Английская Википедия:Gheluvelt Plateau actions, July–August 1917

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Шаблон:Use British English Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Infobox military conflict The Gheluvelt Plateau actions, July–August 1917 took place from 31 July to 27 August, during the Third Battle of Ypres (31 July – 10 November 1917) in Belgium, in the First World War. The British Fifth Army and the German 4th Army fought for possession of the plateau at the highest part of the ridges to the south-east, east and north-east of Ypres in West Flanders. The 4th Army had been building defensive positions in the Ypres Salient since 1915 and the Gheluvelt Plateau was the most fortified section of the front. The Fifth Army had made the plateau its main objective during the Battle of Pilckem Ridge (31 July – 2 August) but the II Corps advance was contained short of its objectives and German counter-attacks later recaptured some ground.

The ground had been churned by artillery-fire and beginning late on 31 July, torrential rains lasted until 5 August, turning the ground into a sea of mud and flooded shell craters. An attack by II Corps on 2 August, postponed to 10 August, led to the Capture of Westhoek but Inverness Copse, Glencorse Wood and Nonne Bosschen were re-captured by German counter-attacks. The German defensive success was costly even with new tactics and began to concern German commanders. In a dry spell, the Fifth Army attacked again at the Battle of Langemarck Шаблон:Nowrap but II Corps was again repulsed by counter-attacks of the German ground-holding divisions and their supporting Шаблон:Lang (specialist counter-attack) divisions. The Royal Flying Corps flew more battlefield reconnaissance and ground attack sorties but a German hasty counter-attack (Шаблон:Lang) overran a brigade of the 56th (1/1st London) Division, leaving British troops further north outflanked, forcing them to retreat.

On 22 August, the 14th (Light) Division captured Inverness Copse and then lost it to a German methodical counter-attack (Шаблон:Lang) on 24 August. A tank–infantry attack failed on 27 August, when the tanks bogged down and another attempt was cancelled on 31 August. The sodden ground hampered all movement, made tank operations almost impossible and smothered shell explosions. Low cloud and fog obstructed communication between the front line and rear, impeding liaison between British artillery and their observation aircraft. Despite considerable tactical refinements by the British, the German defenders, who had to endure the same exhausting and morale-sapping conditions, held on at Inverness Copse and Glencorse Wood. British morale fell so low that some men were taken prisoner without a fight; the Germans found them bitter over their failures but the success of the 4th Army was costly in casualties.

After 24 August, Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig, the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) commander, moved the Fifth Army–Second Army boundary again, this time northwards to the Ypres–Roulers railway and relieved II Corps with the I Anzac Corps and X Corps. After a three-week lull to improve communications, during which the rains stopped and the ground dried, the British captured much of the Plateau on 20 September, during the Battle of the Menin Road Ridge (20–26 September). In 1929, John Charteris, the BEF head of intelligence from 1915 to 1918, wrote contradictory remarks about the August climate in Flanders, which influenced later writers. The official historian, James Edmonds rebutted Charteris in 1948 and also criticised Gough, despite including much contrary evidence. In 1996, Prior and Wilson wrote that Gough had planned attritional "bite and hold" operations, rather than attempts to break through the German defences, contrary to claims by many other writers, including the official historian. Шаблон:TOC limit

Background

Topography

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Ypres is overlooked from the south-west by Kemmelberg (Kemmel Hill) and from the east by low hills running south-west to north-east, with Wytschaete (Wijtschate) and Hill 60 to the south of Verbrandenmolen (Шаблон:Coord), Hooge, Polygon Wood and Passchendaele (Passendale). Wytschaete is Шаблон:Cvt from Ypres, at Hollebeke the ridge is Шаблон:Cvt distant and recedes to Шаблон:Cvt distant at Polygon Wood. Wytschaete is the highest point, about Шаблон:Cvt above the plain; on the Ypres–Menin road at Hooge, the elevation is about Шаблон:Cvt and is Шаблон:Cvt at Passchendaele. The rises are slight, apart from the vicinity of Zonnebeke, which has a gradient of Шаблон:Nowrap From Hooge and to the east, the slope is Шаблон:Nowrap near Hollebeke, it is Шаблон:Nowrap height variations are subtle and resemble a saucer lip around the city. The main ridge has spurs sloping east and the spur at Wytschaete runs Шаблон:Cvt south-east to Messines, with a gentle slope to the east and a Шаблон:Nowrap to the west. Further south is the muddy valley of the Douve river, Ploegsteert Wood (Plugstreet to the British) and Hill 63. West of Messines Ridge is the parallel Wulverghem (Spanbroekmolen) Spur, with the Oosttaverne Spur, also parallel, further to the east. The general aspect south and east of Ypres is one of low ridges and dips, gradually flattening northwards beyond Passchendaele into a featureless plain.Шаблон:Sfn

Possession of the higher ground to the south and east of Ypres gave the Germans easy observation, plenty of opportunities for enfilade fire and converging artillery bombardments. The 4th Army could also move artillery, reinforcements, supplies and stores in dead ground. The ridge had woods from Wytschaete to Zonnebeke giving good cover, some being of notable size like Polygon Wood and those named Battle Wood, Shrewsbury Forest and Sanctuary Wood by the British. In 1914, the woods contained undergrowth but by 1917, artillery bombardments had reduced the woods to a wilderness of tree stumps, shattered tree trunks and barbed wire lying tangled on the ground amid shell-holes; fields between the woods were Шаблон:Cvt wide and devoid of cover. Roads in this area were unpaved, except for the main ones from Ypres, with occasional villages and houses along them. In 1914, the lowland west of the ridge had been a mixture of meadow and fields, with high hedgerows dotted with trees, cut by streams and ditches emptying into canals. The main road to Ypres from Poperinghe to Vlamertinge is in a defile, easily observed from the ridge.Шаблон:Sfn

Strategic developments

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Only two US divisions had arrived in France by late August but the mutinies in the French armies after the Nivelle Offensive had abated. The Second Battle of Verdun, in support of the offensive in Flanders, had been delayed from mid-July, which forfeited strategic surprise. German artillery frequently bombarded French positions with the new mustard gas and several spoiling attacks disrupted French preparations. On 20 August, the French attacked on an Шаблон:Cvt front and recaptured Mort Homme and Hill 304, taking Шаблон:Nowrap for the loss of Шаблон:Nowrap Шаблон:Nowrap them killed or missing.Шаблон:Sfnm The 5th Army was not able to deliver large counter-attacks, because its Шаблон:Lang divisions (Шаблон:Lang) had been transferred to Flanders; local operations continued into November.Шаблон:Sfn On the Eastern Front, the Kerensky Offensive Шаблон:Nowrap had been defeated by the Central Powers; the Russian armies began to disintegrate and Germany and Austria-Hungary were able to reinforce other fronts. In the south, the Italian army began the Eleventh Battle of the Isonzo on 17 August and captured the Bainsizza Plateau, leading the Austro-Hungarians to appeal for German help; a French offensive in Greece on the Salonika front was repulsed.Шаблон:Sfn

Tactical developments

Battle of Messines

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Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig, commander of the British Expeditionary Force intended to exploit success in the Second Army (General Herbert Plumer) attack on the Messines–Wytschaete Ridge on 7 June, by gaining a foothold on the Gheluvelt Plateau as a preliminary to the main offensive out of the Ypres Salient. Plumer planned for II Corps (Lieutenant-General Claud Jacob) and VIII Corps (Lieutenant-General Aylmer Hunter-Weston) to attack either side of Bellewaarde Lake, to capture the higher ground for Шаблон:Cvt west of a line from Stirling Castle Шаблон:Cvt northwards to Westhoek (West Corner). Plumer wanted three days to transfer Шаблон:Nowrap guns and howitzers northwards from Messines Ridge. On 6 June, the day before the Messines attack, the Fifth Army commander, General Hubert Gough, had told Haig that he preferred to wait until the Northern Operation, the main offensive out of the Ypres Salient or to have command of the II and VIII corps attack. On 8 June, both corps sent patrols forward which reported determined resistance, prompting Haig to ask Plumer to begin the attack at once. Plumer wanted to wait for the artillery to arrive and Haig transferred command of the II and VIII corps to the Fifth Army.Шаблон:Sfn

Haig ordered Gough to conduct a limited attack with the two corps but Gough reported that a success would put the British in a "very exposed and difficult salient" and that it would be better to conduct the attack with the main offensive. Шаблон:Lang (Field Marshal) Rupprecht, Crown Prince of Bavaria, the commander of Army Group Rupprecht of Bavaria (Шаблон:Lang) on the northern part of the Western Front, thought that the British success on 7 June foreshadowed an attack against the 4th Army to capture the higher ground between Gheluvelt and Zandvoorde in the north and Comines on the Lys (Leie) river, south of Messines Ridge. Rupprecht contemplated a retirement to a line from Werviq to Zandvoorde and Hooge as soon as the British attacked, then to retreat to the Шаблон:Lang, which had been built earlier in 1917. In late June, Rupprecht expected the British to conduct battering-ram attacks on narrow fronts, with overwhelming artillery-fire, to drive wedges into the defences of the 4th Army and deplete German reserves, preparatory to an advance out of the Ypres Salient on a broad front (Шаблон:Lang "breakthrough attack launched on a broad basis").Шаблон:Sfn

Peripheral operations

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Between the end of the Battle of Messines and the Battle of Pilckem Ridge at Ypres beginning on 31 July, operations against Lens and Lille were to be made by the First Army in late June. Offensive operations were planned near Gavrelle and Oppy, along the Souchez River against a German salient between Avion and the west end of Lens, the capture of Reservoir Hill (Hill 65) south of Lens and an attack by the Canadian Corps on Hill 70, at the northern outskirts of Lens. The attacks were conducted earlier than intended, to use heavy and siege artillery before it was transferred to Ypres; the Souchez operation was cut back and the attack on Hill 70 postponed.Шаблон:Sfn the Battle of Hill 70, Шаблон:Cvt south of Ypres, took place from 15 to 25 August. Three of the Canadian divisions captured the hill, inflicted many casualties on five divisions of the German 6th Army and pinned down troops reserved for the relief of tired divisions on the Flanders front.Шаблон:Sfn Шаблон:Lang (Lieutenant-General) Hermann von Kuhl, the chief of staff of Шаблон:Lang, wrote later that it was a costly defeat and wrecked the plan for relieving fought-out (exhausted) divisions from Flanders.Шаблон:Sfn

