fbpx
Wikipedia

Battle of Neuve Chapelle

Battle of Neuve Chapelle
Part of the Western Front of the First World War

Neuve Chapelle area, 1914–1915
Date10–13 March 1915
Location
Artois region, France
50°35′06″N 02°46′39″E / 50.58500°N 2.77750°E / 50.58500; 2.77750
Result See Analysis section
Territorial
changes
Minor Allied territorial gains
Belligerents

 British Empire

 German Empire
Commanders and leaders
John French
Douglas Haig
Crown Prince Rupprecht
Strength
4 divisions 2 divisions
Casualties and losses
12,892
c.  7,000 British
c.  4,200 Indian
9–20 March: 8,500–10,000

The Battle of Neuve Chapelle (10–13 March 1915) took place in the First World War in the Artois region of France. The attack was intended to cause a rupture in the German lines, which would then be exploited with a rush to the Aubers Ridge and possibly Lille. A French assault at Vimy Ridge on the Artois plateau was also planned to threaten the road, rail and canal junctions at La Bassée from the south as the British attacked from the north. The British attackers broke through German defences in a salient at the village of Neuve-Chapelle but the success could not be exploited.

If the French Tenth Army captured Vimy Ridge and the north end of the Artois plateau, from Lens to La Bassée, as the First Army took Aubers Ridge from La Bassée to Lille, a further advance of 10–15 mi (16–24 km) would cut the roads and railways used by the Germans, to supply the troops in the Noyon Salient from Arras south to Rheims. The French part of the offensive was cancelled when the British were unable to relieve the French IX Corps north of Ypres, which had been intended to move south for the attack and the Tenth Army contribution was reduced to support from its heavy artillery.

The Royal Flying Corps (RFC) carried out aerial photography, despite poor weather, which enabled the attack front to be mapped to a depth of 1,500 yd (1,400 m) for the first time and for 1,500 copies of 1:5,000 scale maps to be distributed to each corps. The battle was the first deliberately planned British offensive and showed the form which position warfare took for the rest of the war on the Western Front. Tactical surprise and a break-in were achieved, after the First Army prepared the attack with great attention to detail. After the first set-piece attack, unexpected delays slowed the tempo of operations and command was undermined by communication failures. Infantry-artillery co-operation broke down when the telephone system ceased to work and the Germans had time to send in reinforcements and dig a new line.

The British attempted to renew the advance, by attacking where the original assault had failed, instead of reinforcing success, and a fresh attack with the same detailed preparation as that on the first day became necessary. A big German counter-attack by twenty infantry battalions (c.  16,000 men) early on 12 March was a costly failure. Sir Douglas Haig, the First Army commander, cancelled further attacks and ordered the captured ground to be consolidated, preparatory to a new attack further north. An acute shortage of artillery ammunition made another attack impossible, apart from a local effort by the 7th Division, which was another costly failure. The Germans strengthened the defences opposite the British and increased the number of troops in the area. One consequence of the battle was that the French became cautiously optimistic that British forces could be reliable in offensive operations.

Battle

Despite poor weather, the early stages of the battle went extremely well for the British. The RFC quickly secured aerial dominance and set about bombarding railways and German reserves en route.[1] At 7:30 a.m. on 10 March, the British began a thirty-five-minute artillery bombardment by ninety 18-pounder field guns of the Indian Corps and IV Corps, on the German wire which was destroyed within ten minutes. The remaining fifteen 18-pounder field gun batteries, six 6-inch howitzer siege batteries and six QF 4.5-inch howitzer batteries, with sixty howitzers, fired on the German front-line trenches. The trenches were 3 ft (0.91 m) deep, with breastworks 4 ft (1.2 m) high but were unable to withstand a howitzer bombardment. The 1st Canadian Division at Fleurbaix, several kilometres north-east of Neuve Chapelle, provided artillery support and machine-gun fire as a diversion to prevent the Germans from reinforcing the sector.[2][3] The artillery bombardment was followed by an infantry assault at 8:05 a.m.[4]

