional Signal Service. The
-Commander will arrange with the 5th Australian Division accordingly.
-
-4. As soon as the Battalion Commander or his representative reports to
-the 5th Tank Brigade, he will be instructed to report to the General
-Staff, Australian Corps, and then to Headquarters, 5th Australian
-Division.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 14A
-
-ARMOURED CAR BATTALION
-
-
-1. The 17th Armoured Car Battalion is being given definite roles
-in accordance with paragraph 3 of Battle Instructions No. 14. The
-roles assigned to this battalion may carry the cars forward for a
-considerable distance into enemy territory, and may necessitate their
-returning through other Divisional Sectors than that of the 5th
-Australian Division.
-
-2. British Armoured Cars can be recognized by the red and white band
-markings which are similar to those of the British Tanks.
-
-3. All troops will be warned of the possibility of our armoured cars
-coming into our own sector, and of the way in which they are marked.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 15
-
-ZERO HOUR--SYNCHRONIZATION OF WATCHES
-
-1. _Zero Hour._
-
-Zero hour will be notified in writing from Australian Corps
-Headquarters by noon on the day prior to zero.
-
-2. _Synchronization of Watches._
-
-Watches will be synchronized by officers detailed by Australian Corps
-Headquarters, who will visit Headquarters in the following order,
-leaving Corps Headquarters shortly after noon and 6 p.m. on Y day:
-
- (_a_) One officer to Headquarters Heavy Artillery, 3rd Australian
- Division and 4th Australian Division.
-
- (_b_) One officer to 2nd Australian Division and 5th Australian
- Division.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 16
-
-AIRCRAFT
-
-1. The Air Forces which will operate on the Australian Corps front
-during the battle will be as follows:
-
- (_a_) Corps Squadron--3rd Australian Squadron.
-
- (_b_) 5th Tank Brigade--8th Squadron.
-
- (_c_) The 22nd Wing, consisting of eight Scout Squadrons, which
- will be exclusively employed in engaging ground targets by bombing
- and machine-gunning along the whole Army front.
-
- (_d_) One night-bombing squadron--101st Bombing Squadron.
-
- (_e_) One Reconnaissance Squadron--48th Squadron.
-
-Four additional day-bombing squadrons and three additional
-night-bombing squadrons are being obtained from other Wings for
-co-operation with the above, making 19 Squadrons in all.
-
-2. _Low-flying Scouts._
-
-The low-flying scouts of the 22nd Wing are being detailed on an even
-distribution to the Corps front. They will operate in two phases, viz.:
-
- (_a_) From zero to zero plus four hours eastward from the green
- line.
-
- (_b_) From zero plus four hours onwards eastwards from the red line.
-
-In each phase favourable targets will be engaged in addition to the
-targets marked by the green and red lines.
-
-3. _Markings on Planes._
-
-The following will be the special markings of machines allotted to
-special duties:
-
- (_a_) Contact patrol machines--Rectangular panels 2' by 1' on both
- lower planes about three feet from the fuselage.
-
- (_b_) Machines working with Tanks--Black band on middle of right
- side of tail.
-
-4. _Ammunition-carrying Squadron._
-
-Aeroplanes carrying small arms ammunition will drop it at points
-as laid down in Battle Instructions No. 11, para. 3 (b). The first
-ammunition-carrying planes will arrive over the battlefield at zero
-plus seven hours.
-
-5. _Aeroplane Smoke Screens._
-
-In addition to carrying small arms ammunition, this Squadron will be
-employed to drop phosphorus smoke bombs to obstruct the enemy's view.
-The areas to be screened and the time at which the screening in each
-case shall cease in order not to interfere with the advance of the
-Infantry will be shown on a map to be issued later.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 17
-
-ARTILLERY ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE LAST NIGHT BEFORE ZERO
-
-1. _S.O.S._
-
- (_i_) Each line division will arrange for four field artillery
- brigades, or an equivalent number of guns, to fire on S.O.S. lines
- at any time up to zero minus fifteen minutes.
