Showing posts with label 18th (Eastern) Division. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 18th (Eastern) Division. Show all posts

Thursday, 25 October 2018

Congratulations to the 18th Division


Friday 25th October 1918

Today we have heard more of the 2nd Battaion, Bedfordshire Regiment's exploits on 23rd and 24th. The commanding officer, Lieutenant-Colonel Arthur Percival read to me over the telephone remarks he has made in an account of the actions to his Brigadier. He noted that, as the operations began in the early hours of the morning and in a thick mist, there had been confusion but it had been overcome by good training and leadership: "Although no opposition was encountered, I consider Lieutenant R. I. Edwards' performance in moving forward his Company a distance of over a mile on a very dark night without loss of direction and again establishing contact with the enemy is worthy of considerable praise". 

"I wish to mention the excellent work done by the Tanks both on the 23rd and 24th October. They frequently appeared on the scene just when they were wanted and assisted the advance of the Infantry and they also displayed a fine spirit in returning to the fight in spite of having the majority of their crew wounded by Armour Piercing Bullets".

18th (Eastern) Division has received a congratulatory wire from General Sir Ivor Maxse (late Commander of 18th Division) now Inspector General of Training and fromthe French general Morland. the latter wrote: "Hearty congratulations to yourself, staff and all ranks on their great success of last two days which reflects the greatest credit on all concerned". Sir Ivor wrote: Hearty congratulations to 18th Division on their splendid fighting successes this week".

Source: X550/3/wd

Saturday, 1 September 2018

More Advances


Sunday 1st September 1918

Today three divisions to the north of the Somme - in descending order north to south - 42nd, New Zealand and 5th Divisions have made some progress east, the gallant Kiwis, once again, in the lead. On the Somme itself key progress has been made. 38th (Welsh) Division has taken Morval and 18th (Eastern) Division has take the eastern portion of Saint-Vaast Wood. Last night and this morning the Australian Corps crossed the River Somme and drove on Peronne, taking Mont-Saint-Quentin and ending up just west of the town - in German hands since 1914. Everywhere our armies are on the march towards what looks increasingly like a final victory

Friday, 31 August 2018

Marking Time


A7V Captured by the New Zealand Division [from Wikipedia]

Saturday 31st August 1918

Early this morning 42nd Division finally succeeded in taking the remains of the village of Riencourt. The enemy has finally put in a counter-attack against the all-conquering New Zealand Division. They even employed four of their lumbering tanks in the operation but it failed and two of these monsters have been captured by the triumphant Kiwis.

South of this 38th (Welsh) and 18th (Eastern) Divisions have made no set piece attacks today but German positions at Morval and Combles have been systematically bombarded to weaken the defences. That does not mean that the infantry has been idle. 2nd Battalion, Bedfordshire Regiment, for example have pushed forward a series of posts north-east of Combles as shown on the map below. The adjutant reckoned that during the month of August the battalion has captured one German officer and seventy-one other ranks as prisoners-of-war



Source: X550/3/wd

Thursday, 30 August 2018

More Success for the New Zealanders



Friday 30th August 1918

With Bapaume taken the New Zealand Division was today given the task of taking two villages to the east of the town - Bancourt and, to the north-east of that place, Fremicourt. The villages have duly fallen and the line taken some two thousand yards forward. Sadly, 42nd Division have been unable to take the village of Riencourt. 

Similarly, 38th (Welsh) Division have been unable to take Morval, mainly owing to the strength of the enemy's artillery barrage on any attempt to get forward. The same artillery has rendered impossible the 18th Division's attempts to make any serious advance though a little ground has been made. 

2nd Battalion, Bedfordshire Regiment had been ordered to take a sunken lane north of Combles and the attempt was duly made. However, they could get no further than another sunken lane a little way to the west - both shown on the map below. Sadly some nine other ranks have been killed, five are missing and thirty two have been killed. Amongst officers Captain P J Reiss has been wounded and 2nd Lieutenant A D Greenwood has been killed.




Source: X550/3/wd

Monday, 27 August 2018

Those Blasted Woods Again



Tuesday 27th March 1918

Today has seen a number of attacks along the front. In the south 18th (Eastern) Division of Fourth Army has been renewing its acquaintance with Trones Wood, where it fought so long in 1916. and Bernafay Wood between Montauban and Ginchy. The enemy still held the village of Longueval at the start of the attack and 8th Battalion, Royal Berkshire Regiment suffered many casualties as they struggled to get forward and were eventually pushed from Trones Wood to Bernafay Wood to the west. A few moments ago, however, a counter-attack has once more pushed the enemy from the wood, hopefully for good. The 38th (Welsh) Division has obtained a firm lodging now in the western remains of Longueval. 