British Artillery
Neuve Chapelle
(10–13 March 1915)
[5]
Gun No shells
13-pdr gun 60 600
18-pdr gun 324 410
4.5-inch how 54 212
60-pdr gun 12 450
4.7-inch gun 32 437
6-inch how 28 285
6-inch gun 4 400
9.2-inch how 3 333
2.75-inch gun 12 500
15-inch how 1 40

The Garhwal Brigade of the Meerut Division, Indian Corps attacked with all four battalions on a 600 yd (550 m) front, from Port Arthur to Pont Logy. On the right the attack quickly collapsed, both companies losing direction and veering to the right. The attack confronted a part of the German defences that had not been bombarded by the artillery and before the mistake was realised the two support companies followed suit. The Indian troops forced their way through the German wire and took 200 yd (180 m) of the German front trench, despite many casualties. The three Lahore battalions to the left advanced in lines of platoon fifty paces apart, swiftly crossing the 200 yd (180 m) of no man's land, overran the German infantry and pressed on to the German support trench, the attack taking only fifteen minutes. The leading companies then advanced beyond the Port Arthur–Neuve Chapelle road without waiting for the planned thirty-minute artillery preparation and took the village by 9:00 a.m. along with 200 prisoners and five machine-guns.[6]

A gap of 250 yd (230 m) had been created by the loss of direction on the right, where the German garrison had been severely bombarded but the survivors, about two platoons of the 10th Company, Infantry Regiment 16, fought on. A fresh British attack was arranged from the north, in which the Garhwal Brigade were to join in with a frontal assault. German troops infiltrated northwards before being forced back by bombers (the Grenadier Guards had objected to specialist grenade throwers usurping their name) and bayonet charges but the Indian attack was stopped by the Germans, 200 yd (180 m) south of the Port Arthur–Neuve Chapelle road.[7] Haig ordered more attacks that day, with similarly disappointing results.[6]

The German defences in the centre were quickly overrun on a 1,600 yd (1,500 m) front and Neuve Chapelle was captured by 10:00 a.m.[8] At Haig's request, the British Commander-in-Chief, Field Marshal Sir John French, released the 5th Cavalry Brigade to exploit the expected breakthrough.[9] On the left of the attack, two companies of Jäger Battalion 11 (with c.  200 men and a machine-gun) delayed the advance for more than six hours until forced to retreat, which left no time to resume the advance.[10] Although aerial photography had been useful, it was not sufficient to identify efficiently German strong points. Primitive communications also meant that the British commanders had been unable to keep in touch with each other, the battle became uncoordinated and this disrupted the delivery of supplies.[9] On 12 March, the 6th Army (Crown Prince Rupprecht) counter-attacked; the attempt failed but forced the British to use most of their artillery ammunition; the British offensive was postponed on 13 March and abandoned two days later.[11]

Aftermath

Analysis

 
Positions following the battle, New York Times, May 1915

The battle at Neuve Chapelle showed that trench defences could be breached if the attack was carefully prepared and disguised to achieve at least local surprise. After the initial shock, the German defenders recovered, just as the attackers were beset by delays, loss of communication and disorganisation. In his report at the end of March, Major-General John Du Cane wrote that the First Army command system disintegrated after the capture of Neuve Chapelle. Although Haig claimed he had made his intent plain to his subordinates, he felt they had not grasped the "spirit" of the plan and had failed to press on when initial objectives had been captured. One of the subordinates later claimed that pressing on was pointless, due to the lack of ammunition.[12]

The British telephone system proved vulnerable to German artillery-fire and the movement of troops along communication trenches was delayed by far more than the most pessimistic expectations. Equilibrium between attack and defence quickly resumed, which could only be upset by another set-piece attack, after a delay for preparation which gave the defenders just as much time to reorganise. The attack front was found to have been wide enough to overcome the small number of German reserves but the attackers had not been ordered to assist units which had been held up. British reinforcements were sent to renew failed attacks rather than reinforce success. Small numbers of German troops in strong-points and isolated trenches, had been able to maintain a volume of small-arms fire sufficient to stop the advance of far greater numbers of attackers.[13]