-
- (_ii_) From zero minus fifteen minutes until zero hour S.O.S.
- arrangements will be inoperative.
-
-2. _Heavy Artillery._
-
-In the event of the enemy opening a gas bombardment on the
-VILLERS-BRETONNEUX area, arrangements have been made for the
-co-operation of the Canadian Corps Heavy Artillery in an artillery
-counter-attack on enemy batteries. The Canadian Corps will deal with
-the enemy artillery about WIENCOURT and MARCELCAVE. Fire will be
-opened, on application, direct between the two Corps Headquarters.
-
-G.O.C., R.A., Australian Corps, will arrange details with G.O.C., R.A.,
-Canadian Corps.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 18
-
-These are not reproduced. They refer only to Wireless Code Calls
-prescribed for all units.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 19
-
-LIAISON ARRANGEMENTS
-
-1. Officers are detailed for liaison duties as follows:
-
-
- (_a_) At Canadian Corps Headquarters--Capt. SHEARMAN, D.S.O., M.C.
-
- (_b_) At Third Corps Headquarters--Major R. MORRELL, D.S.O.
-
- (_c_) With 1st Australian Division--To be notified.
-
- (_d_) With 2nd Australian Division--Major H. PAGE, M.C.
-
- (_e_) With 3rd Australian Division--Lt.-Col. A. R. WOOLCOCK, D.S.O.
-
- (_f_) With 4th Australian Division--Major G. F. DICKINSON, D.S.O.
-
- (_g_) With 5th Australian Division--Lt.-Col. N. MARSHALL, D.S.O.
-
-2. The main function of the liaison officer is to relieve the Staff of
-the fighting formation of the necessity of:
-
- (_a_) Supplying information to Australian Corps Headquarters.
-
- (_b_) Collecting information from Corps Headquarters for
- transmission to the formation for whom they are carrying out
- liaison duties. It is their function to save the Staff as far as
- possible, and not to get in the way. At the same time, they are
- expected to keep Corps Headquarters and the formation to which they
- are attached fully informed of events.
-
-3. Direct telephone lines exist between Australian Corps Headquarters
-and neighbouring Corps.
-
-For the battle there is a special General Staff switchboard with direct
-lines to 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 5th Australian Divisions.
-
-4. An information bureau will be established in a marquee to be erected
-on the lawn in front of the Headquarters offices. Major W. W. BERRY
-will be in charge of this bureau. It will be provided with a telephone,
-writing material, maps, etc.
-
-Liaison officers from other formation at Australian Corps Headquarters
-will be accommodated in this marquee.
-
-During the battle officers whose business does not require them to
-visit the General Staff Office will make all inquiries at this office
-for information as to the progress of the operations.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 20
-
-CAVALRY
-
-1. The First Cavalry Brigade, plus one company of Whippet Tanks
-attached, comes under the command of the Australian Corps Commander at
-9 p.m. on Y/Z night.
-
-2. Its function is to assist in carrying out the main Cavalry role by
-seizing any opportunity which may occur to push through this Corps
-front.
-
-3. The First Cavalry Brigade will operate north of the AMIENS--CHAULNES
-railway in conjunction with 5th Australian Division. It will move
-from its assembly position in Square n.32 under orders of G.O.C., 1st
-Cavalry Division, via the southern side of BOIS DE L'ABBE.
-
-It will cross to the north side of the railway east of
-VILLERS-BRETONNEUX.
-
-It will push forward patrols to keep in touch with 8th and 15th
-Australian Brigades.
-
-After crossing the railway the main body of 1st Cavalry Brigade will
-march roughly parallel to it, keeping close touch with the remainder of
-1st Cavalry Division to the south.
-
-4. If a break in enemy's resistance occurs, the remainder of the 1st
-Cavalry Division may be employed in support of 1st Cavalry Brigade.
