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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The British Campaign in France and
-Flanders--January to July 1918, by Arthur Conan Doyle
-
-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
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The British Campaign in France and Flanders--January to July 1918
-
-Author: Arthur Conan Doyle
-
-Release Date: April 09, 2021 [eBook #65046]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Al Haines
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BRITISH CAMPAIGN IN FRANCE AND
-FLANDERS--JANUARY TO JULY 1918 ***
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: THE BRITISH FRONT IN FRANCE AND FLANDERS]
-
-
-
- THE BRITISH CAMPAIGN
-
- IN FRANCE AND FLANDERS
-
- JANUARY TO JULY
-
- 1918
-
-
-
- BY
-
- ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE
-
- AUTHOR OF
- 'THE GREAT BOER WAR,' ETC.
-
-
-
- HODDER AND STOUGHTON
- LONDON NEW YORK TORONTO
- MCMXIX
-
-
-
-
- SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE'S
- HISTORY OF THE WAR
-
- Uniform with this Volume.
-
- THE BRITISH CAMPAIGN IN FRANCE
- AND FLANDERS
-
-
- VOL. I--1914
-
- THE BREAKING OF THE PEACE.
- THE OPENING OF THE WAR.
- THE BATTLE OF MONS.
- THE BATTLE OF LE CATEAU.
- THE BATTLE OF THE MARNE.
- THE BATTLE OF THE AISNE.
- THE LA BASSÉE-ARMENTIÈRES OPERATIONS.
- THE FIRST BATTLE OF YPRES.
- A RETROSPECT AND GENERAL SUMMARY.
- THE WINTER LULL OF 1914.
-
-
- VOL II.--1915
-
- THE OPENING MONTHS OF 1915.
- NEUVE CHAPELLE AND HILL 60.
- THE SECOND BATTLE OF YPRES.
- THE BATTLE OF RICHEBOURG-FESTUBERT.
- THE TRENCHES OF HOOGE.
- THE BATTLE OF LOOS.
-
-
- VOL III.--1916
-
- JANUARY TO JULY 1916.
- THE BATTLE OF THE SOMME.
- THE GAINING OF THE THIEPVAL RIDGE.
- THE BATTLE OF THE SOMME.
- THE BATTLE OF THE ANCRE.
-
-
- VOL IV.--1917
-
- THE BATTLE OF ARRAS.
- THE BATTLE OF MESSINES.
- THE THIRD BATTLE OF YPRES.
- THE BATTLE OF CAMBRAI.
-
- With Maps, Plans, and Diagrams
-
- HODDER AND STOUGHTON
- LONDON, NEW YORK, AND TORONTO
-
-
-
-
-{v}
-
-PREFACE
-
-This fifth volume deals with one of the most tremendous episodes in
-history, when the vigour of the German attack and the desperate
-resistance of the British both on the Somme and in Flanders, held an
-awestruck world in suspense. A million men released from the Russian
-front, rolled across Europe and, swelling that great tide which was
-already banked up before the British breakwater, it washed over all
-the front line barriers and threatened at one time to sweep down to
-the sea. The account of how the British Army, upon which
-incomparably the greater pressure fell, rose to the occasion and
-first slowed and then held the terrific flood is one of the most
-wonderful of military epics. At the same time every credit must be
-given to the loyalty of the French commanders who, while guarding
-their own extended lines, endeavoured to spare all possible help to
-their hard-pressed Allies. This volume carries the story of the
-German attack to its close. The next and final one will describe the
-enormous counter-attack of the Allies leading up to their final
-victory.
-
-The Chronicler has been faced by many obstacles in endeavouring to
-preserve both accuracy and historical proportion while writing
-contemporary history. He would gratefully acknowledge that his {vi}
-critics in the press have shown a kindly indulgence, which arises, no
-doubt, from an appreciation of these difficulties. There has,
-however, been one conspicuous exception to which he would desire to
-call attention, since a large question of literary etiquette is
-involved. From the beginning a series of unflattering and anonymous
-articles have appeared in _The Times_ Literary Supplement, commenting
-adversely upon each volume in turn, and picking out the pettiest
-details for animadversion. Upon enquiry, these articles--in whole or
-part--are admitted to have been written by the Hon. J. W. Fortescue,
-who is himself the official historian of the War. On being
-remonstrated with, this gentleman could not be brought to see that it
-is not fitting that he should make anonymous attacks, however _bonâ
-fide_, upon a brother author who is working upon the same subject and
-is therefore in the involuntary position of being a humble rival.
-
-Having stated the facts they may be left to the judgment of the
-public.
-
- ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE.
-
- CROWBOROUGH,
- _May_ 1, 1919.
-
-
-
-
-
-{vii}
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-EVENTS UPON THE BRITISH FRONT UP TO MARCH 21, 1918
-
-The prospects of the Allies--Great dangers from the Russian
-collapse--State of the British line--Huge German preparations--Eve of
-the Great Offensive
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE SECOND BATTLE OF THE SOMME
-
-Attack on the Seventeenth and Sixth Corps
-
-Disposal of the Third Army--Attack upon the Third Division--Upon the
-Thirty-fourth Division--Upon the Fifty-ninth Division--Terrible
-losses--Loss of Henin Hill--Arrival of Thirty-first Division--Hard
-fighting of the Fortieth Division--The East Yorkshires at
-Ervillers--The 15th West Yorks at Moyenneville--Recapture of
-Ayette--Grand resistance of Third, Fifteenth, and Fourth Divisions
-before Arras--Final German check in the north
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-THE SECOND BATTLE OF THE SOMME
-
-Attack on the Fourth and Fifth Corps
-
-Attack on Sixth and Fifty-first Divisions--Engagement of the
-Twenty-fifth and Forty-first Divisions--Attack on Forty-seventh,
-Sixty-third, Second, and Nineteenth Divisions--The German
-torrent--Serious situation--Arrival of Sixty-second
-Division--Fighting before Albert--Gallant defence by Twelfth
-Division--Arrival of the New Zealanders, of the Australians, of the
-Thirty-fifth Division--Equilibrium
-
-{viii}
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-THE SECOND BATTLE OF THE SOMME
-
-Attack on the Fifth Army. March 21
-
-The Fifth Army front--The story of a Redoubt--Attack upon Congreve's
-Seventh Corps--Upon Watts' Nineteenth Corps--Upon Maxse's Eighteenth
-Corps--Upon Butler's Third Corps--Terrific pressure--Beginning of the
-Retreat--Losses of Guns
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-THE SECOND BATTLE OF THE SOMME
-
-Retreat of the Seventh and Nineteenth Corps
-
-Problems before General Gough--His masterful action--Arrival of
-Thirty-ninth, Twentieth, and Fiftieth Divisions--Retreat of Tudor's
-Ninth Scottish Division--Destruction of the South Africans--Defence
-of the Somme--Arrival of the Eighth Division--Desperate fighting--The
-Carey line--Death of General Feetham--"Immer fest daran"--Advance,
-Australia--Great achievement of General Watts
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE SECOND BATTLE OF THE SOMME
-
-The Retreat of the Eighteenth Corps
-
-Retreat of the Sixty-first Division--The Gloucesters at
-Beauvais--Fall of Ham--Retreat of the Thirtieth and Thirty-sixth
-Divisions--Great privations of the men--Fine feat at Le
-Quesnoy--Summary of the experience of Maxse's Corps
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE SECOND BATTLE OF THE SOMME
-
-The Retreat of the Third Corps
-
-Movement across the Crozat Canal--Fight of the 173rd Brigade--Forcing
-of the Canal Line--Arrival of the French--Fight of Frières
-Wood--Splendid work of the Cavalry--Loss of Noyon--Final
-equilibrium--General retrospect of the Battle
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-THE SOMME FRONT FROM APRIL 1 ONWARDS
-
-The last waves of the storm--The Twelfth Division at Albert--The
-Forty-seventh Division at Aveluy Wood--The Australians in the {ix}
-
-south--Capture of Villers-Bretonneux by the Germans--Recapture by
-Australians and Eighth Division--Fierce fighting--The first turn of
-the tide
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-THE BATTLE OF THE LYS
-
-April 9-12
-
-The Flanders front--Great German onslaught--Disaster of the
-Portuguese--Splendid stand at Givenchy of the Fifty-fifth
-Division--Hard fight of the Fortieth Division--Loss of the
-Lys--Desperate resistance of the Fiftieth Division--Thirty-fourth
-Division is drawn into the Battle--Attack in the north upon the
-Ninth, Nineteenth, and Twenty-fifth Divisions--British
-retreat--General survey of the situation
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-THE BATTLE OF THE LYS
-
-April 13 to May 8
-
-Desperate situation--Sir Douglas Haig's "Win or Die" message--Epic of
-the 4th Guards Brigade at Hazebrouck--Arrival of First Australian
-Division--Splendid services of Thirty-third Division--Loss of
-Armentières, Bailleul, and Neuve Eglise--The First Division at
-Givenchy--Fall of Kemmel--Battle of Ridge Wood--Great loss of
-ground--Equilibrium
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-THE BATTLES OF THE CHEMIN DES DAMES AND OF THE ARDRES
-
-May 27 to June 2
-
-The rest cure of the Aisne--Attack upon the Fiftieth Division--Upon
-the Twenty-first--Fifth Battery R.F.A.--Glorious Devons--Adventure of
-General Rees--Retreat across the Aisne--Over the Vesle--Arrival of
-Nineteenth Division--Desperate fighting--Success of 4th
-Shropshires--General Pellé's tribute--General prospect of the Allies
-midway through 1918
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
-
-
-{xi}
-
-MAPS AND PLANS
-
-British Battle Line, March 21
-
-Position at the Close of the Great Retreat, March 30
-
-Rough Sketch of the General Position of Troops at the Battle of
-Villers-Bretonneux, April 24-25
-
-Rough Sketch of Guards' Position, April 13
-
-Defence of Givenchy by the First Division, April 18
-
-Position of the Line in Flanders, April 9
-
-British Line on Chemin des Dames
-
-Map to illustrate the British Campaign in France and Flanders
-
-
-
-
-{1}
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-EVENTS UPON THE BRITISH FRONT UP TO MARCH 21, 1918
-
-The prospects of the Allies--Great dangers from the Russian
-collapse--State of the British line--Huge German preparations--Eve of
-the Great Offensive.
-
-[Sidenote: Events upon the British Front to March 21]
-
-The New Year of 1918, the fourth of the world war, opened with
-chequered prospects for the Allies. Upon all subsidiary fields of
-action the developments were good. In Palestine, General Allenby,
-the victor of Arras, had shown himself to be a fine soldier upon the
-larger scale, and had fought his way up the old highway of history
-which leads from Egypt by Gaza to Jerusalem. Homely crusaders in
-tattered khaki stood where once Godfrey de Bouillon and his chivalry
-had worshipped before the shrine of religion, and the cavalry of
-Australia, the yeomen of the Shires, and the infantry of London won
-once more the ground which Richard of the Lion Heart with his knights
-and bowmen had contested in the long ago. Surely in all the strange
-permutations and combinations of the world war there could be none
-more striking than that! By April the British force covered all the
-northern approaches to the city and extended its right wing to the
-Jordan, where our Arab allies in the land of Moab were pushing {2}
-the Turks back along the line of the Damascus railway.
-
-On another road of world conquest, that from British Bagdad to
-Nineveh, the British and Indian columns were also both active and
-victorious. The knightly Maude had perished from cholera contracted
-by his own courtesy in drinking a proffered cup of village water.
-His successor, General Marshall, formerly his Chief of Staff, and as
-such conversant with his aims and his methods, carried on both one
-and the other, moving his men north until the spectator who compared
-their numbers with the immensity of the spaces around them, was
-appalled at the apparent loneliness of their position. By May his
-raiding cavalry were not far from the Turkish supply depot of Mosul,
-where the barren mounds, extending over leagues of desert, proclaim
-both the greatness and the ruin of Nineveh. Salonica continued in
-its usual condition of uneasy and malarial somnolence, but gratifying
-reports came of the belated rally of the Greeks, who, acting with the
-French, won a smart little victory against their Bulgarian enemies
-upon May 31. German East Africa had at last been cleared of German
-forces, but General Lettow Vorbeck, to whom we cannot deny remarkable
-fortitude and leadership, wandered with his piebald commands in the
-depths of the forests and marshes of Mozambique, still evading his
-inevitable capture, and master only of the ground on which he camped.
-
-But these distant campaigns had only a remote and indirect effect
-upon the war in Europe. Here the late winter and the early spring of
-1918 saw the balance tilted against the British and their comrades in
-the West, through causes over which they had no {3} control. Russia
-had completely broken down. In her case, with a rapidity which made
-it difficult to realise the situation, autocracy had changed to
-liberty, liberty to license, and license to chaos. The absolute
-dissolution of all fighting power was partly due to national folly
-and partly to deliberate treachery. The leaders of the extreme party
-had arrived from Switzerland with a free pass granted by the German
-authorities. Instantly they set to work to subvert the comparatively
-sane government with which the name of Kerensky is chiefly
-associated. Lenin and his associates seized the reins of power and
-guided their mad team up to and over the precipice. It was clear to
-any observer that such a frenzy of insanity must have its reaction,
-and great pity was felt for those more honourable Russians who were
-compelled to look on at the degradation of their country. The new
-super-democracy began its career by repudiating its debts of honour,
-and by betraying all the other democracies of the world. Such
-conditions could not last; but meanwhile the Germans overran the
-country at their pleasure, practically annexed both Finland and the
-Ukraine, and helped themselves to harvests, warships, or anything
-else they might desire. Chivalrous little Roumania, with the foe in
-front and the traitor in the rear, was compelled to make such hard
-terms as she might--surely one of the most bitter tragedies of
-history.
-
-As a result of this huge defection the whole force of Germany and of
-Austria, together with a good deal of captured Russian artillery, was
-available for the Western war, and from November to March an endless
-succession of troop trains were bearing the divisions which had
-extended from the Baltic to {4} the southern frontiers of Russia, in
-order to thicken the formidable array already marshalled across
-France. A great Austrian army assembled on the line of the Piave,
-where the Italians had formed their new front, while a second force
-in the mountains upon their flank seemed to hang suspended like an
-avalanche, ready at any instant to crash down into the valleys. In
-spite of this imminent danger the situation was so threatening in
-France that half of the British and French force in Italy had to be
-recalled, while the gallant Italians actually sent some divisions of
-their own best troops to aid the Allies in the more vital theatre of
-war. It was not only the vast concentration of infantry which formed
-the immediate menace, but it was the addition to the German gun
-power, in which the Austrians greatly assisted. The enemy was acting
-also upon internal lines and with excellent radiating communications,
-so that by assembling large bodies in certain central points he could
-hurl them against any portion of a long arc of the Allied line and
-depend upon several days of battle before the reinforcements could
-intervene. This, as it proved, was a very great advantage. He had
-also used his Russian experiences to initiate and improve a new form
-of attack by which he was confident, with a confidence which proved
-to be well justified, that he could certainly make a deep impression
-upon the Allied line, and turn the war, for a time, at least, into
-one of open movement. Such was the very favourable position of the
-German army at the opening of the tremendous campaign of 1918, which
-was enhanced by the fact that they had reduced to slavery the
-population in their rear, and had thus gained a very {5} solid
-present advantage at the cost of a universal hatred and execration of
-which no man now living will see the end. In the hope of being a
-nation of victors they took steps which will brand them as a nation
-of monsters so long as history is read--a nation with modern minds
-but with worse than mediaeval souls.
-
-The Allies were not without their consolations, though they lay
-rather in the future than in the present. Their veteran armies,
-though somewhat outnumbered, had done so well in the offensive of the
-year before that they had good reason to believe that, acting upon
-the defensive, they would either hold the German onslaught, or at
-worst inflict such losses that they would gradually bring them to an
-equilibrium. Neither France nor Britain had called upon its last
-reserves to the same extent as Germany, and behind both was the
-mighty power of America. Up to date the American forces landed in
-France had not been sufficiently trained or numerous to influence the
-course of events, but from the spring onwards there was a steady
-flow, and hardly a day elapsed without one or more transports laden
-with troops arriving in the British or French ports. The men were of
-splendid spirit and physique, and the mere sight of them revived the
-weary souls of those who had fought the hard fight so long. It was
-the knowledge of these reinforcements and the constant drafts from
-Britain which stiffened men's courage and steeled their breasts in
-the desperate days to come.
-
-Turning our eyes now from the general prospect and concentrating our
-attention upon the dispositions of the British army, it may be said
-that the ranks had been filled once more after the very {6} expensive
-fighting of the autumn. Divisions were, however, weaker than before
-for, following the German model, one battalion had been taken out of
-each brigade, so that in future a division consisted of nine ordinary
-units and one pioneer. Of the six divisions lent to Italy three had
-been brought back in view of the German menace. The line still ran
-from Houthulst Forest and Passchendaele in the north along the
-familiar curve by La Bassée and Lens to the east of Vimy Ridge, and
-thence along the first Hindenburg Line, with the one six-mile breach
-in front of Cambrai. The Third Army, under Sir Julian Byng, covered
-the ground between Arras and Cambrai, whilst the Fifth, under Sir
-Hubert Gough, carried it south from that point. His junction with
-the French was an indeterminate one and was twice moved to the south,
-the second move on February 15 carrying his right wing across the
-Oise as far south as Barisis, eight miles beyond La Fère. There is
-no doubt that in lengthening his line to this extent Sir Douglas Haig
-took on more ground than his troops could be reasonably expected to
-hold, and that General Gough was given a hard task. It was done, as
-was shown in a subsequent debate, against the better judgment of the
-British at the urgent behest of M. Clemenceau. We must remember,
-however, that our Allies had frequently taken risks in order to help
-us, and that it was for us to reciprocate even though it might
-occasionally, as in this instance, lead to trouble. There was a
-tendency at the time for soldiers and politicians to put the blame
-upon each other, whereas all were equally the victims of the real
-cause, which was the crushing burden placed upon us by the defection
-of our Ally. It is {7} easy to be wise after the event, but it was
-impossible to tell with any certainty where the impending blow might
-fall, and M. Clemenceau was very naturally anxious about the French
-line in Champagne, which was strengthened by this extension of the
-British flank. There is in truth no need for mutual reproach, as
-every one acted for the best under the almost intolerable
-circumstances imposed by the new conditions.
-
-Before referring in detail to the tremendous storm which was visibly
-banking up in the East, and which broke upon March 21 along the
-British lines from the Scarpe to the Oise, some allusion should be
-made to one or two sharp German attacks in the extreme north, by
-which the enemy endeavoured to draw the attention of the Allies away
-from the district in which their first real attack was planned. In
-the first of these, delivered upon March 8 to the south of Houthulst
-Forest, in the area formerly occupied by the Second Army, the German
-stormers, attacking on a mile of front, gained a footing in the
-advanced trenches over a space of 500 yards, but were driven out
-again and past their own front line by a spirited counter-attack.
-The losses of the Thirty-sixth Reserve Division, who carried out the
-operation, were considerable, and their gains were nil. The second
-attack was made upon the same evening in the neighbourhood of
-Polderhoek Château, to the south of the Ypres front. Here again some
-trench elements were secured in the first rush, but were entirely
-regained by the 10th K.R.R. and 13th Fusiliers of the 111th Brigade,
-who restored the line. Neither attempt was serious, but they were
-operations on a considerably larger scale than any others during the
-winter. These attacks were delivered upon the front {8} of Jacob's
-Second Corps, which belonged to Rawlinson's Fourth Army, but within a
-few days Plumer had returned from Italy, and he, with the Second
-Army, took over this sector once again.
-
-We must now turn to the long stretch from Monchy in the north to La
-Fère in the south, a front of fifty miles, upon which the great
-German blow was about to fall. It is said that after a tour of the
-whole line General Ludendorff determined upon this as being the most
-favourable region for a grand attack. Granting that for general
-motives of policy the assault should be on the British rather than on
-the French army, it is clear that he could have come to no other
-decision since Flanders at that time of year might have been a
-morass, and the rest of the line was to a large extent upon
-commanding ground. On the other hand the desolate country which had
-been already occupied and abandoned by the Germans was in front of
-their new advance, and it was likely that this would act as a
-shock-absorber and take the momentum off a victorious advance before
-it could reach any point of vital strategic importance. The German
-Staff seems, however, to have placed great confidence upon their
-secrecy, their numbers, and their new methods. Their ambitious plan
-was to break right through to Amiens, to seize the line of the Somme
-so as to divide the Allied armies, and then to throw their weight to
-right or to left as might seem best, the one movement threatening the
-Channel ports and the other Paris. Their actual success, though it
-was considerable, fell so far short of their real intentions that
-disappointment rather than triumph must have been their prevailing
-emotion. Looking first upon their side of the line one can {9}
-appreciate in a general way the efficient methods which they took to
-ensure success. The troops had been exercised in the back areas
-during the whole winter in the new arts of attack, which will be more
-fully indicated when the battle opens. They were then assembled at
-various railway junctions, such as Valenciennes, Maubeuge, Wassigny,
-and Vervins, sufficiently far from the front to escape direct
-observation. Then for seven nights in successive marches the troops
-were brought forward, finally reaching the front lines on the night
-before the attack, while the guns, the mine-throwers, and the
-munition dumps had already been prepared. The whole affair was upon
-a gigantic scale, for sixty divisions, or half a million of infantry,
-were thrown into the battle upon the first day, with half as many in
-immediate reserve. Secrecy was preserved by every possible
-precaution, though the British aeroplanes, casting down their flare
-lights upon crowded roads, gave few hopes that it could be sustained.
-Three of the most famous generals in the German service were in
-immediate charge of the operations. General Otto von Below, the
-victor of the Italian disaster, with the Seventeenth Army in the
-north; General von Marwitz, who had distinguished himself at Cambrai,
-with the Second Army in the centre; and General von Hutier, the
-conqueror of Riga and the inventor of the new tactics, with the
-Eighteenth Army in the south. It was to the last, which was under
-the nominal command of the Crown Prince, that the chief attack was
-allotted. Forty divisions, with large reserves, were placed under
-his command for an assault upon General Gough's lines between Cambrai
-and the Oise, while twenty divisions, with corresponding reserves,
-{10} were thrown against the British Third Army, especially that
-section of it opposite Croisilles and Bullecourt. Never in the
-history of the world had a more formidable force been concentrated
-upon a fixed and limited objective. The greatest possible
-expectations were founded upon the battle, which had already been
-named the "Kaiser Schlacht," while the day chosen had been called
-Michael's day, or the day of Germany's revenge.
-
-We shall now turn from the German preparations and examine that
-British position upon which the attack was about to fall. It was
-divided into two sections, a point north of Gauche Wood upon the
-Cambrai front being roughly the point of division between the Third
-and the Fifth Armies. These armies were of equal strength, each
-having twelve divisions of infantry in the line or in immediate
-support. These divisions with their respective positions and varying
-experiences will presently be enumerated. For the moment it may be
-stated that the Third Army consisted of four corps, the Seventeenth
-(Fergusson) in the Arras-Monchy sector, the Sixth (Haldane) carrying
-the line past Bullecourt, the Fourth (Harper) continuing it to near
-the Cambrai district, and the Fifth (Fanshawe) covering that
-important point where the gap in the Hindenburg Line seemed to make
-an attack particularly likely. The Fifth Army in turn consisted of
-the Seventh Corps (Congreve) in the southern part of the Cambrai
-district, the Nineteenth Corps (Watts) from south of Ronssoy to
-Maissemy, the Eighteenth Corps (Maxse) in front of St. Quentin, and
-the Third Corps (Butler) covering the great frontage of 30,000 yards
-from Urvillers, across the Oise, down to Barisis, eight miles {11}
-south of La Fère. This long curve of fifty miles was strongly
-fortified throughout its whole length, but the position was stronger
-in the north where the British had been in their lines for a year or
-more. In the southern sector the new ground which had been taken
-over was by no means so strongly organised as its defenders desired,
-either in the portion formerly held by the British or in the French
-sector, where only two lines existed. In the north a system of
-successive lines had been adopted, called respectively the forward
-line, the corps line, and the army line. In the south there was less
-depth to the defence, but every possible effort was made to improve
-it, the work proceeding night and day, and the soldiers being tied to
-it to an extent which gave little time for military exercises. In
-this work the cavalry and special entrenching battalions gave
-valuable help. As a result, by the third week of March the south was
-as well prepared as the number of men available would allow. There
-were not enough to man continuous lines of trenches over so great a
-front. A system was adopted, therefore, by which there was an
-advanced zone, consisting of a thin line of infantry supported by
-numerous small redoubts, each of which contained several machine-guns
-and a company of infantry. These were to take off the edge of the
-assault, and it was hoped, as half a mile separated the two armies,
-and the fields of fire were good, that before reaching the position
-at all the enemy would suffer severely. A thousand yards behind the
-advance zone was the true battle zone, where the main body of the
-infantry lay behind barbed wire with the support of isolated forts.
-Beyond these again was a third zone, 2000 yards farther to the rear,
-but this had not yet been {12} completed. Behind the whole position
-in the southern part of the line was the great bend of the River
-Somme, which was also being organised as a reserve line, but was very
-incomplete. It should be emphasised that these deficiencies were in
-no way due to the British command, which was so assiduous in its
-preparations that it rather raised the ridicule of certain
-unimaginative people upon the spot who cannot see a danger until it
-actually materialises in front of them. The fact that General Gough
-had been a cavalry general, and that his actions in the war had been
-aggressive rather than defensive, gave a false impression at the time
-in certain quarters. It is certain that nothing was neglected in the
-way of defence which skill could devise or industry carry out.
-
-The general situation then upon the night of March 20, when the
-German preparations were complete, was that along the whole front the
-Germans were crouching for their spring, and that their first line
-consisted of sixty divisions, or more than half a million infantry,
-against the twenty-four divisions, or about 200,000 infantry, who
-awaited them. The odds were greatly increased by the fact that the
-Germans held some thirty divisions in immediate reserve, whereas the
-British reserves, especially in the south of the line, were few and
-distant. The German concentration of gun power was more than twice
-that of the British. The published account of a German officer
-claims it as fourfold, but this is probably an over-statement. In
-describing the results of this great attack we shall deal first with
-the sequence of events in the sector of the Third Army in the north,
-and then turn to those connected with the Fifth Army in the south.
-
-
-
-
-{13}
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE SECOND BATTLE OF THE SOMME
-
-Attack upon the Seventeenth and Sixth Corps
-
-Disposal of the Third Army--Attack upon the Third Division--Upon the
-Thirty-fourth Division--Upon the Fifty-ninth Division--Terrible
-losses--Loss of Henin Hill--Arrival of Thirty-first Division--Hard
-fighting of the Fortieth Division--The East Yorkshires at
-Ervillers--The 15th West Yorks at Moyenneville--Recapture of
-Ayette--Grand resistance of Third, Fifteenth, and Fourth Divisions
-before Arras--Final German check in the north.
-
-[Sidenote: Third Army. March 21.]
-
-Taking the account of this great action upon March 21 from the north,
-we shall begin with Sir Julian Byng's Third Army. The left of this
-force joined the Thirteenth Corps, which formed the flank of the
-First Army, to the north of Fampoux, while the extreme right touched
-the left of the Seventh Corps, the northern unit of the Fifth Army to
-the east of Metz-en-Couture opposite to Cambrai.
-
-The Seventeenth Corps consisted of the Fifteenth and Fourth Divisions
-with the Guards Division in reserve. They extended as far south as
-the Sensée River, and were not seriously engaged upon March 21,
-though exposed to heavy shelling. We may for the time leave them out
-of the narrative. It was immediately to the south of them, upon the
-Sixth Corps commanded by General Haldane, that the storm {14} burst
-in its full fury. Nothing can exaggerate the concentrated weight of
-the blow which fell upon this and the next portion of the line. The
-divisions from the north were the old fighting Third upon the Sensée
-section, the Thirty-fourth to the south of it, and the Fifty-ninth
-North Midland Territorials on the right. The Fortieth Division was
-in close support. These were the devoted units who upon that
-terrible day had to bear the heavy end of the load in the northern
-half of the line. Let us turn first to the arduous experiences of
-the Third Division.
-
-This veteran division, still commanded by General Deverell, had all
-three brigades in the line, the 76th upon the left, the 8th in the
-centre, and the 9th upon the right, the battalions in the advanced
-line being the 2nd Suffolks, 2nd Royal Scots, and 1st Northumberland
-Fusiliers. The front covered was 8000 yards from Croisilles to the
-Arras-Cambrai Road in the north, both inclusive. This front had been
-strengthened by every device which experience could suggest, and was
-organised, as already explained upon three lines, which may be called
-the front, support, and reserve lines. Its backing of artillery was
-formidable, its moral high, and it offered a solid barrier to any
-enemy, however numerous.
-
-[Sidenote: Sixth Corps. March 21.]
-
-The preliminary bombardment here as elsewhere broke out shortly after
-five in the morning, and contained a large proportion of gas-shells
-which searched the rear lines and battery positions as well as the
-front defences. So far as the 76th Brigade in the north was
-concerned no serious infantry attack followed, and save for some
-sporadic advances which were easily shot to pieces, there was no
-organised attempt upon their sector. The same applies, though {15}
-in a less degree, to the central unit, the 8th Brigade. Here there
-were continual blasts of heavy fire during the day which decimated
-but were unable to shake the Royal Scots in the front trenches.
-Several times the enemy infantry made what was rather a menace than
-an attack, but on each occasion it dissolved into nothing. It is
-clear that nothing serious was intended and that these demonstrations
-were to hold the troops to their ground. On the right, however, in
-front of the 9th Brigade, the attempts were far more deadly and
-earnest. The first of these lasted from 7.30 till 10, and gained a
-footing in the front trenches, but failed before a determined attack
-by bombing parties of the Northumberland Fusiliers. In the afternoon
-the intermittent shelling became very severe, the trench mortar fire
-upon the front lines being so heavy as to knock them to pieces and
-stop all lateral communication. It was a nerve-shattering ordeal to
-the garrisons of these posts, crouching hour after hour in the midst
-of these terrible explosions. The bravest man on earth may find his
-spirit wilt under such conditions. Finally, about half-past three,
-there came a forward surge of grey infantry from Fontaine Wood which
-reached and occupied the front line, or the irregular hummocks where
-the front line had been. Every effort to extend this advantage was
-crushed almost before it could get started. There was complete
-stability here, but it was known that things were not altogether well
-with the Thirty-fourth Division upon the right, and masses of German
-infantry were seen moving down the Cherisy valley in that direction,
-a fair mark for the heavy guns. The 4th Royal Fusiliers were brought
-forward to reinforce their old comrades of {16} Northumberland, and
-the line on the right was thrown back to get touch with the 11th
-Suffolks of the 101st Brigade. In this support position they were
-solidly linked with the units to right and left, so that the close of
-the day found the whole of this portion of the front absolutely
-intact, save for the loss of the obliterated front line.
-
-We shall now turn to the fortunes of the next unit upon the right,
-the Thirty-fourth Division, a composite hard fighting body composed
-of Northumbrians, Scots, and East Anglian troops. General Nicholson,
-commanding this division, had learned from a prisoner that the coming
-German attack would begin at Bullecourt and then turn to the north.
-Such incidents make one doubtful of the wisdom of that policy of
-"teaching men to take an intelligent interest in the operations"
-which is so often advocated. In this case flank defences were
-arranged and all due preparation was made.
-
-The blow fell even as had been foretold, but the portion of the line
-which was crushed in was on the front of the Fifty-ninth Division, to
-the right of the Thirty-fourth. The result was, however, that after
-the capture of Bullecourt, which occurred about ten, the German
-stormers began to work round the right rear of the 102nd Brigade, the
-nearest unit of the Thirty-fourth Division. The flanking line of
-defence was manned by the 22nd Northumberland Fusiliers and
-strengthened by many Lewis guns, so that it took heavy toll from the
-masses of German infantry who were moving across. This flanking line
-was thickened by the 25th Northumberland Fusiliers and by the 1st
-East Lancashires. The heavy blow had forced back the Fifty-ninth
-Division, and by one {17} o'clock Ecoust also was in the hands of the
-enemy, bringing them considerably to the rear of the Thirty-fourth.
-Up to 4.30 in the afternoon the Germans were attacking the 102nd
-Brigade from the flank, but up to that hour they had not succeeded in
-shifting the solid Tynesiders who held the improvised line.
-Nevertheless the heavy and constant shelling reduced the strength of
-the defenders, who in many cases were quite cut off, and had to hold
-their positions with bombs and rifles as best they could. Farther
-south the Germans, passing Noreuil in their western advance, had
-turned in considerable numbers to the north, well to the rear of the
-flanking line, so that the British in reserve found themselves facing
-south-west, but fought on none the less, the 22nd, 23rd, and 25th
-Northumberland Fusiliers in a mixed line holding firmly to their
-ground at the imminent risk of being cut off, while the 160th Brigade
-R.F.A. were firing at ranges of 800 yards. As the German flood
-rolled on it engulfed these guns, but the gunners withdrew the blocks
-and retired slowly, fighting in line with the infantry. This
-movement in turn affected the British garrisons of the more forward
-trenches, who in any case were very severely pressed by the German
-bombers, so that there was a general retirement towards the north in
-the direction of Croisilles. Outside this village the remains of the
-101st and 102nd Brigades formed a line, and with the aid of the 10th
-Lincolns and 9th Northumberland Fusiliers of the 103rd Brigade held
-the enemy off from occupying it. The Fortieth Division was, as will
-be shown, coming up to fill the gap, and thus, although the
-Thirty-fourth had been curled backwards as if a huge steel plough had
-driven a furrow to the south {18} of them, there was still no
-absolute fracture of the line. Towards evening patrols of the enemy
-had succeeded in filtering through into the village of Croisilles,
-but General Haldane had already seen that his corps front needed
-reorganisation in view of what had occurred to the south. Orders
-were given, therefore, to the 15th Royal Scots, who were still
-holding on near Croisilles, to abandon the village and take up new
-positions to the west of it. With the help of the 119th Brigade of
-the Fortieth Division these changes were made, and a line built up in
-front of Henin Hill for the next day's battle. The general result,
-therefore, of the day's fighting was, so far as the Thirty-fourth
-Division was concerned, that the left flank was still in touch with
-the Third Division in the northern support line, but that the right
-and centre had to hinge back upon it on account of the break through
-to the south of them, and had been compelled to uncover Croisilles
-and abandon it to the enemy. The casualties had been high,
-especially in the 102nd Brigade upon the defensive flank. Of these,
-about 1200 out of a total trench strength of 1800 were lost, some
-being cut off but the greater number injured by the bombardment.
-Three companies of the 25th Northumberland Fusiliers were engulfed in
-the German tide and submerged, as were the field-guns already
-mentioned, which were fought by their crews until the very last
-instant. The 11th Suffolks upon the left flank of the 101st Brigade
-held absolutely fast all day, and by their fire gave great help to
-the Third Division to their north.
-
-The next unit upon the line was the Fifty-ninth North Midland
-Division (Romer) which had a front {19} of over 5000 yards. They
-covered the important villages of Bullecourt, Ecoust, and Noreuil,
-the former being in the very front line. The 178th Brigade of
-Sherwood foresters were upon the right and the 176th of Staffords
-upon the left, with the 177th of Lincolns and Leicesters in reserve.
-In the southern section of this position was the long shallow slope
-of the Noreuil valley, the nearer half of which came within the
-Fifty-ninth area, while the farther was held by the Sixth Division.
-It was speedily apparent by the intensity of the bombardment and by
-the rumoured concentration of the infantry that this was the centre
-of danger. About ten o'clock a demonstration was made against the
-2/6 Sherwood Foresters upon the left, but the real attack came later
-when on the right centre a heavy mass of the enemy surged through the
-outpost line and established itself within the support line. At
-about the same hour the German infantry struck in great force up the
-channel of the Noreuil valley, and having pushed their way as far as
-the western edge of Noreuil turned to the north-west, working along a
-hollow road between Noreuil and Longatte. Two companies of the 2/5
-Sherwoods, together with the 470th Field Company R.E., were caught
-between the pincers of this double German attack, and were entirely
-destroyed on the Noreuil-Ecoust Road, only one officer and six
-sappers making their way safe to Vraucourt. The 2/5 Lincolns of the
-supporting brigade, moving up to the support of their comrades, were
-themselves involved in the tragedy and three companies were
-practically annihilated. This rapid German advance, with the heavy
-British losses, had all taken place by 11 A.M., and created the
-situation which {20} reacted so unfavourably upon the Thirty-fourth
-in the north. The Germans having got so far forward in the south
-were able to assail the flank of the 176th Brigade in the north,
-which threw out a defensive line as far as Ecoust and defended itself
-strongly. Their position, however, was an almost impossible one, and
-when later in the day the enemy took Ecoust and swung round to their
-rear these battalions, already much reduced, were overwhelmed by the
-attack, the survivors joining up with the Thirty-fourth Division in
-their retreat. The machine-guns, so long as they were in action,
-caused heavy casualties to the enemy, but the latter were swarming on
-all sides, and eventually the guns had either to withdraw or were
-captured.
-
-With the two front brigades destroyed and the whole position
-occupied, the Germans may well have thought that a long advance was
-within their power, but in this they were soon undeceived. The
-support brigade, the 177th, still barred their way, and it had been
-strengthened by Headquarters staffs, bands, transport men and others,
-and very especially by the pioneer battalion, the 6/7 Scots
-Fusiliers. These men occupied the third defence line, and from the
-Hog's Back on which it was sited, they defied every effort of the
-Germans to get forward from Ecoust. This position was well covered
-by artillery and supported by machine-guns. So strong was the
-defence that the enemy were beaten back three times, and on the last
-occasion, late in the afternoon, fairly took to their heels. Shortly
-afterwards the 120th Brigade from the Fortieth Division came into
-support, and the situation was saved for the day. How terrific had
-been the strain upon the Fifty-ninth {21} Division may be reckoned
-from the fact that their losses were close upon 5000 out of a
-ten-battalion unit. It is true that they had been driven by vastly
-superior numbers out of their two front lines with the attendant
-villages, but evening found them still defiant, and, for the time,
-victorious, with their right still linked up with the Sixth Division
-and their left with the Thirty-fourth. There could not have been a
-finer recovery under more arduous circumstances. It was the last of
-the Fifty-ninth Division, however, for many a day to come, for the
-Fortieth (Ponsonby) taking charge in this sector, gathered to itself
-the fifteen field-guns still left of the artillery and the only
-remaining brigade. It was as well, for they would need every gun and
-every rifle in the dark days to come. Four German divisions, the
-111th, 221st, 6th Bavarian, and 2nd Guards Reserve, had been engaged
-in the attack. Even admitting that some of these divisions were
-concerned also with the attack upon the Thirty-fourth Division, the
-latter had the 234th and some smaller units in front of it, so that
-it is within the mark to say that five German had attacked two
-British divisions, and by the aid of a vastly superior light and
-heavy artillery equipment had pushed them back to their reserve line,
-but had failed to break them. It was not a fight of which either
-nation need be ashamed.
-
-This completes a superficial view of the experiences of the Sixth
-Corps upon March 21. In order to get the full picture one should
-understand that the Sixth Division upon the right had also been
-driven from their sector, including several important villages. For
-the sake of continuity of narrative it will be best {22} to merely
-indicate this fact for the moment, and to continue to follow the
-fortunes of Haldane's Corps during the fateful days which followed,
-casting a glance also to the north where the Seventeenth Corps was
-gradually involved in the fight. We shall bear in mind, then, the
-long slanting front from the old positions on the left to Henin Hill
-and the Hog's Back upon the right, and we shall return to the Third
-Division at the northern end of the line.
-
-[Sidenote: Sixth Corps. March 22.]
-
-The night had been quiet along the whole corps front, which seemed to
-imply some exhaustion of the attack. In the morning this lull still
-continued in the region of the Third Division, which had up to now
-been just outside the track of the storm. During the morning and
-afternoon of March 22 no serious attack was made upon this point, but
-in the evening the enemy, having made a lodgment upon Henin Hill in
-the south-west, was able to make a powerful onslaught from the flank
-which met with very little success. Its first onrush pushed back the
-20th K.R.R., pioneer battalion of the division, in the trench called
-Hind Avenue, but the ground was regained by the 13th King's
-Liverpool, while the 4th Royal Fusiliers loosened the German grip of
-another small corner of trench. Up to nightfall the attempts
-continued, alternating with bombardments, but no progress was made,
-the 9th Brigade beating down every new advance.
-
-About ten o'clock at night orders reached the division that as the
-Seventeenth Corps were falling back for strategic reasons to the west
-of Monchy on the north, while the Thirty-fourth were also retreating
-upon the south, the Third Division must retire in conformity with
-them. It was no easy task under {23} a heavy shell fall and with an
-elated enemy in close contact. It was of importance that the
-telephoned orders should not be tapped, and it is suggestive of the
-world-wide services of the British soldier that they were sent over
-the wires in Arabic and Hindustani. Before morning the weary troops
-had been quickly withdrawn without confusion or mishap, and all were
-safely aligned in their new positions. Their defence of their
-battle-ground had been a splendid one, and though they had no huge
-mass attack to contend with, such as had dashed the line of the
-Fifty-ninth to pieces, still they had constant severe pressure and
-had withstood it completely.
-
-[Sidenote: Sixth Corps. March 21.]
-
-We left the Thirty-fourth Division upon the evening of March 21 still
-holding its reserve lines, with its three brigades in line, the 103rd
-on the right in touch with the Fortieth Division, and the 101st on
-the left where the Third Division joined it. A spirited little body,
-the J Special Company R.E., had joined the fighting line of the
-Thirty-fourth, and did good work with it. About 8 A.M. upon March
-22nd the enemy attacked the 102nd Brigade in the Croisilles sector,
-but two attempts had no result, though the general British line was
-now 500 yards west of the village. About ten o'clock a misfortune
-occurred, for a heavy column of the enemy, moving up through a dense
-mist, broke through the 101st Brigade and carried the greater part of
-Henin Hill, a most important strategic point. The possession of the
-hill was, however, contested most strongly by the Fortieth Division
-machine-gun company and by the 11th Suffolks, who by their valiant
-resistance prevented the enemy from gaining the whole crest, though
-they could not stop them from extending north and south, which {24}
-turned the line of the troops at the flanks and caused them to fall
-back. The troops to the south, the 15th and 16th Royal Scots,
-withdrew slowly to a new position west of Boyelles; the remains of
-the 102nd Brigade (it was but 500 strong at the beginning of the
-action) fell back upon the supports; while the valiant men of
-Suffolk, aided by Colonel Roberts' machine-guns, still fought stoutly
-upon the top of the incline, though entirely isolated upon the right
-flank. Finally the shattered remains of this staunch battalion
-withdrew towards the north-west, their slow retreat being covered by
-Lieutenant Woods, who met his death in the venture, and by a handful
-of machine-gunners.
-
-The chief evil result from the capture of Henin Hill was in the
-south, where it enabled the enemy by a joint frontal and flank attack
-at the junction of the Thirty-fourth and Fortieth Divisions, to push
-back the 9th Northumberland Fusiliers and 13th Yorkshire, and to get
-possession of the village of St. Leger. The 103rd Brigade moved back
-to Judas' Farm to the west of St. Leger, while the 119th Brigade
-prolonged the line to the south. A few machine-guns, with their feed
-blocks removed, were lost on Henin Hill, but otherwise no booty was
-obtained by the enemy. On the evening of the 22nd the infantry of
-the Thirty-first Division was rushed to the front, and the
-Thirty-fourth Division after their two days of desperate and
-honourable battle, were drawn back for a rest. During March 22 the
-103rd Brigade held on to St. Leger and St. Leger Wood, and so blocked
-the valley of the Sensée.
-
-To the south of the Thirty-fourth Division the Fifty-ninth Division
-had now been entirely replaced {25} by the Fortieth, save for the
-177th Brigade, the artillery, and machine-guns, some of which
-rendered splendid service during the day. There was little fighting
-in the morning of March 22, but about mid-day it was found that some
-hundreds of Germans with a profusion of machine-guns ("many bullets
-but few men" was the key-note of the new advanced tactics) were close
-to the divisional front in the region of St. Leger Wood. These were
-driven back, and fourteen of their guns taken, after some confused
-but vigorous fighting, in which Lieutenant Beal captured four guns
-himself before meeting a glorious death. Several times the enemy
-pushed strong patrols between the Sixth and Fortieth Divisions in the
-Vaux-Vraumont sector, but these were always expelled or digested.
-Shortly after mid-day, however, a very strong attack broke upon this
-line, pushing back the left of the Sixth Division and causing heavy
-losses to the Highlanders of the 120th Brigade upon the right of the
-Fortieth Division. The 14th Argyll and Sutherlands, with the 10/11
-Highland Light Infantry, were the units concerned, and they restored
-their line, which had been bent backwards. Finding, however, that
-they had lost touch with the Sixth Division to the south, they fell
-back until communication was restored. All day groups of German
-machine-gunners could be seen rushing forward, their crouching
-figures darting from cover to cover, while all day also the guns of
-the division observed and shattered the various nests which were
-constructed. Major Nesham distinguished himself in this work.
-Towards evening of the 22nd it was known that Vraumont to the south
-was in German possession, and orders were given to withdraw to the
-new general line which this change {26} and the capture of Henin Hill
-must entail. In the new position the Fortieth was still in close
-touch with the Sixth in the neighbourhood of Beugnâtre, the general
-line of the withdrawal being in a south-westerly direction. The
-losses had been heavy during the day, and included Colonel
-Eardley-Wilmot of the 12th Suffolks.
-
-The line of the Seventeenth and of the Sixth Corps, upon the morning
-of March 23, stretched from the south of Fampoux, west of Heninel and
-of St. Leger down to Mory. The Seventeenth Corps had not yet been
-seriously attacked. We shall continue with the record of the Sixth
-Corps, which now consisted of the Third Division in the north, part
-of the Guards Division, which had formed up to their right, the
-Thirty-first Division north of Mory, and the Fortieth Division to the
-west of Mory, with outposts in the village. We shall again trace the
-events from the northern flank. No serious movement occurred during
-the day in front of the Third Division or of the Guards, but there
-was a report of concentrations of infantry and other signs which
-indicated that the storms of the south would soon spread upwards in
-that direction. The Thirty-first Division, the well-tried Yorkshire
-unit, still retained two of its old brigades, but had an additional
-4th Brigade of Guards, cut from the old Guards Division by the new
-system of smaller units. General Bridgford had taken over command
-just before the battle and would be the first to admit that the
-splendid efficiency of his troops was due to General Wanless O'Gowan,
-who had been associated with them so long. They carried a high
-reputation into this great battle and an even higher one out of it.
-On the morning of March 23 the division faced {27} the Germans to the
-north of Mory Copse, having the 4th Guards Brigade upon the right and
-the 93rd Brigade upon the left. Two German divisions which had
-already been engaged, the 111th and the 2nd Guards Reserve, tried to
-break this fresh line and were each in turn broken themselves, as
-were the German batteries which pushed to the front and found
-themselves under the double fire of the Thirty-first and
-Thirty-fourth divisional artillery. Prisoners taken in this repulse
-gave the information that the Germans were already a full day behind
-their scheduled programme in this quarter. All attacks upon the
-Thirty-first met with the same fate during the day, but the enemy, as
-will be shown, had got a grip of Mory for a time, and pushed back the
-Fortieth in the south. Instead of a retirement the 92nd Brigade was
-brought from reserve and placed upon the exposed flank, while the
-Guards and Yorkshiremen still stood firm. In the evening the general
-line extended from north of Ervillers, where the 92nd Brigade was on
-watch, to the region of Hamelincourt, where the 93rd had their line.
-
-[Sidenote: Sixth Corps. March 23.]
-
-The heaviest work of the day had fallen upon the Fortieth Division,
-which had dug itself in west of Mory and of Mory Copse, with strong
-posts in the village itself. The enemy attacked in the morning of
-March 23 in great force and got complete possession of Mory. A
-splendid counter-attack, however, by the 13th East Surreys and 21st
-Middlesex at 2.30 P.M. regained the village. A deep cutting ran up
-to Mory from Vraucourt in the south-east, and along this the Germans
-sent their reinforcements, but the artillery of the British got the
-range of it and caused heavy losses. The village was held all day,
-under the local {28} direction of Colonel Warden of the Surreys, and
-was violently attacked by the enemy after dark, with the result that
-desultory hand-to-hand fighting went on among the houses during the
-whole night. At one time the British had won to the eastern edge,
-and then again they were forced back to the centre. When one
-remembers that these men had been fighting for three days, with
-little food and less sleep, it was indeed a fine performance. One
-small post of the 18th Welsh under Sergeant O'Sullivan was isolated
-for nearly two days and yet cut its way out, the gallant Irishman
-receiving a well-deserved honour. The morning of March 24 found
-little change along the line of the corps. If the Germans were
-already a day behind they showed no signs of making up their time.
-The 40th Machine-gun Battalion had done particularly fine work during
-the day. As an example of the gallantry which animated this unit it
-may be recorded that two of the guns having been rushed by the
-Germans near Ervillers, Lance-Corporal Cross volunteered to recover
-them single-handed, which ne did in such fashion that seven German
-prisoners appeared carrying them and marching at the point of his
-revolver, an exploit for which he was decorated.
-
-[Sidenote: Sixth Corps. March 24.]
-
-March 24 was marked by considerable activity in the Mory district,
-but no strong attack developed to the north of it. On the front of
-the Thirty-first and Fortieth Divisions, however, the battle raged
-with great intensity. The enemy had full possession of Mory by 9
-A.M., and was attacking the depleted battalions opposed to them along
-the whole divisional front so that they were compelled to fall slowly
-back, by the late afternoon held a line about half a {29} mile east
-of the Arras-Bapaume Road. The situation to the south had been such
-that the Fourth Corps had to arrange to withdraw to the west of
-Bapaume, so that in any case the Sixth Corps would have been
-compelled to throw back its right flank. The Sixth Division on the
-immediate right had been relieved by the Forty-first, but touch had
-been lost and a gap formed, the enemy pushing on to Favreuil. The
-Forty-second Division was on the march up, however, in order to
-relieve the Fortieth, and two brigades of this formed a defensive
-line covering Gomiecourt.
-
-These events had their reaction upon the Thirty-first Division to the
-north. When the enemy were seen in Mory at 9 A.M. they were upon the
-flank of the 4th Guards Brigade, which at the same time could see
-heavy columns massing to the east of St. Leger. The Guards at once
-dug in a new support switch line towards Ervillers and so kept touch
-with the Fortieth in its new position. The 93rd upon the left was in
-the meanwhile heavily attacked in front, the enemy coming on again
-and again with a powerful support from trench mortars. These attacks
-were all beaten back by the stout Yorkshire infantry, but nothing
-could prevent the enemy from working round in the south and occupying
-Behagnies and Sapignies. The British artillery was particularly
-masterful in this section, and no direct progress could be made by
-the Germans.
-
-[Sidenote: Sixth Corps. March 25.]
-
-In the late afternoon of the 24th the Germans made a new and violent
-attack upon the exhausted Fortieth Division and upon the 4th Guards
-Brigade on the right of the Thirty-first. In this attack the enemy
-succeeded in forcing their way into Ervillers, while the Fortieth
-reformed upon the west of it, so {30} as to cover Hamelincourt and
-Moyenneville. The situation in the morning of March 25 was
-exceedingly critical for the two advanced brigades of the
-Thirty-first, the Guards and the 93rd, who had not budged from their
-position. The enemy were now to the right rear, and if they advanced
-farther northwards there was imminent danger that the defenders would
-be cut off. As usual the best defence of a dashing commander is an
-attack, so the reserve brigade, the 92nd, was ordered to advance upon
-Ervillers, which had already been consolidated by the 91st German
-Infantry Regiment. The 10th East Yorkshires led the attack and
-seized the village once again, but the situation was still critical,
-for the enemy were round the south-west, so that they enveloped the
-whole right wing of the division, which was stretched to cracking
-point with every man in the line. Touch had for the moment been lost
-with the troops on the right. As the Germans poured past the right
-wing of the Thirty-first they presented a menace for the future, but
-a most tempting mark for the present, and ten machine-guns were kept
-in continuous action for three hours upon ideal targets ranging from
-300 to 1500 yards. The enemy losses upon this occasion were
-undoubtedly very heavy, but with fine persistency they kept upon
-their way, as one-idea'd and undeviating as a swarm of ants in a
-tropical forest. A thick trail of their dead marked their westward
-road.
-
-There had been comparative quiet at the north of the line so that the
-narrative may still concern itself with the situation which centred
-round the Thirty-first Division. The relief of the Fortieth upon the
-right was now long overdue, and the men had been worked to the bone,
-but the fact that Solly-Flood's {31} Forty-second Division had been
-deflected to the south withheld their succours. The Forty-first
-(Lawford), however, was gradually coming into action and thickening
-their shredded lines. Sapignies in the extreme south of the corps
-area had been taken by the Germans, but was recaptured in the morning
-of March 25 by parts of the 120th Brigade working with the 127th
-Brigade of the Forty-first Division. Strong German reinforcements
-came up, however, and the British line was pushed back in this
-quarter to the north-west until it crossed the high ground east of
-Gomiecourt. This southern sector was handed over before noon from
-the Sixth Corps to the Fourth, and in the evening the remains of the
-Fortieth Division were finally drawn out, having finished a splendid
-spell of service. The strain upon General Ponsonby, and upon his
-three Brigadiers, Crozier, Campbell, and Forbes, had been enormous,
-but under the most extreme pressure their units had always maintained
-the line. Part of the 126th Brigade of the Forty-second Division was
-now on the immediate right of the Thirty-first Division, the 10th
-Manchesters connecting up with the 11th East Yorks and doing great
-work in covering that flank.
-
-It has already been recorded how the 92nd Brigade, all of East
-Yorkshire, had beaten the 91st Prussian Regiment out of the village
-of Ervillers. A second regiment of the 2nd Guards Reserve Division,
-the 77th, essayed the adventure of turning the Yorkshiremen out, but
-met with a bloody repulse. "It was a sight to see," says one who was
-present. "We were only a battalion, probably 800 strong, while he
-had massed artillery and many thousands of infantry. They came over
-to us in columns, and they {32} kept coming. They swarmed towards
-us, but they made no progress, and we could not shoot fast enough.
-For three and a half hours they came, and for three and a half hours
-we knocked them out. They were falling like ripe corn before the
-reaper. As fast as they fell others took their places, but they
-could not move the East Yorks." The 2nd Guards Reserve were worn out
-by this experience, and it must be admitted that their service in the
-battle had been long and arduous. They were relieved by the 16th
-Bavarians and the 239th Division, so that there was no surcease in
-the endless pressure.
-
-At 1.15 the 93rd West Yorkshires upon the left of the line were
-attacked, but could no more be shifted than their brother Tykes in
-the south. The German stormers never reached the line, partly owing
-to the excellent barrage and partly to the steady rifle-fire. After
-a long interval of following false gods, such as bombs and rifle
-grenades, the British soldier was reasserting himself once more as
-the best average shot of all the forces engaged, though it must be
-admitted that the specialised German snipers with their weapons of
-precision were of a high excellence. All day the division stood its
-ground and hit back hard at every attack, but by evening the salient
-had become so extreme that it was necessary to readjust the line.
-They fell back, therefore, the 92nd covering the operation, and took
-up the line from Moyenneville to Ablainzeville, where they faced
-round on the morning of March 26, the 92nd on the right of the line,
-the 93rd upon the left, and the 4th Guards in reserve. On their
-north lay the division of Guards, on their south the Forty-second
-Division.
-
-It was on this morning that an incident occurred {33} leading to the
-loss of a village, but also to a singular instance of military
-virtue. It is the episode of Moyenneville and of the 15th West
-Yorkshire Battalion. It appears that an officer in a state of
-concussion from the explosion of a shell, sent an order to the left
-of the line that they should retire. The Guards and other observers
-were surprised to see two British battalions walking back with sloped
-arms under no pressure from the enemy. By some chance the mistaken
-order did not reach the 15th West Yorkshires, who remained isolated
-in their position, and Colonel Twiss refused to follow the brigade
-until a positive command should arrive. In their loneliness they
-extended each flank in search of a friend, and finally stretched
-their left into Moyenneville village, which they found already
-strongly occupied by the Germans. To many minds this would have
-appeared to be an excellent excuse for retirement, but its effect
-upon the Yorkshire temperament was that they instantly attacked the
-village and drove the intruders out. One considerable body of
-Germans was driven down into a hollow and pelted with bullets until
-the survivors raised the white flag. Very large numbers of German
-wounded lay in and around the village, but it was not possible to
-send them to the rear. The enemy attacked Moyenneville again, but
-the battalion covered the western exits and denied all egress. For
-the whole of that day, the whole night, and up to the afternoon of
-March 27, this heroic body of infantry held their ground, though shot
-at from every side and nearly surrounded. Not one yard backwards
-would they budge without a definite written order. Not only did they
-hold their own front but their machine-guns {34} played upon nine
-successive waves of Germans advancing from Courcelles to Ayette, and
-sorely hampered their movements to the south. They covered 2000
-yards for thirty-six hours and relieved the front of the Thirty-first
-Division from pressure during that time. When at last the survivors
-made their way back only four officers and forty men represented that
-gallant battalion. Colonel Twiss was among the missing. "This
-battalion," says the official record, "by its brave action relieved
-the pressure on our front throughout the whole day and gave the
-division time to establish its position near Ayette." It was as well
-that this pressure should have been taken off, for both upon the 26th
-and the 27th the ammunition question had become serious, and disaster
-might have followed a more extended action.
-
-[Sidenote: Sixth Corps. March 27.]
-
-If we continue to follow the fortunes of the Thirty-first Division,
-so as to bring them to their natural term, we find it now covering
-the line from Ayette in the south to Ablainzeville. The enemy were
-driving up on the right of the division between Courcelles and
-Ablainzeville, a space which was covered by the 92nd Brigade, who
-were fighting as brilliantly as ever. Touch had been lost with the
-Forty-second upon March 27. The East Yorkshires lost their outpost
-line four times this morning and four times they cleared it with the
-bayonet. Colonel Rickman, the senior officer on the spot, fought for
-every inch of ground as he retired before the ever-increasing
-pressure. Finally the 92nd, worn to rags, were ordered to reform
-behind the 4th Guards Brigade at Ayette, but so high was their spirit
-that when during the night there was word that the Guards {35} were
-themselves hard pressed they eagerly sent help forward to them, while
-the Guards, with equal chivalry of spirit, strictly limited the
-number who should come. About six in the evening the Guards threw
-out a line to the south and joined up with the 10th Manchesters of
-the Forty-second Division to the west of Ablainzeville, so that the
-line was once more complete.
-
-[Sidenote: Sixth Corps. March 28.]
-
-March 28 found the battle still raging in front of the division,
-which had now been engaged for four days without a break and had
-beaten off the attacks of five separate German divisions. Two
-attacks were made, the one upon the 93rd Brigade, the other upon the
-Guards. Each attack got into the line and each was pitchforked out
-again. So broken was the enemy that they were seen retiring in
-crowds towards the north-east under a canopy of shrapnel. The
-British barrage was particularly good that day, and many assaulting
-units were beaten into pieces by it. The division was terribly worn,
-and the men could hardly stand for exhaustion, and yet it was a glad
-thought that the last glimpse which their weary and bloodshot eyes
-had of their enemy was his broken hordes as they streamed away from
-the front which they had failed to break. So thin were the ranks
-that the pioneer battalion, the 12th Yorkshire Light Infantry, was
-brought up to form the line. The Guards had taken their position
-somewhat to the west of Ayette, and some of the enemy from the south
-filtered into the village, but they were shortly afterwards put out
-again by Shute's Thirty-second Division, which had come up for the
-relief. There was no attack upon the 29th, and upon the 30th the
-Thirty-first was able to withdraw, having established {36} a record
-which may have been equalled but cannot have been surpassed by any
-division in this great battle. Five German divisions, the 111th, 2nd
-Guards Reserve, 239th and 16th Bavarians, and 1st Guards Reserve, had
-been wholly or partially engaged with the Thirty-first. Both sides
-had lost heavily and were exhausted. It was here, near Ervillers,
-that a German war correspondent has described how he saw the long
-line of German and British wounded lying upon either side of the main
-road.
-
-It has been stated that the Thirty-second Division carried Ayette
-after this unit had relieved the Thirty-first Division, and the
-operation may be treated here to preserve continuity of narrative.
-It was of more than local importance, as it was one of the earliest
-indications that the British army was still full of fight and that in
-spite of every disadvantage it meant to hit back at every
-opportunity. On taking over his section of the front, General Shute
-found before him the village of Ayette, which was strongly held, but
-was on the forward slope of a hill so that it could obtain little
-help from the German guns. He at once determined to attack. The
-15th Highland Light Infantry of the 14th Brigade were directed upon
-the village on the night of April 2, while the 96th Brigade continued
-the attack to the south. The result was a very heartening little
-success. Three companies of the Highlanders, numbering under 300 in
-all, carried the village, though it was held by a German battalion.
-On the right, the 16th Lancashire Fusiliers made the attack, and in
-spite of one check, which was set right by the personal intervention
-of General Girdwood of the 96th Brigade, the objectives were reached.
-The two attacks were {37} skilfully connected up by the 5/6th Royal
-Scots, while a party of sappers of the 206th Field Company under
-Lieutenant Cronin followed on the heels of the infantry and quickly
-consolidated.
-
-[Sidenote: Sixth Corps. March 24.]
-
-Whilst these stirring events had been in progress in the south, the
-north of the line had slowly drawn back in order to preserve
-conformity. The Seventeenth Corps, as already stated, were to the
-west of Monchy, and the left of the Sixth Corps was on the line of
-Henin, where the Third Division occupied a strong defensive position.
-This was strongly attacked upon the forenoon of March 24; especially
-on the 8th Brigade front, which was the right of the line, the
-Germans swarming up from the south-east of Henin and trying hard to
-work up the Henin-Neuville Vitasse Road. This attack fell
-particularly upon the 1st Scots Fusiliers, and it was completely
-repulsed with heavy losses, though it was facilitated by the sunken
-roads which converged upon Henin. The Germans in their retirement
-had to pass along a slope where once again they lost heavily.
-
-Shortly after noon the left of the Third Division was also attacked,
-and the enemy obtained a temporary footing between the 1st Gordons
-and 8th Royal Lancasters of the 76th Brigade. From this he was very
-soon ejected, and though many bombing attacks were pushed with great
-resolution they had no results. March 25 was quiet upon the front of
-the Third Division, though the right of the Guards Division to the
-south near Boyelles was subjected to one heavy unsuccessful attack.
-That evening both the Guards and the Third Division had to make some
-retraction of their line in order to conform to the situation already
-described in the south, but March 26 {38} passed without an attack,
-the soldiers listening with anxious impatience to the roar of battle
-on their right, unable to see the fight, and yet keenly conscious
-that their own lives might depend upon its results. The 27th was
-also a day of anxious expectancy, culminating upon the 28th in a very
-severe battle, which was the greater test coming after so long a
-period of strain. All three brigades were in the line, the 8th upon
-the right, 9th in the centre, and 76th in the north. Still farther
-to the north was the 44th Highland Brigade of Reed's Fifteenth
-Division upon which the storm first burst.
-
-[Sidenote: Sixth and Seventeenth Corps. March 28.]
-
-This brigade at 6.45 was assailed by a bombardment of so severe a
-character that its trenches were completely destroyed. The German
-infantry pushed home behind this shattering fire and drove back the
-front line of the Highlanders. This enabled them to get behind the
-left flank of the 2nd Suffolks and nearly surround them, while at the
-same time they pierced the front of the 1st Northumberland Fusiliers
-on their right. The front line of the 8th Royal Lancasters had also
-been penetrated, and the British infantry were pushed back and split
-up into various small squads of men, intermingled in the north with
-Highlanders of the 44th Brigade, and all fighting desperately with
-the enemy swarming thickly upon them. By 9.45 the whole front was in
-German hands. Enemy field-guns were lining Wancourt Ridge, and as
-the shattered formations tried to form a new line they were heavily
-shelled by them. The loss in officers and men was very heavy,
-Colonel James of the Royal Lancasters being among the dead. The
-withdrawal was made to the reserve line, which the 44th Brigade had
-already occupied in the north. {39} This included the village of
-Neuville Vitasse which became untenable from shell-fire, and into the
-northern portion of which the enemy was able to push, but in the main
-the reserve system was occupied, the movement being covered by some
-of the 1st Gordons. At this point an equilibrium was attained and
-the enemy held after as desperate a conflict as any troops could be
-called upon to endure.
-
-[Sidenote: Sixth Corps. March 28.]
-
-On the right of the 76th Brigade the 9th Brigade had also been
-fighting very hard, and been compelled to yield some ground before
-the overpowering weight of the attack, especially that of the
-preliminary trench-mortar fire. The first enemy advance in the
-morning was completely beaten off with great loss. A second attack
-had driven in the 8th Brigade on the right, which enabled the Germans
-to get behind the two companies of the 13th King's Liverpool who were
-in the front line. These men fought to the end and were last seen
-standing on the parapet without a thought of surrender. At the same
-time a company of the Northumberland Fusiliers on their left shared
-their fate, save for one officer and twelve men who survived. The
-front line of the 8th Brigade had now ceased to exist, but the
-reserve line still held. An attack upon the 7th Shropshires who,
-with the remains of the other battalions, held on to it, was
-successfully shattered, even the battalion headquarters being brought
-into the desperate battle, while the guns on each side fought as hard
-as the infantry, barrage and attack succeeding each other with
-mechanical accuracy, and being answered by an equally efficient
-barrage and defence, for the British guns were extraordinarily well
-handled that day. About mid-day the enemy got a lodgment {40} on the
-right of the reserve line, but the Fusiliers, whose Colonel, Moulton
-Barrett, had been hit, and the 13th King's still fought furiously for
-what was left, and retained their ground until dusk, when they were
-drawn back into the reserve line in order to conform with the 76th
-Brigade.