The battle had no strategic effect but showed that the British were capable of mounting an organised attack, after several winter months of static warfare. They recaptured about 2 km (1.2 mi) of ground. In 1961 Alan Clark wrote that relations with the French improved, because British commanders had shown themselves willing to order attacks regardless of loss and quoted Brigadier-General John Charteris that

... England will have to accustom herself to far greater losses than those of Neuve Chapelle before we finally crush the German army.[14]

 
Fortunino Matania illustration of Bengal Lancers returning from Port Arthur after the capture of Neuve Chapelle

In 2004, George Cassar called the battle a British tactical success but that the strategic intentions had not been met.[15] Jack Sheldon was less complimentary and wrote that although the attack had shocked the 6th Army, it quickly amended its defensive tactics and that the British had also been shocked that such a carefully planned attack had collapsed after the first day. Sheldon called the British analysis of the battle "bluster" and wrote that Joseph Joffre, the French commander, praised the results of the first day, then dismissed the significance of the attack "Mais ce fut un succès sans lendemain" (But it was a success which led to nothing.).[16] The German and French armies began to revise their low opinion of the BEF, the Germans having assumed that the British would remain on the defensive to release French troops and had risked keeping as few troops as possible opposite the British. The German defences were hurriedly strengthened and more troops brought in to garrison them. The French had also expected that the British troops would only release French soldiers from quiet areas and that British participation in French attacks would be a secondary activity. After the battle French commanders made more effort to co-operate with the BEF and plan a combined attack from Arras to Armentières.[17]

The expenditure of artillery ammunition on the first day had consumed about 30 per cent of the field-gun ammunition in the First Army, which was equivalent to 17 days' shell production per gun.[18] After the battle, French reported to Field Marshal Lord Kitchener, the British Secretary of State for War, that fatigue and the shortage of ammunition had forced a suspension of the offensive. On 15 March French abandoned the offensive as the supply of field-gun ammunition was inadequate. News of the ammunition shortage led to the Shell Crisis of 1915 which, along with the resignation of Admiral Fisher over the naval attack on the Dardanelles, brought down the Liberal government. The Prime Minister H. H. Asquith formed a new coalition government and appointed David Lloyd George as Minister of Munitions. It was a recognition that the whole economy would have to be adapted for war, if the Allies were to prevail on the Western Front. The battle also affected British tactical thinking with the idea that infantry offensives accompanied by artillery barrages could break the trench warfare stalemate.[19]

Casualties

 
Detail of the war memorial in the village of Preying (Saldenburg, Bavaria) naming Infantryman Mathias Ebner, killed during the Battle of Neuve Chapelle, 12 March 1915

The British suffered 7,000 casualties and the Indian Corps 4,200 of the 40,000 troops in the offensive. The 7th Division suffered 2,791 casualties, the 8th Division 4,814, the Meerut Division 2,353 and the Lahore Division 1,694.[20] In 2010 Humphries and Maker recorded German casualties from 9 to 20 March as c.  10,000 men; in 2018, Jonathan Boff wrote that the British suffered 12,592 casualties and that the German official history estimate of "almost 10,000 men", was closer to 8,500, according to the records of the 6th Army and the diary kept by Crown Prince Rupprecht.[21] The 6th Bavarian Reserve Division suffered 6,017 casualties from 11 to 13 March, Bavarian Reserve Infantry Regiment 21 1,665 casualties, Infantry Regiment 14 of VII Corps suffered 666 casualties from 7 to 12 March and Infantry Regiment 13 1,322 casualties from 6 to 27 March.[20] During its diversionary assault in support of the main offensive, the 1st Canadian Division suffered 300 casualties, nearly 100 fatal.[22]