-
-5. Command of 1st Cavalry Brigade will pass from Australian Corps to
-the 1st Cavalry Division when the Infantry reaches the red line unless
-the brigade is required in the area south of the Australian Corps to
-exploit success gained before that hour. This will be determined by
-G.O.C., 1st Cavalry Division, who will inform Australian Corps and 5th
-Australian Division, and issue orders direct to 1st Cavalry Brigade.
-
-
-BATTLE INSTRUCTIONS NO. 21
-
-NOTIFICATION OF DATE AND TIME OF BATTLE
-
-1. Reference paragraph 1 of General Staff Memo. No. AC/42, dated 7th
-instant, ZERO will be 4.20 a.m. 8th instant.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- Administrative Services, 12.
-
- Aeroplanes first used to carry small arms ammunition, 59.
- As noise camouflage, 105.
-
- Air Force, 13, 171.
-
- Albert, 30, 36, 79.
-
- Allied Offensive, Aug. 8th:
- Conference at Flexicourt, 73.
- Outline of plan, 73-80.
- Three phases, 84.
- Disposition of brigades, 93-94.
- Artillery calibration, 102.
- Tanks, 104.
- Armoured cars, 107.
- Intelligence Service, 112.
- Air Squadron, 113.
- Day before battle, 119.
- Zero hour, 4.20 a.m., 120.
- Guns begin, 121.
- First phase completed, 122.
- "Outwards" telegrams, 123.
- Enemy completely surprised, 125.
- Third Corps failed to reach objective, 126.
- Armoured cars, sensational report, 127.
- Guns and booty captured, 129.
- Ludendorff's comments, 130.
- General meeting at Villers-Bretonneux, 132.
- The King at Bertangles, 132.
-
- American Army's first great attack, 206, 259.
- First offensive battle, Hamel, 59.
- Second Corps, 235.
- To join Fourth British Army, 236, 243, 254.
- 1,200 taken prisoners, 262.
- 131st Regt., 136, 143.
- 27th Div., 275, 278.
- 30th Div., 275, 278.
- 33rd Div., 52.
-
- Amiens, defence of, 26 _et seq._
-
- Anzac, First and Second Corps, 7.
- Corps, abolition of, 9.
- Day, 3rd anniversary, 37.
-
- Arcy Wood, 161, 163.
-
- Armistice requested by enemy, 280.
-
- Army Corps improvised, 2.
- Constitution and scope, 3.
-
- Artillery barrage, 228-229.
- Classification of, 12.
-
- Assevillers, 221, 247.
-
- Aubigny, 31.
-
- Australian Army Corps constituted, 9.
- United, 10.
-
- Australian Corps Headquarters, Bertangles, 35.
-
- Australian Soldier's high _moral_, 288.
- Adaptability, 291.
- Instinct for "square deal," 292.
-
- Australian Staff watchword, "Efficiency," 295.
-
- Australia's five Divisions, 5.
-
- Authie, 25.
-
-
- Bapaume, 198.
-
- Basseux, 24.
-
- Battles on grand scale finished, 281.
-
- Beaurevoir, 218, 258, 276.
-
- Bell, Maj.-Gen. John, 52, 136.
-
- Bellenglise, 219.
- Captured, 260.
-
- Bellicourt taken, 261.
-
- Bellicourt Tunnel, 219, 237.
-
- Bertangles, Australian Corps H.Q., 35, 52, 132.
-
- Biaches, 198.
-
- Bingham, Lt.-Col., 106.
-
- Birdwood, Gen., 9, 36, 40, 132.
-
- Birdwood, Gen. Sir William:
- Commands First Anzac Corps, 7.
- Appointed Commander Australian Imperial Force, 10.
- Appointed Commander Fifth British Army, 10, 40, 209.
-
- Blamey, Brig.-Gen., 296.
-
- Bony captured, 267.
-
- Bouchavesnes, 182.
-
- Bourlon Wood, 259.
-
- Braithwaite, Lieut.-Gen., 204, 221.
-
- Brancourt, 259.
-
- Bray, 137, 148, 155, 158, 195.