Prelude

German preparations

Fortifications

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The 4th Army (General Friedrich Bertram Sixt von Armin) was responsible for defence of the Western Front from Lille to the North Sea, which included the Ypres Salient. In early 1917, German corps had been renamed Шаблон:Lang based on a corps headquarters, with fresh divisions coming under command as tired ones were withdrawn, rather than the traditional permanent establishment of divisions. The IX Reserve Corps became Шаблон:Lang and held Шаблон:Cvt of the front south of the Menin road northwards, with three ground holding divisions (Шаблон:Lang) in the front line and three Шаблон:Lang (specialist counter-attack) divisions in reserve. The III Bavarian Corps was renamed Шаблон:Lang and held Шаблон:Cvt of front from the Menin road north to the Gheluvelt Plateau and Pilckem, with three Шаблон:Lang and two Шаблон:Lang divisions. The Шаблон:Lang divisions were kept out of sight behind the Menin and Passchendaele ridges. About Шаблон:Cvt further back were four more Шаблон:Lang divisions and Шаблон:Cvt beyond were another two divisions in army group reserve.Шаблон:Sfn

After the defeat of Шаблон:Lang at Messines in June, the Germans feared a British attack on the Bassevillebeek spur (Tower Hamlets to the British) beyond the north end of the ridge. Since early 1917, there had been three German defensive positions behind the front position. The Шаблон:Lang ran from Bixschoote in the north, southwards behind Pilckem Ridge and across the Gheluvelt Plateau. The Шаблон:Lang began at Langemarck, ran south to Gravenstafel then crossed the Gheluvelt Plateau to Zandvoorde to the east of Messines Ridge. The Шаблон:Lang (Flanders Position), built earlier in the year, ran along Passchendaele Ridge and across the Gheluvelt Plateau behind Polygon Wood, west of Becelaere, across the Menin road and south to the Lys river. Because of the flat ground and high water table, hundreds of pillboxes and blockhouses, rather than deep dugouts, had been built above ground and camouflaged with mud and turf. The many stone farmhouses dotted around had also been fortified; from two to forty men could be accommodated in the concrete and steel shelters, immune to anything smaller than a hit by an 8-inch shell.Шаблон:Sfnm

On 9 June, Rupprecht proposed a withdrawal to the Шаблон:Lang east of Messines; construction of defences had begun but were terminated on 14 June, after Colonel Fritz von Loßberg, the Chief of Staff of the 6th Army, had been swapped with Шаблон:Lang (Lieutenant-Colonel) Max Stapff, Chief of Staff of the 4th Army.Шаблон:Sfnm Loßberg rejected a withdrawal and ordered that the front line be held rigidly. The Шаблон:Lang, along Passchendaele Ridge east of the Шаблон:Lang, would become the Шаблон:Lang and a new Шаблон:Lang would branch off north of Passchendaele, run south through Terhand and west of Menin to the Lys. Construction of Шаблон:Lang from Moorslede to Westroosebeke, behind Passchendaele Ridge to Dadizeele and west of Menin on the Lys, was also begun. By July, the defences east of Ypres were the front position, the Шаблон:Lang (second position), Шаблон:Lang (third position), Шаблон:Lang (fourth position), Шаблон:Lang (fifth position) and Шаблон:Lang (sixth position, under construction).Шаблон:Sfn

Debate among the German commanders continued and on 25 June, Erich Ludendorff suggested that Шаблон:Lang be withdrawn to the Шаблон:Lang, leaving only outposts in the Шаблон:Lang. On 30 June, Kuhl suggested a withdrawal to Шаблон:Lang along Passchendaele Ridge, joining with the old front line near Langemarck to the north and Armentières in the south. A withdrawal would avoid a hasty retreat from Pilckem Ridge and force the British into a time-consuming redeployment. Loßberg disagreed, because the British would launch a broad front attack, making a local withdrawal pointless; the ground east of the Шаблон:Lang line was easy to defend, the Menin Road Ridge could be held and Pilckem Ridge deprived the British of ground observation over the Steenbeek valley, while German observation of the area from Passchendaele Ridge allowed infantry to be supported by observed artillery fire.Шаблон:Sfn

Infantry organisation

The 4th Army operation order for the defensive battle was issued on 27 June.Шаблон:Sfn The system of defence in depth began with a front system (first line) with breastworks Шаблон:Nowrap, about Шаблон:Cvt apart, garrisoned by the four companies of each front battalion, with listening-posts in no-man's-land. About Шаблон:Cvt behind these works was the forward battle zone (Шаблон:Lang) in front of the Шаблон:Lang (second position or artillery protective line [[[:Шаблон:Lang]]]). The support battalions comprised a Шаблон:Lang (security company) to hold strong-points and three Шаблон:Lang (storm troops) to counter-attack from the back of the Шаблон:Lang, half being based in the pillboxes of the Шаблон:Lang to provide a framework for the re-establishment of defence in depth, once an attack had been repulsed.Шаблон:Sfn Dispersed in front of the line were divisional Шаблон:Lang (Sharpshooter) machine-gun nests, called the Шаблон:Lang (strongpoint line). The Шаблон:Lang marked the front of the main battle zone (Шаблон:Lang) which was about Шаблон:Cvt deep, containing most of the field artillery of the front divisions, behind which was the Шаблон:Lang (third position); in its pillboxes the reserve battalions of the front-line regiments were held back for counter-attacks.Шаблон:Sfn

From the Шаблон:Lang back to Шаблон:Lang was a rearward battle zone (Шаблон:Lang) containing support and reserve assembly areas for the Шаблон:Lang divisions. The failures at Verdun in December 1916 and at Arras in April 1917, had given more importance to these areas, since the Шаблон:Lang had been overrun during both offensives and the garrisons lost. It was anticipated that the main defensive engagement would take place in the Шаблон:Lang, with the reserve regiments of the Шаблон:Lang (front divisions) and Шаблон:Lang divisions advancing against attackers who had been slowed and depleted by the forward garrisons,

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The leading regiment of an Шаблон:Lang division was to advance into the zone of the Шаблон:Lang, with its other two regiments moving forward in close support. Шаблон:Lang divisions were accommodated Шаблон:Cvt behind the front line and began their advance to assembly areas in the Шаблон:Lang, ready to intervene in the Шаблон:Lang with an instant-immediate counter-thrust (Шаблон:Lang).Шаблон:SfnШаблон:Sfn Loßberg rejected elastic defence as a tactic in Flanders, because there was little prospect of operational pauses between British attacks given that the British had so much artillery and ammunition. A trench garrison which retired, quickly became disorganised and could not counter-attack, losing the sector and leaving the flanks of neighbouring formations in the air. Loßberg ordered that the front line was to be fought for at all costs, with immediate counter-attacks to recapture lost sectors.Шаблон:Sfn

Front line troops were not expected to cling to shelters but leave them as soon as the battle began, moving forward and to the flanks, to avoid artillery-fire and to counter-attack. German infantry equipment had recently been improved by the arrival of Шаблон:Nowrap machine-guns (tactical equivalent of the British Lewis gun) per regiment. The Шаблон:Lang of eight men was augmented by a Шаблон:Nowrap crew of four men, to become a Шаблон:Lang, the Шаблон:Lang becoming a Шаблон:Lang. The extra fire power provided German infantry with more means for fire and manoeuvre tactics; Шаблон:Nowrap of the front line garrison were formed into Шаблон:Lang and the other Шаблон:Nowrap were concentrated in Шаблон:Lang, in the forward battle zone. The Шаблон:Lang contained Шаблон:Nowrap of the Шаблон:Lang and Шаблон:Lang in divisional reserve and the Шаблон:Lang division (composed of Шаблон:Lang formations), was based in the rear positions.Шаблон:Sfn

British preparations

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By mid-1917, plans for infantry attacks were determined by the artillery support that could be provided. Commanders planned attacks to create the conditions for success in the absence of voice communication and attacks were limited to the range of artillery covering fire. Infantry units were to follow a creeping barrage, pausing at intermediate objectives to reorganise behind standing barrages and then dig in on the final objective, behind a protective barrage. In February 1917, infantry units were organised and equipped on a standard pattern and trained to achieve their objectives so that each man knew what to do and the drills to follow in certain circumstances. SS 143 (Instructions for the training of Platoons for Offensive Action) prescribed a platoon organisation of four sections, the Lewis gun and rifle-grenade sections for firepower and the rifle and bombing sections for manoeuvre. The platoon was to seek opportunities for flank attacks and to use initiative rather than refer back for orders. The new infantry platoon organisation and training gave infantry the capacity to succeed despite casualties to officers and NCOs and sometimes after losing the creeping barrage.Шаблон:Sfn

Divisions organised attacks according to SS 135 (Instructions for the training of Platoons for Offensive Action) of December 1916. The pamphlet was derived from the experience of the Somme in 1916 for divisions to organise according to a common pattern and prescribed the siege warfare methods necessary for trench-to-trench attacks, the semi-open fighting, when defensive positions had been captured and open warfare techniques, for when the defence collapsed. All the sections of SS 135 addressed the problem of command when no voice communication existed by prescribing that a commander's intention must be communicated and that the infantry should make every effort to send back information by any means available, primarily by visual methods which needed specialist parties to advance with the infantry to set up relay stations, carrier pigeons, experimental wireless sets, power buzzers, signal lamps and runners, who were trained to use the terrain and know the trench systems for maximum protection.Шаблон:Sfn

Davidson memorandum

In late June, Brigadier-General John Davidson, the head of the Operations Branch, BG(O), at GHQ, wrote a memorandum criticising some aspects of the Fifth Army plan for "ambiguity as to what was meant by a step-by-step attack with limited objectives". Davidson advocated advances of no more than Шаблон:Cvt, to increase the concentration of British artillery and for operational pauses to repair roads and move artillery and ammunition forward.Шаблон:Sfn Destructive artillery fire on the smaller area of attack would be of correspondingly greater density and a closer objective would make a better jumping-off line for the next advance. The German tactic of immediate counter-attack (Шаблон:Lang) would be easier to defeat when the British infantry were organised and relatively fresh, the artillery was ready and communications established, rather than in an isolated position further forward. Davidson wrote that a series of such attacks would be needed, before the demoralisation of the defenders would make more ambitious tactics feasible.Шаблон:Sfn Gough replied to Davidson that the extent of the preparations for the attack justified a more optimistic plan,