Further north 63rd (Royal Naval) Division has once more been attacking Thilloy and Ligny-Thilloy to help the New Zealand complete its encirclement of Bapaume to the south. The 4th Battalion, Bedfordshire Regiment has been to the fore in today's unsuccessful efforts at Thilloy and Ligny-Thilloy. Your correspondent has just heard from the adjutant with details of the attack, which began about eleven o'clock. The Bedfords were then in a sunken road variously called Chalk Cut or Red Cut as shown on the map above. Preceded by a rolling barrage then men went over the top but not before shells fell into the assembly positions which were thought to come from our own guns firing short. On leaving the sunken road heavy machine gun fire was encountered from the front and the left and especially from the right flank. It had been arranged that 21st Division would attack on the Bedfords' right, but their attack was cancelled at the last moment and so the right flank was exposed to extremely heavy machine gun fire from the high ground.

The line was held up and the positions occupied were then roughly as shown on the map above. No further advance was possible as machine gun fire from Thilloy and the ridges on the right was so heavy. Snipers were very active and claimed many victims.
An hour ago, at six o'clock after an hour's bombardment by heavy artillery and preceded by an 18 pounder barrage the advance was continued again. Just previous to zero a heavy shell fell in the midst of the centre company and did much damage. Despite this, some of C Company on the left entered Thilloy and went right through, with their right on the cross roads shown on the map by an X. The left of the centre company was met again by very heavy machine gun fire from the right and was unable to make much progress and the right company was unable to advance at all owing to the same reason. The enemy had a perfect defensive position which commanded the approach from in front and on the right flank.  

As regards those elements of the left company which passed through Thilloy, the situation is difficult to ascertain. No Officer by this time appears to have been left with the company. The enemy appear to have been surrounding them on the right flank and eventually they withdrew through the village, and back to the sunken road from which the attack had started, which they reached a few moments ago.  

Owing to the formation of the ground the only possible defensive line was then indeed the sunken road from which the battalion had started this morning, with posts pushed out to the edge of la Barque. The line joins up with the 7th Royal Fusiliers on the left. The Battalion hopes to be relieved tonight.  

The commanding officer then came on the blower to make his views known, saying: "I attribute the failure of the attack to the fact that the right flank was exposed as the Division on our right did not advance. It is possible that the first attack would have been held up in any case from machine gun fire from Thilloy, but I feel certain that if other troops had been pressing on our right and so engaging the machine guns on the ridges and neighbourhood, my right company would have been able to get forward at the second attempt. If the request for tanks to co-operate had been granted the task would have been easy and could have been accomplished by one Battalion instead of two".

Source: X550/5/3

Saturday, 18 August 2018

Preparations Being Made


Sunday 18th August

We heard today from the adjutant of 1st Battalion, Bedfordshire regiment, part of 5th Division. They are currently in billets at Doullens. Yesterday they marched a couple of miles or so south-east to Orville where they spent the night. They have been warned to be ready to move at short notice, encouraging the belief that the great drive against the enemy will soon continue again.

2nd Battalion, meanwhile, was relieved today, moving back from the front line to Henencourt Wood directly west of Albert. Preliminary orders have been issued "in the event of the Brigade going forward" allowing us to draw our own conclusions. If and when the attack is made 54th Brigade will, we understand, be the vanguard of 18th Division. 

Sources: X550/2/5, X550/3/wd


Thursday, 10 August 2017

Eleventh Day of the Third Battle of Ypres



Friday 10th August 1917

Today has seen the first day of major operations in this new offensive since 31st July. Two divisions have been involved in trying to push forward in the one area where the first day of the battle achieved little overall success - the ground on and immediately north of the Menin Road, known as the Westhoek Ridge. The divisions taking part were 18th (Eastern) Division and 25th Division. The weather has been wet recently, uncharacteristically so for August and it has rained again today, the warm air temperature making a debilitating, muggy atmosphere. In places there is reckoned to be a foot of standing water(1)


74th Brigade from 25th Division attacked across a very wide area (a 2,000-yard frontage) from the railway from Ypres to Roulers in the north, down past the western edges of the village of Westhoek to a point just west of the northern edge of Glencorse Wood. The attack was designed to take the village and its two strongpoints and the ground on either flank. This comparatively modest advance was carried out successfully, despite the conditions and our troops are now preparing against any German counter-attack.



18th Division, including our own 7th Battalion, attacked to the south of 74th Brigade, between them and Inverness Copse. 54th Brigade attacked north of the Menin Road and 53rd Brigade astride and south of it. 54th Brigade, the Bedfords well to the fore, stormed into Glencorse Wood from a position some way to the west of it. The west edge of the wood is protected by a major trench known as Jargon Trench and this fell quickly. We understand that the Bedfords took the whole of Glencorse Wood with the 11th Royal Fusiliers getting as far as Fitzclarence Farm. At this point the enemy massed in Polygon Wood and Nonne Bosschen Wood for a counter-attack. They pushed the Fusiliers back nearly to their starting positions. The Bedfords, I have been hearing, were let down by this failure of the Fusiliers, having to defend not only their front but an over-extended right flank where the Fusiliers had withdrawn. As a result they have fallen back to Jargon Trench where they are holding. I hope for a more detailed picture to emerge tonight.