-
- Brie, 196, 198.
-
- Brigade reductions, 15.
-
- British Fifth Army, 40, 219.
-
- Brown, Corpl. W., captures officer and 11 men, 66.
-
- Bryce, Lt.-Col., 106.
-
- Bussy, 62.
-
- Butler, Gen., Third Corps, 73, 136, 221.
-
- Byng, Gen., 27, 134.
-
-
- Calibration, 102.
-
- Cambrai, 259.
-
- Canadians, 73, 75, 76, 115, 122, 129, 133, 134, 136, 139, 140, 198, 259.
-
- Canadian Troops, fixed constitution, 5.
-
- Cannan, Brig.-Gen., 27.
-
- Cappy, 137, 157, 166.
-
- Captive Balloon Service, 14.
-
- Carter, Lieut.-Col. E. J., 108.
-
- Cavalry first employed, 201.
-
- Cerisy, 136.
-
- Cessation of hostilities, 281.
-
- Chamier, 22.
-
- Chateau-Thierry, 72.
- End of German offensive, 72.
-
- Chipilly, 126, 136, 137.
-
- Chuignes, 152, 156.
-
- Churchill, Mr. Winston, 209.
-
- Clemenceau, M.:
- Speech to troops after Hamel battle, 62.
- After Aug. 8th, 132.
-
- Clery, 170-180.
-
- Combles, 198.
-
- Commanders and Staffs, 16-17.
-
- Congreve, Gen., his first order, 26.
-
- Contact aeroplanes, 171.
-
- Cook, Sir Joseph, 55.
-
- Corps Cavalry, 11.
-
- Corps Commander's responsibilities, 4.
-
- Corps Conferences, 150.
-
- Corps Signal Troops, 11.
-
- Corps Troops, 11.
-
- Couin, 25.
-
- Courage, Brig.-Gen., 50, 106, 222.
-
- Couturelle, 24.
-
- Cox, Maj.-Gen. Sir H. W., 9.
-
- Crossing the Somme, plan for, 178.
-
- Cummings, Brig.-Gen., 29.
-
- Curlu, 170.
-
- Currie, Gen., 73, 132, 140.
-
-
- Dernancourt, 31, 33.
-
- Difficulties of Army in retreat, 280.
-
- Disorganized British retreat, 23.
-
- Division, the fighting unit, 2.
-
- Division I., 18, 34, 40, 43, 73, 117, 134, 139, 140, 146, 152, 166,
- 203, 205, 221, 232, 243, 281.
- Last fight, 233.
-
- Division II., 18, 34, 40, 43, 65, 67, 71, 86, 115, 122, 135, 139,
- 146, 165, 170, 184, 257, 266, 270, 275, 277, 279.
- Last fight, 279.
-
- Division III., 18, 20, 31, 37, 40, 53, 86, 115, 122, 126, 137, 142,
- 146, 155, 158, 165, 170, 184, 191, 200, 201, 205, 235, 253, 261,
- 263, 265, 268, 270.
- Last fight, 270.
-
- Division IV., 18, 24, 30, 33, 65, 89, 115, 117, 126, 137, 146, 164,
- 203, 205, 221, 232, 233, 243, 281.
- Last fight, 233.
-
- Division V., 18, 34, 65, 76, 89, 115, 134, 146, 165, 169, 184, 193,
- 235, 253, 261, 262, 267.
- Last fight, 270.
-
- Doullens, population prepare to evacuate, 23.
- First move, 22-23.
-
- Dummy Tanks, 223.
-
-
- Efficient Army more potent than League of Nations, 298.
-
- Elles, Gen., 44, 221.
-
- End of German offensive, 72.
-
- Enemy attack in the South, July 15th, 72.
- Comments on our successes, 66-67.
- Discover our movement South, 116.
- Move from Russian to Western Front, 20.
- "On the run," 168.
- Propaganda, 160.
- Reserves melting away, 42.
- Reserves absorbed, 206.