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The Fifth Army plan emphasised that information should quickly be communicated back to headquarters and that troops should be independent within the plan, to achieve a high tempo of operations (the rate or rhythm of activity relative to the enemy) rather than lose time waiting for orders.Шаблон:Sfn On 27 June, Haig agreed to widen the II Corps frontage, to attack Tower Hamlets, a cluster of pillboxes at the top of the Bassevillebeek Spur opposite the right flank, which was an obvious base for a German counter-attack into the right flank of II Corps. Haig arranged through the Fifth Army HQ for II Corps to take over the 24th Division and artillery from the Second Army, extending the southern flank of the II Corps to the Klein Zillebeke–Zandvoorde road on 4 July.Шаблон:Efn After meeting with Gough and Plumer on 28 June, Haig endorsed the Fifth Army plan but emphasised that the main battle would be for the Gheluvelt Plateau and the plan should reflect this. An advance in the north should depend on the capture and consolidation of the plateau, after which an advance along the main ridge to Broodseinde could begin.Шаблон:Sfn

The Fifth Army Intelligence summary of 7 July described the elaborate defences on the Gheluvelt Plateau, noted that most new fortifications were being added to the plateau compared to the flanks and that much of the German artillery was placed to support the defenders on the plateau. The summary contained a prediction that the Germans would pivot on the Gheluvelt Plateau if they were pushed back over the Steenbeek further north. Summaries on 14, 17 and 21 July, reported that the German field artillery west of the Steenbeek had been withdrawn Шаблон:Cvt behind the front line and that the assembly areas for Шаблон:Lang divisions (Шаблон:Lang) were behind the Gheluvelt Plateau and Passchendaele Ridge.Шаблон:Sfn In the Fifth Army operation order issued on 27 June, the green line (third objective) was made the main objective, where a protective barrage would fall for one hour after the infantry were scheduled to arrive. After the protective barrage finished, patrols of fresh troops were to move forward to reconnoitre and occupy tactically valuable ground not occupied by the Germans, up to the fourth objective (red line).Шаблон:Sfn

II Corps plan

The II Corps was to advance successively on a Шаблон:Cvt front to the blue, black and green objective lines, about Шаблон:Cvt forward. The objectives were just beyond the German front system, the Шаблон:Lang (second line) and the Шаблон:Lang (third line), at any of which a halt could be called.Шаблон:Sfn The green line was Шаблон:Cvt ahead on the right flank of the 24th Division at Klein Zillibeke in the south, to Шаблон:Cvt along the Ypres–Roulers railway, the left flank of the 8th Division (Major-General William Heneker) in the north.Шаблон:Sfn Local advances could be made towards the red line (fourth objective) Шаблон:Cvt further on, by patrols from the reserve brigades at the discretion of divisional commanders, depending on the state of the German defenders beyond the green line.Шаблон:Sfn The preliminary bombardment was intended to destroy German strong-points and trenches, cut barbed wire and counter-battery fire was to suppress German artillery during the attack. The infantry would advance behind a creeping barrage moving at Шаблон:Cvt every four minutes, followed by infantry in columns or artillery formation.Шаблон:Sfn The II Tank Brigade, Tank Corps was to attack the plateau with Шаблон:Nowrap followed by Шаблон:Nowrap attack the third objective and eight more to advance on the fourth objective with four supply tanks following.Шаблон:Sfn

The wreckage of the woods on the plateau camouflaged many German strongpoints (including 23 pillboxes still undamaged between the front line and the Шаблон:Lang on 31 July) and barbed-wire obstacles, which were hard to detect by air reconnaissance, which was also limited by poor weather during July. Much of the German field artillery on the plateau was hidden in the remains of the woods or behind the plateau, safe from ground observation.Шаблон:Sfn II Corps was to attack with three divisions, one with an attached brigade, supported by about Шаблон:Nowrap of the Fifth Army artillery and the guns of X Corps, Second Army to the south. The Germans were expected to counter-attack quickly on the plateau, given the vital importance of its commanding ground to both sides.Шаблон:Sfnm The 22 July operation order for the 8th Division specified that "if the opportunity arises", an attempt would be made to advance to the red line along the Broodseinde Ridge. The 25th Brigade, with the Шаблон:Nowrap of C Company, A Tank Battalion, was to conduct the attack from the black to the green line and if successful, an infantry battalion, the surviving tanks and B Squadron of the 1/1st Yorkshire Dragoons were to advance on the red line. The rest of the division was in corps reserve, ready to advance beyond the red line if needed.Шаблон:Sfn Beyond the red line were the Шаблон:Lang and Шаблон:Lang (positions), except for a mile of Шаблон:Lang south of Broodseinde.Шаблон:Sfn

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On 10 July, Heneker wrote that the 8th Division attack depended on the success of the 30th Division (Major-General Weir de Lancey Williams) on the right (south). If the 30th Division failed to reach its objectives, an advance by the 8th Division beyond the second objective would be vulnerable to enfilade fire from Stirling Castle north to Polygon Wood. The 30th Division had the most difficult task in II Corps, yet had not recovered from its losses earlier in the year. Too late, GHQ suggested using a fresher division but to reduce the burden, two battalions of the 89th Brigade and two of the 53rd Brigade of the 18th (Eastern) Division were added the 30th Division. The extra battalions were to advance from the second to the third objective, with the 54th Brigade ready to continue the advance if the third objective fell. On 29 July, Williams told the Fifth Army HQ that a creeping barrage at Шаблон:Cvt a minute was too fast for the tangles of undergrowth and wrecked woods of the ridges and Gheluvelt Plateau and next day, Williams suggested that the creeper should be slowed to Шаблон:Cvt per minute but was over-ruled because it was too late to change the barrage plan.Шаблон:Sfnm

Battle

31 July

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Weather
31 July – 15 August 1917Шаблон:Sfn
Date Rain
mm
°F
31 21.7 69 dull
1 21.5 59
2 5.3 59
3 9.9 59
4 4.9 66 dull
5 0.0 73 fine
6 0.1 71 fine
7 0.0 69 dull
8 10.2 71 dull
9 0.2 68 fine
10 1.5 69 fine
11 4.4 69 dull
12 1.7 72 dull
13 0.0 67 dull
14 18.1 79
15 7.8 65 dull

The II Corps attack began at Шаблон:Nowrap to coincide with dawn but low cloud meant that it was still dark.Шаблон:Sfn II Corps faced Reserve Infantry Regiment 82 on the right flank of the 22nd Reserve Division from Klein Zillebeke to Lower Star Post in Shrewsbury Forest, the 6th Bavarian Reserve Division from Lower Star Post northwards to Westhoek and Infantry Regiment 95 of the 38th Division from Westhoek to the Ypres–Roulers railway. The 6th Bavarian Reserve Division had been in the front line since 15 July and had suffered many casualties during the British bombardment and began to be relieved by the 52nd Reserve Division on the night of Шаблон:Nowrap The outpost garrisons of Bavarian Reserve Infantry Шаблон:Nowrap either side of the Menin road at Hooge, had been reduced by half against the risk of mine explosions, after the disaster on 7 June during the Battle of Messines. Troops holding the front line were slowly to retire to the second line when attacked and Шаблон:Lang were to close up to their assembly areas on receipt of simple code words like Шаблон:Lang and Шаблон:Lang, ready to advance and conduct Шаблон:Lang (instant-immediate counter-attacks).Шаблон:Sfnm

All three brigades of the 24th Division attacked to create a defensive flank along the south-west of the Gheluvelt Plateau, across the dip of the Bassevillebeek stream from south of the Klein Zillebeke–Zandvoorde road in the east to the Menin road on the west. On the right flank, the 17th Brigade achieved its objective Шаблон:Cvt east of Klein Zillebeke and gained touch with X Corps of the Second Army. The 73rd Brigade, in the centre, had to advance through Shrewsbury Forest but was stopped by fire from German pillboxes at Lower Star Post, on a slight rise in the middle of a clearing. The German garrison held out supported by covering fire from machine-gun posts further back; the 73rd Brigade advance was stopped and the 17th Brigade was forced to retire to a line about Шаблон:Cvt short of the second objective. The 72nd Brigade on the left flank reached the Bassevillebeek stream below the Bassevillebeek (Tower Hamlets) Spur but was fired on from Dumbarton Wood on the left flank and withdrew to a line south from Bodmin Copse, several hundred yards short of the first objective. (Torrential rain fell during the night and troops of the 73rd Brigade discovered that the Germans had retired from Lower Star Post and occupied the position early on 1 August.)Шаблон:Sfn

The 21st Brigade on the right could not emerge from assembly dugouts on time because of a German bombardment and reached the start line after the barrage had begun to creep forward. The infantry were overburdened and the two leading battalions failed to catch up through the wreckage of tree stumps shell craters and barbed wire in Sanctuary Wood. As the British reached the eastern edge of the wood they were engaged by German machine-gunners in pillboxes on Stirling Castle Ridge Шаблон:Cvt further on. a slow and costly advance began across the devastated ground and the support battalions, which should have advanced to the second objective, also became involved in the attack, which took until Шаблон:Nowrap to capture the ridge, Шаблон:Nowrap being captured in the remains of the castle. By the time the ridge was captured, the creeping barrage was on the far side of the Bassevillebeek valley and all attempts to advance down the forward slope were costly failures in the face of German machine-gun fire from camouflaged emplacements on the far side. The brigade dug in roughly on the first objective from Bodmin Copse north to Stirling Castle.Шаблон:Sfn

On the left flank, the 90th Brigade made a slow advance in the dark, the left flank battalion veering northwards into Château Wood and reporting mistakenly that it had captured its objectives in Glencorse Wood. The rest of the brigade was unable to advance beyond the first objective, against German machine-gun fire from pillboxes around the Шаблон:Lang at the narrowest part of the plateau between Inverness Copse and Glencorse Wood. At Шаблон:Nowrap the German artillery began to bombard Sanctuary and Château woods, which cut communications with the rear. Telephone lines were cut, wireless sets were damaged, power buzzers were useless in the wet ground and the bad light made visual signalling very difficult. A messenger pigeon released at Шаблон:Nowrap with a situation report and one at and Шаблон:Nowrap requesting that the barrage be brought back to the first objective, failed to return. At Шаблон:Nowrap an aircraft on contact patrol had reported that it received small-arms fire from Inverness Copse and that no British troops could be seen. Runners took hours to traverse the heavy going and it took until Шаблон:Nowrap for reports to arrive. The creeping barrage had begun to move from the second to the third objective at Шаблон:Nowrap and thirty minutes later, Williams reported to II Corps HQ that the infantry were held up on the first objective.Шаблон:Sfn