7th Queen’s of 53rd Brigade attacked Inverness Copse from the south. This was only after the enemy spotted them forming up in the pre-dawn half-light and caused many casualties. A strongpoint at the south-western edge of the wood further hampered the attack which has now been called off.

So the attack has had mixed fortunes but I have been able to gauge that the opinion is that the 7th Bedfords, at least, have added to their laurels today.

Source: X550/8/1

(1) The water table was naturally high in such low-lying ground as that around Ypres. The constant shelling had destroyed ditches and drainage systems and the rain had made the soil waterlogged.

Wednesday, 2 August 2017

Third Day of the Third Battle of Ypres



Thursday 2nd August 1917

No further attacks have been made today as General Gough “shuffles his pack”, replacing some of the divisions which took part in the first day of the attack with newer, fresher units. So far six divisions have been replaced in the front line, including 30th Division. However, the adjutant of the 2nd Battalion, Bedfordshire Regiment, suspects that this relief may be temporary as the battalion has been warned that they will have to carry out an attack in about two days’ time to take Glencorse Wood, which was to have fallen on 31st July but held out.

30th Division has been replaced in the front line by 18th (Eastern) Division. 7th Battalion, Bedfordshire Regiment, is currently behind the lines at a place called Château Segard. They have been resting as much as possible as it seems that, for them, too, offensive operations will soon unfold. Consequently only scouts and runners have been sent forward during the day to reconnoitre the route up for pending operations. There has been rain again today, as there has been since the attack began and some of my colleagues of “The Staff” as correspondents have taken to calling ourselves are worried in case the ground gets too muddy for an advance. However, the rain yesterday and today has mean of the drizzling variety and seems unlikely to do too much damage to the ground and, despite the comparatively low temperature today, this is the beginning of August, still high summer, and we can surely expect some warm, drying weather soon.

Sources: X550/3/wd; X550/8/1

Friday, 24 March 2017

Shell Craters and Barbed Wire


Saturday 24th March 1917 from our correspondent in the field

During the pursuit of the retreating Germans the East Anglian Royal Engineers have not been idle, as we heard on 13th March. They have been working in the vicinity of the village of Sapignies, north-west of Bapaume.

A tool cart and limber was sent to No 1 section at Sapignies via Bapaume. Then the Company (less one section detailed as an advanced guard) received orders to move to Sapignies as Royal Engineers of the main guard, formed by 6th Infantry Brigade, on 2nd Division advance.

The Company arrived (via Bapaume) at Sapignies and cleared roads around two mine craters, shown as red x's on the map above. They also removed the wire obstacles across the road marked by the blue cross. Their division was then relieved by 18th Division bringing them, once more, into close contact with 7th Bedfords, though whether old friends were able to spend time together is doubtful as everyone is working at high pressure to ensure that the German retreat is followed as closely as possible.

Source: WW2/WD3

Sunday, 20 November 2016

The Battle of the Somme - What Has It Achieved?




Monday 20th November 1916 From our Correspondent in the Field

If, as looks likely, the battle of the Somme has come to an end until the Spring, it is time to reflect on what it has achieved. A total of twenty four villages have been captured. It is true that the objective for the battle was Bapaume which has not quite been reached, the Butte de Warlencourt has stood as a German sentry in the dreadful weather of October and November denying the army their prize, but still much ground has fallen to our attacks.

Many of these attacks have been made by untried “Kitchener” battalions, such as the 6th and 7th Bedfords, whose first taste of action was during this battle. Some formations have already, as a result of their actions of the last five months, received a reputation as very efficient and deadly fighting formations – not least 18th (Eastern) and 30th Divisions.

The casualties have been high. There is no clear word from High Command about the numbers of dead, wounded and missing from our army, let alone calculations about the enemy but, given that for every British and Empire attack there was at least one corresponding German counter-attack, it is unlikely that the enemy have lost much less than we have(1).

It is clear that our attacks on the Somme materially aided our allies the French who were struggling against a vicious German offensive at Verdun. To be engaged in three major offensives, the Anglo-French offensive on the Somme, their own offensive at Verdun and the Brusilov Offensive in Russia, must have seriously depleted German reserves of manpower.

It seems, therefore, that, though the weather is gloomy, the outlook for the allied cause in this war is not. We know that Germany is not yet beaten and that severe fighting will take place in 1917 but we can reasonably expect that victory is much closer than it was on 1st July this year.