Commemoration and legacy

The Neuve-Chapelle Indian Memorial commemorates 4,700 Indian soldiers and labourers who died on the Western Front during the First World War and have no known graves; the location was chosen because it was at the Battle of Neuve Chapelle that the Indian Corps fought its first big offensive action.[23] War graves of the Indian Corps and the Indian Labour Corps are found at Ayette, Souchez and Neuve-Chapelle.[24] Along with the Indian Corps, the battle was the first big battle of the Canadian Expeditionary Force.[a]

Victoria Cross

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The first combat action by the Canadian Expeditionary Force occurred on 28 February 1915, when the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry conducted a trench raid along with a larger British brigade.[2]

References

  1. ^ Squadron-Leader 1927, p. 97.
  2. ^ a b "The Battle of Neuve-Chapelle". canada.ca. Library and Archives Canada. 17 March 2017. Retrieved 22 December 2019.
  3. ^ Dickson 2007, p. 35.
  4. ^ Edmonds & Wynne 1995, p. 91.
  5. ^ Farndale 1986, p. 88.
  6. ^ a b Edmonds & Wynne 1995, pp. 93–94.
  7. ^ Edmonds & Wynne 1995, p. 95.
  8. ^ Edmonds & Wynne 1995, p. 98.
  9. ^ a b Strachan 2003, p. 176.
  10. ^ Edmonds & Wynne 1995, p. 105.
  11. ^ Edmonds & Wynne 1995, pp. 147–149.
  12. ^ Sheffield 2011, pp. 110–111.
  13. ^ Edmonds & Wynne 1995, pp. 151–152.
  14. ^ Clark 1961, p. 73.
  15. ^ Cassar 2004, p. 166.
  16. ^ Sheldon 2012, p. 78.
  17. ^ Edmonds & Wynne 1995, pp. 152–154.
  18. ^ Edmonds & Wynne 1995, p. 149.
  19. ^ Griffith 1996, pp. 30–31.
  20. ^ a b Edmonds & Wynne 1995, p. 151.
  21. ^ Humphries & Maker 2010, p. 67; Boff 2018, p. 67.
  22. ^ Gliddon 2015, p. 19.
  23. ^ "Neuve Chapelle Memorial". www.cwgc.org. Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 10 March 2017.
  24. ^ CWGC 2013.
  25. ^ Edmonds & Wynne 1995, p. 132.
  26. ^ a b Edmonds & Wynne 1995, p. 140.
  27. ^ Edmonds & Wynne 1995, p. 141.
  28. ^ a b Edmonds & Wynne 1995, p. 145.
  29. ^ Edmonds & Wynne 1995, p. 133.
  30. ^ Edmonds & Wynne 1995, p. 143.
  31. ^ Edmonds & Wynne 1995, p. 94.
  32. ^ Edmonds & Wynne 1995, p. 134.

References

Books

  • Boff, J. (2018). Haig's Enemy: Crown Prince Rupprecht and Germany's War on the Western Front (1st ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-967046-8.
  • Cassar, G. (2004). Kitchener's War: British Strategy from 1914 to 1916. Washington: Brassey's. ISBN 978-1-57488-708-2.
  • Clark, A. (1961). The Donkeys: a Study of the Western Front in 1915. London: Hutchinson. OCLC 271257350.
  • Dickson, Paul Douglas (2007). A Thoroughly Canadian General: A Biography of General H. D. G. Crerar. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0-8020-0802-2.
  • Edmonds, J. E.; Wynne, G. C. (1995) [1927]. Military Operations France and Belgium, 1915: Winter 1914–15 Battle of Neuve Chapelle: Battles of Ypres. History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence. Vol. I (facs. repr. Imperial War Museum Department of Printed Books and Battery Press ed.). London: Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-89839-218-0.
  • Farndale, M. (1986). Western Front 1914–18. History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery. London: Royal Artillery Institution. ISBN 978-1-870114-00-4.
  • Gliddon, Gerald (2015). For Valour: Canadians and the Victoria Cross in the Great War. Dundurn. ISBN 978-1-4597-2849-3.
  • Griffith, P. (1996). Battle Tactics of the Western Front: The British Army's Art of Attack 1916–1918. London: Yale. ISBN 978-0-300-06663-0.
  • Humphries, M. O.; Maker, J. (2010). Germany's Western Front: 1915, Translations from the German Official History of the Great War. Vol. II. Waterloo Ont.: Wilfrid Laurier University Press. ISBN 978-1-55458-259-4.
  • Sheffield, G. (2011). The Chief: Douglas Haig and the British Army. London: Aurum Press. ISBN 978-1-84513-691-8.
  • Sheldon, J. (2012). The German Army on the Western Front, 1915. Barnsley: Pen and Sword. ISBN 978-1-84884-466-7.
  • Squadron-Leader (pseud.) (1927). Basic Principles of Air Warfare: the Influence of Air Power on Sea and Land Strategy. Aldershot: Gale & Polden. OCLC 500116605.
  • Strachan, H. (2003). The First World War: To Arms. Vol. I. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-303518-3.