- Secure our "Recruiting
- Cable," 159.
- Withdraws in disorder, 170.
-
- Engineers, Companies of, 12.
-
- Estries, 258.
-
- Eterpigny, 196.
-
- Etinehem, 137.
-
-
- Fairfax, Lieut.-Col. Ramsay-, 106.
-
- Farewell Order to Third Division, 41.
-
- Farewell Order, 282.
-
- Feuillancourt, 185.
-
- Feuilleres, 137.
-
- Fifth Army defensive unduly attenuated, 23.
-
- Fifth British Army, 21.
-
- First Australian Division, 5.
-
- First British Army attack, Aug. 26th, 198.
-
- First Order from 10th Corps, 25.
-
- Flamicourt, 191.
-
- Flanders' liquid mud, 18, 20.
-
- Flexicourt Conference, 73.
-
- Foch, Marshal, appointed Supreme Commander, 37; 142, 200.
-
- Fontaine, 169.
-
- Foott, Brig.-Gen., 196.
-
- Forty-sixth Imperial Division, 260.
-
- Foucaucourt, 169.
-
- Fourth Army enlarged, 204.
- British flank with French, 37.
-
- Fourth and Fifth Australian Divisions, 6.
-
- Framerville, 135.
-
- Franvillers, 27, 33.
-
- Fraser, Brig.-Gen., 173, 222.
-
- French Army's different outlook, 71.
-
- Frevent, 23.
-
- "Fuse 106" as wire cutter, 257.
-
-
- Garenne Wood, 157.
-
- Gellibrand, Maj.-Gen., 268.
-
- German attack, March 21st, 1918, 21.
- Propaganda, 160.
- Withdrawal general on all fronts, Sept. 4th, 205.
-
- Germany's "Black Day," 130.
- Crack regiments opposed to Australians, 183.
- Surrender due to military defeat, 287.
- Determining cause, breach of Hindenburg defences, 287.
-
- Gillemont Farm, 251, 267.
-
- Glasgow, Maj.-Gen., 158, 221.
-
- Godley, Lieut.-Gen. Sir A., commands Second Anzac Corps,
- 7, 132, 136, 199, 204.
-
- Gouy, 262.
-
- Grimwade, Brig.-Gen., 30.
-
-
- Haig, Brig.-Gen. Neil, 201.
- Field Marshal, 54, 62, 132, 209, 250.
-
- Hamel, proposed operation against, 44-48.
- Battle of, planned, 51.
- Zero fixed, 56.
- Over in 93 minutes, 56.
- Official commentary, 57.
- Americans' first offensive battle, 59.
- No gas shells used, 60.
- Congratulatory messages, 61.
- M. Clemenceau's speech, 62-3.
- Dinner at Amiens to celebrate victory, 63-64.
- End of British defensive, 64.
-
- Hamel Wood, 33, 39, 44, 56.
-
- Hangard, 34, 36.
-
- Hargicourt, Zero hour, 5.20 a.m. Sept. 8th, 226.
- Red line reached before 10 o'clock, 232.
- Outpost line captured, 232.
-
- Haut Allaines, 200.
-
- Hautcloque, 23.
-
- Hazebrouck, 35.
-
- Headquarters of Army Corps, 11.
-
- Hebuterne, 25.
-
- Heilly, 28.
-
- Hem, 170.
-
- Herleville, 152.
-
- Hill 90, 157.
-
- Hill 104, 33, 36, 65.
-
- Hindenburg Line, 199.
- Purpose of, 214.
- St. Quentin-Cambrai section, 215.
- Germans' elaborate system of trenches, 217.
- Hargicourt line, 218.
- Capture of plans of German defence scheme, 219.
- Plan for attacking, 221.
- Machine gun barrage, 223.
- Dummy tanks, 223.
- Tapes for Infantry start line, 224.
- Direction boards, 225.
- Plan for further advance, 236-240.
- America's Second Corps in battle front, 242.
- Australian and American Divisions, 254.
- Mustard gas first used, 256.