(1) Figures for casualties vary but British and Empire casualties were probably around half a million, the Germans not far behind or maybe slightly higher. French casualties probably exceeded 200,000. German Chief of Staff Erich Ludendorff called the Somme “the muddy grave of the German field army”.

Friday, 22 July 2016

Day Twenty Two in the Somme

Saturday 22nd July 1916 From our Correspondent in the Field



We understand that 18th (Eastern) Division, of which the 7th Battalion, Bedfordshire Regiment forms a part, is leaving Fourth Army and this Battle of the Somme, now in its twenty second day. Rumour has it that the move north will be to the area near Béthune and Loos, scene of so much of the fighting last year but comparatively “quiet” this year.

Colonel Price shared the following telegram sent by Fourth Army commander General Rawlinson to the whole of 18th Division: “The part which the 18th Division has taken in the Battle of the Somme reflects the highest credit on every Officer, Non Commissioned Officer and Man, and I desire to tender to one and all my gratitude and congratulations”.

“The gallantry and determination displayed in the assault of the enemy's first system of defence, together with the night attack on, and final capture, of Trônes Wood, were feats of arms which will rank amongst the best attainments of the British Army. Nothing could have been finer than the behaviour of those men of the West Kent Regiment who held their position throughout the night when surrounded by the enemy at the northern end of the wood”.

“The heavy fighting in the village of Longueval and Delville Wood in which portions of the Division were engaged was an example of discipline, valour, and endurance which was wholly admirable”.

“It is with great regret that I hear the Division is to be transferred to another Army and I trust at some future time I may be honoured by again having it under my command”.

Source: X550/8/1

Wednesday, 20 July 2016

Day Twenty on the Somme

Thursday 20th July 1916 From our Correspondent in the Field



Today the South Africans were relieved from the evil Delville Wood, now being referred to by all and sundry as Devil’s Wood. The rescue was effected by two battalions from 53rd Brigade, 18th Division, the division which has so greatly distinguished itself in the first three weeks of this great battle. 8th Battalion, Suffolk Regiment and 6th Battalion, Royal Berkshire Regiment finally broke through German defences to bring out the encircled South Africans. Only two wounded officers, we understand and 140 men, out of a total of several thousand who went in, came out of the wood. There is a story doing the rounds, which I cannot verify, that they were piped out by a man of the Black Watch who had fought against the Boers at the Battle of Magersfontein in 1899(1).

A few hundred yards to the north-west 33rd Division attacked High Wood this morning. In vicious fighting they have managed to occupy a portion of the southern edge of this place. Attacks this afternoon saw men of the division reach the northern part of the wood. Sadly they were driven back to the southern end by heavy German shelling.




(1) This was Piper Sandy Grieve.

Thursday, 14 July 2016

Day Fourteen on the Somme

Friday 14th July 1916 From our Correspondent in the Field



The last twenty-four hours have seen a major series of British attacks making it the most intense period since the first day of the battle, 1st July. I will begin this despatch with the continued fighting in and around Trônes Wood, which is now being carried on by 18th Division. The 7th Bedfords, part of 54th Brigade of this division, received orders just after midnight to proceed to Maricourt from their rest area where they are in reserve for the major attack by 12th Battalion, Middlesex Regiment and 6th Battalion, Northamptonshire Regiment in the wood. This was because the attacks launched by 55th Brigade last night all failed and resulted in the wood being lost. Brigadier Shoubridge of 54th Brigade decided on a simple attack south to north through the wood by the Middlesex and Northamptons under the commanding officer of the 12th Middlesex, Lieutenant-Colonel F A Maxwell. At 4.30 am, an hour after the great push on the nearby Bazentin Ridge began (which I will outline below) the Northamptons began the attack. 

Colonel Maxwell

In the darkness and undergrowth the troops reaching the eastern edge of the wood believed it to be the northern edge and thought they had taken the whole wood. So, when the Middlesex Regiment entered the wood at 8 am they found many men in the south-east of the wood but no one further north. So Colonel Maxwell led his battalion north slowly, using a compass to ensure they were on the right track. In this way he cleared the middle of the wood and finally cleared all Germans from the wood by 9.30. So it fell to the men from Northamptonshire and, more importantly, from Middlesex to finally take and hold this blood-clotted tangle of splintered trees. And they hold it still, as I write this, no counter-attack having been made. The Germans must be as sick of the place as I know our own men are(1).