Websites

  • "London Gazette". The London Gazette. London: HMSO (29146). 27 April 1915. ISSN 0374-3721. Retrieved 7 September 2013.
  • "Neuve Chapelle Memorial". Commonwealth War Graves Commission website. CWGC. 13 August 2013. Retrieved 7 September 2013.

Further reading

  • Nicholson, G. W. L. (1964) [1962]. (PDF). Official History of the Canadian Army in the First World War (2nd corr. online ed.). Ottawa: Queen's Printer and Controller of Stationery. OCLC 557523890. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 October 2017. Retrieved 7 January 2018.
  • Stanistreet, B. (1988). Brave Railwaymen. Token: Greyshot. ISBN 978-1-870192-03-3.

External links

  • German Official History situation map, 10 March 1915 OÖLB
  • Indian and Chinese cemetery, Ayette
  • The Indian Memorial at Neuve Chapelle
  • World War I Document Archive – The Battle of Neuve Chapelle by Count Charles de Souza

battle, neuve, chapelle, part, western, front, first, world, warneuve, chapelle, area, 1914, 1915date10, march, 1915locationartois, region, france50, 58500, 77750, 58500, 77750resultsee, analysis, sectionterritorialchangesminor, allied, territorial, gainsbelli. Battle of Neuve ChapellePart of the Western Front of the First World WarNeuve Chapelle area 1914 1915Date10 13 March 1915LocationArtois region France50 35 06 N 02 46 39 E 50 58500 N 2 77750 E 50 58500 2 77750ResultSee Analysis sectionTerritorialchangesMinor Allied territorial gainsBelligerents British Empire Canada India United Kingdom German EmpireCommanders and leadersJohn French Douglas HaigCrown Prince RupprechtStrength4 divisions2 divisionsCasualties and losses12 892c 7 000 Britishc 4 200 Indian9 20 March 8 500 10 000 The Battle of Neuve Chapelle 10 13 March 1915 took place in the First World War in the Artois region of France The attack was intended to cause a rupture in the German lines which would then be exploited with a rush to the Aubers Ridge and possibly Lille A French assault at Vimy Ridge on the Artois plateau was also planned to threaten the road rail and canal junctions at La Bassee from the south as the British attacked from the north The British attackers broke through German defences in a salient at the village of Neuve Chapelle but the success could not be exploited If the French Tenth Army captured Vimy Ridge and the north end of the Artois plateau from Lens to La Bassee as the First Army took Aubers Ridge from La Bassee to Lille a further advance of 10 15 mi 16 24 km would cut the roads and railways used by the Germans to supply the troops in the Noyon Salient from Arras south to Rheims The French part of the offensive was cancelled when the British were unable to relieve the French IX Corps north of Ypres which had been intended to move south for the attack and the Tenth Army contribution was reduced to support from its heavy artillery The Royal Flying Corps RFC carried out aerial photography despite poor weather which enabled the attack front to be mapped to a depth of 1 500 yd 1 400 m for the first time and for 1 500 copies of 1 5 000 scale maps to be distributed to each corps The battle was the first deliberately planned British offensive and showed the form which position warfare took for the rest of the war on the Western Front Tactical surprise and a break in were achieved after the First Army prepared the attack with great attention to detail After the first set piece attack unexpected delays slowed the tempo of operations and command was undermined by communication failures Infantry artillery co operation broke down when the telephone system ceased to work and the Germans had time to send in reinforcements and dig a new line The British attempted to renew the advance by attacking where the original assault had failed instead of reinforcing success and a fresh attack with the same detailed preparation as that on the first day became necessary A big German counter attack by twenty infantry battalions c 16 000 men early on 12 March was a costly failure Sir Douglas Haig the First Army commander cancelled further attacks and ordered the captured ground to be consolidated preparatory to a new attack further north An acute shortage of artillery ammunition made another attack