-
-The 8th Brigade upon the extreme right of the division had also
-endured heavy losses in men and some loss in ground. The front line
-was held by companies of the 1st Scots Fusiliers and of the 7th
-Shropshires. The enemy, after an unsuccessful attempt, got into the
-trenches of the latter and bombed their way along them, clearing that
-section of the front. It was bomb against rifle in the tortuous
-ditches, and the bomb proved the more handy weapon. The Scots
-Fusiliers, who were the next to be assailed, made shift with
-rifle-grenades, but these also ran short, and they were forced back,
-so that the survivors of the two front companies were driven across
-the Arras-Bapaume Road. Finally, as in the case of the other
-brigades, the reserve line was successfully maintained until evening.
-
-No soldiers could have fought with greater bravery and skill than did
-the Third Division on March 28. They were assailed by at least three
-German divisions and by a crushing artillery, but they disputed every
-inch of ground, and finally fought their formidable adversary to such
-a complete standstill that he could not, with several hours of
-daylight at his disposal, and disorganised ranks before him, continue
-his attacks. It is true that he secured Henin and Neuville Vitasse,
-but he paid a rich price in blood. So broken were the enemy that the
-British wounded came back through their ranks without let or {41}
-hindrance. A strong counter would have swept them out of the ground
-that they had gained, but neither the Third nor the Fifteenth, which
-had endured an equal attack upon the left, was in a condition to
-advance, while the Guards had been already withdrawn in accordance
-with the situation on their right. The blow which the Germans had
-received was shown even more clearly by their failure to attack upon
-the next day. On March 30 the Third Division was relieved by the
-Second Canadians. Their record was a great one, and their losses,
-139 officers and 3500 men, were a measure of their services. In nine
-days, before a vastly superior force, they had only gone back 7000
-yards, most of which was strategic withdrawal. Well might General
-Byng say, "By their conduct they have established a standard of
-endurance and determination that will be a model for all time."
-
-[Sidenote: Seventeenth Corps. March 28.]
-
-This desperate German attack on March 28 to the north of the British
-line had spread right across the face of the Fifteenth Scottish
-Division through the line of Orange Hill and on to Telegraph Hill,
-finally involving the Fourth Division on the other side of the
-Scarpe, and the right-hand unit of the Thirteenth Corps on their
-left, so that Horne's First Army was now drawn into the fray, which
-reached as far north as Oppy and Gavrelle. Along the whole of this
-long front there was constant fighting, which in the case of the
-Fifteenth Division was as desperate as that of the Third. All three
-brigades were in the line, each of them having two battalions in
-front and one in reserve. Never has the grand tough Scottish fibre
-been more rudely tested than on this terrible day of battle, and
-never has it stood the strain more splendidly. General Reed's men
-{42} undoubtedly saved Arras and held up at least six German
-divisions which broke themselves on that rugged and impenetrable
-line, formed in the first instance by the 7th Camerons upon the
-right, the 13th Royal Scots in the centre, the 9th Black Watch and
-7/8 Scots Borderers on the left. As already told, the shattering
-bombardment destroyed a large part of the right front, burying the
-garrison amid the ruins of their trenches, near their junction with
-the Third Division. Some fifty Camerons, under Colonel MacLeod,
-fought most desperately round their headquarters, and then fell back
-slowly upon the 8/10 Gordons, who were holding the Neuville Vitasse
-trench behind them. This was about 6 A.M. By 7.40 the whole front
-line, shot to pieces and with their right flank gone, readjusted
-their line to correspond, winding up near the Feuchy Road. There was
-no rest nor respite, however, for the whole German plan of campaign
-depended upon their getting Arras, so they poured forward their waves
-of attack regardless of losses. It was a really desperate battle in
-which the Scots, lying in little groups among the shell-holes and
-ditches, mowed the Germans down as they swarmed up to them, but were
-themselves occasionally cut off and overpowered as the stormers found
-the gaps and poured through them. The pressure was very great on the
-front of the Black Watch, north of the Cambrai Road, and there
-General Reed determined upon a counter-attack, for which he could
-only spare a single company of the 10th Scottish Rifles. In spite of
-the small numbers it was carried out with such dash, under the
-personal lead of Colonel Stanley Clarke, that the front was cleared
-for a time, and the Germans thrown back east of Feuchy.
-
-{43}
-
-[Sidenote: Seventeenth Corps.]
-
-Meanwhile the Germans had made some advance to the north of the
-Scarpe, and the 7/8 Scots Borderers on the left wing had to fall back
-to preserve the line. At 11 A.M. the enemy were raging in the centre
-of the line, and the 6th Camerons, north of the Cambrai Road, were
-forced backwards, the enemy piercing their front. Up to 1.45 the
-weight of the attack was mostly in the north, and ended by all three
-brigades moving back, with the enemy still striving with the utmost
-fury and ever fresh relays of men to burst the line. At 3 P.M. the
-German stormers had won the Bois des Bœufs, but were driven out
-again by the 9th Black Watch and by the 11th Argylls, who had lost
-their C.O., Colonel Mitchell. The division was worn to a shadow, and
-yet the moment that the German attack seemed to ease both they and
-the Fourth Division on their north advanced their front. In this
-single bloody day the Fifteenth Division lost 94 officers and 2223
-men, but there can be no doubt that their action, with that of the
-Third Division and the Fourth on either side of them, was the main
-determining factor in the whole of this vast battle. General Reed (a
-V.C. of Colenso) with his Brigadiers, Hilliard, Allgood, and Lumsden,
-might well be proud of the way they held the pass.
-
-North of the Scarpe all three brigades of the Fourth Division were
-exposed to a furious attack, and lost the village of Rœux, which
-was defended literally to the death by the 2nd Seaforths of the 10th
-Brigade, but the 1st Hants in the front line of the 11th Brigade and
-the 2nd Essex of the 12th stood like iron, and in a long day's
-fighting the enemy was never able to make any serious lodgment in the
-position, though the rushes of his bombing parties {44} were said by
-experienced British officers to have been extraordinarily determined
-and clever. Very little ground was gained by the Germans, and of
-this a section upon the left flank near Gavrelle was regained by a
-sudden counter-attack of the Fourth Division.
-
-[Sidenote: Sixth and Seventeenth Corps. March 28.]
-
-Of the attack to the north of the Third Army in the Bailleul and Oppy
-district, it should be noted that it fell upon the Fifty-sixth London
-Territorial Division, who for once had the pleasant experience of
-being at the right end of the machine-gun. They took every advantage
-of their opportunity, and there are few places where the Germans have
-endured heavier losses with no gains to show in return. The
-Westminsters and L.R.B.'s of the 169th Brigade were particularly
-heavily engaged, and a party of the former distinguished themselves
-by a most desperate defence of an outlying post, named Towy Post,
-near Gavrelle, which they held long after it was passed by the enemy,
-but eventually fought their way to safety. The attack lasted from
-seven in the morning till six at night, and the Londoners had full
-vengeance for their comrades of July 1916 or August 1917, who had
-died before the German wire even as the Germans died that day.
-
-It was a successful day for the British arms, so successful that it
-marked the practical limit of the German advance in that quarter,
-which was the vital section, covering the town of Arras. There is no
-doubt that the attempt was a very serious one, strongly urged by six
-divisions of picked infantry in front and four in support, with a
-very powerful concentration of artillery, which was expected to smash
-a way through the three divisions chiefly {45} attacked. The
-onslaught was whole-hearted and skilful, but so was the defence. The
-German losses were exceedingly high, and save for a strip of
-worthless ground there was really nothing to show for them. It was
-the final check to the German advance in this quarter of the field,
-so that the chronicler may well bring his record to a pause while he
-returns to the first day of the battle and endeavours to trace the
-fortunes of the Fourth and Fifth Corps, who formed the right half of
-the Third Army. We have fixed the northern sector of the
-battle-field from Bailleul in the north right across the Scarpe and
-down to the Cojeul in its position, from which it was destined to
-make no change for many months to come. It was the first
-solidification of the lines, for to the south all was still fluid and
-confused.
-
-[Sidenote: Sixth and Seventeenth Corps.]
-
-A word should be said before one finally passes from this portion of
-the great epic, as to the truly wonderful work of the Army Medical
-Corps. In spite of the constant fire the surgeons and bearers were
-continually in the front line and conveying the wounded to the rear.
-Many thousands were saved from the tortures of a German prison camp
-by the devotion which kept them within the British lines. It may be
-invidious to mention examples where the same spirit of self-sacrifice
-animated all, but one might take as typical the case of the Fortieth
-Division, some details of which are available. Colonel M'Cullagh and
-his men conveyed to the rear during five days, always under heavy
-fire, 2400 cases of their own or other divisions, the whole of the
-casualties of the Fortieth being 2800. M'Carter, a British, and
-Berney, an American surgeon, both had dressing-posts right up to the
-battle-line, the latter being {46} himself wounded twice. Wannan, a
-stretcher-bearer, carried thirty cases in one day, and ended by
-conveying a wounded friend several miles upon his shoulders. Private
-M'Intosh, attacked by a German while binding an injured man, killed
-the cowardly fellow with his own bayonet, and then completed his
-task. It is hard to work detail into so vast a picture, but such
-deeds were infinitely multiplied along that great line of battle.
-Nor can one omit mention of the untiring work of the artillery, which
-was in action often for several days and nights on end. Occasionally
-in some soldier's letter one gets a glimpse of the spirit of the
-gunners such as no formal account can convey: "Our battery fired two
-days and nights without ceasing until spotted by the German
-observers. They then kept up a terrible fire until the British guns
-were silenced in succession. One officer was left standing when I
-was wounded. He shook my hand as they carried me away. I went
-leaving him with about seven men and two guns, still carrying on as
-if nothing had happened. This is only one battery among hundreds
-which showed as great pluck and tenacity as we did."
-
-
-
-
-{47}
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-THE SECOND BATTLE OF THE SOMME
-
-Attack on the Fourth and Fifth Corps
-
-Attack on Sixth and Fifty-first Divisions--Engagement of the
-Twenty-fifth and Forty-first Divisions--Attack on Forty-seventh,
-Sixty-third, Second, and Nineteenth Divisions--The German
-torrent--Serious situation--Arrival of Sixty-second
-Division--Fighting before Albert--Gallant defence by Twelfth
-Division--Arrival of the New Zealanders, of the Australians, of the
-Thirty-fifth Division--Equilibrium.
-
-[Sidenote: Fourth Corps. March 21.]
-
-To the immediate south of the Sixth Corps the front line upon March
-21 was held by Harper's Fourth Corps, which consisted of the Sixth
-Division (Harden) opposite to Lagnicourt with the Fifty-first
-Highland Division to the right of them, which famous unit was now
-under the command of General Carter-Campbell, whose name has been
-recorded in a previous volume as the only officer left standing in
-his battalion after the action of Neuve Chapelle. To the south of
-the Fourth Corps was the Fifth Corps (Fanshawe) with the Seventeenth
-Division (Robertson) on the left, the Sixty-third (Lawrie) in the
-centre, and the Forty-seventh (Gorringe) on the right covering the
-whole Cambrai salient from Flesquières in the north to the point near
-Gouzeaucourt Wood where the Third Army met the left flank of the
-Fifth. The line took a considerable bend at this point, marking the
-{48} ground gained at the battle of Cambrai, and it was part of the
-German scheme to break through to the north and south, so that
-without attacking the Fifth Corps they would either cause it to fall
-back or else isolate and capture it. Had their advance been such as
-they had hoped for, they would certainly have placed it in great
-peril. Even as it was, it was necessary to withdraw the line, but
-without undue haste or confusion. Great pressure was laid upon the
-Fifth Corps in later stages of the battle, but beyond a considerable
-shell-fall and demonstration there was no actual attack upon March
-21. It was by holding certain sections of the line in this fashion
-that the Germans were able to pile up the odds at those places which
-were actually attacked.
-
-It will be possible to describe the sequence of events with
-considerably less detail in this and other sectors of the line, since
-the general conditions of attack and defence may be taken as similar
-to that already described. Here also the bombardment began with its
-full shattering force of high explosive, blue cross invisible gas,
-mustard gas, phosgene, and every other diabolical device which the
-German chemist has learned to produce and the British to neutralise.
-In the case of the British infantry, many of them had to wear their
-gas masks for eight hours on end, and the gunners were in even worse
-plight; but these appliances, which will no doubt find a place in the
-museums of our children, were of a surprising efficiency, and
-hampered the experienced soldier far less than would have been
-thought.
-
-The infantry advance was at 9.45, the Germans swarming in under the
-cover of Nature's smoke barrage, for here, as in several other parts
-of the line, {49} a thick morning mist greatly helped the attack and
-screened the stormers until they were actually up to the wire, which
-had usually been shattered in advance by the trench-mortars. The
-line from Flesquières to Dernicourt in the region of the Fifty-first
-Division was less seriously attacked, and remained inviolate, but the
-northern stretch from Dernicourt to Lagnicourt was struck with
-terrific impact, and gave before the blow to very much the same
-extent as the divisions to the immediate north. The 71st Brigade in
-the Lagnicourt sector was especially hard hit, and was very violently
-assailed by a strong force of Germans, which included the 1st
-Prussian Guard. This famous regiment was at one time all round the
-9th Norfolks, who succeeded at last in fighting themselves clear,
-though their Colonel, Prior, and the great majority of the officers
-and men in the battalion were killed or wounded. Even these wounded,
-however, were safely carried off, thanks to the devotion of Captain
-Failes and a handful of brave men. In this desperate struggle the
-whole brigade was decimated. The 16th and 18th Brigades had also
-suffered severely, but the division, in spite of its losses, was
-splendidly solid, and fell back slowly upon the support of the 75th
-Brigade of the Twenty-fifth Division, which had hastened up to the
-danger point. By evening, the Germans, advancing in great numbers
-and with fine resolution, had occupied the four villages of Doignies,
-Boursies, Louverval, and Lagnicourt, their total penetration from
-Boursies in the south to Ecoust in the north, a stretch of seven
-miles, averaging about 3000 yards. This advance had completely
-turned the left wing of the Fifty-first, which was compelled to fall
-back in consequence, {50} after stopping several attacks from across
-the Canal du Nord. All three brigades of the Fifty-first Division
-were in line, and of the three the left and centre had been seriously
-engaged, the enemy entering the front line of both before mid-day,
-and finally reaching the second system between Louverval and
-Lagnicourt, so that the defence lay along the Beaumetz-Morchies line.
-The Nineteenth Division was in general support in this quarter, and
-the 57th Brigade became practically the right of the Fifty-first
-Division. About 7 P.M. in the evening two battalions of it, the 8th
-Gloucesters and 10th Worcesters of the 57th Brigade, tried to turn
-the tide of fight by a counter-attack, with the aid of tanks, against
-the village of Doignies. This attack was successful in retaking half
-the village, but in the course of the night it was found necessary to
-withdraw before the increasing pressure of the enemy, who brought
-many machine-guns into the village. During the night it was arranged
-that the Fifth Corps should fall back from its dangerous position in
-the Cambrai salient, and by eleven next day the divisions which
-composed it were ranged from Highland Ridge, through Havrincourt and
-Hermies, in touch with the Fourth Corps in the north and with the
-left of the Fifth Army in the south. Whilst this very heavy attack
-had been made upon the Fourth Corps, Bainbridge's Twenty-fifth
-Division had been in close support of the two divisions in the front
-line. While the 75th Brigade, as already stated, was pushed up under
-very heavy fire to strengthen the Sixth Division in their desperate
-resistance, the 74th was allotted to the Fifty-first Division, which
-was in less serious need of help during the day. Griffin's 7th
-Brigade {51} remained in reserve in front of Morchies, where upon the
-following morning its presence was invaluable as a solid unshaken
-nucleus of resistance. Eight German divisions were identified that
-day among those which attacked the two British divisions in the front
-line of the Fourth Corps.
-
-[Sidenote: Fourth and Fifth Corps. March 22.]
-
-There was no attack during the night, but the Germans thickened their
-advanced line and were all ready for another strenuous day, while the
-British, though hustled and overborne by the tremendous onslaught
-which had pushed them back, were still within their battle positions
-and as doggedly surly as British infantry usually are in hours of
-stress and trial. Three strong attacks were made in the morning and
-early afternoon between Hermies and Beaumetz, all of which were
-driven back. There is no method of gauging the losses of the enemy
-upon such occasions, but when one knows that the machine-guns fired
-as many as 9000 rounds each, and that a single Lewis gun discharged
-30,000 bullets, one can say with certainty that they were very heavy.
-These attacks fell upon the Highlanders on the right, the 7th Brigade
-in the centre, and the remains of the Sixth Division upon the left.
-Unhappily, a chain of defence is no stronger than its weakest link,
-which finds itself so often at points of juncture. Upon this
-occasion the Germans, continually filtering forward and testing every
-possible orifice, found a weakness between the 120th Brigade of the
-Fortieth Division in the north and the Sixth in the south. This weak
-point was to be mended by the Forty-first Division, which had been
-hurried up from Favreuil, but the time was too short, or the rent was
-too wide, so that the Germans pushed rapidly through and {52} seized
-the village of Vaulx-Vraumont, separating the Fourth Corps from the
-Sixth. It was an anxious moment, and coupled with the German success
-at Henin Hill in the north it might have meant the isolation of the
-Sixth Corps; but the necessary changes were rapidly and steadily
-effected, so that before evening the Highlanders of the 120th Brigade
-feeling out upon their right and fearing all would be void, joined
-hands suddenly with the 15th Hampshires of the Forty-first Division
-in the neighbourhood of Beugnâtre. Before night had fallen upon
-March 22 the line had been restored and built up once more, though
-some five thousand yards westward of where it had been in the
-morning. That evening the Sixth Division was drawn out, weak and
-dishevelled, but still full of fight. With all the hammering and
-hustling that it had endured, it had saved its heavy guns and nearly
-all its field batteries. The Forty-first Division took its place,
-and incorporated for the time the 7th Brigade, a unit which had
-endured hard fortune, for it had held its ground splendidly with
-little loss until, after the fashion of modern war, events upon the
-other side of the horizon caused it to get the order to retire, an
-order which could not be obeyed without complete exposure and very
-heavy casualties, including Colonel Blackall of the 4th South
-Staffords. Each day of arduous battle was followed by a no less
-arduous night, during which, under heavy fire and every conceivable
-difficulty the various divisions were readjusted so that the morning
-light should show no impossible salients, no outlying indefensible
-positions, no naked flanks, and no yawning gaps. How easy are such
-exercises over a map upon a study table, and how difficult when
-conducted by dazed, {53} over-wrought officers, pushing forward their
-staggering, half-conscious men in the darkness of a wilderness of
-woods and fields, where the gleam of a single electric torch may mean
-disaster to all! And yet, as every morning dawned, the haggard
-staff-captain at the telephone could still report to his anxious
-chief that all was well, and his battle-line still intact between the
-Hun and his goal.
-
-On the morning of the battle the general disposition of the Fifth
-Corps had been that the Seventeenth Division (Robertson) was in the
-line on the left, the Sixty-third Naval Division (Lawrie) in the
-centre, and the Forty-seventh Division (Gorringe) on the right, being
-the southern unit of the Third Army, in close liaison with the Ninth
-Division, the northern unit of the Fifth Army. Two divisions were in
-close reserve, the Second (Pereira) on the right, and the Nineteenth
-(Jeffreys) on the left.
-
-[Sidenote: Fourth and Fifth Corps. March 21.]
-
-The Forty-seventh Division was in a particularly important position,
-since it was the flank unit and the liaison between the two armies
-depended upon it. It had only come into line the day before the
-battle, taking the place of the Second Division, which was now in
-immediate support. On March 21 the 140th Brigade covered the right
-of the divisional front, and the 141st the left, the sector being
-that of La Vacquerie. In view of the menacing attitude of the enemy
-both the 142nd Brigade and the 4th Welsh Fusiliers Pioneer Battalion
-were brought nearer to the front line. So heavy was the gas
-bombardment in the morning that the front battalion of the 140th
-Brigade, the 17th London, had to evacuate some advanced trenches and
-to wear their gas masks for hours on end. The front line trenches
-were blown {54} to fragments, and so also were many of their
-garrison. The following infantry advance, however, though vigorously
-conducted, had no great weight, and seems to have been the work of
-two battalions carrying out a subsidiary attack. By a counter-attack
-of the 19th London they were driven out once more.
-
-Whilst this partial attack had been made upon the Forty-seventh
-Division, similar assaults had been made upon the Sixty-third in the
-centre, and upon the Seventeenth in the northern sector of the Fifth
-Corps. None of them made more than petty gains, but in each case the
-bombardment was formidable, chiefly with trench-mortar bombs and with
-gas. In the case of the Forty-seventh Division there was a
-considerable interval between the front brigades, because a number
-both of the 18th and 17th London had been absolutely destroyed,
-together with their trench. There were several other partial attacks
-during the day, but the pressure was never extreme, and the
-withdrawal to Highland Ridge after dusk was carried out on account of
-the general tactical position. All wounded men were carried back,
-and no booty left to the enemy.
-
-Meanwhile the left flank of the Fifth Corps had been covered by the
-58th Brigade of the Nineteenth Division, the 9th Welsh Fusiliers
-being heavily engaged. During March 22, Havrincourt, Herrmies, and
-the Beaumetz-Hermies line were held by the Seventeenth, Nineteenth,
-and Fifty-first divisions against repeated German attacks, and in the
-evening the Nineteenth was in touch with the Forty-first on its left
-and with the Second on its right.
-
-[Sidenote: Fourth and Fifth Corps. March 22.]
-
-On this night of March 22 the principal change was this movement
-backwards of the whole Fifth {55} Corps. The retirement of the Fifth
-Corps continued during the day of March 23, and was caused by the
-necessity of conforming with the Seventh Corps to the south of it
-which, after valiant exertions, soon to be described, had lost Nurlu,
-so placing the enemy upon the right rear of the divisions in the
-north. Fins had also been taken in the same neighbourhood, The Fifth
-Corps was now heavily pressed in its retreat, all five divisions
-enduring considerable losses and having the menace of the enemy
-constantly upon their right flank. At noon the general line was east
-of Equancourt, and this line was held for a time, but the enemy was
-still thundering on in the north, his fresh divisions rolling in like
-waves from some inexhaustible sea. At 1.30 they were pushing their
-attack most desperately upon the weary fringes of riflemen and groups
-of tired machine-gunners, who formed the front of the Forty-first
-Division between Beugny and Lebucquière. In all, this division, with
-the Nineteenth and Fifty-first upon their right, sustained five
-strong attacks in the afternoon of this day, most of them from
-Vaulx-Vraumont. Eventually Lebucquière was taken, the enemy breaking
-their way at this point through the line of the exhausted Fifty-first
-Division, who had fought with splendid resolution. This German
-success placed the Nineteenth Division south of Beaumetz and at
-Beugny in a very serious position, as the enemy infantry got behind
-the 9th Welsh Fusiliers and 6th Wiltshires, who were only saved from
-total destruction by the staunch support of the 9th Welsh at Beugny,
-who held on desperately until the remains of the 58th Brigade could
-get back to them. These remains when the three battalions {56} were
-reunited were only a few hundred men. The case of the 57th Brigade,
-which was fighting a hard rearguard action all afternoon, was little
-better, and both the 8th Gloucesters and 10th Worcesters were almost
-overwhelmed by the swarms of Germans who poured up against their
-front and flank. A splendid stand was made by this brigade
-north-east of Velu, in which the men of Gloucester especially
-distinguished themselves, Captain Jones of A Company receiving the
-V.C. for his heroic resistance. Colonel Hoath of the 10th Warwicks
-conducted this arduous retreat, and his own battalion shares in the
-honours of a fight which was tragic in its losses, but essential for
-its effect upon the fortunes of the army. Captain Gribble of this
-battalion also received the V.C., his D Company falling to the last
-man after the best traditions of the British army. The 5th Brigade
-of the Second Division, upon the right of the Nineteenth Division,
-shared in the honours of this desperate business, the 2nd Oxford and
-Bucks being very heavily engaged. After the prolonged action the
-final line of the Nineteenth Division ran west of Bertincourt, the
-movement of retreat being to the south-west. So confused had been
-the fighting of the last two days that the Nineteenth Division which
-had been on the right of the Fifty-first was now upon their left.
-Still keeping a closely-knit line and their faces to the foe, the
-Third Army stretched that night from Sailly in the south to the west
-of Henin and Monchy. The Fourth Corps, which had been so badly
-mauled, was strengthened that evening by the inclusion of the
-Forty-second Division. The towers of Bapaume in the rear showed how
-far across the {57} ravaged and reconquered land the British line had
-retreated.
-
-The pressure here described had been upon the left of the Fifth
-Corps, but the situation upon its right flank had also been very
-awkward. The terrific weight thrown upon the Ninth Division had, as
-will be described, driven them farther westward than their left-hand
-companions of the Forty-seventh Division. The result was a most
-dangerous gap which exposed the whole rear of the Third Army. The
-99th Brigade in the Equancourt district endeavoured after the fall of
-Fins to fill this front, but they were not nearly numerous enough for
-the purpose. The result was that the Forty-seventh Division, which
-moved back on the night of March 22 from Highland Ridge to the
-Metz-Dessart Wood line, had to reach out more and more upon the right
-in order to save the situation. In this operation two battalions,
-the 4th Welsh Fusiliers Pioneers and the 23rd London, sustained most
-of the attack and suffered very heavily upon March 23, while in the
-preliminary fighting upon March 22 the 18th London had many losses.
-By the morning of March 24, the Forty-seventh, beating off all
-attacks and keeping their position in the unbroken line, had fallen
-back to a new position, the 142nd Brigade, which formed the
-rearguard, fighting hard in its retreat, and having to brush aside
-those groups of Germans who had slipped in at the rear.
-
-[Sidenote: Fourth and Fifth Corps. March 24.]
-
-The morning of March 24 found the German torrent still roaring
-forward in full spate, though less formidable than before, since the
-heavier guns were far to the rear. Their light artillery,
-trench-mortars, and machine-guns were always up with the storming
-{58} columns, and the latter were relieved in a manner which showed
-the competence of their higher command. It was a day of doubt and
-difficulty for the British, for the pressure was everywhere severe,
-and the line had frayed until it was very thin, while officers and
-men had reached the last limits of human endurance. At 8.30 in the
-morning the enemy was pressing hard upon the Seventeenth and
-Forty-seventh Divisions in the region of Bus and Le Mesnil, where
-they were endeavouring to keep in touch with the worn remains of the
-heroic Ninth Division on the left of the Seventh Corps. Sailly
-Saillisel was still clear of the enemy, but the tide was flowing
-strongly towards it. The 51st Brigade of the Seventeenth Division
-occupied this village and threw out its left to the Londoners on the
-north of them. Bertincourt, which had become a dangerous salient,
-was evacuated, and the line now ran east of Haplincourt and
-Rocquigny, the three brigades of the Seventeenth Division occupying
-this latter village, Barastre, and Villers-au-Flos. On their north
-were two brigades of the Forty-seventh, the remaining brigade being
-south of Le Transloy. North of the Forty-seventh Division the
-Sixty-third Naval Division and the Second Division carried the line
-on to the junction with the Fourth Corps, where the exhausted
-Nineteenth Division lay across the Cambrai Road, with the even more
-shattered Fifty-first Division at Riencourt to the north of them.
-There was some very furious fighting in front of Rocquigny about
-mid-day, in which the 12th Manchesters of the Seventeenth Division,
-and the three battalions (18th, 19th, 20th London) of the 141st
-Brigade made a very desperate resistance. The fighting was continued
-until the {59} defenders found themselves in danger of being
-surrounded, when they were withdrawn. The 140th Brigade, under
-Colonel Dawes, also did great service that day in holding the Germans
-from getting behind the line. The enemy was so far round that there
-was the greatest difficulty in clearing the transport, which was only
-accomplished by the fine rearguard work of the 4th Welsh Fusiliers,
-aided by the 11th Motor Machine-gun Battery, and 34th Brigade R.F.A.
-
-It was, however, to the south, where the Third and Fifth Armies were
-intermittently joined and vaguely interlocked, that the danger
-chiefly lay. About noon, the enemy, finding the weak spot between
-the two armies, had forced his way into Sailly Saillisel in
-considerable force, and pushed rapidly north and west from the
-village. So rapid was the German advance upon the right rear of the
-Fifth Corps that Rancourt and even Combles were said to have fallen.
-In vain the Seventeenth Division overstretched its wing to the south,
-trying to link up with the Seventh Corps. Early in the afternoon
-Morval and Les Bœufs had gone, and the troops were back upon the
-mud-and-blood areas of 1916. For the moment it seemed that the
-British line had gone, and it was hard to say what limit might be put
-to this very serious advance. By midnight the enemy were north of
-Bapaume, and had reached Ervillers, while in the south they had taken
-Longueval, the key village of Delville Wood. It was indeed a sad
-relapse to see all that the glorious dead had bought with their
-hearts' blood reverting so swiftly to the enemy. In the north,
-however, as has already been shown in the story of the Sixth Corps,
-the enemy's bolt was shot, {60} and in the south his swift career was
-soon to be slowed and held.
-
-In the Favreruil, Sapignies, and Gomiecourt district, north of
-Bapaume, the advance was mainly accomplished through the pressure of
-fresh German forces upon the exhausted and attenuated line of the
-Forty-first Division, which still struggled bravely, and in the end
-successfully, against overwhelming odds. In the effort to hold a
-line the divisions which had been drawn out as too weak for service
-turned back once more into the fray like wounded men who totter
-forward to strike a feeble blow for their comrades in distress. The
-Sixth Division was led in once more, and sustained fresh and terrible
-losses. Its left fell back to Favreuil, exposing the right wing of
-the Fortieth Division. The Twenty-fifth Division to the east of
-Achiet found itself also once more overtaken by the battle. By
-evening the line had been built up again in this quarter, and the
-dead-weary British infantry snatched a few hours of sleep before
-another day of battle. The Nineteenth Division, reduced to 2000
-rifles, lay from Le Barque to Avesnes, with the Second upon their
-right and the Forty-first upon their left, while the whole of this
-difficult retreat had been covered by the weary but indomitable
-Highlanders of the Fifty-first.
-
-The really serious situation was to the south of Bapaume upon the old
-Somme battle-field, where the Germans had made sudden and alarming
-progress. Their temporary success was due to the fact that the
-losses in the British lines had contracted the ranks until it was
-impossible to cover the whole space or to prevent the infiltration of
-the enemy between the units. The situation required some complete
-and {61} vigorous regrouping and reorganisation if complete disaster
-was to be avoided. Up to this point the British Higher Command had
-been unable to do much to help the two hard-pressed armies, save to
-supply them with the scanty succours which were immediately
-available. Now, however, it interfered with decision at the vital
-spot and in the vital moment. To ensure solidity and unity,
-Congreve's Seventh Corps, which had been the northern unit of the
-Fifth Army, became from this time onwards the southern unit of the
-Third Army, passing under the command of General Byng. With them
-went the First, Second, and Third Cavalry Divisions, which had been
-doing really splendid service in the south. Everything north of the
-Somme was now Third Army. At the same time the three fine and fresh
-Australian Divisions, the Third, Fourth, and Fifth, were assembling
-near Doullens in readiness to strike, while the Twelfth British
-Division was also hurried towards the place of danger. The future
-was dark and dangerous, but there were also solid grounds for hope.
-
-[Sidenote: Fourth and Fifth Corps. March 21.]
-
-On the morning of March 25 the line of the Third Army, which had
-defined itself more clearly during the night, ran from Curlu near the
-Somme, east of Bazentin, west of Longueval, east of Martinpuich,
-through Ligny Thilloy, Sapignies, Ervillers, and hence as before.
-The enemy, whose cavalry were well up and in force, at once began his
-thrusting tactics in the southern section of the field, and may have
-expected, after his advance of the day before, to find some signs of
-weakening resistance. In this he was disappointed, for both the 47th
-Londoners in front of Contalmaison and the Second Division at Ligny
-Thilloy beat off several attacks with {62} very great loss to the
-assailants. The units were much broken and mixed, but the spirit of
-the individuals was excellent. The pressure continued, however, to
-be very great, and in the afternoon the line was once more pushed to
-the westwards. There was severe fighting between Bapaume and
-Sapignies, where mixed and disorganised units still held the Germans
-back, but in the late afternoon three distinct gaps had appeared in
-the line, one between the Seventh and Fifth Corps, one in the Fifth
-Corps itself in the Pozières area of the Sixty-third Division, and
-one between the Fifth and the Fourth Corps. Fortunately, the
-resistance had been so desperate that by the time the Germans had
-their opportunity they were always so bedraggled themselves that they
-could not take full advantage of it. The general order of divisions
-in this area, counting from the south of Contalmaison, was
-Seventeenth, Forty-seventh, Sixty-third, Second, upon the morning of
-March 25.
-
-The Seventh Corps, the previous adventures of which will be described
-under the heading of the Fifth Army, had now become the right wing of
-the Third Army. It had been strengthened by the advent of the
-Thirty-fifth Division, and this unit now covered from west of Curlu
-to east of Maricourt, where it touched the right of the Ninth
-Division--if the thin ranks of that gallant band can be dignified by
-so imposing a title. The Highlanders covered the front to Montauban,
-where they touched the First Cavalry Division, but beyond that the
-enemy were pouring round their flank at Bernafoy and Mametz Woods.
-It was under these trying conditions that the Twelfth Division was
-ordered up, about noon, to secure the {63} left of the Seventh Corps
-and entirely stopped the dangerous gap.
-
-Another had formed farther north. The Seventeenth Division, who were
-on the right of the Fifth Corps, held from Mametz to Contalmaison.
-Thence to Pozières was held by the Forty-seventh. A gap existed,
-however, upon their left, between them and the Sixty-third Division,
-who were gradually falling back upon Courcelette. The left of the
-Naval Division was also in the air, having lost touch with the right
-of the Second Division who were covering Le Sars. North of them the
-Nineteenth Division extended from the west of Grevillers to the south
-of Bihucourt. The 57th Brigade in the north, under the local command
-of Colonel Sole, fought a fine rearguard action as the enemy tried to
-debouch from Grevillers. Considering how terribly mauled this
-brigade had been a few days before, this was a really splendid
-performance of these brave Midlanders, and was repeated by them more
-than once during the day. From their left flank to the north
-stretched a new division, Braithwaite's Sixty-second, which had
-upheld the honour of Yorkshire so gloriously at Cambrai. Their line
-ran west of Sapignies and joined the Forty-second Division at the
-point where they touched the Sixth Corps, east of Ervillers.
-
-The front of the Sixty-second stretched from Bucquoy to Puisieux.
-The enemy kept working round the right flank, and the situation there
-was very dangerous, for everything to the immediate south was in a
-state of flux, shreds and patches of units endeavouring to cover a
-considerable stretch of all-important country. South of Puisieux
-there was a gap of four or five miles before one came to {64} British
-troops. Into this gap in the very nick of time came first the 4th
-Brigade of the Second Australian Division, and later the New Zealand
-Division in driblets, which gradually spanned the vacant space. It
-was a very close call for a break through without opposition. Being
-disappointed in this the Germans upon March 26 spent the whole
-afternoon in fierce attacks upon the Sixty-second Division, but got
-little but hard knocks from Braithwaite's Yorkshiremen. The 186th
-Brigade on the right threw back a flank to Rossignol Wood to cover
-the weak side.
-
-Meanwhile the enemy had made a spirited attempt to push through
-between the Seventh Corps and the Fifth. With this design he
-attacked heavily, bending back the thin line of the Ninth Division,
-who were supported by the Twenty-first Division, numbering at this
-period 1500 men. At four in the afternoon the German stormers got
-into Maricourt, but they were thrust out again by the Thirty-fifth
-Division. They had better success farther north, where in the late
-evening they got round the left flank of the Forty-seventh Division
-and occupied Pozières. The Londoners threw out a defensive line to
-the north and awaited events, but the general position between the
-Fifth and Fourth Corps was serious, as the tendency was for the gap
-to increase, and for the Fourth Corps to swing north-west while the
-other turned to the south-west. The Twelfth Division was transferred
-therefore from the Seventh to the Fifth Corps, and was given a line
-on the west bank of the Ancre from Albert to Hamel. This move proved
-in the sequel to be a most effective one. In the evening of this
-day, March 25, the line from Bray to Albert exclusive was allotted to
-the Seventh Corps, {65} which was directed to leave a covering party
-as long as possible on a line from the River Somme to Montauban, in
-order to safeguard the retirement of the Fifth Army. Then came the
-Twelfth Division covering Albert, then the remains of the
-Forty-seventh and of the Second from Thiepval to Beaumont Hamel, all
-moving across the Ancre. It is said that during the retreat from
-Moscow an officer having asked who were the occupants of a certain
-sledge, was answered: "The Royal Regiment of Dutch Guards." It is in
-a somewhat similar sense that all mentions of battalions, brigades,
-and divisions must be taken at this stage of the battle. The right
-of the Fourth Corps was threatened by an irruption of the enemy at
-Pys and Irles, who threatened to get by this route round the flank of
-the Sixty-second Division, but found the Twenty-fifth Division still
-had vitality enough left to form a defensive flank looking south. At
-the same time the Forty-second Division had been driven back west of
-Gomiecourt, and was out of touch with the right of the Sixth Corps.
-Things were still serious and the future dark. Where was the retreat
-to be stayed? Was it destined to roll back to Amiens or possibly to
-Abbeville beyond it? The sky had clouded, the days were mirk, the
-hanging Madonna had fallen from the cathedral of Albert, the troops
-were worn to shadows. The twilight of the gods seemed to have come.
-
-It was at that very moment that the first light of victory began to
-dawn. It is true that the old worn divisions could hardly be said
-any longer to exist, but the new forces, the Yorkshiremen of the
-Sixty-second in the north, the New Zealanders and the Twelfth in the
-centre, and very particularly the {66} three splendid divisions of
-Australians in the area just south of Albert, were the strong
-buttresses of the dam which at last held up that raging tide. Never
-should our British Imperial troops forget the debt which they owed to
-Australia at that supreme hour of destiny. The very sight of those
-lithe, rakish dare-devils with their reckless, aggressive bearing, or
-their staider fresh-faced brethren with the red facings of New
-Zealand, was good for tired eyes. There was much still to be done
-before an equilibrium should be reached, but the rough outline of the
-permanent positions had even now, in those hours of darkness and
-danger, been traced across the German path. There was but one gap on
-the morning of March 26, which lay between Auchonvillers and
-Hebuterne, and into this the New Zealand Division and one brigade of
-the Second Australians were, as already stated, hurriedly sent, the
-New Zealanders supporting and eventually relieving the Second British
-Division, while the Australians relieved the Nineteenth. The line
-was attacked, but stood firm, and the New Zealanders actually
-recaptured Colincamps.
-
-[Sidenote: March 26.]
-
-The chief fighting both of this day and of the next fell upon Scott's
-Twelfth Division, which lay before Albert, and was occupying the
-western side of the railway line. So vital was the part played by
-the Twelfth in this quarter, and so strenuous their work, that a
-connected and more detailed account of it would perhaps not be out of
-place. The 37th Brigade was in the north-east of Mesnil and Aveluy
-Wood, the 36th in the centre, and the 35th on the west bank of the
-Ancre, with outposts to cover the crossings at Albert and Aveluy.
-{67} The men were fresh and eager, but had only their rifles to trust
-to, for they had neither wire, bombs, rifle-grenades, Very lights, or
-signals, having been despatched at the shortest notice to the
-battle-field. Their orders were to hold their ground at all costs,
-and most valiantly they obeyed it. It is only when one sees a map of
-the German forces in this part of the field, with the divisions
-marked upon it like flies upon fly-paper, that one understands the
-odds against which these men had to contend. Nor was the efficiency
-of the enemy less than his numbers. "The Germans scouted forward in
-a very clever manner, making full use of the old chalk trenches,"
-says an observer. In the north upon the evening of March 26 the
-enemy crept up to Mesnil, and after a long struggle with the 6th
-Queen's forced their way into the village. Shortly after midnight,
-however, some of the 6th Buffs and 6th West Kents, together with part
-of the Anson battalion from the Sixty-third Division, won back the
-village once more, taking twelve machine-guns and a number of
-prisoners. The other two brigades had not been attacked upon the
-26th, but a very severe battle awaited them all upon March 27. It
-began by a heavy shelling of Hamel in the morning, by which the
-garrison was driven out. The Germans then attacked southwards down
-the railway from Hamel, but were held up by the 6th West Kents. The
-pressure extended, however, to the 9th Royal Fusiliers of the 36th
-Brigade upon the right of the West Kents, who had a long, bitter
-struggle in which they were assisted by the 247th Field Company of
-the Royal Engineers and other elements of the 188th Brigade. This
-brigade, being already worn to a shadow, was {68} withdrawn, while
-another shadow, the 5th Brigade, took its place, one of its
-battalions, the 24th Royal Fusiliers, fighting stoutly by the side of
-the West Kents. There was a time when the pressure was so great that
-all touch was lost between the two brigades; but the line was held
-during the whole of the day and night of the 27th and on into the
-28th. At eleven o'clock in the morning of this day a new attack by
-fresh troops was made upon the West Kents and the 7th Sussex, and the
-men of Kent were at one time driven back, but with the aid of the
-24th Royal Fusiliers the line was entirely re-established. The whole
-episode represented forty-eight hours of continual close combat
-until, upon March 29, this front was relieved by the Second Division.
-Apart from the heavy casualties endured by the enemy, this gain of
-time was invaluable at a crisis when every day meant a thickening of
-the British line of resistance.
-
-[Sidenote: Fourth and Fifth Corps. March 27.]
-
-The fight upon the right wing of the 36th Brigade had been equally
-violent and even more deadly. In the fight upon March 27, when the
-Royal West Kents and 9th Fusiliers were so hard pressed in the north,
-their comrades of the 5th Berks and 7th Sussex had been very heavily
-engaged in the south. The Germans, by a most determined advance,
-drove a wedge between the Berkshires and the Sussex, and another
-between the Sussex and the Fusiliers, but in each case the isolated
-bodies of men continued the desperate fight. The battle raged for a
-time round the battalion headquarters of the Sussex, where Colonel
-Impey, revolver in hand, turned the tide of fight like some leader of
-old. The losses were terrible, but the line shook itself clear of
-Germans, and though they attacked again upon the morning of March 28,
-{69} they were again beaten off, and heavily shelled as they plodded
-in their sullen retreat up the hillside to La Boisselle.
-
-[Sidenote: Fourth and Fifth Corps. March 26.]
-
-Meanwhile, the 35th Brigade had also been fighting for its life to
-the south. Albert had fallen to the Germans, for it was no part of
-the plan of defence to hold the town itself, but the exits from it
-and the lines on each side of it were jealously guarded. At 7 P.M.
-on March 26 the Germans were in the town, but they had practically
-reached their limit. Parties had crossed the Ancre, and there were
-attacked by the 7th Norfolks, who were supported in a long fight upon
-the morning of the 27th by the 9th Essex and the 5th Northants
-Pioneer Battalion. The line was held, partly by the aid given by the
-51st Brigade of the Seventeenth Division, who numbered just 600 men
-and were led by Major Cubbon. Whilst the line was held outside
-Albert, the Germans in the town had a very deadly time, being fired
-at at short ranges by the 78th and 79th Brigades Royal Field
-Artillery. The 7th Suffolks were drawn into the infantry fight,
-which became a more and more desperate affair, involving every man
-who could be thrown into it, including two battalions, the 1st
-Artists and 10th Bedfords from the 190th Brigade of the Sixty-third
-Division. These latter units suffered very heavily from machine-gun
-fire before ever they reached the firing-line. At 8 A.M. upon March
-28 the Germans were still pouring men through Albert, but were
-utterly unable to debouch upon the other side under the murderous
-fire of the British. A single company of the 9th Essex fired 15,000
-rounds, and the whole slope which faced them was dotted with the
-German dead. The town of {70} Albert formed a covered line of
-approach, and though the British guns were still pounding the
-buildings and the eastern approaches, the Germans were able to
-assemble in it during darkness and to form up unseen in great numbers
-for the attack. At ten in the morning of the 28th another desperate
-effort was made to get through and clear a path for all the hordes
-waiting behind. The British artillery smothered one attack, but a
-second broke over the 7th Norfolks and nearly submerged them. Both
-flanks were turned, and in spite of great work done by Captain
-Chalmers with his machine-guns the battalion was nearly surrounded.
-The losses were terrible, but the survivors formed up again half a
-mile to the west, where they were again attacked in the evening and
-again exposed to heavy casualties, including their commanding
-officer. Few battalions have endured more. Late that night the 10th
-West Yorkshires of the Seventeenth Division came to their relief.
-The whole of the Twelfth Division was now rested for a time, but they
-withdrew from their line in glory, for it is no exaggeration to say
-that they had fought the Germans to an absolute standstill.
-
-We shall now return to March 26, a date which had been darkened by
-the capture of Albert. Apart from this success upon the German side,
-which brought them into a town which they had not held for years, the
-general line in this quarter began to assume the same outline as in
-1916 before the Somme battle, so that Hebuterne and Auchonvillers
-north of Albert were in British hands, while Serre and Puisieux were
-once more German. The existence of the old trenches had helped the
-weary army to hold this definite line, and as already shown it had
-received {71} reinforcements which greatly stiffened its resistance.
-The dangerous gap which had yawned between the Fourth and Fifth Corps
-was now successfully filled. In the morning of March 27 all was
-solid once more in this direction. At eleven on that date, an
-inspiriting order was sent along the line that the retreat was over
-and that the army must fight out the issue where it stood. It is the
-decisive call which the British soldier loves and never fails to
-obey. The line was still very attenuated in parts, however, and it
-was fated to swing and sway before it reached its final stability.
-
-[Sidenote: Fourth and Fifth Corps. March 27.]
-
-The fighting upon the front of the Sixty-second Division at Bucquoy
-upon March 27 was as heavy as on the front of the Twelfth to the
-south, and cost the Germans as much, for the Lewis guns had wonderful
-targets upon the endless grey waves which swept out of the east. The
-5th West Ridings, east of Rossignol Wood, were heavily engaged, the
-Germans bombing their way very cleverly up the old trenches when they
-could no longer face the rifle-fire in the open. There were three
-separate strong attacks on Bucquoy, which covered the slopes with
-dead, but the persistent attempts to get round the right wing were
-more dangerous. These fell chiefly on the 2/4 Yorks Light Infantry
-between Rossignol Wood and Hebuterne, driving this battalion in. A
-dangerous gap then developed between the British and the Australians,
-but a strong counter-attack of the 5th Yorkshire Light Infantry after
-dark, with the Australians and four tanks co-operating, recovered
-nearly all the lost ground.
-
-[Sidenote: Fourth and Fifth Corps. March 28.]
-
-On March 28 there was again a very heavy attack upon the 186th
-Brigade. The stormers surged right {72} up to the muzzles of the
-rifles, but never beyond them. Over 200 dead were found lying in
-front of one company. One isolated platoon of the 5th West Ridings
-was cut off and was killed to the last man. Farther to the right
-there were several determined attacks upon the 187th Brigade and the
-4th Australian Brigade, the latter being under the orders of the
-Sixty-second Division. These also were repulsed in the open, but the
-bombing, in which the Germans had the advantage of a superiority of
-bombs, was more difficult to meet, and the 5th Yorkshire Light
-Infantry were driven from Rossignol Wood and the ground which they
-had so splendidly captured the night before.
-
-About 11 A.M. on this day the Forty-first Division had been ordered
-up to man the east of Gommecourt. A brigade of this division, the
-124th, co-operated with the 8th West Yorkshires and some of the
-Australians in a fresh attack upon Rossignol Wood, which failed at
-first, but eventually, after dark, secured the north end of the wood,
-and greatly eased the local pressure. On March 29 and 30 the
-positions were safely held, and the attacks less dangerous. On the
-evening of the latter date the Sixty-second Division was relieved by
-the Thirty-seventh.
-
-Whilst these events had occurred upon the front of the Sixty-second
-Division, Russell's New Zealanders were holding the line to the south
-in their usual workmanlike fashion. From March 26 they held up the
-Germans, whose main attacks, however, were north and south of them,
-though March 27 saw several local advances against the Canterburys
-and the Rifles. On March 30 the New Zealanders hit {73} back again
-at La Signy Farm, with good results, taking 295 prisoners. It was a
-smart little victory at a time when the smallest victory was indeed
-precious.
-
-[Sidenote: Fourth and Fifth Corps. March 21.]
-
-Reverting now to the general situation upon March 27, the weak point
-was north and south of the Somme to the south of Albert. Between the
-river and Harbonnière the left wing of the Fifth Army had been
-broken, as will be told when we come to consider the operations in
-that area. The German advance was pouring down the line of the river
-with the same fierce rapidity with which it had recently thundered
-forward over the old Somme battle-fields. Having annihilated the
-local resistance on the left bank of the river, where Colonel Horn
-and 400 nondescripts did all that they could, they were pushing on
-from Cerisy to Corbie. General Watts of the Nineteenth Corps, whose
-defence was one of the outstanding features of the whole operations,
-was hard put to it to cover his left wing, so in loyal co-operation
-the Third Army north of the river detached the hard-worked Cavalry
-Corps, who were always called upon at moments of supreme crisis, and
-who never failed to answer the call. It was actually engaged to the
-north of the river at the time, but disengaged itself in part, though
-the enemy was holding Cerisy and Chipilly and had got a bridge across
-the river which would enable them to get to the rear of General
-Watts' Corps. The means by which this very dangerous German move was
-kept within bounds comes within the history of the Fifth Army.
-Suffice it to say that the cavalry passed over the river and that the
-Seventh Corps, north of the river, extended to cover the {74} wider
-front, throwing out a defensive flank along the north bank from
-Sailly-le-Sec to Aubigny.
-
-Along the whole line to the north the pressure was great all day upon
-March 27, but the attacks upon the Fourth Corps, which were
-particularly severe, were repulsed with great loss at Beaumont Hamel,
-Bucquoy, north of Puisieux, and at Ablainzeville. Near Bucquoy the
-Sixty-second Division in these two days repelled, as already
-narrated, eight separate German attacks. This fighting has to be
-fitted in with that recounted in the previous chapter near Ayette, in
-connection with the Thirty-first Division, in order to get a complete
-view of the whole German effort and the unbroken British line. Hamel
-was the only fresh village to the north of Albert which was taken by
-the Germans that day.
-
-[Sidenote: Fourth and Fifth Corps. March 21.]
-
-March 28 was remarkable for the very desperate engagement upon the
-front of the Sixth and Seventeenth Corps, which has been already
-described, and which marked the limit of the whole German advance in
-the northern area. The Fourth Corps farther south had its own share
-of the fighting, however, as already told in connection with the
-defence of Bucquoy by the Sixty-second Division. The line was held,
-however, and save for a small strip of Rossignol Wood, no gain at all
-came to solace the Germans for very heavy losses.
-
-All through these operations it is worthy of note that an important
-part was played by reorganised bodies of men, so mixed and broken
-that no name can be assigned to them. Officers stationed in the rear
-collected these stragglers, and led them back into gaps of the line,
-where their presence was sometimes of vital importance. A divisional
-general, {75} speaking of these curious and irregular formations,
-says: "There was no panic of any kind. The men of all divisions were
-quite willing to halt and fight, but as the difficulty of orders
-reaching them made them uncertain as to their correct action, they
-came back slowly and in good order. Once they received some definite
-orders they fell into line and dug themselves in at once." At one
-point 4000 men were collected in this fashion.
-
-In the Australian area the enemy occupied Dernancourt, but otherwise
-the whole line was intact. It was still necessary, however, to keep
-a defensive line thrown back along the north bank of the Somme, as
-the situation to the south, especially at Marcelcave, was very
-dangerous. Thus, the Seventh Corps covered this flank from Corbie to
-Sailly, and then ran north to Treux on the Albert-Amiens Railway.
-The arrival of the cavalry to the south of the river had spliced the
-weak section, so that on the morning of March 29 the British
-commanders from north to south had every cause to be easier in their
-minds. An inactive day was the best proof of the severity of the
-rebuff which the Germans had sustained the day before, nor were
-matters improved from their point of view when upon March 30 they
-attacked the Australians near Dernancourt and lost some thousands of
-men without a yard of gain, or when the New Zealanders countered
-them, with the capture of 250 prisoners and many machine-guns.
-
-This small chronicle of huge events has now brought the southern half
-of the Third Army to the same date already reached in the previous
-chapter by the northern half. The narrative has by no means reached
-the limit of the fighting carried on {76} by this portion of the
-line, but equilibrium has roughly been attained, and if the story be
-now continued it leaves too wide a gap for the reader to cross when
-he has to return to the history of the Fifth Army upon the 21st of
-March. Therefore we shall leave the Third Army for the time and only
-return to it when we have followed the resistance of the Fifth Army
-up to the same date.
-
-[Sidenote: Third Army. March 28.]
-
-Before starting upon this new epic, it would be well to remind the
-reader of the general bearing of the events already described, as it
-is very easy in attention to detail to lose sight of the larger
-issues. The experience of the Third Army then, put in its briefest
-form, was that the attack upon March 21 fell with terrific violence
-upon the two central corps, the Sixth and Fourth; that these, after a
-most valiant resistance, were forced to retire; that the strategical
-situation thus created caused the Seventeenth Corps in the north and
-the Fifth Corps in the south to fall back, and that both of them were
-then pressed by the enemy; that for six days the army fell slowly
-back, fighting continual rearguard actions against superior numbers;
-that this movement involved only a short retreat in the north, but a
-longer one in the south, until in the Albert region it reached its
-maximum; that finally the Germans made a determined effort upon March
-28 to break the supple and resilient line which had always faced
-them, and that this attempt, most gallantly urged, involved the Corps
-in the north as well as the whole line of the Third Army. The result
-of this great battle was a bloody defeat for the Germans, especially
-in the northern sector, where they made hardly any gain of ground and
-lost such vast numbers of men that their whole {77} enterprise was
-brought to a complete standstill and was never again resumed in that
-quarter.
-
-The losses of the Third Army during that week of desperate fighting
-when, in spite of the heroic efforts of the Medical Corps, the
-wounded had frequently to be abandoned, and when it was often
-impossible to get the guns away intact, were very severe. Many
-divisions which numbered their 9000 infantry upon March 21 could not
-put 1500 in the line upon March 28. These losses were not, however,
-so great as they might appear, since the constant movement of troops,
-carried on very often in pitch darkness, made it impossible to keep
-the men together. An official estimate taken at the time and subject
-to subsequent revision put the loss of guns at 206, only 23 of which
-were above the 6-inch calibre. Forty-three others were destroyed.
-The casualties in the Third Army during the period under review might
-be placed approximately at 70,000, divided into 10,000 killed, 25,000
-missing, and 35,000 wounded. The heaviest losses were in the
-Fifty-ninth Division, which gave 5765 as its appalling total, but the
-Sixth Division was little behind it, and the Forty-second,
-Forty-seventh, and Fifty-first were all over 4000. The Thirty-fifth
-Division had also a most honourable record, enduring very heavy
-losses in which the numbers of missing were comparatively small. Its
-work, however, was chiefly done at a later date than that which
-closes this chapter. In the estimate of losses there has to be
-included practically the whole personnel of the devoted battalions
-who held the forward line upon the first day of the German attack.
-In connection with the large number of stragglers, who were
-afterwards gathered together and showed {78} by their conduct that
-they had no want of stomach for the fight, it is to be remembered
-that the men had been accustomed to the narrow routine of trench
-operations, that most of them had no idea of open warfare, and that
-when they found themselves amidst swift evolutions over difficult
-country, carried on frequently in darkness, it was very natural that
-they should lose their units and join the throng who wandered down
-the main roads and were eventually rounded up and formed into
-formations at the river crossings or other places where they could be
-headed off. Among the casualties were many senior officers,
-including General Bailey of the 142nd Brigade.
-
-
-
-
-{79}
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-THE SECOND BATTLE OF THE SOMME
-
-Attack upon the Fifth Army. March 21.
-
-The Fifth Army front--The story of a Redoubt--Attack upon Congreve's
-Seventh Corps--Upon Watts' Nineteenth Corps--Upon Maxse's Eighteenth
-Corps--Upon Butler's Third Corps--Terrific pressure--Beginning of the
-Retreat--Losses of Guns.
-
-[Sidenote: Fifth Army. March 21.]
-
-In dealing with the German attack upon the Fifth Army, the first
-point which should be emphasised is, that heavy as the fighting was
-in the north, still it was this southern advance which was the main
-one. The official account of the disposition of the German forces
-brings this fact out very clearly. From the Sensée River to the
-Bapaume-Cambrai Road they are stated to have had nine divisions in
-line and eight in close reserve, covering a front of nine miles. In
-the eight miles from Cambrai Road to La Vacquerie they had four
-divisions. In the southern area from La Vacquerie down to La Fère
-they had twenty-three divisions in the line and seventeen in reserve,
-covering a front of over forty miles. This front was defended by
-eleven British divisions, with three divisions of infantry and three
-of cavalry in reserve. So far as infantry was concerned the odds
-were 40 to 14, while the German guns numbered about 3500 to 1300 on
-the British {80} line. These odds were serious enough if directed
-equally along the whole area, but when thrown in on special sectors
-they became more crushing. To add to the total picture of German
-strength, it should be added that twenty-five fresh divisions were
-thrown into the fight during the first week, nine upon the Scarpe
-front, three between the Ancre and the Somme, seven between the Somme
-and Montdidier, and six between Montdidier and the Oise. Against
-these have to be set British reinforcements, and the influx of French
-from the south. It was only on the first five days of battle that
-the odds were so overpoweringly with the Germans.
-
-In this chapter we shall endeavour to gain a superficial view of the
-general course of events upon the whole front of the Fifth Army upon
-the fateful March 21. We shall then be in a position to appreciate
-the situation as it was in the evening and to understand those
-decisions on the part of General Gough and his subordinates which
-influenced the subsequent operations.
-
-The front of the Fifth Army extended from its junction with the Third
-Army in the neighbourhood of La Vacquerie to Barisis, a village some
-miles south of the Oise, the total frontage being nearly forty miles.
-This was occupied by four corps. The northern was the Seventh, under
-General Congreve, a well-known soldier, whose V.C. and shattered arm
-proclaimed his past services to the Empire. This corps covered the
-southern part of the dangerous Cambrai salient and extended to the
-region of Ronssoy. From this point to Maissemy the line was held by
-General Watts with the Nineteenth Corps. Upon his right, extending
-as far as north of Essigny, {81} was General Maxse with the
-Eighteenth Corps. From thence to Barisis lay the Third Corps under
-General Butler. All four were soldiers of wide experience, their
-leader, General Gough, had never failed in any task to which he had
-laid his hand, and the troops in the line comprised some of the
-flower of the British army, so that in spite of all disparity of
-numbers there was a reasonable hope for success. Arrangements had
-been made by which the French or British could send lateral help to
-each other; but it must be admitted that the liaison work proved to
-be defective, and that the succours were slower in arriving, and less
-equipped for immediate action, than had been expected.
-
-The fortifications along the front of the Fifth Army were of various
-degrees of strength, depending upon the nature of the ground and upon
-the time that it had been in British possession, the north being
-stronger than the south. The Oise, which had been looked upon as an
-obstacle, and the presence of which had seemed to justify the
-extraordinarily long sector held by the Third Corps, had to some
-extent dried up and had ceased to be a real protection. In the main,
-the defences consisted of a forward line, a chain of small redoubts,
-each with four machine-guns and all connected by posts; a battle-line
-which was strongly wired and lay about 3000 yards behind the forward
-line; and a rear zone, the fortifications of which were not complete.
-If anything were wanting in the depth of the defences it has to be
-remembered that we are speaking of a vast tract of country, and that
-to dig a serviceable trench from London, we will say, to Guildford,
-furnishing it with sand-bags and wire, is a mighty {82} task. There
-were no enslaved populations who could be turned on to such work.
-For months before the attack the troops, aided by the cavalry and by
-several special entrenching battalions, were digging incessantly.
-Indeed, the remark has been made that their military efficiency was
-impaired by the constant navvy work upon which they were employed.
-There is no room for criticism upon this point, for everything
-possible was done, even in that southern sector which had only been a
-few weeks in British possession.
-
-Before beginning to follow the history of March 21, it would be well
-to describe the position and number of the reserves, as the course of
-events depended very much upon this factor. Many experienced
-soldiers were of opinion that if they had been appreciably more
-numerous, and considerably nearer the line, the positions could have
-been made good. The three infantry divisions in question were the
-Thirty-ninth, which was immediately behind the Seventh Corps, the
-Twentieth, which was in the neighbourhood of Ham, and was allotted to
-the Eighteenth Corps, and the Fiftieth, which was in general army
-reserve, and about seven hours' march from the line. The First
-Cavalry Division was in the rear of the Nineteenth Corps, while the
-Second Cavalry Division was on the right behind the Third Corps. The
-Third Cavalry Division was in billets upon the Somme, and it also was
-sent to the help of the Third Corps. Besides these troops the
-nearest supports were at a distance of at least three days' journey,
-and consisted of a single unit, the Eighth Division.
-
-The German preparations for the attack had not been unobserved and it
-was fully expected upon the {83} morning of the battle, but what was
-not either expected or desired was the ground mist, which seems to
-have been heavier in the southern than in the northern portion of the
-line. So dense was it that during the critical hours when the
-Germans were pouring across No Man's Land it was not possible to see
-for more than twenty yards, and the whole scheme of the forward
-defence, depending as it did upon machine-guns, placed in depth and
-sweeping every approach, was completely neutralised by this freak of
-nature, which could not have been anticipated, for it was the first
-time such a thing had occurred for two months. Apart from the
-machine-guns, a number of isolated field-guns had been sown here and
-there along the front, where they had lurked in silence for many
-weeks waiting for their time to come. These also were rendered
-useless by the weather, and had no protection from the German
-advance, which overran and submerged them.
-
-The devastating bombardment broke out along the line about five
-o'clock, and shortly after ten it was known that the German infantry
-had advanced and had invaded the whole of the forward zone, taking a
-few of the redoubts, but in most cases simply passing them in the
-fog, and pushing on to the main British line. As it is impossible to
-give the experiences of each redoubt in detail, the story of one may
-be told as being fairly typical of the rest. This particular one is
-chosen because some facts are available, whereas in most of them a
-deadly silence, more eloquent than words, covers their fate. The
-Enghien redoubt was held by Colonel Wetherall with a company of the
-2/4 Oxford and Bucks Light Infantry {84} upon the front of the
-Sixty-first Division. The redoubt formed the battalion headquarters,
-and was connected to brigade headquarters by a cable buried eight
-feet deep. In front were two companies of the battalion in the
-outpost line; behind was the fourth company ready for counter-attack.
-Early in the morning heavy trench-mortar fire was raining bombs upon
-the redoubt, and the wire was flying in all directions. At 6 the
-redoubt was so full of gas that even the masks could not hold it out,
-so the men were ordered below and put up gas blankets to fend it off.
-This could be safely done, as when gas is so thick it is not possible
-for the stormers to advance. At 6.15, what with fog and gas and
-blurred respirators, it was hardly possible to see anything at all.
-At 7.30 the gas cleared and there was a shower of high explosive
-shells with shattering effect. At 9.30 the barrage lifted and the
-garrison rushed up from their shelters and manned their posts, but
-the fog rolled white and thick across their vision. The cloud banked
-right up to their wire, while from behind it came all the noises of
-the pit. So nerve-shaking was the effect that some of the outlying
-men came creeping into the redoubt for human company. At 9.40 the
-whizzing of bullets all around showed that the infantry was on the
-move. The garrison fired back into the mist, whence came vague
-shoutings and tramplings. A request was cabled back for a protective
-barrage, but the inadequate reply showed that the British guns had
-suffered in the shelling. Suddenly the mist darkened at one point;
-it broke into running figures, and a wave of men rushed forward,
-scrambled through the broken wire, and clambered into the redoubt.
-The Oxfords {85} rushed across and bombed them back into the mist
-again. There was a pause, during which the attack was reorganised,
-and then at 11 o'clock the German stormers poured suddenly in from
-three sides at once. The garrison stood to it stoutly and drove them
-out, leaving many bodies on the broken wire. The fort was now
-entirely surrounded, and there was a fresh attack from the rear which
-added fifty or sixty more to the German losses. At 11.45 there was
-some lifting of the fog, and Colonel Wetherall endeavoured to get
-across to the village, 300 yards behind him, to see if help could be
-obtained. He found it deserted. Stealing back to his fort he was
-covered suddenly by German rifles, was dragged away as a prisoner,
-but finally, late in the evening, escaped and rejoined the main body
-of his own battalion. Meanwhile, Lieutenant Cunningham had taken
-over the defence of Enghien redoubt, assisted by Lieutenant Richards
-with the machine-guns. Hour after hour fresh attacks were repelled,
-but showers of bombs fell in the confined space, and the garrison
-were continually thinned out. Despairing messages--"What shall we
-do? What shall we do?"--were sent back over the cable, but nothing
-could be done, for these outliers are the _enfants perdus_ of the
-army, marked from the first for destruction. Finally, at 4.30, the
-great deep all around them sent one heavy wave to submerge them, and
-the cable was for ever silent.
-
-Such is the typical history of a redoubt. Some succumbed more
-readily, some survived until the afternoon of the next day; but the
-difference may sometimes have depended upon the various degrees of
-severity of attack, which was by no means the {86} same upon all
-sectors. The total effect was the complete destruction of the eleven
-gallant battalions which held the advanced line of the Fifth Army,
-and the loss of all material therein. One can but hope that the
-enemy paid a full price. Occasionally a sudden rise of the mist gave
-the defence a splendid opening for their machine-guns. On one
-occasion such a chance exposed a German officer standing with a large
-map in his hand within thirty yards of the fort, his company awaiting
-his directions beside him. Few of them escaped.
-
-[Sidenote: Seventh Corps. March 21.]