As I have mentioned a major offensive begun in the early hours of this morning has been against the Bazentin Ridge. The villages of Bazentin-le-Petit and Bazentin-le-Grand and their attendant woods, are around a mile or so north-west of Trônes Wood. A mile or so due west of these is the village of Ovillers a target for the attack on 1st July. This place was attacked by 25th Division but the attacks failed to make much headway, so great is the strength of the defences. During the day today Ovillers has been attacked from three sides, south, east and west but these, too, have come to nothing. Attacks were also made against the high ground south of the village of Thiepval known as the Leipzig Salient, north-west of Ovillers and these managed to take a small amount of ground.



Elsewhere much, it seems, has been achieved. 9th (Scottish) Division began their attack on Longueval, directly north of Trônes Wood in the early hours of this morning and, after heavy fighting, have taken the southern part of the village, though Delville Wood still holds out. An attack on Waterlot Farm, south-east of the village and half-way to the village of Guillemont was not successful.



3rd Division, on the left of 9th Division succeeded in capturing the village of Bazentin-le-Grand. 7th  Division, to the left of 3rd Division, have captured Bazentin-le-Grand Wood and the village of Bazentin-le-Petit, which lies north-west of Bazentin-le-Grand. 21st Division have taken by far the greatest part of Bazentin-le-Petit Wood (which is bigger than Bazentin-le-Grand Wood). We understand that these attacks have taken somewhere in the order of 1,500 prisoners.

There is a wood north of Longueval and north-east of the Bazentins which the army has christened High Wood as it stands on ground commanding a view over great parts of the battlefield. It is believed that this wood was empty in the wake of the successful attacks made early this morning(2). It is hoped that the army can seize it this evening. If so it is likely that the army has finally achieved a significant breakthrough at the end of the second week of this battle. There are rumours that the cavalry are being called up to pour through this gap and tear into the German rear areas. If this happens the breakthrough may turn into a rout and the end of the war may be in sight. I need not tell you that the prospect of this has put huge energy into all around. Everywhere I see smiles and thumbs up.

P. S. the Indian horseman of the Deccan Horse have just charged into High Wood and are reported to be slaughtering the few defenders, now the hunt is up!

(1) Lieutenant-Colonel Francis Aylmer Maxwell VC, DSO (1871-1917). He won the Victoria Cross in 1900 in the Second Boer War whilst serving with Roberts’ Horse having received the Distinguished Service Order with the Bengal Lancers in 1898. He was regarded as one of the finest commanders serving in the Great War – an aggressive, original thinker and popular with his men. He was later promoted to Brigadier and led 27th Brigade, 9th (Scottish Division) He was killed by a sniper on the Menin Road near Ypres on 21st September 1917. He is buried at Ypres Reservoir Cemetery.


(2) At the time the French name was Bois des Foureaux, now it is Bois des Fourcaux.

Wednesday, 13 July 2016

Day Thirteen on the Somme

Thursday 13th July 1916 From our Correspondent in the Field



Just after midnight this morning 2nd Bedfords were relieved from their trenches in the south-west of Trônes Wood by 7th Battalion, Royal West Kent Regiment of 55th Brigade, 18th Division. We understand that two battalions of 54th Brigade have also been assigned to the struggle in the wood, joining 55th Brigade. 7th Bedfords are part of 54th Brigade but have not yet been fed into this confusing and brutal struggle. This evening an attack by three different battalions from three directions is under way. 

We understand that the work so ably begun by the 38th (Welsh) Division has been completed today by 21st Division. Now the whole of Mametz Wood is in British hands





Tuesday, 12 July 2016

Day Twelve on the Somme

Wednesday 12th July 1916 From our Correspondent in the Field



The 2nd Battalion’s ordeal in Trônes Wood has continued today. About 10 pm last night the enemy surrounded the force formerly led by Captain Tyler, bombing it from three sides. In the circumstances Lieutenant L H Walker ordered the men to fall back to the old brickworks on the other side of Bernafay Wood where they joined the Battalion’s headquarters. C and D Companies, entrenched in the south-west of the wood managed to retain their toe-hold all night despite frequent attacks.

Lieutenant Walker

This morning Lieutenant W White and Second Lieutenant L A L Fink were sent from the reserve of officers at the Battalion’s transport lines to replace those officers who were lost yesterday. Lieutenant White took over command of A Company from the unfortunate Captain Tyler who is either dead or a prisoner.

Lieutenant White

Just after midnight two companies of 17th Battalion King’s (Liverpool) Regiment occupied the southern edge of the wood and linked up with C and D Companies of the Bedfords. Through the day this line has been held despite many determined attacks with bombs by the enemy. Second Lieutenant H J Bricknell was wounded during the day.

Second Lieutenant Bricknell

We understand that 55th Brigade of 18th Division (7th Bedfords are in 54th Brigade of that division) has been temporarily attached to 30th Division because, although the division now holds the southern part of the wood, it has suffered many casualties over the last four days and is exhausted. I can vouch that the lined faces of the officers and men I have seen today attest to their expenditure of strength and courage over the last day or more.