impossible apart from a local effort by the 7th Division which was another costly failure The Germans strengthened the defences opposite the British and increased the number of troops in the area One consequence of the battle was that the French became cautiously optimistic that British forces could be reliable in offensive operations Contents 1 Battle 2 Aftermath 2 1 Analysis 2 2 Casualties 3 Commemoration and legacy 4 Victoria Cross 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 References 8 1 Books 8 2 Websites 9 Further reading 10 External linksBattle EditDespite poor weather the early stages of the battle went extremely well for the British The RFC quickly secured aerial dominance and set about bombarding railways and German reserves en route 1 At 7 30 a m on 10 March the British began a thirty five minute artillery bombardment by ninety 18 pounder field guns of the Indian Corps and IV Corps on the German wire which was destroyed within ten minutes The remaining fifteen 18 pounder field gun batteries six 6 inch howitzer siege batteries and six QF 4 5 inch howitzer batteries with sixty howitzers fired on the German front line trenches The trenches were 3 ft 0 91 m deep with breastworks 4 ft 1 2 m high but were unable to withstand a howitzer bombardment The 1st Canadian Division at Fleurbaix several kilometres north east of Neuve Chapelle provided artillery support and machine gun fire as a diversion to prevent the Germans from reinforcing the sector 2 3 The artillery bombardment was followed by an infantry assault at 8 05 a m 4 British ArtilleryNeuve Chapelle 10 13 March 1915 5 Gun No shells13 pdr gun 60 60018 pdr gun 324 4104 5 inch how 54 21260 pdr gun 12 4504 7 inch gun 32 4376 inch how 28 2856 inch gun 4 4009 2 inch how 3 3332 75 inch gun 12 50015 inch how 1 40The Garhwal Brigade of the Meerut Division Indian Corps attacked with all four battalions on a 600 yd 550 m front from Port Arthur to Pont Logy On the right the attack quickly collapsed both companies losing direction and veering to the right The attack confronted a part of the German defences that had not been bombarded by the artillery and before the mistake was realised the two support companies followed suit The Indian troops forced their way through the German wire and took 200 yd 180 m of the German front trench despite many casualties The three Lahore battalions to the left advanced in lines of platoon fifty paces apart swiftly crossing the 200 yd 180 m of no man s land overran the German infantry and pressed on to the German support trench the attack taking only fifteen minutes The leading companies then advanced beyond the Port Arthur Neuve Chapelle road without waiting for the planned thirty minute artillery preparation and took the village by 9 00 a m along with 200 prisoners and five machine guns 6 A gap of 250 yd 230 m had been created by the loss of direction on the right where the German garrison had been severely bombarded but the survivors about two platoons of the 10th Company Infantry Regiment 16 fought on A fresh British attack was arranged from the north in which the Garhwal Brigade were to join in with a frontal assault German troops infiltrated northwards before being forced back by bombers the Grenadier Guards had objected to specialist grenade throwers usurping their name and bayonet charges but the Indian attack was stopped by the Germans 200 yd 180 m south of the Port Arthur Neuve Chapelle road 7 Haig ordered more attacks that day with similarly disappointing results 6 The German defences in the centre were quickly overrun on a 1 600 yd 1 500 m front and Neuve Chapelle was captured by 10 00 a m 8 At Haig s request the British Commander in Chief Field Marshal Sir John French released the 5th Cavalry Brigade to exploit the expected breakthrough 9 On the left of the attack two companies of Jager Battalion 11 with c 200 men and a machine gun delayed the advance for more than six hours until forced to retreat which left no time to resume the advance 10 Although aerial photography had been useful it was not sufficient to identify efficiently German strong points Primitive communications also meant that the British commanders had been unable to keep in