By Шаблон:NowrapWilliams suspected that the advance had stalled and Lee managed to cancel the advance of the 54th Brigade from the third to the fourth objective but two 89th Brigade battalions and two 53rd Brigade battalions from the 18th (Eastern) Division, which should have made the advance from the second to the third objective, had already advanced. The four battalions were slowed by the barrage on Sanctuary Wood and reached the first objective at Шаблон:Nowrap having suffered casualties crossing the wood. The creeping barrage had already reached the third objective and attempts to press on without the barrage down the forward slope of the Bassevillebeek valley and the neck of the plateau further north, failed. The British infantry became so mixed up that troops from eight battalions ended up in dug outs on the Menin road at Clapham Junction. On the left flank, a costly advance for Шаблон:Cvt was achieved south of Westhoek and then prevented from continuing by machine-gun fire from Glencorse Wood.Шаблон:Sfn

The support battalion of Reserve Infantry Regiment 239 had sheltered in a tunnel west of Inverness Copse and then blew it when the British attack began. The reserve battalion moved forward from Becelaere to Inverness Copse at Шаблон:Nowrap to recapture the high ground at Stirling Castle but was prevented from advancing beyond the second line by British artillery and machine-gun fire.Шаблон:Sfn The Germans opposite the 30th Division on the Menin road and on the far side of the Bassevillebeek stream, conducted Шаблон:Lang (instant counter-attacks) which failed but the three Шаблон:Lang of Шаблон:Lang were not called on, since the British were well short of the second objective. Communication between Шаблон:Lang and Шаблон:Lang was just as prone to failure as that of the British, which made counter-attacks extremely difficult to co-ordinate.Шаблон:Sfn Williams ordered an attack at Шаблон:Nowrap but an hour earlier, II Corps had ordered that the ground gained should be consolidated and the attack was cancelled.Шаблон:Sfn

In the 8th Division advance towards Westhoek, Bellewaarde Lake was taken by a converging attack along the spurs either side, while the banks were bombarded by mortars firing thermite bombs. As the troops advanced further, through the obstacles of Château Wood, they struggled to keep up with the creeping barrage to the first objective, the east side of Bellewaarde Ridge. The objective was captured in time for the support battalions to follow the barrage to the second objective and they arrived at Шаблон:Nowrap The second objective was on a forward slope and the troops there were soon engaged by German machine-gunners Шаблон:Cvt away on the far side of the Hanebeek valley and from Glencorse Wood on the right flank. The new front line could not be held south of Westhoek and the 24th Brigade and the right flank of the 23rd Brigade fell back about Шаблон:Cvt behind Westhoek Ridge.Шаблон:Sfn The 25th Brigade moved forward to Westhoek Ridge ready for the advance to the third objective at Шаблон:Nowrap but after moving forward several hundred yards the troops were caught in cross-fire from the machine-guns across the Hanebeek and from Glencorse Wood and fell back to the start line, the infantry on the right flank gaining touch with the 30th Division Шаблон:Cvt south of Westhoek. The line of shell-holes was held with great difficulty against massed small-arms fire.Шаблон:SfnШаблон:Efn By Шаблон:Nowrap the attack by II Corps had been stopped and Jacob reported this to the Fifth Army HQ. Determined German counter-attacks by a battalion of Reserve Infantry Regiment 41 and by Infantry Regiment 95 to recapture Westhoek Ridge, were made at Шаблон:Nowrap The Germans gained a footing before the 25th Brigade recaptured the ground and was then withdrawn behind Bellewaarde Ridge in immediate reserve, with the 23rd and 24th brigades holding the new line.Шаблон:Sfn The infantry of the German 38th Division had conducted well-timed counter-attacks, in accord with the latest thinking about tactical manoeuvre.Шаблон:Sfn

Air operations

Шаблон:See also

Файл:Sopwith Triplane (27389566584).jpg
Шаблон:Centre

Operations by the Royal Flying Corps (RFC) to deprive the Germans of air observation over the attack front had been curtailed because of the poor weather on 29 and 30 July. On 31 July, dull weather and cloud at Шаблон:Cvt stopped the air operation planned in support of the ground offensive. The RFC managed Шаблон:Nowrap sorties by aircraft from corps squadrons, giving some information about the progress of the ground battle and observers reported that the infantry had failed to light flares when called on. Pilots flew lower to see the uniforms of the troops and Шаблон:Nowrap the aircraft returned with damage from by bullets and shells. After taking such risks, some of the reconnaissance reports dropped at special reporting centres did not arrive at corps HQs but other reports were acted on, promptly to alter the bombardment.Шаблон:Sfn

Small numbers of aircraft from army squadrons were sent out to seek targets of opportunity and had some local effect.Шаблон:SfnШаблон:Efn Troops marching along roads, in villages and woods, supply columns, staff cars, machine-gun nests, artillery batteries and aircraft caught in the open on airfields were strafed from very low altitude.Шаблон:Sfn The Шаблон:Lang made a maximum effort despite the weather and its airmen were able to report the position of the front line, also descending to identify soldiers' uniforms. Aircraft attacked British troops on the battlefield and reconnaissance aircrews saw that British reserves were not moving forward but poor light made photographic reconnaissance impossible. Despite visibility being fewer than Шаблон:Cvt, German balloons were sent up until rained off in the afternoon.Шаблон:Sfn

Tank operations

Файл:British Gun Carrier Mark I - 60 pdr.jpg
Шаблон:Centre

The advance of the tanks was hampered by the decision not to conduct a preliminary attack to capture the ground east of Sanctuary Wood and the woods nearby, for tank assembly areas. The 30th Division failed to capture a huge blockhouse to the north-east of Clapham Junction, from which the Germans commanded the Menin road to Hooge. Several attempts to destroy it with heavy artillery had failed and as tanks drove down the Menin road, Шаблон:Nowrap hit by an anti-tank gun in the blockhouse. The first wave of Шаблон:Nowrap were late and were reduced to Шаблон:Nowrap trying to drive between the woods, four being hit near Hooge by anti-tank guns. The third objective was to be captured with the help of Шаблон:Nowrap in the second wave but only Шаблон:Nowrap forward.Шаблон:Sfn

Some tanks drove along the edges of Dumbarton Wood, Inverness Copse and Glencorse Wood, destroyed machine-gun nests and dispersed German troops assembling to counter-attack. The tank crews could not hit camouflaged, low, concrete emplacements built with ground-level loopholes, through which the German machine-gunners fired and forced the British infantry to ground. Eight tanks to attack the fourth objective were in the third echelon but only one tank got into action, joining in the fighting between the first and second objectives. Of the Шаблон:Nowrap tanks attached to II Corps, Шаблон:Nowrap or broke down and Шаблон:Nowrap into action and caused the Germans many casualties but all were knocked out that day.Шаблон:Sfn (Gun Carrier Mark Is, the first self-propelled artillery could carry a 60-pounder gun or a 6-inch howitzer and made their début on 31 July.)Шаблон:Sfn

1–9 August

After II Corps reported that it was close to the second objective, Gough ordered another attack on 2 August and then altered the order, to make certain that the second objective had been captured before the Fifth Army attacked again. On 1 August, Davidson recommended that the attack by II Corps should not be rushed but start after two to three days of clear weather, to exploit the observation points and the two maps captured on 31 July. The maps showed the positions of camouflaged pillboxes and Davidson argued that fresh divisions should be used because it was vital for II Corps to secure the Gheluvelt Plateau. The Fifth Army corps commanders agreed that taking the area from Inverness Copse to Westhoek would not be enough because the priority given to the defence of the plateau by the German 4th Army, meant that a big counter-attack to restore the front line must be expected.Шаблон:Sfn On the evening of 31 July, Rupprecht had made a diary entry,

Шаблон:Blockquote

Шаблон:Lang (sic) announced that

Шаблон:Blockquote

The German commanders were anxious about the effect on German infantry of the fighting in Flanders but troops transferred to the 4th Army had been trained in the new defensive tactics developed in 1916 and revised after the Battle of Arras. Divisions arriving in Flanders were confident that their training, equipment and tactics could defeat the Allies.Шаблон:Sfn

The rain that began on 31 July continued for three days and turned the ground into a morass about Шаблон:Cvt wide behind the new British front line. The banks of streams had been smashed by artillery-fire and became bogs with few places to cross, all of whom were easily visible to the Germans and frequently bombarded, especially on the Gheluvelt Plateau. The consolidation of captured ground was retarded and troops who deviated from the tracks could drown. Roads were covered in mud, full of shell craters Шаблон:Cvt deep and the conditions exhausted rapidly the infantry of both sides.Шаблон:Sfn

On 2 August, Gough agreed that tanks would not be used again until a dry spell and on 2 August, the resumption of the offensive was postponed. On 4 August it stopped raining and 5 August was dull, stormy and sunless, with no drying wind and yet more rain forecast. On 3 August, Rupprecht wrote in his diary that German troops were quickly being exhausted by the conditions and divisions had suffered about Шаблон:Nowrap during a period in the line, unlike on the Somme in 1916, when 14-day tours had cost divisions an average wastage of Шаблон:Nowrap Shorter periods in the front line enabled troops to recover faster but the frequent British gas bombardments made it difficult to get supplies forward; carrying parties of the 6th Bavarian Reserve Division had suffered Шаблон:Nowrap casualties.Шаблон:Sfn The Fifth Army HQ set 9 August for the II Corps attack and 13 August for the main offensive; the weather remained dull and misty until the evening of 8 August, when thunder and heavy rain again reduced the battlefront to a swamp; the attack was put back to Шаблон:Nowrap on 10 August.Шаблон:Sfn

Capture of Westhoek

Шаблон:See also

Файл:German pillbox, Flanders 1917.jpg
Шаблон:Centre

The power of the German artillery behind the Gheluvelt Plateau after 31 July was undiminished and a continuous bombardment fell on the front line and rear areas of II Corps. The counter-battery artillery of the Fifth Army fired on German artillery positions along the width of the army front, ready for the general attack due after the II Corps operation on the Gheluvelt Plateau. The British guns often bombarded the wrong artillery positions because of a lack of air reconnaissance to track the moves of German artillery from one artillery position to another in the bad weather. The British failed to achieve artillery superiority over the German artillery behind the plateau, which made the completion of new battery positions a long and costly effort that took until 8 August. Casualties in men and guns were so high that on 4 August, many British batteries were reduced to half strength. The state of the ground was so bad that gunners had to live in shell holes. New plank roads to carry ammunition forward could easily be seen by German artillery observers and wagon drivers and carrying parties moved only at night, dodging German bombardments which frequently included mustard gas. Amidst the rain and mud, the delivery of supplies and the passage of troops across the beaten zone extremely dangerous and caused a constant drain of casualties.Шаблон:Sfn