-
-We shall now follow the line of the Fifth Army from the north. The
-Seventh Corps upon the left consisted of the Ninth (Tudor), the
-Twenty-first (Campbell), and the Sixteenth (Hull) Divisions in the
-order named, and it carried the line down as far as Ronssoy, where it
-joined on to Watts' Nineteenth Corps. The Ninth Division had two
-brigades in the line, and all the battalions both of the Twenty-sixth
-and of the South Africans were in the forward zone and exposed to the
-usual devastating losses. Their front joined that of the
-Forty-seventh Division at Fifteen Ravine in the north, and the
-Twenty-first at Chapel Hill in the south. About eleven o'clock the
-main advance of the Germans struck up against this front. There was
-no action upon the left between Gauche Wood and the canal, though the
-bombardment was exceedingly heavy. On the right in the neighbourhood
-of Gauche Wood the fighting was very severe all day, and the stormers
-were able to make little progress, although they attacked again and
-again with the utmost resolution. This attack fell mainly upon the
-South African Brigade, who held on with the same firm courage which
-they had shown {87} at Delville Wood, and proved once more that there
-are no better soldiers in all the vast army of the Empire. It was
-only at this point, however, near the junction with the Twenty-first
-Division that the Ninth Division was attacked, for the German
-infantry was crushed by the artillery fire upon the left in front of
-Gonnelieu, so that the total losses of the Ninth upon this murderous
-day were probably less than those of other divisions in the Fifth
-Army. Gauche Wood was continually attacked, but the Quentin redoubt
-to the immediate north of it was left alone during the whole day. It
-was the 2nd or Natal South African regiment which held the extreme
-front, and after a very fine resistance they were driven through the
-wood, until at 11.30 the Germans held it all, but the Africans still
-clung to the system of Chapel trenches to the immediate west and
-south of it. To this they held all day, being much helped by a local
-rise in the mist about eleven, which enabled the guns in Quentin
-redoubt to see their targets in the south. Finally, the Germans were
-compelled to dig in in Gauche Wood, and give up the attempt to get
-farther. No other point was gained upon the Ninth Divisional front.
-Meanwhile, the enemy had pressed their attack with great violence
-upon the immediate right, where it fell with special strength upon
-the 2nd Lincolns of the Twenty-first Division. At 12 they were well
-behind the right rear of the Africans, who were compelled to throw
-back a flank. The Lincolns held on splendidly, however, and the
-danger was arrested. At 3.30 a new concentration of the enemy
-developed in front of Vaucelette Farm, and was heavily shelled by the
-British guns. At 5 o'clock the fight was very desperate upon Chapel
-{88} Hill on the southern limit of the South African area, where the
-Lincolns were still holding out but were being gradually pressed
-back. The 4th South African Regiment (South African Scots) was
-therefore ordered to counter-attack in this direction, which was done
-with great dash, the position upon Chapel Hill being re-established.
-Such was the general situation when at 8.15 orders were issued for
-the withdrawal of all units to the rear zone. This was done during
-the night, the general line of retirement being towards Sorel and
-Heudicourt, while the Scottish Brigade kept position upon the left.
-The order to retire came as a complete surprise, as all was well upon
-the immediate front, but the reason given was the penetration of the
-line at other points.
-
-Upon the right of the Scots and South Africans of the Ninth Division
-the line was held by Campbell's Twenty-first Division, consisting of
-the Leicester Brigade and two brigades of North Country troops, all
-of them the veterans of many battles. They covered the ground from
-south of Gauche Wood in the north to Epehy in the south. Two
-brigades were in the line, the 62nd in the north and the 110th in the
-south, and were exposed all day to a very severe attack which they
-held up with great steadiness and resolution. Heudicourt, Peizière,
-and Epehy were the scenes of particularly severe fighting. In the
-evening these places, and the whole line through Quentin Ridge and
-east of Gouzeaucourt, were still firmly held by the defenders. It
-may truly be said that along the whole fifty-mile front of battle
-there was no point where the enemy met with a more unyielding
-resistance than in the area of the Twenty-first Division. During the
-long day three {89} German divisions essayed the task of forcing
-Epehy and overcoming the defence of Chapel Hill, but as the night
-drew in all three lay exhausted in front of their objectives, and
-there would certainly have been no British retirement had it not been
-for the movements in the other sections of the line. Only at one
-post had the enemy made any lodgment, namely at Vaucelette Farm, and
-here he could have been thrown out by a counter-attack had the
-general situation permitted it. The Leicesters and the
-Northumberland Fusiliers upheld the fame of their historic regiments
-on this day of battle, but two of the outstanding exploits in the
-fight lie to the credit of the Lincolns, who kept an iron grip upon
-Chapel Hill, and to the 15th Durhams, who made a dashing
-counter-attack which swept back the German advance when it tried to
-penetrate between Epehy and Chapel Hill. The village of Peizière was
-held by the 7th Leicesters of the 110th Brigade, who fought as this
-brigade has always fought and held the Germans out. Once with the
-help of flame-throwers they gained a lodgment among the houses, but
-the brave Midlanders came back to it and threw them out once more.
-It was a party of this same Leicester regiment which held the farm of
-Vaucelette, and fought it out to the very last man before they
-suffered it to pass from their keeping.
-
-The fighting upon Chapel Hill was particularly severe, and was the
-more important as this eminence, lying almost upon the divisional
-boundary, enfiladed the Ninth Division to the north. There was a
-trench in front of the hill, called Cavalry Trench, and a farm behind
-called Revelon Farm, and the battle swung and swayed all day,
-sometimes the British holding {90} all the ground, and sometimes
-being pushed back as far as the farm. The 1st Lincolns gained great
-honour that day, but they could not have held the hill were it not
-for the co-operation of the South Africans, who twice helped to
-retake it when it had been temporarily lost. The 11th Royal Scots
-from the Ninth Division Reserve Brigade struck in also with effect
-when the enemy filtered round the north edge of the hill and worked
-to the rear of it. They had got as far as Genin Copse when the Royal
-Scots attacked and hunted them back once more. The weak point of the
-Twenty-first Division lay upon their right where they had to throw
-out a defensive flank 3000 yards deep. They had not troops enough to
-cover this ground, and it was only the splendid work of the batteries
-of the 94th Brigade R.F.A. which prevented a disaster.
-
-The Sixteenth Irish Division (Hull) lay upon the right of the
-Twenty-first Division, carrying the line to the south of Ronssoy.
-This division had two brigades in the line, the 48th to the left and
-the 49th to the right, and it appears to have sustained an attack
-which was of a peculiarly crushing nature. It cannot be denied that
-the wretched parochial politics which tear Ireland in two, and which
-are urged with such Celtic extravagance of language, cannot have a
-steadying effect upon national troops, but none the less every
-soldier will admit that the men who carried Guillemont and breasted
-the slope of the Messines Ridge have proved themselves to be capable
-of rising to the highest exercise of military virtue. If, therefore,
-they gave way upon this occasion while others stood, the reason is to
-be sought rather in the extra severity of the attack, which had {91}
-the same crushing effect upon other divisions both in the north and
-in the south of the line. All these brigades were desperately
-engaged during the day, as was the 116th Brigade of the Thirty-ninth
-Division which came to the help of the Irish, while the other two
-brigades of this supporting division endeavoured to strengthen the
-line of defence in the rear zone with a switch line from Saulcourt to
-Tincourt Wood. On the right the attack was too severe to be
-withstood, and not only the advance line but the battle position also
-was deeply penetrated, the Germans pouring in a torrent down the
-Catelet valley and occupying Ronssoy and Lempire, by which they
-turned the flanks both of the Twenty-first in the north and of the
-Sixty-sixth Division in the south. Especially fierce was the
-resistance offered by the 48th Brigade in the north, some units of
-which were swung round until they found themselves sharing with the
-Twenty-first Division in the defence of Epehy. The 2nd Munsters
-lived up to their high reputation during a long day of hard fighting,
-and were for the third or fourth time in the war practically
-destroyed. Colonel Ireland was hit about 10.30 in the morning, and
-one company, which counter-attacked near Malassise Farm, was
-annihilated in the effort; but the survivors of the battalion were
-undismayed, and under Major Hartigan they continued to oppose every
-effort of the stormers. One of the features of the battle in this
-area was the fight maintained all day by C Company scattered in
-little parties over Ridge Reserve and Tetard Wood. Lieutenant Whelan
-was the soul of this fine defence, contesting every bay of his
-trench, and continuing to rally and lead his dwindling band until
-noon of {92} the next day. A road ran past this position, and it was
-all-important for the enemy to move their artillery down it in order
-to press the retreat; but the Irishmen shot down the horse teams as
-they came until the passage was blocked with their bodies. Finally,
-all the scattered bands rallied near Epehy village, where, under
-Captain Chandler, who was killed in the contest, they fought to the
-last, until in the late evening their cartridges gave out, and the
-gallant Hartigan, with the headquarter staff of the battalion, was
-overwhelmed. Lieutenant Whelan, meanwhile, held his post near Epehy
-until noon of March 22, when he and his men fired their last round
-and threw their last bomb before surrender. The defence of Malassise
-Farm by Lieutenant Kidd and his men was also a glorious bit of
-fighting to the last man and the last cartridge.
-
-The general situation upon the front of the Seventh Corps on the
-night of March 21 was that the Sixteenth Division, reinforced by the
-116th Brigade, held the main battle positions, save on the extreme
-right, as far north as St. Emilie. Thence the line followed
-approximately the railway round and east of Epehy, in the region of
-the Twenty-first Division. East of Chapel Hill and Chapel Crossing
-it entered the holding of the Ninth Division, and passed west of
-Gauche Wood, through Quentin redoubt and so to the original line.
-Behind this indented position the 118th and 117th Brigades with the
-Sappers and Pioneers of the Thirty-ninth Division were hard at work
-upon the switch line, which should form a cover for retreat or a
-basis for reorganisation.
-
-[Sidenote: Nineteenth Corps. March 21.]
-
-Upon the right of the Seventh Corps lay Watts' Nineteenth Corps,
-which had two divisions in the {93} line, the Sixty-sixth Lancashire
-Territorial Division (Malcolm) in the north, and the Twenty-fourth
-Division (Daly) in the south. They covered a front from south of
-Ronssoy to south of Maissemy. The Lancashire Division, the same
-which behaved so splendidly in the mud battle of Broodseinde, had all
-three brigades in the front, covering 4000 yards, and were exposed
-all day to a most terrific assault. From the north they were in the
-order 197th, 199th, 198th. To the south of them an even more
-strenuous attack was launched upon the Twenty-fourth Division, which
-had two brigades in the line. These were the 17th upon the left and
-the 72nd upon the right, with the 1st North Staffords, 8th West
-Kents, 1st Rifle Brigade, and 8th Queen's in front. About 11 o'clock
-the news came that the enemy was pushing through at the point of
-junction with the Eighteenth Corps upon the right, where there seems
-to have been a gap of some hundreds of yards between divisions, and
-later that they had penetrated into the village of Hargicourt in the
-rear of the Sixty-sixth Division. There was heavy fighting all day,
-and by evening the whole forward zone held by the 2/3 Lancs
-Fusiliers, East Lancashires, and Manchesters had passed into the
-hands of the enemy, Colonel Stokes-Roberts of the former battalion
-being among the casualties. The twelve redoubts which constituted
-the main defences of the battle zone held out stoutly all day, all
-three brigades fighting with great valour. The Germans were
-continually pushing in, however, upon the right of the Twenty-fourth
-Division and enlarging their gains in that direction, so that the
-First Cavalry Division was called up, and the Pioneer Battalion of
-the 2nd Cavalry Brigade was thrown in on the {94} right of the
-Sixty-sixth Division near Roisel to form a defensive flank. By 1
-o'clock the battle zone of the Twenty-fourth Division was seriously
-compromised. The 72nd Brigade upon the right had been turned and the
-village of Maissemy had been taken by the Germans. Stone's 17th
-Brigade kept a tight grip, however, upon the hamlet of Le Verguier,
-and though many assaults were made upon it the place remained untaken
-in the evening. In the area of the Sixty-sixth Division the enemy
-was still gaining ground, however, and they had pushed on from
-Hargicourt to Templeux, where a counter-attack by the 6th Lancashire
-Fusiliers held them for a time. The fighting continued to be very
-bitter until late in the evening, for though the Germans had
-infiltrated all the ground between the redoubts, they were unable to
-overcome their resistance, or to take possession of their gains. At
-10.15 the order from General Watts was that there should be no
-retreat, and that however great the odds against them--and it was
-manifest that they were indeed very great--the two divisions should
-prepare for a fight to a finish. Meanwhile, the Fiftieth Division
-(Stockley) in army reserve had been ordered, after a march of seven
-hours, to support the line of the Nineteenth Corps, taking up a
-position in the rear from the Omignon River to the Cologne River,
-upon a front which had been partly wired. With the early morning of
-March 22 there came a renewed German attack which forced back the
-left of the Sixty-sixth, who were always much handicapped by the deep
-incursion the enemy had made into the area of the Sixteenth Division
-to the north, which continually endangered their flank and even their
-rear. {95} The battle was soon general along the whole front, and
-everywhere the resistance was most desperate, though the troops were
-gradually pressed back by the ever-increasing weight of the attack as
-Hindenburg's legions came rolling in from the east. Many a bitter
-curse went up that day from overwrought men against the perjured
-traitors on the Russian front, who to ease their own burden had
-thrown a double weight upon those who had helped and trusted them.
-At 11.30 in the morning the post of Le Verguier, which had been held
-so long and so gallantly by the 8th West Surreys, was at last carried
-by storm and its brave garrison destroyed or taken, though Colonel
-Peirs, who had been the soul of this defence, dashed out, revolver in
-hand, at this last moment, and got away in the mist. The whole line
-of the Twenty-fourth Division was shaken by the gap thus created.
-The pressure was very great also at Roisel, and the 151st Brigade
-from the Fiftieth Division had to be hurried up in order to hold back
-the advance down the valley of the Cologne, which would have turned
-the right flank of the Lancashire men to the north. The 9th Sussex
-was heavily engaged in this quarter and suffered severely. About
-noon a valiant attempt was also made by some tanks and dismounted
-troopers to turn the tide by recapturing the village of Hervilly,
-which had some temporary success. The German penetration had been
-too deep, however, and there was very pressing danger of isolation
-unless the corps fell back. This they did in the late afternoon and
-evening, passing through the ranks of the Fiftieth Division behind
-them. "They were nearly all gassed and dead weary," said one who
-observed them as {96} they passed. The 11th Hussars and 19th
-Entrenching Battalion most gallantly covered the retreat. The enemy
-were close at their heels, however, in great force and most
-aggressive mood, as the Fiftieth Division soon discovered. This unit
-will be remembered as the famous Yorkshire Territorial division who
-helped to turn the tide at the second battle of Ypres, and have shown
-their worth upon many fields; but on this occasion the odds were too
-heavy, though they held the enemy for the rest of the day. The lower
-half of the line between the Omignon and the Cologne rivers was held
-by Riddell's 149th Brigade of Northumberland Fusiliers, while the
-northern half was held by Rees' 150th Brigade, of Yorkshiremen.
-Against this thin wall dashed the full tide of the German advance as
-it swept on in the wake of the Nineteenth Corps. It was a long and
-hard fight in which the enemy had heavy losses, especially in front
-of Pœuilly, where considerable sheets of wire lay in front of the
-position of the 6th Northumberland Fusiliers. It was a most gallant
-affair--gallant on both sides. Their Colonel, Robinson, laid out his
-machine-guns in the long grass upon each side of this wire and
-enfiladed the German line with most murderous results. In the south
-the 4th Northumberland Fusiliers were attacked in front and on the
-right flank, and the pressure was so great that they had to abandon
-Caulaincourt, which was then recaptured and again abandoned by the
-6th Northumberland Fusiliers from the supporting line. The enemy,
-with his usual wile, telephoned from the mausoleum, a central
-building, that reinforcements be sent to that point. Upon asking the
-name of the officer and getting no reply, General Riddell, in local
-command, {97} turned on five batteries of 18-pounders and blew the
-mausoleum to pieces. At Poeuilly also there had been two successful
-counter-attacks, but the enemy was swarming round the southern flank
-in great numbers, and the river, which is not more formidable than an
-average South of England trout stream, was of little use as a
-protection. An important point named Nobescourt Farm, lying near the
-junction of brigades, had fallen into the hands of the enemy, and the
-village of Poeuilly was also taken. By evening the Fiftieth Division
-had done its work, however, as it had held up the pursuit and enabled
-the Nineteenth Corps to reach the line of the Somme without severe
-pressure. That night they received orders to withdraw, which were
-carried out in the morning of March 23, Martin's 149th Brigade in the
-south making a show of fighting in order to cover the movements of
-their companions in the north who were moving over a perfectly flat
-plain from Mons to Brie. Finally, General Riddell destroyed Tertry
-bridge and dropped back to St. Christ. During all these operations
-the German infantry were moving slowly forward in successive lines of
-skirmishers, about a thousand yards from the British, who retired in
-leisurely fashion, continually turning and holding them up, so that
-the whole spectacle was exactly that of a well-ordered field-day.
-When the main body had reached the bridges, a single company of the
-5th Northumberland Fusiliers lay out in the higher ground, under the
-leadership of Captain Proctor, who received the D.S.O. for his able
-conduct of the operation. This company held up a brigade for two
-hours, and then, their comrades being safely across, they withdrew in
-their turn, leaving half their number behind {98} them. Every one
-being across, both the St. Christ and Brie bridges were blown up.
-The latter was a brand-new construction and was in charge of an
-American officer of engineers who distinguished himself by his cool
-courage, starting out alone, and bringing across the river a train
-full of ammunition which lay upon the farther side. The
-Twenty-fourth Division had crossed at Falvy, the rearguard action
-being fought by the depleted battalions of the 72nd Brigade. Colonel
-Pope of the 1st North Staffords, Colonel Charlton of the 4th Yorks,
-and Colonel Le Fleming of the 9th East Surreys were among those who
-had fallen.
-
-[Sidenote: Nineteenth Corps. March 23.]
-
-The Nineteenth Corps was now covering a total front of 20,000 yards
-along the western bank of the stream, which is shallow and marshy in
-these reaches. Their line was from Rouy-le-Crane in the south to
-near Peronne, with some small outposts to the east of the river. The
-Eighth Division (Heneker) had come up on the morning of March 23, and
-occupied the southern end of the line, with the remains of the
-Twenty-fourth, the Sixty-sixth, and the Fiftieth extending to the
-north. There we shall leave them while we return to the history of
-the front line upon March 21.
-
-[Sidenote: Eighteenth Corps. March 21.]
-
-On the right of the Nineteenth Corps was Maxse's Eighteenth Corps
-covering the ground from the Omignon valley to a point just west of
-St. Quentin, with three divisions in the line. These were the
-Sixty-first on the left, the Thirtieth in the centre, and the
-Thirty-sixth in the south. The Sixty-first Division, under General
-Colin Mackenzie, was one of those fine second-line Territorial units
-which have done so well in the later stages of the war. All {99}
-three brigades were in the line, the 183rd Brigade of Scottish troops
-in the north, the 184th in the centre, and the 182nd in the south,
-both of the last being from the South Midlands. The 2/4th Oxfords,
-2/5th Gordons, and 2/8th Worcesters were the devoted battalions which
-held the forward line, and so fierce was their defence that the
-battle-line was able to maintain itself along the whole divisional
-front, in spite of very valiant efforts upon the part of the German
-stormers, who showed absolute contempt of death in their efforts to
-cut the wire at those points where their artillery had failed to do
-so. The story of the Enghien redoubt and its devoted defence has
-already been told, but belongs to the record of this division. The
-battle zone ran in the main along the eastern edge of the Bois
-d'Holnon, and this was desperately defended from morning to night.
-In the afternoon the high ground south of Maissemy, in the left rear
-of the division and outside their area, had been captured, and the
-2/4th Berkshires endeavoured to help the Twenty-fourth Division in
-their counter-attack. The Berkshires lost heavily in this venture,
-and their gallant Colonel, Dimmer, who had won the V.C. in the early
-days of the war, was shot through the head leading his men on
-horseback to the very lip of a trench full of Germans. Horse and
-groom fell before the same volley. The Sixty-first resumed its line
-after this action in the north, and it maintained it intact until
-evening, the three divisions of the German attack being practically
-held up by the three heroic battalions in the front line, so that the
-full weight of attack never reached the main line. It was as solidly
-established in the evening as in the morning. The position of the
-enemy on their left {100} rear had become more and more menacing, as
-after taking Maissemy they had pressed on to Villescholes. This led
-to dangerous attacks from the north on the early morning of March 22,
-in the course of which the 183rd Brigade had to fight desperately to
-preserve the flank of the division. The weight of this fighting fell
-chiefly upon the 8th Argyll and Sutherlands, who counter-attacked
-most valiantly, aided by the remains of the gallant 2/4 Berkshire's,
-who had suffered so severely the day before. Colonel M'Alpine Downie
-of the Argylls was wounded, and died next day. Even when the enemy
-had got as far westward as Vermand, the Sixty-first Division was
-still rooted to its ground, and the Highlanders on the left flank
-recovered by a spirited advance nine guns which had been overrun by
-the German advance between Maissemy and Villescholes. The 9th Royal
-Scots extended their line to the westward, and facing north presented
-an unbroken front to the constant hordes of Germans who were moving
-down the northern slopes of the Omignon valley in the direction of
-Caulaincourt. It was not until late in the afternoon of March 22
-that the Sixty-first Division retired, still fighting, to a prepared
-position north of Vaux.
-
-[Sidenote: Eighteenth Corps. March 22.]
-
-Next to the Sixty-first Division was the Thirtieth under General
-Williams. This division had two brigades--the 21st (Goodman) and the
-90th (Poyntz)--in the line, the latter officer being known to all
-sportsmen as the famous Somerset batsman. The front of 4000 yards
-was from the immediate west of St. Quentin to the Somme, and included
-two notable strong points, Manchester Hill and the Epine du Dullon.
-The 89th Brigade under General Stanley was in the immediate rear. It
-was {101} not used as a unit during the day, but the three fine
-battalions of the King's Liverpool Regiment, the 17th, 18th, and
-19th, were dispersed in the evening to reinforce three separate units.
-
-The fighting along the front of the Thirtieth Division was of a very
-desperate character. The forward battalions were the 2nd Wilts and
-the 16th Manchesters. Rushing through the gaps in their line of
-defence, the Germans flung themselves upon the battle zone, where
-after long fighting which lasted into the afternoon they gained
-possession of the two posts already mentioned, and worked into the
-main battle-line at Savy. Both brigades lost very heavily during
-these attacks, but the addition of the 18th and 19th King's from
-Stanley's brigade helped them to carry on under most trying
-conditions. Both these reinforcing battalions came in for severe
-fighting in the evening, and the 18th King's, which joined in a
-counter-attack by the 21st Brigade, was particularly hard hit, while
-the 19th had hardly an officer left, the colonel falling at the head
-of his men. As a final result of the day's battle both the brigades
-were somewhat driven in upon the front, but each held its line and
-was ready to renew the battle next morning. The 2nd Bedfords
-particularly distinguished themselves during this day of incessant
-fighting, making no less than six successful counter-attacks in order
-to clear their sector when it was partly occupied by the Germans. Up
-to 4 o'clock in the afternoon of March 22 the Thirtieth were still
-firm in their positions, and it was only the general situation of the
-Army which finally compelled them to abandon them. They dropped back
-upon the general line of Ham, where the three scattered {102}
-battalions of the 89th Brigade had been ordered to form one unit once
-more. Of the Manchester men in the front rank upon the day of battle
-hardly a man ever got away, and their splendid Colonel Elstob lay
-dead with the greater part of his battalion around him. He had said:
-"The Manchesters will defend Manchester Hill to the last," and he
-lived and died true to his word. A superior officer reporting upon
-this episode said: "At about 11 o'clock Colonel Elstob informed me
-that the Germans had broken through and were swarming round the
-redoubt. At about 2 P.M. he said that most of his men were killed or
-wounded, including himself; that they were all getting dead beat,
-that the Germans had got into the redoubt and hand-to-hand fighting
-was going on. He was still quite cheery. At 3.30 he was spoken to
-on the telephone and said very few were left and that the end was
-nearly come. After that no further answer could be got."
-
-On the right of the Thirtieth Lancashire Division was the
-Thirty-sixth Ulster Division under the command of General Nugent, one
-of the many good soldiers who were trained by South Africa for this
-greater ordeal. That scrambling and difficult campaign has, though
-its lessons were most imperfectly apprehended, proved to be an
-invaluable preparation for the leaders in the world's war of the
-future. The Ulster division had all three brigades in the line, the
-109th (Ricardo) to the north, the 107th (Witteycombe) in the centre,
-and the 108th (Griffiths) in the south. The three outlying
-battalions were the 12th and 15th Irish Rifles and the 2nd
-Inniskilling Fusiliers, which suffered the common fate of all who
-held that post of danger. Not a man returned, save a few of {103}
-the Irish Rifles, who swam down the canal that night.
-
-[Sidenote: Eighteenth Corps. March 21.]
-
-The front held by the Ulstermen was from the Somme on the left to the
-neighbourhood of Urvillers on the right, a distance of 6000 yards.
-Three German divisions attacked upon this frontage, but the edge of
-their onslaught was blunted by the splendid resistance of the three
-doomed battalions in the van. None the less, it surged with great
-violence all along the edge of the battle zone, but it was everywhere
-held save only at the hamlet of Contescourt, where the Germans
-obtained a lodgment. The whole defence of the division was
-imperilled, however, by the fact that the Germans had bitten deeply
-into the British line to the south of the 108th Brigade, getting as
-far as Essigny on their right rear, with the effect that a deep
-defensive flank had to be thrown back in this direction, which used
-up all the reserves of the division. Thus, when the Germans late
-that day and in the following morning pressed their advantage at
-Contescourt, and were stopped by the magnificent resistance of the
-1st Inniskilling Fusiliers at the neighbouring village of
-Fontairie-les-Clercs, they should have been permanently held, as they
-were driven back in twelve successive attacks. As there were no
-reserves available for a counter-attack, however, the defence was
-gradually worn down by a great disparity of numbers, so that by March
-22 the Germans had advanced into the sector of the line which ran
-down the course of the rivulet which is dignified by the name of the
-Somme.
-
-[Sidenote: Eighteenth Corps. March 22.]
-
-Such, in brief, was the experience of the three divisions which held
-the line of the Eighteenth Corps on March 21. The Twentieth Division
-in {104} reserve was not employed during the day, nor were its
-services needed, for Maxse's Corps, though attacked by eight German
-divisions, was able to hold its ground, thanks largely to the
-splendid resistance of the shock-absorbing battalions in the front
-line. Up to 4 P.M. of March 22 the enemy had made no permanent
-advance into the battle zone, but at that hour both flanks of the
-Corps had been turned at Maissemy in the north and at Essigny in the
-south, and the alternative was retirement or absolute isolation and
-destruction. It may then briefly be said that, thanks to the
-resolute resistance of the battalions in the forward zone, and to the
-solidity of those in the battle zone, the Eighteenth Corps was able
-to maintain its ground until it was ordered to leave it, and that
-save for some indentation of its front, especially at Contescourt,
-its main positions remained inviolate.
-
-[Sidenote: Third Corps. March 21.]
-
-Upon the right of the Eighteenth Corps lay the Third Corps, which
-covered the enormous front of 30,000 yards. Of the nine brigades in
-the corps, eight were in the line and only one in reserve, so that
-between the tenuity of the line and its want of support it was an
-extremely tempting mark for the German assault, especially as by
-ignoring the two brigades south of the Oise they could concentrate
-their whole force upon the six brigades in line in the north. It is
-true that the wide marshes of the Oise offered an impediment which
-covered part of the British line, but as already remarked, the waters
-were exceedingly low for the time of year, and the Germans very
-cleverly overcame whatever obstacle was left.
-
-The three divisions which formed Butler's Third Corps were the
-Fourteenth Light Division (Cowper), which extended as far south as
-Moy, the Eighteenth {105} Division (Lee) covering the ground between
-Moy and Travecy, and finally the Fifty-eighth Division (Cator)
-extending to Barisis, five or six miles south of the Oise. As usual,
-we will take them from the north, confining the narrative to the
-point at which the fighting in the front line came to an end.
-
-The Fourteenth Division had all three brigades in the line, their
-order being 41st, 42nd, and 43rd from the north. This division,
-composed entirely of light infantry battalions, has had more than its
-share of desperate adventures during its service in France. Again
-and again, notably in the fire-attack before Ypres in 1915, in the
-third battle of Ypres, and upon the present occasion, they have been
-exposed to ordeals of the most tremendous kind. Their frontage was
-5500 yards, which was not excessive as compared with that of other
-divisions, and it contained some high ground north of Essigny which
-should have been valuable for observation and defence, but none the
-less the attack was so severe and so concentrated that it rapidly
-made an impression upon the defence, which became more serious as the
-day wore on. The three outlying battalions were the 8th and 9th
-King's Royal Rifles and the 6th Somerset Light Infantry, and these,
-as usual, were sacrificed almost to a man. The enemy then stormed in
-upon the line, making his advance here, as elsewhere, with a
-systematic skill which showed how thoroughly he had been drilled and
-exercised behind the line. This process of infiltration by which
-small bodies here, there, and everywhere extend their advance where
-they find a cranny into which to push and establish machine-gun posts
-which, unless they be instantly rooted out, soon grow into formidable
-{106} positions, shows the remarkable adaptability of the German
-soldier--a quality with which, it must be admitted, the world had not
-credited him in the past. It may also be admitted that we yielded
-too easily to such tactics, and that there was a tendency, as was
-pointed out in a memorandum from the Higher Command, to consider a
-position as untenable because it was outflanked, instead of closing
-in upon the intruders and pressing each side of the nut-crackers
-against the intrusive nut. In many cases this was done, but in
-others small bodies of daring men with a few machine-guns were able
-to dislodge whole lines which they had managed to enfilade. On this
-occasion the Germans pushed in upon both flanks of the Fourteenth
-Division, but their most serious gains occurred about mid-day, when
-they captured Manufacture Farm north of Essigny, and, shortly
-afterwards the weighbridge west of that village. The 41st Brigade on
-the left were driven out of their headquarters, while the 43rd on the
-right were pushed back to the Gibercourt Road. A very weak point was
-evidently developing, so General Butler hurried up part of the Second
-Cavalry Division (Greenly), and also his only spare infantry brigade,
-the 54th (Sadleir-Jackson) in order to make a line of resistance at
-the switch line between Camas and Lizerolles. About 1.30 the Germans
-had got in between Essigny and Benay and taken Lambay Wood. In view
-of their accelerating advance and the ominous reports which were also
-coming in from the 173rd Brigade on the right, General Butler
-continued to build up his rear line, putting into it not only all
-three brigades of the Second Cavalry and the 54th Infantry Brigades,
-but also the 12th and {107} 13th Entrenching Battalions, thus
-covering the whole rear zone of the corps. Isolated parties of the
-41st Brigade were holding out in the main position upon the left, but
-Hinacourt had also fallen and the line was slowly rolling westward,
-so that by evening the Fourteenth Division had practically lost its
-hold of the whole of its battle position.
-
-Things were going better, however, with the Eighteenth Division,
-which held 9000 yards of front in the centre of the Third Corps. As
-this great frontage was maintained by only two brigades, the 53rd
-(Higginson) in the north and the 55th (Wood) in the south, it must
-have been very thinly held, and even admitting that the pressure was
-less than on either of the wing divisions, it was none the less a
-fine achievement to keep a grip on so wide an area. Three battalions
-were in the forward zone, the 8th Berks on the left, the 7th West
-Kents in the centre, and the 7th Buffs on the right, all of whom did
-splendidly, so that the defence of Fort Vendeuil, Cork, Cardiff,
-Durham, and other redoubts upon this point form a whole series of
-epics. Besides the infantry, the 79th Company Royal Engineers shared
-in the peril and the glory of this defence. The wires connecting up
-these forward garrisons were speedily cut, and no news came back all
-day, save the rattle of their rifle-fire. The first definite tidings
-of the German advance came back through the fog about 12 o'clock,
-when some gunners emerged from its folds and announced that the
-advanced guns had been overrun by the enemy. Soon after came a
-runner with a message from Colonel Crosthwaite of the West Kents to
-say that his headquarters was surrounded, and asking for a barrage on
-one side {108} of it. A second message arrived from him: "Still
-holding, 12.30 P.M. Boche all round within fifty yards except rear.
-Can only see forty yards, so it is difficult to kill the blighters."
-It was the last word from the post. At 1.30 the enemy had closed in
-on the battle zone, and the high ground at Cerisy in the area of the
-53rd Brigade had been lost. On the front of the 55th Brigade at the
-same hour strong parties of the enemy who had pushed between the
-redoubts in the fog had occupied Vendeuil, while a section of guns in
-Ronquenet Wood had been rushed by them. The reserve company of the
-Buffs in front of the battle zone fought desperately against these
-intruders, while near the Dublin redoubt Captain Dennis fought his
-guns till 5 P.M., inflicting heavy losses upon the Germans, who
-collected in masses in front of the wire at this point. Eventually
-his gun-pits were rushed, all the gunners being killed or taken. The
-main weight of the attack fell upon the 53rd Brigade upon the left,
-and by the middle of the afternoon all the redoubts upon this front
-had gone, while the 55th was still well covered. The battle zone,
-however, was still intact, though the enemy massed heavily in front
-of Moulin Farm and opposite the switch line from Vendeuil to
-Ly-Fontaine. They came forward several times, but the mist had risen
-and the rifle-fire was accurate so that they made no progress. At
-Caponne Farm there was also a brisk attack, but the 10th Essex, the
-only battalion left in the brigade, held firmly to its position,
-though much plagued by low-flying aeroplanes who skimmed their very
-heads, while the British Headquarters was equally disturbed by a
-captured anti-tank gun with which the Germans kept up a point-blank
-fire. To {109} ease the pressure upon this wing, General Lee put in
-the 8th East Surreys from divisional reserve to thicken the line in
-the neighbourhood of Remigny.
-
-At 3.30 the covering forts upon the front of the 55th Brigade were
-still holding out. Fort Vendeuil had made a particularly fine
-defence and broke up a heavy attack. There was lamp signalling from
-this fort till 6 P.M., when the lamp went out for ever. The 7th
-Buffs, who had charge of all this portion of the battle front, did a
-magnificent day's work, and the famous regiment to which this
-battalion belongs has won no prouder laurels in all the centuries.
-Little is known of their fate save the pregnant facts that the front
-was screened all day, that repeated messages for help were received
-up to 8.30 in the evening, and that rifle-fire was heard from their
-posts till midnight. Bald words--and yet to him who can see they
-convey a sure picture of fading light, dwindling cartridges, and
-desperate men, baited from all sides and dying with clenched teeth
-amid the ever-flowing German hordes.
-
-About 4 o'clock the Germans had not only penetrated deeply into the
-battle zone of the Fourteenth Division to the north, but had also
-dented that of the Fifty-eighth in the south, so that both wings of
-the Eighteenth were in a perilous state. The East Surreys were
-pushed forward, therefore, into the switch line from Gibercourt to
-Ly-Fontaine. Two regiments of dismounted cavalry from the Second
-Division were sent also to form a defensive flank upon the right of
-the 55th Brigade. At 6 P.M. the attack upon the battle zone of the
-Eighteenth had ceased, but it was being pushed hard upon the two wing
-divisions, and the Fifty-eighth had lost both Quessy {110} and
-Fargniers. Orders were then issued to get behind the Crozat Canal
-after dark, this having always been chosen as the second line of
-defence. The 54th Brigade, which behaved with great steadiness, was
-directed to cover the retirement of the Fourteenth Division, and the
-guns were withdrawn first, so as to cover the infantry at the canal
-crossings. A few of the outlying posts were gathered up and brought
-back in safety. The East Surreys covered the withdrawal of the poor
-remains of the 53rd Brigade, while the 3rd Hussars covered the 55th
-Brigade on the right. It was a most difficult and delicate operation
-with a victorious and elated enemy swarming upon the rear, but it was
-successfully carried out, and by 6 A.M. the Third Corps were all
-across the canal, and the bridges in that sector had been destroyed.
-
-The performance of the Eighteenth Division had been a very fine one,
-and it was one of the units which could boast that on the evening of
-that terrible day they still held the main position which they had
-covered in the morning. The main German attack seems to have been
-conducted by four divisions, the Thirty-fourth, Thirty-seventh, One
-hundred and third, and Two hundred and eleventh, while four more were
-identified as either partly engaged or in immediate reserve. The
-direction of the attack was mainly from the north and came upon the
-front and flank of the 53rd Brigade, which could hardly call itself a
-battalion in the evening. The gunners had to fire by guess until the
-mist lifted, after which time they did great execution, and stuck to
-their pieces to the last moment. A particularly notable performance
-was that of Captain Haybittle of C Battery, 83rd Brigade Royal Field
-Artillery, whose guns, just {111} south of Benay, were rushed in the
-mist at noon. He and his crews removed the blocks and held a
-neighbouring position with their rifles, directing at the same time
-the fire of two guns in the rear which played upon the German masses
-as they debouched from Lambay Wood. Afterwards he and his men fell
-back upon these guns and fought them until late in the evening, when
-both of them were knocked out. Nineteen hundred rounds were fired,
-and this stubborn defence did much to hold the northern flank of the
-battle zone.
-
-It only remains now to give some account of the events upon the front
-of the 173rd Brigade (Worgan) of the Fifty-eighth London Division
-(Cator) upon the extreme right, in order to complete this rapid
-bird's-eye view of the events of March 21 upon the front of the Fifth
-Army. This brigade, which filled the space between Travecy on the
-left and the Oise upon the right, had the 2/1 Londons in the forward
-zone, the 2/4 Londons in the battle zone opposite La Fère, and the
-2/3 Londons in the rear zone upon the Crozat Canal.[1] The single
-battalion in front was attacked by the impossible odds of three
-German divisions, but held out for a long time with great constancy.
-Their brave Colonel, Richardson, was last seen surrounded by the
-enemy, but still fighting with his headquarters troops around him.
-The Germans stormed forward to the battle zone, but there on the high
-ground across the Oise they also met with a very vigorous resistance
-from the 4th Londons, aided by some sappers and a company of
-pioneers. It was indeed {112} a great achievement of Colonel Dann
-and his men to hold up the attack with such disparity of numbers, for
-according to the official German account several divisions took part
-in the attack. Finally, as the afternoon wore on the enemy obtained
-a lodgment in the left of the position, and before evening they had
-occupied Travecy and part of Fargniers, winding up by the capture of
-Quessy. The 2/3 Londons had been drawn into the fight, and now the
-2/8 Londons from the 174th Brigade were brought north and placed in
-reserve along the line of the Crozat Canal, across which the troops
-were now ordered to fall back. This battalion with the 18th
-Entrenching Battalion guarded the whole canal line from Condren
-Crossing on the right to the junction with the Eighteenth Division on
-the left. By 5 A.M. all troops were across and the bridges had been
-destroyed. The 2/4th Londons succeeded in removing all their stores
-and munitions, and their remarkable achievement in holding the high
-ground of La Fère against ten times their numbers for as many hours,
-during which they inflicted very heavy losses upon their assailants
-and repulsed six separate attacks, was among the outstanding military
-feats of that difficult day.
-
-
-[1] When two numbers are given to a Territorial battalion, for
-instance 2/4 Londons, it means that the 4th Londons have two
-battalions and that this is the second of them.
-
-
-It is needless to say that the losses in men were very heavy on March
-21, though it is difficult to separate them from the general losses
-of the retreat, which will be recorded later. Among senior officers
-of note who died for their country that day, besides those already
-mentioned, were Colonels Acklom of the Northumberland Fusiliers,
-Thorne of the North Staffords, Wrenford of the East Lancashires, and
-Stewart of the Leicesters.
-
-[Illustration: General line of Army on March 21st.]
-
-
-
-
-{113}
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-THE SECOND BATTLE OF THE SOMME
-
-Retreat of the Seventh and Nineteenth Corps
-
-Problem before General Gough--His masterful action--Arrival of
-Thirty-ninth, Twentieth, and Fiftieth Divisions--Retreat of Tudor's
-Ninth Scottish Division--Destruction of the South Africans--Defence
-of the Somme--Arrival of the Eighth Division--Desperate fighting--The
-Carey line--Death of General Feetham--"Immer fest daran"--Advance
-Australia--Great achievement of General Watts.
-
-[Sidenote: Fifth Army. March 22.]
-
-The reader is now in a position to form some conception of the
-situation of the Fifth Army upon the evening of March 21, and to
-understand the problems which confronted its commander. He was of
-opinion, and the opinion was shared by some at least of his corps
-commanders, that had he had four or five divisions of reserves within
-easy call, he could unquestionably have held the line. He had,
-however, to deal with the situation as it stood, and no man could
-have had a more difficult and responsible task. His own reserves
-were already practically engaged. On the other hand, both his air
-service and the reports of prisoners assured him that those of the
-enemy were numerous and near. His line had been deeply dented in
-four places: in the sector of the Sixteenth Division at Ronssoy, in
-that of the {114} Twenty-fourth Division at Maissemy, in that of the
-Fourteenth Division at Essigny, and in that of the Fifty-eighth
-Division opposite La Fère. These various points are, it will be
-observed, almost equidistant along the line, which tends to show that
-the German attack was conducted upon a plan which threw such forces
-upon limited areas that the result was almost a certainty, whatever
-troops might be holding them. It was the misfortune and not the
-fault of these gallant divisions that their thin ranks were in the
-very places which huge hordes of the enemy had marked in advance as
-their objectives.
-
-It must have been clear to General Gough and to his corps commanders
-that a second day of battle, with the German reserves pouring up,
-would certainly mean a penetration of the line at these various weak
-points, and that the enemy would then be in a position to cut off
-large portions of the force. These units, be they divisions or
-corps, would no doubt fight to the last, but the end must surely be
-annihilation. In that case the general situation would have been an
-appalling one. It might indeed have been decisive for the whole war.
-There was nothing between the Germans and Amiens. Pouring westwards
-they would have destroyed all reserves almost before they could have
-alighted from their trains or their motors, and within a few days
-would have entirely cut off the British from the French, with the
-estuary of the Somme between the two armies. Any hesitation would
-have been fatal. An immediate decision was imperative. That
-decision could only be that the British Army should retard the German
-advance by an obstinate rearguard action, that it should endeavour to
-preserve its line, and allow no unit to be cut off, {115} that it
-should fall back in an orderly fashion upon its reserves, and that
-when it met them it should turn at bay and prevent the enemy from
-reaching his objective. This was the plan which General Gough
-instantly formed, and which he proceeded with firmness and moral
-courage to carry out. Orders were at once given that the weaker
-portions of the line should drop back behind the obstacles which had
-already been marked out as the best defensive lines. At the same
-time with great foresight he gave orders that the old French Somme
-trenches, from the river southwards, should be set in order as a last
-line of defence. He despatched his chief army engineer, General
-Grant, to carry out this order, and it was eventually a very vital
-one in ensuring the safety of the army in the last stages of its
-retreat.
-
-The orders to each corps commander were given in the form of general
-indications, the details being left to his own judgment, for the
-position of each corps and the pressure upon it formed a number of
-independent problems. We shall turn to the north therefore, where,
-upon the whole, the situation was least critical, and we shall follow
-first the Seventh and then the Nineteenth Corps in their various
-movements until a condition of equilibrium was at last safely
-established. Let it be at once stated that the design was duly
-carried out along the whole line, and that the operation, which at
-the time was designated as a disaster, was really a remarkable
-example of how by the coolness of commanders and the discipline of
-their men, the most desperate situation may be saved and the most
-powerful and aggressive foe foiled in his attempts. What complicated
-the military problem of the Fifth Army was that the {116} German
-threat was really aimed at Paris as much as at Amiens, and that if
-they could have got through at Essigny and cut off the Fifty-eighth
-Division there were hardly any reserves between them and the
-all-important metropolis.
-
-[Sidenote: Seventh Corps. March 22.]
-
-The morning of March 22 again presented those conditions of fog and
-low visibility which are favourable to the attack. There was no
-advance in the early hours upon the new positions of the Ninth
-Division, but the enemy directed his attention entirely to the Chapel
-Hill front of the Twenty-first Division upon the right, which was
-still held by the Lincolns. An attempt was made to relieve them by
-the Scots battalion of the South Africans, who took over some of the
-northern line. The defence was a splendid one, but by 4 o'clock in
-the afternoon the Germans had gained most of this high ground by
-outflanking it, and the South Africans at Revelon Farm, who had been
-reinforced by the 11th Royal Scots Battalion from the 27th Brigade,
-were badly enfiladed in consequence by rifle and machine-gun fire
-from the south. Colonel M'Leod of the South African Scots, and many
-officers and men, were among the casualties. There was a withdrawal
-therefore of the right of the Ninth Division, and about 6.30 P.M. the
-Germans had got as far as Heudicourt, and the brigade staff at Sorel
-had to line up in order to resist his turning movement to the north.
-So far round had the Germans penetrated that the Africans were
-compelled to fall back due north for some distance until their rear
-was clear, when they retreated with the rest of the division
-westwards towards Nurlu. By two in the morning of March 23 the new
-positions had been reached, and the attenuated {117} South African
-Brigade, which had borne the brunt of the fighting, was taken into
-divisional reserve. This difficult retreat was rendered possible by
-the desperate resistance offered by the 6th Scots Borderers, who
-formed a defensive flank south of Sorel and gave the troops to the
-north time to gain the new position. One company of the 11th Royal
-Scots was cut off in Revelon Farm, but managed to fight their way
-back, bringing with them an officer and eighteen other prisoners. No
-guns were lost by the Ninth Division save ten, which were without
-teams and were therefore destroyed.
-
-[Sidenote: Seventh Corps. March 23.]
-
-At this period there was some dislocation between the left of the
-Ninth Division and the right of the Forty-seventh, as is likely to
-occur where each belongs to a different corps and army. For a time
-there was a gap between them. This was partly overcome, however, on
-the evening of the 22nd by means of the Second Division, which lay in
-reserve behind the Forty-seventh and put its 99th Brigade under the
-orders of the Ninth Division so as to ensure unity of command in this
-position of danger.
-
-Turning to the right wing of the Seventh Corps allusion has been made
-in the last chapter to the severe pressure upon the Sixteenth
-Division and its determined resistance. It will be remembered that
-it was reinforced by the 116th Brigade of the Thirty-ninth Division,
-and all three brigades were involved in the same heavy fighting on
-the morning of March 22, the German attack being relentless in its
-vigour. In the course of this severe action the village of St.
-Emilie was lost, and was afterwards retaken in a very gallant fashion
-by the 1st Hertfords, a battalion which had greatly distinguished
-itself {118} already at St. Julien and elsewhere. The orders were to
-retreat, however, and in this movement the switch line from Saulcourt
-dug and manned by the 117th and 118th Brigades proved invaluable.
-The army policy was to fight rearguards and delay the enemy, and this
-was most efficiently done during the evening of March 22, the flank
-of the Twenty-first Division being covered in its retirement, and the
-line held against vigorous attacks. Many of the guns of the
-Thirty-ninth Divisional artillery were lost through their extreme
-devotion in covering the retreat of the Sixteenth Division, for they
-frequently carried on until the infantry were behind them. The enemy
-was pressing his attacks with great vigour, and every withdrawal was
-followed up by strong bodies of troops and of field artillery.
-
-[Sidenote: Seventh Corps. March 22.]
-
-During these operations General Hornby had been in command of the
-division, but on March 23 General Feetham returned from leave and
-took over the duties. All day the Thirty-ninth Division was fighting
-rearguard actions as it fell back upon the Somme. In the course of
-them General Hornby, now in command of the 116th Brigade, was
-severely wounded. The roads running westwards to Peronne and Clery
-were crowded with traffic, but the Thirty-ninth Division turned at
-bay again and again, giving them time to get clear. By evening the
-remains of the Sixteenth Division had been practically squeezed out
-of the line, and the Thirty-ninth had the Sixty-sixth Division on its
-right and the Twenty-first on its left. At night it held a line from
-La Maisonnette along the canal to south of Ommiecourt. The enemy
-appeared to be much exalted by the capture of Peronne, and the 118th
-Brigade {119} on the right heard them singing lustily during the
-night.
-
-[Sidenote: Seventh Corps. March 23.]
-
-On March 23 the German attack continued to be very heavy upon the
-front of the two Scottish brigades of the Ninth Division, which were
-in touch with the Fifth Corps in the north and with the Twenty-first
-Division in the south. So close and violent was the fighting that
-the 6th Scots Borderers were only extricated with difficulty. At 2
-P.M. the line was east of Bouchavesnes, but by 4 P.M. the
-Twenty-first Division on the right had lost ground, and the flank and
-even the rear of the Ninth was for a time exposed until the Natal
-Regiment was thrown out south of Bouchavesnes to cover it. The three
-brigades of the Twenty-first Division were engaged all day as they
-slowly retreated before the swarming enemy.
-
-March 23 was a most arduous day for both the Highland and the Lowland
-brigades, for each of them was attacked again and again with the
-utmost violence. Though the attacks were repulsed each of them had
-the effect of weakening still further these units which were already
-much exhausted by hard fighting and incessant exertion. Gradually
-they were pushed to the westward until they found themselves lining
-the eastern edge of St. Pierre Vaast Wood, and manning the ridge
-which extended from that forest to the ruins of Saillisel. Their
-left at this period seems to have been in the air, as the 99th
-Brigade had been returned to its division, and they had failed to
-make contact with the Seventeenth Division, who were at the time just
-west of Saillisel. At this period the front of the Ninth Division
-seems to have covered 11,000 yards, and to have extended for at least
-two miles into the area of the Third Army, {120} showing how
-desperate were the exertions needed to cover the ground and to
-prevent a break through.
-
-[Sidenote: Seventh Corps. March 24.]
-
-In the morning of March 24 the Scots could see the German infantry
-streaming forward over the open ground which had been evacuated upon
-the evening before. It was clear that a great attack was imminent,
-and at 9 o'clock, after a very heavy cannonade, it developed along
-the whole line. For three hours the Germans made repeated efforts to
-force their way through the Ninth Division, but on each occasion they
-were repulsed, and their losses at this point were exceedingly heavy.
-About mid-day, however, they had gained so much ground upon the
-flanks that the South Africans were almost surrounded, and shot into
-from north and south. The general British line had fallen back to
-the ridge east of Combles, 1000 yards behind, but General Dawson
-found it impossible to withdraw in daylight, so that his brigade was
-compelled to defend itself in its isolated position at Marrières Wood
-as best it could. The result was a disaster, but one of a most
-glorious kind, for the men fought until their last cartridges had
-been expended, and a large proportion of the survivors were wounded
-men. General Dawson was among the prisoners. It was reported
-afterwards from German sources that he was taken while working a
-machine-gun with his brigade-major lying dead beside him. The whole
-defence was said by the Germans to have been one of the finest things
-in the war. From that time forward the South African Brigade had
-practically ceased to exist until it was reorganised in Flanders.
-The supporting parties alone were left, and these were formed at once
-into a composite battalion under Colonel Young, for no rifle {121}
-could be spared from the fighting line at such a time. Whilst the
-South Africans had been engaged in this death struggle the 27th
-Lowland Brigade had been in a similar plight. All these battalions,
-the 6th Scots Borderers and the 11th and 12th Royal Scots, were very
-hard pressed, particularly the former. The Lowlanders extricated
-themselves from an almost desperate situation and fell back from St.
-Pierre Vaast to the position covering Combles. So great was the
-general dislocation of troops that one portion of the 5th Camerons
-found themselves that evening fighting with the Forty-seventh
-Division, while another was with the Seventeenth.
-
-The main effort of the enemy upon March 24 was directed against the
-Fifth and Seventh Corps in the centre of the British line, though his
-energy at other points was sufficient to engage the full attention of
-all the other units. Heavy and fresh masses were poured in at the
-centre and the pressure was great. For the Seventh Corps it was the
-fourth day of incessant and desperate fighting. There were few men
-left, and these were very exhausted. Towards evening the left of the
-Seventh had been turned, and had been compromised by the occupation
-of Sailly Saillisel. All attempts at counter-attack, however
-gallant, were destined to failure, or at the best evanescent success,
-for there was not the weight to carry them through. At 4.15 the
-report was: "The enemy is through on the right flank and has occupied
-Combles, Morval, and Lesbœufs." The Seventh Corps then fell back
-to the line Hem-Maurepas and threw out every stray unit it could get
-together--troops of cavalry, Canadian motor-guns, crews and
-machine-guns of tanks, and all the powdered débris {122} of broken
-formations, in the direction of Bernafoy Wood to cover the exposed
-flank. It was still out of touch with the Fifth Corps. This
-movement gave the line an awkward angle from Peronne and made it
-almost impossible to hold the stretch of river. For the time the
-right of the Third Army was a good five miles behind the left of the
-Fifth Army--the result, as Sir Douglas Haig has stated, of an
-unauthorised local withdrawal due to misunderstanding of orders. The
-line near Peronne was still held by the Thirty-ninth Division.
-Throughout the morning of the 24th strong enemy forces were seen by
-them pushing forwards between Clery and Rancourt, where they were
-harassed by the British fire in enfilade, particularly on the roads,
-where the artillery of the Sixteenth and Thirty-ninth Divisions
-caused much havoc and confusion, doing great work at short range over
-open sights. Many excellent targets were missed, however, owing to
-that difficulty in liaison between the infantry and the guns, which
-was one of the greatest problems of the operations. During the day
-the average number of rounds fired per battery was 3000, most of
-which were observed fire.
-
-As March 24 wore on the position of the Thirty-ninth Division became
-untenable, as they heard upon one side of the loss of Saillisel, and
-on the other of the forcing of the Somme at Brie, Pagny, and
-Bethencourt. They moved back, therefore, at night with orders to
-hold the line from Buscourt to Feuilleres. The average strength of
-brigades at this time was not more than 20 officers and 600 men.
-From the morning of March 25 the Thirty-ninth Division passed to the
-command of the Nineteenth Corps, and its {123} further arduous work
-will be found under that heading. During all this day Campbell's
-Twenty-first Division, still fighting hard in a succession of
-defensive positions, had its right upon the Somme, while its left was
-in intermittent touch with the Ninth Division.
-
-The Ninth Division had fallen back, the two Scottish brigades being
-continually in action until they reached the Maricourt-Montauban
-line, where they supported the First Cavalry Division who were in
-front of Bernafoy Wood. The general line at this period from
-Montauban southwards was held by the Ninth Division, the First
-Cavalry, the newly-arrived and most welcome Thirty-fifth Division
-(Franks), the Twenty-first Division, now reduced to a single
-composite brigade under General Headlam, and then some oddments under
-Colonel Hunt. This brought the line to the Somme, on the south side
-of which were the remains of the Sixteenth and Thirty-ninth
-Divisions. This might sound an imposing force upon so short a front,
-but save for the Thirty-fifth each division was _nominis magni
-umbra_, none of them stronger than brigades. The Forty-seventh
-Division was retiring at this time upon Contalmaison, and a gap of
-several miles was appearing between the Fifth and Seventh Corps.
-During the movements upon March 24 the guns of the 65th and 150th
-R.F.A. did great work and earned the warm gratitude of the weary
-infantry. The enemy targets round Combles were all that a gunner
-could wish.
-
-All troops north of the Somme were upon March 25 transferred to the
-Fifth Corps, and became part of the Third Army. The 27th Brigade was
-drawn out of the line, and the 26th was under the orders of the {124}
-Thirty-fifth Division which took over the defence of this sector,
-relieving the exhausted Twenty-first Division. March 25 saw heavy
-attacks on Bernafoy which was lost once, but regained by the 106th
-Brigade. There was still a gap to the north, and no touch had been
-made with the Seventeenth Division, though the cavalry had built up a
-defensive flank in that direction. At 2 P.M. the Germans attacked
-from Ginchy towards Trones Wood, names which we hoped had passed for
-ever from our war maps. In the first onset they pressed back the
-12th and 18th Highland Light Infantry of the 106th Brigade, but there
-was a strong counter-attack headed by the 9th Durhams which retook
-Favière Wood and restored the situation. A second attack about 3
-P.M. upon the Thirty-fifth Division was also repulsed. The German
-pressure was so great, however, that the line of defence was taken
-back during the night to the Bray-Albert position. The enemy
-followed closely at the heels of the rearguards, though the guns were
-active to the last so as to conceal the retreat as long as possible.
-Early in the morning of March 26 the Lowland Brigade was again
-attacked with great violence, but the 12th Royal Scots, upon whom the
-main assault fell, drove it back with loss. Changes in other parts
-of the line, however, necessitated a withdrawal across the Ancre, so
-as to keep in touch with the Twelfth Division which had now come up
-on the left. The Ninth Division upon this date numbered 1540 rifles
-with 20 machine-guns. It was shortly afterwards drawn from the line
-after as severe a spell of service as troops could possibly endure.
-The story of the retreat of the Seventh Corps has been indicated
-mainly from the point of view of this {125} northern unit, but it
-will be understood that the Twenty-first, as tried and as worn as its
-Scottish neighbour, was keeping its relative position to the south,
-while the Sixteenth was conforming in the same way until the time
-when it passed into the Nineteenth Corps.
-
-The Thirty-fifth Division, newly arrived from Flanders, did great and
-indeed vital work in upholding the weakening line at the moment of
-its greatest strain. A consecutive account of its work may make this
-clear. Pushing through the remains of the Twenty-first Division on
-March 24, Franks threw his men instantly into the thick of the fight,
-attacking the Germans in front of Clery. Marindin's 105th Brigade
-did great work that day, the 15th Cheshires on the right and 15th
-Sherwood Foresters on the left, attacking and, for a time, carrying
-the ridge of Clery, though it was impossible in view of the general
-retreat to hold it for long. The Germans were staggered by the
-sudden, unexpected blow, and they poured troops against their new
-antagonist, losing very heavily in their reconquest of the ridge.
-Finally the front line of the Sherwoods was practically annihilated,
-and the Cheshires were in almost as bad a way, but with the help of
-some Sussex men who were formed into an emergency unit, together with
-some signallers, they were able to draw off, and a line of defence
-was organised under General Marindin, but general orders arrived for
-a withdrawal to the front Curlu-Maurepas, which was safely carried
-out, the 17th Royal Scots covering the rear. It was a most ticklish
-business, as touch had been lost with the Ninth Division, but the
-wounded were safely evacuated, and all withdrew in good order, the
-12th {126} Highland Light Infantry finally bridging the gap upon the
-left. This battalion had lost in these operations its splendid
-Colonel, Anderson, whose work has earned a posthumous V.C. The enemy
-followed closely, and attacked again before dusk, but was driven off.
-The attack was renewed on the morning of March 25, but still without
-success, the 4th North Staffords bearing the brunt. The weary troops
-of the Scottish division, who had been engaged for four long days,
-were rallied here and formed into provisional fighting units, which
-did good service by relieving the 106th Brigade at Maricourt, when it
-was forced back. The pressure upon the division was desperately
-severe, but was slightly eased by the arrival of a Northumberland
-Fusilier battalion from the Twenty-first Division. That night the
-order was to withdraw to the line Bray-Albert.
-
-[Sidenote: Seventh Corps. March 25. March 30.]
-
-The general command of the retiring line in this section, including
-the Ninth, Twenty-first, and Thirty-fifth Divisions had for the time
-fallen to General Franks, who handed his own division over to General
-Pollard. The position was exceedingly critical, as not only were the
-units weak, but ammunition had run low. The line was still falling
-back, and the enemy was pressing on behind it with mounted scouts in
-the van. In this retreat tanks were found of the greatest service in
-holding the German advance. The route was through Morlancourt and
-Ville-sur-Ancre to a defensive position upon the right bank of the
-Ancre in the Dernancourt area, the orders being to hold the line
-between that village and Buire. Both villages were attacked that
-evening, but the Thirty-fifth Division on the right and the 26th
-{127} Brigade on the left, drove back the enemy. By the morning of
-March 28 the line seemed to have reached equilibrium in this part,
-and the welcome sight was seen of large bodies of troops moving up
-from the rear. This was the head of the Australian reinforcements.
-During the day the enemy got into Dernancourt, but was thrown out
-again by the 19th Northumberland Fusiliers Pioneer Battalion. The
-104th Brigade also drove back an attack in front of Treux Wood. It
-was clear that the moving hordes were losing impetus and momentum.
-That same evening the Australians were engaged upon the right and
-inflicting heavy losses on the enemy. On the night of March 30 the
-Thirty-fifth Division, which had lost nearly half its numbers, was
-relieved by the Third Australians.
-
-[Sidenote: Nineteenth Corps. March 23.]
-
-We shall now follow the Nineteenth Corps in its perilous retreat. It
-will be remembered that on the evening of the first day of the battle
-it had been badly outflanked to the north, where the Sixty-sixth
-Division had made so stout a resistance, and had also lost a great
-deal of the battle zone in the south, which was made more disastrous
-by the fall of Le Verguier at nine on the morning of March 22. The
-supporting line formed by the Fiftieth Division had also been pushed
-in at Pœuilly and other points, and it was with no little
-difficulty that the depleted and exhausted corps was able to get
-across the Somme on the morning of March 23, where they were ordered
-to hold the whole front of the river, including the important
-crossings at Brie. This, as a glance at the map will show, was a
-very considerable retreat, amounting to no less than ten miles in two
-days, but it was of the first importance to get a line {128} of
-defence, and also to lessen the distance between the sorely tried
-army and its reserves. It was hard indeed to give up ground and to
-be back on the line of Peronne, but there was at least the small
-solace that this was the ravaged ground which the Germans had
-themselves turned into a waste land, and that there was no town of
-any consequence nor any military point of importance in its whole
-extent.
-
-By the late afternoon of March 23 the bulk of the Nineteenth Corps
-was across the Somme. The Germans had followed closely, and there
-was rearguard fighting all the way in which the Fiftieth Division
-slowed down the pursuit of the enemy. The officers who were
-entrusted with the defence of the line of river soon realised that
-they had a difficult task, for the dry weather had shrunk it into
-insignificance in this section, and owing to trees and thick
-undergrowth the fields of fire were very limited, while the thin line
-of defenders scattered over some twelve miles of front offered, even
-after the advent of the Eighth Division, an ineffective screen
-against the heavy advance from the east. Heneker's Eighth Division,
-a particularly fine unit consisting entirely of Regular battalions,
-had made heroic exertions to reach the field of battle, and fitted
-itself at once into its correct position in that very complicated
-operation in a way which seemed marvellous to soldiers on the spot.
-
-In the evening of March 23 a number of Germans, some of them cavalry,
-were observed upon the farther side of the Somme and were heavily
-punished by artillery fire. None got across before dark, but during
-the night numerous bodies established themselves upon the western
-side. Local reserves had {129} been placed near the probable
-crossings, and these in several cases hunted the enemy across again;
-but the fact was that the river could be forded anywhere, and that a
-German concentration on a given point could always overpower the thin
-local defence. The line of resistance was further weakened by the
-First Cavalry Division, which had linked up the Nineteenth Corps with
-the Eighteenth Corps on the south, being now ordered to join the
-Seventh Corps in the north. The general order of the troops at this
-moment was, that the newly arrived Eighth Division was on the extreme
-right touching elements of the Eighteenth Corps at Bethencourt and
-extending with the aid of one brigade of the Fiftieth as far as
-Eterpigny, nearly eight miles. From Eterpigny to Biaches, south of
-Peronne, were the remains of the Sixty-sixth Division, covering about
-four miles, and joining the Thirty-ninth Division on the right of the
-Seventh Corps near that point. The Twenty-fourth was lining up
-between Hattencourt and Chaulnes.
-
-[Sidenote: Nineteenth Corps. March 24. March 25.]
-
-It was on the front of the Eighth Division, at Bethencourt, at
-Pargny, and at St. Christ, that the Germans made their chief
-lodgments upon the western banks of the river on the morning of March
-24. The Bethencourt attack was particularly formidable, both for its
-energy and because it aimed at the junction of the two corps. By two
-in the afternoon the German infantry were across in considerable
-numbers, and had forced back the right flank of the Eighth Division,
-which fell back hinging upon the river farther north, so as to oppose
-the repeated efforts which were made to enfilade the whole line.
-General Watts' responsibilities were added to next morning, March 25,
-for the two much exhausted {130} divisions of the Seventh Corps which
-were holding the northern bend of the river from Biaches to beyond
-Frise were handed over to him when the rest of Congreve's Corps was
-incorporated in the Third Army. These two divisions were the
-Thirty-ninth and the Sixteenth, the former holding as far as Frise
-and the latter the Somme crossings to the west of that point. March
-25 was a day of great anxiety tor General Watts, as the enemy were
-pressing hard, many of his own units were utterly exhausted, and the
-possibilities of grave disaster were very evident. A real fracture
-of the line at either end might have led to a most desperate
-situation. The French were now at the south end of the river
-position, but their presence was not yet strongly felt, and with
-every hour the pressure was heavier upon the bent line of the Eighth
-Division, on which the whole weight of the central battle had fallen.
-By 10 o'clock on the morning of March 25, the defensive flank of the
-Eighth Division had been pushed back to Licourt, and had been broken
-there, but had been mended once more by counter-attack, and was still
-holding with the aid of the Fiftieth. The cyclists of the Nineteenth
-Corps, the armoured-car batteries, and other small units were thrust
-in to stiffen the yielding line, which was still rolled up, until
-after one o'clock it lay back roughly from Cizancourt to Marchelepot
-and the railway line west of that place. Later in the day came the
-news of fresh crossings to the north at St. Christ and Eterpigny
-where the Sixty-sixth Division had been pushed back to Maisonette.
-It was evident that the line was doomed. To stay in it was to risk
-destruction. At 4.15 the order was given to withdraw to a second
-position which had been prepared farther westward, {131} but to
-retain the line of the Somme as the left flank. During these
-operations the Eighth Division had performed the remarkable feat of
-holding back and defeating fourteen separate German divisions during
-thirty-six hours on a nine-mile front, and finally withdrew in
-perfect order. Every unit was needed to cover the ground, and the
-general disposition of divisions was roughly as drawn:
-
- Hattencourt. Estrees. Herbecourt.
- Chantres. Assevillers. Frise.
- _R._ 24 8 50 66 39 16 _L._
-
-
-It will be seen that General Watts' command had increased from two
-divisions to six, but it is doubtful whether the whole six had the
-normal strength of two. The new line had not yet been completed and
-was essentially unstable, but none the less it formed a rallying
-point for the retreating troops. It should be noted that from the
-morning of March 25 General Fayolle took over the command south of
-the Somme.
-
-The Twenty-fourth Division, which had suffered so severely in the
-first two days of the action, was again heavily engaged during this
-arduous day. In the morning it had been directed to counter-attack
-in the direction of Dreslincourt in co-operation with the French
-Twenty-second Division. In the meantime, however, the whole
-situation had been changed by the right flank of the Eighth Division
-being turned, so that General Daly's men as they went up for the
-attack were themselves heavily attacked near Curchy, while the
-junction with the French could not be made. They fell back therefore
-upon their original position where hard fighting ensued all day, and
-a most anxious situation developed upon the southern flank, where a
-wide gap existed and the enemy was mustering {132} in force. Colonel
-Walker, C.R.E. of this division, was killed that day.