- Destroying wire entanglements, 256.
- Disposition of Divisions, 258.
- Two phases, 258.
- Zero hour, 5.50 a.m. Sept. 29th, 259.
- Fifth Australians hung up, 261.
- Americans held up, 261.
- Forget to mop up, 262.
- Change of plan, 264.
- Enemy relinquish tunnel defences, 268.
- Collapse of the whole defences, 279.
-
- Hobbs, Maj.-Gen., 108, 169, 193.
-
- Hughes, W. M., 55.
- Message from, 61, 281.
-
- Hunn, Maj. A. S., 210.
-
-
- Infantry advance behind barrage, 229.
-
- Infantry Brigade reductions, 15.
-
- "Instantaneous" fuse, 257.
-
-
- Joncourt, 258, 267.
-
- July 18th, French and American counter-stroke, 72.
-
-
- Kavanagh, Gen., Cavalry Corps, 73, 132.
-
- King, the, at Bertangles, 132.
-
- Knob, the, 267.
-
- Knoll, the, 267.
-
-
- Labour Corps, 12.
-
- La Flaque, 129.
-
- La Neuville, 155.
-
- Last Australian battle in Great War, 279.
-
- La Verguier, 232.
-
- League of Nations less potent than efficient Army, 298.
-
- "Leap Frog" tactics, 81.
-
- Le Cateau, 281.
-
- Le Catelet, 218, 261.
-
- Leslie, Brig.-Gen. W. B., 9.
-
- Lewis, Maj.-Gen., 246.
-
- Lewis Gun detachments, 91.
-
- "Liaison Force," 143.
-
- Lihons, 135.
-
- Losses, comparison of, 289.
-
- Ludendorff's comments on Aug. 8th attack, 130.
-
- Lyon, Lt.-Col., 106.
-
-
- Maclagan, Maj.-Gen., 24, 26, 30, 52, 136, 221, 243, 247.
-
- McNicoll, Brig.-Gen., 24, 28.
-
- March 22nd, 1918, first move, 21.
-
- Marett Wood, 29.
-
- Martin, Brig.-Gen., 185.
-
- Marwitz, Gen. von der, 281.
-
- Maurepas, 198.
-
- Max (Prince) of Baden, 280.
-
- Mechanical Transport, 11.
-
- Mericourt, 133, 139.
-
- Mills's grenades, 248.
-
- Minor battles begun, 37.
- Result, 38-39.
-
- Monash, Lieut.-Gen., Sir John:
- In command First Australian Div., 5.
- Third Australian Div., 6.
- Australian Army Corps, 10.
- 17th Imperial Div., 16.
- 32nd Imperial Div., 16.
- 27th American Div., 16.
- 30th American Div., 16.
- Without orders, 23.
- Honoured by the King, 132.
- Hands over command to General Read, 279.
-
- Mondicourt, 24.
-
- Monster German Naval 15-inch gun captured, 161.
-
- Montbrehain, 278.
- Last Australian battle, 279.
-
- Montgomery, 132.
-
- Mont St. Martin, 275.
-
- Mont St. Quentin, 177, 182.
- Second Prussian Guards defend, 183.
- Captured, 184, 193.
-
- Monument Wood, 67.
-
- Mopping up, 229, 248.
- Result of neglecting, 252, 262.
-
- Morain, M., entertains British and French Army officers after Hamel,
- 64.
-
- _Moral v._ material, 279.
-
- Motor Ambulance Corps, 12.
-
- Mound, the, 78.
-
- Mullens, Maj.-Gen., letter of appreciation, 31.
-
- Mustard gas, 78, 255.
-
-
- Nauroy, 218, 263, 267.
-
- Nielles-lez-Blequin, 20.
-
- Noise camouflage, 105.
-
- Nollet, Gen., 164.
-
- Noyons, 198.
-
-
- Officers and men, relations between, 293.
-
- Ommiecourt, 137.
-
- O'Ryan Maj.-Gen., 246.