Source: X550/3/wd

Thursday, 7 July 2016

Day Seven on the Somme

Friday 7th July 1916 From our Correspondent in the Field

As the 7th Bedfords withdraw from this battle, now in its seventh day, the adjutant has passed on the congratulatory telegrams received in the wake of the successful attack on 1st July. General Rawlinson, commander-in-chief of 4th Army wrote, on 2nd July: "please convey to 18th Division my best congratulations and thanks for their dashing attack yesterday. They have done excellent work and I desire to thank them most heartily." The commander of XIII Corps, General Sir Walter Norris Congreve wrote: “please convey to all units my intense appreciation of their splendid fighting which has attained all asked for from them and resulted in heavy losses to the enemy, nearly 1,000 prisoners have already passed through the cage”. And the commander of 18th Division, Sir Ivor Maxse wrote simply: “well done; it's what I expected; now hold on to what you have gained so splendidly”.



Today 17th Division made a determined attack on the area south of the village of Contalmaison this morning. They began at 2 am but their attack failed due to strong defence and uncut wire. The Germans then counter-attacked but were defeated by 7 am. Another attack was then made by 17th Division but this, too, was defeated.

23rd Division, next-door to 17th, also made an attack this morning, with the aim of taking the village of Contalmaison itself. Despite furious machine-gun fire they entered the village as far as the church, but suppoting attacks failed and, with ammunition running out, the gallant men of 23rd Division were forced to abandon the village. This ended what has been a frustrating day, like so many in this war.


Source: X550/8/1

Monday, 4 July 2016

Day Four on the Somme

Tuesday 4th July 1916 From our Correspondent in the Field



It has been another busy day, if a very wet one, the fourth day of what we are now calling The Battle of the Somme. 18th Division, of which 7th Bedfords forms a part, occupied a small wood called Marlboro’ Wood, just north of Caterpillar Wood which was taken yesterday, unopposed. Just over the ridge to the north lies the village of Bazentin-le-Grand and its accompanying wood to the west, both, no doubt, full of Germans. The battalion itself is resting further south around Carnoy Wood. Total casualties for the battle so far have been calculated by the adjutant as 2 officers killed and 13 wounded; 79 other ranks killed, 212 wounded, 6 missing and another 9 who subsequently have died of their wounds – a total of 306 officers and men.



The 2nd Battalion continue to consolidate the division’s positions, again under considerable shellfire, which wounded a number of people including Lieutenant Leonard Dolman(1). This evening they hope to be relieved by the South African Brigade. This Battalion has also been totting up its casualties so far: 2nd Lieutenant W. E. Boulton was reported as suffering from shell shock on 1st July(2). Seven other ranks have been killed, eight are missing, five also have shell shock and two, though wounded, are still at duty; 56 have been wounded making a grand total of 78.

Lieutenant Dolman [X550/1/82] (left) and Second Lieutenant Boulton [X550/1/81] (right)

Elsewhere another attack was made on the hamlet of la Boisselle by 19th and 23rd Divisions. The attack was hampered by the flooded ground which has turned to a deep, sucking mud. The attack began at 8.30 and by 2.30 most of the village was in British hands, despite counter-attacks. 17th Division made a short advance north towards Contalmaison, much hampered by the weather and state of the ground and so an attack is prepared for the hours of darkness tonight.



Sources: X550/3/wd; X550/8/1

(1) He died on the last day of 1917, from wounds received in a trench raid by the Germans on 21st December, whilst serving with 8th Battalion, and is buried at Achiet-le-Grand Communal Cemetery Extension.
(2) Neurasthenia was the medical name given to this ailment. Today it would probably be labelled as Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. 

Sunday, 3 July 2016

Day Three on the Somme

Monday 3rd July 1916 From our Correspondent in the Field



We have become used to battles in this war taking days, sometimes weeks. The current operations, over such a large area and with such huge numbers of men involved may even take months. This is the third day of operations and the adjutant of the 2nd Bedfords, near the Glatz Redoubt, immediately north of Maricourt, tells me that they have been consolidating positions under shellfire.



Meanwhile 27th Brigade of 9th Division made an advance just north of the 2nd Bedfords, towards a spearhead-shaped stand of trees called Trônes Wood, which they found occupied by the enemy. This wood lies on the east-west road from Guillemont to Montauban, the tip of its spear pointing due north to the village of Longueval. Meanwhile, the 7th Bedfords’ division (18th) occupied Caterpillar Wood in the early morning. This wood, so-called for its wriggling shape, lies north-west of Montauban, just beyond the targets set for the attack of the first day of the battle. It almost links up with the eastern face of Mametz Wood.