-
-[Sidenote: Nineteenth Corps. March 26.]
-
-On the morning of March 26 the new line had been occupied. The
-Seventeenth Corps had retired in the night to the Bray-Albert line,
-which left a considerable gap in the north, to the west of Frise, but
-this was filled up by an impromptu line made up of stragglers and
-various odds and ends from the rear of the army. It was in the
-south, however, that the attack was most severe, and here it soon
-became evident that the line was too long and the defenders too weak,
-so that it could not be maintained against a determined assault.
-Before the sun had risen high above the horizon it had been shaken
-from end to end, the Twenty-fourth Division being hard put to it to
-hold Fonches, while the Sixty-sixth were driven out of Herbecourt.
-At 9.30 the order was given to withdraw, and with their brave
-rearguards freely sacrificing themselves to hold back the swarming
-enemy, the troops--some of them in the last stage of exhaustion--fell
-back upon a second position. It was at this period of the battle
-that Major Whitworth, the gallant commander of the 2/6 Manchester's,
-stood at bay with his battalion, which numbered exactly 34 men. He
-and 17 of his men were dead or wounded after this last stand, and 17
-survivors were all that could be mustered that evening.
-
-Before the right wing fell back to Vrely there had been a good deal
-of fighting. The Twenty-fourth Division, which was now a mere
-skeleton, was strongly attacked in the morning of March 27, and
-Dugan's 73rd Brigade was pushed back towards Caix, the 8th Sussex
-having very heavy losses, including Colonel Hill, and Banham, the
-second-in-command.
-
-{133}
-
-The situation upon the other flank of the Twenty-fourth Division was
-also particularly desperate, and the 9th East Surrey, under Major
-Clark, sacrificed itself to cover the withdrawal of the 72nd Brigade.
-There were few more gallant actions in the war. Major Clark, writing
-from a German prison, gave a small account which enables us to get a
-glimpse of the actual detail of such a combat. The enemy's infantry
-were in force, he says, within 100 yards of his scattered line. "We
-managed to get back some hundred yards when I saw that our position
-was really desperate. The enemy were sweeping up from the south, and
-several lines of them were in between us and our next defensive
-line.... We were seen and the enemy began to surround us, so I
-decided to fight it out. We took up position in a communication
-trench, and used our rifles with great effect. Grant was doing good
-work till shot through the head, and Warre-Dymond behaved admirably.
-It was a fine fight, and we held them until ammunition gave out.
-They then charged and mopped up the remainder. They were infuriated
-with us. My clothing had been riddled with shrapnel, my nose
-fractured, and my face and clothing smothered with blood. There are
-3 officers and 59 men unwounded. The rest of the battalion are
-casualties. It was a great fight, and the men were simply splendid.
-I have the greatest admiration for them. It was a glorious end."
-Such were the class of men whom the East End of London sent into the
-New Army.
-
-The new position on March 26 may be depicted as follows:
-
- Rosières. Framerville. Froissy.
- Rouvroy. Vauvillers. Proyart.
- _R._ 24 8 50 66 39 16 _L._
-
-
-{134}
-
-The Germans followed up closely all along the line, the pressure
-being great everywhere, but greatest on the left, where the
-Thirty-ninth and Sixty-sixth disengaged themselves with difficulty,
-both of them being heavily attacked, and the Cambridgeshires fighting
-a fine rearguard action in Biaches. About two in the afternoon the
-troops were solidly established in their new positions, but the
-extreme north of the line was in a very unstable condition, as the
-Sixteenth were fired upon from the north of the river and their left
-was in no condition to meet an attack. On the right, however, there
-was earlier in the day some very spirited fighting, for the Eighth
-and Fiftieth Divisions, though very worn, were in far better shape
-than their comrades who had endured the gassings and the losses of
-the first day.
-
-The Fiftieth Division fought particularly hard to stop the enemy's
-advance, turning at every rise, and hitting back with all the
-strength that was left it. A very fine little delaying action was
-fought by its rearguard this day upon the line
-Lihons-Vermandovillers--Foucaucourt. The 5th and 8th Durhams, with a
-few of the 5th Northumberland Fusiliers and a couple of batteries,
-held up the advance for several hours and stood their ground with
-such resolution that two platoons of the Northumberlands were never
-seen again, for they held on to Foucaucourt until both they and the
-village were submerged. As the day wore on and the pressure
-increased, the Sixty-sixth Division was forced to let go of
-Framerville, for these men had fought without sleep for five days and
-nights. They staggered back through the rear ranks of the Fiftieth
-Division, consisting of the 4th Northumberland Fusiliers, who at
-once, under the {135} personal leading of General Riddell and Colonel
-Anstey, both of them on horseback and in red-banded caps, rushed the
-village once again. It was a fine advance which was much helped by
-the way in which Captain Thompson in Vauvillers brought his
-machine-guns to bear upon the flank of the Germans advancing to the
-south of him. Brigade-Major Paget, a very rising officer, was killed
-in this spirited affair.
-
-No gains could ever be held, as the general line was receding, but
-all such successful blows were of use as slowing down the German
-advance, teaching him caution, and gaining time--for time was the
-very essence of the matter. If there were time the line could be
-built up behind. If there were no time Amiens must fall. "I will
-fight before Amiens, in Amiens, or behind Amiens!" cried Foch. Brave
-words, but if Amiens went, the future was dark indeed.
-
-[Sidenote: Nineteenth Corps. March 27.]
-
-At eight on the morning of March 27 the Germans were raging once more
-along the whole line of the British breakwater. The gallant weary
-Eighth Division was heavily attacked near Rosières and the stormers
-reached the village, but Heneker's men counter-attacked in most
-heroic fashion, and cleared them out again, taking a number of
-prisoners. The 2nd Devons, 1st Sherwoods, and 22nd Durham Light
-Infantry were the units engaged in this fine action.
-
-News was bad from the north end of the line, and it was understood
-that the Germans were in Proyart, so both the Eighth and Fiftieth
-Divisions, out of their scanty ranks, sent reinforcements (R.E.
-details and the 2nd Devons) to help the Thirty-ninth Division. At 3
-P.M. on March 27 the Germans were in Framerville, and an hour later
-were on the top of the {136} Eighth and Fiftieth once more, in front
-of Harbonnière. The rearguard of the latter were the 4th and 6th
-Northumberland Fusiliers. The German guns were in full blast that
-morning, and the infantry full of ginger, but they could not break
-that protective line, thin, disciplined, and flexible. The two
-battalions could not cover the ground, and the Germans streamed past
-their flank. In order to support the advanced line every available
-man was assembled on the reverse slope of a rise, just out of sight
-of the Germans. In front of them they could hear the roar of the
-battle, ever growing nearer as the British line was rolled back. "We
-were a mixed crowd," says one who was among them. "Staff officers in
-red caps, clerks in spectacles, signalling officers, cooks, sappers,
-and that extraordinary never-beaten infantry." It was indeed one of
-the crises of the war, for the situation was desperate just south of
-the Somme, and if the enemy was through at this point also the line
-would be in fragments. The whole array waited over the curve of the
-hill, and as the enemy, in eight or ten waves, poured over the brow
-they fired at close range in the traditional Busaco fashion of the
-peninsula. A bayonet charge as of old completed the transaction, and
-the enemy broke and fled, with a barrage beating down upon his
-supports. The British infantry from the top of the rise was treated
-to the welcome, and, as it must be confessed, unusual sight of a
-large force of Germans all shredded out and hurrying for the nearest
-shelter, "like a football crowd caught in the rain." It is an
-instance of the incurable levity of British troops that they broke
-into the refrain of "Goodbyee! Goodbyee! There's a silver lining in
-the skyee!"
-
-{137}
-
-In spite of their cheerfulness, however, the losses had been heavy,
-both Colonel Robinson of the 6th and Colonel Wright of the 5th
-Northumberland Fusiliers being among the casualties. Each of the
-battalions now numbered little more than a hundred men.
-
-This brisk counter-attack was a healthy little reminder to the
-Germans upon this section of the line that the British infantry might
-be overborne by numbers or by strategy, but that they were still the
-men who had in the previous year chased them again and again from the
-most formidable positions which they could construct. But these
-points of aggressive resistance were now rare and the men were worn
-out. It does indeed seem to be an extreme example of the weakness of
-the reserves at this period in France, that in spite of the fact that
-the battle broke out upon March 21, no help save the one division had
-in the course of a week reached the overmatched and exhausted troops.
-It is true that the Higher Command may well have reckoned upon the
-French as reserves, and this would have been perfectly true had they
-been able to take over the ground in the south and contract the
-British line. They did take over the ground, but they took over most
-of the two British Corps as well, so that the Nineteenth Corps was
-little the better for their presence. Unaided by either their own
-people or by the French, the Nineteenth Corps still held on
-desperately with dwindling numbers to a line which was far beyond
-their strength.
-
-Bad as was the position of the Nineteenth Corps, it was made worse by
-the ever-changing position in the north. When the Seventh Corps fell
-back to the line of Bray it was behind the left flank of the
-Nineteenth Corps. But now it was compelled to make {138} a further
-move to the line Chipilly-Morlancourt, while all bridges were ordered
-to be destroyed up to Cherisy. This disposition was absolutely
-necessary in view of what was happening in the Third Army area; but
-it made the position more and more difficult for the men in the
-south, who had either to fall back or to see the gap of undefended
-river upon their left rear grow wider and wider. General Watts is a
-stubborn fighter with no idea of going back if it can be in any way
-avoided, so he held on in the south and fought a brisk, successful
-action there, while he sent such poor reinforcements as he could to
-the Sixteenth Division in the north, stopping the dangerous rent with
-any odds and ends upon which he could lay his hands. Three hundred
-improvised infantry, six Lewis guns, and a battery in armoured cars
-were the best that he could do, and these troops actually did hold
-the river line in the north from the early morning of March 27 until
-nightfall, against an ever-growing menace. But they could not cover
-all the ground, and the enemy, as was foreseen, was coming over the
-river and getting behind the British line. The Sixteenth Division
-was practically destroyed, and the Thirty-ninth was in little better
-case, though General Feetham showed great energy in re-organising all
-the débris of units upon the road, so that the line of resistance was
-very weak. In the afternoon a considerable party of Germans with
-machine-guns had got across the river at Cherisy, west of Morcourt,
-held by seventy men of the Sixteenth Division, and pushed on in the
-most daring way south-west to Lamotte and Bayonvillers. They were
-right across the rear of the Nineteenth Corps, and a great disaster
-seemed inevitable, but weary as the {139} men were, and tired as were
-their leaders, they were still capable of clear decision and swift
-action. The river was for the moment abandoned, the left of the line
-was swung south, and early upon March 28 they faced north in this
-sector, along the track of the Amiens-La Fère railway. Roughly, the
-new position may be traced as follows:
-
- Vrely. Gillancourt.
- Warvillers. Caix. Wiencourt. Marcelcave.
- +---------------------+
- _R._ 24 8 60 66 39 _L._
-
-
-[Sidenote: Nineteenth Corps. March 28.]
-
-This very difficult and remarkable disengagement was particularly
-trying for the Thirty-ninth Division since it had farthest to go and
-was in close contact with the enemy. It was carried out in broad
-daylight in the morning of March 28, and with such skill that there
-was no great loss in the 118th Brigade which covered it, but so close
-was the enemy that both General Bellingham and his brigade-major,
-Major F. Gunner, were captured while personally supervising the
-withdrawal. After this operation the remains of the Thirty-ninth
-Division were occupying the line from Marcelcave to Wiencourt
-inclusive, along the railway track. Germans were found in Wiencourt,
-and the two brigades, now reduced to two composite battalions under
-Colonel Saint, attacked them with success, but eventually occupied a
-line to the west. All the guns had been saved and were in action
-once more.
-
-On the occasion of the reforming of the line as already described on
-March 28, the Fiftieth Division had fallen back upon Caix, where it
-held fast to the important bridge across the River Luce upon which a
-number of troops from various units were converging. Many of these
-were disorganised, and some, {140} to use the expression of a
-spectator, "stone-cold"; but the same witness has recorded the
-splendid moral effect produced by one battalion which, marching in
-fours and with everything in most precise order, came swinging down
-the road, with no change after its seven days of purgatory save that
-two-thirds of its personnel had disappeared. This was Colonel
-Hancock's 1st Battalion of Royal Fusiliers from the Twenty-fourth
-Division--an object-lesson to all who saw it as to how discipline can
-outlast the most terrific tests which a soldier can be asked to
-endure.
-
-[Sidenote: Nineteenth Corps. March 28.]
-
-The enemy, still working down from the north, had threatened the new
-defensive flank at a point between Caix and Cayeux, but were held by
-a very spirited attack made by the men of the 22nd Entrenching
-Battalion. With considerable loss both to themselves and to the
-Germans, they held the line of the river until reinforcements
-arrived. The Thirty-ninth from the north and the Eighth and
-Twenty-fourth from the south were all converging upon the one point
-to take up their new positions. A Brigadier in command of the
-infantry, with 800 men and 3 batteries, held the bridge; but the
-Germans might have rushed it had it not been for a charge by the
-151st Brigade, when the 5th and 7th Durhams drove back their
-advancing line. This spirited attack was led by General Jackson in
-person, who encouraged his men by blasts upon his hunting-horn.
-Speaking of one of their military heroes, a French historian has
-said: "Il avait la graine de folie dans sa bravoure que les Français
-aiment." All soldiers love it, and it is a wise leader who knows how
-to employ it. It was a time when every possible device was needed to
-hold the men, for the enemy was close upon the bridge, {141} and the
-safety of the remains of several divisions depended upon the bridge
-being held.
-
-[Sidenote: Nineteenth Corps. March 27.]
-
-Returning to the general survey of the line of the Nineteenth Corps
-the Sixteenth Division was now rather a crowd of warlike particles
-than an organised unit. It was ordered, however, that every
-individual particle should be reassembled at Hamel so that the
-nucleus of a division should exist once more. Hard marching and hard
-fighting had reduced the Twenty-fourth Division to almost the same
-condition, though, thanks to a miraculous survival of most of the
-senior officers, the unit was still efficient. On the other hand,
-the Sixty-first Division from the Eighteenth Corps, numbering at this
-period 2400 men, was given to General Watts to help to form his new
-line. It was at first intended with the aid of these new troops to
-endeavour to clear the left flank, and for this purpose a
-counter-attack upon Lamotte was ordered. The newly-arrived men from
-the south, the 183rd and 184th Brigades, who could hardly stagger a
-mile, did actually carry the twin village of Warfusee and hold the
-edge of it for a time under very heavy fire--an operation in which
-Major Bennett of the Oxfords did conspicuously fine work. Several
-grand soldiers fell in this attack, including Captain Willick who had
-commanded the 2/4 Berkshires after the fall of the heroic Dimmer.
-His last speech to his men is worth recording. It was, "I know how
-you feel, boys, tired and worn out, but we have to stop them from
-breaking through." The support to this brave attack is said to have
-been "one gun, firing wildly."
-
-The line sloped back now from Demuin in the south to the Somme at a
-point opposite Sailly-le-Sec, the Sixty-first occupying the general
-sector {142} just south of the Lamotte-Amiens Road. From there to
-the river had been a gap which it was absolutely vital to fill. An
-old line of trench existed here, extending from the river to Demuin,
-and early in the battle General Gough, amid all his preoccupations,
-had realised that it might be of great importance to have it ready as
-a rallying place. He had therefore deputed General Grant, his own
-chief of engineers, together with Colonel Harvey, his chief of staff,
-to organise it and to endeavour to man it, with any spare troops that
-they could find. This had been done, and after three days of
-feverish work, Grant had prepared a line and had thrust into it a
-most curious assortment of all sorts of details, made up of
-entrenching troops, American sappers, the staffs of various army
-schools, reinforcing units, and stragglers. On the third day General
-Grant was recalled to his official duties, but General Carey happened
-to be passing from the front to take over a divisional command, and
-he was deflected and placed in charge of this assembly of military
-samples, which included 500 cases out of hospital. There was a
-sprinkling of machine-guns with trained instructors to use them, but
-the line was thin and there was a want of cohesion in the elements
-which formed it. The great thing, however, was that the gulf was
-spanned between Watts in the south and Congreve in the north. There
-was still a trench and a line of British soldiers between the Germans
-and the open country that led to Amiens.
-
-[Sidenote: Nineteenth Corps. March 28.]
-
-March 28 was a day of destiny along the line, for upon that date were
-the first definite signs that the assault had failed so far as its
-ultimate objective was concerned, and that the Germans were not
-destined to overcome the British resistance. In the north, {143}
-this was clearly indicated by the victory in front of Arras. In the
-south, the situation was still obscure and dangerous; but the mere
-fact that the day was got over without a catastrophe was in itself a
-success, for on March 27 the prospects were very ominous. The line
-now ran from Demuin to Marcelcave, and thence the improvised trench
-garrison carried it on to the river. The First Cavalry Division,
-which had come across from the north bank, formed a link between the
-Sixty-first in the north of Watts' line, and what we will now call
-the Carey line. The cavalry men were still full of fight, but they
-had done wonderful work since the first day of the battle, cementing
-every weak seam, and they were terribly reduced in numbers if not in
-spirit. Nothing can exaggerate the debt which the infantry owed to
-all three divisions of cavalry for their tireless support during that
-awful week. They now tried to advance towards Lamotte, but they came
-upon the right flank of a very strong German force moving south-west
-from Cherisy, and though they endeavoured to harass it they were
-unable to make much impression. The 61st was also terribly worn.
-Upon this day the 184th Brigade lost Colonel Belton, its fifth
-commander, and was taken over by Colonel Pagan of the Gloucesters.
-
-The southern end of the British line had troubles enough before, but
-they were now accentuated by the fact that the Germans had made a
-very rapid advance in the Montdidier sector which placed them in the
-right rear of the Nineteenth Corps. On this right flank there was
-much confused fighting, and a mixture of units which reached such a
-point before the morning of March 29 that the Twenty-fourth, or what
-remained of it, found that it had unwittingly {144} changed from the
-right to the left flank of the Eighth Division. There could perhaps
-be no clearer illustration of the dimensions to which the division
-had shrunk. These confused movements caused loss of touch, and there
-was a time when Corps Headquarters had completely lost the right of
-the line, which was badly disorganised. It was a time of great
-danger. Yet another division, however, the Twentieth, was given to
-Watts, and though it was already worn to the bone, and could not
-reckon a thousand men in all three brigades, it was still
-battleworthy and formed an invaluable asset at such a time. They
-were lined up, or perhaps dotted along would be a fitter term, upon
-the front of Mezières-Demuin, and formed a frail barrier behind which
-the hard-pressed men could have a brief breathing space while they
-endeavoured to reform. By the late afternoon of March 28 this
-operation was in progress, and before 11 P.M. the new positions were
-actually occupied. The line, which was partly wired, now ran from
-Mezières, through Demuin, Marcelcave, and Hamel to the Somme, but it
-would be hard to add the exact alignment of the units, as in many
-places they were inextricably mixed. The Sixty-first and the Cavalry
-had been placed behind Carey's line, in order to support it should it
-weaken. South of this was the Twentieth Division, reinforced by
-fragments of other divisions, which among them had the strength and
-spirit to beat off a strong German attack delivered by the force
-which had been engaged by the cavalry in the morning. The country
-here was seamed by the old French trenches, which were woefully out
-of repair but none the less were of great value to the defence.
-Carey's force was involved in this German {145} attack on March 28,
-but with the help of the First Cavalry Division they managed to hold
-their line. Upon that date the exhausted troops received the
-following well-timed message from the Fifth Army commander: "By the
-grand and stubborn way you are holding out and delaying the advance
-of the enemy, the British and French reserves are being given the
-necessary time to come up and assume the offensive. Your great
-exertions and sacrifices are not being thrown away: they are of
-immense importance, and your resistance and your deeds in this great
-battle will live for all time, and will save our country."
-
-[Sidenote: Nineteenth Corps. March 29.]
-
-March 29 was another eventful and critical day for the Nineteenth
-Corps, and began badly for them, since the remains of the Eighth and
-Twenty-fourth Divisions had, as already explained, been thrust out of
-their positions and were mostly on the west side of the Avre and out
-of the line. The Fiftieth Division was only partly in position, the
-fighting strength of the Sixty-sixth was reckoned at 750 bayonets,
-and that of the Thirty-ninth at 500 bayonets. The Nineteenth Corps
-at this moment was nominally composed of eight infantry
-divisions--Eighth, Twentieth, Twenty-fourth, Sixteenth, Thirty-ninth,
-Fiftieth, Sixty-first, and Sixty-sixth; but it is questionable
-whether their united strength greatly exceeded that of a single full
-division, to such a point had the army been reduced. On the other
-hand, there was no direct evidence of excessive wastage upon the part
-of the Germans, who could be seen in large well-organised bodies
-moving in front of the British lines. The one consolation lay in the
-fact that their heavy guns, and even a good many of their field-guns,
-had been {146} left behind. The machine-guns, however, and their
-newly-developed light field artillery were as energetic as ever. The
-British artillery had been weakened by capture and destruction, but
-it was greatly supplemented by several armoured-car batteries,
-Canadian and British, which did splendid service during these
-all-important days.
-
-About mid-day on March 29 the French, and the remains of the
-Thirtieth Division under the French Higher Command, had abandoned
-Mezières upon the right flank of the Nineteenth Corps, and by so
-doing they exposed the right of the steadfast Twentieth Division.
-The fighting extended from the River Avre to Demuin. The 59th
-Brigade, which was in the south of the line, was forced to fall back,
-but two battalions of the 60th Brigade were thrown out to cover the
-flank and hold the German advance from getting behind the British
-line. At 2 o'clock these two brigades gathered their thin ranks
-together for a counter-attack, aided by the Fiftieth Division, which
-had now been telescoped into a single weak brigade. It was a
-remarkable attack, for most of the men were stumbling with utter
-fatigue, and could hardly totter forward with their rifles at the
-port. It was the Riflemen and Shropshires who made the advance upon
-Mezières while their comrades stormed the surrounding woods. The 5th
-Durhams, 6th Northumberland Fusiliers, and 22nd Entrenching Battalion
-of the Fiftieth Division also did great things. There is evidence
-from the prisoners that the Germans at that particular point had lost
-very heavily and were much distressed, so that the combat was like
-those closing rounds of a hard-fought boxing contest, where the two
-exhausted combatants can {147} but push and paw as they lurch against
-each other. The village was actually carried by the British, and a
-temporary easement secured, together with a handful of the 352nd
-Regiment, who stated that they had lost three entire companies in
-their first advance upon Mezières. This spirited counter-attack was
-covered by the guns of the Fiftieth Division which, under Major
-Johnson, had worked very hard during those last trying days.
-
-About 2 o'clock on March 29 Watts' Corps was reinforced by another
-skeleton division, the Eighteenth--2000 bayonets, in all. It was
-merged with the Sixty-first and placed in the Berteaucourt-Bois de
-Blangy line. The thin ranks of the Twenty-fourth were still able to
-muster at the south end of the position, but only one brigade of the
-Eighth Division, the Twenty-fifth, was in a condition for service.
-This unit moved to the edge of Moreuil Wood, and co-operated with the
-French One hundred and thirty-third Division which was holding the
-line at that point. From this time onwards the
-Moreuil-Ailly-sur-Noye Road and everything south of it was French.
-As the British force dwindled its front also contracted, otherwise
-the situation would have indeed been impossible.
-
-As it was, it continued to be desperately critical, for beyond the
-telescoping of units and the contraction of front there was no help
-for the British line, while the assailants were still very numerous
-and aggressive. About noon on this day, March 29, the Thirty-ninth
-Division, and indeed the whole army, sustained a severe loss in the
-person of General Feetham, a leader of great valour and experience,
-who was killed by a shell while walking with Colonel {148} Gosset,
-his chief of staff, in the village of Demuin. His death was to some
-extent revenged at once by his devoted troops, for a German attack
-which followed at once down the valley of the Luce was driven back
-with heavy loss by the rifles of the infantry. General Feetham was
-replaced next day by General Blacklock. It is a remarkable fact that
-Feetham was the second commander of the Thirty-ninth Division killed
-within a fortnight, for General Cape, his _locum tenens_, fell upon
-the 13th of March.
-
-[Sidenote: Nineteenth Corps. March 30.]
-
-On the morning of March 30 the 61st Brigade of the Twentieth Division
-was on the south end of the line covering the bridge over the Luce at
-Hangard, while the 59th covered that at Dornart, the 60th lining up
-from Dornart to Berteaucourt. The Fiftieth Division had been now
-incorporated in the Twentieth. All the bridges had been prepared for
-demolition. The enemy were slowly pushing the French out of the
-Moreuil Wood upon the extreme right, small bodies of infantry
-gradually infiltrating the whole position. The Germans soon
-developed activity also in the Luce valley, and finally along the
-whole corps front. The Second Cavalry Division was sent into Moreuil
-Wood to help the French, but the whole right of the line began
-gradually to crumble in face of the repeated assaults. The remains
-of the Sixty-sixth and Twentieth Divisions were bent back, though the
-latter continued for a long time to hold the Demuin-Marcelcave line
-of road, but about 8 A.M. the Sixty-sixth Division was pushed out of
-Aubercourt. There was some weakness farther north also, between
-Villers and Marcelcave, but the never-failing First Cavalry Division
-stiffened the yielding line. At 10 {149} o'clock the situation had
-improved in Moreuil Wood, where Seely's Canadian cavalry, with the
-3rd Cavalry Brigade in support, were making their presence felt.
-They held the line along the edge of the wood from east of Moreuil,
-but had lost touch with the Twentieth upon their left. Later in the
-morning there was a strong German counter in this quarter which drove
-the cavalry back into the wood. Here at a later hour they were
-reinforced by the Eighth Division, if such a sonorous name can be
-given to a handful of dazed and exhausted men. The line at mid-day
-ran roughly as follows:
-
- Moreuil Wood. Demuin. W. of Aubercourt. W. of Marcelcave.
- 2nd Cav. 20th. 66th. Carey. 61st. 1st Cav.
-
-The great bulk of the British force lay to the north of the Luce
-River, and the Germans were making every effort to push the flank
-backwards or aside and to ford the stream. A wood named Little Wood
-lay in such a position as to help or hinder, such an attempt, and it
-was the scene of some fierce fighting. It was first occupied by one
-of the enemy's advanced parties. It was then retaken by some of the
-West Yorkshires of the 60th Brigade. These in turn were pushed out
-by the enemy. Finally, in the evening the 12th Rifles and 12th Rifle
-Brigade, with some French and scattered units of the Fiftieth
-Division, charged forward through the twilight, recaptured the wood,
-and re-established the whole line in this quarter. Nine machine-guns
-and fifty-three prisoners were taken. Well might General Watts
-telegraph: "Well done, the Twentieth! Such a counter-attack after
-all your hard work is splendid."
-
-Now at last there were signs of some relaxation {150} in the dreadful
-strain. On this, the ninth day of the battle, the first British
-reserves, save only the Eighth Division, began to appear in the line.
-They were the 9th Australian Brigade, who came into the fight between
-Demuin and Aubercourt with their usual brisk gallantry. Their attack
-made some progress, and the 12th Lancers who advanced with them
-shared something of the glory. Although the final objectives were
-not attained, the line north of the Luce was stayed by their presence
-and made firm for the morrow. On this evening several of those
-heroic units which had fought themselves to the last point of human
-endurance from the beginning of the battle were taken from that stage
-where they had played so glorious and tragic a part. The remains of
-the Thirty-ninth, the Fiftieth, the Sixteenth, and the Sixty-sixth
-were all drawn back for re-organisation. It was theirs to take part
-in what was a defeat and a retreat, but their losses are the measure
-of their endurance, and the ultimate verdict of history upon their
-performance lies in the one single undeniable fact that the Germans
-could never get past them. Speaking of these troops an observer
-remarked: "They had been fighting for nine days, but were very
-cheerful and still full of vigour." The losses of some units and the
-exertions of the individuals who composed them can seldom have been
-matched in warfare. The 2/6th Lancashire Fusiliers, for example, had
-fought in the rearguard of the Sixty-sixth Division for the whole
-retreat under Captain Porter, the only officer left standing. They
-were now reduced to about a hundred men. Many battalions were in no
-better condition. Carey's nondescript force was also broken up on
-the evening of March 30. They had {151} served a most useful purpose
-at a critical moment of the battle, and their formation may have
-prevented a disaster, but it should be emphasised that their
-existence was not some impromptu effort, but had been pre-arranged by
-the wise foresight of General Gough.
-
-[Sidenote: Nineteenth Corps. March 31.]
-
-On March 31 there were signs that the German flood was reaching full
-tide. They had acted to a wonderful degree up to their own saying:
-"Immer fest daran!" but they had now far outstripped their artillery
-support and the tenacious elastic British defence had worn them down.
-There was no attack on the morning of this day, but about noon the
-fighting broke out once more in the Moreuil Woods, the enemy pushing
-their way through them and slowly driving back the line of the Eighth
-and the Twentieth, while the French were again driven out of the
-village of Moreuil. North of Marcelcave there was a day of quiet and
-re-organisation. The Sixty-first was still holding the
-Berteaucourt-Gentilles line, while the Eighteenth was holding the
-line of the Luce. In the evening the Eighth and Twentieth were again
-reinforced by the cavalry, and by the superior and heroic exertions
-of every one concerned the position on the right flank was
-maintained. The 2nd Berkshires distinguished themselves in this
-fighting. There is something more than a name even in this stage of
-the war in the old Regular battalions, for the chronicler finds that
-they stand out amidst the other units out of all proportion to their
-numbers. The 2nd Bedfords, 1st Royal Fusiliers, 2nd Scots Fusiliers,
-and many others upheld the honour of the grand old force.
-
-The right wing had been considerably hustled in {152} the Moreuil
-quarter on March 31, but on April 1 the Second Cavalry Division,
-which included the Canadian Brigade, made a sudden fierce
-counter-attack which threw the enemy back. Fifty prisoners and
-thirteen machine-guns were the fruits of this action. The British
-guns had played upon the wood during the whole night, and the enemy
-had suffered severely, for the assailants found the brushwood to be
-full of dead Germans. There was no other movement of importance on
-this day. The reformed Fourteenth Division was brought back into the
-battle and took the place of the Twentieth, the Fiftieth, and of the
-cavalry upon the front to the south of the Luce. Speaking of the
-latter troops after their nine days of martyrdom, a senior officer
-who saw them at this stage said: "In the last attack they were driven
-back about a mile towards Amiens, but after the first Bosch onrush
-they stood like rocks, repelling attack after attack,
-counter-attacking and regaining ground in such a manner that every
-day I marvelled at the doing of it, and at the men who did it."
-
-[Sidenote: Nineteenth Corps. April 4.]
-
-April 2 and 3 were quiet days, but on the 4th there was a very
-violent and general attack along the line of the Nineteenth Corps,
-and of the Thirty-sixth French Corps (General Nollet) which lay to
-the immediate south. The main weight of the battle fell upon the
-Fourteenth Division in their new positions, and by nine o'clock in
-the morning the Germans had gained some success to the north of the
-main Amiens Road. The Australian 9th Brigade, which was south of the
-road, held their line, but had to fall back 500 yards in order to
-conform with the general position. At 11.30 the enemy was still
-making progress, mostly {153} on the front of the Fourteenth
-Division, and had reached the east edge of Hamel and of Bois de
-Vaire. The Third Cavalry Division, those indomitable troops, were
-thrown in to thicken the line of the Fourteenth, and the Canadian
-motor guns from Villers-Bretonneux were also brought into the battle.
-Later two battalions of the invaluable Australian infantry came up at
-the double from the 15th Australian Brigade. If ever the arrival of
-strong loyal men in a time of darkness brought joy and comfort with
-it, it was when the Australians relieved the British line in these
-later days of the second battle of the Somme. "God bless them!" was
-the silent prayer that went down the weary line. Ground had been
-lost south of Villers-Bretonneux, and the line was bent, but the
-whole of the Third and Fifth Australian Divisions were streaming down
-to their places in the defence. The end of the retreat was at hand.
-
-[Sidenote: Nineteenth Corps. April.]
-
-Upon the evening of April 4, the line which was to be permanent for
-many months to come began to define itself, and order gradually
-evolved out of ever-shifting chaos. Lee's Eighteenth Division was
-now in touch with the Thirty-sixth French Corps at Hangard. Then at
-the Bois l'Abbé lay the 9th Australian Brigade. North of this, at
-the Bois de Gentilles, was the Third Cavalry Division. Thence in
-succession came the 15th Australian Brigade, the 43rd Brigade, the
-remains of the Twenty-fourth Division, the 8th Australian Brigade,
-the other elements of the Fourteenth Division, the Fifth Australian
-Division near Aubigny, and the Fifty-eighth Division in the north.
-This summary will show how Australia had braced the line. Upon the
-next day, April 5, Butler's Third Corps took over {154} the whole
-area of the Nineteenth Corps, and the episode was at an end.
-
-The retreat of General Watts across the ravaged country, his attempt
-to hold the long front of the Somme, his successive short retreats,
-his continual stands, and his eventual success, will always remain
-one of the most remarkable incidents in the war. This officer, who
-at the beginning of hostilities was a "dug-out," hardly rescued from
-a premature ending of his military career, showed in the highest
-degree those qualities of never despairing, and of rapidly adapting
-means to an end, which mark the competent soldier. He began with two
-units under his control, and he ended with fifteen, but no general
-ever had to handle more weary troops, or had more need of a clear
-head and a high heart. The strain upon him had been
-extraordinary--though indeed that is true of every corps and
-divisional commander in the line. As to the special features of this
-operation, it may be said to be remarkable for the improvisations of
-troops, for the continual use of entrenching battalions as
-combatants, for the work of the dismounted cavalry, for the
-self-sacrifice and energy of the motor batteries, and very specially
-for the degree of mobility attained by the heavy artillery and the
-rapidity with which it came into action in successive positions.
-Military critics will draw many deeper lessons from these operations,
-but these at least are sufficiently obvious to catch the eye of the
-least experienced student.
-
-The total losses of the Nineteenth Corps during this fourteen days of
-battle came to from 35,000 to 40,000, killed, wounded, and missing.
-The losses in guns were 41 heavy pieces and 73 field-guns, twelve
-{155} of which were anti-tank guns in the forward line. The pressure
-sustained by some of the divisions would be incredible if the facts
-were not fully authenticated. Thus the Eighth English Division was
-attacked from first to last by eighteen different German divisions,
-including three of the Guards. Prisoners were taken from each so
-that their identity could not be disputed. Yet this same Eighth
-Division was engaged within three weeks in the victorious advance at
-Villers-Bretonneux. The German oracle Clausewitz has said that a
-retreating army should go back not like a hunted deer but like a
-wounded lion. His commentators would hardly find a better example
-than the British armies in the second battle of the Somme.
-
-
-
-
-{156}
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE SECOND BATTLE OF THE SOMME
-
-The Retreat of the Eighteenth Corps, March 21-29.
-
-Retreat of the Sixty-first Division--The Gloucesters at
-Beauvais--Fall of Ham--Retreat of the Thirtieth and Thirty-sixth
-Divisions--Great privations of the men--Fine feat at Le
-Quesnoy--Summary of the experience of Maxse's Corps.
-
-[Sidenote: Eighteenth Corps. March 22.]
-
-It has been shown that Maxse's Eighteenth Corps, covering the St.
-Quentin front, maintained its whole position on March 21, thanks to
-the splendid conduct of the three battalions in the forward line, and
-to the stout resistance in the zone of battle. It has also been told
-how the Sixty-first Division, the most northern unit, withdrew on the
-afternoon of March 22, very attenuated but still full of fight, to a
-prepared position between Vaux and Villévêque. At 4 P.M. that day
-the three brigades, or what was left of them, were in line 1500 yards
-east of Beauvais, the 184th being in the centre, with the 182nd on
-its right, and the 183rd on its left. As they faced their pursuers
-they could plainly see the Germans pouring in successive waves from
-Atilly. The central brigade was commanded by General the Hon. Robert
-White, one of two gallant brothers who sowed their military wild oats
-in the Jameson Raid, and this unit, reduced now to a mere handful of
-{157} Gloucesters, Berkshires, and Oxfords, was exposed to a
-scourging fire of shrapnel, which further thinned their ranks, their
-General being one of the casualties. No field ambulances were
-available at the moment, and as General White was led away badly
-wounded he saw the German cavalry breaking into the south side of
-Beauvais, while a large artillery dump west of the village was
-exploded by the enemy fire. The whole situation was chaotic, but the
-British infantry still hung together, retreating slowly and turning
-continually upon their pursuers. Some twenty German aeroplanes were
-quartering the district like so many fierce hawks, and diving with
-great daring from time to time into the very streets of the village,
-while the British falling back into cover fired up at them with their
-rifles and light machine-guns. Two of them came crashing down upon
-the roofs of the houses. It was rumoured that the enemy had already
-got close to Ham upon the right rear of the division, and they were
-round the left flank in the region of Holnon Wood. There was little
-artillery support available, for sixty per cent of the forward guns
-had been taken or destroyed in Holnon Wood, and the remaining
-batteries were getting away with their reduced teams, so that the
-retreat of the infantry was correspondingly slow in order to cover
-the withdrawal. In the north the Scotsmen of the 183rd Brigade were
-moving back near Villescholles in touch with the 72nd Brigade of the
-Twenty-fourth Division, both of them being much helped in their
-retirement by the 11th Hussars. All along the line the Germans were
-pressing very closely, but the Sixty-first kept wonderfully steady,
-though at Beauvais, where Colonel Wetherall had taken over the
-command when {158} General White was wounded, the two parties were
-continually intermingled, so ardent was the pursuit and so leisurely
-the retreat. So mixed were the combatants that Major Howitt,
-brigade-major of the 184th, was dragged out from among his men, and
-was in the hands of the Germans for some exciting and instructive
-hours. "I must say the officers treated me well, though the escorts
-were very rough," says he. "For all my hatred I could not help
-admiring them intensely, for their deployment, discipline, and
-preparation were an eye-opener. They extended into battle order with
-hardly a sound and lay down preparatory for the next assault,
-bringing up mules dragging light trench-mortars, machine-guns, and
-ammunition." Major Howitt finally broke away from his escort, and by
-keeping so near to a burning ammunition dump that no one dared to
-follow him, he succeeded in regaining his own lines.
-
-The defence of the line in front of Beauvais was kept up with
-remarkable tenacity and ended by 150 men of the 2/5th Gloucester
-battalion performing what was an extraordinary feat, even in this war
-of miracles, for they held on to a line 2000 yards in length until
-3.30 in the morning of March 23, holding up the whole German advance.
-All night the enemy tried to rush or to bomb this thin line of
-determined men, but it was not until the cartridges ran low that the
-British made their retreat, sneaking round the outskirts of the
-village which blazed behind them, and making their way to
-Longuevoisin where they joined their comrades, who had already given
-them up as lost, for they had been five miles behind the army.
-Colonel Lawson was in command during this heroic episode, and was
-ably supported by his {159} two lieutenants, Rickerby and Dudbridge.
-Of the latter, it is recorded that in a later stage of the retreat he
-was in such a condition of absolute exhaustion that he was wounded
-three times in the course of a single day without ever observing it
-until evening. Utter nerve fatigue has its compensations as well as
-its terrors.
-
-The Thirtieth Division had held on to its ground until four in the
-afternoon of March 22. Some units lingered to cover the retreat, the
-2nd Yorkshires and the 17th Manchesters holding on to their redoubts
-until six o'clock, when they were in danger of isolation.
-
-During their withdrawal both the Sixty-first Division and the
-Thirtieth Division to the south of it were covered by the 59th and
-60th Brigades of the Twentieth Division. These two fine brigades,
-still intact and full of fight, allowed the weary soldiers to pass
-through their ranks, while they opposed a tenacious resistance to the
-pursuing Germans. When the Sixty-first and Thirtieth were across the
-canal of the Somme the covering division fell back in orderly
-fashion, and itself crossed the canal between Canizy and Bethencourt,
-the 60th Brigade being on the right and the 59th on the left. The
-60th Brigade was compelled to fight hard to make good its retirement,
-and it struck back again and again at the German vanguard. In this
-fighting the 12th Rifle Brigade particularly distinguished itself,
-but its losses were heavy, and included its gallant Colonel,
-Maclachlan.
-
-Early in the morning of March 23 it was known that the enemy had
-crossed the line of the Somme at Ham. The Thirtieth Division had
-retreated upon {160} this important little town, which had been
-thrown into a state of defence by General Stanley of the 89th
-Brigade, but his garrison was so utterly inadequate to cover the
-ground that his dispositions were useless, as the Germans could get
-round him on either side. He had with him in the first instance two
-entrenching battalions, the 21st and 23rd, two companies of gas
-engineers, the corps cyclists, and a mere handful of infantry. Late
-on March 22 he was joined, however, by his own three attenuated
-battalions of the King's, each of which had been heavily engaged in
-different parts of the battle. At the same time the 90th Brigade
-dropped back to the left of Ham and the 21st to the right. The
-division was bare on both flanks, however, and it was determined to
-continue the retreat. The bridges were blown up and such rolling
-stock as was possible was destroyed, but there were very many stores
-in the town which had to be abandoned to the enemy. It was a very
-great disaster, for it supplied him with much, and indeed served him
-as an advanced base, all ready-made for his operations in this part
-of the field. As to the loss of the river line, it has already been
-explained that in these higher reaches it is a very slight barrier.
-
-[Sidenote: March 23.]
-
-When the enemy had taken Ham he pushed along swiftly towards
-Esmery-Hallon on the heels of the retiring Thirtieth Division. The
-Thirty-sixth Division, which had been assisted in its retreat by the
-61st Brigade of the Twentieth, had crossed the Somme to the east of
-Ham, and was now to the right of the Thirtieth (right and left being
-used all through these operations on the supposition that the unit is
-turning and facing the enemy). The Thirty-sixth {161} Division
-crossed the Somme Canal at St. Simon, closely pressed by the enemy,
-and the 121st Field Company Royal Engineers and other sapper units
-performed great work under heavy fire, destroying no less than
-twenty-seven bridges. After the passing of the river by the Germans
-there were constant rearguard actions, one of the most spirited of
-which was at Villeselve, where the 9th Irish Fusiliers and the Royal
-Dragoons fought together and drove in the German vanguard. The
-general situation of Maxse's Corps upon the forenoon of March 23 was
-that the Thirty-sixth Division was over the Somme and near Golancourt
-and Bronchy, that the Thirtieth Division was dropping back upon
-Esmery-Hallon, and that the Sixty-first Division, retreating in the
-direction of Nesle had crossed the Somme at Voyennes and Offoy,
-continuing its retreat to the Nesle Canal. Between the Thirtieth and
-Sixty-first Divisions were the 60th Brigade on the right and the 59th
-on the left, who were also covering the Nesle Canal, but were quite
-ready to counter-attack should an opening present itself.
-
-A British corps does not allow itself to be driven without hitting
-back, however great the odds may seem. A series of brisk skirmishes
-was going on all along the line. In one of these, just south of Ham,
-Colonel Watson with the 17th King's Liverpools came back on his
-pursuers and held them up for a time. More serious was the
-counter-attack organised by the main body north of Esmery-Hallon.
-This attack struck southwards from Canizy and hit upon the right
-flank of the Germans, staggering them for the instant. It was
-carried out by the 60th Brigade and the 182nd Brigade, all under
-General Duncan of the {162} former unit. This spirited advance was
-led upon the field by Colonel Bilton of the Sixty-first Division, and
-was delivered with such force that this small British detachment
-drove back for some distance the great army which was rolling
-westwards. It was impossible, of course, to recover ground
-permanently, but it gained invaluable time and eased the pressure
-upon the south end of the line for the whole of a critical evening.
-It was clear, however, that the capture of Ham and the crossing of
-the stream had turned the flank of the Twentieth and Sixty-first
-Divisions, who were defending the higher reaches of the same river.
-They were not to be frightened prematurely out of their positions,
-however, and at Bethencourt the 11th Rifle Brigade drove back a
-German attempt at crossing, while at Offoy the 12th Rifles also
-inflicted a sharp repulse upon the pursuers. That evening, March 23,
-the Sixty-first Division was practically amalgamated with the
-Twentieth, and both were concentrated near Nesle. They received at
-this time a most useful reinforcement in the shape of two batteries
-(16 guns) of Canadian motor machine-guns under Captain Meerling.
-There is not an officer or man of these much-tried battalions who
-would not admit a deep debt of gratitude to these splendidly
-efficient and energetic guns, which had such mobility that they were
-always where they were most wanted.
-
-[Sidenote: March 24.]
-
-The troops had on the morning of March 24 got behind the Somme Canal,
-which runs beside the river, all bridges had been broken, and patrols
-were pushed across where practicable so as to keep in touch with the
-enemy. It was not in this southern area, however, but at Bethencourt
-that the Germans did actually get across in force, by which they
-turned {163} the flank of the 25th Brigade of the Eighth Division in
-the north and of the 59th Brigade in the south. An attack was
-instantly organised by the 11th Rifle Brigade, who had lost their
-Colonel, Cotton, the day before, and were now led by Major Bertie.
-They succeeded by a fine effort in driving the Germans for the time
-across the canal and gaining touch with the Eighth Division. The
-Germans pushed across once more at Pargny, upon the other flank of
-the Eighth Division, and also renewed their attempt in greater force
-at Bethencourt, getting possession of the higher ground there. This
-time it was the Highlanders and Royal Scots of the 183rd Brigade who
-counter-attacked, acting as part of the Twentieth Division, and by
-half-past two in the afternoon the position had once more been
-re-established. The Canadian motor-guns were invaluable in this
-operation.
-
-Upon the morning of March 24 the Sixty-first Division was barring the
-road from Ham to Nesle. The German progress had been checked in this
-direction by a spirited counter-attack carried out by the 5th
-Cornwalls, the pioneer battalion of that division, together with a
-mixed array of police, bandsmen, and other details, who advanced from
-Offoy to a depth of five miles, under Major Bennett. This little
-improvised force held on all night, and seems eventually to have
-joined up with the French in the neighbourhood of Esmery-Hallon.
-
-The British were still holding the crossings at Voyennes and Offoy,
-but very hard fighting had broken out to the south, and the Germans,
-who had poured over in the neighbourhood of Ham, were now thrusting
-hard for Canizy. The road bridges had all been destroyed, but there
-was a railway bridge {164} at Ham which had been taken out of the
-hands of the army authorities and left in charge of the railway
-department. This was either uninjured or at any rate inadequately
-destroyed, and was of immediate use to the enemy, enabling him to
-keep uninterrupted pressure upon the retiring troops. Canizy was now
-taken, but the 12th Rifles made an immediate counter-attack and
-forced the Germans back from the village. In this spirited operation
-they lost their gallant Colonel, Moore, who had led them with the
-utmost fearlessness.
-
-Whilst the Germans were pushing forward at Canizy they had also
-maintained strong and continuous pressure upon the Thirtieth Division
-near Moyencourt, and upon the Thirty-sixth Division at Golancourt,
-causing the Ulster men, whose left wing was entirely in the air, to
-fall back westwards. The next line of defence, after the Somme had
-been forced, lies along what is called the Libermont Canal between
-Nesle and Libermont. It was necessary to fall back, fighting as best
-they could, and to place this obstacle, narrow as it was, between the
-weary soldiers and their pursuers. It was the third day since the
-men had had a decent meal or an uninterrupted rest, and they were
-very disorganised and broken. "Hundreds of men were streaming back,"
-says one observer. "They had been without food for days and were
-done in completely. They were stopped and reformed at the bridges,
-where as many as 2000 were collected." It is such plain sobering
-sentences which help one to realise that war is not, as large scale
-descriptions might seem to imply, a question of the moving of pieces
-upon a board, but that underneath the strategy lie the countless
-human tragedies, the {165} tortured frames, the broken nerves, the
-prayers of brave men that they may still be brave, the torturing
-anxiety of officers, the ever-pressing burden which sometimes breaks
-the weary back which tries to hold it. Strategy reckons nothing of
-these things, but their accumulation makes up the terrible human
-tragedy of war, which brings humility to the most proud and fear to
-the most valiant. All equally feel the weakness of nature, but he is
-blessed who has the strength of spirit to cover and to combat it.
-
-By mid-day on March 24 the Thirtieth Division was over the Libermont
-Canal, holding from Buverchy to Libermont, with the village and
-bridge of Raincourt as a joining point between the 90th Brigade to
-the north and the 89th to the south. It may be recorded, to descend
-suddenly from divisions to individuals, that the first sign of the
-new German advance was a single scout who appeared in the open in
-front of the canal, and was engaged in a prolonged and deliberate
-rifle duel by Lieutenant Harrop, with the result that he was finally
-brought in as a wounded prisoner. The Twentieth Division had also
-fallen back, the orders of brigades from the south being the 60th
-with its flank on Buverchy, the 59th resting on Quiquery, and the
-183rd to link up with the Eighth Division near Mesnil St. Nicaise.
-The Thirty-sixth Division prolonged the line to the south of
-Libermont. The French reinforcements from the south were beginning
-by the afternoon of this day to get as far north as this section, and
-if not very weighty at the moment they were of great moral use as a
-promise for the future.
-
-From the new positions of the British line the German infantry could
-now be seen advancing in {166} platoon columns in three lines on each
-side of the Voyenne Road and heading for the Libermont Canal.
-Several parties of horsemen could be seen also, who were conjectured
-to be battery staffs, keeping up with the fight. The weak point was
-still near Bethencourt, between the Twentieth and the Eighth
-Divisions, where the gap tended to be wider as the enemy got more
-troops across and endeavoured to push the 25th Brigade north as has
-been described in dealing with the experiences of the Nineteenth
-Corps. They were reported before evening as having got as far as
-Morchain. The flank brigade of the Eighteenth Corps, the 183rd, was
-ordered to extend as far to the north-west as Potte in the hope of
-regaining touch, but though they reached that village they were still
-unable to bridge the gap. During the night there were heavy attacks
-upon Mesnil St. Nicaise in this region, which fell chiefly upon the
-Rifle battalions of the 59th Brigade, which had been reinforced by
-the 20th Entrenching Battalion and the 11th Durhams, the divisional
-pioneer battalion. The general result was to force the British line
-some little distance to the westward. At Buverchy in the evening the
-German infantry also advanced in great numbers, but came under the
-very efficient guns of the Thirtieth Division, and lost very heavily.
-The enemy artillery was also very active so that both the Thirtieth
-near Buverchy and the Thirty-sixth farther south had many casualties.
-The French relief was making itself more felt, however, in this
-southern section, where they were already outnumbering the British.
-The latter were greatly worn--so much so that the 21st Brigade of the
-Thirtieth Division could hardly be said to exist, only about 100 of
-the Yorkshires {167} being left in the line. By evening the centre
-of the position was near Moyencourt, some little distance to the west.
-
-[Sidenote: March 25.]
-
-In spite of the French reinforcements, which were not accompanied
-with artillery, the attack was still markedly stronger than the
-defence, so that March 25 was a most dangerous and critical day in
-this quarter of the field. To trace the developments from the north
-the enemy continued to press through the gap between the two corps,
-the Nineteenth and the Eighteenth, making a series of heavy attacks
-towards Mesnil-le-Petit and Nesle from the direction of Potte. This
-movement, powerfully followed up, pushed back the left flank from
-Quiquery to a point on the high ground 1000 yards west of Nesle. The
-183rd Brigade, which was now a mere handful of Scottish infantry,
-superb in quality but reduced to the last stage of exhaustion,
-together with the thin ranks of the 59th Brigade of Rifles, could
-not, even with the aid of the Canadian motor-guns, hold the heavy
-masses who pressed down upon them. The French One hundred and
-thirty-third Division moving up in support had dug a line between
-Billancourt and Herly, but Nesle was abandoned to the enemy, the
-Twenty-second French Division retiring from this sector and falling
-back towards Roye. The 60th Brigade of the Twentieth Division, much
-helped by the 23rd Entrenching Battalion--these valiant diggers made
-their presence felt all along the line--still held stoutly to their
-positions from Quiquery to Buverchy, but their left and left rear
-were so compromised that it was clear they could not hold out longer.
-To the south the French, who had relieved the Thirty-sixth Division
-at Libermont, had been pushed back, and the British {168} position
-was turned in their direction also. By the afternoon the French had
-taken over the line as far north as Buverchy, and the Thirtieth
-Division was ordered to fall back, but the Germans had advanced so
-rapidly from Libermont and got so far to their right rear that it was
-no easy matter either for the British or the French to get past them.
-Many had to swim the canals which striate this part of the country,
-and the 2nd Bedfords were especially hard-pressed before they were
-able to get away. The Twenty-second French Division was doing all it
-could to cover the approaches to Nesle upon the south, and the 184th
-Brigade cheered them loudly as they passed through their ranks.
-"They looked very fine men and seemed very much for it." General
-Wetherall of this brigade was badly wounded by a shell splinter in
-this period of the battle. And we have a vivid pen-picture drawn by
-a spectator of Brigade-Major Hewitt, some of whose adventures have
-already been recorded, holding Wetherall's wounded artery with one
-hand, while he wrote brigade orders with the other, for more than two
-hours on end. The 184th lost five commanders during the retreat.
-
-Even if the local pressure had not caused a rapid withdrawal at this
-portion of the line, it would have been enforced by the general
-strategic position, for the German advance in the south had been so
-masterful that on this night of March 25 Roye was taken, which is far
-to the south-west of Nesle. The 61st Brigade had been sharing the
-hard fortunes of the Thirty-sixth Division, but now, as the latter
-had been drawn out, it was restored to the Twentieth Division. So
-severe had been the strain upon it that it only numbered about 500
-bayonets, and some battalions, {169} such as the 2/6th Royal
-Warwicks, had not a single combatant officer left standing. None the
-less, it was at once sent to man a supporting line stretching through
-Gruny, Cremery, and Liancourt, and had hardly reached it before the
-Germans were also at Liancourt. The brigade held them, however, and
-so enabled the front line to fall back upon an organised position
-whence, on the next morning, a swift retreat became necessary.
-
-After dark on March 25 the One hundred and thirty-third French
-Division had come up to relieve the Twentieth and Sixty-first, but
-the situation was such along the line of the Nesle Canal that no
-fixed line could be formed, and the three divisions were finally
-greatly mixed up in the darkness and there was a good deal of
-confusion in their councils, since the general directions of the
-French were to fall back to the south, while the line of retreat of
-the British lay rather to the west. There was little time for
-deliberation, for word had come in that the Germans were closing in
-upon Liancourt, pressing south and west, in a way which threatened to
-cut off the whole forward line. At midnight, the British, many of
-them hardly able to move for fatigue, staggered off in such
-formations as they could assemble, with orders to concentrate north
-and east of Roye. Thanks largely to the presence of the remnants of
-the 61st Brigade near Liancourt, this most hazardous march was
-successfully accomplished, but as Roye was within the grasp of the
-enemy the movement was continued so as to reach a line between
-Hangest and Le Quesnel. The Germans were close upon them in the
-north, so the 61st Brigade, now down to 400 men, acted as flankguard,
-fending off their constant attacks. {170} The war has shown few
-finer instances of disciplined and tenacious valour than in the case
-of the three handfuls of men who represented what had once been the
-12th King's, 7th Somersets, and 7th Cornwalls. The enemy were in
-Liancourt, and their patrols were in actual hand-to-hand fighting
-with a French detachment aided by some of the Somersets. Other
-German troops pouring down from the north and using to the utmost the
-gap which had opened between the corps, endeavoured to cut in and to
-seize Le Quesnoy (not to be confused with Le Quesnel towards which
-the troops were marching). It was, however, upon their line of
-retreat, and about halfway to their destination, so that a German
-occupation would have been serious. The post was most desperately
-defended by Captain Combe, the brigade-major of the 61st Brigade,
-with two Lewis guns and 100 men. Only eleven were left standing at
-the end of this defence, but the village was held for the necessary
-time, and the survivors only withdrew upon receipt of a positive
-order. Thus the flank march of the British from Roye to Le Quesnel
-upon the morning of March 26 was successfully accomplished, owing to
-the devotion of their covering party to the north. "It was very much
-of a rabble," says an officer, "and there was great difficulty in
-sorting out the men and arranging the units." None the less the
-future was to show that the force was no more beaten than were the
-old contemptibles after Mons.
-
-[Sidenote: March 26.]
-
-The Thirtieth Division had been drawn out of the line on the arrival
-of the French, but they were hardly started on their movement towards
-the rest which they had earned so well, when this great pressure
-arose, and every man who could still carry a {171} rifle was needed
-once more in the line. On the morning of March 26 they were back
-then, between Bouchoir and Rouvroy. The 21st Brigade had now
-entirely disappeared, but the remains of the 2nd Yorks and the South
-Lancashire Pioneer Battalion were added to the 89th Brigade which was
-in the north at Rouvroy, while the 90th, under General Poyntz, filled
-the gap to Bouchoir. The Thirtieth Division had got considerably to
-the west of this line before they were recalled, and it was only by
-some splendid marching that they were able at last to throw
-themselves down upon the coveted ground before the German armies,
-which were streaming along the Roye-Amiens road, were able to reach
-it. As they faced the Germans the Twenty-fourth, now the mere shadow
-of a division, was on their left at Warvillers, while the Sixty-first
-and Twentieth were in support at Beaufort and Le Quesnel. Near
-Erches the Thirty-sixth Ulster men, whose relief, like that of the
-Thirtieth, had proved to be impossible, were still battling bravely,
-retaking the village of Erches after it had fallen to the enemy. The
-109th Brigade also distinguished itself greatly in this area, the
-Irish Fusiliers Battalions of which it is composed holding on most
-desperately to the village of Guerbigny, at the extreme south of the
-corps front, and continuing a heroic defence during March 26, and
-long after it was isolated upon March 27. The artillery of the
-Ulster Division was particularly good in its covering fire during
-these operations, gaining the very grateful acknowledgments of the
-French troops and generals who were more and more concerned with this
-southern sector of the line. Speaking generally the troops had now
-reached the region of the old French trenches, {172} which
-grid-ironed a considerable area of country, so that it was certain
-that if men could be found to man them, the pursuit would no longer
-continue at the pace of the last two days.
-
-Great work was done at this period by four of the Canadian motor-guns
-at the cross-roads, north-west of Rouvroy, where they not only
-inflicted heavy losses upon the enemy but delayed his advance while
-the exhausted troops were settling down into this new position.
-Every hour was of importance as giving reinforcements time to come up
-from the rear, and the general orders to the divisional generals were
-to hold on at all costs wherever defence was possible. A small body
-of corps cyclists under Lieutenant Quartermain co-operated splendidly
-with the motor-guns and did good service at this critical period of
-the retreat, during which there was very little artillery support
-behind the thin line of infantry.
-
-[Sidenote: March 27.]
-
-The German pressure on March 27 fell chiefly, as already shown, upon
-the Twenty-fourth Division and the other units on the extreme south
-of the Nineteenth Corps, which were forced back for some distance,
-and so threatened the stability of the line in the south. The 17th
-King's Liverpool, which was the flank battalion, held fast, however,
-and flung back their left to form a defensive line to the north. A
-small body of German cavalry performed a brilliant piece of audacious
-work in the darkness of the early morning of this date, pushing
-through the outposts of the Thirty-sixth Division in the south near
-Guerbigny, and capturing the Brigade Headquarters of the 109th
-Brigade, and also the chief staff officer of the division.
-
-The future was full of menace, for the Germans {173} were pressing on
-in great numbers. An observer near Bouchoir that evening (March 27)
-says: "I have never seen so many Germans in all my life--one huge
-dark mass about a mile away. With glasses one could see howitzers,
-machine-guns, trench-mortars, and field batteries, as well as
-infantry. It was a most wonderful sight. They seemed to be coming
-down the Roye Road, then moving off to the south, and some stopping
-in a mass."
-
-The main German attack upon the extreme south of the corps line on
-March 27 fell upon the Thirty-sixth Division in the direction of
-Erches, with the result that the Ulster men fell slowly back upon
-Arvillers, the 60th Brigade throwing back a defensive flank to
-correspond. By 12.30 Bouchoir, held by the 90th Brigade, was gained
-by the Germans, but the British formed a new line to the immediate
-westward of the village. An attack upon Folies was thrown back by
-the 59th Brigade. Towards evening some order came out of a rather
-tangled position, which may well be obscure both to writer and
-reader, since soldiers upon the spot found the greatest difficulty in
-separating the various confused elements. As night fell upon March
-27 after much desultory and inconclusive local fighting, there was no
-great change in the British line which ran from Warvillers, still
-held by the Twenty-fourth Division, to the west of Bouchoir, where
-the Thirtieth held the line, and down to Arvillers held by the 60th
-Brigade of the Twentieth Division, which was temporarily out of touch
-with the Thirty-sixth Division. Hangest was held by the Sixty-first
-Division, and Le Quesnel by the Sixty-first and the French. That
-night the Twentieth Division was ordered to join the Nineteenth {174}
-Corps, and their record under this new command will be found in the
-preceding chapter. One would have thought that they had reached the
-limits of human endurance, and their total numbers were not more than
-a thousand, and yet they were but at the beginning of a new chapter
-in their glorious history. The same words apply to their comrades of
-the Sixty-first Division, who were also ordered north. They were
-relieved by the French at Arvillers, and this portion of the line was
-on March 28 pressed back to the west of Hangest.
-
-[Sidenote: March 28.]
-
-The removal of the Twentieth Division at so critical a time could
-only be justified by the extreme and pressing need of the Nineteenth
-Corps, for it had the effect of producing an almost impossible
-position for the line in the south. Had it been possible to replace
-it at once with a solid French division, it would have mattered less,
-but as matters stood the One hundred and thirty-third French Division
-had itself been involved in the retreat and was greatly worn. There
-was so little time also to get it into its new positions that there
-was never any solid bastion upon that corner of the line. The result
-was speedily seen in the morning of March 28, when the Thirtieth
-Division were first subjected to a very heavy bombardment, and then
-looking south saw a general retreat going on from Arvillers, while
-their left flank at Warvillers was also very weak, since the
-Twenty-fourth Division was hardly strong enough to maintain itself.
-By 2 P.M. both flanks were bare, and the enemy were well round them
-in the north and in the south at Hangest. At one time it seemed
-impossible for the division to get clear, and even now their
-extrication seems miraculous to {175} the officers who effected it.
-A rapid retreat was made through Mezières and on to Moreuil, which
-only just avoided the closing pincers of the German advance. The
-French, who were in the act of relieving the Thirtieth Division, came
-away with them and had the same narrow escape. The block upon the
-road which formed the only egress is described as having been
-appalling, fugitives, refugees, and small disciplined columns of
-troops being crowded together from one end of it to the other. "The
-men were excellent," says an officer of the Thirtieth Division.
-"Their discipline was not a bit shaken." Such words could not
-truthfully be said of every unit, and yet soldiers can have seldom
-been more highly tried in any operation in history. Even the
-Imperial Guard may reach its breaking point, as the retreat from
-Moscow has shown. At Moreuil there is only one bridge, and had the
-German artillery been able to find it the result would have been a
-Beresina. As it was, the troops got across and speedily reformed
-upon the farther side of the river Avre.
-
-This may be taken as the limit of the retreat of the Eighteenth
-Corps, since the stand in the north of the line and the thickening
-French resistance in the south brought the momentum of the German
-advance to a halt. How terrible the ordeal had been may be gathered
-from the fact that the Twentieth Division, as already mentioned, was
-not more than 1000 strong, the Thirtieth Division about 2000 strong,
-the Sixty-first Division 2100 strong, and the Thirty-sixth Division
-only a little stronger at the end of it. Again and again it had been
-on the brink of absolute disaster, but always by the wise
-dispositions of General Maxse and his divisional generals, seconded
-{176} by the splendid tenacity of his men, the worst consequences had
-been avoided. Rapid readjustments had been needed, but a fatal break
-was always averted. The troops were handicapped in every possible
-way, for not only was their artillery far below strength, but for
-some reason the British Air Service during these days of stress was
-very weak in this southern area, while the German machines were very
-numerous and aggressive. The artillery officers were splendidly cool
-and efficient all through, and in the case of the 92nd Brigade Royal
-Field Artillery near Esmery-Hallon, it is said that the last gun was
-just 25 yards from the Germans when it limbered up. For two days the
-whole corps artillery was with the French, and did fine work with
-them, but to the great detriment of their own infantry. Some of the
-batteries remained for a long time with the French, and one French
-general has left it upon record that the failure of the Germans to
-capture Moreuil on April 4 was almost entirely due to the splendid
-shooting of the 306th Brigade Royal Field Artillery. After the first
-two days of the retreat no guns were abandoned by the Eighteenth
-Corps. The total losses of guns might be put at about 90 field
-pieces and 4.5 howitzers, with about 50 heavier pieces.
-
-
-
-
-{177}
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE SECOND BATTLE OF THE SOMME
-
-The Retreat of the Third Corps
-
-Movement across the Crozat Canal--Fight of the 173rd Brigade--Forcing
-of the Canal Line--Arrival of the French--Fight of Frières
-Wood--Splendid work of the Cavalry--Loss of Noyon--Final
-equilibrium--General retrospect of the Battle.
-
-[Sidenote: March 22.]
-
-We shall now complete this slight survey of a vast subject by
-following the fortunes of Butler's Third Corps upon the extreme right
-of the whole British Army. It has already been shown that the
-condition of this corps at the end of the first day of battle was
-most perilous, as its left flank in the region of Essigny, where the
-battle zone of the Fourteenth Division had been deeply pierced, was
-completely turned. The Eighteenth Division in the centre had, it is
-true, retained its ground, but the left brigade of the Fifty-eighth
-Division upon the right, the only brigade of that unit which was
-engaged, had also after a very desperate resistance lost their front
-positions at Quessy opposite to La Fère. Therefore orders had been
-given to draw off the troops during the night of March 21 across the
-Crozat Canal, and a covering line had been built up from the 54th
-Brigade, the Second Cavalry Division, and the 12th and 18th
-Entrenching Battalions in order to hold the German pursuit and {178}
-to give the somewhat dishevelled troops time to re-organise their
-ranks. By 5 A.M. on March 22 they were over the canal and the
-bridges had been destroyed. The artillery had been got over first to
-cover the crossings, and the 54th Brigade, which had covered the rear
-of the Fourteenth Division, was lined up from Jussy to Mennessis.