The 8th Division was replaced by the 7th and 75th brigades of the 25th Division from Шаблон:Nowrap which were then relieved by the 74th Brigade, troops in the front line being replaced every 48 hours.Шаблон:Sfn The 30th Division was relieved by the 55th and 54th brigades of the 18th (Eastern) Division on 4 August. The 24th Division, not due to attack, remained in the line and took over the front northwards close to Stirling Castle to narrow the attack frontage of the 18th (Eastern) Division.Шаблон:Sfn The fresh divisions had to remain close to the front for more than a week before zero hour and were rapidly exhausted by the conditions.Шаблон:Sfn The infantry were to advance behind a creeping barrage at Шаблон:Nowrap straight through to the second objective (black line) of 31 July, to capture the Шаблон:Lang, Inverness Copse and Glencorse Wood across the neck of the plateau. The speed of the barrage gave the 18th (Eastern) Division Шаблон:Nowrap and the 25th Division Шаблон:Nowrap to complete the attack. On 8 August, Inverness Copse and Glencorse Wood were bombarded with Шаблон:Nowrap and heavy shells each; the bombardment was repeated on 9 August, the first bright day since July. The 18th (Eastern) Division attack by the 55th Brigade was to be on a battalion front of about Шаблон:Cvt and the 54th Brigade was to attack with two battalions on a front Шаблон:Cvt wide.Шаблон:Sfn The 74th Brigade of the 25th Division was to attack on the left flank on a Шаблон:Cvt front to recapture the Шаблон:Lang, Westhoek village and Westhoek Ridge.Шаблон:Sfn

10 August

Many of the German pillboxes were still undamaged, especially those at the south-west and north-west angles of Inverness Copse but the Шаблон:Lang, about Шаблон:Cvt deep, was easily overrun by the British troops following the creeping barrage, which began at Шаблон:Nowrap The ground was full of flooded shell holes and in Glencorse Wood smashed trees rested on oozing mud. The defenders of Reserve Infantry Regiment 239 were capable of little resistance and many surrendered. The attacking battalion of the 55th Brigade that had advanced to the east side of Inverness Copse was vulnerable to attack from the south, because the right hand company, which had to form a defensive flank along the southern edge, had been stopped on its jumping-off line by machine-gun fire from a strongpoint at the south-west corner of the Copse. In the moonlight at Шаблон:Nowrap German sentries had seen the company and its support company crossing Stirling Castle Ridge to the start line. Both companies had been severely depleted by artillery and machine-gun fire before the attack. Just after Шаблон:Nowrap German field guns and machine-guns began to barrage the British start line from Stirling Castle north to Westhoek and cut off the British infantry from supplies and reinforcements. The German support battalions began immediate counter-attacks (Шаблон:Lang) into the Copse and the British were forced back through the north end. The Germans retook the western edge and the blockhouse at the north-western corner; British attempts to recapture the Copse failed.Шаблон:Sfn

The two battalions on the 54th Brigade front captured their objectives with fewer losses and occupied the Шаблон:Lang pillboxes either side of FitzClarence Farm and along the track through Glencorse Wood, from which they repulsed the German Шаблон:Lang. The troops remained isolated by the German box barrage and needed reinforcements as their casualties increased during the day. The other two battalions of the brigade had held the front line for the last ten days and were exhausted but when the brigade commander asked for the 53rd Brigade to move closer at Шаблон:Nowrap Lee refused, to avoid crowding the area under bombardment, keeping the brigade available to take over the front line for the night. The brigade moved forward at Шаблон:Nowrap and the first two battalions only closed up to Sanctuary Wood around Шаблон:Nowrap German infantry moved into Polygon Wood and Nonne Bosschen and around Шаблон:Nowrap a hurricane bombardment fell on Glencorse Wood. Reserve Infantry Regiment 238 and Reserve Infantry Regiment 6, the Шаблон:Lang regiment of the Шаблон:Lang 9th Reserve Division from Reutel, advanced behind a smokescreen into the wood and made a flanking attack from Inverness Copse. The British were forced back to their start line on the right but managed to hold the north-west corner of the wood.Шаблон:Sfn

The four battalions of the 74th Brigade, 25th Division, advanced on a Шаблон:Cvt front at Шаблон:Nowrap and were quick enough to evade the German counter-barrage. The outposts of Reserve Infantry Regiment 90, 54th Division, in the front line since Шаблон:Nowrap were captured by Шаблон:Nowrap but on the right flank a blockhouse garrison held out until attacked under a bombardment by Stokes mortars. The garrison in Westhoek and two blockhouses in the village were taken by surprise; a mud slough up to Шаблон:Cvt wide under Шаблон:Cvt of water in the Hanebeek Valley, protected the occupiers from counter-attacks. German artillery-fire continued all day; sniping and attacks by German aircraft on troops in the open caused many more losses. Contact with the rear was maintained all day using signal lamps; the five field artillery brigades responded quickly to calls for covering fire and dispersed German troops assembling for counter-attacks. As German troops reoccupied Glencorse Wood, snipers and machine-gunners were able to obstruct consolidation, particularly on the right flank; it was impossible to dig a continuous front line trench or communication trenches to the rear.Шаблон:Sfn

The 7th Brigade was in reserve and sent a battalion to reinforce the right flank and one forward to Westhoek Ridge in close reserve. The Germans attempted to make several counter-attacks into the night but all bar one were dispersed by artillery-fire. When a SOS rocket went unseen in the smoke at Шаблон:Nowrap another counter-attack was defeated by infantry small-arms fire, rifle-fire being found to be particularly effective. The 75th Brigade took over on the night of Шаблон:Nowrap and by 14 August the 56th (1/1st London) Division (Major-General F. A. Dudgeon) and the 8th Division relieved the 25th Division. Casualties were Шаблон:Nowrap killed, Шаблон:Nowrap and more than Шаблон:Nowrap missing; the right-hand battalion had Шаблон:NowrapШаблон:Sfn At Шаблон:Nowrap Jacob ordered the front line to be consolidated and for the 53rd Brigade, in the 18th (Eastern) Division area, to recapture Glencorse Wood as soon as possible. The attack was postponed for Шаблон:Nowrap because of the weather, the condition of the ground and one of the relieving battalions going north of the Menin road instead of east. The artillery opened fire but the infantry advance was cancelled in time; the postponed attack was later called off.Шаблон:Sfn

11–15 August

The front battalion commander of Reserve Infantry Regiment 239 had been captured on 10 August and said that the men had been so demoralised by their casualties from 31 July to 9 August, that he had reported that they could not hold their ground.Шаблон:Sfn The commanders of the 54th and 55th brigades in the attack of the 18th (Eastern) Division wrote that the artillery arrangements against a counter-attack had been inadequate and that one RFC aircraft for counter-attack reconnaissance was insufficient.Шаблон:Sfn On 12 August, Heneker asked that Nonne Bosschen and Glencorse Wood be captured as a preliminary, to avoid casualties like those of 31 July and that the artillery for 56th (1/1st London) Division should be reinforced. The sloping ground from the Menin road down to the Hanebeek Valley meant that if the attack on the southern flank failed, the 8th Division would again suffer enfilade-fire from the higher ground on the right flank. The suggestion was rejected but the day before the attack, the 53rd Brigade from the 18th (Eastern) Division was attached to the 56th (1/1st London) Division as a reinforcement.Шаблон:Sfn

On 12 August, Jacob asked for a delay in the general offensive due on 14 August, to allow time to capture the Gheluvelt Plateau at least as far as the 10 August objectives. The British had still not gained artillery superiority over the German guns beyond the plateau, which were destroying the tracks through Sanctuary and Château woods, interrupting the delivery of supplies and ammunition needed for the next attack.Шаблон:Sfn The eight divisions in corps reserve had been committed and the two in Fifth Army reserve had also been used, the 56th (1/1st London) Division joining II Corps on 6 August, along with the 47th (1/2nd London) Division and the 14th (Light) Division from the Second Army, by 15 August. Gough was constrained by Operation Hush needing the high tides due at the end of the month; if they were missed it would be four weeks before the next high tides. The Fifth Army offensive was postponed for a day but after a thunderstorm and downpour late on 14 August, Gough ordered another postponement until 16 August.Шаблон:Sfn

Battle of Langemarck

Шаблон:See also

Файл:Warhistoryof4thb00grim 0349.png
Шаблон:Centre

II Corps planned for the 56th (1/1st London) Division and the 8th Division to capture the Шаблон:Lang from Polygon Wood to the Ypres–Roulers railway, an advance of about Шаблон:Cvt. The divisions were to set up a defensive flank facing south towards Inverness Copse, with eight strong points from Black Watch Corner at the south-west corner of Polygon Wood back to Stirling Castle. On 12 and 14 August, Brigadier-General Higginson reported that the casualties of the 53rd Brigade from Шаблон:Nowrap had been so severe, that the brigade was incapable of reaching its objective. On 15 August, a tired battalion from the 54th Brigade and a fresh one from the 168th Brigade, 56th (1/1st London) Division reserve, were attached to form the defensive flank. The depth of advance was twice that of 10 August but battalion frontages were reduced from Шаблон:Cvt to compensate.Шаблон:Sfn

An intermediate objective was selected for a pause of Шаблон:Nowrap for the supporting battalions to leapfrog the leading battalions and take the final objective. A creeping barrage by a hundred and eighty 18-pounder field guns was to move slower, at Шаблон:Cvt in five minutes, as seventy-two 4.5-inch howitzers and thirty-six 18-pounders kept standing barrages further on. The eight machine-gun companies of the 56th (1/1st London) Division and the 8th Division formed two groups, to fire overhead barrages on the objective and from south-west of Zonnebeke to the north-east corner of Polygon Wood. The 52nd Reserve Division, opposite the 56th (1/1st London) Division, was relieved by the 34th Division on the night of Шаблон:Nowrap a battalion of Infantry Regiment 145 took over in Glencorse Wood and Nonne Bosschen on the right and a battalion of Infantry Regiment 67 relieved the defenders of Inverness Copse and Herenthage Park, either side of the Menin road. The night of Шаблон:Nowrap was very dark and a mist limited visibility to Шаблон:Cvt.Шаблон:Sfn

