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The Somme

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The Wounded

 
 

The Attack

 
         

World War I |August 1914 | Recruitment | Sam Hughes | To England |To France | 2nd Battle of Ypres | Battle of St Julien | The Navel War | Festubert | Givenchy | Canadian Corps | The Air War | Newfoundland | The Somme | St Eloi Crater | Mount Sorrel | Hill 70 | Passchendaele | Vimy Ridge | Amiens | Cambrai | Mons | Flanders Fields | Victory

The Somme | Beaumont-Hamel | Canadian Corp | September Attack | Regina Trench

 

Battle: The Somme

July 1 - November 13, 1916

Campaign:  Western Front  
War: World War I 1914 - 1918
 
Where: Somme River Northwest France
Western Front
France
 
 

Opponents

Belligerents: Canada Germany
Britain  
France  
Australia  
New Zealand  
South Africa  
India  
Newfoundland  
 
Commanders:
 Douglas Haig
 Ferdinand Foch
Max von Gailwitz
Fritz von Below
Forces: 51 British Divisions, 48 French Divisions 50 Divisions
 
Result:

British Victory

 
Casualties: Canada & Allies Opponents
Casulaties - 620,000 Casulaties - 465,000 - 595,294
100 tanks lost  
782 planes  

By the Spring of 1916 the war had been grinding along for 22 months and the slaughter had only intensified along the Western Front. The British and French commands had determined that bigger and bigger forces were required to accomplish the huge knock out punch required to shatter the German lines along a narrow front and then exploit the hole created by pushing through cavalry forces to destroy the German communications and supplies behind their lines.
 

The build up for this planned attack was begun in December of 1915 when plans were laid for a joint Anglo/French attack along the Somme River in North Eastern France. This planning was disrupted when the Germans launched their attack on the French city of Verdun in February of 1916, which they knew would draw in enormous French forces to prevent it's fall. This drained most French forces that had been allotted for the Somme attack and essentially left the offensive in the hands of the British army and their commander Sir Douglas Haig.

The British pushed ahead with plans for the Somme offensive and built up huge stockpiles of munitions and supplies. The activity and the build-up indicated to the Germans that a big attack might be coming and they spent the spring repairing defences and building additional trenches, strong points and generally reinforcing the line. Before long they were firmly entrenched along the British sector and ready for the attack.

The problem for the offensive power on the Western Front during the First World War was that in order to smash the defensive positions that were well dug in, a massive bombardment would have to take place before the attack in order to soften up the defence. This could temporarily or partially dislodge the defenders but it also destroyed any suitable terrain that could be used to pass follow-up troops through to the breakthrough point. The road to complete victory was in essence destroyed by the tactics of achieving the first phase of that victory.

One of the novel techniques that the British forces employed for the Somme attack was to dig tunnels under the German lines and fill them with high explosives so that just as the attack was about to commence the tunnels could be blown up and a route right through the destroyed German lines created for the attackers. Unfortunately this tactic once again made the terrain almost impassable for the attackers as well as the defenders.

On July 1st 1916 at 7:30b AM the artillery barrage ceased and the whistles, which signified the beginning of the infantry attack, blew. A forty kilometre long line of men rose from the trenches and began a moderate march across no man's land which separated them from the German trenches and the attack was underway. The Germans had scrambled back into their defensive position and in most of the Northern British sectors they were waiting to mow down the Empire's finest soldiers. About 57,500 British troops were killed, wounded or missing on that first day of the attack.

In the Northern sector the 1st battalion of the Newfoundland regiment attacked into the teeth of withering German fire and within 30 minutes about 2/3's of the Newfoundlanders were causalities. The attack was to continue over the following weeks.

The middle of July brought in Byng's boys, which was a Canadian contingent, and like other reinforcements they were also thrown into the meat grinder and suffered over 2600 causalities.

The attacks went on until November by which time the Allies had suffered nearly 650,000 causalities. The muddy bloodbath of the Somme proved to be a moral defeat for the Germans but also an expensive lesson for the British, Canadian and French forces.

This was the first step for the Canadian units in their development of a unique Canadian identity and although they suffered 24,029 casualties, they had gained a reputation as tough shock troops.  The British Prime Minister David Lloyd George wrote "they played a part of such distinction that thenceforward they were marked out as storm troops; for the remainder of the war they were brought along to head the assault in one great battle after another. Whenever the Germans found the Canadian Corps coming into the line they prepared for the worst."

 

 
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