-The Eighteenth Division (less the 54th Brigade) fell back in the line
-of Frières Wood, behind the canal. Many guns had been lost but the
-cavalry had thrown the 3rd and 5th Brigades of the R.H.A. into the
-firing-line to support the infantry, and two new batteries of the
-96th R.F.A., only arrived the day before from England, came in at the
-nick of time.
-
-It was of the first importance to destroy the bridges along the
-canal, but this was found to be no easy matter. They had all been
-mined and prepared for destruction some time before by the French,
-but either the lapse of time or faulty material had caused such
-deterioration that the charges failed to explode, and had to be
-renewed and discharged under circumstances of great difficulty and
-danger. It was carried out none the less with great tenacity by the
-British sappers, but several weak points remained, notably a canal
-lock which had been so injured that the bed of the canal was exposed
-for some distance. The railway bridges here, as elsewhere, were also
-a source of weakness.
-
-As the corps turned to face the enemy upon the south side of the
-canal the general line of battle showed the 41st Brigade just south
-of St. Simon, connected up on the left by the only surviving
-battalion of the 42nd Brigade with the 61st Brigade of the Twentieth
-Division who were in support of {179} the Thirty-sixth Ulsters at
-that place. Then came the 43rd and 54th Brigades, facing Jussy and
-Mennessis with the 3rd and 5th Dismounted Cavalry Brigades in
-support. South of this point were the 4th Cavalry Brigade, the 55th
-Brigade, and the 53rd Brigade, all in the Frières area. Then came
-the 173rd Brigade in the Vouel neighbourhood with the 18th
-Entrenching Battalion and the 6th Dismounted Cavalry Brigade. This
-force had already lost heavily, and many of the men were suffering
-from gas, but they were sustained by the certainty that French
-reinforcements would speedily reach them from the south, as a system
-of mutual lateral support had been agreed upon between the commanders.
-
-A line of trenches had been begun in this neighbourhood by the French
-some time before, and it had been carried on by Italian labour, but
-it was still very unfinished, with many gaps, so that the tired
-soldiers had to lay down their rifles and take to their trenching
-tools to get some cover. It was already clear that they would need
-it, for with early daybreak on March 22 the Germans showed that they
-had reached the north bank of the canal at Jussy. It was again very
-misty, and they were able to bring up their machine-guns and small
-artillery with perfect impunity and place them under cover. It was
-not until between 10 and 11 A.M. that the mist began to lift, and the
-British outposts peering through it could see the flash of the guns
-among the plantations on the farther side. At an earlier hour the
-Germans had tried to cross at Jussy, but had been driven back. It
-was already evident, however, that they were in a position to repair
-the bridges in such a way as to find a passage wherever they desired.
-The general {180} situation might be described as a curious
-reproduction of the first action of the war when the two armies lay
-upon either side of the Mons Canal.
-
-The French Sixth Army on the right had acted with loyal promptitude,
-and the One hundred and twenty-fifth Division, under General Diebold,
-was already moving up from the south. One would have imagined that
-the most efficient relief would have been to replace the two British
-brigades in the south of the Oise, and so re-unite the Fifty-eighth
-Division. For some reason this was not done, and General Worgan's
-173rd Brigade continued to be a lone unit. A very welcome
-reinforcement consisted of nine batteries of French 75's. It was
-understood also that the whole Fifth French Corps, under General
-Pellé, was due at Noyon that evening, and that the Third British
-Corps would be relieved by it as soon as possible, but further help
-was slow in materialising.
-
-At about 1 P.M. on March 22 the enemy made their first crossing of
-the canal in the region of the 173rd Brigade. They advanced from
-Fargniers in the direction of Tergnier village. The range of vision
-in this water-sodden region was not more than fifty yards, which
-greatly handicapped Colonel Dervicke-Jones of the 8th London, who was
-in local command of this sector, as it put his machine-gun defence
-out of action. The troops were spread over a front of 3000 yards, so
-that the various companies were widely separated. The first German
-advance was made across a lock gate by a number of men dressed in the
-uniforms of some of the 1st London, taken the day before--a ruse
-which was the more successful as a number of genuine stragglers had
-actually been in in this fashion during the morning. An {181} attack
-followed during which C Company of the 8th Londons, while holding the
-enemy in front, were attacked by these pretended comrades upon the
-right rear, so that they were almost entirely destroyed. A road was
-thus opened across the canal, and the enemy opened out both north and
-south of the Quessy-Tergnier Road, cutting off those of the 3rd and
-8th London who were on the farther side. These men fought to a
-finish, and only a few of them ever got back. Colonel Dervicke-Jones
-had taken up a position in an old French reserve line called the Butt
-line, with two companies of his battalion and some machine-guns, and
-was able to hold up the enemy all day in his immediate front, and to
-prevent several battalions from deploying out of Tergnier. The
-artillery also got on to the German infantry in this part of the
-field with good results. This Butt position was maintained until the
-morning of March 23. Farther up the line, in the region of the
-Fourteenth Division, other troubles had developed, and the pressure
-of the enemy was great. At 4.30 P.M. the defenders were reinforced,
-but the enemy were already across at several points and were
-advancing upon Cugny. There was desultory fighting along the whole
-corps front, and though there was promise of immediate French relief,
-no French troops seem to have been actually engaged upon March 22.
-About 6 o'clock in the evening the enemy was across at Jussy Bridge
-and also at Montagne, but a fine counter-attack was made at this
-point by the 7th Bedfords and 6th Northamptons of the 54th Brigade,
-aided by the 16th Lancers, which drove the German infantry across
-once more and caused considerable losses. In spite of this success
-the general situation upon {182} the evening of March 22 was not
-cheering, and the task of the Third Corps which had been ordered to
-stand fast and form the southern hinge upon which the whole retreat
-should turn, was clearly a very difficult one. It was the more
-alarming, as the rapid progress of the enemy at Beauvais and Vaux at
-the centre of the army led to a demand for cavalry which could not be
-complied with without denuding the line to a dangerous and almost
-impossible extent.
-
-[Sidenote: March 23.]
-
-It was soon clear on the morning of March 23 that the Butt position
-on the right could not be maintained. The French had taken it over,
-but they were unable to hold it. A line was built up near Noreuil,
-where the remains of the 8th and 3rd Londons, aided by some French
-details, endeavoured all day to check the German advance. The main
-attacks were driving down from the north, and were heralded by a very
-severe machine-gun barrage, which rained bullets over the British
-position. The defence was much aided by a French armoured car upon
-the Quessy-Rouez road, and by a battery of 75's. The 4th London were
-to the south of the village and less exposed to the force of the
-advance. About six, after an hour of intense shelling, the Germans
-closed in upon Noreuil, the defenders, after a stout resistance which
-occasionally came to hand-to-hand fighting, being driven westwards.
-Colonel Burt, commanding the 6th Cavalry Brigade, barricaded his
-headquarters in the village and held the Germans off a long time by
-his deadly fire. It was not until long after the lines had been
-withdrawn that this brave officer had to be specially summoned to
-leave his post and fall back on Chauny. Finally, the retreat became
-general, but was rallied at the end of the Noreuil valley, where
-{183} some 200 men collected, and with a good field of fire to help
-them, remained for some time on the defence. Late at night this
-small force was ordered to fall back to a new line at Chauny.
-
-It has already been stated that two companies (C and D) of the 8th
-London (Post Office Rifles) had been cut off when the Germans got
-across the lock gate on the afternoon of March 22. These men, under
-Captain Gunning, had made a remarkable defence, crawling out with
-Lewis guns on to the lock gates in order to enfilade the advancing
-Germans. In the afternoon of March 23 they found themselves with the
-Germans on three sides of them and the canal on the fourth. Captain
-Gunning and Captain Kelly with the survivors then fought their way
-through to Condren, where they still continued their resistance.
-These soldiers, who made so admirable a resistance, were largely men
-who had been combed from the Army Service Corps.
-
-Whilst the 23rd of March had brought this heavy fighting to the 173rd
-Brigade, it had been a day of severe trial to all the other units of
-the corps front. The 54th Brigade was still covering the crossing at
-Jussy and Montagne, but the pressure was rapidly increasing as fresh
-German divisions made their presence felt. The situation was the
-more serious as General Butler already knew that the enemy were
-across the canal at Ham and had turned his left flank, but it was
-still hoped that a counter-attack in this quarter might throw him
-back, and so it was determined to hold on to the line. An emergency
-force of odds and ends, dismounted troopers, labour men, and returned
-leave men were gathered together at Crisolles and placed under the
-command of General {184} Harman to co-operate with General Greenly
-who now led the remains of the Fourteenth Division, in guarding the
-left wing. Meanwhile there was very brisk fighting at Jussy, where
-the German infantry had once again, under the cover of many guns, got
-a footing upon the south side of the canal. They were at once
-vigorously attacked by a small body of the 11th Royal Fusiliers and
-of the Scots Greys and penned up in the village of Jussy. At 11 A.M.
-the Germans had also got across at Mennessis, but came under the fire
-of four machine-guns of the Canadian Mounted Brigade which inflicted
-heavy losses upon them. None the less at a second effort the Germans
-were across once more, driving back by the weight of their attack the
-worn ranks of the 7th Bedfords and of the 9th Scottish Rifles. At
-11.30 they were half a mile south of Jussy, and might have got round
-the flank of the Bedfords but for the interposition of 200 Canadian
-dragoons. "These grim, square-faced men, with their parchment skins
-and their granite features, were a glad sight to our weary eyes,"
-says one who was fighting beside them. There was a time when it was
-doubtful whether in this quarter there was anything but a line of
-dismounted troops between the enemy and Paris.
-
-Every man who could be spared was hurried up to hold the weak points
-of the line, including the 8th Sussex, the pioneer battalion of the
-Eighteenth Division, the rest of the Canadian Cavalry Brigade, and
-the 7th Cavalry Brigade, but the mischief had gone too far, and the
-situation upon the right of the line was even worse than at Jussy.
-The counter-attack of the French One hundred and twenty-fifth
-Division in the direction of Tergnier had not been a {185} success,
-which is not to be wondered at, for the French infantry had come fast
-and far, their ammunition was not plentiful, and they were working
-over strange ground against an aggressive and victorious enemy. Next
-to the French on that front was the 7th Queen's. Colonel Bushell
-found himself at one period in command of the left of the French as
-well as of his own Surrey men, and he led on this mixed following
-under an intense fire, being himself severely wounded and yet
-rallying them again and again. Little progress could be made, but at
-least he held the line firm for a time. This gallant colonel, after
-having his wound dressed, returned to the field of battle, fell
-insensible, and had at last to be carried off. Next to the 7th
-Queen's was the 8th East Surreys (both of 55th Brigade), which was
-also in the thick of the battle, as was the neighbouring 12th
-Entrenching Battalion. This line made a very fine resistance, but
-was slowly pressed back by weight of numbers until at 4 P.M. they
-were on the line Noreuil-Frières-Faillouel, to the left of the spot
-where the 173rd Brigade was still holding its ground. The remains of
-the 7th Buffs fell back also with the rest of the 55th Brigade,
-fighting hard, through Frières Wood, where to the south-west of the
-wood they found some old French trenches, in which, with the aid of
-the survivors of the Queen's, they, under Colonel Ransome, organised
-a line for the rest of that arduous day. This resistance held up
-some strong drives of the enemy which were evidently intended, in
-conjunction with the attack from Jussy in the north, to cut off all
-the troops in the woody country round Frières, and it acted as a most
-efficient screen during the withdrawal of the rest of the line.
-
-{186}
-
-The whole eastern limit of the British area was spotted at this
-period by small bodies of men who were working desperately to keep
-the German infantry from sweeping in from that side. At Noreuil, as
-has been shown, were the remains of the 173rd Brigade. At Frières
-Wood were the decimated 55th Brigade. Opposite Jussy were the 54th
-Brigade and the dismounted cavalry, slowly retiring before the
-ever-increasing pressure. In between these organised bodies were
-many smaller units all striving hard for the same end. Among these
-may be mentioned two companies of sappers, 80th and 92nd Field
-Companies R.E., who were extended upon the road north of Noreuil in
-touch with the 173rd Brigade on one side. These valiant men not only
-held their position all day, but actually made a counter-attack under
-Lieutenant Richardson in the evening, when they advanced until they
-were nearly surrounded. Finally they fought their way back to the
-Caillouel area.
-
-As evening drew in the situation had become more and more difficult.
-The enemy had been driving in from every quarter all day without a
-respite, and the troops, many of whom had been engaged for more than
-two days without a moment for rest or re-organisation, were in a
-great state of exhaustion. Only a handful of several battalions
-remained as a fighting force. The confusion was made worse by the
-fact that the light blue uniforms of the French were mistaken for the
-grey of the Germans, so that misleading and alarming reports were
-continually brought in to the commanders. All reserves were in the
-fight, and the need of relief was urgent. About 4 o'clock the
-Faillouel position was found to be no longer tenable, and the troops
-fell {187} back through the village, which was immediately occupied
-by the enemy who were pushing up their troops in motor-lorries in
-this quarter. By 5 o'clock the right wing had come back 500 yards,
-and by evening the main position was at Caillouel, when the 54th
-assembled, numbering 650 bayonets all told, the three battalions of
-Bedfords, Northamptons, and Royal Fusiliers being each a little over
-200 strong. Detachments of the Scots Greys and 20th Hussars joined
-them at that village.
-
-The 53rd Brigade, fighting upon the left of the 55th Brigade, was as
-heavily engaged on March 23 as the other units of the Third Corps on
-the south side of the canal. At noon they had lent the 10th Essex to
-support their neighbours, and they consisted henceforth of only two
-weary battalions, the 6th Berks and 7th West Kents. At 3 o'clock in
-the afternoon they were heavily attacked and were pushed slowly back,
-struggling hard to keep the line. Major Tween led a counter-attack
-of his battalion headquarters, and checked the German advance at a
-critical moment, but was mortally wounded in the gallant endeavour.
-The two battalions were so weak that they had been telescoped into
-one, but good steel remains tough be it ever so thin, and the line
-still held. At 5.30 the 9th French Cuirassiers, long-booted giants,
-came up to help them, as did the 79th Field Company and various small
-details. At 7 the remains of the 55th Brigade were falling back
-through their ranks. When they had passed, the 53rd was also
-withdrawn as far as Commenchon, while the 55th reassembled at
-Bethencourt to the north. Three gallant Cuirassier regiments of the
-1st French Cavalry Division covered the rear. All {188} the troops
-that night were worn to rags, for it is to be remembered always that
-the great local disparity of force enabled the Germans to bring up
-perpetually lines of perfectly fresh men with a new impetus and
-inspiration, against men, many of whom had been gassed on the first
-day, and who were now weary to death and hardly able either to stand
-or to think, to order or to understand an order. On the whole long,
-tormented, struggling line there was no time or place where the
-pressure was greater than here. In spite of all the ardour of the
-attack the stubborn constancy of the defence may be measured by the
-fact that, save for one battery which was destroyed by shell-fire
-upon the afternoon of the 23rd, no guns were lost in this corps
-either upon March 22 or 23. On the other hand, so great had been the
-destruction of machine-guns, especially upon the first day, that only
-two were left out of forty-eight in the Eighteenth Division, though
-these were augmented by six new ones on March 24.
-
-The Sixth French Army, on the right of the British, was doing all it
-could to send up help, but it seems certain that none of this force
-was actually engaged before March 23, though it is stated upon good
-authority that in the liaison plans of the army the aid from the
-south was promised for the very first day. Any delay was not due to
-want of energy or loyalty of officers and men upon the spot. By the
-evening of March 23 the French units in the fighting-line were the
-One hundred and twenty-fifth Division, which made the unsuccessful
-counter-attack towards Tergnier, the First French Dismounted Cavalry
-Division, who fought side by side with the Eighteenth British
-Division, the Ninth and the Tenth French {189} Divisions, both of
-which were on the extreme left of the Third Corps, and can hardly be
-said to have been engaged. As the French troops were now
-predominating in this sector, the command passed on the evening of
-March 23 to General Humbert, a dark, wiry little French veteran,
-commanding the Third Army. General Butler continued, of course, to
-command his own corps.
-
-[Sidenote: March 24.]
-
-On the morning of March 24 the situation to the south of the Crozat
-Canal was as follows. The Fifty-eighth Division still held its
-original line from Barisis to the Buttes de Rouy, with a party
-holding the bridgehead at Condren. Then on the general line north
-and north-east of Chauny were the broken but indomitable remains of
-the Londoners of the 173rd Brigade, mixed up with fragments of the
-French One hundred and twenty-fifth Division, the 18th Entrenching
-Battalion, and troopers of the 6th Dismounted Cavalry Brigade,
-together with the dust of smaller broken units. Up to La Neuville
-was covered by the worn brigades of the Eighteenth Division
-supporting the French Cuirassiers. North of that was the 326th
-Regiment of the Ninth French Division, and north of that what was
-left of the British Fourteenth Division up to a point within a mile
-of Cugny, which was in German hands. On the extreme left flank on
-this sector the Thirty-sixth Division and the 61st Brigade were in
-Ollezy and Eaucourt. There had been some fighting on the front of
-the Fifty-eighth Division during the night, but otherwise it was
-quiet, and the soldiers were able to snatch a few hours of sleep.
-
-Once again there was a thick morning fog, under cover of which the
-German infantry broke suddenly {190} upon the One hundred and
-twenty-fifth French Division, north-east of Chauny, driving them back
-towards Abbecourt. This placed the British troops at Condren in a
-perilous position, but it was essential to hold the line of the Oise,
-and any abandonment of the bridge would have been fatal. The
-Fifty-eighth Division was ordered to stand fast therefore, and the
-173rd Brigade was reinforced by the 16th and 18th Entrenching
-Battalions. These entrenching battalions are, it may be remarked,
-entirely apart from the Labour Corps, and were soldiers, well
-officered and organised, formed from those units which remained over
-after the re-organisation of the three-battalion brigades. Apart
-from these were the labour battalions who also in those hard days
-were occasionally the final weight which tilts the balance where the
-fate of armies and finally of empires was in the scale. Manfully
-they rose to the occasion, and the Empire owes them a very special
-word of thanks. During the afternoon all the British and French
-troops in this quarter passed over the Oise, mostly in the Abbecourt
-district, blowing up the bridges behind them and passing under the
-command of General Duchesne of the Sixth French Army. This left a
-blank upon the right of the Eighteenth Division upon the north of the
-river, but General Seely brought up his cavalry and endeavoured to
-cover it, while the Second Dismounted Cavalry Division was pushed out
-upon the left of the Fourteenth Division in the north, to preserve
-the connection between the Third and Eighteenth Corps. The Third
-Cavalry Division under General Harman was thrown in also at this
-point, and about 2.30, having mounted their horses, they charged most
-gallantly in order to re-establish {191} the line north of Villeselve
-on the front of the Ulster Division. The Royal Dragoons were
-prominent in this fine charge in which they sabred many of the enemy,
-took over 100 prisoners, and relieved the pressure upon the Irish
-Fusiliers of the 109th Brigade at a time when it was very heavy.
-
-The whole corps front was slowly falling back during the day, partly
-on account of the steady pressure of the German attack and partly in
-order to conform with the line to the north. The Fourteenth
-Division, moving south-west through Crisolles, found itself in the
-evening on the west side of the Noyon Canal, covering the two
-crossings at Haudival and Beaurains. A vamped-up detachment of
-stragglers and nondescripts under Colonel Curling were placed to fill
-up the gap between the Fourteenth Division and Noyon. The left of
-the Fourteenth Division at Guiscard was covered by General Harman's
-detachment, and it is characteristic of the adaptability of the
-British soldier that seventy Northumberland Hussars who had become
-cyclists were suddenly whipped off their machines, put upon horses
-and sent up to reinforce the thin ranks of the cavalry.
-
-The centre of the line covering Caillouel was held all day by the
-Eighteenth Division, with the First French Cavalry Division still
-acting as a breakwater before the advancing flood. In spite of the
-gallant Cuirassiers the pressure was very great from the 54th Brigade
-who were in the north, through the 55th and down to the 53rd, which
-covered the north of Noyon. Some of the edge was taken from the
-German attack by the efficient work of the 82nd Brigade Royal Field
-Artillery and the 3rd and 5th Royal Horse Artillery, who were hard at
-it from {192} morning to night. The French infantry on the left of
-the Eighteenth Division lost Guivry towards evening, but they held
-fast to Beaugies until after nightfall. About ten o'clock, however,
-the German infantry was into Beaugies, and the situation became
-dangerous as they were getting round the left flank of the Eighteenth
-Division, so that there was a general retreat to the rearward
-position called the Crepigny Ridge, which was not fully reached and
-occupied until 3 A.M. on March 25. That evening the Fifty-eighth
-Division reported that early in the day they had blown up all bridges
-and also the Royal Engineer dump at Chauny. So intersected is the
-whole country at the back of the line of the Fifth Army by
-watercourses, that the total number of bridges blown up during the
-retreat amounted to about 250; and only in two cases, that of the Ham
-Road bridge and that at Chipilly, was the result unsatisfactory.
-
-[Sidenote: March 25.]
-
-In the early morning of March 25 the Germans, who were still marching
-rapidly and fighting hard, were close to Guiscard, pushing on so
-swiftly that special troops had to be detailed to cover the heavy
-guns. General Butler had so far as possible pulled his dismounted
-troopers out of the fight and had restored them to their proper role,
-so that now he possessed a force of about 2000 horsemen, who were
-ready to execute the all-important functions of mounted infantry, so
-invaluable in a retreat. Under Generals Greenly and Pitman these
-horsemen did great work during the remainder of the operations.
-
-Since the German pressure was still very heavy and the enemy were
-sweeping onwards in the north, it was necessary to continue the
-withdrawal of {193} the line north of the Oise, while holding fast to
-the southern bank along its whole length. The first movement in this
-withdrawal was to the line Mondescourt-Grandru, and the second to the
-line Appilly-Babœuf-Mont de Béthéricourt. By 8.30 the Eighteenth
-Division in the middle of the line was effecting this retirement, the
-northern flank, which was the post of danger, being covered by the
-11th Royal Fusiliers of the 54th Brigade. It was a most difficult
-and delicate business with the enemy pressing down continually
-through the woods and villages with which the country is studded. On
-the south the 53rd Brigade and the French Cuirassiers were
-withdrawing through Mondescourt in some disorder. When the troops
-were rallied and rearranged, there were no French troops upon the
-right. At 10 A.M. the 54th Brigade had reached the Grandru position,
-but were out of touch both with the French on their left and with the
-55th Brigade on their right. They therefore continued to fall back
-upon Béthéricourt. At 1 o'clock a strong German infantry attack, in
-many lines, developed upon the right near Appilly and a heavy
-machine-gun barrage burst out over the 53rd Brigade and their
-immediate comrades upon the right, the 289th French Regiment. Up to
-3 o'clock the Allies in this quarter were retiring under a very heavy
-fire, much helped by four valiant cars of the French Cavalry's
-Mitrailleuses Automobiles, who did splendid service in covering the
-exhausted infantry. The German infantry, pressing eagerly forward in
-expectation of that general débacle which never occurred, was riddled
-by the fire of these motor-guns and left swathes of dead behind them.
-The attack had the effect, however, of driving back {194} the Allied
-line to such a point that a French force which was defending Mont
-Béthéricourt was entirely isolated and in great peril of destruction.
-Under these circumstances the French officer in command appealed to
-General Sadleir-Jackson of the 54th Brigade to make a great effort to
-rescue his imperilled men. Sadleir-Jackson without hesitation led
-back his men into the village of Babœuf, cleared it of the
-Germans, captured ten machine-guns with nearly 300 prisoners, and
-regained touch with the French, who were enabled to withdraw. The
-7th Bedfords and 11th Royal Fusiliers were the heroes of this
-chivalrous exploit, where we were able to repay the loyalty which the
-French have so often shown to us. It should be added that a company
-of the 12th Entrenching Battalion, which like all the other
-entrenching units had gone through this severe infantry fighting
-without light artillery, signals, or any of the ordinary adjuncts of
-well-equipped infantry, was still so full of military spirit that
-without orders it joined in this victorious charge.
-
-On March 25 the Germans were within shelling distance of Noyon, and
-the British evacuated successfully nearly 2000 wounded from that
-town. The counter-attack of the 54th Brigade had stopped the German
-advance for a time, and the Eighteenth Division was able to get
-across the river Oise, the guns and transport passing in the
-afternoon while the infantry got across that night and in the morning
-of March 26, without serious molestation, being covered by their
-sappers and pioneers, who blew up the bridges as soon as the troops
-were safely across. At two in the morning of March 26 the French
-abandoned Noyon. At this time there were no {195} British troops
-upon the north of the river save the remains of the Fourteenth
-Division which were finally relieved upon this date, and the Second
-and Third Cavalry Divisions, now under Generals Pitman and Portal,
-who harassed the German advance at every opportunity, and rendered
-constant help to the French rearguards. The Second Cavalry Division
-secured the high ground immediately west of Noyon, and held it until
-it could be handed over to the French infantry. The general line of
-the cavalry was facing north-east from west of Noyon, through Suzoy
-to Lagny, where they were in touch with the Tenth French Division.
-The left of the Second Cavalry Division had been prolonged by the
-addition of the Canadian Dismounted Brigade. These men soon found
-themselves involved in some hard fighting, for the Germans attacked
-the French at Lagny and drove them out. On one occasion this day, at
-the Bois des Essarts, the troopers of the Second British Cavalry
-Division galloped through the French infantry to hold off the
-attacking Germans, an episode in which Lieutenant Cotton and other
-officers gained the honour of mention in the French order of the day.
-The left of the cavalry was compelled to fall back finally to Dives,
-and the Canadians after a determined struggle were driven out of the
-woods which they occupied. Finally, the 3rd Cavalry Brigade
-(Bell-Smyth), consisting of the 5th and 16th Lancers with the 4th
-Hussars were nearly surrounded, and had the greatest difficulty in
-fighting their way out. Before night they were in touch once more
-both with the French and with their comrades of the 4th Brigade. On
-the morning of March 27 word came that the British cavalry was
-imperatively {196} needed at the junction between the French and
-British armies. It was despatched forthwith to do splendid service
-in the north after having played a glorious part in the south.
-
-[Sidenote: March 28.]
-
-From now onwards the fighting upon the Roye and Montdidier front
-(both towns passed soon into German possession) was no longer
-connected with the Third Corps. The position to the south of the
-Oise showed that the Fifty-eighth British Division held from Barisis
-to Manicamp. Thence to Bretigny was the One hundred and twenty-fifth
-French Division. Thence to the east of Varennes were the Fifty-fifth
-French Division, with cavalry, and the First French Division up to
-Sempigny. Thence the line ran in an irregular curve through Lassigny
-to Canny, the enemy being well past that line on the north, and the
-direction of attack being rather from the north-west. On the morning
-of March 28 orders were issued that the remains of the Third Corps
-should be transferred to the north, where they should join their
-comrades of the Fifth Army, from whom they were now separated by a
-considerable distance. Within the next two days, after some
-difficulties and delays in extricating the artillery, these orders
-were carried out, though it was not till some days later that the
-Fifty-eighth London Division could be relieved. This unit had not,
-save for the 173rd Brigade, been engaged in the recent fighting, but
-it had held a line of over ten miles of river, along the whole of
-which it was within touch with the enemy. One effort of the Germans
-to get across at Chauny on March 31 was met and repelled by the 16th
-Entrenching Battalion, who killed many of the assailants and captured
-nearly 100 prisoners.
-
-{197}
-
-So ended the vicissitudes of the Third Corps, which had the strange
-experience of being swept entirely away from the army to which it
-belonged, and finding itself under French command, and with French
-troops fighting upon either wing. Its losses were exceedingly heavy,
-including 20 heavy and 100 field-guns, with about 15,000 killed,
-wounded, or missing. The Fourteenth Division was the chief sufferer
-with 5880 casualties, 4500 of which came under the head of "Missing,"
-and represent the considerable detachments which were cut off in the
-first day of the battle. The losses of some of the battalions
-approached annihilation. In spite of all pressure and all
-misfortunes there was never a time when there was a break, and the
-whole episode was remarkable for the iron endurance of officers and
-men in the most trying of all experiences--an enforced retirement in
-the face of an enemy vastly superior both in numbers and in artillery
-support. When we realise how great was the disparity it is amazing
-how the line could have held, and one wonders at that official
-reticence which allowed such glorious epics to be regarded as part of
-a great military disaster. Against the two and a half British
-divisions which were in the line on March 21 there were arrayed seven
-German divisions, namely, the Fifth Guards, First Bavarians,
-Thirty-fourth, Thirty-seventh, One hundred and third, Forty-seventh,
-and Third Jaeger. There came to the Third Corps as reinforcements up
-to March 26 two British cavalry divisions, one French cavalry
-division, and three French infantry divisions, making eight and a
-half divisions in all, while seven more German divisions, the Tenth,
-Two hundred and eleventh, Two hundred and twenty-third, Eleventh
-{198} Reserve, Two hundred and forty-first, Thirty-third, and
-Thirty-sixth, came into line, making fourteen in all. When one
-considers that these were specially trained troops who represented
-the last word in military science and efficiency, one can estimate
-that an unbroken retreat may be a greater glory than a victorious
-advance.
-
-Every arm--cavalry, infantry, and artillery--emerged from this
-terrible long-drawn ordeal with an addition to their fame. The
-episode was rather a fresh standard up to which they and others had
-to live than a fault which had to be atoned. They fought impossible
-odds, and they kept on fighting, day and night, ever holding a fresh
-line, until the enemy desisted from their attacks in despair of ever
-breaking a resistance which could only end with the annihilation of
-its opponents. Nor should the organisation and supply services be
-forgotten in any summing up of the battle. The medical arrangements,
-with their self-sacrifice and valour, have been already dealt with,
-but of the others a high General says: "A great strain was also cast
-upon the administrative staffs of the army, of corps and of
-divisions, in evacuating a great mass of stores, of hospitals, of
-rolling stock, of more than 60,000 non-combatants and labour units,
-while at the same time supplying the troops with food and ammunition.
-With ever varying bases and depots, and eternal rapid shifting of
-units, there was hardly a moment when gun or rifle lacked a
-cartridge. It was a truly splendid performance."
-
-We have now traced the movements and the final positions of the eight
-corps which were involved in this terrible battle from the foggy
-morning which {199} witnessed the German attack, up to those rainy
-days of early April which showed a stable line--a line which in spite
-of occasional oscillations continued from that date until the great
-British victory in August, to mark the point of equilibrium of the
-giant forces which leaned from east and from west. In this account
-we have seen the Seventeenth and Sixth Corps in the north fall back
-upon Arras and the Vimy Ridge, where they turned and dealt their
-pursuers such a blow that the battle in that sector was at an end.
-We have seen the Fourth, Fifth, and Seventh Corps struggling hard to
-make a line from Arras to Albert and down to the Somme; we have seen
-the Nineteenth Corps covering a huge front and finally holding firm
-near Villers-Bretonneux, and we have seen the Eighteenth and Third
-Corps intermixed with our French Allies helping to determine the line
-in the southern area of the great field of battle. That line running
-just to the west of Montdidier, Moreuil, and Albert was destined for
-four months to be a fixed one, though it was advanced during that
-time by the splendid audacity of the Australians, who gave their
-opponents no rest, and finally, with the help of the British Eighth
-Division, entirely re-won the town of Villers-Bretonneux when it was
-temporarily lost, and extended our outposts a mile or more to the
-east of it, as will be presently described. Save for this action
-there was no movement of importance during that time, though the
-general set of the tide was rather eastwards than westwards.
-
-One cannot leave so vast a theme as the second battle of the Somme
-without a few words as to the general impression left upon the mind
-of the writer by the many documents bearing upon the subject {200}
-which he has had to peruse. In the first place, we cannot possibly
-deny that it was a great German victory, and one which was well
-earned, since it depended upon clever and new dispositions entailing
-laborious preparation with the intelligent and valiant co-operation
-of officers and men. The overpowering force of the blow, while it
-removed all reproach from those who had staggered back from it,
-depended upon the able way in which it was delivered. Having said so
-much, we must remind the German commentator that he cannot have it
-both ways, and that if a gain of guns, prisoners, and ground which
-fails to break the line is, as we admit, a victory to the Germans,
-then a similar result is a victory to the British also. He cannot
-claim the second battle of the Somme to be a victory, and yet deny
-the term to such battles as Arras, Messines, and Passchendaele. The
-only difference is that the Germans really did try to break the line
-upon March 21, and failed to do so, while no such design was in
-General Haig's mind during the battles of 1917, save perhaps in the
-last series of operations.
-
-[Illustration: Position at the Close of the Great Retreat, March 30]
-
-There was a regrettable tendency after the battle to recriminations
-in the Press, and General Gough, who had been the head of the Fifth
-Army, was sacrificed without any enquiry as to the dominant force
-which he had to face, or as to the methods by which he mitigated what
-might have been a really crushing disaster. It can be safely stated
-that in the opinion of many of those who are in the best position to
-know and to judge, there was absolutely nothing upon the military
-side which could have been bettered, nor has any suggestion ever been
-made of anything which was left undone. {201} The entrenching had
-been carried out for several months with an energy which raised
-protests from the men who had to do it. There might almost be room
-for the opposite criticism that in the constant work of the navvy the
-training of the soldier had been unduly neglected; but that was the
-result of the unavoidable scarcity of non-military labour. The
-extension of the front was undoubtedly too long for the number of men
-who had to cover it; but this was done at the express request of the
-French, who had strong military reasons for drawing out and training
-a number of their divisions. It was taking a risk undoubtedly, but
-the risk was forced upon the soldiers, and in any case the French
-have taken risks before now for us. The blowing up of the bridges
-was well done, and the only exception seems to have been in the case
-of railway bridges which, for some reason, were taken out of the
-hands of the army commander. The reserves were insufficient and were
-perhaps too far back, but the first item at least depended upon the
-general weakness of manpower. Nowhere can one lay one's hand upon
-any solid ground for complaint, save against the rogues and fools of
-Brest-Litovsk, who by their selfish and perjured peace enabled the
-Germans to roll a tidal wave of a million men from east to west, with
-the certainty that they would wash away the first dam against which
-they struck. If there is any military criticism to be made, it lies
-rather in the fact that the French help from the south was nearly
-sixty hours before it made itself felt at the nearest part of the
-British line, and also in the surprising number of draft reserves
-kept in England at that date. Within a month of the battle 350,000
-had been sent to the {202} front--a very remarkable feat, but a sign,
-surely, of an equally remarkable omission. Had ten emergency
-divisions of infantry been made out of the more forward of these
-drafts, had they been held ready in the rear zones, and had the
-actual existing reserves been pushed up to the front, it is safe to
-say that the German advance would have been stopped earlier and would
-probably not have got beyond the Peronne-Noyon line. If, as was
-stated in Parliament, it was confidently expected that the German
-attack would strike exactly where it did, then it does seem
-deplorable that the nearest reserve to the Fifth Army, a single
-division, had, through our weak man-power, to be kept at a three
-days' journey from the point of danger. If, instead of searching the
-record of the General for some trace of weakness, our critics had
-realised the rapidity of his decision, with the moral courage and
-grasp of actuality which he showed by abandoning his positions--no
-easy thing for one of his blood and record--and falling back unbroken
-upon a new line of defence beyond the German heavy artillery, they
-could not have failed to admit that the country owes a deep debt of
-gratitude to General Gough. Had he hesitated and his army been
-isolated and destroyed, the whole war might well have taken a most
-sinister turn for the worse.
-
-Granting, however, that the disaster was minimised by the prompt
-appreciation of the situation by the General in command, by the
-splendid work of his four corps-commanders, and by the co-operation
-of every one concerned, it is still undeniable that the losses were
-very heavy, and the result, even after making every allowance for
-German wastage, a considerable military disaster. In killed, {203}
-wounded, and missing in the Fifth Army alone the figures could not be
-less than 50,000, including Feetham and Malcolm, army divisional
-generals, with Dawson, Bailey, White, Bellingham, and numerous other
-brigadiers and senior officers. In field-guns 235 were so lost or
-destroyed out of 600, in medium heavies 108 out of 494, in 8-inch or
-over pieces 19 out of 98. Great quantities of stores, especially at
-Ham, fell into the hands of the enemy, but so far as possible they
-were burned or made useless. Bad as the episode seemed at the time,
-it is clear now to any one who looks back upon it that it had no evil
-effect upon the result of the war. The Germans were exposed to very
-heavy losses which they could ill afford. They have admitted to
-180,000 in documents published since the armistice but this may be an
-understatement. They were drawn away from their famous lines to
-which they did not return until they were so reduced that they could
-not hold them. Finally, it led to that concentration of power in the
-hands of Marshal Foch which was worth many sacrifices to attain. Sir
-Douglas Haig, from his many services and long experience, might well
-have put forward claims to the supreme place, and it is
-characteristic of the nobility of this great soldier that it was in
-response to a telegram from him to the Prime Minister, in which he
-named General Foch for the position, that the change was eventually
-carried through.
-
-
-
-
-{204}
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-THE SOMME FRONT FROM APRIL 1 ONWARDS
-
-The last waves of the storm--The Twelfth Division at Albert--The
-Forty-seventh Division at Aveluy Wood--The Australians in the
-south--Capture of Villers-Bretonneux by the Germans--Recapture by
-Australians and Eighth Division--Fierce fighting--The first turn of
-the tide.
-
-[Sidenote: April 1918.]
-
-The limit and results of the second battle of the Somme had been
-defined when the Australians, New Zealanders, Second Canadians, and
-fresh British divisions took the place of their exhausted comrades
-towards the end of March. The German reserves, great as they were,
-were nearly exhausted, and they had no more men to put into the
-fight. The final line began to clearly define itself, running from a
-few miles east of Arras where the Seventh and Sixth Corps had struck
-back so heavily at the German pursuit, through Neuville Vitasse,
-Boyelles, Ayette, Bucquoy, Hebuterne, Auchonvillers, Aveluy, just
-west of Albert, Denancourt, Warfusee, and Marcelcave. The worst
-storm was over, but even as the sinking sea will still send up one
-great wave which sweeps the deck, so the German battle front would
-break from time to time into a spasm of energy, which could effect no
-great purpose and yet would lead to a considerable local engagement.
-These episodes must at least be indicated in the order of their
-occurrence.
-
-{205}
-
-One great centre of activity was the ruined town of Albert, for the
-Germans were able to use it as a covered approach, and thus mass
-their troops and attempt to break through to the westward. The order
-of divisions in this sector showed that the Sixty-third and
-Forty-seventh, still fighting in spite of their wounds, were to the
-immediate north-west. The Twelfth Division was due west. South-west
-was the Third Division of Australians and south of these the Fourth.
-On each of these, and sometimes upon all of them, the strain was very
-great, as the Germans struggled convulsively to burst the bonds of
-Albert. It should be noted that the Fifth Army had for the time
-passed out of being, and that all the southern end of the line was
-now held by the Fourth Army under General Rawlinson.
-
-[Sidenote: April 4.]
-
-The main attack upon the Albert sector was on April 4, when the
-Germans made a violent effort, and the affair reached the proportions
-of a considerable battle. About eight in the morning the action
-began by a severe and sudden attack upon the Australian Division 1000
-yards south of Albert, and also on the railway near Denancourt. The
-Australians fought as Australians have always fought in this war, but
-the onset was very heavy, supported by a shattering fire, and they
-were forced to yield some ground.
-
-[Sidenote: April 5.]
-
-North of the Australians was the Twelfth Division with the 35th and
-36th Brigades in the line, in that order from the south. The
-temporary recoil of the Australians rendered the 35th Brigade
-vulnerable, and the Germans with their usual quick military
-perception at once dashed at it. About 1 o'clock they rushed forward
-in two waves, having built up {206} their formation under cover of
-the ruined houses of Albert. The attack struck in between the 7th
-Suffolks and 9th Essex, but the East Anglians stood fast and blew it
-back with their rifle-fire, much helped by the machine-guns of the
-5th Berks. Farther north the attack beat up against the left of the
-Forty-seventh and the right of the Sixty-third Divisions, but neither
-the Londoners nor the naval men weakened. The pressure was
-particularly heavy upon the Forty-seventh, and some details of the
-fighting will presently be given. The next morning, April 5, saw the
-battle still raging along the face of these four divisions. The
-Germans attempted to establish their indispensable machine-guns upon
-the ridge which they had taken on the south, but they were driven off
-by the Australians. The 36th Brigade in the north of the Albert
-sector had lost some ground at Aveluy, but about noon on April 5 the
-9th Royal Fusiliers with the help of the 7th Sussex re-established
-the front, though the latter battalion endured very heavy losses from
-an enfilade fire from a brickfield. The 5th Berks also lost heavily
-on this day. So weighty was the German attack that at one time the
-4th Australians had been pushed from the high ground, just west of
-the Amiens-Albert railway, and the 35th Brigade had to throw back a
-defensive wing. The position was soon re-established, however,
-though at all points the British losses were considerable, while
-those of the Germans must have been very heavy indeed.
-
-It has been stated that to the north of the Twelfth Division,
-covering Bouzincourt and partly occupying Aveluy Wood, was the
-Forty-seventh Division (Gorringe), which had been drawn out of the
-line, {207} much exhausted by its prolonged efforts, some days
-before, but was now brought back into the battle. It stood with the
-15th and 20th London of the 140th Brigade on the right, while the
-23rd and 24th of the 142nd Brigade were on the left. Units were
-depleted and the men very weary, but they rose to the crisis, and
-their efforts were essential at a time of such stress, for it was
-felt that this was probably the last convulsive heave of the dying
-German offensive. It was on April 5 that the German attack from the
-direction of Albert spread to the front of the Forty-seventh
-Division. The bombardment about 8 A.M. reached a terrific pitch of
-intensity and was followed by an infantry advance through clouds of
-gas and smoke. The main attack fell upon the left of the divisional
-line, and was met by a sustained rifle, Lewis gun, and artillery
-fire, which could not be faced by the stormers. At one time the left
-of the 23rd London was penetrated, but a rally re-established the
-position. The enemy were rushing forward in mass formations, and
-their desperate tactics offered targets which ensured very heavy
-losses.
-
-About 9 o'clock the right brigade was also involved in the fighting,
-the enemy advancing in force towards Aveluy Wood. Here also the
-assault was very desperate and the defence equally determined. The
-15th (Civil Service Rifles) was heavily attacked, and shortly
-afterwards the Blackheath and Woolwich men of the 20th Battalion saw
-the enemy in great numbers upon their front. The whole line of the
-division was now strongly engaged. About 10 A.M. a company of the
-24th London was driven from its position by concentrated
-rifle-grenade {208} fire, but a support company sprang to the front
-and the line was unbroken. At 10.30, however, things took a grave
-turn, for a sudden rush brought the assailants into the line between
-the two left flank battalions, outflanking and destroying the
-outlying company of the 23rd London. These men fought bravely to the
-end and took heavy toll of the enemy. At the same time the 20th
-London came under a shattering shell-fire which put every Lewis gun
-out of action. It was also enfiladed by machine-guns from the corner
-of Aveluy Wood, where the Germans had penetrated the line. The 20th
-threw out a defensive flank and held on. The 15th on their right
-were still in their original positions.
-
-At 11.40 the 23rd London, which had suffered from the German
-penetration of its left company, was exposed all along its line to
-machine-gun fire from its left rear, where the enemy had established
-three posts. The result was that the position in Aveluy Wood had to
-be abandoned. The 22nd London from the reserve brigade was now
-pushed up into the firing-line where the pressure was very great.
-The weight of the attack was now mainly upon the 20th, who held their
-posts with grim determination in spite of very heavy losses, chiefly
-from trench mortars and heavy machine-guns. It was a bitter ordeal,
-but the enemy was never able to get nearer than 300 yards to the line
-of the 20th, and if they caused heavy losses they endured as much
-from the British fire. About 12.40 the enemy seemed to be mustering
-at the south end of the wood for a grand final attack, but the
-gathering was dispersed by the machine-guns of the Londoners.
-
-At four in the afternoon, after a truly terrible day, the
-Forty-seventh Division determined to counter-attack, {209} and the
-22nd Battalion was used for this purpose. They had already endured
-heavy losses and had not sufficient weight for the purpose, though
-eight officers and many men had fallen before they were forced to
-recognise their own inability. The failure of this attack led to a
-further contraction of the line of defence. The Sixty-third Division
-on the left had endured a similar day of hard hammering, and it was
-now very exhausted and holding its line with difficulty. For a time
-there was a dangerous gap, but the exhausted Germans did not exploit
-their success, and reserves were hurried up from the Marines on the
-one side and from the 142nd Brigade on the other to fill the vacant
-position.
-
-When night fell after this day of incessant and desperate fighting
-the line was unbroken, but it had receded in the area of Aveluy Wood
-and was bent and twisted along the whole front. General Gorringe,
-with true British tenacity, determined that it should be
-re-established next morning if his reserves could possibly do it.
-Only one battalion, however, was available, the pioneer 4th Welsh
-Fusiliers, who had already done conspicuous service more than once
-during the retreat. An official document referring to this attack
-states that "no troops could have deployed better or advanced more
-steadily under such intense fire, and the leadership of the officers
-could not have been excelled." The casualties, however, were so
-heavy from the blasts of machine-gun fire that the front of the
-advance was continually blown away and no progress could be made.
-Two platoons upon the left made some permanent gain of ground, but as
-a whole this very gallant counter-attack was unavailing.
-
-{210}
-
-This attack near Albert on April 4 and 5 was the main German effort,
-but it synchronised with several other considerable attacks at
-different points of the line. One was just north of Warfusee in the
-southern sector, where once again the Australians were heavily
-engaged and prevented what at one time seemed likely to be a local
-break-through. As it was the line came back from Warfusee to Vaire,
-where the Australian supports held it fast. Farther north the Fourth
-Australian Division was sharply attacked opposite Denancourt, and had
-a very brisk fight in which the 13th Brigade, and more particularly
-the 52nd Regiment, greatly distinguished itself. The object of the
-fight was to hold the railway line and the position of the Ancre.
-The tenacity of the Australian infantry in the face of incessant
-attacks was most admirable, and their artillery, ranging upon the
-enemy at 1500 yards, as they came over the higher ground behind
-Denancourt, inflicted very heavy losses. One gun fired 1250 rounds
-without a stop.
-
-The village of Hangard and Hangard Wood were at that time the points
-of junction between the French and British armies. The extreme right
-unit of the British was Smith's 5th Brigade of the Second Australian
-Division (Rosenthal). The 20th Battalion on the southern flank was
-involved on this and the following days in a very severe and
-fluctuating fight in which Hangard Wood was taken and lost several
-times. Colonel Bennett, an Australian veteran whose imperial
-services go back as far as the Suakin expedition, had to cover 3500
-yards with 600 men, knowing well that there were no reserves behind
-him and that the point was vital. With heavy losses he managed, with
-the 19th Battalion beside him, to {211} dam the German flood until
-help could arrive. So fierce was the fighting that 750 dead Germans
-were picked up in the Hangard Wood. On April 7 the wood was
-abandoned, but under no compulsion and in accordance with the general
-movement of the line.
-
-[Sidenote: April 5 and 6.]
-
-About 10 A.M. on April 6 the enemy renewed his attack upon the
-junction between the Forty-seventh and Sixty-third Divisions, but it
-was the British turn to mow down advancing lines with machine-gun
-fire. No progress was made, and there were such signs of German
-weakening that the British made a sudden local advance, capturing two
-machine-guns and some prisoners. In this affair it is characteristic
-of the spirit which still remained in the weary British troops, that
-Corporal March of the 24th London went forward and shot the opposing
-German officer, bringing back his maps and papers.
-
-The German commanders were well aware that if the line was to be
-broken it must be soon, and all these operations were in the hope of
-finding a fatal flaw. Hence it was that the attacks which began and
-failed upon April 4 extended all along the northern line on April 5.
-Thus the New Zealand Division on the left of the points already
-mentioned was involved in the fighting, the right brigade, consisting
-of the New Zealand Rifle Brigade, being fiercely attacked by some
-2000 storm troops who advanced with great hardihood, and at the
-second attempt recaptured the farm of La Signy. The German officers
-seem upon this occasion to have given an example to their men which
-has often been conspicuously lacking. "A tall Wurtemburger," says
-the New Zealand recorder, "ran towards our line with nine of his men.
-In one hand he carried a cane and over his arm a {212} light
-waterproof coat. He was a fine big fellow over six feet high....
-Just at the critical moment some Lewis-gunners took a hand in the
-business, the officer was shot dead, and most of the others were
-killed or wounded."
-
-On the left of the New Zealanders the attack was extended to the road
-between Ayette and Bucquoy. Here a brigade of the Thirty-seventh
-Division in the south and of the Forty-second in the north were
-heavily attacked and Bucquoy was taken, but before the evening the
-defenders returned and most of the lost ground was regained. The
-right of the Thirty-seventh Division had advanced in the morning upon
-Rossignol Wood, that old bone of contention, and had in a long day's
-struggle got possession of most of it. Three machine-guns and 130
-men were the spoils.
-
-[Sidenote: April 21, 22.]
-
-From this time onwards there were no very notable events for some
-weeks in the Somme line, save for some sharp fighting in the Aveluy
-Wood sector on April 21 and 22, in which the Seventeenth,
-Thirty-fifth, and Thirty-eighth Divisions were all involved. The
-enemy tried hard to improve his position and did succeed in gaining
-some ground. The attacks were costly to both sides but the results
-were futile. The British outposts, and particularly those of the
-Australians, maintained an aggressive attitude throughout, and it was
-more and more impressed upon the German mind that in spite of his
-considerable advance and large captures, it was an unbeaten army
-which lay before him.
-
-[Sidenote: April 24.]
-
-On the morning of April 24 a very determined attack was made by the
-Germans upon the front of Butler's Third Corps in the area of
-Villers-Bretonneux. {213} This small town is of great importance, as
-it stands on a curve of the rolling downs from which a very
-commanding view of Amiens is obtained, the cathedral especially
-standing out with great clearness. Already the city had suffered
-great damage, but the permanent loss of Villers-Bretonneux would mean
-its certain destruction. The attack was urged by four German
-divisions and was supported by tanks which did good service to the
-enemy and broke in the British line, held mainly at this point by
-Heneker's Eighth Division which had hardly recovered from its heroic
-services upon the Somme.
-
-It is suggestive of the value of the tanks whether in German or in
-British hands that where the attack was unsupported by these machines
-it broke down under the British fire, as on the right of Cator's
-Fifty-eighth Division to the south and on the left of the Eighth
-Division. There were fifteen German tanks in all, so their array was
-a formidable one, the more so in a mist which was impenetrable at
-fifty yards. It was for the British now to experience the thrill of
-helpless horror which these things can cause even in brave hearts
-when they loom up out of the haze in all their hideous power. The
-2/4th Londons on the south of the village were driven back to the
-line Cachy-Hangard Wood, so that their neighbours of the 2/2nd London
-had to conform. The 2/10th London counter-attacked at once, however,
-and penetrated Hangard Wood, doing something to ease the situation.
-The 2nd Middlesex and 2nd West Yorks were overrun by the tanks, much
-as the Roman legionaries were by the elephants of Pyrrhus, and even
-the historical and self-immolating stab in the belly was useless
-against these monsters. The 2nd Rifle {214} Brigade were also
-dislodged from their position and had to close up on the 2nd
-Berkshires on their left. The 2nd East Lancashires had also to fall
-back, but coming in touch with a section of the 20th Battery of
-divisional artillery they were able to rally and hold their ground
-all day with the backing of the guns.
-
-The 2nd Devons in reserve upon the right were also attacked by tanks,
-the first of which appeared suddenly before Battalion Headquarters
-and blew away the parapet. Others attacked the battalion, which was
-forced to move into the Bois d'Aquenne. There chanced to be three
-heavy British tanks in this quarter, and they were at once ordered
-forward to restore the situation. Seven light whippet tanks were
-also given to the Fifty-eighth Division. These tanks then engaged
-the enemy's fleet, and though two of the heavier and four of the
-light were put out of action they silenced the Germans and drove them
-back. With these powerful allies the infantry began to move forward
-again, and the 1st Sherwood Foresters carried out a particularly
-valuable advance.
-
-Shortly after noon the 173rd Brigade of the Fifty-eighth Division saw
-the Germans massing behind tanks about 500 yards east of Cachy, with
-a view to attacking. There were three whippets still available, and
-they rushed out and did great work, catching two German battalions as
-they deployed.
-
-The Fifty-eighth had good neighbours upon their right in the shape of
-the Moroccan corps, a unit which is second to none in the French Army
-for attack. These were not engaged, but under the orders of General
-Debeney they closed up on the left so as to shorten the front of
-General Cator's division, a great assistance with ranks so depleted.
-His {215} troops were largely lads of eighteen sent out to fill the
-gaps made in the great battle, but nothing could exceed their spirit,
-though their endurance was not equal to their courage.
-
-On the evening of April 24 General Butler could say with Desaix, "The
-battle is lost. There is time to win another one." The Germans not
-only held Villers-Bretonneux, but they had taken Hangard from the
-French, and held all but the western edge of Hangard Wood. The
-farthest western point ever reached by the Germans on the Somme was
-on this day when they occupied for a time the Bois l'Abbé, from which
-they were driven in the afternoon by the 1st Sherwoods and 2nd West
-Yorks. They had not attained Cachy, which was their final objective,
-but none the less it was very necessary that Villers-Bretonneux and
-the ground around it should be regained instantly before the Germans
-took root.
-
-For this purpose a night attack was planned on the evening of April
-24, and was carried out with great success. The operation was
-important in itself, but even more so as the first sign of the turn
-of the tide which had run so long from east to west, and was soon to
-return with such resistless force from west to east.
-
-For the purposes of the attack the fresh 13th Australian Brigade
-(Glasgow) was placed under the General of the Eighth Division, and
-was ordered to attack to the south of Villers, while the 15th
-Australian Brigade made a similar advance upon the north. Each of
-these was directed to pass beyond the little town, which was to be
-cleared by an independent force. On the right of the Australians was
-the {216} balance of the Eighth Division, which had to clear up the
-Bois d'Aquenne.
-
-[Illustration: Rough Sketch of the General Position of Troops at the
-Battle of Villers-Bretonneux, April 24-25]
-
-The attack was carried out at 10 P.M., the infantry having white
-arm-bands for identification in the darkness. There was no artillery
-preparation, and the advance was across unknown country, so that it
-may be placed among the most hazardous operations in the war. In the
-case of the 13th Australian Brigade, the 52nd Battalion was on the
-right in touch with the British, while the 51st was on the left, with
-the 50th in support. From the onset the machine-gun fire was very
-severe, especially against the 51st Regiment, but the admirable
-individuality of the Australian soldiers was of great service to
-them, every man getting forward through the darkness as best he
-could. The weather was ideal, for there was sufficient moon to give
-direction, but not enough to expose the troops to distant fire. The
-German flares were rather a help to the attack by defining the
-position. The Australian front got as far forward as Monument Wood,
-level with the village, but the 173rd Brigade on their right was in
-some difficulty, and they themselves were badly enfiladed from the
-town, so they could not maintain their more advanced position. The
-2nd Northamptons, attached to the 13th Australian Brigade, had been
-told off to take the town itself, but both their colonel and their
-adjutant were killed during the assembly, and some confusion of
-orders caused the plans to miscarry. On the north of the town the
-15th Australian Brigade, with the 22nd Durhams attached, had been an
-hour late in starting, but the 60th and 59th Regiments got up, after
-some confused fighting, to a point north of the town, which was
-entered after dawn and {218} cleared up by the 2nd Berkshires, aided
-by a company of the Australian 58th Battalion.
-
-The German tanks had done good work in the attack, and some of the
-British tanks were very useful in the counter-attacks, especially
-three which operated in the Bois d'Aquenne and broke down the
-obstinate German resistance in front of the Eighth Division.
-Daylight on April 25 found the British and Australian lines well up
-to the village on both sides, and a good deal of hard fighting, in
-which the troops got considerably mixed, took place. One unusual
-incident occurred as two blindfolded Germans under a flag of truce
-appeared in the British line, and were brought to Colonel Whitham of
-the 52nd Australian Regiment. They carried a note which ran: "My
-Commanding Officer has sent me to tell you that you are confronted by
-superior forces and surrounded on three sides. He desires to know
-whether you will surrender and avoid loss of life. If you do not he
-will blow you to pieces by turning his heavy artillery on to your
-trenches." No answer was returned to this barefaced bluff, but the
-messengers were detained, as there was considerable doubt as to the
-efficiency of the bandages which covered their eyes.
-
-By 4 P.M. on April 25 the village had been cleared, and the troops
-were approximately in the old front line. The 22nd Durham Light
-Infantry had mopped up the south side of the village. About a
-thousand prisoners had been secured. The 54th Brigade of Lee's
-Eighteenth Division, which had been in support, joined in the
-fighting during the day, and helped to push the line forward, winning
-their way almost to their final objective south of the village and
-then having to yield 200 yards to a counter-attack. {219} The fast
-whippet tanks were used during this action, and justified themselves
-well, though, as in the case of all tanks, the value of the
-instrument depends mainly upon the courage of the crew who handle it.
-One British tank, under the command of a leader named Craig, seems to
-have been all over the field wherever it was most needed, so that
-some weeks after the fight the present chronicler in visiting the
-field of battle still heard the legend of his prowess. As to the
-German resistance a skilled observer remarks: "The enemy handled his
-machine-guns with great boldness. The manner in which he pushes
-forward numbers of guns, relying upon the daring and initiative of
-the crews to use them to best advantage, may lead to a greater number
-being lost, but he certainly inflicts enormous casualties in this
-way."
-
-[Sidenote: April 26.]
-
-There was an aftermath of the battle on April 26 which led to some
-very barren and sanguinary fighting in which the losses were mainly
-incurred by our gallant Allies upon the right. There was a position
-called The Monument, immediately south of Villers, which had not yet
-been made good. The Moroccan Division had been slipped in on the
-British right, and their task was to assault the German line from
-this point to the north edge of Hangard Wood. Part of the
-Fifty-eighth Division was to attack the wood itself, while on the
-left the Eighth Division was to complete the clearance of Villers and
-to join up with the left of the Moroccans. The Eighth Division had
-already broken up three strong counter-attacks on the evening of
-April 25, and by the morning of April 26 their part of the programme
-was complete. The only six tanks available were given to the {220}
-Moroccans. At 5.15 on the morning of April 26 the attack opened. It
-progressed well near the town, but on the right the Foreign Legion,
-the very cream of the fighting men of the French Army, were held by
-the murderous fire from the north edge of Hangard Wood. The 10th
-Essex and 7th West Kents, who had been lent to the Fifty-eighth
-Division by the 53rd Brigade, were held by the same fire, and were
-all mixed up with the adventurers of the Legion, the losses of both
-battalions, especially the West Kents, being terribly heavy. The
-Moroccan Tirailleurs in the centre were driven back by a German
-counter-attack, but were reinforced and came on again. Hangard
-village, however, held up the flank of the French. In the evening
-about half the wood was in the hands of the Allies, but it was an
-inconclusive and very expensive day.
-
-The battle of Villers-Bretonneux was a very important engagement, as
-it clearly defined the _ne plus ultra_ of the German advance in the
-Somme valley, and marked a stable equilibrium which was soon to turn
-into an eastward movement. It was in itself a most interesting
-fight, as the numbers were not very unequal. The Germans had five
-divisions engaged, the Fourth Guards, Two hundred and twenty-eighth,
-Two hundred and forty-third, Seventy-seventh Reserve, and Two hundred
-and eighth. The British had the Eighth, Fifty-eighth, Eighteenth,
-and Fifth Australian, all of them very worn, but the Germans may also
-have been below strength. The tanks were equally divided. The
-result was not a decided success for any one, since the line ended
-much as it had begun, but it showed the Germans that, putting out all
-their effort, they could get no {221} farther. How desperate was the
-fight may be judged by the losses which, apart from the Australians,
-amounted to more than 9000 men in the three British divisions, the
-Fifty-eighth and Eighth being the chief sufferers.
-
-As this was the first occasion upon which the Germans seem to have
-brought their tanks into the line of battle, some remarks as to the
-progress of this British innovation may not be out of place--the more
-so as it became more and more one of the deciding factors in the war.
-On this particular date the German tanks were found to be slow and
-cumbrous, but were heavily armed and seemed to possess novel
-features, as one of them advanced in the original attack upon April
-24 squirting out jets of lachrymatory gas on each side. The result
-of the fighting next day was that two weak (female) British tanks
-were knocked out by the Germans while one German tank was destroyed
-and three scattered by a male British tank. The swift British
-whippet tanks were used for the first time upon April 24, and seem to
-have acted much like Boadicea's chariots, cutting a swathe in the
-enemy ranks and returning crimson with blood.
-
-Treating the subject more generally, it may be said that the limited
-success attained by tanks in the shell-pocked ground of the Somme and
-the mud of Flanders had caused the Germans and also some of our own
-high authorities to underrate their power and their possibilities of
-development. All this was suddenly changed by the battle of Cambrai,
-when the Germans were terrified at the easy conquest of the
-Hindenburg Line. They then began to build. It may be said, however,
-that they never really gauged {222} the value of the idea, being
-obsessed by the thought that no good military thing could come out of
-England. Thus when in the great final advance the tanks began to
-play an absolutely vital part they paid the usual price of blindness
-and arrogance, finding a weapon turned upon them for which they had
-no adequate shield. If any particular set of men can be said more
-than another to have ruined the German Empire and changed the history
-of the world, it is those who perfected the tank in England, and also
-those at the German headquarters who lacked the imagination to see
-its possibilities. So terrified were the Germans of tanks at the end
-of the war that their whole artillery was directed to knocking them
-out, to the very great relief of the long-suffering infantry.
-
-From this time onwards this front was the scene of continuous
-aggressive action on the part of the Australians, which gradually
-nibbled away portions of the German line, until the day came for the
-grand advance of August 8. One of the most successful of these was
-on May 19, when the village of Ville-sur-Ancre was taken by a sudden
-assault with 20 machine-guns and 360 prisoners. A second very sharp
-fight, which may be mentioned here, though it is just beyond the
-scope of this volume, was on July 1 and following days in the Aveluy
-sector, near the Ancre, where the Twelfth and Eighteenth Divisions
-had three bouts of attack and counter-attack, in which the 37th and
-54th Brigades were heavily engaged, the honours of the action being
-about equally divided between the British and the Germans.
-
-
-
-
-{223}
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-THE BATTLE OF THE LYS
-
-April 9-12
-
-The Flanders front--Great German onslaught--Disaster of the
-Portuguese--Splendid stand at Givenchy of the Fifty-fifth
-Division--Hard fight of the Fortieth Division--Loss of the
-Lys--Desperate resistance of the Fiftieth Division--Thirty-fourth
-Division is drawn into the Battle--Attack in the north upon the
-Ninth, Nineteenth, and Twenty-fifth Divisions--British
-retreat--General survey of the situation.
-
-
-Nearly a hundred German divisions had been used against the British
-alone in the great offensive which began on March 21 and ended in the
-first week of April. At this time the British forces in France,
-including Portuguese and Overseas divisions, numbered sixty in all.
-Of these no less than forty-four had been engaged in the great
-battle, and all of these were either still in the line, tied to the
-Amiens front, or else had been drawn out in a shattered and
-disorganised condition, having lost on an average not less than from
-4000 to 5000 men each. It will be seen that there was only a very
-small margin over, and that if the Germans by a supreme effort had
-burst the line and reached the estuary of the Somme, it would have
-been possible to have caused a great military disaster. Especially
-would this have been the case if the northern flank {224} of the
-British could have been driven in as well as the southern, for then
-the mutilated and shaken army would have been hurled in upon itself
-and would have found itself crowded down upon a sea-coast which would
-have given few facilities for embarkation. In the hopes of a débacle
-in the south the Germans had prepared out of their huge reserves a
-considerable force in the north which would have formed the second
-claw of their deadly embrace. When the first claw missed its grip
-and could get no farther it was determined that the other should at
-least go forward and endeavour to reach the Channel ports. Although
-the Somme estuary had not been attained, none the less the Germans
-knew well that three-quarters of the whole British force had been
-engaged, and that most of it was not fit to take its place in a
-renewed battle. Therefore they had reason to hope for great results
-from their new offensive in Flanders, and they entered upon it with a
-good heart.
-
-The omens were certainly propitious, but there were two factors which
-were in favour of the British--factors which could not yet have been
-adequately appreciated by the Germans. The first was the new unity
-of command under General Foch, a soldier famous for his writings in
-peace and for his deeds in war. This great leader, who had
-distinguished himself again and again since the first month of the
-war, when he had played a vital part in checking the German rush for
-Paris, was selected with the cordial consent of every one concerned,
-and especially of Sir Douglas Haig, as Generalissimo of the Allied
-forces. Therefore a common control and a common policy were ensured,
-so that the German chiefs could not {225} turn their whole force upon
-half of the Allies with the assurance that the other half would find
-the operations outside their war map. Hence the British in Flanders,
-though they would have to fight their own battle for a week or two,
-could count confidently upon receiving help at the end of that time.
-
-The second and more immediate factor, was that by a fine national
-effort a splendid stream of efficient drafts had been despatched from
-England during the great battle--young soldiers it is true, but full
-of spirit and most eager to meet the Germans and to emulate the great
-deeds of their elders. Their training had been short, but it had
-been intense and practical, with so excellent a result that one could
-but marvel at the old pre-war pundits who insisted that no soldier
-could be made under two years. These high-spirited lads flocked into
-the depleted battalions, which had often to be reformed from the
-beginning, with a skeleton framework of officers and N.C.O.'s upon
-which to build. It was of course impossible to assimilate these
-drafts in the few days at the disposal of the divisional generals,
-but at least they had adequate numbers once more, and they must be
-taught to be battle-worthy by being thrown into the battle, as
-Spartan fathers have taught their boys to swim.