touch with each other the battle became uncoordinated and this disrupted the delivery of supplies 9 On 12 March the 6th Army Crown Prince Rupprecht counter attacked the attempt failed but forced the British to use most of their artillery ammunition the British offensive was postponed on 13 March and abandoned two days later 11 Aftermath EditAnalysis Edit Positions following the battle New York Times May 1915 The battle at Neuve Chapelle showed that trench defences could be breached if the attack was carefully prepared and disguised to achieve at least local surprise After the initial shock the German defenders recovered just as the attackers were beset by delays loss of communication and disorganisation In his report at the end of March Major General John Du Cane wrote that the First Army command system disintegrated after the capture of Neuve Chapelle Although Haig claimed he had made his intent plain to his subordinates he felt they had not grasped the spirit of the plan and had failed to press on when initial objectives had been captured One of the subordinates later claimed that pressing on was pointless due to the lack of ammunition 12 The British telephone system proved vulnerable to German artillery fire and the movement of troops along communication trenches was delayed by far more than the most pessimistic expectations Equilibrium between attack and defence quickly resumed which could only be upset by another set piece attack after a delay for preparation which gave the defenders just as much time to reorganise The attack front was found to have been wide enough to overcome the small number of German reserves but the attackers had not been ordered to assist units which had been held up British reinforcements were sent to renew failed attacks rather than reinforce success Small numbers of German troops in strong points and isolated trenches had been able to maintain a volume of small arms fire sufficient to stop the advance of far greater numbers of attackers 13 The battle had no strategic effect but showed that the British were capable of mounting an organised attack after several winter months of static warfare They recaptured about 2 km 1 2 mi of ground In 1961 Alan Clark wrote that relations with the French improved because British commanders had shown themselves willing to order attacks regardless of loss and quoted Brigadier General John Charteris that England will have to accustom herself to far greater losses than those of Neuve Chapelle before we finally crush the German army 14 Fortunino Matania illustration of Bengal Lancers returning from Port Arthur after the capture of Neuve Chapelle In 2004 George Cassar called the battle a British tactical success but that the strategic intentions had not been met 15 Jack Sheldon was less complimentary and wrote that although the attack had shocked the 6th Army it quickly amended its defensive tactics and that the British had also been shocked that such a carefully planned attack had collapsed after the first day Sheldon called the British analysis of the battle bluster and wrote that Joseph Joffre the French commander praised the results of the first day then dismissed the significance of the attack Mais ce fut un succes sans lendemain But it was a success which led to nothing 16 The German and French armies began to revise their low opinion of the BEF the Germans having assumed that the British would remain on the defensive to release French troops and had risked keeping as few troops as possible opposite the British The German defences were hurriedly strengthened and more troops brought in to garrison them The French had also expected that the British troops would only release French soldiers from quiet areas and that British participation in French attacks would be a secondary activity After the battle French commanders made more effort to co operate with the BEF and plan a combined attack from Arras to Armentieres 17 The expenditure of artillery ammunition on the first day had consumed about 30 per cent of the field gun ammunition in the First Army which was equivalent to 17 days shell production per gun 18 After the battle French reported to Field Marshal Lord Kitchener the British