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THE BATTLE OF THE SOMME
July 1st 1916 - the bloodiest day in the
history of the British Army, or The Battle of the Somme –
The Lost Generation
Ninety years ago on 1st July 1916 at around
7.30 in the morning, whistles were blown to signal the
start of what would be the bloodiest day in the history
of the British Army. ‘Pals’ from towns and cities across
Britain and Ireland, who had volunteered together only
months earlier, would rise from their trenches and walk
slowly towards the German front-line entrenched along a
15-mile stretch of northern France. By the end of the
day, 20,000 British and Irish men and boys would never
again see home, and a further 40,000 would lie maimed
and injured.
But why
was this battle of World War I fought in the first
place? For months the French had been taking severe
losses at Verdum to the east of Paris, and so Allied
High Command decided to divert German attention by
attacking them further north at the Somme. Allied
Command had issued two very clear objectives; the first
was to relieve pressure on the French Army at Verdum by
launching a combined British and French offensive, and
the second objective was to inflict as heavy losses as
possible on the German armies.
The
battle plan involved the British attacking on a 15 mile
front to north of the Somme with five French divisions
attacking along an 8 mile front to the south of the
Somme. Despite having fought trench warfare for almost
two years, the British Generals were so confident of
success that they had even ordered a regiment of cavalry
to be put on standby, to exploit the hole that would be
created by a devastating infantry attack. The naďve and
outdated strategy was that the cavalry units would run
down the fleeing Germans.
The
battle started with a weeklong artillery bombardment of
the German lines, with a total of more than 1.7 million
shells being fired. It was anticipated that such a
pounding would destroy the Germans in their trenches and
rip through the barbed wire that had been placed in
front.
The
Allied plan however, did not take into account that the
Germans had sunk deep bomb proof shelters or bunkers in
which to take refuge, so when the bombardment started,
the German soldiers simply moved underground and waited.
When the bombardment stopped the Germans,
recognising that this would signal an infantry advance, climbed up from
the safety of their bunkers and manned their machine
guns to face the oncoming British and French.
To
maintain discipline the British divisions had been
ordered to walk slowly towards the German lines, this
allowed the Germans ample time to reach their defensive
positions. And as they took their positions, so the
German machine gunners started their deadly sweep, and
the slaughter began. A few units did manage to reach the
German trenches, not however in sufficient numbers, and
they were quickly driven back.
This
was the first taste of battle for Britain's new
volunteer armies, who had been persuaded to join-up by
patriotic posters showing Lord Kitchener himself
summoning the men to arms. Many 'Pals' Battalions went
over the top that day; these battalions had been formed
by men from the same town who had volunteered to serve
together. They suffered catastrophic losses, whole units
were annihilated; for weeks afterwards, local newspapers would
be filled with lists of the dead and wounded.
Reports from the morning of 2nd July included
the acknowledgment that “…the British attack had been
brutally repulsed”, other reports gave snapshots of the
carnage “…hundreds of dead were strung out like wreckage
washed up to a high water-mark”, “…like fish caught in
the net”, “…Some looked as if they were praying; they
had died on their knees and the wire had prevented their
fall”.
The British Army had suffered 60,000 casualties, with
almost 20,000 dead: their largest single loss in one
day. The killing was indiscriminate of race, religion
and class with more than half of the officers involved
losing their lives.

Without
the decisive breakthrough, the months that followed
turned into a bloody stalemate. A renewed offensive in
September, using tanks for the first time, also failed
to make a significant impact.
Heavy
rains throughout October turned the battlegrounds into
mud baths. The battle finally ended in mid-November,
with the Allies having advanced a grand total of five
miles. The British suffered around 360,000 casualties,
with a further 64,000 in troops from across the Empire,
the French nearly 200,000 and the Germans around
550,000.
For
many, the Battle of the Somme was the battle that
symbolised the true horrors of warfare and demonstrated
the futility of trench warfare. For years after those
who led the campaign received criticism for the way the
battle was fought and the appalling casualty figures
incurred – in particular the British commander-in-chief
General Douglas Haig was said to have treated soldiers’
lives with disdain. Many people found it difficult to
justify the 125,000 Allied men lost for every one mile
gained in the advance.
©
HUK
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