-
-One more sign of the times was the quick appreciation by the American
-authorities of the desperate nature of the crisis all along the
-Allied line. With magnanimous public spirit they at once gave
-directions that such American troops as were available and had not
-yet been formed into special American divisions should be placed
-under British or French command and fitted temporarily into their
-organisation. The few complete organised American divisions {226} in
-France had been on the Alsace line, but some of these were now
-brought round to thicken the French army on the Oise. But most
-important of all was the effect upon the shipment of American troops,
-which had averaged about 50,000 a month and now rose at a bound to
-250,000, a number which was sustained or increased for several months
-in succession. This result was helped by the whole-hearted
-co-operation of the British mercantile marine, which was deflected
-from its other very pressing tasks, including the feeding of the
-country, in order to carry these troops, and actually handled about
-two-thirds of them whilst the British Navy helped to find the
-escorts. So efficiently were the transport arrangements carried out
-both by British and Americans; that when a million men had been
-conveyed they were still able to announce that the losses upon the
-voyage were practically nil. Even the lie-fed bemused German public
-began to realise in the face of this fact that their much boomed
-submarines were only one more of their colossal failures.
-
-The German attack upon the British lines by the army of General von
-Quast in Flanders broke on the morning of April 9. There had been
-considerable shelling on the day before along the whole line, but as
-the hour approached this concentrated with most extreme violence on
-the nine-mile stretch from the village of Givenchy in the south to
-Fleurbaix, which is just south of Armentières in the north. This
-proved to be the area of the actual attack, and against this front
-some eight German divisions advanced about 6 o'clock of a misty
-morning. So shattering had been their bombardment and so active
-their wire-cutters, who were covered {227} by the fog, that the
-advanced positions could hardly be said to exist, and they were able
-to storm their way at once into the main defences.
-
-The point upon which this attack fell was held the by four divisions,
-all of which formed part of Horne's First Army. The general
-distribution of the troops at that time was that the Second Army
-stretched from the junction with the Belgians near Houthulst Forest
-down to the Messines district where it joined the First Army. The
-First Army had weakened itself by an extension to the south, and
-Plumer's force was about to extend also, and take over the Laventie
-district, when the storm suddenly burst upon the very point which was
-to be changed.
-
-Two corps were involved in the attack, the Fifteenth (De Lisle) in
-the Armentières region, and the Eleventh (Haking) in the region of
-Givenchy. The latter had two divisions in the line, Jeudwine's
-Fifty-fifth West Lancashire Territorials defending the village and
-adjacent lines, while the Portuguese Second Division (Da Costa)
-covered the sector upon their left. The depleted Fiftieth Division
-(Jackson) was in immediate reserve. On the left of the Portuguese
-was Ponsonby's Fortieth Division which had lost five thousand men in
-the Somme battle only a fortnight before, and now found itself
-plunged once more into one of the fiercest engagements of the war,
-where it was exposed again to very heavy losses.
-
-The main force of the German attack fell upon the Portuguese line,
-and it was of such strength that no blame can be attached to
-inexperienced troops who gave way before so terrific a blow, which
-would have been formidable to any soldiers in the world. The
-division held the line from 2000 yards south of {228} Richebourg
-l'Avoué to the east of Picantin, a frontage of 9350 yards, or more
-than half of the total front of the assault. The division had all
-three brigades in the line, and even so was very extended to meet a
-serious assault. The 3rd Brigade from the First Portuguese Division
-was in immediate support. The 5th Brigade was on the right, covering
-Le Touret, the 6th in the middle, and the 4th on the left, covering
-Laventie. Behind the whole position lay the curve of the River Lys,
-a sluggish stream which moves slowly through this desolate plain, the
-Golgotha where so many men have died, Indians, French, British, and
-German, since the first months of the war. In all that huge flat
-canalised space it was only at Givenchy that some small ridge showed
-above the dreary expanse.
-
-The Portuguese had been in the line for some months, but had never
-experienced anything to approach the severity of the shattering
-bombardment which poured upon them from four in the morning. When an
-hour or two later the storming columns of the German infantry loomed
-through the thick curtain of mist, the survivors were in no condition
-to stand such an attack. All telephone and telegraph wires had been
-cut within the first half-hour, and it was impossible to direct any
-protective barrage. The artillery in the rear, both British and
-Portuguese, had been much weakened by a concentration of gas-shells
-extending as far as Merville, so that the infantry were left with
-insufficient support. The gunners stood to their work like men, and
-groups of them continued to fire their guns after the infantry had
-left them exposed. These brave men were killed or captured by the
-enemy, and their batteries were taken. In the rear the roads had
-been so {229} shattered by the German fire that it was impossible to
-get a tractor or lorry up to the heavy guns, and there was no way of
-removing them. All observers agree that the crews of the heavy guns
-did excellently well. The whole front had fallen in, however, and in
-spite of scattered groups of infantry who showed the traditional
-Portuguese courage--that courage which had caused the great Duke to
-place them amongst his best soldiers--the position was in the hands
-of the enemy. By mid-day they were at Le Touret upon the right, and
-the guns there were blown up and abandoned. About the same time they
-had reached Estaires upon the left and Bout Deville in the centre.
-Before evening the German line was four miles from its
-starting-point, and had reached the River Lawe, a small affluent of
-the Lys. From this time onwards the Fiftieth Division, coming up
-from the rear, had taken over the front, and the Portuguese were out
-of the battle. The Germans in their day's work had taken 6000
-prisoners and 100 guns, many of them in ruins. It should be
-mentioned that the Portuguese ordeal was the more severe, as
-breast-works had taken the place of trenches in this sector. All
-were agreed that General da Costa did what was possible. "He is a
-fine man, who does not know what fear is," said a British officer who
-was with him on the day of the battle.
-
-The caving in of the front of the line had a most serious effect upon
-the two British divisions, the Fifty-fifth and the Fortieth, who were
-respectively upon the right and the left of the Portuguese. Each was
-attacked in front, and each was turned upon the flank and rear. We
-shall first consider the case of the Fifty-fifth Division which
-defended the lines of {230} Givenchy with an energy and success which
-makes this feat one of the outstanding incidents of the campaign.
-This fine division of West Lancashire Territorials, containing
-several battalions from Liverpool, had some scores to settle with the
-Germans, by whom they had been overrun in the surprise at Cambrai at
-the end of the last November. At Givenchy they had their glorious
-revenge.
-
-The position of the Fifty-fifth Division was a strong one, extending
-for some thousands of yards from the hamlet of Le Plantin in the
-south to Cailloux in the north, with a section of the old British
-line a thousand yards in front, a deserted trench half full of water
-and festooned with rusty wire. There were outpost companies along
-the scattered line of ruined houses, and a few posts were thrown far
-out near the old trench. The village line consisted of a series of
-well-concealed breast-works and loopholed walls without any
-continuous trench, the whole so cunningly arranged that it was
-difficult to get the plan of it from in front. Each post or small
-fort had its own independent scheme of defence, with good enfilade
-fire, concrete emplacements, belts of wire, and deep ditches.
-
-Very early in the day the left flank of the position had been
-entirely exposed by the retirement of the Portuguese, so that during
-the whole long and desperate struggle the general formation of the
-division was in the shape of an L, the shorter arm being their proper
-front, and the longer one facing north and holding up the German
-attack from inside the old lines. The northern defensive flank does
-not seem to have been entirely improvised, as some precautions of
-this nature had already been taken. The new front extended from the
-hamlet of Loisne upon the {231} stream of that name, through a second
-hamlet called Le Plantin, and so down to the canal. The first strain
-of the fighting fell chiefly upon the 165th Brigade (Boyd-Moss),
-consisting of three battalions of the famous King's Liverpool
-Regiment. The 6th and 7th Battalions were in the line with the 5th
-in support at Gorre, but as the day wore on and the pressure
-increased, units from both the other brigades were drawn into the
-fight, so that all participated in the glory of the victory. By 8.30
-the flank was entirely naked, and the Germans in small but audacious
-bodies, with a constant rattle of rifle and machine-gun fire, were
-pushing in between the outer posts of the British division,
-overwhelming and obliterating some of them by a concentrated fire of
-trench mortars. Some of these isolated garrisons held out in the
-most desperate fashion, and helped to take the pressure off the main
-village line. One particularly brilliant example was that of Captain
-Armstrong of the 1/4th South Lancashires, who with A Company of that
-battalion defended a moated farm, literally to the death, having been
-warned that it was a key position.
-
-About mid-day the German attack was still creeping in, and had gained
-one important outpost called Princes' Island. The 10th Liverpool
-Scots from the 166th Brigade, a battalion which has a great record
-for the war, had come up to thicken the line of defenders. Amid the
-crash and roar of constant shells, and a storm of bullets which beat
-like hail upon every wall and buzzed through every crevice, the
-stubborn infantry endured their losses with stoic patience, firing
-steadily through their shattered loopholes at any mark they could
-see. At 1 o'clock some audacious stormers had got so far forward on
-{232} the left that they were in the rear of the Brigade
-Headquarters, and were only held there by spare men from the
-transport lines who chanced to be available. The attack was drifting
-down more and more from the new ground, so about this hour the 5th
-South Lancashires, also of the 166th Brigade, were sent across to the
-north of Loisne to hold the stream. Each flank was attempted in turn
-by the wily assailants, so that when the left proved impervious they
-charged in upon the right, and captured Windy Corner, which is near
-the canal upon that side, continuing their advance by attacking Le
-Plantin South from the rear and the flank, so that the defenders were
-in an impossible position. Having taken this point it seemed as if
-the Germans would roll up the whole long thin line from the end, and
-they actually did so, as far as Le Plantin North. Here the British
-rallied, and the survivors of the 6th and 7th King's made a furious
-advance, pushed the Germans back, retook Le Plantin South, and
-captured a number of prisoners. The position was still serious,
-however, as the Germans held Windy Corner, and had penetrated between
-the British right and the canal, so as to get into the rear of the
-position. A great effort was called for, and the men responded like
-heroes. The 2/5th Lancashire Fusiliers from the 164th Brigade
-(Stockwell) had come up, and these fine soldiers, with the weary
-remains of the two King's Liverpool battalions, rushed the whole
-German position, dragging them out from the pockets and ruins amid
-which they lurked. In this splendid counter-attack more than 700
-prisoners were taken in all, with a number of machine-guns. At the
-end of it the British right was absolutely intact.
-
-{233}
-
-Whilst these stirring events had taken place on the right flank,
-there had been heavy fighting also on the left. Here the British
-defence had been based upon two small but strong forts, called
-Cailloux North and Route A Keep. The latter fell early in the
-action, the German infantry coming upon it so unexpectedly in the fog
-that the machine-guns were at the moment mounted upon the parapet and
-elevated for indirect fire. They were put out of action, and the
-place was surrounded and taken. This greatly weakened the left wing
-of the defence. Farther still to the left the Germans were pushing
-through Loisne, and the fort called Loisne Central was heavily
-engaged. This portion of the line was held by the 166th Brigade.
-Once the German wave actually lapped over into the little fort, but
-the place was not taken, and its machine-guns still clattered and
-flashed. All day the Germans were held at this point though the
-pressure was great. During the night the 13th King's Liverpools from
-the 9th Brigade were sent as a reserve to the weary line. At 7.40 on
-the morning of April 10 the enemy, under cover of a murderous
-barrage, attacked Loisne once more, striving hard to break in the
-left of the British defence. The garrison suffered terribly, but
-none the less the stormers were shot back into their shell-holes and
-lurking-places. Two successive attacks on the forts of Cailloux and
-Festubert had no better success and were less strongly urged. At
-seven in the evening they again, with a sudden rush, got a footing in
-the fort of Loisnes, and again were driven out, save for twenty-one
-who remained as prisoners. Another day had passed, and still
-Lancashire stood fast and the lines were safe. On April 11 the whole
-position {234} was swept by a heavy shell-storm, and the German
-infantry clustered thickly in front of the crumbling barricades. The
-guns both of the Fifty-fifth and of the Eleventh Division played
-havoc with them as they assembled, so that the attack was paralysed
-on the right, but on the left the two little forts of Festubert East
-and Cailloux were both overwhelmed. The former, however, was at once
-retaken by a mixed storming party from the 5th and 13th King's
-Liverpools. Late in the evening Cailloux Keep was also stormed, and
-once more the position was intact.
-
-There was now only Route A Keep in possession of the enemy, and it
-was determined to regain it. The guns had quickly registered upon it
-during the day, and at midnight they all burst into a concentrated
-bombardment which was followed by a rush of two companies, one drawn
-from the Liverpool Scots and the other from the 13th King's
-Liverpools. The place was carried by assault, and the garrison held
-it strongly on the 12th and 13th against a series of attacks. It was
-a most murderous business, and the brave little garrisons were sadly
-cut about, but they held on with the utmost determination, having
-vowed to die rather than give the fort up. The survivors were still
-there, crouching among the ruins and exposed to constant heavy
-shelling, when on April 15 the old epic was ended and a new one was
-begun by the relief of the Fifty-fifth Division by Strickland's First
-Division. The episode will live in history, and may match in
-tenacity and heroism the famous defence of Ovillers by the German
-Guards. The casualties were heavy, but it may be safely said that
-they were small compared with those of the attacking battalions.
-
-{235}
-
-The story has been carried forward in this quarter for the sake of
-connected narrative, but we must now return to the events of April 9,
-and especially to the effect produced upon the Fortieth Division by
-the exposure of their southern flank. This fine unit, with its
-terrible wounds only half healed, was exposed all day to a desperate
-attack coming mainly from the south, but involving the whole of their
-line from Laventie to Armentières. The division, which is
-predominantly English, but contains one brigade of Highland troops,
-fought most valiantly through the long and trying day, enduring heavy
-losses, and only yielding ground in the evening, when they were
-attacked in the rear as well as in front and flank.
-
-In the morning the Fortieth Division had the 119th Brigade (18th
-Welsh, 21st Middlesex, and 13th East Surrey) on the right, while the
-121st Brigade (20th Middlesex, 12th Suffolks, and 13th Yorks) was on
-the left, joining up with Nicholson's Thirty-fourth Division which
-held the Armentières front. The right of the Fortieth was involved
-in the heavy initial bombardment and also in the subsequent infantry
-advance, which established a footing in the front trenches of the
-119th Brigade. Whilst a counter-attack was being organised to drive
-the stormers out, it was found that the right and the rear of the
-position were threatened by the advance through the Portuguese. The
-120th Scottish Brigade in reserve was ordered to form a defensive
-flank, but the 10/11th Highland Light Infantry, the nearest unit,
-found itself almost overlapped, and the brigade had to fall back upon
-the bridges at Nouveau Monde in order to protect the river crossings.
-The 2nd Scots Fusiliers covered the bridge-head, while the {236}
-whole of the 119th Brigade fell back to the line of the Lys, save
-only the garrison of Fleurbaix. The 121st Brigade was still holding
-its line in the Bois Grenier sector. By 1 o'clock the bulk of the
-Fortieth Division was across the Lys, the bridges being destroyed one
-by one as the day advanced. The destruction was not in all cases
-complete, and in that of the Pont Levis at Estaires was absolutely
-checked by a chance shell which destroyed the leads, and prevented
-the explosion. The enemy, under cover of machine-guns mounted in the
-houses of Bac St. Maur, were able to cross the river here and get a
-footing upon the northern bank. The 74th Brigade from the
-Twenty-fifth Division and the 150th from the Fiftieth were coming up,
-however, and it was still hoped that the German advance might be
-checked. So severe had the fighting been that the 18th Welsh had
-only 5 officers and 120 men standing in the evening.
-
-The 121st Brigade were in the meanwhile endeavouring to hold the
-Fleurbaix defences on the left of the line. At 11.30 A.M. the
-Germans were in the east of the village, but the 12th Suffolks, who
-formed the garrison, put up a most determined resistance, in which
-they were aided by a company of the 12th Yorkshires Pioneer
-Battalion. It was not till 5.30 that the village was nearly
-enveloped, and the troops had to make their way as best they could to
-the north bank of the Lys. The 20th Middlesex and 13th Yorkshires,
-with their flank badly compromised, still held on to the Bois Grenier
-sector. These battalions on the left were taken over by the
-Thirty-fourth Division, with whom they were now in close liaison.
-
-{237}
-
-On the morning of April 10 the two brigades which had crossed the
-river were in very evil case, having sustained heavy losses. They
-were concentrated about Le Mortier. The 74th Brigade was in position
-south of Croix du Bac in touch on the right with the 150th Yorkshire
-Territorials. All day the enemy were pushing west and north, but
-meeting a strong resistance from the British who had an excellent
-trench, the Steenwerck switch, to help them. Some ground was lost,
-but much of it was regained in the evening by a spirited
-counter-attack of the 14th and 10/11th Highland Light Infantry, the
-2nd Scots Fusiliers, and the 21st Middlesex, which advanced over 600
-yards. The pressure was great and unceasing, however, so that the
-morning of April 11 found the line farther back again. The two
-brigades were reduced to about 1000 men, who were concentrated at
-Strazeele, while the 92nd and 93rd Brigades of the Thirty-first
-Division came up in their place. A brave counter-attack by the 93rd
-Brigade at Le Verrier gained its objective, but created a dangerous
-gap between it and the 92nd Brigade on its right, which was filled,
-however, by the 11th East Yorkshires. On the 12th the remains of all
-three brigades were strung out to cover Strazeele and Hazebrouck from
-the east and south-east, but next day they were relieved by the
-welcome appearance of the First Australian Division, whose advent
-will afterwards be explained. It had been a very desperate term of
-service, in which for three days the sappers of the 224th, 229th, and
-231st Field Companies Royal Engineers had to fight as hard as the
-infantry. The Fortieth, like the other divisions described, were
-driven back, but only as the buffer is driven back, {238} with the
-ultimate result of stopping the force which drove it. They were much
-aided by the guns of the Fifty-seventh Division under General Wray.
-The losses of the division were 185 officers and 4307 other ranks.
-When one reflects that the losses on the Somme three weeks before had
-been equally heavy, one can but marvel.
-
-We shall now follow the fortunes of the Thirty-fourth Division
-(Nicholson), which was on the immediate left of the Fortieth,
-covering a sector of 8000 yards, including the town of Armentières.
-On the north, near Frelinghien, it joined the right of the
-Twenty-fifth Division. On the night of April 7 the enemy fired an
-enormous number, 30,000 or 40,000, gas-shells into Armentières, and
-soaked it to such an extent with mephitic vapours that it became
-uninhabitable. Otherwise there was no warning of an impending
-attack, which came indeed as a surprise to all the forces engaged.
-
-On April 9 the division lay with the 103rd Brigade upon the right
-section and the 102nd upon the left, with the guns of the
-Thirty-eighth Division behind them. The main attack on this day was
-entirely upon the two divisions, the Portuguese and the Fortieth, to
-the south. There was heavy shelling, however, of the back areas,
-especially Armentières and Erquinghem. When as the day advanced
-everything on the right had given way or weakened, the 103rd Brigade
-threw back a long thin defensive line, facing south, which ended in
-the direction of Fleurbaix. At the same time the reserve 101st
-Brigade was ordered up to cover Bac St. Maur Bridge. One battalion
-of the Reserve Brigade, the 11th Suffolks, got into Fleurbaix, when
-by a happy chance {239} they were able to reinforce their own
-comrades of the 12th Battalion. These two sturdy East Anglian units
-held the village in a very desperate fight for many hours. The 15th
-and 16th Royal Scots of the the same brigade had some hard fighting
-also as they continued the defensive line formed by the 103rd
-Brigade, and tried to prevent the victorious Germans from swarming
-round and behind the Thirty-fourth Division. Some idea of the danger
-may be gathered from the fact that of two brigades of artillery
-engaged one was firing south-west and the other due east. The
-original front was never in danger, but it was a desperate conflict
-upon the refused flank.
-
-During the afternoon the Germans crossed the Lys at Sailly and Bac
-St. Maur, though the bridge at the latter place had been destroyed.
-Their progress, however, had slowed down and become uncertain. The
-74th Brigade of the Twenty-fifth Division had come under the orders
-of General Nicholson, and was at once directed against the village of
-Croix du Bac, with the ultimate design of recovering the Bac St. Maur
-crossing. The 74th Brigade succeeded in clearing Croix du Bac of the
-enemy, but night fell before they could get farther. The morning
-found this brigade sandwiched in between the Fortieth and
-Thirty-fourth Divisions, while the 147th Brigade had also moved up in
-support. It was soon found, however, that the enemy had got so far
-west in the south that they outflanked the 74th Brigade, who had to
-retire on April 10 through Croix du Bac and Steenwerck. On the same
-morning the Twenty-fifth Division had been attacked near Frelinghien,
-and the Germans penetrated as far as the northern bend of the Lys,
-north of Armentières. {240} The left of the Thirty-fourth Division
-was now entirely in the air. It was clear, therefore, that a
-retirement north of the Lys was necessary, and about 3 P.M. in a
-sedate and orderly fashion it was started and carried through,
-covered by the fire of the 147th Brigade. The Thirty-fourth drew off
-in fine order, the rearguards stopping from time to time, especially
-in the streets of Armentières, for the purpose of beating back the
-advancing German patrols. All bridges were destroyed, and no
-unwounded prisoners were left. The men of the Thirty-fourth were
-loud in praise of the way in which the Yorkshire Territorials of the
-147th Brigade covered their right flank during this difficult and
-dangerous extrication. We will now, having traced the effects upon
-the Fifty-fifth to the south, and upon the Fortieth and Thirty-fourth
-Divisions to the north, return to the situation created on April 9 by
-the breaking of the Portuguese.
-
-Jackson's Fiftieth Division, without its artillery, had only arrived
-from the Somme on April 8, having lost half its old soldiers, so that
-50 per cent of the personnel were drafts. It had also suffered
-severely in officers, and was very battle-weary and exhausted. It
-was placed in billets at Merville, with two battalions of the 151st
-Brigade holding redoubts at Lestrem south of the Lys close to
-Estaires.
-
-As soon as it was seen that the situation was serious, about 8
-o'clock in the morning, the division was put in motion. The 151st
-Brigade was ordered to extend its left into Estaires, while the 150th
-prolonged the line north of Estaires. The 149th was held in reserve,
-though one of its battalions, the 4th Northumberland Fusiliers, was
-sent in to {241} strengthen the right. The intention was that the
-Fiftieth Division should hold the line until the reserves could be
-brought to the point of danger.
-
-By two in the afternoon the Germans could be seen all along the
-front, and some of the Portuguese had made their way through and
-between the ranks. A very heavy fire was opened by both lines of
-infantry, and the Germans advancing by short rushes made continuous
-progress towards the eastern bank of the stream. Yorkshire and
-Durham stood solid upon the farther side, however, and 5000 recruits
-endured a long and terrible baptism of fire from the afternoon to the
-evening of that spring day. It was on the right at Lestrem, where
-the British were to the east of the Lys, that the pressure was most
-severe, and eventually the 151st Brigade found it impossible to hold
-this point, while farther to the north, upon the left of the
-Yorkshire men, the German infantry of the 370th Regiment had won a
-footing upon the western bank of the Lys at Sailly and Bac St. Maur.
-The British guns were beginning to concentrate, however, and
-invaluable time had been gained by the resistance of the Fiftieth
-Division. As night fell the 5th Durhams were still holding Estaires,
-while the 5th and 6th Northumberland Fusiliers from the reserve were
-standing firm along the stretch north and east of Estaires. Farther
-north still were the 4th East Yorks, 4th Yorks, and 5th Yorks in that
-order from the south, all very weary, but all holding tenaciously to
-their appointed line. During the night the Fifty-first Highland
-Division (Carter-Campbell) came up on the right of the 151st Brigade
-to cover the weak point at Lestrem and all the line to the south of
-it. A brigade of the Twenty-fifth Division also came up {242} to
-Steenwerck north of where the river line had been broken, but it was
-too late for an effective counter-attack, as considerable forces were
-already across, which were spreading out north and south on the
-western bank.
-
-The fall of night made no change in the battle, and the darkness was
-lit up by the red glare of the incessant fire. For many hours the
-line was held, though the Germans had brought up fresh divisions for
-their attack. Early in the morning of April 10, however, they won a
-footing in Estaires, which was desperately defended by the 5th
-Durhams. By 8.45, after long-continued street fighting, the Germans
-held the whole town, with the exception of the south-western
-extremity. The fight raged all day backwards and forwards through
-this little straggling place, the infantry upon either side showing
-the most determined valour. About 9.30 the 6th Northumberland
-Fusiliers, under Colonel Temperley, made a brilliant counter-attack,
-crossing 1500 yards of open country with only three batteries to
-cover the movement. Before 10 o'clock they were into Estaires and
-had cleared the main street, rushing house after house and driving
-the Germans down to the river edge, where they rallied and remained.
-The 149th Brigade had promptly sent forward its machine-guns, and
-these were mounted on the highest houses at the south end of the
-town, to fire on any enemy reserves coming up south of the Lys. They
-raked the Germans on the farther bank and caused heavy losses. All
-day the remains of the 5th Durhams and 6th Northumberlands fought
-desperately in Estaires, and held nearly all of it in the evening,
-which was in a way a misfortune, since it allowed the Germans to
-{243} concentrate their heavies upon it during the night in a
-whole-hearted fashion which rendered it absolutely untenable. The
-morning of April 11 found Estaires a No Man's Land between the lines
-of infantry. In spite of a fresh advance by the 4th and 5th
-Northumberland Fusiliers, it was found impossible to regain the
-place, while the Germans gradually extended their line from the river
-crossings which they had retained all through. By mid-day on April
-11, the British line was 500 yards west of the town.
-
-In the southern portion of the line the 151st Brigade of Durhams had
-been slowly forced back from the Lestrem sector until they were on
-the line of the Lys, which they reached in the evening of April 10.
-At that date the 150th Yorkshire Brigade was still firm upon the
-river, but the left-hand battalion, the 5th Yorks, had thrown back
-its flank, since the enemy, brushing aside the right wing of the
-Fortieth Division, had crossed the stream and turned the Fiftieth
-from the north. The Fortieth was still fighting hard, as already
-described, and endeavouring to hold back the attack, so that the
-German advance was slow. Early in the morning of April 11 the attack
-became very severe, and broke through to the west of Estaires--the
-river at this point runs from west to east--driving back the Durham
-Brigade, which was absolutely exhausted after forty-eight hours of
-ceaseless fighting without assistance. Their resistance had been an
-extraordinarily fine one, but there comes a limit to human powers.
-The whole division was at the last extremity, but fortunately at 12
-o'clock on the 11th, two brigades of the Twenty-ninth Division
-(Cayley) came up in relief. {244} So close was the fighting,
-however, and so desperate the situation, that General Riddell of the
-149th Northumberland Fusiliers Brigade refused to disengage his men
-from the battle, since the confusion of a relief might have led to
-disaster. He was at the time holding the line astride the Meteren
-Becque, north of Estaires, covering about 1000 yards of vital ground.
-Here the Germans attacked all day, making prodigious efforts to push
-the 4th and 5th Northumberland Fusiliers out of Trou Bayard. The
-ground between this point and Pont Levis, the bridge at the east end
-of Estaires, was dead flat, and afforded no particle of cover.
-Fifteen British machine-guns stationed beside the infantry swept all
-this expanse, and cut down each wave of attack. Four times the place
-was supposed to have fallen, and four times the Germans fell back,
-leaving long grey swathes of their dead. It was not until 3 P.M.
-that the stubborn Northumbrians found that their right was completely
-exposed, and were forced to retire from a position which they had
-sold at a terrible price.
-
-Instead of dying down the German advance was attaining a greater
-proportion with every day that passed, for it seemed to their
-commanders that with so favourable an opening some very great success
-lay within their power. In spite of the arrival of the Fifty-first
-and Twenty-ninth Divisions the battle raged most furiously, and the
-weight of the attack was more than the thin line could sustain. The
-Germans had rapidly followed up the 151st Brigade as it drew out, and
-there was a fierce action round Merville and Robermetz in the early
-afternoon of April 11. The exhausted Durhams turned furiously upon
-their pursuers, and there was fierce hand-to-hand {245} work in which
-even General Martin and his Headquarters Staff found themselves
-handling rifles and revolvers. The Thirty-first Division (Bridgford)
-had come up and taken position in the rear of the Twenty-ninth, with
-their left flank facing east to hold off the enemy, who were now
-close to Steenwerck in the north. By nightfall Merville had gone,
-and so had Neuf Berquin, which lay between the 151st and the 149th
-Brigade, rather in the rear of the latter's right. At this period
-the Twenty-ninth Division, with the Thirty-first behind it, was on
-the left or north of the 149th Brigade, covering the ground between
-Neuf Berquin and Steenwerck. The enemy had turned the right of this
-line as already described, and now through the events in the north,
-which will soon be narrated, the left of the Twenty-ninth Division
-was also turned, and the situation became most dangerous, for the
-enemy was in great force in front. A consultation was held by the
-various general officers affected, and it was decided to make a side
-slip under the cover of darkness to the line of Vierhouck-Meteren
-Becque. The British had to fight, however, to gain this position, so
-far had the enemy outflanked them, and when the 149th Brigade, with
-their indomitable Northumbrians, now reduced to a few hundred men,
-had cut their way through to Vierhouck it was only to find it empty
-and the British line about 1000 yards to the west of it, where the
-4th Guards Brigade of the Thirty-first Division had just begun to
-arrive. The Northumbrians held on to Vierhouck none the less on the
-morning of April 12, and the Guards Brigade came forward.
-
-Whilst this stern fighting had been in progress, and while the
-Fifty-fifth kept its iron grip upon {246} Givenchy and Festubert, the
-Fifty-first Highland Division to its north, along the line of the
-Lawe Canal, had been very hard pressed. All three brigades had been
-engaged in most desperate defence and counter-attack, the fighting
-being so close that two at least of the Brigadiers had been compelled
-to drop maps and binoculars, while they seized rifles from their
-orderlies. The canal was half dry and offered a poor front, but it
-was sustained until the Germans got across in the north where the
-left flank of the 153rd Brigade was turned and had to fall back. The
-Gordons and Black Watch of this unit fought most fiercely in the
-neighbourhood of Vieille Chapelle, and the Germans will long remember
-their meeting with the clansmen. Finally their line swung back west
-of Lestrem, keeping in touch with the right flank of the Fiftieth
-Division.
-
-At this period the 184th Brigade was the only one in the Highland
-Division which was still capable of service, for the others had lost
-so heavily and were so wearied that rest was absolutely necessary.
-The Sixty-first Division (Colin Mackenzie), still very weak after its
-service on the Somme, came up in the Robecq sector, and, with the aid
-of the surviving Highland Brigade, formed a barrier to the terrific
-German pressure, the whole coming under General Mackenzie. This line
-was held by these troops up to the 23rd of April.
-
-Meanwhile, to revert to the early days of the battle, the German
-attack was raging with great fury upon the centre and left of this
-line, and finding a gap between the Twenty-ninth Division and the
-149th Brigade it poured through it with most menacing results, but
-the 4th Guards Brigade counter-attacked {247} and retrieved the
-situation west of the Vieux Berquin-Neuf Berquin Road, as will be
-told in detail in the next chapter. Farther north, however, the
-German attack made more progress and rolled forward to the south of
-the village of Merris. The 6th Northumbrians with only two officers
-left standing--one of them their gallant Colonel, Temperley,--still
-held on to their old stance at Vierhouck, though reduced to the
-strength of a company, and in such a state of physical exhaustion
-that the men fell to the ground fast asleep between the attacks. One
-young soldier woke up during his nap to find the Germans among them,
-on which he sprang up, shot the German officer, and organised a
-charge which re-established the line. As darkness fell on the
-evening of April 12 the survivors of the Fiftieth Division were drawn
-from the line, though some were so entangled with other units that
-they stayed and shared in the severe fighting of April 13.
-
-As already shown the Givenchy bastion was held firm, which meant that
-the Fifty-first Division was also to some extent helped to resist
-attack, since an enfilade fire from the Fifty-fifth would beat upon
-any advance against them. Such advances were repeatedly made upon
-April 11 and were splendidly countered. North of this point the
-Fiftieth, Twenty-ninth, and Thirty-first Divisions had all suffered
-heavily, while the line had been bent back in a curve from the La
-Bassée Canal to a maximum depth of ten miles, ending on the night of
-April 12 in a position from west of Merville through the two Berquins
-to Merris. The Twenty-ninth Division, which is a particularly good
-comrade in a tight place, had been very hard pressed, with its
-brigades sent {248} hither and thither wherever a leak was to be
-stopped. It was in this action that Colonel Forbes Robertson, one of
-the heroes of Cambrai, earned the coveted Cross by fighting on
-horseback at the head of his men like some knight of old, and
-repeatedly restoring the line when it was broken. In spite of all
-valour, however, the general movement was westwards. Whilst these
-misfortunes had occurred in the southern sector, others not less
-serious had occurred in the north, owing to the great extension of
-the German attack. It is to these that we must now turn.
-
-The enemy had achieved a considerable success upon April 9 when they
-succeeded in establishing themselves across the Lys at Sailly and Bac
-St. Maur, because by doing so they had got to the south-west of
-Armentières. They had prepared another attack in the north, and it
-was evident that if it had any success the Armentières position would
-be impossible. Early in the morning of April 10 the usual shattering
-and pulverising bombardment which preceded a full-dress German attack
-broke out upon the right of the Second Army, involving the front from
-the Ypres-Comines Canal in the north down to the Lys River at
-Armentières, thus joining up with the battle of yesterday, and
-turning the ten-mile front into one of twenty. The chief points in
-this line are Hollebeke in the north, Wytschaete in the centre, and
-Messines in the south, with Ploegsteert Wood and village and Nieppe
-as the final connecting links with Armentières. It was all classic
-and sacred ground drenched with the blood of our bravest. There can
-be few regiments in the British Army which have not at one time or
-another left their dead upon this shell-pitted slope, or upon the
-levels which face it.
-
-{249}
-
-The order of the Second Army from the north at this time was
-Twenty-second, Eighth, Second, and Ninth Corps. It was the Ninth
-Corps (Hamilton-Gordon) which was now attacked. The order of
-divisions upon this front was Campbell's Twenty-first Division
-astride the Ypres-Menin Road, the Ninth (Tudor) in the Hollebeke
-district, the Nineteenth (Jeffreys) covering 6000 yards east of
-Messines and Wytschaete from Ravine Wood in the north to the Douve in
-the south, and finally the Twenty-fifth Division (Bainbridge) on the
-right, which was already in a most unfavourable position, as its
-right flank was menaced by the driving in of the Fortieth and threat
-to the Thirty-fourth on the preceding day, while one of its brigades,
-the 74th, had been taken away to cover Steenwerck from the German
-advance at Bac St. Maur. It was upon these divisions, and, in the
-first instance, upon the two southern ones that the new German attack
-from the Fourth Army of our old enemy General von Armin broke on
-April 10. It should be remembered that, like so many of their
-fellow-units, both of these divisions had been very heavily engaged
-in the south, and that their losses within the last two weeks had
-been very great. Verily we have travelled far from the day when it
-was laid down as an axiom that a corps which had lost a quarter of
-its numbers would not stand to its work until time had effaced the
-shock.
-
-Since the main assault on April 10 fell upon the Nineteenth Division
-the story can be most plainly told from their central point of view.
-The left of their line was held by the 58th Brigade (Glasgow),
-consisting of the 6th Welsh and 9th Welsh Fusiliers. The right was
-held by the 57th Brigade (Cubitt) {250} which contained the 10th
-Warwick, 8th Gloucester, and 10th Worcesters. The 56th (Heath) was
-in reserve. It was upon these troops that there fell the strain of
-an attack which can seldom have been exceeded in severity. The total
-German force on the corps front was eleven divisions, and of these no
-less than five were directed on the morning of April 10 upon the
-depleted ranks of General Jeffreys' unit.
-
-A very thick mist prevailed, and through this protective screen the
-German infantry advanced about 6 o'clock, driving swiftly through all
-the forward posts, and putting them out of action in exactly the same
-fashion as on March 21. The enemy were in great numbers, and their
-advance was swift and resolute. Within half an hour of the first
-alarm they had made a lodgment in the main position of the 57th
-Brigade, and had also broken in the face of the left wing of the
-Twenty-fifth Division to the south. The garrisons of the outlying
-posts were never seen again, and it was observed that they were
-greatly hampered by their camouflage screens which they had no time
-to tear away in the face of so rapid and overwhelming an attack. At
-6.40 the enemy were deep in the position of the 57th Brigade,
-especially near Gapard Spur, which marked the centre of that unit.
-At 7.30 the whole brigade was in difficulties, which was more marked
-in the centre than on either flank, but was serious at every point of
-the line. The 8th North Staffords of the Reserve Brigade were
-brought up at this hour to help in the defence of this weakening
-sector. Before they could arrive upon the scene the enemy had made
-such progress that he had reached the crest of the ridge and had
-occupied the village of Messines. The 68th Brigade in the north
-{251} had not yet been attacked, but General Glasgow seeing his right
-flank entirely exposed had thrown back a defensive line. Close to
-this line was a post named Pick House, and upon this the mixed
-elements of the left of the 57th Brigade, chiefly men of the 10th
-Warwicks, now rallied and formed a strong centre of resistance. The
-Twenty-fifth Division to the south had been also very hard pressed,
-and was in immediate danger of losing the important knoll, Hill 63,
-so that the reserve brigade of the Nineteenth Division had to send
-the two remaining battalions, the 4th Shropshires and 9th Cheshires,
-to strengthen their defence. There was thus no longer any support
-for the Nineteenth Divisional fighting line in their great need, save
-for the 5th South Wales Borderers, their pioneer battalion, and the
-81st Field Company R.E., both of whom were thrown into the battle,
-the pioneers pushing bravely forward and connecting up with the 10th
-Warwicks at Pick House. Meanwhile the 8th North Staffords had made a
-fine attempt to retake Messines, and had actually reached the western
-edge of the village, but were unable to gain a permanent footing.
-Their right was in touch with the 8th Gloucesters, and some sort of
-stable line began to build itself up before the Germans. They had
-been unable to occupy Messines in force, owing to the rifle-fire
-which became more deadly with the rising of the mist. The scattered
-groups of infantry lying upon the ridge on either side of Messines
-were greatly heartened by the splendid work of A Battery, 88th
-R.F.A., under Captain Dougall, which remained among them, firing over
-open sights at the advancing Germans. "So long as you stick it I
-will keep my guns here!" he shouted, and the crouching men {252}
-cheered him in return. He was as good as his word, and only withdrew
-what was left of his battery, man-handling it across almost
-impossible ground, when he had not a shell in his limbers. This
-brave officer received the Victoria Cross, but unhappily never lived
-to wear it.
-
-The 8th North Staffords, still lying opposite Messines, extended
-their left down the Messines-Wytschaete Road in an endeavour to join
-up with the men at Pick House. Thus a frail curtain of defence was
-raised in this direction also. Shortly after mid-day things began to
-look better, for the gallant South African Brigade (Tanner) of the
-Ninth Division was despatched to the rescue. So severe had been its
-losses, however, that it numbered only 1600 bayonets, and had hardly
-been re-organised into battalions. Late in the afternoon it
-advanced, the 1st Battalion on the left, 2nd on the right, and though
-it had not the weight to make any definite impression upon the German
-front it entirely re-established the line of the road from Messines
-to Wytschaete, and reinforced the thin fragments of battalions who
-were holding this precarious front. The South Africans incurred
-heavy losses from machine-gun fire in this very gallant attack.
-
-The Ninth Division had hardly relinquished its Reserve Brigade when
-it found that it was itself in urgent need of support, for about 2
-o'clock on August 10 the attack spread suddenly to the northern end
-of the line, involving the 25th, 26th, and 58th Brigades, all under
-General Tudor, who was now responsible for the Wytschaete front. So
-infernal was the barrage which preceded the attack, that the right of
-the Ninth Division in the vicinity of Charity {253} Farm was driven
-in, and the 58th Brigade, with both flanks in the air and smothered
-under a rain of shells, was compelled also to fall back upon its
-support line. About 4 P.M. the 58th Brigade was broken near Torreken
-Farm, and the 6th Wiltshires, who were the flank battalion on the
-right, were cut off and lost heavily. The enemy were driving hard at
-this period towards Wytschaete, but the 9th Welsh stood fast in a
-cutting to the south of the village, and held the Germans off with
-their rifle-fire. So ended a most trying and unfortunate day, where
-the overborne troops had done all that men could do to hold their
-ground, fighting often against five times their own number. The
-prospects for the morrow looked very black, and the only gleam of
-light came with the advent, about midnight, of the 108th Brigade
-(Griffiths) from the Ulster Division, with orders to fight alongside
-the exhausted 57th, whose commander, General Cubitt, was now
-directing the local operations to the west of Messines. The
-Wytschaete front was also strengthened by the inclusion in the Ninth
-Division of the 62nd and later of the 64th Brigade of the
-Twenty-first Division. Farther south the 75th Brigade north of
-Armentières had been driven back by the enemy's attack, and the 7th
-Brigade on its left, finding its flank uncovered, had hinged back
-upon Ploegsteert Wood, where it held its line as best it might. Thus
-on the left, the centre, and the right there had been the same story
-of unavailing resistance and loss of valuable, dearly-bought ground.
-Even more serious, however, than the local loss was the strategical
-situation which had been created by the German advance in the lower
-sector, by their crossing the Lys, and by the fact that on the night
-of {254} April 10 they were closing in upon Steenwerck and La Crêche
-far to the right rear of the defenders of the Messines line. It was
-a situation which called for the highest qualities of generals as of
-soldiers.
-
-By the morning of April 11 General Plumer, dealing out his reserves
-grudgingly from his fast diminishing supply, placed the 147th Brigade
-of the Forty-ninth Yorkshire Territorial Division (Cameron) behind
-the Twenty-fifth Division in the Ploegsteert region, and a brigade of
-the Twenty-ninth Division to the north of it. Such succours were
-small indeed in the face of what was evidently a very great and
-well-prepared attack which had already shaken the whole northern
-front to its foundations. The Higher Command had, however, some
-points of consolation. If the vital sectors could be held there was
-the certainty that strong reinforcements would arrive within a few
-days from the south. The Amiens line was now certainly stabilised,
-and if once again an equilibrium could be secured then the last
-convulsive efforts of this titanic angel of darkness would have been
-held. With no illusions, but with a dour determination to do or die,
-the British line faced to the east.
-
-The immediate danger was that a gap had opened between Messines and
-Wytschaete, while another was threatened farther south between
-Ploegsteert and the Nieppe-Armentières Road. The pressure upon the
-Damstrasse was also very great in the region of the Ninth Division.
-The first disposition in the Messines area was to strengthen the line
-of resistance by pushing up the three battalions of the 108th
-Brigade, the 1st Irish Fusiliers on the left near Pick House, the 9th
-Irish Fusiliers west of Messines, and the 12th Irish Rifles in the
-Wulverghem line. The {255} attack on the morning of April 11 was not
-heavy in this direction, but was rather directed against the
-Twenty-fifth Division in the Ploegsteert district, where it came
-ominously close to Hill 63, a commanding point from which the
-Messines position of the British would be taken in reverse. General
-Jeffreys of the Nineteenth Division determined none the less to stand
-his ground, but he threw out a defensive flank along the
-Messines-Wulverghem Road, and mounted machine-guns to hold any attack
-from the south. Meanwhile the 57th, South African, and 108th
-Brigades, in spite of this menace to their right rear continued to
-hold the Messines front. There was severe fighting on this sector
-during the afternoon in which the remains of the 2nd and 4th
-(Transvaal Scots) Battalions were pushed back for some distance, but
-counter-attacked under the lead of Captain Green, regaining most of
-the ground that they had lost, and connecting up with the 5th South
-Wales Borderers, who were still holding fast near Pick House. This
-line was maintained until the general withdrawal. It was further
-strengthened by the 146th Brigade, one of the three units of the
-Forty-ninth Division, which were all engaged at different points.
-One battalion, the 7th West Yorkshires, called on suddenly to fill a
-gap, made a very fine advance under heavy fire, and restored the
-situation. It remained in the line until, on April 16, it was almost
-annihilated by a terrific German attack upon it.
-
-But the situation on the right rear was getting worse and worse. In
-the evening it was definitely known that Hill 63 had at last fallen
-after a long and obstinate struggle. The Twenty-fifth, and later
-{256} the Thirty-fourth Divisions had held up against great odds, but
-the main force of the enemy was now striking upon that line, and the
-British were forced to withdraw from Le Bizet towards Nieppe. These
-German gains enforced a completely new re-arrangement of the forces
-in the north if they were to avoid being taken in the rear. This
-change of a wide and far-reaching character was quickly and safely
-effected during the night of April 11 and 12. It involved moving
-back the three northern corps into their battle zones, leaving only
-outposts in advance. They still covered Ypres, but the retirement
-meant that all that had been won in the mud-and-blood struggle of
-1917 had passed into German keeping, and coupled with the loss of
-Messines it seemed to threaten that the old salient might be renewed
-in as disastrous a fashion as ever. This retirement was rather in
-the nature of a precaution against the possibilities of the future.
-What was of most immediate importance was the withdrawal of the lines
-which were at such close grips with the enemy to the west of
-Messines. By the morning of April 12 the general line of the
-Nineteenth Corps was Steenwerck Station, Pont-d'Achelles, Neuve
-Eglise, Wulverghem, Wytschaete. No immediate German attack followed
-on the withdrawal. This abstention on the part of the enemy was due
-in part to the wonderful work done by a small nest of four
-machine-guns on the Messines-Wulverghem Road under the command of
-Lieutenant Hodgson. This small unit had already fought for
-forty-eight hours, but on this third day of the battle their services
-were invaluable, for they shot down hundreds of Germans as they
-endeavoured to debouch from Messines and descend the slope. Save for
-two {257} wounded men none of this band of heroes ever returned.
-Among other detachments who behaved with great heroism were a few men
-of the 5th South Wales Borderers, B Company, under Captain Evans, who
-maintained themselves at Pick House, north and east of Messines, for
-three days, until they were at last rescued by the 58th Brigade from
-the north.
-
-Whilst these fresh dispositions and general retrogressions had been
-made on this front the Thirty-fourth Division to the south had also
-been compelled to rearrange its positions. It has already been
-described how, under cover of the 147th Brigade, they withdrew in
-absolute order across the Lys. April 11 saw such continued pressure,
-however on the right of the Twenty-fifth and the whole of the
-Thirty-fourth Divisions that it became clear early in the afternoon
-of April 11 that further retirement was imperative. This began at
-dusk, the three brigades retiring by the Armentières-Bailleul Road,
-while the 147th still acted as rearguard. They retired through the
-74th and 88th Brigades near Bailleul Station, fighting back all the
-way and considerably harassed by the German guns. On the morning of
-the 12th the general line was Steam-mill-Bailleul Station-southern
-border of La Crêche to a point about 500 yards north-east of Pont
-d'Achelles on the Bailleul Road. Along this line the order of battle
-from the south was the 147th, 75th, 101st, 74th, 102nd, and 88th
-Brigades. Nieppe, which had been evacuated, was occupied by the
-enemy later in the day, and on the evening of April 12 the line was
-pushed a little farther back to De Seule.
-
-There was no fighting on the new line opposite {258} Messines on
-April 12, but the battle was, as has been shown, raging furiously
-elsewhere, and the situation in the south, where the enemy was making
-progress, must deeply affect that in the north. Had an aviator taken
-a swift flight from Hollebeke to Givenchy on this day, following the
-deep curve which had formed in the British line, his observations
-would have been roughly as follows: in the Hollebeke district he
-would have found no extreme pressure, and that the Ninth Division,
-reinforced by the 58th Brigade, was holding the line not far westward
-of their original position. From there onwards he would have skirted
-the new line of the Ninth Corps, as already indicated, and would have
-seen the remains of the Nineteenth Division covering the north of it,
-the Twenty-fifth Division, also in fragments, about Neuve Eglise, and
-the Thirty-fourth Division near Steenwerck. He would next observe
-with consternation or joy according to his colours, that there was a
-considerable gap before Bailleul. At the other side of this gap he
-would come upon elements of the Thirty-first and Twenty-ninth
-Divisions, hard-pressed and worried by the advance which the enemy
-had made through Merville on their right. He would catch a glimpse
-also of some thin lines of resistance, still farther south, which
-represented all that was left of the Fiftieth Division. Finally, he
-would see the Fifty-first and the Fifty-fifth on the extreme south,
-both of them standing firm in their positions. Looking eastwards he
-would see pouring across the Lys the legions of Prince Rupprecht of
-Bavaria, hurrying to improve their blow, while behind the British
-lines he would see new divisions, the Fifty-ninth Midlanders at
-Wulverghem, the Thirty-third {259} near Bailleul, the Sixty-first
-near Robecq, the 4th Guards Brigade followed by the First Australians
-near Hazebrouck, all hastening with heavy hearts but the most grim
-determination to throw themselves across the path of this German
-invasion which already threatened the most vital points in Flanders.
-Far to the south also our aviator would perhaps have seen the smoke
-of many trains, and out at sea might have made out the little dots
-which marked in the one case French, in the other British,
-reinforcements. Such was the general panorama upon the Flanders
-front on the evening of April 12.
-
-
-
-
-{260}
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-THE BATTLE OF THE LYS
-
-April 13-May 8
-
-Desperate situation--Sir Douglas Haig's "win or die" message--Epic of
-the 4th Guards Brigade at Hazebrouck--Arrival of First Australian
-Division--Splendid services of Thirty-third Division--Loss of
-Armentières, Bailleul, and Neuve Eglise--The First Division at
-Givenchy--Fall of Kemmel--Battle of Ridge Wood--Great loss of
-ground--Equilibrium.
-
-
-Up to April 13 twenty-eight German divisions had been traced in the
-battle of Flanders. Since the whole British Army consisted of sixty
-divisions, and only thirteen had been engaged in Flanders, one can
-gather how terrible had been their task.
-
-By the fourth day of the battle the purpose of the enemy became more
-clear. It was evident now that his attack consisted really of three
-movements. The northern of these, consisting of about six divisions,
-had for its task to drive through Wytschaete and Messines to
-Bailleul. At present it was held up in the north by the Ninth
-Division, but had made its way in the south until Neuve Eglise was
-the only village which intervened between it and Bailleul. The
-central attack, consisting of the main force, had taken Armentières
-and penetrated ten miles deep, capturing Merville, reaching the
-Clarence River, touching Robecq, and threatening St. Venant. This
-{261} deep penetration reacted upon the British flanks to north and
-south of it. Finally, there was an advance by seven or eight
-divisions in the south, which had been held at Givenchy, but had bent
-the line back the from that point, Bethune being the immediate
-objective. The hammering of the Germans was remorseless and
-terrific. All that the British needed was a little time, but it
-seemed as if it would be denied them. Help was coming, but it did
-not arrive so quickly as the new divisions which Von Armin and Von
-Quast were pouring over the Messines Ridge and across the plain of
-the Lys.
-
-The position was very menacing, as was shown by an order of the day
-from the British Commander-in-Chief which is unique perhaps in our
-military annals--a stern call to duty and to death, pitched on the
-very note which would arouse the historic tenacity of the British
-soldier. Documents have been avoided in this chronicle, but this one
-at least must be quoted in full. It was addressed to all ranks of
-the British Army under his command.
-
-"Three weeks ago to-day," said Sir Douglas Haig, "the enemy began his
-terrific attacks against us on a fifty-mile front. His objects are
-to separate us from the French, to take the Channel ports, and
-destroy the British Army.
-
-"In spite of throwing already 106 divisions into the battle, and
-enduring the most reckless sacrifice of human life, he has, as yet,
-made little progress towards his goals. We owe this to the
-determined fighting and self-sacrifice of our troops.
-
-"Words fail me to express the admiration which I feel for the
-splendid resistance offered by all ranks of our army under the most
-trying circumstances.
-
-{262}
-
-"Many amongst us now are tired. To these I would say that victory
-will belong to the side which holds out the longest.
-
-"The French Army is moving rapidly and in great force to our support.
-
-"There is no other course open to us but to fight it out. Every
-position must be held to the last man: there must be no retirement.
-With our backs to the wall, and believing in the justice of our
-cause, each one of us must fight to the end.
-
-"The safety of our homes and the freedom of mankind depend alike upon
-the conduct of each one of us at this critical moment."
-
-No words can describe the danger of the crisis more clearly than this
-clear call from a leader remarkable for his judgment and restraint,
-exhorting his men to fight to the death with their faces to the
-raging German line, and their backs to those all-important harbours
-on which the fate of the world was now depending. The German
-vanguard was forty miles from Calais on the day that the appeal was
-made, and there was no strong line to be forced, save that strongest
-of all lines which was formed by Sir Herbert Plumer and his men.
-
-A new unit had come into line on April 13. This was the Thirty-third
-Division under General Pinney. It was at once thrust in to fill the
-gap in front of Bailleul, where it found itself involved from that
-date onwards in most desperate fighting, in which it was associated
-with the Thirty-first Division. The narrative of the services and
-trials, both of them very great, which were rendered and endured by
-these divisions may be best told in consecutive form, as a too strict
-adhesion to the order of dates produces an {263} effect which makes
-it difficult to follow the actual happenings. We shall first
-consider the operations at Hazebrouck and Meteren, where these two
-divisions and the First Australian Division were chiefly concerned,
-and we shall afterwards return to the north and follow the fortunes
-of the Nineteenth, Twenty-fifth, Forty-ninth, Thirty-fourth, and
-other divisions which were holding the northern curve.
-
-[Sidenote: Central Area. April 12.]
-
-The line was very weak on April 12 in front of central Hazebrouck,
-and yet it was absolutely vital that this important railway junction
-should not fall into German hands. The need was pressing and
-desperate, for the German attack was furious and unremitting, while
-the British line was so thin, and composed of such weary units, that
-it seemed impossible that it could hold. The exhausted remains of
-the Fiftieth Division, who had been at it continually ever since the
-breaking of the Portuguese front, were hardly capable now of covering
-or defending any serious front. Yet if the ground could be held, the
-First Australian Division, brought hurriedly back from the Somme and
-in the act of detraining, would be in the line within twenty-four
-hours. There have been few moments more heavy with fate during the
-whole of the campaign. Everything depended for the moment upon
-Pinney's Thirty-third Division, upon the worn remnants of the
-Twenty-ninth Division, upon the 92nd and 93rd Brigades, and upon the
-4th Guards Brigade of the Thirty-first Division who were brought up
-from Pradelles, and thrown hurriedly across the path of the advancing
-Germans.
-
-Of the Thirty-first Division the 92nd and 93rd Brigades had already
-been heavily engaged on April 11 as already recorded. The Guards
-Brigade {264} had been delayed in its journey and was still fresh.
-General Reedman of the 92nd Brigade was in local command, and the
-situation was a particularly difficult one. At all costs Hazebrouck
-must be covered until reinforcements could arrive, for if the line
-were cut there was no end to the possible evils. When Merris fell
-General Reedman still held the heights west of Merris with the 10th
-East Yorkshires, while the 11th East Lancashires were to the south,
-and the remnants of the 86th and 87th Brigades of the Twenty-ninth
-Division held on to Vieux Berquin. This line held until 5 P.M. on
-April 13 in spite of very stormy attacks and very little help from
-the guns. About that hour the right of the line gave way under
-severe pressure, and Vieux Berquin was taken, but the Germans were
-bottled up in it and were unable to get forward. There they remained
-until the great turn of the tide. We must now, however, turn our
-gaze to the immediate south and follow the phases of the wonderful
-stand made by the remaining brigade of the Thirty-first Division, the
-4th Guards Brigade, who found themselves involved in a desperate
-battle in front of Hazebrouck.
-
-Without enumerating a number of obscure hamlets which are rather
-confusing than helpful, it may be said that the brigade under General
-Leslie Butler covered the north of the main road from Merville to
-Hazebrouck, with their right resting upon the Bourre, a small
-sluggish stream. Vierhouck represented roughly the centre of their
-line. It was a country of flat cultivated fields, with many roads
-and watercourses lined with willows, which cut the view. There were
-untouched farms with their human and animal on every side. To the
-west lay the great {265} forest of Nieppe. On the right were the 3rd
-Coldstream, on the left the 4th Grenadiers, with the 2nd Irish in
-close support. They were in position on the morning of April 12, and
-at once found the enemy in front of them, who after a strong
-preliminary bombardment advanced in great numbers along the whole
-line. The rifle-fire of the Guardsmen was too deadly, however, and
-the attack dissolved before it. The German machine-gunners were
-exceedingly aggressive, "not to say impudent" as a Guards officer
-explained it, and many losses were sustained from their fashion of
-pushing forward upon the flanks, and worming their way into every
-unoccupied crevice. Nothing could exceed both the gallantry and the
-intelligence of these men. Having cleared their front the Guards
-endeavoured to advance, but the Coldstream on the right met with
-murderous fire from the village of Pures Becques, and the movement
-could get no farther, nor were the Grenadiers much more fortunate on
-the left, though Captain Pryce with his company broke into some
-outlying houses, killing a number of Germans, seven of whom fell to
-that officer's own automatic. This whole gallant episode occurred
-under the very muzzles of a German battery, firing with open sights
-at a range of 300 yards.
-
-At this period the brigade seems to have got ahead of the general
-British line, and to have had both flanks entirely exposed to every
-sort of enfilade fire. About four in the afternoon the right company
-of the Coldstream, numbering only forty men, had to turn south to
-face the enemy. The Germans had thrust into the centre of the
-Coldstream also, but No. 2 Company of the supporting Irish, acting
-without {266} orders upon the impulse of the moment, and aided by the
-surviving Coldstream, completely re-established the line. The Irish,
-who were led by Captain Bambridge, were almost annihilated in their
-dashing effort to ease the pressure upon their English comrades.
-Their leader was wounded, Lieutenant Dent was killed, and only eleven
-men of the company were left standing. On the left the Germans were
-500 yards in the rear, and here a rearrangement was called for and
-steadily carried out. An hour later another violent attack was made
-at the junction of the two battalions, but it also was driven back in
-disorder. The Germans had brought their guns well forward and into
-the open, but they met their match in Lieutenant Lewis of the 152nd
-Brigade Royal Field Artillery, who directed the scanty British
-artillery, and handled his pieces in a way which was much appreciated
-by the weary Guardsmen.
-
-The readjustment of the line enabled the 4th Guards Brigade to link
-up with the 12th Yorkshire Light Infantry, pioneer battalion of their
-own division, which was holding the line at La Couronne, and fought
-that day with the utmost tenacity and resolution. On the left flank
-of the Yorkshiremen, near Vieux Berquin, were the worn remains of the
-Twenty-ninth Division.
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-{267}
-
-[Illustration: Rough Sketch of Guards' Position, April 13]
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-Night fell upon a sorely-tried but unconquered line. The two front
-battalions had lost at least a third of their effectives. Under the
-screen of darkness the position was re-organised, and it was hoped
-that the Fifth Division, drawn back from Italy, would be able to
-effect a relief. This could not be fully accomplished, however, and
-at best only a small contraction of the front could be effected, so
-that the morning {268} of April 13 found the exhausted Coldstream and
-Grenadiers still facing the German attack. Their line had been
-strengthened by the 210th Field Co. of the Royal Engineers. The
-front to be held was still very wide for so weakened a force.
-
-It had been a hard day, but it was only the prelude of a harder one.
-On April 13 the morning began with thick mist, of which the Germans
-took advantage to rush their machine-guns to very close quarters. At
-early dawn the Coldstream found themselves once more heavily
-attacked, while an armoured car came down the road and machine-gunned
-the outposts at a range of ten yards. After severe mixed fighting
-the attack was driven back. At 9.15 it was renewed with greater
-strength, but again it made no progress. It is typical of the truly
-desperate spirit of the men, that when every man save one in an
-outpost had been killed or wounded, the survivor, Private Jacotin of
-the Coldstream, carried on the fight alone for twenty minutes before
-he was blown to pieces with a grenade.
-
-The left flank of this battalion had also been heavily attacked, the
-enemy, with their usual diabolical ingenuity, shouting as they
-advanced through the fog that they were the King's Company of the
-Grenadier Guards. They were blown back none the less into the mist
-from which they had emerged. The 12th Yorkshire Light Infantry was
-also four separate times attacked, but held to its appointed line.
-This gallant unit fairly earned the title of the "Yorkshire Guards"
-that day, for they were the peers of their comrades. Meanwhile,
-however, outside the area of this grim fight the Germans had taken
-Vieux Berquin, pushing back the scanty line of defence at that point,
-so that they were able to bring up trench-mortars and guns {269} to
-blast the Yorkshire battalion at La Couronne out of its shallow
-trenches. Captain Pryce, on the extreme left of the Guards, found
-the Germans all round him, and his Grenadiers were standing back to
-back and firing east and west. The company was doomed, and in spite
-of the gallant effort of a party of Irish Guards, who lost very
-heavily in the venture, the whole of them perished, save for Sergeant
-Weedon and six men who reported the manner in which their comrades
-had met their end. Captain Pryce had led two bayonet charges, first
-with eighteen men, which was entirely successful, and later with
-fourteen men, who buried themselves in the grey of the German ranks,
-and there remained. Such was the end of No. 2 Company of the 4th
-Grenadiers, and of its commander. This brave man received a
-posthumous V.C. in the record of which it is stated that with forty
-men he had held up a German battalion for ten hours and so saved a
-break through.
-
-Apart from this flank company the centre company of the Grenadiers at
-this period consisted of six unwounded men, while the right company
-was twenty strong. All the officers were down. They were hemmed in
-on two sides by the enemy, but they were still resisting as the
-shades of night fell upon them. By dawn the Grenadier battalion had
-ceased to exist.
-
-The 3rd Coldstream on the right were hardly in better case. The
-right company was surrounded, and fought until there was only a
-handful left. A few survivors fell back upon the Fifth Division and
-the Australians who were now well up to the line. The orders to the
-Guards had been to keep the Germans out until the Australians could
-arrive. They had {270} been faithfully obeyed. The total casualties
-had been 39 officers and 1244 rank and file, the greater part from
-two weak battalions; 17 per cent of the brigade mustered after the
-action. Soldiers will appreciate the last words of the official
-report which are: "No stragglers were reported by the A.P.M." It is
-an episode which needs no comment. Its grandeur lies in the bare
-facts. Well might General de Lisle say: "The history of the British
-Army can record nothing finer than the story of the action of the 4th
-Guards Brigade on April 12 and 13."
-
-Whilst the Guards had made their fine stand to the east of
-Hazebrouck, the rest of the Thirty-first Division, covering a front
-of 9000 yards, had a most desperate battle with the German stormers.
-The fine north country material which makes up the 92nd and 93rd
-Brigades had never been more highly tried, for they were little more
-than a long line of skirmishers with an occasional post. In some
-parts of the line they were absolutely exterminated, but like their
-comrades of the Guards, they managed somehow or other to retain the
-positions and prevent a penetration until reinforcements arrived.
-The remains of the Twenty-ninth Division on the left had also fought
-with the utmost devotion and held the line at the price of a heavy
-drain upon their weakened ranks. It has been calculated that the
-line held by the 31st Division upon these days was 5½ miles long, and
-that it was attacked by the 35th and 42nd German divisions, the 1st
-Bavarian Reserve, and 10th, 11th, and 81st Reserve divisions.
-
-It would be well to continue the action upon the Hazebrouck front by
-giving at once an account of the operations of the First Australian
-Division under {271} General Sir Harold Walker, which had the
-remarkable experience of being sent from Flanders to the Amiens
-front, being engaged there, and now being back in the Flanders front
-once more, all in little over a week. They detrained on April 12,
-and on the 13th their 2nd Brigade (Heane) found themselves in front
-of Hazebrouck with the remains of the 92nd British Brigade on their
-left and with the hard-pressed 4th Guards Brigade in front of them.
-In the evening the remains of the Guards were withdrawn through their
-line, and they were facing the pursuing Germans. On their left the
-Australians were in touch with the 1st Cameronians of the 19th
-Brigade in the Meteren area.
-
-This fierce fighting was going on in a country which was new to war,
-with unbroken soil, whole cottages, and numerous refugees, who by
-their flight before the German vanguard complicated a situation which
-was already so chaotic that it was very difficult for the generals on
-the spot to grasp the relative positions of the attack and the
-defence.
-
-[Sidenote: Central Area. April 14 onward.]
-
-On April 14 the Germans, advancing behind a deadly barrage, came
-forward through Merris and Vieux Berquin. They soon found, however,
-that they had before them fresh and steady troops who were not to be
-driven. The immediate German objective was the high ground from Mont
-de Merris to Strazeele. The 2nd Australian Brigade was on the right
-and the 1st (Leslie) on the left. Both were equally attacked, and
-both met their assailants with a shattering fire which piled the
-level plain with their bodies. Three lines swept forward, but none
-reached the shallow trenches of the "digger" infantry. The 3rd and
-4th Battalions held the line {272} to the north where the pressure
-was greatest. The One hundred and twenty-third French Division was
-in support, but there was never any need to call for their
-co-operation. Strazeele, however, was blown to pieces by the German
-guns.
-
-April 15 and 16 were comparatively quiet, and the Australians busily
-strengthened their lines. On the 17th a sharp attack was made upon
-the 1st and 4th Battalions on the left and centre of the 1st
-Australian Brigade, the advance coming up the valley between Merris
-and Meter en. This also was cut to pieces by rifle and gun-fire, so
-that it made no progress whatever.
-
-The 3rd Australian Brigade (Bennett) had been in reserve, but it was
-destined for severe service after Meteren had passed out of the hands
-of the Thirty-third Division in the manner elsewhere described. They
-had actually relieved some of the worn elements of the British
-Thirty-third and of the French One hundred and thirty-third Divisions
-to the west of Meteren, and on April 22 and 23 they endeavoured by
-two separate movements upon either flank to fight their way back into
-the little town. The first operations carried out by the 11th and
-12th Battalions were successful, but the final push into the town by
-the 9th and 10th met with heavy opposition, and the casualties were
-so great that the attempt had to be abandoned. The three Australian
-brigades were shortly relieved, after their very valuable spell in
-the line. They were destined soon to find themselves with their
-comrades on the Somme once again.
-
-Whilst the 1st Brigade had won a complete defensive victory in the
-north of the line, the 2nd {273} Brigade had done equally well in the
-south. The 7th and 8th Battalions were in the line, and both were
-heavily engaged, especially the latter, which faced Vieux Berquin.