-
-
- Partington, Major, 106.
-
- Pas, 25.
-
- Peronne, 148, 182.
- Enemy defence of, 183.
- Taken, 191.
-
- Poulainville, 129.
-
- Prince Max of Baden, 280.
-
- Prisoners, treatment of, 210.
- Excuses for surrender, 213.
- Cages, 209.
- "Pigeons" employed to gain information, 211.
-
- Proyart, 139.
-
- Prussian Guards hold Mont St. Quentin, 183.
-
-
- Quennemont Farm, 251, 263.
-
-
- Ramicourt, 277.
-
- Ramsay-Fairfax, Lieut.-Col., 106.
-
- Rawlinson, Gen. Lord, 35-44, 52, 72, 73, 96, 132, 166, 181,
- 192, 221, 235, 236, 241, 250, 274, 278.
-
- Read, Maj.-Gen. G. W., 243, 278, 279.
-
- Reorganization of Brigades, 272-3.
-
- Repatriation of Australian Forces, 282.
-
- Results, analysis of, 284 _et seq._
-
- Rheims, 259.
-
- Robertson, Maj. P. R., 142.
-
- Roisel, 204.
-
- Rosenthal, Brig.-Gen., 24, 43, 67, 169, 192, 278.
-
- Rosieres, 129.
-
- Roye, 133, 141, 198.
-
-
- Sailly-Laurette, 29.
-
- Sailly-le-Sec, 31.
-
- Second Australian Division, 5.
-
- "Set-piece" operations, 226.
-
- "Siegfried Line," 214.
-
- Skene, Brig.-Gen. P. G. M., 9.
-
- Smoke shells, 169.
-
- Smyth, Sir N. M., V.C., 9.
-
- Soissons, German withdrawal, 78.
-
- Somme Canal, 174.
- Line of, 148.
- Enemy retreat, 182.
-
- Somme, North, 34.
- Plan for crossing, 178.
- South, 34.
-
- St. Christ, 198.
-
- St. Denis, 190.
-
- St. Gratien, 33.
-
- St. Mihiel Salient attack, Sept. 11th, 206.
-
- St. Quentin Canal, 216, 232.
-
-
- Tanks, 14, 44, 48, 49, 91, 104, 276.
- Improved type, 48.
- Dummy, 223.
- "Star," 91.
-
- Teamwork, 150.
-
- Third Australian Division, 6.
-
- Third British Army attack Aug. 21st, 154, 198, 221.
-
- Time-table for successive Army engagements impossible, 153.
-
- Tivoli Wood, 170.
-
- Toulorge, Gen., 42.
-
- Treux Wood, 29.
-
- Tunnellers, 12.
-
-
- Underground shelters, galleries and dug-outs, German, 249.
-
-
- Vaire Wood, 39, 56.
-
- Vaux, 49.
-
- Vauxvillers, 133, 135.
-
- Verdun, 259.
-
- Vermandovillers, 169.
-
- Villers-Bretonneux, 33, 36, 37, 64, 67, 78.
-
- Visitors to Corps, 208.
- Lord Milner, 209.
- Mr. Winston Churchill, 209.
-
-
- Wackett, Capt., Australian Flying Corps, 60.
-
- Walker, Maj.-Gen. Sir H. B., 9.
-
- Warneton, early 1918, 18.
-
- Whippet tanks, 276.
-
- Wiancourt, 277.
-
- Wilson, Sir Henry, 132.
-
- Wisdom, Brig.-Gen., 143.
-
-
- Ypres, 260.
-
-
- Zero hour, Aug. 8th, 120.
- Hamel, 56.
- Hargicourt, 226.
- Hindenburg Line, 259.
-
- _Printed at The Chapel River Press, Kingston, Surrey._
-
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's note:
-
-Obvious errors of punctuation and diacritical markings were corrected.
-
-Inconsistent hyphenation was made consistent.
-
-P. 123: No correction made to "Sent at 2.5 p.m."
-
-
-
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