16 August

Weather
16–31 August 1917Шаблон:Sfn
Date Rain
mm
°F
16 0.0 68 dull
17 0.0 72 fine
18 0.0 74 fine
19 0.0 69 dull
20 0.0 71 dull
21 0.0 72 fine
22 0.0 78 dull
23 1.4 74 dull
24 0.1 68 dull
25 0.0 67 dull
26 19.6 70 dull
27 15.3 57 dull
28 0.9 62 dull
29 2.6 61 dull
30 0.7 63 dull
31 0.7 64 dull

The British barrage began at Шаблон:Nowrap and the infantry followed its creep forward. German SOS flares rose into the sky but the artillery reply was too late and missed most of the attacking waves, except in the 56th Division area on the right, which lost many men in the leading companies to German artillery firing from the south-east; the advance of the two 53rd Brigade battalions to form the southern defensive flank was delayed. The rest of the composite brigade pressed on but was stopped by massed machine-gun fire from inside Inverness Copse, particularly from three machine-guns in the pillbox at the north-west corner, which had a wide field of fire. Machine-gun fire was also received from FitzClarence Farm in the open between the Copse and Glencorse Wood; a second attempt by the support companies failed. A shoot by heavy artillery on the pillbox from Шаблон:Nowrap the night before, had mistakenly not been fired and the preliminary bombardment by Шаблон:Nowrap had no effect.Шаблон:Sfn Part of the brigade managed to work forward further north and formed the defensive flank along the southern edge of Glencorse Wood.Шаблон:Sfn

In the centre, the 169th Brigade advanced quickly at the start but veered to the right to avoid boggy ground, then entered Glencorse Wood. The defenders were overrun after a mutually costly engagement and the intermediate objective, a line of pillboxes in the sunken road inside the wood, was captured. After a pause, the support battalions leapfrogged the intermediate line and pressed on through more boggy ground, against greater opposition and delays caused by German machine-gunners firing from old artillery positions. The troops lost the barrage but a few parties reached the final objective in the Шаблон:Lang pillboxes in Polygon Wood and northwards, along Anzac Farm spur to the vicinity of Iron Cross Redoubt.Шаблон:Sfn

The 167th Brigade also had a fast start but when it reached the north end of Nonne Bosschen, found mud Шаблон:Cvt deep. The brigade went round to the left, which caused a gap between the 167th and 169th brigades. The quick start had been partly due to the rear waves pushing up to avoid German shelling on the left of the brigade. The supporting infantry got mixed up with the foremost troops and failed to mop up captured ground or German troops who had been overrun and begun sniping from behind. Part of a company reached the area north of Polygon Wood, at about the same time as small numbers of troops from the 8th Division, attacking to the north.Шаблон:Sfn The ground in the 56th (1/1st London) Division area was so bad that none of the tanks in support got into action.Шаблон:Sfn A protective barrage fired in front of the intermediate objective failed to prevent Infantry Regiment 145 penetrating gaps and surrounding the four battalions of the 167th Brigade by Шаблон:Nowrap A German creeping barrage followed by infantry rolled over the surrounded battalions, whose survivors collected behind the sunken track in Glencorse Wood and the west side of Nonne Bosschen. Machine-gunners of the 9th London Battalion managed to stop the German advance and when news of the German attack reached the 167th Brigade HQ, the plan to form the southern defensive flank was cancelled.Шаблон:Sfn

On the 8th Division front, the two attacking brigades started well, advancing behind an "admirable" barrage and reached the Hanebeek stream, where hand bridges were used to cross for the advance to continue up Anzac Spur to the green line objectives on the ridge beyond. Difficulties began on the left flank, where the advance of the 16th (Irish) Division was stopped near Potsdam Redoubt, which freed German machine-gunners north of the railway to enfilade the area of 8th Division to the south. On the right flank, the 56th (1/1st London) Division advance was stopped by fire from German strong points and pillboxes and from German artillery concentrated to the south-east. The 8th Division eventually captured Iron Cross, Anzac and Zonnebeke redoubts on the rise beyond the Hanebeek, then sent parties over the ridge.Шаблон:Sfn German troops who recaptured machine-gun posts at the north end of Nonne Bosschen fired on the 25th Brigade troops digging in on Anzac Farm Spur, as Heneker had predicted.Шаблон:Sfn

German troops, seen arriving in lorries behind the German front line, advanced over Anzac Spur at Шаблон:Nowrap Smoke-shells in the German barrage obscured British SOS rockets and despite the good visibility, only a vague warning was delivered by an RFC aircraft on counter-attack reconnaissance. Other German guns placed a barrage from Stirling Castle to Westhoek for the rest of the day, which intensified at noon and prevented British carrying parties from taking food and ammunition forward. The British artillery did not open fire until Шаблон:Nowrap by when the 25th Brigade, already enfiladed from the right, had been frontally attacked and forced back to the Hanebeek, with many casualties. As the 25th Brigade fell back, the right of the 23rd Brigade was exposed and enveloped by the Germans, forcing the brigade retreated to avoid being rolled up. The British troops became disorganised but managed to hold the ground west of the Hanebeek, a few hundred yards forward of the start-line, with the northernmost battalion further forward, where the Hanebeek flowed beneath the Ypres–Roulers railway.Шаблон:Sfn

Reserve Infantry Regiment 90 had been resting around Becelaere and was sent back to Glencorse Wood and Nonne Bosschen to reinforce Infantry Regiment 145.Шаблон:Sfn At Шаблон:Nowrap the Germans counter-attacked from Polygon Wood and forced the remnants of the 169th Brigade out of the sunken track and back to the start-line at the west end of the wood. The 167th Brigade fell back as its southern flank was exposed and about Шаблон:Nowrap infantry tried to exploit their success but British SOS flares were seen by the artillery which smothered the attack, inflicting many losses. By evening, German enfilade-fire led to the 8th Division brigades being ordered to retire close to their start-line.Шаблон:Sfn In a diary entry, Rupprecht wrote that Шаблон:Nowrap had been suffered by Army Group Prince Rupprecht from 1 June to 10 August and that it was impossible for the 4th Army to conduct more than small attacks to improve their positions; Langemarck could not be recaptured.Шаблон:Sfn

17–19 August

Файл:No106MkIIFuzeRLDiagram.jpg
Шаблон:Centre

On 17 March, Gough told a conference that an attack to capture the objectives not attained on 16 August, would take place on 25 August and that II Corps was to capture Inverness Copse on 22 August as a preliminary; the weather on 17 and 18 August was good with a drying wind.Шаблон:Sfn Reports from the brigade commanders of the 56th (1/1st London) Division criticised a lack of time to prepare for the attack and suggested that fresh troops ought to keep close to the foremost troops to consolidate objectives as soon as they were captured. The protective barrage fired in front of the objective had been unsatisfactory because many of the shells were fitted with Fuze 106 were ineffective when falling on soft ground and waterlogged shell-holes.Шаблон:Sfn

During the Battle of Langemarck, Infantry Regiment 145 had penetrated the protective barrage and surrounded the leading battalions of the 167th Brigade, 56th (1/1st London) Division and the division had suffered Шаблон:Nowrap before it was relieved by the 14th (Light) Division on the night of Шаблон:Nowrap The 47th (1/2nd London) Division relieved the 8th Division, which had losses of Шаблон:Nowrap from the Westhoek–Zonnebeke road to the Ypres–Roulers railway on the night of Шаблон:NowrapШаблон:Sfn The infantry occupied fortified shell holes and some captured pillboxes; German artillery-observers in Polygon Wood and Hollebeke had good observation over the 47th (1/2nd London) Division area and every sign of movement was bombarded. The division edged forwards into the sparsely-garrisoned German outpost line opposite and improved the front line as a jumping-off point for the next attack; the 25th Division took over on 3 September.Шаблон:Sfn On 19 August, an intelligence summary estimated that the Germans had Шаблон:Nowrap between Zandvoorde, Gheluvelt and Zonnebeke.Шаблон:Sfn

Inverness Copse

22–23 August

Шаблон:Main

Файл:The Menin Road.jpg
Шаблон:Centre

By late August, Inverness Copse on the north side of the Menin road and Herenthage Park to the south, were held by troops of Infantry Regiment 67 in shell-hole positions along the western fringe of the Copse. The Шаблон:Lang ran along eastern edge of the Copse but the defences on the west side, about Шаблон:Cvt forward, were a vital outpost line. The defenders were ordered to hold on at all costs because the Шаблон:Lang was on the edge of the Gheluvelt Plateau. The capture of the decline to the east would provide the British with valuable observation posts for the next advance.Шаблон:Sfn The British attack was intended to capture the Шаблон:Lang from Herenthage Park south of the Menin road to Glencorse Wood, with a defensive flank back to the old British front line. The line was to follow the eastern fringe of Inverness Copse north of the Menin road and further on to FitzClarence Farm; on the left (northern) flank, the 42nd Brigade was to capture the blockhouses along the sunken road in Glencorse Wood.Шаблон:Sfn

On 18 August, the III Battalion, IR 177 from the 32nd Division, the Шаблон:Lang division for Шаблон:Lang, had moved forward in support of the 34th Division; two days later IR 103 from the same division had been moved up to Dadizele as the Шаблон:Lang Regiment.Шаблон:Sfn The 43rd Brigade attacked with the 6th Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry (6th DCLI) on the right and the 6th Somerset Light Infantry (6th SLI) on the left. The 6th SLI got into Inverness Copse with few losses and began a bayonet and hand grenade fight with the 5th Company of II Battalion, IR 67. The Germans were slowly forced back and the 7th and 8th companies were sent forward from the Шаблон:Lang as reinforcements. The 7th Company on the left was also forced back by the 6th SLI and around Шаблон:Nowrap the SLI reached the château south of the Menin road and took Шаблон:Nowrap in a Шаблон:Cvt advance. The 5th and 7th companies were almost destroyed but the SLI was down to about Шаблон:Nowrap by the time the troops reached the objective. As the 5th Company had been forced back, the left flank of the 6th Company north of the Menin road, was left in the air and the commander covered the gap with machine-guns.Шаблон:Sfn