-The German attack was once again a complete failure, and it was clear
-that the Australians had the historical honour in Flanders as well as
-on the Somme, of saying, "Thus far and no farther," upon the sector
-which they manned.
-
-We pass on to the movements of the Thirty-third Division, which
-arrived upon the scene of action on April 11, and from that time
-onwards played an ever increasing part in this great world crisis.
-General Pinney had the experience of first being denuded of large
-part of his own proper force, which was given away, brigade by
-brigade, to points of danger, and afterwards of not only seeing them
-reunited under his hand, but of having the remains of four divisions
-and a great number of details under him, and so being in actual
-command of the whole operations to the south and west of Bailleul.
-To his coolness, firmness, and well-tried fortitude, the nation owed
-much during those few desperate days.
-
-The 100th Brigade (Baird) was moved forward at once to come under the
-orders of General Bainbridge, who, with his Twenty-fifth Division,
-had endured so much in the Ploegsteert district and was in urgent
-need of help. We shall follow them from the date of their detachment
-to that of their return to their own unit. On April 11, after dusk,
-they took their position, covering Neuve Eglise, the 16th King's
-Royal Rifles on the right of the line, the 2nd Worcesters in the
-centre, and the 9th Highland Light Infantry in reserve, the 148th
-Brigade being on the left, and the 75th Brigade on their right, the
-{274} latter much exhausted by two days of battle. Immediately to
-the north lay the much enduring battle line of the Nineteenth
-Division, which has already been fully described. Two points can
-hardly be described simultaneously, but these facts are to be read in
-conjunction with those already given in the last chapter, and it is
-to be understood that the whole situation at Neuve Eglise reacted
-from hour to hour upon that farther north, since a German capture of
-the town would place the enemy in the rear of General Jeffreys and
-his men.
-
-[Sidenote: Northern Area. April 13.]
-
-On April 12 there was no direct attack upon this area, but about 4
-P.M. the 75th Brigade on the right, which was much worn, was driven
-back and a gap created, which was filled in by such reserves as could
-be got together at the shortest notice. In the morning of April 13
-it was found that this flank was still very open, the nearest
-organised unit being the 88th Brigade of the Twenty-ninth Division,
-which was also stretching out its left in the hope of making
-connection. The enemy, however, pushed through early on April 13,
-getting to the rear of the 100th Brigade, and swinging north into
-Neuve Eglise which they captured. The Glasgow Highlanders, the only
-battalion of the Highland Light Infantry which wears Highland
-costume, attacked at once with all the vigour of fresh troops, and
-cleared the Germans out of the town at the point of the bayonet. The
-enemy had filtered into the brigade line, however, and parties of
-them were in the rear of the Worcesters. The hardest part of all was
-borne by the 16th King's Royal Rifles, who, being the flank
-battalion, bore all the weight of an advance which had enveloped them
-upon three sides, front, flank, {275} and rear. Of this gallant
-battalion there were hardly any survivors. The Worcesters threw back
-their right flank, therefore, in order to cover Neuve Eglise upon the
-south and south-east, while the Twenty-fifth Division were on the
-north and north-east.
-
-The mishaps of a dark day were still not over, for the enemy about
-4.30 made a determined attack and again punctured the over-stretched
-line. Some of them drove their way once more into Neuve Eglise,
-brushing aside or scattering the thin line of defence. Another
-strong force broke into the front of the 100th Brigade and drove a
-wedge between the Glasgow Highlanders and the Worcesters. The
-headquarters of the latter battalion was in the Municipal Building of
-Neuve Eglise, and put up a desperate, isolated resistance for many
-hours, Colonel Stoney and his staff finally making their way back to
-their comrades. In this defence the Chaplain, the Rev. Tanner,
-greatly distinguished himself. The survivors of the 2nd Worcesters
-had also maintained themselves in Neuve Eglise as house neighbours to
-the German stormers, but after mid-day on April 14, finding
-themselves entirely cut off, they fought their way out, leaving the
-Square round the Church and Mairie piled with corpses. The town was
-now entirely German, with results already described upon the northern
-section of the outflanked line. Once more the Worcesters, the heroes
-of the old Gheluvelt battle, had placed fresh laurels upon their
-faded and battle-stained colours. The remains of the 100th Brigade
-were now reassembled on the Ravelsberg ridge, west of Neuve Eglise,
-where they faced their enemy once more. So worn was it that the
-survivors of the Rifles {276} and of the Highlanders were clubbed
-together to form one very weak composite battalion. On their right
-now was a collection of odds-and-ends under General Wyatt about a
-thousand strong, while on their left was the 103rd Brigade of the
-Thirty-fourth Division, with the 148th in support.
-
-[Sidenote: Northern Area. April 14 onwards.]
-
-This latter brigade had aided in the defence of Neuve Eglise, and
-done very severe service, two of the battalions, the 4th Yorkshire
-Light Infantry and the 4th York and Lancasters, having sustained
-heavy losses. During the two days in which the fate of the village
-hung in the balance these battalions were engaged in constant defence
-and counter-attack, especially on April 13, when in one desperate
-sally they captured a German colonel and nearly a hundred of his men.
-When the village fell on April 14 the gallant Yorkshiremen still held
-on close to it and gave no ground until they were ordered that night
-into reserve. The other battalion of the brigade, the 5th York and
-Lancaster, had been ordered to Steenwerck, where also it had borne a
-distinguished part in the fight.
-
-The Germans were now nursing their wounds and also digesting their
-gains, so that there was a very welcome pause which was mainly in
-favour of the defence, who had good hope of reinforcement. A number
-of French batteries appeared as the forerunners of relief, and helped
-to break up an advance upon the Ravelsberg on the morning of April
-16. A second attack had no better luck. Some posts were taken but
-were won back again with the help of the 9th Northumberland Fusiliers
-of the 103rd Brigade.
-
-April 17 saw a fresh attack which was preceded by {277} a barrage
-which tore gaps in the thin line of the Highlanders. It developed
-into an infantry attack, which gave the enemy possession of an
-orchard near the line. The Highlanders, aided by some of the 6/7th
-Scots Fusiliers of the 177th Brigade, tried hard to win it back, but
-could at best only block the exits. After dark that night the
-brigade was relieved by the 148th Brigade, and staggered out of the
-line with only 800 men unscathed. General Baird's infantry had
-endured an ordeal which exceeded what the most disciplined troops
-could be expected to survive: 58 officers and 1424 men had fallen in
-their splendid defence of Neuve Eglise.
-
-The other brigades of the Thirty-third Division had meanwhile been
-involved in situations hardly less critical than those which had
-faced Baird's Brigade at Neuve Eglise. Maitland's 98th Brigade,
-which found itself on April 12 in the Ravelsberg area, was placed to
-the north of Bailleul as a support to that place, and the narrative
-of its doings will be found in the subsequent account of the defence
-of Meteren.
-
-[Sidenote: Northern Area. April 12.]
-
-The 19th Brigade (Mayne) of the Thirty-third Division had been
-detailed to cover Meteren to the west of Bailleul against the
-northward sweep of the Germans. At 9.40 on April 12 it was known
-that the enemy had got through at Merville, that their cavalry had
-been seen at Neuf Berquin, and by noon that this swiftly advancing
-tide was submerging Merris only three miles south of Meteren.
-General Pinney, deprived of two of his brigades, had only under his
-hand the 19th Brigade, with the 18th Middlesex Pioneers, 11th and
-222nd Field Companies Royal Engineers, and the 33rd British
-Machine-gun {278} Corps under Colonel Hutchinson, an officer who
-until he was gassed, was a tower of strength to the defence. At
-mid-day the place was under heavy shell-fire. There is a windmill in
-a prominent position south of the town overlooking the dead flats of
-Flanders. In and around this was stationed the 1st Queen's West
-Surrey. East of the town, facing Bailleul, was the 5th Scottish
-Rifles, while the 1st Scottish Rifles (The Cameronians) were in
-reserve. The whole situation was under the direct control of General
-Pinney, and he was reinforced in the course of the day by several
-very welcome units--9th Corps Cyclists, 22nd New Zealand Entrenching
-Battalion, and others. Strazeele was included in the line of
-defence, which joined up in the night with the hard-worked
-Twenty-ninth Division.
-
-The situation on April 12 in this quarter of the field was most
-alarming. Everything in the south seemed to be in a state of chaos,
-and the line was for the moment absolutely fluid. The fall of
-Merville and of Estaires had been exploited with extraordinary energy
-by the Germans, who were rushing on at the very heels of the retiring
-and often disorganised troops, who were dead-beat after two days and
-nights of constant exertion. It was all important to build up some
-sort of line south of Meteren, but events were moving so fast that it
-was doubtful if it could be done. It was here that the value of the
-new machine-gun organisation, perfected during the winter, was
-brilliantly exemplified. Colonel Hutchinson was able to throw
-forward the whole of his guns to make up for the local weakness of
-the infantry, and he ran great risks in doing so, since he had only
-broken men and stragglers to man the gaps between his gun {279}
-positions. The crisis was such, however, that any risk had to be
-taken, and the 33rd Battalion of the Machine-gun Corps saved the
-situation. On the other hand it is not too much to say that a humble
-hero, Driver Sharples, whose motor-lorry was handy, saved the 33rd
-Battalion, for he not only rushed up eight guns under heavy fire,
-with their crews, but he brought up afterwards on his own initiative
-the wire and other essentials which enabled them to hold their
-position. It was a supreme example of what can be done by one brave,
-clear-headed man. The German tide was flowing at a rate which was
-measured as 1½ miles in forty minutes, but now it was to reach its
-limit, when it came under the fire of these eight guns upon Windmill
-Hill. The advance was not only from Merris in the south but even
-more along the Bailleul-Meteren Road, which was crowded with their
-troops. By dusk the infantry of the 19th Brigade had taken the place
-of the weary fragments who lined the front, and the immediate danger
-of a complete rupture of the line was over.
-
-[Sidenote: Northern Area. April 13.]
-
-At 5.30 A.M. on April 13 the attack upon Meteren commenced with a
-strong advance against the 1st Queen's at the Windmill, and gained
-some ground in the centre. The usual tactics of rushing up
-machine-guns was tried, but in spite of the mist they had very
-limited success. The 98th Brigade was now in support, and the 2nd
-Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders were ordered forward to cover Meule
-Houck Hill on that side. At 10.30 the Queen's were again fiercely
-attacked, and after changing hands three times the windmill in their
-position remained with the stormers. At noon a well-knit line had
-been formed in front of Meteren, with the Yorkshiremen {280} of the
-92nd Brigade in touch on the right, while their brother Yorkshiremen
-of the 147th Brigade were on the left, drawn respectively from the
-Thirty-first and the Forty-ninth Divisions. There were cheering
-rumours that the First Australians and the hundred and thirty-third
-French were both speeding upon their way, but the need of the present
-was very great, for the German guns were many, while there was hardly
-one to aid in the defence.
-
-At 4 P.M. the Germans were beating once more along the whole front of
-the division, but by 5.30 were back in their own line, what was left
-of them, much the worse for the venture. News came, however, that
-Vieux Berquin had fallen, and that Meteren was to be taken next day
-at all costs. Meanwhile, in spite of the severe fighting, the losses
-had not been heavy, save in the 1st Queen's, which had borne all the
-brunt of three separate attacks. Colonel Kemp-Welch and his men had
-a very severe ordeal that day. Cavalry appeared more than once in
-front of the position, and one body, 200 strong, were cut to pieces
-by a sudden concentration of machine-guns. The splendid machine-guns
-still played a prominent part in the battle. One of them having been
-submerged by a rush of the enemy, Corporal Hurd returned
-single-handed, advancing 200 yards beyond the line, and brought it
-back upon his shoulder. At one time the supplies of belts ran short,
-but they were brought up in most dashing fashion. "At noon," says an
-officer, "the fighting limbers with belt-boxes, barrels, and S.A.A.
-were galloped through a hail of shell to our gun positions in a style
-reminiscent of the Royal Horse Artillery upon an Aldershot
-field-day." The result was great. {281} "Gunners and gun-commanders
-report having piled the dead enemy before their guns."
-
-[Sidenote: Northern Area. April 14]
-
-Shortly after dawn on April 14 the 1st Queen's was in the wars once
-more, and from six to eight there were constant attacks along the
-whole line from Strazeele on the right to Bailleul Station on the
-left, the latter forming the front of the Thirty-fourth Division.
-The 1st Cameronians, those stern descendants of the Covenanters, beat
-the enemy away from Strazeele about noon. At one time there were
-renewed attacks upon both the Queen's and the Cameronians. It is
-difficult to know which was the more admirable, the perseverance of
-the attacks or the tenacity of the defence. About five in the
-evening another fierce wave of storm-troops swept up from the south;
-and for one critical moment found a gap in the line. Two companies
-of the stalwart labourers of the 2nd New Zealand Entrenching
-Battalion threw themselves into the breach, and the position was
-restored. When night fell, the whole line, though shaken, was still
-intact, and the assault had been a complete and a costly failure.
-Such operations, which littered the fields of Flanders with their
-dead, go far to explain the German weakness in the latter part of
-this campaign of 1918.
-
-[Sidenote: Northern Area. April 15.]
-
-April 15 was quiet in the morning on the front of Meteren, but the
-afternoon proved to be disastrous at Bailleul, since Ravelsberg and
-Mont de Lille were stormed by the Germans, with the result that the
-town had to be vacated. The Thirty-fourth Division had been
-withdrawn from this position, and the Fifty-ninth North Midlanders
-(Romer) had taken their place, but this division had, as already
-described, suffered extraordinary losses on the Somme front, {282}
-and was in no condition to undertake another considerable operation.
-It had already been partly engaged in Flanders, and its losses had
-been increased. Under these conditions it is not surprising that the
-determined assault of the Germans should have forced the line. It
-would appear upon the map that this German success entirely
-outflanked the position of the Thirty-third Division, but fortunately
-a switch line had been constructed which was now manned by the
-remains of the Thirty-fourth Division, while the Fifty-ninth passed
-through it and concentrated in the rear. In this way an extension of
-the German success was prevented, in spite of great energy upon the
-part of the enemy, who had his patrols a kilometre to the west of the
-town before night. The 98th Brigade had now taken the place of the
-19th in the line, the 4th King's Liverpools relieving the Queen's at
-the Windmill, while the 5th Scottish Rifles relieved the Cameronians
-near Strazeele.
-
-[Sidenote: Northern Area. April 15 onwards.]
-
-In the efforts to stop the German advance from Bailleul the 147th
-Brigade of Cameron's Forty-ninth Yorkshire Division played an
-important part. This unit, containing the 4th, 6th, and 7th
-Battalions of the West Riding Regiment found themselves in the front
-line on the evening of April 15, and held hard to a defensive
-position north-west of Bailleul. For two more days, April 16 and 17,
-they maintained the fight, inflicting and receiving heavy losses, but
-with the balance well in their favour. The dour Yorkshiremen made it
-clear at last to their equally dour assailants, that there was no
-road through their ranks, however they might thin them.
-
-In the early morning of April 16 the enemy by a very sudden and
-violent attack broke through the {283} switch line and made a
-lodgment in the eastern outskirts of Meteren. In spite of determined
-counter-attacks made during the morning by the 1st Middlesex, the 4th
-King's, and the gallant New Zealand Trench Battalion, it was not
-possible to clear these houses to which the enemy's machine-gun
-parties clung with great bravery. Evening found them still in
-possession, but all efforts to debouch to the north and west had been
-stopped. The Australians were coming up on the right, so that the
-Thirty-third were able to shorten their line.
-
-One farm west of Meteren was penetrated by a pushful party of
-Germans, but they were beaten out of it and destroyed by the 11th
-Field Company of sappers, who took a number of prisoners.
-
-On April 17 the 2nd Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders had come into
-the line, relieving the 18th Middlesex Pioneers. About 10 A.M. this
-battalion was violently attacked, but drove back its assailants, as
-did the Thirty-fourth Division on the left at about the same hour.
-At six in the evening another very severe attack developed upon the
-front of the 4th King's. For a time the line appeared to be
-penetrated, but the 1st Middlesex and units of the One hundred and
-thirty-third French Division, which had newly arrived, made a brisk
-counter-attack, and the situation was completely restored. It must
-indeed have been discomposing to the enemy to find that each success
-which he won, whether it was the taking of Neuve Eglise, of Bailleul,
-or later of Mount Kemmel, instead of being an opening which led to
-victory, was only a passage to further trials and further losses in
-an unending vista. The edge of the attack had now been completely
-blunted in this quarter. April 18 {284} was quiet, and on the 19th,
-as the Australians and French were up, arrangements were made for
-drawing the Thirty-third out of the line which they had so splendidly
-made good. Their losses in the six days amounted to 145 officers and
-3302 men. A few days later Monsieur Clemenceau arrived to convey to
-General Pinney and his battle-worn men the thanks of the French
-Republic for their iron defence of an essential line.
-
-The Thirty-fourth Division was last mentioned in this narrative when
-it fell back from Nieppe on April 12, and was afterwards compelled to
-take position on the right of the Twenty-fifth Division in the De
-Seule neighbourhood. Among other losses during the retreat was a
-tried soldier, General Gore of the 101st Brigade.
-
-[Sidenote: Northern Area. April 13 onwards.]
-
-On the 13th the enemy made several tentative attacks, but had no
-success. Late in the afternoon, however, he had succeeded in
-penetrating the line of the Twenty-fifth Division between Neuve
-Eglise and De Seule. This success left the left flank of the
-Thirty-fourth in the air. The 103rd Brigade had moved to the
-Ravelsberg Ridge, however, and so gave a definite line upon which to
-withdraw, extending from Bailleul Station to Crucifix Corner, which
-was a very important position. The 103rd Brigade was now on the left
-of the line, and the 102nd on the right. There followed, on April
-15, a day of very severe fighting, the enemy making continual and
-very fiery attacks along the whole line, especially upon the three
-points, Steam Mill, Mont de Lille, and Crucifix Corner. The latter
-was carried by the enemy and then was retaken by the 9th
-Northumberland Fusiliers. Mont de Lille was held by the 74th {285}
-Brigade, and Steam Mill by the 147th, each the centre of a very
-deadly combat. Steam Mill was lost and yet again retaken by the
-Yorkshire Territorials who were aided by the 1st Middlesex from the
-Thirty-third Division. It was a long and arduous day of battle,
-inexpressibly trying to the wearied troops engaged. General
-Nicholson had under his hand six brigades that day, and senior
-officers upon the spot have testified to the masterly use which he
-made of them. That night the Fifty-ninth came up into the front line
-and relieved the exhausted infantry. The relief, however, was but a
-momentary one, for on the afternoon of April 15 the Germans delivered
-yet another strong attack upon the Ravelsberg line, now held by the
-Forty-ninth, Fifty-ninth, and Thirty-third Divisions. The
-Fifty-ninth, as already described, fell back through the
-Thirty-fourth Division, which again found itself in the front line.
-The two flank divisions both fell back to conform, and lined up with
-the remains of the Thirty-fourth on the new line near St. Jans
-Cappel, which held firm from April 16.
-
-On April 17 there was yet another day of heavy fighting upon this
-line, both flanks and the Meule Hook being strongly attacked, but the
-position was successfully held, and one more limit seemed to have
-been reached in the advance. The same six brigades under General
-Nicholson, reduced now to the strength of battalions, were still
-throwing an iron bar across the German path. From the right the
-147th, 74th, 101st, 102nd, 103rd, and 88th, all of them with set
-teeth, held on to the appointed line which receded under pressure and
-was yet again re-established. The 88th, under that remarkable young
-soldier, {286} General Freyberg, had some especially hard work to do.
-
-Late on April 20 this goodly fellowship in arms was dissolved, the
-three separate brigades returned to their divisions, and the
-Thirty-fourth was relieved by the French. The artillery of the
-Thirty-eighth Welsh Division fought throughout these awful days at
-the back of the infantry, who could not say too much for these guns
-or for General Topping who commanded them. Save two howitzers hit on
-April 9, no gun of this division was lost during all this close and
-severe fighting. South of the Lys many of the Royal Army Medical
-Corps remained with their wounded, and were taken prisoners, sharing
-with their charges the wretched treatment which was still meted out
-to British captives, especially behind the lines and before reaching
-the camps in Germany.
-
-It should be added that the sappers of the 207th, 208th, 209th Field
-Companies and the 18th Northumberland Fusiliers Pioneers fought like
-ordinary infantry, and did splendid and essential service in holding
-the line.
-
-We shall now turn to Jeffreys' Nineteenth Division which we left on
-the 12th of April, holding on to the Wulverghem-Wytschaete front,
-with formidable enemies in front of them, but an even more formidable
-menace upon their right flank, whence came constant rumours that the
-enemy had at last penetrated the hard-pressed Twenty-fifth Division,
-had occupied Neuve Eglise, and was pushing up along the lines of the
-northward roads which would turn the whole of the position. Late at
-night on April 12 it had been ascertained that these reports were
-premature. {287} The units of the 108th Ulster Brigade on the right
-of the line and connecting with the Twenty-fifth Division had been
-penetrated and driven back, but were strengthened and stayed by the
-advent of the 8th Gloucesters. The situation was obscure on the
-right, and there was a dangerous gap which was filled early in the
-morning of April 13 by the energy and initiative of Captain Macintosh
-of the 94th Field Company Royal Engineers, who with a handful of the
-10th Worcester's pushed his way in, and showed a bold front to the
-enemy.
-
-The 2/5th Sherwood Foresters from the 178th Brigade (Stansfeld) of
-the Fifty-ninth North Midland Division had also been ordered to face
-south and with the help of some machine-guns to hold off the turning
-movement from that quarter. All these movements were carried out in
-pitch darkness and amid a situation so confused that it was
-impossible to define which was the attacking line and which the line
-of defence. The general scheme of the battle in this area on the
-morning of April 13 was that the Twenty-fifth Division, with the help
-of the 148th Brigade of Yorkshire Territorials, was fighting
-desperately in and around Neuve Eglise to the north of those units of
-the 100th Brigade, whose defence of the town has already been
-described. Next to them on the north lay the remains of the 108th
-Brigade, then the battalion of Sherwood Foresters, and then the 57th
-Brigade with the 8th Gloucesters on the southern flank. All the
-morning the roar of battle rose from Neuve Eglise where the German
-stormers fought hand to hand with the British infantry, who had been
-strengthened by the addition of that fine battalion, the 4th
-Shropshires from the Nineteenth {288} Division. The contest swung
-and swayed as fresh German troops were thrown into the struggle, but
-at last about half-past ten in the morning the attack was defeated,
-the German infantry fell back in sullen groups under the constant
-fire of the defenders, and the British line was pushed forward to the
-south of the village.
-
-During the day, which was spent under heavy fire of artillery and the
-imminent menace of attack from the grey clouds seen gathering upon
-the Messines Ridge, the remaining battalions of the 178th Brigade,
-the 2/6th and the 7th Sherwood Foresters, were pushed into the line
-to relieve the exhausted 108th Brigade. It was clear that great
-German concentrations were being made upon Neuve Eglise, and that the
-village was in danger, so every arrangement was made to accommodate
-the line to the situation which would arise if that important point
-were taken, and the Wulverghem position became in consequence
-untenable. This new line would run from Meteren through Kemmel and
-Spy Farm to Spanbrockmolen. The night of April 13 would have been
-quiet upon the front of the Nineteenth Division had it not been for
-the constant pre-occupation and alarm caused by the varying fortunes
-of the fighting at Neuve Eglise, in which they were well aware that
-their own fate was concerned. The attack had been renewed with fresh
-forces, and the Twenty-fifth Division was extremely exhausted and
-could only be helped by other units which were in no better case.
-Again and again the Germans were deep in the village. Again and
-again they were evicted. It seemed to be the beginning of the end,
-however, when it was announced towards morning that the Twenty-fifth
-Division was {289} out of touch with the British troops upon its
-south flank, and that the Germans filtering through this gap had got
-to Nordhoek, west of Neuve Eglise, and were pushing to the north in
-the rear of the British position, By morning of April 14 Neuve Eglise
-had been abandoned, though it does not appear to have been solidly
-occupied by the enemy until mid-day, and snipers of both armies
-infested the ruins.
-
-[Sidenote: Northern Area. April 14.]
-
-The loss of the village and of the low ridge which adjoined it had a
-most sinister effect upon the general strategic position to the
-north, and it was indeed fortunate that measures had been taken in
-advance to deal with the new situation. The Nineteenth Division on
-April 14 found itself shelled heavily all day, while it was
-machine-gunned and trench-mortared from the right where its flank was
-now in the air. The position of the right-hand unit, the 4th
-Shropshires, south of the Neuve Eglise-Wulverghem Road, became
-impossible, as the Germans were in the rear, and indeed upon three
-sides of them.
-
-Major Wingrove stuck to his position till mid-day, and no battalion
-could have given a more cogent example of steadiness and fortitude in
-adversity. About 2 P.M. the Germans began to emerge in force from
-the villages, beating up against the gallant Shropshires, who retired
-slowly and steadily, taking toll of their assailants, while the
-Sherwood Foresters of the 178th Brigade helped them to hold the enemy
-at arm's length.
-
-As the day wore on the pressure became more insistent, until about
-seven in the evening Major Wingrove, of whom it has been stated by
-his General that "his tenacity, gallantry, and determination had held
-the much-tried and isolated line up to this {290} time," was severely
-wounded. When his inspiring presence was removed there was a break
-to the north of Neuve Eglise and the Twenty-fifth Division, now
-reduced to a handful, were retreating westwards, while the Nineteenth
-was being rolled up from the south.
-
-General Jeffreys' force was now in so dangerous a position that it
-had actually to form a front to the west as well as to the east, a
-difficult manoeuvre which was carried out with great coolness and
-skill by Colonel Sole of the 10th Worcesters, who was in charge of
-the new line, aided by Major Parkes of the 8th Gloucesters. The men
-were rallied, led into their new positions, and a dangerous
-penetration was narrowly averted. Later a new line was built up with
-the Forty-ninth Yorkshire Territorial Division in the place of the
-Twenty-fifth Division on the right, reinforced by the 71st Brigade
-from the Sixth Division. Next to them on the left was the 178th
-Sherwood Foresters Brigade, then the 108th Brigade, and finally the
-58th Brigade, standing just in their old positions. The changes in
-the British line were such that whereas it used to face east, it now
-faced almost south from near Meteren to Kemmel and Spanbrockmolen.
-The latter marked the point of junction upon the left with the right
-of the Ninth Division. This line was not fully occupied till April
-16.
-
-[Sidenote: Northern Area. April 15.]
-
-On April 15 the intermediate positions were attacked, the 9th Welsh
-Fusiliers, on the extreme left of the line, and the remains of the
-6th Wiltshires being heavily engaged. No impression was made. At a
-different point the Germans had better results to show with the 108th
-Brigade, and made some {291} progress, but the Sherwood Foresters
-once more mended the line. In the evening it was reported that the
-enemy had taken Crucifix Corner and were moving westwards. The
-strength of all battalions had now fallen to such a point, owing to
-constant shelling and incessant attacks, that it was very difficult
-to form more than a line of outposts. By evening of April 15 all the
-troops concerned, the remains of the Twenty-fifth, the Forty-ninth,
-and the Nineteenth Divisions were on the general line Meteren-Kemmel,
-facing south to the German advance, but also threatening the German
-right flank if they should press too far to the west. The remnant of
-the 108th Ulsters was relieved that night.
-
-[Sidenote: Northern Area. April 15.]
-
-A heavy attack was made at 6 A.M. on the morning of April 16 upon the
-front of the Ninth Division, which had withdrawn in conformity with
-the new northern line. The 62nd Brigade of the Twenty-first Division
-had, as already stated, been put under the orders of General Tudor of
-the Ninth Division, for his unit had been greatly weakened by the
-terrible losses of the South Africans. The North Countrymen of the
-62nd fought desperately against great odds, but they were pushed out
-of Spanbrockmolen, and later out of Wytschaete.
-
-They found a new line to the north, however, and the Germans tried in
-vain to bend it. The 58th Brigade had thrown back its own line to
-correspond, and joined up with the 62nd at Lacache Farm. Late that
-evening the worn and weary troops were deeply comforted by the sight
-of a small group of blue-clad men with classical helmets surveying
-the German lines through their glasses. It was the vanguard and the
-observers of the Twenty-eighth and One {292} hundred and thirty-third
-French Divisions which were coming up to the aid of the Ninth.
-
-[Sidenote: Northern Area. April 17.]
-
-It was clear that the commanding position of Kemmel, a hill which
-overlooks a wide range of country, was the immediate objective of the
-enemy in this quarter. About 10 A.M. on April 17 they put down a
-heavy barrage, and then pushed on in force with the intention of
-breaking in the British line and capturing the hill. The battalions
-attacked were the three Sherwood Foresters units, with the 8th North
-Staffords and 10th Warwicks of the 57th Brigade. This attack was a
-complete failure. Weary as they were the sturdy Englishmen stood
-fast to their lines, and beat their assailants back in blood and
-ruin. Machine-gun fire from the crest of the hill contributed to the
-result, and the guns also did their share. The only German gain was
-a post called Donegal Farm between the Nineteenth and the Forty-ninth
-Divisions. A fresh attack was made upon the 10th Warwicks in the
-evening, but this also was thrown back with heavy loss.
-
-Meanwhile, on the northern sector, the Ninth Division endeavoured to
-regain the ground which they had lost the day before, but their
-efforts had no great success, save that the 7th Seaforths of the 26th
-Brigade in a very brilliant advance fought their way into Wytschaete
-once more, and took possession of the village which they held until
-the following day, when the general position forced them to abandon
-it. On April 18 the fighting died down upon this front, and in the
-evening the gallant Nineteenth Division, after most glorious service,
-was relieved by the French Twenty-eighth Division, which took over
-the defence of Kemmel Hill. The total losses {293} of this division
-had been nearly 4000 men, which, coming on the top of the heavy
-losses on the Somme in the previous fortnight, formed such a record
-as had seldom been equalled. Nor was their ordeal yet at an end, and
-many a stout battle was still to be fought before a rest should come.
-
-All these stirring episodes, including the glorious destruction of
-the 4th Brigade of Guards, the formation of a permanent line by the
-Australians, the defence of Meteren and Bailleul by the Thirty-third
-and other divisions, the fighting at Neuve Eglise, and the defence of
-the Wytschaete and Messines fronts by the Nineteenth and Ninth
-Divisions with odd brigades to help them, all came within the area of
-Plumer's Second Army, which still consisted of the Ninth and
-Fifteenth Corps in the line. It should be mentioned that of fourteen
-divisions contained in this army on March 21 no less than twelve had
-been sent down to the Somme, while the remaining two, the Forty-ninth
-and Twenty-ninth, were under orders to go at the moment when the
-great battle in Flanders broke out.
-
-[Sidenote: Southern Area. April 14.]
-
-We shall now for a moment turn to the left flank of the First Army in
-the south which had so far, in spite of heavy attacks, lost very
-little ground. It has already been described how the Fifty-fifth
-Lancashire Division stood like a rock at Givenchy and Festubert,
-while the Fifty-first and afterwards the Fourth Division struggled
-desperately to hold back the attack on their left. The former had
-been relieved on April 16 by Strickland's First Division, while the
-Highlanders and Fourth Division also had been drawn out, and gave
-place to Deverell's Third Division, which had done so splendidly and
-lost so heavily upon the Somme.
-
-{294}
-
-After the repulse from the Fifty-fifth Division, the Germans had
-contented themselves with shelling Givenchy, but they had pushed on,
-as already narrated, to the north of the position, and had got as far
-as Locon. The result was that the First Division had a long frontage
-which faced due north and a shorter frontage to the east.
-
-[Sidenote: Southern Area. April 16.]
-
-The Fourth Division held the front at this period to the east of
-Robecq, being on the right of the Sixty-first, with the 184th Brigade
-between them. It was used on April 14 for a counter-attack which was
-carried out at night, and which achieved a local success by the
-recapture of the village of Riez, with 150 prisoners. This operation
-was carried out by the 11th Brigade, with the 1st Hants and 1st
-Somersets in the lead, and was a very workmanlike little action which
-was the more valuable when coming at a period of general recoil.
-
-[Sidenote: Southern Area. April 18.]
-
-On April 18 the new German attack upon the First Division at Givenchy
-began with a bombardment of great violence. Their plan upon this day
-was to carry Givenchy and Festubert by storm, and to win the line of
-the canal as far west as Gorre. They would then capture the high
-ground at Hinges, and so command the canal right up to Robecq. No
-doubt they calculated, and with justice, that if they could overcome
-the men on the spot they would find that the reserves had all been
-drawn away to the north. Their plan was wrecked, however, by the
-fact that the men on the spot were not to be overcome. Eighteen
-German battalions moved forward to the attack, and all of them
-suffered heavily without gaining any appreciable advantage. So heavy
-was the slaughter that many German companies were {295} reduced
-before evening to twenty or thirty effectives, while the three
-battalions of one regiment were left under the respective command of
-one lieutenant and two sub-lieutenants. There have been few more
-costly failures, considering the scale of the operations, in the
-whole campaign.
-
-The infantry attack was on the two flanks of the British line which
-looked northwards, the one attack being in front of Hinges and the
-other covering the space from Loisne to the south of Givenchy,
-including Festubert. Three German regiments, the 98th, 361st, and
-202nd Reserve, advanced in this quarter. They had constructed two
-bridges during the night to cross a broad ditch in front of the
-British line, but machine-guns were trained upon them, and the troops
-which tried to cross were exposed to heavy losses, which left both
-the bridges and the banks heaped with bodies. The mist, the smoke,
-and the dust from the shells were so thick, however, that a hundred
-yards was the limit of visibility. The German shell-storm continued
-to be very heavy, but the British were snugly ensconced in trenches
-with a parapet and parados, both of which were several feet thick, so
-that no very great harm was done. The worst losses were at the
-advanced keep at Festubert, which was blown to bits, only eight men
-of the garrison surviving.
-
-The First Division had two brigades in the line, the 1st on the right
-holding from Givenchy to Le Plantin, and the 3rd to the left from Le
-Plantin to Festubert. The fighting was particularly severe in the
-latter sector of the line. As the garrison looked north they saw
-through the rising mist about 8.15 in the morning the enemy advancing
-in small groups {296} of light machine-guns, coming over a slight
-rise some 900 yards east of Festubert. These troops pushed bravely
-on, though they had no cover but shell-holes, and they suffered very
-severely. The 1st Gloucester, under Colonel Tweedie, on the right
-and the 1st {297} South Wales Borderers on the left, battalions with
-the halo of the first Ypres battle round their heads, held the line
-and littered the open ground with their steady rifle-fire. There was
-a gap in the defences at a point called Willow Road, and into this
-the enemy poured more quickly than they could be shot down. Their
-rush carried them through, and into the houses and gardens of Le
-Plantin. A company of the Gloucesters under Captain Handford was cut
-in two, but both sections stood fast, Lieutenant Hall on one side,
-and the company commander on the other, closing in on the centre and
-preventing reinforcement, while Lieutenant Gosling attacked with the
-reserve company. The Germans ran field-guns right up, but the crews
-were shot down. So matters remained until the afternoon, the
-stormers being in the British position, but so pinned down by
-rifle-fire that they could not raise their heads. On the other hand,
-German snipers in the houses and trees were very deadly to any
-runners or other exposed defenders. Whilst matters were in this
-stage in the Le Plantin area, they were even more critical at
-Festubert. The enemy, moving up behind a good barrage, overran a
-part of the South Wales Borderers and forced their way into an
-orchard just south of the keep known as Route A. Thence they tried
-to get into the rear of the defence. About eleven Sergeant-Major
-Biddle of D Company ran the gauntlet to Brigade Headquarters to
-explain the situation and ask for help. Captain Smith got together a
-party of odds and ends, under twenty in number, who made their way up
-the west side of Festubert and prevented the extension of this
-dangerous German movement.
-
-[Illustration: DEFENCE OF GIVENCHY BY THE FIRST DIVISION, APRIL 18,
-1918.*]
-
-* This rough plan was drawn by an officer engaged in the action.
-
-
-By two o'clock the attack was definitely defeated, {298} and by three
-the Germans were retiring along the whole line. They found it,
-however, very difficult to disengage themselves from their advance
-positions. They tried to crawl back from shell-hole to shell-hole,
-while the British stood up all along the parapets and shot them in
-scores. Absolutely demoralised, many of the Germans threw away their
-arms. Their retirement probably cost as much as their advance.
-Those who had got into Le Plantin had to run the gauntlet between two
-halves of the Gloucesters in getting out, and few of them escaped.
-The performance of the 1st Gloucesters was remarkable, for they were
-at one time attacked front, flank, and rear by a force estimated at
-four battalions. It is recorded that the barrels of their new Lewis
-guns were worn smooth by the intensity of one day of battle. The 1st
-Brigade on the right of the defence from the canal to Le Plantin was
-also heavily attacked, though their ordeal was not so long or severe
-as that of their comrades on the left. The 1st Black Watch, the
-flank battalion next to the Gloucesters, had some especially heavy
-fighting, but kept their ground intact, and did their full share
-towards the victorious result. The whole affair was a fine feat of
-arms, for the German gun power had greatly increased since April 9,
-while the repulse was even more decisive. It proved to be a final
-one, as the Germans made no further attempt to force their passage to
-Bethune. During all this long fight the Third Division beyond Loisne
-on the left was holding the line firmly against all German pressure.
-So ended April 18. Before the evening of the 20th all outlying posts
-had been cleared of the Germans. On this same date, April 18, there
-was a sharp {299} action to the immediate left of this Givenchy
-fighting, when the Fourth Division held up a German attack, and
-afterwards countered, capturing the Bois Paquan in the Kobecq sector.
-Two hundred prisoners were the fruits of this action, but they were
-dearly bought, for many officers and men were killed or wounded.
-Among the former were two grand soldiers, Colonel Armitage of the 1st
-Hants and Brigade-Major Harston of the 11th Brigade. This forward
-movement was continued later by the Sixty-first Division, who did
-very good work on April 23, General Pagan of the 184th Brigade being
-a leader in the advance, which was notable for a fine attack by the
-2/5th Gloucesters under Colonel Lawson. Shortly afterwards General
-Colin Mackenzie of this division, who had done splendid work from the
-first days of the war, was wounded while reconnoitring in front of
-his line and had to return to England.
-
-There now followed a short pause in the German attack, and we may
-look around and follow the general line of the defence at this period
-before the action was renewed. On the extreme north of the Second
-Army the Belgians had relieved the Thirtieth Division, and thus
-shortened the British line. Then came the Ninth and Twenty-first
-British Divisions near Wytschaete. South and west of this point the
-front line had been taken over by General de Mitry with the
-Thirty-sixth French Corps, which now succeeded the Ninth British
-Corps in this sector. The Thirty-fourth and One hundred and
-thirty-third French Divisions were in the line, with the Second
-French Cavalry Corps in co-operation. This most welcome and indeed
-vital reinforcement had taken over Kemmel, Mont Rouge, Mont Noir,
-Mont Vidaigne, {300} and Mont des Cats, the range of kopjes which
-screen the Ypres plain from the south. On the right of the French
-was the weary Fifteenth Corps, with the First Australian Division as
-the flank unit near Meteren. The British divisions in the north were
-in close support to the French, the Nineteenth and Thirty-fourth
-being near Poperinghe, and the Twenty-fifth behind Kemmel. Such was
-the general position in that northern sector, to which the battle was
-now more and more confined. Before following the further events it
-should be mentioned that on April 17 the Belgians in the
-neighbourhood of Bixschoote had been exposed to a very severe attack
-from four German divisions, which would have shaken the whole line of
-defence had it succeeded. It was met, however, with very great
-courage, and the Belgians proved themselves to be valiant soldiers,
-well worthy to be admitted upon entirely equal terms into the
-battle-line of the larger nations. They fought the action with
-heroic gallantry, and gave the Germans a severe check, killing some
-2000 of them, and taking 700 prisoners with several guns. It was a
-notable performance, and the more welcome in a period of such stress.
-
-[Illustration: Position of the Line in Flanders, April 9]
-
-[Sidenote: Northern Area. April 25.]
-
-On April 25, at an early hour of the morning, the Germans made an
-attack upon the northern line from a point north of Bailleul to the
-east of Wytschaete, a distance of about ten miles. The whole of this
-front, save the extreme eastern portion, was held by the French, who
-made a very gallant resistance to as fierce an assault as the war has
-seen. The main German objective was the very important height of
-Mount Kemmel, a bluff five hundred feet high, wooded upon the sides.
-This was held by the Twenty-eighth {301} French Division, who fought
-most gallantly, but were finally overpowered by the four German
-divisions which were brought against it, including a division of
-Alpine troops, especially trained for hill fighting. The Allied line
-was pushed back along its whole front, Dranoutre and St. Eloi falling
-into the hands of the Germans, together with 6000 prisoners. It was
-the darkest hour of the Flemish battle, and was the more depressing
-as it came after a week of equilibrium in which the tide of invasion
-seemed to have been finally dammed. The German infantry had
-penetrated through the joining point of the French and British near
-Wytschaete, and at the same time through the French at Dranoutre, so
-that they were able to assail Kemmel Hill from both sides. It had
-fallen by nine o'clock. The Ninth Division in the north was forced
-to fall back upon the line of La Clytte, after enduring heavy losses
-in a combat lasting nine hours, during which they fought with their
-usual tenacity, as did the 64th and 146th Brigades, who fought beside
-them.
-
-The Germans, having got through the French upon the right flank, had
-got round to the rear of the 27th Brigade, with the result that the
-12th Royal Scots were almost entirely destroyed, and the Scottish
-Borderers were also very hard hit. None the less, with the enemy in
-front and rear, the Lowland infantry held out, finally making their
-way back in orderly fashion during the night. Farther north the line
-of the 64th and the 146th Brigades was broken and the remnants
-reformed in Cheapside, where their reserve battalions thickened their
-array. The 26th Highland Brigade threw back all attacks in front,
-and formed a defensive flank to the south, withdrawing at leisure and
-in order after dark.
-
-{302}
-
-Even the Ninth Division has seldom had a harder day, or a more
-honourable one. On the 26th General Cameron of the Forty-ninth
-Division took over this sector, and the Ninth went out of the line
-with very special messages of thanks from both the British and the
-French marshals.
-
-Some small British units were involved in the disaster of Mount
-Kemmel as they were on the hill helping in the defence. Among these
-were the 19th Lancashire Fusiliers (Pioneers), the 456th Field
-Company R.E., and part of the 49th Battalion Machine-gun Corps, all
-drawn from the Forty-ninth Division.
-
-[Sidenote: Northern Area. April 26.]
-
-A determined effort was at once made to retrieve the situation, and a
-counter-attack upon the new German line was ordered for 3 A.M. on
-April 26. It was carried out by the Thirty-ninth French Division on
-the right, and by the Twenty-fifth Division (Bainbridge) on the left.
-The French advance was held by severe machine-gun fire on the line of
-the Kemmel Brook. The British advancing from La Clytte had more
-success, but were unable to maintain the ground which they had won.
-They went forward with Griffin's 7th Brigade on the left and
-Bethell's 74th on the right. The water was up to the men's waists as
-in the cold of the early morning they splashed their way across the
-Kemmel Brook. It was dismal and desperate work, but the spirit of
-the men, in spite of all that this division had endured, was still
-high, and they beat down all obstacles until they had forced their
-way into the village of Kemmel, where they secured 200 prisoners.
-Their own losses were heavy, however, including Colonel Cade of the
-1st Wilts, Colonel {303} Stewart of the 4th South Staffords, Colonel
-Reade of the 10th Chesters, and several other senior officers. It
-was now found that the flanks of both brigades were in the air, and
-as the losses were increasing through the enfilade fire, they were
-ordered to withdraw. It was still early, and the morning mist
-screened what would otherwise have been a very murderous operation.
-The final line held by the Twenty-fifth Division was about 1000 yards
-in advance of the starting-point.
-
-It should be remembered that in this difficult and gallant night
-attack against a victorious enemy the young 19-year-old recruits, who
-now made up a considerable proportion of the decimated division,
-showed a very fine spirit and kept up with the veterans beside them.
-
-Having repulsed the counter-attack of the French and of the
-Twenty-fifth Division, the enemy tried with great energy to improve
-his advantage, and Von Armin thundered during the whole of April 26
-against the Allied line, trying especially to drive in the northern
-sector at Wytschaete and Eloi. The fighting on this line was very
-desperate during the day, and in spite of every effort the troops
-were pushed back from their forward positions. The strain fell
-chiefly upon the remains of the 26th Brigade of the Ninth Division,
-the Twenty-first Division, the 21st Brigade of the Thirtieth
-Division, and the Thirty-ninth Division. The 21st Brigade defended
-the northern portion of the line, and one of the outstanding feats of
-the day was the defence of the Old Bluff from morning to dusk by that
-grand battalion, the 2nd Bedfords. Farther south the two points
-called the Brasserie and the Spoil-Bank were eventually {304} won by
-the Germans, but they were defended with great determination by units
-of the Thirty-ninth Division, the 1st Herts, the Cambridgeshires, and
-the Sussex battalions. It was a day of struggle, and the most that
-the Allies could say was that they had prevented a break in their
-line. That night there was another general withdrawal along the
-front which brought the Allied position into very much the same
-trenches as had been occupied in the autumn of 1914. Such a result
-of four years' fighting might well have caused depression, and yet
-these brave hearts never for one instant relinquished their high
-hopes of the victory to come.
-
-[Sidenote: Northern Area. April 26 onwards.]
-
-The enemy had gained a spectacular advantage at Kemmel, and high
-hopes were raised in Germany that some great ulterior result would
-come of it, but in spite of strong efforts it was not destined that
-there should be any particular consequences from their victory.
-Observation can be obtained from a balloon as easily as from a hill,
-and the space upon the summit was so limited that the Allied guns
-could make it almost untenable. Strong efforts were at once made to
-push on upon the line Locre-La Clytte, which was held by the French.
-They repulsed three strong attacks on April 27, and though in the
-evening the Germans got into Locre, they were thrown out again by our
-tenacious Allies. Again on the morning of April 29 the enemy
-attacked along the whole line from Mont Vidaigne to Zillebeke Lake.
-This attack was repulsed with severe loss to the enemy, and must have
-gone far to convince him that he was not destined to develop his
-Kemmel success. The battle involved not only the front of the
-Thirty-sixth French Corps, but also that of the Twenty-fifth,
-Forty-ninth, and {305} Twenty-first Divisions, all of which stood
-like a wall and beat off every assault. These attacks extended from
-north of Kemmel to Voormezeele. The Twenty-fifth Division was next
-to the French on the right of the line, in the British centre was the
-Forty-ninth, while on the left the Twenty-first Division connected up
-with the Ninth, which was out of the direct line of attack.
-
-[Sidenote: Northern Area. April 29.]
-
-The 75th Brigade formed the fighting line of the Twenty-fifth
-Division on this day of battle. They found themselves on the western
-side of the Kemmel Brook, while the 3rd Prussian Guards lay on the
-farther side and advanced to the attack. To do this they had to pass
-over the smooth slope which led down to the stream, and they fell in
-heaps in the attempt. They huddled for shelter behind a group of
-huts, but the guns got on to them and blew them to pieces. Four
-distinct attacks were all equally murderous and unsuccessful. The
-8th Border Battalion was particularly conspicuous in the defence.
-Next to them, near Ridge Wood, were the well-tried Yorkshiremen of
-the Forty-ninth. For some reason the Germans at this point advanced
-in close formation with bayonets fixed. Such tactics received the
-slating which they deserved. Both the West Riding Battalions of the
-147th Brigade and the York and Lancasters of the 148th were in the
-firing-line, and they amply repaid themselves for many a distressful
-hour. Once for three minutes the Germans made a lodgment, but at the
-end of that time a rush of bayonet-men pitchforked them out of their
-only gain. The Twenty-first Division held the line above Ridge Wood
-and on towards Voormezeele. Upon them came the heaviest attack of
-all, and the slaughter {306} of the Germans, coming on at a range of
-400 yards under machine-gun and rifle-fire, was very murderous. The
-Leicester Brigade did particularly well this day, and so did the worn
-89th Brigade of the Thirtieth Division, which had come under the
-orders of General Campbell of the Twenty-first Division. The German
-attack struck very hard against the front of this unit near the
-Brasserie on the Vierstraat-Ypres Road, and all three battalions, the
-17th, 18th, 19th King's Liverpools, had desperate fighting, the 17th
-coming in for particularly rough treatment. It had each flank
-penetrated and one company surrounded, but still managed to shake
-itself clear.
-
-The Belgians were also involved in this wide-spread attack, and both
-their lines in the north and those of the French round the
-Sharpenberg and Mont Rouge were held intact. This severe check,
-inflicted upon a force which was not less than twelve divisions,
-marked the beginning of the collapse of the great German offensive in
-Flanders, which had now lasted for twenty days of constant battle.
-
-Early in May the Franco-British line still lay from Kemmel village in
-the south to Ypres in the north, taking Voormezeele upon the way. If
-the Germans could succeed in bursting through here they would partly
-encircle Ypres, and would probably cause an evacuation, an event
-which might be of no great military importance, but could not fail to
-have a moral and political repercussion. Ypres stood like an
-oriflamme of war amid the ranks of the British Army. Here it was
-that in October 1914 they had said to the Germans, "Thus far and no
-farther!" Now in the fourth year the words still held good. If
-after all the efforts, all the self-sacrifice, all {307} good blood
-so cheerfully shed, it was now to pass from their hands, no consoling
-lectures upon strategy could soften the heavy blow which it would be
-to those who relaxed the grip which their comrades had the held so
-firmly. Yet it was this and no less which was at stake in these
-early days of May. A crushing German victory with the capture of the
-coast was no longer to be feared. But an important local success,
-which would reverberate through the world, was still well within
-their hopes and their power.
-
-At the moment of this important attack the southern sector of this
-line was held by the One hundred and twenty-ninth and Thirty-second
-French Divisions, the latter being next to the British just to the
-south of Vierstraat. To the north of the French lay the 30th
-Composite Brigade (Currie), which had been formed by telescoping the
-remains of the Thirtieth Division into a single unit. It had two
-splendid though attenuated Regular battalions, the 2nd Bedfords and
-2nd Yorkshires in the line with the 17th King's Liverpools in
-immediate support. Still farther to the north lay Pinney's
-well-tried Thirty-third Division with the 98th Brigade (Maitland) in
-front. Their battle line consisted of the 2nd Argyll and Sutherland
-Highlanders, the 4th King's Liverpools, and the 1st Middlesex, from
-south to north. Farther north still from the Voormezeele region to
-the southern suburbs of ruined Ypres lay Marden's Sixth Division
-which was not involved to any great degree in the fighting.
-
-[Sidenote: Northern Area. May 8.]
-
-In the centre of the position was a well-marked line of trees forming
-the edge of Ridge Wood. Behind the British line was the village of
-Dickebush with the Dickebush Lake. These two points were the first
-{308} objectives of the German attack, which broke with great
-violence at 7.30 in the morning of May 8. It was preceded by a
-lavish use of mustard gas shells, a hellish device which was used
-more and more from this time forward. This poison may be kept out of
-the lungs by a mask, but cannot be kept from the body, where it
-raises such blisters and irritation as may prove fatal in the same
-fashion as a bad burn. When enough has been poured into any position
-it can be made untenable by troops, since in heavy weather it hangs
-about for days, and has the unpleasant property of appearing to have
-vanished and yet becoming active again when exposed to moisture.
-Many a battalion which has crossed a dew-moistened field within the
-battle area has had reason afterwards to regret it.
-
-Coming after so deadly a preparation the first rush of the Germans
-met with success, and they penetrated the line, both of the
-Thirty-second French Division and of the 30th Composite Brigade.
-Their advance brought them roughly to the south end of Dickebush
-Lake, whereupon the 98th Brigade threw back a flank from Ridge Wood
-to the lake, so as to cover themselves from a southern attack.
-
-At seven in the evening a strong attempt was made to re-establish the
-line, the 19th Brigade (Mayne) being thrown into the battle. The
-counter-attack was made by the 1st Cameronians, advancing across the
-Hallebast-La Clytte Road, but they were in full view of the enemy
-whose machine-gun fire was sweeping the very grass from the ground in
-front of their feet. They could not get forward, and many of them
-never got back. A fine advance was made, however, by the composite
-King's Liverpools with the {309} help of some of the Bedfords. It
-actually reached the old front line, but had lost so heavily that it
-was unable to retain it in the face of a renewed German assault, but
-stuck on as near as it could.
-
-It should be explained that this King's Liverpool unit was really the
-old 89th Brigade which had been worn down to such an extent that the
-17th, 18th, and 19th King's were now compressed into one battalion,
-750 strong. Their heavy losses upon the Somme had been greatly
-increased in Flanders, and included Colonel Watson, the gallant and
-veteran leader of the 17th Battalion. Now under Colonel Rollo their
-sentiment was that of one of their officers who wrote, "We are still
-the 89th Brigade, call us what they like and put us in what division
-they please. The old spirit remains as ever." This was the unit
-whose swan song is here recorded. Next day the survivors made good
-their line, and handed it over intact to their relief.
-
-To the north of this composite battalion (which was independent of
-the 30th Divisional Brigade already mentioned) the counter-attack was
-made by the 5th Scottish Rifles near Dickebush Lake, and by the 2nd
-Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders at Ridge Wood. Both of these
-battalions won home and gained their full objectives. The great
-German local effort, urged by four strong divisions, the Fifty-second
-and Fifty-sixth in front, the Twenty-ninth and Thirty-first in
-support, had been held. Each of these convulsive efforts of Von
-Armin's tired army brought the final equilibrium and ultimate
-retirement more close.
-
-The fighting died down entirely in this quarter, and the Fourteenth
-French Division took it over {310} from the British. Indeed this day
-of strenuous battle may be said to have marked the end of the great
-Battle of the Lys, which had raged ever since April 9. The Germans
-had been fought to a standstill. They had in the course of a month's
-fighting won ground, prisoners, and guns, but it is possible in
-winning a battle to lose a war, and this is exactly what they had
-accomplished. An expensive and barren success had been achieved by a
-lavish use of their reserves, and on the day when those reserves were
-vitally needed, they had been wastefully strewn over the plains of
-the Somme and of Flanders. Never had the British Army been more
-severely tried than at this time when their General issued his famous
-"back to the wall" appeal, and never had the individual soldier risen
-to a greater height. "The British Army," says an Italian observer
-who was present throughout the crisis, "impresses one with its
-inherent moral soundness. The German," he adds, "uses almost
-exclusively machine-guns and bombs, but the Englishman loves his
-rifle, and knows much better how to use it. He is a better marksman,
-he is more contemptuous of danger, and he is calmer, steadier, and
-feels himself individually superior to his enemy. The cheerfulness
-of the men is due in great measure to the noble, dignified, serene
-example of their officers, so simple in their gentlemanly bearing, so
-conscious of the reasons and the end of the war, so proud of their
-country and of its unshakeable prestige." It is a noble tribute, but
-none who know the men could say that it was a strained one.
-
-No account of the battle of the Lys can close without a word as to
-the splendid work done by General Plumer, never wearied, never
-flurried, during {311} those fateful days. Hardly less arduous was
-the experience of General Horne in the southern sector. The three
-corps commanders, too, who bore the brunt, and very especially
-General de Lisle, who only took over his command on the second day of
-the battle, will always be associated with one of the most desperate
-incidents of the war. But above and behind all is the commanding and
-heroic figure of Douglas Haig, impassive, serene, still working as he
-had worked four years before, at the mending of broken lines and the
-bracing of weak ones, until the hour should strike for his tremendous
-revenge.
-
-
-
-
-{312}
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
- THE BATTLES OF THE CHEMIN DES DAMES AND
- OF THE ARDRES
-
-May 27-June 2
-
-The rest cure of the Aisne--Attack upon the Fiftieth Division--Upon
-the Eighth--Upon the Twenty-first--5th Battery R.F.A.--Glorious
-Devons--Adventure of General Rees--Retreat across the Aisne--Over the
-Vesle--Arrival of Nineteenth Division--Desperate fighting--Success of
-4th Shropshires--General Pellé's tribute--General prospect of the
-Allies midway through 1918.
-
-
-It had been determined to rest four of the crippled British divisions
-which had been heavily engaged first on the Somme and then in the
-battle of the Lys. These divisions were the Twenty-fifth
-(Bainbridge), Twenty-first (Campbell), Eighth (Heneker), and Fiftieth
-(Jackson), all forming the Ninth Corps (Hamilton-Gordon). Each of
-them had been cut to pieces twice in the course of little more than a
-month, and should by every pre-war precept have been incapable of
-exertion for a long time to come. They were reconstituted with
-numbers of recruits under fresh officers, both leaders and men with
-slight experience of actual warfare. They were then sent, via the
-outskirts of Paris, the direct route being under fire from the German
-guns in front of Amiens, and they were thrust into the French line
-just north {313} of the Aisne in the region of the Chemin des Dames.
-The intention was to give them repose, but the change was looked upon
-with misgiving by the divisional generals, one of whom wrote to the
-present chronicler at the time saying, "They think it will be a rest
-cure, but to my mind it is more likely to be a fresh centre of storm."
-
-As a matter of fact the Germans, who had now made two colossal
-thrusts, the one on March 21 on the Somme, the other at the Lys on
-April 9, were planning a third desperate attack at this very point.
-The competent military historian of the future with all the records
-before him will no doubt be able to pronounce how far it was wise for
-the German high command to leave two unfinished tasks in order to
-undertake a third one. On the face of it, it seemed an unlikely
-thing to do, and that perhaps is why they did it. The line at this
-position had few natural advantages and was not strongly held. In
-the opinion of British generals it would have been wise if it could
-have been drawn south of the Aisne, since a broad river is a good
-friend in one's front, but a treacherous enemy in one's rear. There
-were reasons, however, why it was not easy for the French to abandon
-the north bank, for they had spent much time, labour, and human life
-in capturing Craonne, the California Plateau, and other positions
-within that area, and it was a dreadful thing to give them up unless
-they were beaten out of them. They held on, therefore--and the
-British divisions, now acting as part of the French army, were
-compelled to hold on as well. The Fiftieth Northern Territorial
-Division had a frontage of 7000 yards from near Craonne to
-Ville-aux-Bois, including the famous California {314} Plateau; on
-their immediate right was the Regular Eighth Division, and to the
-right of that in the Berry-au-Bac sector, where the lines cross the
-Aisne, was the Twenty-first Division, this British contingent forming
-the Ninth Corps, and having French troops upon either side of them.
-The Twenty-fifth Division was in reserve at Fismes to the south of
-the river. The total attack from Crecy-au-Mont to Berry was about
-thirty miles, a quarter of which--the eastern quarter--was held by
-the British.
-
-Confining our attention to the experience of the British troops,
-which is the theme of these volumes, we shall take the northern unit
-and follow its fortunes on the first day with some detail, remarking
-in advance that the difficulties and the results were much the same
-in the case of each of the three front divisions, so that a fuller
-account of one may justify a more condensed one of the others. The
-position along the whole line consisted of rolling grass plains where
-the white gashes in the chalk showed out the systems of defence. The
-Germans, on the other hand, were shrouded to some extent in woodland,
-which aided them in the concentration of their troops. The defences
-of the British were of course inherited, not made, but possessed some
-elements of strength, especially in the profusion of the barbed wire.
-On the other hand, there were more trenches than could possibly be
-occupied, which is a serious danger when the enemy comes to close
-grips. The main position ran about 5000 yards north of the Aisne,
-and was divided into an outpost line, a main line of battle, and a
-weak system of supports. The artillery was not strong, consisting of
-the divisional guns with some backing of French 75's and heavies.
-
-{315}
-
-The Fiftieth Division, like the others, had all three brigades in the
-line. To the north the 150th Brigade (Rees) defended Craonne and the
-slab-sided California Plateau. On their right, stretching across a
-flat treeless plain, lay the 151st Brigade (Martin). To the right of
-them again was the 149th Brigade (Riddell), which joined on near
-Ville-aux-Bois to the 24th Brigade (Grogan) of the Eighth Division.
-It may give some idea of the severity with which the storm broke upon
-the Fiftieth Division, when it is stated that of the three brigadiers
-mentioned one was killed, one was desperately wounded, and a third
-was taken before ten o'clock on the first morning of the attack.
-
-The German onslaught, though very cleverly carried out, was not a
-complete surprise, for the experienced soldiers in the British lines,
-having already had two experiences of the new methods, saw many
-danger signals in the week before the battle. There was abnormal
-aircraft activity, abnormal efforts also to blind our own air
-service, occasional registering of guns upon wire, and suspicious
-movements on the roads. Finally with the capture of prisoners in a
-raid the suspicions became certainties, especially when on the
-evening of May 26 the Germans were seen pouring down to their front
-lines. No help arrived, however, for none seems to have been
-immediately available. The thin line faced its doom with a courage
-which was already tinged with despair. Each British brigade brought
-its reserve battalion to the north bank of the Aisne, and each front
-division had the call upon one brigade of the Twenty-fifth Division.
-Otherwise no help was in sight.
-
-The bombardment began early in the morning of {316} May 27, and was
-said by the British veterans to be the heaviest of the war. Such an
-opinion meant something, coming from such men. The whole area from
-Soissons to Rheims was soaked with gas and shattered with high
-explosives, so that masks had to be worn ten kilometres behind the
-lines. A German officer declared that 6000 guns were employed. Life
-was absolutely impossible in large areas. The wire was blown to
-shreds, and the trenches levelled. The men stuck it, however, with
-great fortitude, and the counter-barrage was sufficiently good to
-hold up the early attempts at an infantry advance. The experiences
-of the 149th Infantry Brigade may be taken as typical. The front
-battalion was the 4th Northumberland Fusiliers under Colonel Gibson.
-Twice the enemy was driven back in his attempt to cross the shattered
-wire. At 4 A.M. he won his way into the line of outposts, and by
-4.30 was heavily pressing the battle line. His tactics were good,
-his courage high, and his numbers great. The 6th Northumberland
-Fusiliers, under Colonel Temperley, held the main line, and with the
-remains of the 4th made a heroic resistance. At this hour the
-Germans had reached the main lines both of the 151st Brigade on the
-left and of the 24th on the right. About five o'clock the German
-tanks were reported to have got through on the front of the Eighth
-Division and to be working round the rear of the 149th Brigade. Once
-again we were destined to suffer from the terror which we had
-ourselves evolved. The main line was now in great confusion and
-breaking fast. The 5th Northumberland Fusiliers were pushed up as
-the last reserve. There was deep shadow everywhere save on the
-California Plateau, where General Rees, with his {317} three
-Yorkshire battalions, had repulsed repeated assaults. The French
-line had gone upon his left, however, and the tanks, with German
-infantry behind them, had swarmed round to his rear, so that in the
-end he and his men were all either casualties or captives.
-
-Colonel Gibson meanwhile had held on most tenaciously with a nucleus
-of his Fusiliers at a post called Centre Marceau. The telephone was
-still intact, and he notified at 5.45 that he was surrounded. He
-beat off a succession of attacks with heavy loss to the stormers,
-while Temperley was also putting up a hopeless but desperate fight.
-Every man available was pushed up to their help, and they were
-ordered to hold on. A senior officer reporting from Brigade
-Headquarters says: "I could hear Gibson's brave, firm voice say in
-reply to my injunctions to fight it out, 'Very good, sir.
-Good-bye!'" Shortly afterwards this gallant man was shot through the
-head while cheering his men to a final effort.
-
-The experience of the Durhams of the 151st had been exactly the same
-as that of the Northumberlands of the 149th. Now the enemy were
-almost up to the last line. The two brigadiers, Generals Martin and
-Riddell, together with Major Tweedy of the reserve battalion, rushed
-out to organise a local defence, drawing in a few scattered platoons
-for the purpose. As they did so they could see the grey figures of
-the Germans all round them. It was now past six o'clock, and a
-clear, sunny morning. As these officers ran forward, a shell burst
-over them, and General Martin fell dead, while Riddell received a
-terrible wound in the face. In spite of this, he most heroically
-continued to rally the men and form a centre of resistance {318} so
-as to cover Pontavert as long as possible. The 5th Northumberland
-Fusiliers with a splendid counter-attack had regained the position of
-Centre d'Evreux, and for the moment the pressure was relieved. It
-was clear, however, both to General Jackson and to General Heneker
-that both flanks were exposed, and that their general position was an
-acute salient far ahead of the Allied line. The Twenty-first
-Division was less affected, since it already lay astride of the
-river, but the French line on the left was back before mid-day as far
-as Fismes, so that it was absolutely necessary if a man were to be
-saved to get the remains of the two British divisions across the
-Aisne at once.
-
-Pontavert, with its bridges over river and canal, was in the hands of
-the Germans about 7 A.M., but the bridge-heads at Concevreux and
-other places were firmly held, and as the men got across, sometimes
-as small organised units, sometimes as a drove of stragglers, they
-were rallied and lined up on the south bank. The field-guns had all
-been lost but the heavies and machine-guns were still available to
-hold the new line. Some of the 5th Northumberland Fusiliers were
-entirely cut off, but fought their way through the Germans, and
-eventually under Major Leatheart reported themselves at the bridges.
-So rapid had been the hostile advance that the dressing-stations were
-captured, and many of our doctors and wounded fell into the hands of
-the Germans to endure the hard fate which these savages so often
-reserved for the brave but helpless men who fell into their power.
-It is a terrible fact which should not be forgotten, that among these
-torturers the nurses and the doctors held in many cases a prominent
-position.
-
-The 150th Brigade, under General Rees, which {319} was defending the
-Craonne position, had endured an even heavier ordeal than the others.
-It was on the extreme left of the British line, on the right of the
-French 118th Regiment. This latter seems to have been entirely
-destroyed or taken early in the attack. The British brigade lay in
-front of Craonne upon the edge of the California Plateau, with the
-5th Yorks on the right and the 4th East Yorks on the left. The 4th
-Yorks were in brigade reserve in Craonelle, immediately behind the
-fighting line. The Germans got through the French on the left, also
-through a gap down the Corbeny railroad on the right of the 150th and
-left of the 151st Brigade. Colonel Thomson of the 5th Yorks, a very
-brave and experienced soldier who was said by those who knew him best
-to be worth half a battalion in his own person upon the day of
-battle, was in charge on the right, and hung on with tooth and claw
-to every inch of ground, but his little force, already greatly
-weakened by the cannonade, was unable to resist the terrible
-onslaught of the German infantry. Two counter-attacks were attempted
-by reserve companies, but each was swept away. The Germans were on
-the flank in Craonne and enfiladed the line with a machine-gun.