17th Division continued their attack of yesterday finally taking both Shelter and Bottom Woods south of Contalmaison. Birch Tree Wood, just north of Shelter Wood, was also taken. German counter-attacks were successfully beaten off. There are hopes that the village of Contalmaison might be quickly taken tomorrow.



Further west, 12th Division overran more than two hundred Germans in the vicinity of the hamlet of la Boisselle, which had been an objective of the first day of the battle. All these enemy combatants have been taken prisoner. The hamlet itself, however, remains in German hands. The neighbouring hamlet of Ovillers was also attacked (again an objective from the first day) but only limited progress was made.

Colonel Price, commanding officer of the 7th Bedfords, has been telling me more about their great triumph on 1st July. He particularly mentioned: “the wonderful steadiness and coolness of all ranks under heavy shell and machine gun fire. As the men worked practically without officers and the majority of their senior platoon and section commanders. A truly wonderful performance when it is taken into consideration that their training had not reached its second year”.

“Both during the preliminary bombardment, when the weather was very bad [at the end of June], and the men were living in trenches filled with water day and night and during and after making good their final objective, the cheeriness and high morale of all ranks was remarkable”. He tells me he has also recommended the following officers for special recognition:

  • Captain Bull: “who led the right attack with conspicuous gallantry, until severely wounded at the Maple Trench”(1);
  • Captain Lloyd: “who was in charge of the Support Company until very severely wounded at the Emden Trench”;
  • Captain and Acting Adjutant Bridcutt: “this officer was my right hand man previous to and during the assault. He took five German prisoners single handed and organized and led two bombing parties against  Montauban Avenue. He was tireless in seeing to the organisation of the strong points and arranging for the comfort of the men”(2);
  • Lieutenant Benson: “this officer never ceased in his exertions to keep up communications. The difficulty of laying down wires was enormous, for the enemy shell fire was heavy and the wires were continually being cut. His system of runners was very good but unfortunately the casualties among them were very heavy. Six separate efforts were made by him personally to lay wires while exposed to this fire but without success, until it had to be abandoned.
  • Lieutenant Fleming Brown: “this officer did remarkably good work as officer in charge of the machine guns. He personally superintended the placing of the machine guns in all strong points in the [captured] Redoubt, in Beetle Alley and in the New Trench. In addition he acted as orderly officer to me and rendered valuable assistance in letting me know the exact situation whenever it required clearing up”.
 Lieutenant Fleming Brown [X550/1/82]

Sources: X550/3/wd; X550/8/1

(1) He was killed at the Battle of Chérisy on 3rd May 1917 and is buried at Cérisy-Gailly French National Cemetery. He does not seem to have been awarded any gallantry medal.
(2) Killed on 1st October when a Lieutenant-Colonel commanding 2nd Battalion, Royal Irish Rifles. He had been awarded the Distinguished Service Order and is buried at Dadizeele New British Cemetery.

Saturday, 2 July 2016

Day Two in the Somme

Sunday 2nd July 1916 From our Correspondent in the Field



It is evident this evening that my hopes, formed in expectation of the great success on the right flank of the British Army’s attack yesterday, were severely premature. As the day has gone on I have heard increasingly sombre accounts of the events of yesterday which took place elsewhere and it is with these that I will begin.

30th Division was on the right of the British attack with 18th Division on their left flank. On the left flank of 18th Division was 7th Division home, until late last year, of the 2nd Bedfords. This division lost severely yesterday but, through costly fighting, the Germans pulled back this morning leaving the village of Fricourt in its hands. Every other attack failed. Ten divisions achieved nothing bar acts of heroism in a losing cause. All were back in their own front line trenches by the end of yesterday. All this is very disappointing in itself. Far more than disappointing is the number of casualties. Yesterday 7th Bedfords were highly successful but lost around one third of their strength, of whom about one hundred were killed. Of the British Army overall, out of just over 150,000 men attacking the German lines over 56,000 have become casualties, of whom, we believe, around 19,000 have been killed. This is the same number of men lost in the three weeks of the Battle of Loos in September 1915 lost in a single day. To put it another way, the combined populations of a swathe of south Bedfordshire including the towns of Dunstable and Leighton Buzzard and their neighbouring parishes of Billington, Eggington, Heath and Reach, Houghton Regis, Stanbridge and Tilsworth as measured by the 1911 census are 18,293.

Last night the 2nd Battalion were consolidating ground won by the rest of their division, principally battalions from Manchester and Liverpool. They have carried on this work today, beating off four German counter-attacks. They have dug a new trench to link up the captured trenches to our old front line which they have taken upon themselves to name Bedford Trench

The 7th Battalion also spent the night after their attack in consolidating the ground they had helped to win in the Pommiers Redoubt and Beetle Alley. At day-break they returned behind the old British Front Line to Carnoy from the enemy's captured trenches and rested. As I write this they are about to move forward again, as a reserve battalion, to Emden and Austrian Trenches.