The 6th DCLI was caught within Шаблон:Cvt of its jumping-off line by machine-gun fire from Inverness Copse, forced under cover and lost the barrage. One of four tanks supporting the attack arrived along the Menin road, turned north at the edge of the Copse and engaged the pillboxes pinning down the DCLI, then drove close to a trench along the north edge of the Copse, machine-gunning the German defenders, forcing them out. The 8th Company arrived from the Шаблон:Lang but could not stop the tank, despite losing many men rushing it and throwing grenades. The survivors retreated until a field gun was brought up to the south end of Polygon Wood and opened fire, forcing the tank to withdraw. The 6th DCLI was able to use the distraction to move up another Шаблон:Cvt but was still far short of its objective, leaving the 6th SLI isolated.Шаблон:Sfn

The HQ of IR 67 in Шаблон:Lang got news of the British attack at Шаблон:Nowrap from a messenger pigeon and ordered forward I Battalion, IR 67 from the Шаблон:Lang to recapture the front line; III Battalion, IR 67 was moved forward from Шаблон:Lang to the Шаблон:Lang in its place. I Battalion found the survivors of II Battalion in the Шаблон:Lang and took them forward to counter-attack the 6th SLI, who were too depleted to repulse the attack and fell back to the western edge of the Copse. Reinforced by the 10th Durham Light Infantry, the Somersets managed to hold a line about Шаблон:Cvt south of the Menin road and gained touch with the 6th DCLI to the north. During the afternoon, the two companies of III Battalion, IR 67 in the Шаблон:Lang went forward and entered the Copse at about Шаблон:Nowrap the other two companies took their place and a battalion of IR 177 replaced them in Шаблон:Lang. Orders for another counter-attack were sent from the 34th Division HQ but arrived too late and the attack had to be postponed.Шаблон:Sfn

From Шаблон:Nowrap on 23 August, the rest of III Battalion, IR 67 moved into the Copse and IR 177 moved up from Шаблон:Lang to the Шаблон:Lang to take its place, IR 103 taking over in Шаблон:Lang, ready for the attack to begin at Шаблон:Nowrap after a five-minute hurricane bombardment. The bombardment was not fired and the infantry advanced on time against a determined defence (the 6th SLI and the 6th DCLI had been relieved during the night by the 6th King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry (6th KOYLI) and the 10th DLI), through which the Germans claimed to have penetrated Шаблон:Cvt to the western edge of the Copse. The German attack coincided with a British attack supported by five tanks crossing no man's land at Шаблон:Nowrap The tanks were to attack the strong points and the infantry were to follow up but three tanks ditched; the other two arrived at about Шаблон:Nowrap and turned left and right off the Menin road and drove along the German defences. The German infantry were forced back to their start-line by machine-gun fire from the tanks but after about thirty minutes, German artillery knocked one out; the second tank had engine-trouble and the crew were killed as they dismounted.Шаблон:Sfn

The British guns bombarded the Copse during the afternoon and the rest of IR 67 was sent forward from the Шаблон:Lang to the front line. At Шаблон:Nowrap the 34th Division HQ ordered a methodical attack (Шаблон:Lang) to be made next morning in Шаблон:Lang (Becelaere Sector), to retake the western edge of the Copse and Herenthage Park. During the night, three companies of IR 177 from Шаблон:Lang, a company of IR 30 and the 4th Army Storm Detachment (Шаблон:Lang), with seven ten-man platoons of bombers and flamethrowers from Guard Reserve Pioneer Regiment 9, joined IR 67. The 34th Division artillery and that of the neighbouring division were to fire a preliminary bombardment and the advance was to begin at Шаблон:Nowrap A company with four machine-guns was to be left behind as a rallying point on each side of the Menin road and IR 30 and IR 145 on the flanks were to support the Шаблон:Lang. After five minutes, the guns were to lift the barrage Шаблон:Cvt and maintain it for an hour to isolate the British from reinforcements; aircraft were to strafe the British front line.Шаблон:Sfn

24 August

The German hurricane bombardment preceding the Шаблон:Lang began at Шаблон:Nowrap fell short of the British along the western fringe of the Copse and hit the German positions instead. It was too late to contact the artillery and the German infantry began the advance at Шаблон:Nowrap but the Шаблон:Cvt lift by the artillery fell correspondingly short. As the German infantry approached the British positions, they were met by massed small-arms fire but several parties reached the objective, particularly south of the Menin road, as IR 30 attacked southwards from Шаблон:Lang (Hooge Sector) and dug in. The British counter-attacked at Шаблон:Nowrap but were held up by the arrival of another company of IR 177. The short shooting by the German artillery continued and at Шаблон:Nowrap a message was sent back that the infantry would have to retire unless it stopped. The firing continued and the Germans retreated from the western edge of the Copse. The British 43rd Brigade were mixed up and the 9th Rifle Brigade (a battalion), on loan from the 42nd Brigade had also arrived. The British brigade commander wanted to exploit the German retirement but at noon, the commanders at the front reported that they lacked sufficient men to conduct the attack and to hold their positions if it failed.Шаблон:Sfn

The Germans were preparing for another attack with II Battalion, IR 177, which had come forward from the Шаблон:Lang by noon. As it moved through the Шаблон:Lang, the battalion managed to rally the troops retiring from the Copse and advanced through shrapnel and high explosive shells at Шаблон:Nowrap forcing back the British to the western fringe of the Copse and beyond by Шаблон:Nowrap The British repulse led to alarmist reports and the 43rd Brigade HQ requested reinforcements but by Шаблон:Nowrap news arrived that the German counter-attack had stopped at the western edge of the Copse and Herenthage Park. The panic abated but a counter-attack by two fresh battalions was called off because of the confused state of the front line. During the night, the "shattered" I Battalion IR 177 was relieved by the II Battalion, which had suffered no more than Шаблон:Nowrap and the survivors of IR 67, which had lost more than Шаблон:Nowrap in Шаблон:Lang were also relieved; III Battalion, IR 102 took over in Шаблон:Lang with the 34th Division remaining in command; the British 43rd Brigade had suffered more than Шаблон:Nowrap in three days.Шаблон:Sfnm

25–31 August

On 25 August, British artillery blew up an ammunition dump near the blockhouse of the commander of the German support battalion (Шаблон:Lang) of the Hooge sector (Шаблон:Lang). British shelling of the target forced the BTK to abandon the headquarters and the front line battalion commander (Шаблон:Lang) did the same before his bunker was destroyed the next day.Шаблон:Sfn A general attack by the Fifth Army due on 25 August was cancelled and heavy rain fell during the night of Шаблон:Nowrap before a phased attack planned for the next day. The 23rd Division (Major-General James Babington) relieved the 14th (Light) Division on 26 August, except for the 41st Brigade, which came under command. Two battalions of the 70th Brigade were attached to the 41st Brigade and the rest of the 23rd Division went into reserve positions.Шаблон:Sfn During the morning the Germans advanced behind a creeping barrage and attacked four outposts with flamethrowers and captured three.Шаблон:SfnШаблон:Efn At Шаблон:Nowrap on 27 August (the corps to the north having attacked at Шаблон:Nowrap), four tanks were to advance, each with two infantry platoons, to capture Шаблон:Cvt of the trench from the Menin road along Inverness Copse to Glencorse Wood. The tanks ditched close to the front line around Clapham Junction and few of the infantry reached their objectives; those that did were killed or forced to retreat. Next day, the 41st Brigade was replaced by the 70th Brigade; rain and gales led Haig to cancel Fifth Army attacks, except by II Corps on the Gheluvelt Plateau; the weather continued so bad that the next attack on the plateau was called off on 31 August.Шаблон:Sfn

Aftermath

Analysis

31 July

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In the History of the Great War volume Military Operations France and Belgium 1917, Part II (1948) James Edmonds, the British official historian, described a meeting on 27 June between Haig and Jacob. Haig decided to reinforce II Corps in the Fifth Army by transferring the 24th Division and artillery from X Corps on the northern boundary of the Second Army to the southern boundary of the Fifth Army. Edmonds also described Haig meeting the army commanders the day after on 28 June but the meetings were transposed in the narrative. At the 28 June conference to discuss the memorandum written by Davidson, the Fifth Army plan was endorsed but Edmonds wrote that the emphasis Haig placed on the capture of the Gheluvelt Plateau reflected the GHQ plan, rather than the Fifth Army scheme. In the text, Edmonds wrote that Gough spread the attacking divisions evenly, when he could have reinforced the II Corps with divisions from the corps to the north.Шаблон:Sfn

The Fifth Army Operation Order of 27 June was reproduced in Appendix XIII of the official history, showing that the green line (third objective) was the line on which the Fifth Army was to consolidate. The red line determined the furthest extent that exploitation of local opportunities beyond the green line could be undertaken on local initiative. Advance guards of all arms, from the reserve brigades of the attacking divisions or the divisions in corps reserve, were to advance beyond the green line after the protective barrage ended, to reconnoitre and to occupy undefended ground and tactically valuable features up to the red line.Шаблон:Sfn The order emphasised that several organised battles on a wide front would be necessary to defeat the Germans and that quick reorganisation would be needed after each attack, contrary to later accounts that described the plan as a breakthrough attempt,

Шаблон:Blockquote

In the II Corps area on the Gheluvelt Plateau, the distance to the green line on the right (southern) flank of the 24th Division at Klein Zillibeke, was Шаблон:Cvt and Шаблон:Cvt along the left (northern) flank of II Corps along the Ypres–Roulers railway, much shorter distances to the green line than on the corps fronts further north.Шаблон:Sfn

In 2007, Jack Sheldon wrote that the daily report of the 4th Army claimed that the Allied attack had been a costly failure, which Sheldon called hyperbole. The attackers had advanced Шаблон:Cvt and overrun two defensive positions; heavy artillery had severely bombarded German Шаблон:Lang moving behind the front line. The German defence was most successful on the Gheluvelt Plateau despite the loss of the observation posts on Bellewaarde Ridge and the Шаблон:Lang of Шаблон:Lang had not been needed. The defenders had made powerful and determined counter-attacks and the defensive success on the plateau compromised British advances further north, which were vulnerable to enfilade fire by small arms from the plateau and observed artillery-fire. The capture of the Gheluvelt Plateau would have to be a slow process of preparatory bombardments and limited advances. British and French commanders considered the attack to be the first of a series of blows which would lead to an inevitable German collapse and German commanders were concerned at the demands that the battle made on their troops.Шаблон:Sfn