-Colonel Thomson's last words over the telephone to Headquarters were,
-"Good-bye, General, I'm afraid I shall not see you again." He was
-killed shortly afterwards. Major Haslett of the East Yorks made an
-equally desperate resistance on the other flank, and finally he and a
-wounded sergeant-major were captured with their empty pistols in
-their hands. Meanwhile the Brigade Headquarters at La Hutte were
-practically surrounded and under a terrible fire. General Rees
-endeavoured to get into touch with his only {320} remaining
-battalion, the 4th Yorks, but they had already been overrun by the
-enemy. Colonel Kent, with sixteen men, had thrown himself into a
-house in Craonelle, and had fought until the whole party were killed
-or wounded. The enemy was now several miles to the rear of the few
-survivors of the 150th Brigade, who endeavoured to make their way
-back as best they might. It gives some idea of how completely they
-were cut off that General Rees, after many adventures and escapes,
-was finally stopped and taken by encountering the main line of the
-German traffic coming down the road which he had to cross. This was
-late in the day of May 27, when the enemy was well across the Aisne.
-It may be of interest to add that General Rees was taken before the
-Kaiser next morning, whom he found upon the California Plateau. The
-emperor behaved with courtesy to his prisoner, though he could not
-refrain from delivering a monologue of the usual type upon the causes
-of the war and the iniquity of Great Britain in fulfilling her treaty
-obligations.
-
-Some account must now be given of the experiences of Heneker's Eighth
-Division which occupied the centre of the British line. This
-division, like the others, had been sent to the Aisne for a rest cure
-after its terrific exertions upon the Somme. Full of raw soldiers
-and inexperienced officers it would have seemed to be entirely unfit
-for battle, but it had the two solid assets of experienced leading in
-the senior officers and great regimental traditions, that ever
-present stand-by of the British Army. Young as were the troops they
-took General Heneker's orders literally when he issued the command
-that the posts were to be held at all costs, and, as a consequence,
-{321} hardly a single battalion existed as a fighting unit after the
-engagement.
-
-The British field-batteries were mostly to the north of the river,
-and were greatly damaged by the preliminary German fire. They were
-accurately located by the enemy, and were smothered in poison and
-steel. So were the Gernicourt defences, which formed an important
-tactical position with a permanent garrison on the right of the
-division. All three brigades were in the line, the 25th on the
-right, the 24th in the centre, and the 23rd on the left. The outpost
-line was utterly overwhelmed in the first rush, the experience being
-much the same as on March 21, for each small body of men found itself
-isolated, and could only do its best to hold its own patch of ground.
-Thus at 5.15 A.M. a pigeon message was sent, "H.Q. 2nd Berks,
-consisting of Colonel Griffin, Captain Clare, and staff, are
-surrounded. Germans threw bombs down dug-out and passed on.
-Appeared to approach from right rear in considerable strength. No
-idea what has happened elsewhere. Holding on in hopes of relief."
-Their position was typical of many similar groups along the front,
-marooned in the fog, and soon buried in the heart of the advancing
-German army. The right of the 25th Brigade had been thrust back, but
-on the left the 2nd Berkshires made a desperate resistance. The
-whole front was intersected by a maze of abandoned trenches, and it
-was along these that the enemy, shrouded in the mist, first gained
-their fatal footing upon the flank. The 2nd East Lancashires were
-brought up in support, and a determined resistance was made by the
-whole brigade within the main zone of battle. The German tanks were
-up, however, and {322} they proved as formidable in their hands as
-they have often done in our own. Their construction was cumbrous and
-their pace slow, but they were heavily armed and very dangerous when
-once in action. Eight of them, however, were destroyed by the French
-anti-tank artillery. At 6.30 the 25th Brigade, in shattered
-remnants, was back on the river at Gernicourt.
-
-The attack on this front was developing from the right, so that it
-came upon the 24th Brigade an hour later than upon its eastern
-neighbour. The 2nd Northamptons were in front, and they were driven
-in, but rallied on the battle zone and made a very fine fight, until
-the German turning movement from the south-east, which crossed the
-Miette south of the battle zone, took the line in flank and rear. In
-the end hardly a man of the two battalions engaged got away, and
-Haig, the brigadier, with his staff, had to cut their way out at the
-muzzle of their revolvers, shooting many Germans who tried to
-intercept them. The 23rd Brigade was attacked at about the same
-time, and the 2nd West Yorkshires managed to hold even the outpost
-line for a time. Then falling back on the battle position this
-battalion, with the 2nd Devons and 2nd Middlesex near the Bois des
-Buttes, beat off every attack for a long time. The fatal turning
-movement threatened to cut them off entirely, but about 7.30 General
-Grogan, who had set his men a grand example of valour, threw out a
-defensive flank. He fell back eventually across the Aisne south of
-Pontavert, while the enemy, following closely upon his heels,
-occupied that place.
-
-Many outstanding deeds of valour are recorded in all the British
-divisions during this truly terrible {323} experience, but two have
-been immortalised by their inclusion in the orders of the day of
-General Berthelot, the French general in command. The first
-concerned the magnificent conduct of the 5th Battery R.F.A., which,
-under its commander, Captain Massey, stuck to its work while piece
-after piece was knocked out by an overwhelming shower of German
-shells. When all the guns were gone Captain Massey, with Lieutenants
-Large and Bution and a handful of survivors, fought literally to the
-death with Lewis guns and rifles. One man with a rifle, who fought
-his way back, and three unarmed gunners who were ordered to retire,
-were all who escaped to tell the heroic tale. The other record was
-that of the 2nd Devons, who went on fighting when all resistance
-round them was over, and were only anxious, under their gallant
-Colonel Anderson-Morshead, to sell their lives at the price of
-covering the retreat of their comrades. Their final stand was on a
-small hill which covered the river crossing, and while they remained
-and died themselves they entreated their retiring comrades to hurry
-through their ranks. Machine-guns ringed them round and shot them to
-pieces, but they fought while a cartridge was left, and then went
-down stabbing to the last. They were well avenged, however, by one
-post of the Devons which was south of the river and included many
-Lewis guns under Major Cope. These men killed great numbers of
-Germans crossing the stream, and eventually made good their own
-retreat. The main body of the battalion was destroyed, however, and
-the episode was heroic. In the words of the French document: "The
-whole battalion, Colonel, 38 officers, and 552 in the ranks, offered
-their lives in ungrudging sacrifice to the sacred cause of the {324}
-Allies." A word as to the valour of the enemy would also seem to be
-called for. They came on with great fire and ardour. "The Germans
-seemed mad," says one spectator, "they came rushing over the ground
-with leaps and bounds. The slaughter was frightful. We could not
-help shooting them down."
-
-Whilst this smashing attack had been delivered upon the Fiftieth and
-Eighth Divisions, Campbell's Twenty-first Division on the extreme
-right of the British line had also endured a hard day of battle.
-They covered a position from Loivre to Berry-au-Bac, and had all
-three brigades in action, six battalions in the line, and three in
-reserve. Their experience was much the same as that of the other
-divisions, save that they were on the edge of the storm and escaped
-its full fury. The greatest pressure in the morning was upon the
-62nd Brigade on the left, which was in close liaison with the 25th
-Brigade of the Eighth Division. By eight o'clock the posts at Moscou
-and the Massif de la Marine had been overrun by the overpowering
-advance of the enemy. About nine o'clock the 7th Brigade from the
-Twenty-fifth Division came up to the St. Aubœf Wood within the
-divisional area and supported the weakening line, which had lost some
-of the outer posts and was holding on staunchly to others. The
-Germans were driving down upon the west and getting behind the
-position of the Twenty-first Division, for by one o'clock they had
-pushed the 1st Sherwood Foresters of the Eighth Division, still
-fighting most manfully, out of the Gernicourt Wood, so that the
-remains of this division with the 75th Brigade were on a line west of
-Bouffignereux. This involved the whole left of the Twenty-first
-Division, which had to swing back the 62nd {325} Brigade from a point
-south of Cormicy, keeping in touch with the 7th Brigade which formed
-the connecting link. At 3.20 Cormicy had been almost surrounded and
-the garrison driven out, while the 64th Brigade on the extreme right
-was closely pressed at Cauroy. At six in the evening the 7th Brigade
-had been driven in at Bouffignereux, and the German infantry, beneath
-a line of balloons and aeroplanes, was swarming up the valley between
-Guyencourt and Chalons le Vergeur, which latter village they reached
-about eight, thus placing themselves on the left rear of the
-Twenty-first Division. Night fell upon as anxious a situation as
-ever a harassed general and weary troops were called upon to face.
-The Twenty-first had lost few prisoners and only six guns during the
-long day of battle, but its left had been continually turned, its
-position was strategically impossible, and its losses in casualties
-were very heavy. It was idle to deny that the army of General von
-Boehm had made a very brilliant attack and gained a complete victory
-with, in the end, such solid trophies as 45,000 Allied prisoners and
-at least 400 guns. It was the third great blow of the kind within
-nine weeks, and Foch showed himself to be a man of iron in being able
-to face it, and not disclose those hidden resources which could not
-yet be used to the full advantage.
-
-The capture of Pontavert might have been a shattering blow to the
-retreating force, but it would seem that the Germans who had pushed
-through so rapidly were strong enough to hold it but not, in the
-first instance, strong enough to extend their operations. By the
-afternoon of May 27 they were over at Maizy also, and the force at
-Concevreux, which {326} consisted of the remains of the Fiftieth and
-part of the Eighth and Twenty-fifty Divisions, was in danger of
-capture. At 2 P.M. the Germans had Muscourt. The mixed and
-disorganised British force then fell back to near Ventelay, where
-they fought back once more at the German advance, the Fiftieth
-Division being in the centre, with the 75th and 7th Brigades on its
-right. This latter brigade had been under the orders of the
-Twenty-first Division and had helped to hold the extreme right of the
-position, but was now involved in the general retreat. Already,
-however, news came from the west that the Germans had not got merely
-to the Aisne but to the Vesle, and the left flank and rear of the
-Ninth Corps was hopelessly compromised. Under continuous pressure,
-turning ever to hold up their pursuers, the remains of the three
-divisions, with hardly any artillery support, fell back to the south.
-On the western wing of the battle Soissons had fallen, and Rheims was
-in a most perilous position, though by some miracle she succeeded in
-preserving her shattered streets and desecrated cathedral from the
-presence of the invaders.
-
-The Eighth Division had withdrawn during the night to Montigny, and,
-in consequence, the Twenty-first Division took the general line,
-Hermonville-Montigny Ridge, the 64th Brigade on the right, with the
-62nd and 7th in succession on the left. Every position was
-outflanked, however, touch was lost with the Eighth on the left, and
-the attack increased continually in its fury. Prouilly fell, and the
-orders arrived that the next line would be the River Vesle, Jonchery
-marking the left of the Eighth Division. On the right the
-Twenty-first continued {327} to be in close touch with the French
-Forty-fifth Division. All units were by this time very intermingled,
-tired, and disorganised. The 15th Durhams, who had fought a
-desperate rearguard action all the morning upon the ridge north of
-Hervelon Château, had almost ceased to exist. The one gleam of light
-was the rumoured approach of the One hundred and thirty-fourth French
-Division from the south. It had been hoped to hold the line of the
-River Vesle, but by the evening of May 28 it was known that the
-Germans had forced a passage at Jonchery, where the bridge would have
-been destroyed but for the wounding of the sapper officer and the
-explosion of the wagon containing the charges. On the other hand,
-the Forty-fifth French Division on the right was fighting splendidly,
-and completely repulsed a heavy German attack. When night fell the
-British were still for the most part along the line of the Vesle, but
-it was clear that it was already turned upon the west. Some idea of
-the truly frightful losses incurred by the troops in these operations
-may be formed from the fact that the Eighth Division alone had lost
-7000 men out of a total force of about 9000 infantry.
-
-About eight in the morning of May 29 the enemy renewed his attack,
-pushing in here and there along the line in search of a gap. One
-attempt was made upon the Twenty-first Division, from Branscourt to
-Sapicourt, which was met and defeated by the 1st Lincolns and 6th
-Leicesters. Great activity and movement could be seen among the
-German troops north of the river, but the country is wooded and
-hilly, so that observation is difficult. Towards evening, the right
-flank of the fighting line was greatly comforted by the arrival of
-the French Division already {328} mentioned, and the hearts of the
-British were warmed by the news that one of their own divisions had
-come within the zone of battle, as will now be described.
-
-When the Ninth Corps was sent to the Aisne, another very weary
-British division, the Nineteenth (Jeffreys), had also been told off
-for the French front with the same object of rest, and the same
-actual result of desperate service. So strenuous had the work of
-this division been upon the Somme and in Flanders, that the ranks
-were almost entirely composed of new drafts from England and Wales.
-Their destination was the Chalons front, where they remained for
-exactly twelve days before the urgent summons arrived from the
-breaking line on the Aisne, and they were hurried westwards to
-endeavour to retrieve or at least to minimise the disaster. They
-arrived on the morning of May 29, and found things in a most critical
-condition. The Germans had pushed far south of the Aisne, despite
-the continued resistance of the survivors of the Eighth,
-Twenty-fifth, and Fiftieth British Divisions, and of several French
-divisions, these débris of units being mixed up and confused, with a
-good deal of mutual recrimination, as is natural enough when men in
-overwrought conditions meet with misfortunes, the origin of which
-they cannot understand. When troops are actually mixed in this
-fashion, the difference in language becomes a very serious matter.
-Already the Allied line had been pushed far south of Fismes, and the
-position of the units engaged was very obscure to the Higher Command,
-but the British line, such as it was, was north of Savigny on the
-evening of May 28. Soissons had fallen, Rheims was in danger, and it
-was doubtful whether even the line of the Marne could {329} be held.
-Amid much chaos it must, indeed, have been with a sense of relief
-that the Allied generals found a disciplined and complete division
-come into the front, however young the material of which it was
-composed.
-
-A gap had opened in the line between the Thirteenth French Division
-at Lhery and the One hundred and fifty-fourth near Faverolles, and
-into this the 57th and 58th Brigades were thrust. The artillery had
-not yet come up, and the rest of the Allied artillery was already
-either lost or destroyed, so there was little support from the guns.
-It was a tough ordeal for boys fresh from the English and Welsh
-training camps. On the left were the 10th Worcesters and 8th
-Gloucesters. On the right the 9th Welsh Fusiliers and 9th Welsh. It
-was hoped to occupy Savigny and Brouillet, but both villages were
-found to be swarming with the enemy. Remains of the Eighth and
-Twenty-fifth Divisions were still, after three days of battle, with
-their faces to the foe on the right of the Nineteenth Division. They
-were very weary, however, and the 2nd Wiltshires were brought up to
-thicken the line and cover the divisional flank north of Bouleuse.
-This was the situation at 2 P.M. of May 29.
-
-The tide of battle was still rolling to the south, and first Savigny
-and then Faverolles were announced as being in German hands. A mixed
-force of odd units had been formed and placed under General
-Craigie-Hackett, but this now came back through the ranks of the
-Nineteenth Division. On the right also the hard-pressed and
-exhausted troops in front, both French and British, passed through
-the 2nd Wiltshires, and endeavoured to reform behind them. The
-Nineteenth Division from flank to flank became the {330} fighting
-front, and the Germans were seen pouring down in extended order from
-the high ground north of Lhery and of Treslon. On the right the
-remains of the Eighth Division had rallied, and it was now reinforced
-by the 2nd Wilts, the 4th Shropshire Light Infantry, and the 8th
-Staffords, the latter battalions from the 56th Brigade. With this
-welcome addition General Heneker, who had fought such a long uphill
-fight, was able in the evening of May 29 to form a stable line on the
-Bouleuse Ridge. By this time the guns of the Nineteenth Division,
-the 87th and 88th Brigades Royal Field Artillery, had roared into
-action--a welcome sound to the hard-pressed infantry in front. There
-was a solid British line now from Lhery on the left to the eastern
-end of the Bouleuse Ridge, save that one battalion of Senegal
-Tirailleurs was sandwiched in near Faverolles. Liaison had been
-established with the Thirteenth and One hundred and fifty-fourth
-French Divisions to left and right.
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: British Line on Chemin des Dames]
-
--------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-The early morning of May 30 witnessed a very violent attack along all
-this portion of the line. By 6 A.M. the enemy had worked round the
-left flank of the 10th Worcesters at Lhery, driving before them some
-of the troops, French and British, who were exhausted from the long
-battle. It is difficult for either writer or reader to imagine the
-condition of men who have fought a losing battle for three days
-without cessation. If Foch saved up his reserves during these weeks
-of agony, it was surely at a precious cost to the men who bore the
-weight. The left company of the 10th Worcesters lost all its
-officers and 60 per cent of its men, and Lhery had to be left to the
-enemy. Meanwhile, the Senegalese, who, like all tropical troops, are
-more formidable in attack than in defence, were {331} driven in near
-Faverolles, the Germans making a frontal attack in eight lines. They
-pushed through the gap, outflanked the 9th Welsh Fusiliers on the
-left and the 2nd Wiltshires on the right, cutting off a platoon of
-the former battalion. Both these battalions suffered very heavily,
-the Welsh Fusiliers especially being cut to pieces. At both ends of
-the line the remains of the front battalions had to fall back upon
-their supports. The 74th Composite Brigade, already referred to as
-being under General Craigie-Hackett, fought on the left of the
-Nineteenth Division, and was ordered to hold the Lhery-Rohigny Road.
-The pressure, however, upon these tired troops and upon the remains
-of the 10th Worcesters continued to be very great, and by 11 A.M. the
-situation was critical on the left of the line, the flank having been
-driven in, and the 8th Gloucesters enfiladed so that the D'Aulnay
-Wood could no longer be held. These changes enabled the Germans to
-close in upon the 9th Welsh and the remains of the 9th Welsh
-Fusiliers, attacking them in front and flank. The troops on their
-right gave way, and the assailants were then able to get round the
-other flank of these two devoted battalions, and practically to
-surround them, so that very few won their way back. The whole front
-line had gone with the exception of the 10th Warwicks on the left.
-For a time it seemed as if there was nothing to limit this powerful
-thrust of the enemy, but in the usual miraculous fashion a composite
-party of odds and ends, drawn from stragglers and details, hastily
-swept together by General Jeffreys, were hurried up to the high
-ground south of Ville-en-Tardenois. With the aid of four
-machine-guns from the Nineteenth Division this force {332} held the
-victorious enemy from coming further, covered the left flank of the
-10th Warwicks, and formed a bastion from which a new wall could be
-built. A second bastion had been made by the 5th South Wales
-Borderers, pioneers of the Nineteenth Division, who had dug in south
-of Rohigny and absolutely refused to shift. Up to 2 P.M. the 2nd
-Wilts also held their ground north of Bouleuse. Between these fixed
-points the 57th and 58th Brigades were able to reorganise, the 15th
-Warwicks and 9th Cheshires covering the respective fronts. On the
-right the Twenty-eighth French Division had relieved the One hundred
-and fifty-fourth, while the 4th Shropshires and 8th North Staffords,
-both still intact, formed a link between the two Allies. Touch had
-been lost on the left, and patrols were sent out to endeavour to
-bridge the gap. At this period General Jeffreys of the Nineteenth
-Division commanded the whole British line. A serious loss had been
-caused by the wounding of General Glasgow, the experienced leader of
-the 58th Brigade. General Heath of the 56th Brigade took over the
-command of both units.
-
-The Germans had reached their limit for the day, though some attempt
-at an attack was made in the afternoon from the wood of Aulnay, which
-was beaten back by the British fire. It was rumoured, however, that
-on the left, outside the British area, he was making progress south
-of Rohigny, which made General Jeffreys uneasy for his left wing. Up
-to now the British had been under the general command of the Ninth
-British Corps, but this was now withdrawn from the line, and the
-Nineteenth Division passed to the Fifth French Corps under General
-Pellé, an who left a most pleasant impression upon the {333} minds of
-all who had to deal with him. On May 31 the front consisted of the
-French Fortieth on the left, the French Twenty-eighth on the right,
-and the British Nineteenth between them, the latter covering 12,000
-yards. The weary men of the original divisions were drawn out into
-reserve after as severe an ordeal as any have endured during the
-whole war. The 74th Composite Brigade was also relieved. Some idea
-of the losses on the day before may be gathered from the fact that
-the two Welsh battalions were now formed into a single composite
-company, which was added to the 9th Cheshires.
-
-The morning of the 31st was occupied in a severe duel of artillery,
-in which serious losses were sustained from the German fire, but upon
-the other hand a threatened attack to the south-west of
-Ville-en-Tardenois was dispersed by the British guns. About two
-o'clock the enemy closed once more upon the left, striking hard at
-the 6th Cheshires, who had been left behind in this quarter when the
-rest of the 74th Composite Brigade had been relieved. The 10th
-Warwicks were also attacked, and the whole wing was pushed back, the
-enemy entering the village of Ville-en-Tardenois. The Warwicks
-formed up again on high ground south-east of the village, the line
-being continued by the remains of the 10th Worcesters and 8th
-Gloucesters. Whilst the left wing was driven in, the right was also
-fiercely attacked, the enemy swarming down in great numbers upon the
-French, and the 9th Cheshires. The former were driven off the
-Aubilly Ridge, and the latter had to give ground before the rush.
-
-General Jeffreys, who was on the spot, ordered an immediate
-counter-attack of the 2nd Wilts to retrieve {334} the situation.
-Before it could develop, however, the French were again advancing on
-the right, together with the 4th Shropshires. A local counter-attack
-had also been delivered by the 9th Cheshires, led on horseback with
-extreme gallantry by Colonel Cunninghame. His horse was shot under
-him, but he continued to lead the troops on foot, and his Cheshire
-infantry followed him with grim determination into their old
-positions. The ground was regained though the losses were heavy,
-Colonel Cunninghame being among the wounded.
-
-The attack of the 2nd Wiltshires had meanwhile been developed, and
-was launched under heavy fire about seven in the evening, moving up
-to the north of Chambrecy. The position was gained, the Wiltshires
-connecting up with the Cheshires on their right and the Gloucesters
-on their left. Meanwhile, advances of the enemy on the flank were
-broken up by artillery fire, the 87th and 88th Brigades of guns doing
-splendid work, and sweeping the heads of every advance from the
-Tardenois-Chambrecy Road. So ended another very severe day of
-battle. The buffer was acting and the advance was slowing. Already
-its limit seemed to be marked.
-
-On the morning of May 31 the British position extended from a line on
-the left connecting Ville-en-Tardenois and Champlat. Thence the 57th
-Brigade covered the ground up to the stream which runs from Sarcy to
-Chambrecy. Then the 56th Brigade began, and carried on to 1000 yards
-east of the river Ardres. The line of battalions (pitiful remnants
-for the most part) was from the left, 10th Warwicks, 10th Worcesters,
-8th Gloucesters, 2nd Wilts, 9th Cheshires, 8th Staffords, and 4th
-Shropshires. {335} Neither brigade could muster 1000 rifles, while
-the 58th Brigade in reserve was reduced to 350. The three sapper
-field companies, the personnel of the trench-mortar batteries, and
-every straggler who could be scraped up was thrust forward to thicken
-the line.
-
-The German attack was launched once more at 4 P.M. on June 1,
-striking up against the Fortieth French Division and the left of the
-British line. Under the weight of the assault the French were pushed
-back, and the enemy penetrated the Bonval Wood, crossed the
-Tardenois-Jonchery Road, and thrust their way into the woods of
-Courmont and La Cohette. Here, however, the attack was held, and the
-junction between the French and the Warwicks remained firm. The
-front of the 57th Brigade was attacked at the same time, the 8th
-Gloucesters and the 2nd Wilts on their right being very hard pressed.
-The enemy had got Sarcy village, which enabled them to get on the
-flank of the Gloucesters, and to penetrate between them and the
-Wiltshires. It was a very critical situation. The right company of
-the Gloucesters was enfiladed and rolled up, while the centre was in
-deadly danger. The left flank and the Worcesters held tight, but the
-rest of the line was being driven down the hill towards Chambrecy. A
-splendid rally was effected, however, by Captain Pope of B Company,
-who led his west countrymen up the hill once more, driving the enemy
-back to his original line. For this feat he received the D.S.O. At
-this most critical period of the action, great help was given to the
-British by the 2nd Battalion of the 22nd French Regiment, led in
-person by Commandant de Lasbourde, which joined in Pope's
-counter-attack, {336} afterwards relieving the remains of the
-Gloucester's. Lasbourde also received the D.S.O. The success of the
-attack was due partly to the steadiness of the 10th Worcesters on the
-left, who faced right and poured a cross-fire into the German
-stormers. It was a complete, dramatic little victory, by which the
-high ground north of Chambrecy was completely regained.
-
-A withdrawal of the whole line was, however, necessary on account of
-the German penetration into the left, which had brought them complete
-possession of the Wood of Courmont on the British left rear. The
-movement was commenced at seven in the evening, and was completed in
-most excellent order before midnight. This new line, stretching from
-Quisles to Eligny, included one very important position, the hill of
-Bligny, which was a prominence from which the enemy could gain
-observation and command over the whole valley of the Ardres, making
-all communications and battery positions precarious.
-
-The general order of units in the line on June 2 was much the same as
-before, the 5th South Wales Borderers being held in reserve on the
-left, and the 2/22nd French on the right of the Nineteenth Division.
-These positions were held unbroken from this date for a fortnight,
-when the division was eventually relieved after its most glorious
-term of service. The British Ninth Corps was busily engaged during
-this time in reorganising into composite battalions the worn and
-mixed fragments of the Eighth, Twenty-fifth, and Fiftieth Divisions,
-which were dribbled up as occasion served to the new battle-line. A
-composite machine-gun company was also organised and sent up.
-
-Several days of comparative quiet followed, during {337} which the
-sappers were strengthening the new positions, and the Germans were
-gathering fresh forces for a renewed attack. Congratulatory messages
-from General Franchet d'Esperey, the French Army Commander, and from
-their own Corps General put fresh heart into the overtaxed men.
-There was no fresh attack until June 6. On that date the line of
-defence from the left consisted of the Fortieth French Division, the
-Eighth Division Composite Battalion (could a phrase mean more than
-that?), the 10th Warwicks, 10th Worcesters, 8th Gloucesters, 58th
-Brigade Composite Battalion, 9th Cheshires, 8th North Staffords, 4th
-Shropshires, and Twenty-eighth French Division. At 3 A.M. there
-began a tremendous bombardment, mostly of gas-shell, which gave way
-to the infantry advance at 4 A.M., the attack striking the right and
-centre of the British line, in the section of the all-important
-Bligny Hill. As the enemy advanced upon the front of the 58th
-Composite Battalion, the men who were the survivors of the 2nd Wilts,
-9th Welsh Fusiliers, and 9th Welsh, fired a volley, and then, in a
-fashion which would have delighted the old Duke, sprang from their
-cover and charged with the bayonet, hurling the Germans down the
-slope. It was a complete repulse, as was a second attack upon the
-front of the Gloucesters and Worcesters who, with a similar
-suggestion of the legendary Peninsula tactics, waited till they could
-see their foemen's eyes before firing, with the result that the
-storming column simply vanished, flinging itself down in the long
-grass and hiding there till nightfall. There was no attack on the
-left of the line, but the 9th Cheshires and the North Staffords both
-had their share in the victory. The Twenty-eighth French {338}
-Division on the right had given a little before the storm, and the
-British line was bent back to keep touch. Otherwise it was
-absolutely intact, and the whole terrain in front of it was covered
-with German dead.
-
-The German is a determined fighter, however, and his generals well
-knew that without the command of Bligny Hill no further progress was
-possible for him in the general advance. Therefore they drew
-together all their strength and renewed the attack at 11 A.M. with
-such energy and determination that they gained the summit. An
-immediate counter by the 9th Cheshires, though most gallantly urged,
-was unable to restore the situation, but fortunately a battalion was
-at hand which had not lost so grievously in the previous fighting.
-This was the 4th Shropshires, which now charged up the hill,
-accompanied by the remains of the undefeated 9th Cheshires. The
-attack was delivered with magnificent dash and spirit, and it ended
-by the complete reconquest of the hill. For this feat the 4th
-Shropshires received as a battalion the rare and coveted distinction
-of the Croix de Guerre with the palm. This local success
-strengthened the hands of the French on the right, who were able in
-the late afternoon to come forward and to retake the village of
-Bligny. June 6 was a most successful day, and gave fresh assurance
-that the German advance was spent.
-
-There was no further close fighting in this neighbourhood up to June
-19, when the young soldiers of the Nineteenth and other divisions
-were withdrawn after a sustained effort which no veterans could have
-beaten. In the official report of General Pellé to his own Higher
-Command, there occurs the generous {339} sentence: "L'impression
-produite sur le moral des troupes françaises par la belle attitude de
-leurs alliés a ét très bonne." Both Allies experienced the
-difficulty of harmonising troops who act under different traditions
-and by different methods. At first these hindrances were very great,
-but with fuller knowledge they tended to disappear, and ended in
-complete mutual confidence, founded upon a long experience of loyalty
-and devotion to the common end.
-
-From this date until the end of June no event of importance affecting
-the British forces occurred upon the Western front. The German
-attack extended gradually in the Aisne district, until it had reached
-Montdidier, and it penetrated upon the front as far south as the
-forest of Villers-Cotteret, where it threatened the town of
-Compiègne. In the middle of June the German front was within forty
-miles of Paris, and a great gun specially constructed for the
-diabolical work was tossing huge shells at regular intervals into the
-crowded city. The bursting of one of these projectiles amidst the
-congregation of a church on a Sunday, with an appalling result in
-killed and wounded, was one of those incidents which Germans of the
-future will, we hope, regard with the same horror as the rest of the
-world did at the time.
-
-The cause of the Allies seemed at this hour to be at the very lowest.
-They had received severe if glorious defeats on the Somme, in
-Flanders, and on the Aisne. Their only success lay in putting limits
-to German victories. And yet with that deep prophetic instinct which
-is latent in the human mind, there was never a moment when they felt
-more assured of the ultimate victory, nor when the language of {340}
-their leaders was prouder and more firm. This general confidence was
-all the stranger, since we can see as we look back that the situation
-was on the face of it most desperate, and that those factors which
-were to alter it--the genius of Foch, the strength of his reserves,
-and the numbers and power of the American Army--were largely
-concealed from the public. In the midst of the gloom the one bright
-light shone from Italy, where, on June 17, a strong attack of the
-Austrians across the Piave was first held and then thrown back to the
-other bank. In this most timely victory Lord Cavan's force, which
-now consisted of three British Divisions, the Seventh, Twenty-third,
-and Forty-eighth, played a glorious part. So, at the close of the
-half year Fate's curtain rang down, to rise again upon the most
-dramatic change in history.
-
-
-
-
-{341}
-
-INDEX
-
-
-Ablainzeville, 32, 34, 35
-
-Acklom, Colonel, 112
-
-Aisne, British on the, 312-338
-
-Albert, 64, 65, 66, 69, 70, 73, 76, 199, 204, 205, 206, 207, 210
-
-Allenby, General Sir Edmund, 1
-
-Allgood, Brigadier-General, 43
-
-America, preparations by, 5
-
-Amiens, 65, 114, 135, 152, 213, 312
-
-Anderson, Colonel, V.C., 126
-
-Anderson-Morshead, Colonel, 323
-
-Anstey, Colonel, 135
-
-Armentières, 226, 227, 235, 238, 240, 248, 260
-
-Armin, General von, 249, 261, 303, 309
-
-Armitage, Colonel, 299
-
-Armstrong, Captain, 231
-
-Arras, 6, 42, 44, 199, 204
-
-Aveluy Wood, 204, 206, 207, 208, 209, 212
-
-Ayette, 34, 35, 36
-
-
-
-Bac St. Maur, 236, 238, 239, 241, 248, 249
-
-Bailey, Brigadier-General, 78, 203
-
-Bailleul, 44, 45, 257, 258, 259, 260, 262, 273, 278, 281, 282, 283,
-293
-
-Bainbridge, General Sir E., 50, 249, 273, 302, 312
-
-Baird, Brigadier-General, 273, 277
-
-Bambridge, Captain, 266
-
-Banham, Major, 132
-
-Bapaume, 56, 59, 60, 62
-
-Barisis, 80, 81, 105
-
-Barrett, Colonel Moulton, 40
-
-Beal, Lieutenant, 25
-
-Beaumetz, 50, 51, 55
-
-Beaumont Hamel, 64, 65, 67, 74, 141, 144, 153
-
-Beauvais, 156, 157, 158
-
-Bellingham, Brigadier-General, 139, 203
-
-Bell-Smyth, General, 195
-
-Below, General Otto von, 9
-
-Belton, Colonel, 143
-
-Bennett, Brigadier-General, 210, 272
-
-Bennett, Major (Cornwalls), 163
-
-Bennett, Major (Oxfords), 141
-
-Bernafoy Wood, 62, 122, 123, 124
-
-Berney, Dr., 45
-
-Berthelot, General, 323
-
-Bertie, Major, 163
-
-Bertincourt, 56, 58
-
-Bethell, Brigadier-General, 302
-
-Bethencourt, 122, 129, 159, 162, 163, 166, 187
-
-Biddle, Sergeant-Major, 297
-
-Bilton, Colonel, 162
-
-Blackall, Colonel, 52
-
-Blacklock, General, 148
-
-Bligny, 336, 337, 338
-
-Boehm, General von, 325
-
-Bois d'Aquenne, 214, 216, 218
-
-Boyd-Moss, Brigadier-General, 231
-
-Boyelles, 24, 37
-
-Braithwaite, General, 63, 64
-
-Bridgford, General, 26, 245
-
-British Armies, general disposition of, in March 1918, 5-7
-
-Buchoir, 171, 173
-
-Bucquoy, 63, 71, 74, 204, 212
-
-Bullecourt, 10, 16, 19
-
-Burt, Colonel, 182
-
-Bushell, Colonel, 185
-
-Bution, Lieutenant, 323
-
-Butler, General, 10, 81, 104, 106, 153, 177, 183, 189, 192, 212, 215
-
-Butler, Brigadier-General Leslie, 264
-
-Buverchy, 165, 166, 167, 168
-
-Byng, General Sir Julian, 6, 13, 41, 61
-
-
-
-Cachy, 213, 214, 215
-
-Cade, Colonel, 302
-
-Cailloux, 230, 233, 234
-
-California Plateau, 313, 315, 316, 319, 320
-
-Cambrai, 6, 10, 47, 48, 63, 80, 221
-
-Cameron, General, 254, 282, 302
-
-Campbell, General, 86, 88, 123, 249, 306, 312, 324
-
-Campbell, Brigadier-General, 31
-
-Canizy, 159, 161, 163, 164
-
-Cape, General, 148
-
-Carey, General, 142, 143, 144, 150
-
-Carter-Campbell, General, 47, 241
-
-Cator, General, 105, 111, 213, 214
-
-Cavan, General Lord, 340
-
-Cayley, General, 243
-
-Chalmers, Captain, 70
-
-Chambrecy, 334, 336
-
-Chandler, Captain, 92
-
-Chapel Hill, 86, 87, 88, 89, 92, 116
-
-Charlton, Colonel, 98
-
-Chauny, 182, 183, 188, 190, 192, 196
-
-Chemin des Dames, battle of, 312-338
-
-Clare, Captain, 321
-
-Clark, Major, 133
-
-Clarke, Colonel Stanley, 42
-
-Clemenceau, M., 6, 7, 284
-
-Clery, 118, 125
-
-Combe, Captain, 170
-
-Combles, 59, 120, 121
-
-Congreve, General, V.C., 10, 61, 80, 130, 142
-
-Contalmaison, 61, 62, 63, 123
-
-Contescourt, 103, 104
-
-Cope, Major, 323
-
-Cotton, Colonel, 163
-
-Cotton, Lieutenant, 195
-
-Cowper, General, 104
-
-Craig, ----, 219
-
-Craigie-Hackett, General, 329, 331
-
-Craonelle, 319, 320
-
-Craonne, 313, 315, 319
-
-Croisilles, 17, 18, 23
-
-Croix du Bac, 237, 239
-
-Cronin, Lieutenant, 37
-
-Cross, Lance-Corporal, 28
-
-Crossthwaite, Colonel, 107
-
-Crown Prince, the, 9
-
-Crozat Canal, 110, 111, 112, 177, 189
-
-Crozier, Brigadier-General, 31
-
-Cubbon, Major, 69
-
-Cubitt, Brigadier-General, 249, 253
-
-Cunningham, Lieutenant, 85
-
-Cunninghame, Colonel, 334
-
-Curling, Colonel, 191
-
-Currie, Brigadier-General, 307
-
-
-
-Da Costa, General, 227, 229
-
-Daly, General, 93, 131
-
-Dann, Colonel, 112
-
-Dawes, Colonel, 59
-
-Dawson, General, 120, 203
-
-Debeney, General, 214
-
-De Lisle, General, 227, 270, 311
-
-De Mitry, General, 299
-
-Demuin, 141, 142, 143, 144, 146, 148, 150
-
-Dennis, Captain, 108
-
-Dent, Lieutenant, 266
-
-Dernacourt, 75, 126, 204, 205, 210
-
-Dervicke-Jones, Colonel, 180, 181
-
-Deverell, General, 14, 293
-
-Diebold, General, 180
-
-Dimmer, Colonel, V.C., 99, 141
-
-Doignies, 49, 50
-
-Dougall, Captain, V.C., 251
-
-Downie, Colonel M'Alpine, 100
-
-Duchesne, General, 190
-
-Dudbridge, Lieutenant, 159
-
-Dugan, Brigadier-General, 132
-
-Duncan, Brigadier-General, 161
-
-
-
-Eardley-Wilmot, Colonel, 26
-
-Ecoust, 17, 19, 20
-
-Elstob, Colonel, 102
-
-Epehy, 88, 92
-
-Ervillers, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 59, 63
-
-Esmery-Hallon, 160, 161, 176
-
-Esperey, General Franchet d', 337
-
-Essigny, 80, 103, 104, 105, 106, 114, 116, 177
-
-Estaires, 229, 236, 240, 241, 242, 243, 244, 278
-
-Evans, Captain, 257
-
-
-
-Failes, Captain, 49
-
-Fanshawe, General Sir E. A., 10, 47
-
-Fayolle, General, 131
-
-Feetham, General, 118, 138, 147, 148, 203
-
-Fergusson, General Sir Charles, 10
-
-Festubert, 233, 234, 246, 293, 294, 296, 299
-
-Fins, 55, 57
-
-Fismes, 314, 318, 328
-
-Flesquières, 47, 49
-
-Fleurbaix, 226, 236, 238
-
-Foch, Marshal, 135, 203, 224, 325, 330, 340
-
-Forbes, Brigadier-General, 31
-
-Franks, General, 123, 125, 126
-
-Frelinghien, 238, 239
-
-Freyberg, Brigadier-General, 286
-
-Frières Wood, 178, 185, 186
-
-Frise, 130; 132
-
-
-
-Gauche Wood, 86, 87, 88
-
-Gavrelle, 41, 44
-
-German East Africa, operations in, 2
-
-Gibson, Colonel, 316, 317
-
-Girdwood, Brigadier-General, 36
-
-Givenchy, 226, 227, 228, 230, 246, 247, 258, 293, 294, 295
-
-Glasgow, Brigadier-General, 215, 249, 251, 332
-
-Goodman, Brigadier-General, 100
-
-Gore, Brigadier-General, 284
-
-Gorringe, General, 47, 53, 206, 209
-
-Gosling, Lieutenant, 297
-
-Gosset, Colonel, 148
-
-Gough, General Sir Hubert, 6, 9, 12, 80, 81, 114, 115, 142, 151, 200,
-202
-
-Grant, General, 115, 142
-
-Grant, ----, 133
-
-Green, Captain, 255
-
-Greenly, General, 106, 184, 192
-
-Gribble, Captain, V.C., 56
-
-Griffin, Brigadier-General, 50, 302
-
-Griffin, Colonel, 321
-
-Griffiths, Brigadier-General, 102, 253
-
-Grogan, Brigadier-General, 315, 322
-
-Gunner, Major F., 139
-
-Gunning, Captain, 183
-
-
-
-Haig, Field-Marshal Sir Douglas, 6, 122, 200, 203, 224, 261, 310, 311
-
-Haig, Brigadier-General, 322
-
-Haking, General, 227
-
-Haldane, General Sir Aylmer, 10, 13, 18, 22
-
-Hall, Lieutenant, 297
-
-Ham, 82, 101, 157, 159, 160, 161, 162, 163, 183, 203
-
-Hamilton-Gordon, General, 249, 312
-
-Hancock, Colonel, 140
-
-Handford, Captain, 297
-
-Hangard Wood, 210, 211, 213, 215, 219, 220
-
-Hangest, 173, 174
-
-Hargicourt, 93, 94
-
-Harman, General, 184, 190, 191
-
-Harper, General, 10, 47
-
-Harrop, Lieutenant, 165
-
-Harston, Brigade-Major, 299
-
-Hartigan, Major, 91, 92
-
-Harvey, Colonel, 142
-
-Haslett, Major, 319
-
-Havrincourt, 50, 54
-
-Haybittle, Captain, 110
-
-Hazebrouck, 237, 258, 263, 264, 270, 271
-
-Headlam, General, 123
-
-Heane, Brigadier-General, 271
-
-Heath, Brigadier-General, 250, 332
-
-Heneker, General, 98, 128, 135, 213, 312, 318, 320, 330
-
-Henin, 37, 40
-
-Henin Hill, 18, 22, 23, 24, 26, 52
-
-Hermies, 50, 51, 54
-
-Heudicourt, 88, 116
-
-Higginson, Brigadier-General, 107
-
-Hill, Colonel, 132
-
-Hilliard, Brigadier-General, 43
-
-Hindenburg Line, the, 6, 10
-
-Hoath, Colonel, 56
-
-Hodgson, Lieutenant, 256
-
-Hollebeke, 248, 249, 250
-
-Holnon Wood, 157
-
-Horn, Colonel, 73
-
-Hornby, General, 118
-
-Horne, General Sir H., 41, 227, 311
-
-Houthulst Forest, 6, 7, 227
-
-Howitt, Major, 158, 168
-
-Hull, General, 86, 90
-
-Humbert, General, 189
-
-Hunt, Colonel, 123
-
-Hurd, Corporal, 280
-
-Hutchinson, Colonel, 278
-
-Hutier, General von, 9
-
-
-
-Impey, Colonel, 68
-
-Ireland, Colonel, 91
-
-Italy, operations in, 4, 340
-
-
-
-Jackson, General, 227, 240, 312, 318
-
-Jackson, Brigadier-General, 140
-
-Jacob, General Sir C., 8
-
-Jacotin, Private, 268
-
-James, Colonel, 38
-
-Jeffreys, General, 53, 249, 250, 255, 274, 286, 290, 328, 331, 332,
-333
-
-Jeudwine, General Sir Hugh, 227
-
-Johnson, Major, 147
-
-Jones, Captain, V.C., 56
-
-Jussy, 178, 179, 181, 183, 184, 185
-
-
-
-Kelly, Captain, 183
-
-Kemmel, Mount, 283, 292, 299, 300, 301, 302, 304, 305
-
-Kemmel, village, 302, 306
-
-Kemp-Welch, Colonel, 280
-
-Kent, Colonel, 320
-
-Kerensky, 3
-
-Kidd, Lieutenant, 92
-
-
-
-La Bassée, 6
-
-La Fère, 8, 79, 111, 112, 114, 177
-
-Lagnicourt, 47, 49, 50
-
-Lamotte, 138, 141
-
-Large, Lieutenant, 323
-
-Lasbourde, Commandant de, D.S.O., 335, 336
-
-La Vacquerie, 79, 80
-
-Laventie, 227, 228, 235
-
-Lawford, General, 31
-
-Lawrie, General, 47, 53
-
-Lawson, Colonel, 158, 299
-
-Leatheart, Major, 318
-
-Lee, General, 105, 109, 153, 218
-
-Le Fleming, Colonel, 98
-
-Lenin, 3
-
-Lens, 6
-
-Le Plantin, 230, 231, 232, 295, 297, 298
-
-Le Quesnel, 169, 170, 173
-
-Le Quesnoy, 170
-
-Leslie, Brigadier-General, 271
-
-Lestrem, 240, 241, 243, 246
-
-Lettow Vorbeck, General, 2
-
-Le Verguier, 94, 95, 127
-
-Lewis, Lieutenant, 266
-
-Liancourt, 169, 170
-
-Libermont, 164, 165, 167, 168
-
-Loisne, 230, 232, 233, 295, 298
-
-Longueval, 69, 61
-
-Louverval, 49, 50
-
-Ludendorff, General, 8
-
-Lumsdon, Brigadier-General, 43
-
-Lys, battle of the: the Flanders front, 223-224; German hopes, 224;
-factors in favour of the Allies, 224-226; disaster to and retirement
-of Portuguese, 227-229; Fifty-fifth Division at Givenchy, 230-234;
-loss of the Lys, 235-246; German attack in the north, 249-256;
-British retreat, 256-257; general review of the situation, 258-259;
-loss of Armentières, 260; Sir Douglas Haig's "Win or Die" message to
-his armies, 261-262; 4th Guards Brigade at Hazebrouck, 263-270;
-arrival of First Australian Division, 270-273; loss of Neuve Eglise,
-275, 287-289; Nineteenth Division, 286-287, 289-293; enemy attack on
-First Division at Givenchy, 294-298; attack on and fall of Kemmel,
-300-304; battle of Ridge Wood, 306-309; review of month's fighting on
-Flanders front, 310-311
-
-
-
-M'Carter, Dr., 45
-
-M'Cullagh, Colonel, 45
-
-Macintosh, Captain, 287
-
-M'Intosh, Private, 46
-
-Mackenzie, General Colin, 98, 246, 299
-
-Maclachlan, Colonel, 159
-
-MacLeod, Colonel, 42
-
-M'Leod, Colonel, 116
-
-Maissemy, 80, 93, 94, 99, 100, 104, 114
-
-Maitland, Brigadier-General, 277, 307
-
-Malassise Farm, 91, 92
-
-Malcolm, General, 93, 203
-
-Mametz, 62, 63
-
-Marcelcave, 139, 143, 144, 148, 151, 204
-
-March, Corporal, 211
-
-Marden, General, 47, 307
-
-Maricourt, 62, 64, 123
-
-Marindin, Brigadier-General, 125
-
-Marshall, General, 2
-
-Martin, Brigadier-General, 97, 245, 315, 317
-
-Marwitz, General von, 9
-
-Massey, Captain, 323
-
-Maude, General Sir F. S., 2
-
-Maxse, General Sir Ivor, 10, 81, 98, 104, 156, 161, 175
-
-Mayne, Brigadier-General, 277, 308
-
-Meerling, Captain, 162
-
-Mezières, 146, 147, 175
-
-Mennessis, 178, 179
-
-Merris, 247, 264, 277
-
-Merville, 228, 240, 244, 245, 247, 258, 260, 277, 278
-
-Mesopotamia, operations in, 2
-
-Messines, 227, 248, 249, 250, 251, 252, 253, 254, 255, 256, 258, 260,
-293
-
-Meteren, 263, 272, 277, 278, 280, 281, 283, 293, 300
-
-Mitchell, Colonel, 43
-
-Monchy, 8, 10, 37
-
-Montauban, 62, 65, 123
-
-Montdidier, 196, 199, 339
-
-Moore, Colonel, 164
-
-Moreuil, 147, 148, 149, 151, 175, 199
-
-Mory, 26, 27, 28, 29
-
-Moyencourt, 164, 167
-
-Moyenneville, 30, 32, 33, 34
-
-
-
-Nesham, Major, 25
-
-Nesle, 161, 162, 163, 164, 167, 168, 169
-
-Neuf Berquin, 245, 247, 277
-
-Neuve Eglise, 260, 273, 274, 275, 276, 277, 283, 286, 287, 288, 289,
-290
-
-Neuville Vitasse, 37, 39, 40, 42
-
-Nicholson, General, 16, 235, 238, 239, 285
-
-Nieppe, 248, 256, 257, 265, 284
-
-Nollet, General, 152
-
-Noreuil, 182, 186
-
-Noreuille, 17, 19
-
-Noyon, 180, 191, 194, 195
-
-Nugent, General, 102
-
-
-
-Offoy, 162, 163
-
-O'Gowan, General Wanless, 26
-
-Oppy, 41, 44
-
-O'Sullivan, Sergeant, 28
-
-
-
-Pagan, Brigadier-General, 143, 299
-
-Paget, Brigade-Major, 135
-
-Palestine, operations in, 1, 2
-
-Parkes, Major, 290
-
-Passchendaele, 6
-
-Peirs, Colonel, 95
-
-Peizière, 88, 89
-
-Pellé, General, 180, 332, 338
-
-Pereira, General, 53
-
-Peronne, 98, 118, 122, 128
-
-Piave, Italian victory on the, 340
-
-Pinney, General, 262, 263, 273, 277, 278, 284, 307
-
-Pitman, General, 192, 195
-
-Ploegsteert, 253, 254, 255
-
-Plumer, General Sir Herbert, 8, 227, 254, 262, 293, 310
-
-Pœuilly, 96, 97, 127
-
-Polderhoek Château, 7
-
-Pollard, General, 126
-
-Ponsonby, General, 21, 31, 227
-
-Pope, Colonel, 98
-
-Pope, Captain, D.S.O., 335
-
-Portal, General, 195
-
-Porter, Captain, 150
-
-Poyntz, Brigadier-General, 100, 171
-
-Pozières, 62, 63, 64
-
-Prior, Colonel, 49
-
-Proctor, Captain, D.S.O., 97
-
-Pryce, Captain, V.C., 265, 269
-
-
-
-Quartermain, Lieutenant, 172
-
-Quast, General von, 226, 261
-
-
-
-Ransome, Colonel, 185
-
-Rawlinson, General Sir Henry, 8, 205
-
-Reade, Colonel, 303
-
-Reed, General, V.C., 38, 41, 42, 43
-
-Reedman, Brigadier-General, 264
-
-Rees, Brigadier-General, 96, 315, 316, 318, 319, 320
-
-Regiments:
-
-_Artillery_--
-
-Royal Field Artillery, 17, 59, 69, 90, 110, 123, 176, 178, 191, 251,
-266, 323, 330
-
-Royal Horse Artillery, 178, 191
-
-_Cavalry_--
-
-Royal Dragoons, 161, 191
-
-Scots Greys, 184, 187
-
-6th Lancers, 195
-
-12th Lancers, 160
-
-16th Lancers, 181, 195
-
-3rd Hussars, 110
-
-4th Hussars, 195
-
-11th Hussars, 96, 157
-
-20th Hussars, 187
-
-Northumberland Hussars, 191
-
-_Guards_--
-
-Coldstream, 265, 266, 268, 269
-
-Grenadier, 265, 268, 269
-
-Irish, 265, 266, 269
-
-_Infantry_--
-
-Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders, 25, 43, 100, 279, 283, 307, 309
-
-Bedford, 69, 101, 151, 168, 181, 184, 187, 194, 303, 307, 309
-
-Berkshire, 68, 99, 100, 107, 141, 151, 157, 187, 206, 214, 218, 321
-
-Black Watch, 42, 43, 246, 298
-
-Border, 305
-
-Buffs (East Kent), 67, 107, 108, 109, 185
-
-Cambridge, 134, 304
-
-Cameron Highlanders, 42, 43, 121
-
-Cheshire, 125, 251, 303, 332, 333, 334, 337, 338
-
-Devons, 135, 214, 322, 323
-
-Duke of Cornwall's, 163, 170
-
-Durham Light Infantry, 89, 124, 134, 135, 140, 146, 166, 216, 218,
-241, 242, 243, 244, 317, 327
-
-East Lancashire, 16, 93, 112, 214, 264, 321
-
-East Surrey, 27, 28, 98, 109, 110, 133, 185, 235
-
-East Yorkshire, 30, 31, 32, 34, 237, 264, 319
-
-Essex, 43, 69, 108, 187, 206, 220
-
-Gloucester, 50, 56, 143, 250, 251, 287, 290, 296, 297, 298, 299, 329,
-331, 333, 334, 335, 336, 337
-
-Gordon Highlanders, 37, 39, 42, 99, 157, 158, 246
-
-Hampshire, 43, 52, 294, 299
-
-Hertford, 117, 304
-
-Highland Light Infantry, 25, 36, 124, 126, 235, 237, 273, 274, 275,
-276, 277
-
-Inniskilling Fusiliers, 102, 103
-
-King's Liverpool, 22, 39, 40, 101, 160, 161, 170, 172, 231, 232, 233,
-234, 282, 283, 306, 307, 308, 309
-
-King's Own Royal Lancaster, 37, 38
-
-King's Own Scottish Borderers, 42, 43, 117, 119, 121, 301
-
-King's Royal Rifles, 7, 22, 105, 146, 149, 162, 164, 166, 167, 273,
-274, 275
-
-Lancashire Fusiliers, 36, 93, 94, 150, 232, 302
-
-Leicester, 19, 88, 89, 112, 306, 327
-
-Lincoln, 17, 19, 87, 88, 89, 90, 116, 327
-
-Liverpool Scottish, 231, 234
-
-1st Artists, 69
-
-London Rifle Brigade, 44
-
-1st London, 111, 180
-
-2nd London, 213
-
-3rd London, 111, 112, 181, 182
-
-4th London, 111, 112, 182, 213
-
-8th London (Post Office Rifles), 112, 180, 181, 182, 183
-
-10th London, 213
-
-15th London (Civil Service), 207, 208
-
-15th London (Queen's Westminsters), 44
-
-17th London, 53, 54
-
-18th London, 54, 57, 58
-
-19th London, 54, 58
-
-20th London, 58, 207, 208
-
-22nd London, 208, 209
-
-23rd London, 57, 207, 208
-
-24th London, 207, 211
-
-Manchester, 31, 35, 58, 93, 101, 102, 132, 159
-
-Middlesex, 27, 213, 235, 236, 237, 277, 283, 285, 307, 322
-
-Munster Fusiliers, 91
-
-Norfolk, 49, 69, 70
-
-Northampton, 69, 181, 187, 216, 322
-
-North Staffordshire, 19, 93, 98, 112, 126, 250, 251, 252, 292, 330,
-332, 334, 337
-
-Northumberland Fusiliers, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 24, 38, 39, 40, 89, 96,
-97, 112, 126, 127, 134, 136, 137, 146, 240, 241, 242, 243, 244, 245,
-247, 276, 284, 286, 316, 317, 318
-
-Oxford and Bucks, 56, 83, 84, 99, 141, 157
-
-Queen's (West Surrey), 67, 93, 95, 185, 278, 279, 280, 281, 282
-
-Rifle Brigade, 93, 149, 159, 162, 163, 166, 167, 214
-
-Royal Fusiliers, 7, 15, 22, 67, 68, 140, 151, 184, 187, 193, 194, 206
-
-Royal Irish Fusiliers, 161, 171, 191, 254
-
-Royal Irish Rifles, 102, 103, 254
-
-Royal Scots, 14, 15, 18, 24, 37, 42, 90, 100, 116, 117, 121, 124,
-125, 163, 239, 301
-
-Royal Scots Fusiliers, 20, 37, 40, 151, 235, 237, 277
-
-Royal West Kent, 67, 68, 93, 107, 187, 220
-
-Seaforth Highlanders, 43, 292
-
-Sherwood Foresters, 19, 125, 135, 214, 215, 287, 288, 289, 290, 291,
-292, 324
-
-Scottish Rifles, 42, 184, 271, 278, 281, 282, 308, 309
-
-Shropshire, 39, 40, 146, 251, 287, 289, 330, 332, 334, 337, 338
-
-Somerset Light Infantry, 105, 170, 294
-
-South Lancashire, 171, 231, 232
-
-South Staffordshire, 19, 52, 303
-
-South Wales Borderers, 251, 255, 257, 297, 332, 336
-
-Suffolk, 14, 16, 18, 23, 24, 26, 38, 69, 206, 235, 236, 238, 239
-
-Sussex, 68, 95, 125, 132, 184, 206, 304
-
-Warwick, 56, 169, 250, 251, 292, 331, 332, 333, 334, 335, 337
-
-Welsh, 28, 235, 236, 249, 253, 329, 331, 333, 337
-
-Welsh Fusiliers, 53, 54, 55, 57, 59, 209, 249, 290, 329, 331, 337
-
-West Lancashire, 227, 230
-
-West Riding, 71, 72, 282, 305
-
-West Yorkshire, 32, 33, 70, 72, 149, 213, 215, 255, 322
-
-Wiltshire, 55, 101, 253, 290, 302, 329, 330, 331, 332, 333, 334, 335,
-337
-
-Worcester, 50, 56, 99, 250, 273, 274, 275, 287, 290, 329, 330, 331,
-333, 334, 335, 336, 337
-
-York and Lancaster, 276, 305
-
-Yorkshire, 24, 98, 159, 166, 171, 235, 236, 237, 240, 241, 243, 307,
-317, 319, 320
-
-Yorkshire Light Infantry, 35, 71, 72, 266, 268, 269, 276
-
---------
-
-Entrenching Battalions, 96, 106, 107, 112, 140, 146, 166, 167, 177,
-179, 185, 189, 190, 194, 190
-
-Royal Army Medical Corps, 45, 77, 286
-
-Royal Engineers, 19, 23, 37, 67, 107, 135, 161, 186, 187, 237, 251,
-268, 277, 283, 286, 287, 302
-
-Royal Naval Division, 53, 58, 62, 63, 67, 206, 209
-
-_Overseas Forces_--
-
-Australians, 61, 64, 66, 71, 72, 75, 127, 150, 152, 153, 204, 205,
-206, 210, 212, 215, 216, 218, 220, 221, 222, 237, 259, 283, 269, 270,
-271, 272, 273, 280, 283, 284, 293, 300
-
-Canadians, 41, 121, 146, 149, 152, 153, 162, 167, 172, 184, 195, 204
-
-New Zealanders, 64, 65, 66, 72, 75, 204, 211, 212, 278, 281, 283
-
-South Africans, 86, 87, 88, 90, 116, 117, 119, 120, 121, 252, 255, 291
-
-
-
-Rheims, 316, 326, 328
-
-Ricardo, Brigadier-General, 102
-
-Richards, Lieutenant, 85
-
-Richardson, Colonel, 111
-
-Richardson, Lieutenant, 186
-
-Rickerby, Lieutenant, 159
-
-Rickman, Colonel, 34
-
-Riddell, Brigadier-General, 96, 97, 135, 244, 315, 317
-
-Ridge Wood, 305, 307, 308, 309
-
-Robecq, 246, 259, 260, 294
-
-Roberts, Colonel, 24
-
-Robertson, General, 47, 53
-
-Robertson, Colonel Forbes, V.C., 248
-
-Robinson, Colonel, 96, 137
-
-Rœux, 43
-
-Roisel, 94, 95
-
-Rollo, Colonel, 309
-
-Romer, General, 18, 281
-
-Ronssoy, 80, 90, 91, 93, 113
-
-Rosenthal, General, 210
-
-Rossignol Wood, 64, 71, 72, 74, 212
-
-Roumania, 3
-
-Rouvroy, 171, 172
-
-Roye, 167, 168, 170, 196
-
-Russell, General Sir A., 72
-
-Russia, events in, 3
-
-
-
-St. Emilie, 92, 117
-
-St. Leger, 24, 26, 29
-
-St. Pierre Vaast, 119, 121
-
-St. Quentin, 10, 98, 100, 156
-
-Sadleir-Jackson, Brigadier-General, 106, 194
-
-Sailly Saillisel, 58, 59, 119, 121, 122
-
-Saint, Colonel, 139
-
-Salonica, 2
-
-Scarpe River, 41, 43, 45
-
-Scott, General, 66
-
-Seely, General, 190
-
-Sensée River, 13, 14, 24
-
-Sharples, Driver, 279
-
-Shute, General, 35, 36
-
-Smith, Brigadier-General, 210
-
-Smith, Captain, 297
-
-Soissons, 316, 326, 328
-
-Sole, Colonel, 63, 290
-
-Solly-Flood, General, 31
-
-Somme, the second battle of the: effects of German and Austrian
-successes in Russia, 3; in Roumania, 3; in Italy, 4; disposition of
-the British Armies, 5-7; enemy preparations for the Great Offensive
-of March 21, 1918, 8-10; the German plan, 8; examination of the
-British positions, 10-12; general situation on 20th March, 12; attack
-on the Sixth Army Corps, 14; loss of Bullecourt, 16; Croisilles
-abandoned, 18; losses of the Fifty-ninth Division, 21; capture of
-Henin Hill by the enemy, 23; hard fighting by Fortieth Division, 25,
-27-31; East Yorkshires at Ervillers, 30-32; West Yorkshires at
-Moyenneville, 33-34; recapture of Ayette, 36; successful resistance
-before Arras, 37-43; German advance checked in the north, 44-45; work
-of the R.A.M.C., 45; of the Artillery, 46; attack on Sixth and
-Fifty-first Divisions, 48-53; attack on and retirement of the Fifth
-Corps, 53-57; continued German pressure, 57-63; fighting before
-Albert, 64-70; defence of Twelfth Division, 66-70; enemy advance
-stayed in this sector, 70; results of first week's fighting on Third
-Army front summarised, 76-77; losses of Third Army, 77-78; Fifth Army
-front on 21st March, 80; its fortifications, 81; position and number
-of reserves, 82; story of a redoubt, 83-85; attack upon the Seventh
-Corps, 86-92; on the Nineteenth Corps, 92-98; on the Eighteenth
-Corps, 98-104; on the Third Corps, 104-112; retreat of the Fifth
-Army, 113; the problem before General Gough, 113-115; his plans,
-115-116; the Seventh Corps, 116-127; destruction of the South African
-Brigade, 120; the Nineteenth Corps, 127-155; defence of the Somme,
-127-131; the East Surreys, 133; the Carey line, 142-145; General
-Feetham killed, 147; advance of Australians, 152-153; General Watts'
-achievement, 154; losses of Nineteenth Corps in the retreat, 154; the
-Eighteenth Corps, 156-176; defence of Beauvais by the Gloucesters,
-158-159; enemy capture Ham, 160; defence of Le Quesnoy, 170;
-experiences of Maxse's Eighteenth Corps summarised, 175-176; Third
-Corps, 177-203; Germans force the Crozat Canal line, 178-182; arrival
-of the French, 180; fight at Frières Wood, 186; loss of Noyon,
-194-195; losses of the Third Corps, 197; end of the retreat, 199;
-general observations and criticism, 199-203; losses of Fifth Army,
-21st to 28th March, 203; attack upon Albert, 205-209; fighting at
-Aveluy Wood, 207-209; Germans capture Villers-Bretonneux, 212-215;
-recapture by Australians and Eighth Division, 215-219; turn of the
-tide, 220
-
-Sorel, 88, 116, 117
-
-Stanley, Brigadier-General, 100, 101, 160
-
-Stansfeld, Brigadier-General, 287
-
-Steenwerck, 237, 239, 242, 245, 249, 254
-
-Stewart, Colonel (Leicester), 112
-
-Stewart, Colonel (South Staffs), 303
-
-Stockley, General, 94
-
-Stockwell, Brigadier-General, 232
-
-Stokes-Roberts, Colonel, 93
-
-Stone, Brigadier-General, 94
-
-Stoney, Colonel, 275
-
-Strazeele, 237, 272, 278, 281
-
-Strickland, General, 234, 293
-
-
-
-Tanner, Brigadier-General, 252
-
-Tanner, Rev. --, 275
-
-Temperley, Colonel, 242, 247, 316, 317
-
-Thompson, Captain, 135
-
-Thomson, Colonel, 319
-
-Thorne, Colonel, 112
-
-Topping, General, 286
-
-Tudor, General, 86, 249, 252, 291
-
-Tweedie, Colonel, 296
-
-Tweedy, Major, 317
-
-Tween, Major, 187
-
-Twiss, Colonel, 33, 34
-
-
-
-Vierhouck, 245, 247, 264
-
-Vieux Berquin, 247, 264, 266, 268, 271, 272, 280
-
-Ville-en-Tardenois, 331, 333, 334
-
-Villers-Bretonneux, 153, 155, 199, 212, 213, 215, 219, 220
-
-Vimy Ridge, 6
-
-
-
-Walker, General Sir Harold, 271
-
-Walker, Colonel, 132
-
-Wannan, Private, 46
-
-Warden, Colonel, D.S.O., 28
-
-Warre-Dymond, --, 133
-
-Watson, Colonel, 161, 309
-
-Watts, General Sir H., 10, 73, 80, 86, 92, 94, 129, 130, 131, 138,
-141, 142, 143, 144, 147, 149, 154
-
-Weedon, Sergeant, 269
-
-Wetherall, Brigadier-General, 83, 85, 157, 168
-
-Whelan, Lieutenant, 91, 92
-
-White, Brigadier-General Hon. R., 156, 157, 158, 203
-
-Whitham, Colonel, 218
-
-Whitworth, Major, 132
-
-Williams, General, 100
-
-Willock, Captain, 141
-
-Wingrove, Major, 289
-
-Witteycombe, Brigadier-General, 102
-
-Wood, Brigadier-General, 107
-
-Woods, Lieutenant, 24
-
-Worgan, Brigadier-General, 111, 180
-
-Wray, General, 238
-
-Wrenford, Colonel, 112
-
-Wright, Colonel, 137
-
-Wulverghem, 254, 256, 258
-
-Wyatt, General, 276
-
-Wytschaete, 248, 249, 252, 253, 254, 255, 256, 260, 291, 292, 293,
-299, 301, 303
-
-
-
-Young, Colonel, 120
-
-Ypres, 256, 306
-
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-_Printed in Great Britain by_ R. & R. CLARK, LIMITED, _Edinburgh_.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Map to illustrate the British Campaign in France and
-Flanders]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BRITISH CAMPAIGN IN FRANCE AND
-FLANDERS--JANUARY TO JULY 1918 ***
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