Today your correspondent caught up with Captain Bull, commanding officer of B Company who was wounded in the attack yesterday and is now receiving attention behind the lines. He spoke with feeling of the time the attack stalled in front of the Pommiers Redoubt: "The hour outside that trench will be a nightmare for years to come and this was our expensive time. There were about twenty men from the Royal Berkshires and about the same numbers of my lot. They were all splendid, the way they cut the wire just as if there was nothing doing”.

Colonel Price is penning a report to his Brigade Commander about the attack yesterday and has shared his thoughts with me about the reasons for its success. He believes there were eight of these and, in his own words, here they are:

1. The work of the artillery, with very few exceptions the wire was beautifully cut and the trenches filled up. The shooting was wonderfully accurate.

2. The training of the Battalion behind the lines at Picquigny (where attacks were practised for some weeks over very similar ground to yesterday’s). The time and attention to every detail that was carried out there was repaid a thousand-fold. As an example I may quote that only three officers in the entire Battalion got beyond Emden Trench, most of the platoon and very many section leaders had gone, yet so thorough was the training beforehand that the men carried on entirely by themselves, knew where to go to and what to do when they got there.

3. The clear and concise orders that were received, nothing had been forgotten and provision had been made made for all emergencies.

4. The good work done by the clearing up parties who followed our attack to deal with any Germans still not neutralised who might have fired at us from the rear. The work done by the 6th Battalion, Northamptonshire Regiment was splendid and we had no shooting from behind. I would suggest that these parties, so absolutely necessary, should be increased in strength.

5. The good work of the carrying up parties. In addition to those provided under Brigade arrangements, another party was made up from odd men in the Battalion such as cooks and mechanics, about thirty in number, and they carried up with A Company a supply of small arms ammunition and bombs. This party then returned to the most advanced dump and continued during the whole day to maintain the supply. A large number of bombs were used in clearing Montauban Alley and without the supply furnished by this advanced party matters would have come to a standstill. They did most excellent work and never ceased carrying until a large stock of bombs and ammunition had been accumulated. I would suggest this advanced carrying party going with the Reserve Company whenever possible.

6. The quickness with which the assaulting Battalions left our Trenches. Where a prearranged timetable barrage is arranged, it seems imperative that the men should be quick off the mark. In the assault the two companies left our trenches before cessation of intense bombardment. They were thus able to take full advantage of the artillery barrage(1). It would thus appear safer to risk a few casualties from our own guns than to miss the effect of the barrage and so come under the fire of enemy machine guns which are without doubt kept in dug-outs until the barrage has stepped forward. This point has continually been insisted by all those who were in the first waves.

7. The close co-operation of all units in the assaulting waves. This was very marked, both between our two companies and the company of the 11th Battalion, Royal Fusiliers on our left. With regard to the latter both at the Pommiers Trench and Redoubt they rendered most invaluable assistance at very critical times. Their help was very deeply appreciated and remarked on by the men of my Battalion. I would suggest also that in clearing Montauban Alley as far as Loop Trench considerable assistance was given by us to the 53rd Brigade which enabled them to make good their final objective.

8. A sustained and continual advance. This seems highly important and is exemplified in the taking of the Redoubt. Those immediately facing it were held up but elements which outflanked it pressed on, made use of their bombers and machine guns, killing or forcing the defenders to fall back. Those held up immediately pressed forward and allowed the lines to maintain their formations. An advance of this nature has, no doubt, a big effect on the morale of the enemy.

9. Communications - though minute and detailed arrangements were made for visual signalling and communication by runners, neither were very successful. Messages took a very long time in getting through, and the varying aspect of operations could not be brought quickly enough to the notice of higher authority. Perhaps some form of small portable wireless telegraphy might be arranged for in future operations(2).



Elsewhere on the battlefront the complete failure in the northern sector seems to have led to operations there being suspended. During the day 30th Division found that Bernafay Wood was undefended and so took it. Further north 17th and 21st Divisions launched an attack to try to capture two small woods called Bottom Wood and Shelter Wood immediately south of the village of Contalmaison, which lies east of Mametz Wood and is still in enemy hands.

Sources: X550/3/wd; X550/8/1


(1)  In other, less well-led, divisions, the familiar picture of men “going over the top” only once the barrage ceased was played out. Many of these men were killed in the first few seconds of the attack. Another familiar picture from the first day of the Battle of the Somme is men wearing packs weighing sixty pounds or more trudging slowly across No Man’s Land. Divisional orders for 18th Division made it clear that men were not to carry packs, indeed, were to carry the minimum of equipment. This enabled them to move at the double across the space between the front lines, cutting down the time spent there and the casualties suffered.