August

The Fifth Army needed to maintain a brisk tempo of attack to benefit from German disorganisation and to create the conditions for Operation Hush on the coast. Hush had to begin during the high tide period at the end of August or it would have to be postponed until the end of September. The Fifth Army had captured ground on the Gheluvelt Plateau on 31 July but the unusually wet and murky weather, the tenacious German defence and determined counter-attacks, left the 4th Army in control of the most vital objectives around Inverness Copse and Glencorse Wood.Шаблон:Sfn II Corps attacked the Gheluvelt Plateau on 10, 16, 22 and 27 August. The Germans conducted local counter-attacks (Шаблон:Lang) with reserve units of the ground-holding divisions and made a bigger, methodical counter-attack (Шаблон:Lang) on 24 August to recapture Inverness Copse. Haig cancelled a general attack intended for 25 August and altered the Fifth Army–Second Army boundary for the third time. The Second Army took over the II Corps front on the Gheluvelt Plateau in early September and Plumer was allowed three weeks to prepare the next attack.Шаблон:Sfn

The II Corps operations on the Gheluvelt Plateau from 31 July to 31 August were conducted by the 24th, 30th, 8th, 25th, 14th, 47th (1/2nd London) and 56th (1/1st London) divisions. From 25 June to 31 August, the II Corps artillery fired more than Шаблон:Nowrap shells. All of the II Corps divisions suffered many casualties and the torrential rains created exhausting conditions for the infantry. Edmonds wrote in 1948 that the costly failure to capture the plateau in August depressed British morale lower than ever before. The experience among the survivors, recounted in Britain by wounded troops, made a greater impression than the run of victories in September and early October. Edmonds also wrote that the fighting exhausted the divisions of the 4th Army, which was reinforced with divisions and Шаблон:Nowrap of the heavy artillery ammunition allotment of the French section of the Western Front.Шаблон:Sfn The French had been left "unmolested" and the Germans postponed plans for an offensive against the Russians. Edmonds quoted from Ludendorff (My War Memoirs, 1919) that

Шаблон:Blockquote

In 1996, Robin Prior and Trevor Wilson wrote that changes in Fifth Army infantry tactics had no effect on the lack of accurate artillery firepower necessary to get infantry through the German defences without prohibitive casualties, then keep them there against German artillery-fire and infantry counter-attacks. After the German re-capture of Inverness Copse on 24 August, Haig made the Second Army responsible for the Gheluvelt Plateau, preparatory to a new attack on both sides of the Menin road. The Fifth Army continued with local attacks and by 27 August was worn out.Шаблон:Sfn In 2004, John Lee wrote that the weather in August was the worst for Шаблон:Nowrap but despite the conditions, Gough continued to order attacks which were inevitably defeated, causing a "severe loss of morale" among the British infantry.Шаблон:Sfn

In 2008, J. P. Harris wrote that the August rain fell on both sides but that it benefited the defenders, because it made observation from the air harder, a greater disadvantage to the British and French, who had far more guns than the Germans. Mud stopped movement and the Germans were trying to hold ground, rather than attack like their opponents. The II Corps attack scheduled for 2 August had several postponements, until 10 August, when fresh divisions made a limited objective attack. The ground was still waterlogged, British counter-battery fire failed to suppress the German guns and the attack was a costly failure at the most vital point. By late August, confidence in the handling of the battle by the Fifth Army HQ at GHQ and among the corps and divisional staffs had diminished but intelligence reports continued to be optimistic about the pressure being applied to the Germans. Harris wrote that despite his "endemic optimism", Haig transferred control of the battle for the Gheluvelt Plateau to Plumer but let Fifth Army operations continue in the interim, then ordered them to stop after a series of "bloody failures" that caused a further loss of confidence in Gough.Шаблон:Sfn

R. A. Perry wrote in 2014 that by the end of August, thirty German divisions had fought at Ypres, two of them twice and 23 had been exhausted and replaced but that this could be misleading, since at full strength, German divisions had an establishment of Шаблон:Nowrap rather than the Шаблон:Nowrap a British division. The British had used Шаблон:Nowrap two twice, of which Шаблон:Nowrap been withdrawn. Including the four French divisions of the First Army; Шаблон:Nowrap divisions with an establishment of Шаблон:Nowrap had engaged Шаблон:Nowrap divisions with an establishment of Шаблон:Nowrap Nine of the German divisions had been transferred from Champagne and Alsace-Lorraine, easing the pressure on the French armies. It was conventionally assumed that an attacker needed a Шаблон:Nowrap to prevail but the Fifth Army only had a numerical advantage of about Шаблон:Nowrap British would have needed another 40 divisions sufficiently to outnumber the Germans.Шаблон:Sfn

Weather

In Field Marshal Earl Haig (1929), Brigadier-General John Charteris, the BEF Chief of Intelligence from 1915 to 1918, wrote that

Шаблон:Blockquote

the first part of his sentence was quoted by Lloyd George (1934), Liddell Hart (1934) and Leon Wolff (1959); in a 1997 essay, John Hussey called the passage by Charteris "baffling".Шаблон:Sfn The BEF had set up a Meteorological Section under Ernest Gold in 1915, which by the end of 1917 had Шаблон:Nowrap and Шаблон:Nowrap The section predicted the warm weather and thunderstorms of 7 to 14 June and in a letter to the press of 17 January 1958, Gold wrote that the facts of the Flanders climate contradicted the claim made by Charteris in 1929.Шаблон:Sfn In 1989, Philip Griffiths examined August weather in Flanders for the thirty years before 1916 and found that,

Шаблон:Blockquote

From 1901 to 1916, records from a weather station at Cap Gris Nez showed that Шаблон:Nowrap of August days were dry and that from 1913 to 1916, there were Шаблон:Nowrap rainless days in August and monthly rainfall of Шаблон:Cvt;

Шаблон:Blockquote

It was obvious to the Fifth Army HQ planners that moving so many troops, animals, wheeled vehicles, stores and thousands of tons of ammunition, would cut up the ground in the salient. With the experience of August weather since 1914 and study of French records, it was reasonable to hope that the relatively small amount of rain in August would dry quickly and that mud would bake.Шаблон:Sfn In August 1917, Шаблон:Cvt of rain fell, Шаблон:Cvt of it on Шаблон:Nowrap Шаблон:Nowrap the weather was also overcast and windless, which much reduced evaporation. Divided into two ten-days' and an eleven-day period, there were Шаблон:Cvt of rain in August 1917. In the Шаблон:Nowrap before Шаблон:Nowrap on 31 July, Шаблон:Cvt of rain fell and from Шаблон:Nowrap on 31 July to Шаблон:Nowrap on 4 August, there were Шаблон:Cvt of rain. In August 1917, there were three dry days and Шаблон:Nowrap with less than Шаблон:Cvt of rain. Three August days were sunless and one had six minutes of sun; over Шаблон:Nowrap there were Шаблон:Nowrap of sunshine, an average of Шаблон:Nowrap per day. Hussey wrote that the weather that August was exceptionally bad; Haig had been justified in his optimism.Шаблон:Sfn

Supply

The approaches to the battlefield as far back as Poperinghe, Шаблон:Cvt to the west, were under continual German artillery-fire and anywhere east of the Ypres–Yser Canal was impassable in daylight. Digging was the only protection from the German artillery and the area became a warren of dugouts and deep tunnels, continuously ventilated and pumped out. After 31 July, the British adapted captured German pillboxes and blockhouses but the weather quickly filled them with fœtid water from the corpses littering the area.Шаблон:Sfn The British guns fired more than ten million shells in August [[[:Шаблон:Cvt]]] including most of the GHQ ammunition stock which, with the return fire of the German artillery, smashed the surface of the ground. On the Gheluvelt Plateau, the II Corps artillery fired Шаблон:Nowrap [[[:Шаблон:Cvt]]].Шаблон:Sfn The nine rainy days of August 1917 was average for the month but the quantity of rain that fell was exceptional, flooding the churned ground and causing streams to overflow. Another Шаблон:Cvt of ammunition was due to be dumped from the Pacific and Fuzeville railheads by the second week in September but many wagonloads had to be transported to the artillery lines and constant labour by engineers was necessary to maintain plank roads over the mud. After 31 July, loads had to be carried over the Steenbeek and a one-way system was instituted, once the plank roads had been extended about Шаблон:Cvt closer to the new front line. Duckboards were easy to place, could be moved to avoid shell-fire and quickly repaired.Шаблон:Sfn

Casualties

On 31 July, the 24th Division had Шаблон:Nowrap the 30th Division Шаблон:Nowrap 18th Division suffered Шаблон:Nowrap killed, wounded or missing and the 8th Division Шаблон:NowrapШаблон:Sfn From 31 July to 28 August, British officer casualties were Шаблон:Nowrap Шаблон:Nowrap and Шаблон:Nowrap other ranks Шаблон:Nowrap Шаблон:Nowrap and Шаблон:Nowrap a total of Шаблон:NowrapШаблон:Sfn

Subsequent operations

Шаблон:Main

Файл:Battle of Menin Road - wounded at side of the road.jpg
Шаблон:Centre

To force the Germans to disperse their artillery-fire, the Second Army planned to attack on a Шаблон:Cvt front from the Ypres–Comines canal to the Ypres–Roulers railway, with the Fifth Army continuing the attack north to the French First Army boundary.Шаблон:Sfn The British plan included more emphasis on the use of heavy and medium artillery to destroy German concrete pill-boxes and machine-gun nests, which were more numerous in the battle zones being attacked and to engage in more counter-battery fire. The Second Army corps on the Gheluvelt Plateau had Шаблон:Nowrap and medium and Шаблон:Nowrap guns and howitzers, more than double the quantity at the Battle of Pilckem Ridge.Шаблон:Sfn

Aircraft were to be used for systematic air observation of German troop movements to avoid the failures of previous battles, when too few aircrews had been burdened with too many duties and had often been grounded by bad weather.Шаблон:Sfn On 20 September, the British attacked on a Шаблон:Cvt front and captured most of their objectives to a depth of about Шаблон:Cvt by mid-morning.Шаблон:Sfn The Germans made many counter-attacks, beginning around Шаблон:Nowrap which continued until early evening. The counter-attacks failed to gain ground or made only a temporary penetration of the new British positions. The German defence had failed to defeat a well-prepared attack made in good weather.Шаблон:Sfn

Notes

Шаблон:Notelist

Footnotes

Шаблон:Reflist

References

Шаблон:Refbegin Books

Theses

Шаблон:Refend

Further reading

Books

Theses

External links

Шаблон:Commons category

Шаблон:World War I