Secretary of State for War that fatigue and the shortage of ammunition had forced a suspension of the offensive On 15 March French abandoned the offensive as the supply of field gun ammunition was inadequate News of the ammunition shortage led to the Shell Crisis of 1915 which along with the resignation of Admiral Fisher over the naval attack on the Dardanelles brought down the Liberal government The Prime Minister H H Asquith formed a new coalition government and appointed David Lloyd George as Minister of Munitions It was a recognition that the whole economy would have to be adapted for war if the Allies were to prevail on the Western Front The battle also affected British tactical thinking with the idea that infantry offensives accompanied by artillery barrages could break the trench warfare stalemate 19 Casualties Edit Detail of the war memorial in the village of Preying Saldenburg Bavaria naming Infantryman Mathias Ebner killed during the Battle of Neuve Chapelle 12 March 1915 The British suffered 7 000 casualties and the Indian Corps 4 200 of the 40 000 troops in the offensive The 7th Division suffered 2 791 casualties the 8th Division 4 814 the Meerut Division 2 353 and the Lahore Division 1 694 20 In 2010 Humphries and Maker recorded German casualties from 9 to 20 March as c 10 000 men in 2018 Jonathan Boff wrote that the British suffered 12 592 casualties and that the German official history estimate of almost 10 000 men was closer to 8 500 according to the records of the 6th Army and the diary kept by Crown Prince Rupprecht 21 The 6th Bavarian Reserve Division suffered 6 017 casualties from 11 to 13 March Bavarian Reserve Infantry Regiment 21 1 665 casualties Infantry Regiment 14 of VII Corps suffered 666 casualties from 7 to 12 March and Infantry Regiment 13 1 322 casualties from 6 to 27 March 20 During its diversionary assault in support of the main offensive the 1st Canadian Division suffered 300 casualties nearly 100 fatal 22 Commemoration and legacy EditThe Neuve Chapelle Indian Memorial commemorates 4 700 Indian soldiers and labourers who died on the Western Front during the First World War and have no known graves the location was chosen because it was at the Battle of Neuve Chapelle that the Indian Corps fought its first big offensive action 23 War graves of the Indian Corps and the Indian Labour Corps are found at Ayette Souchez and Neuve Chapelle 24 Along with the Indian Corps the battle was the first big battle of the Canadian Expeditionary Force a Victoria Cross EditCorporal William Anderson 2nd Battalion The Green Howards 25 Private Edward Barber 1st Battalion The Grenadier Guards 26 Private William Buckingham 2nd Battalion Leicestershire Regiment 27 Company Sergeant Major Harry Daniels 2nd Battalion The Rifle Brigade 28 Captain Charles Calveley Foss 2nd Battalion Bedfordshire Regiment 29 Lance Corporal Wilfred Dolby Fuller 1st Battalion The Grenadier Guards 26 Lieutenant Cyril Gordon Martin 56th Field Company R E 3rd Division 30 Rifleman Gabbar Singh Negi 2nd Battalion 39th Garhwal Rifles 31 Corporal Cecil Noble 2nd Battalion The Rifle Brigade 28 Private Jacob Rivers 1st Battalion Sherwood Foresters 32 See also Edit World War I portalIndian Army during World War I Battle of Hill 60 Western Front Notes Edit The first combat action by the Canadian Expeditionary Force occurred on 28 February 1915 when the Princess Patricia s Canadian Light Infantry conducted a trench raid along with a larger British brigade 2 References Edit Squadron Leader 1927 p 97 a b The Battle of Neuve Chapelle canada ca Library and Archives Canada 17 March 2017 Retrieved 22 December 2019 Dickson 2007 p 35 Edmonds amp Wynne 1995 p 91 Farndale 1986 p 88 a b Edmonds amp Wynne 1995 pp 93 94 Edmonds amp Wynne 1995 p 95 Edmonds amp Wynne 1995 p 98 a b Strachan 2003 p 176 Edmonds amp Wynne 1995 p 105 Edmonds amp Wynne 1995 pp 147 149 Sheffield 2011 pp 110 111 Edmonds amp Wynne 1995 pp 151 152 Clark 1961 p 73 Cassar 2004 p 166 Sheldon 2012 p 78 Edmonds amp Wynne 1995 pp 152 154 Edmonds amp Wynne 1995 p 149 Griffith 1996 pp 30 31 a b Edmonds amp Wynne 1995 p 151 Humphries amp Maker 2010 p 67 Boff 2018 p 67 Gliddon 2015 p 19 Neuve Chapelle Memorial www cwgc org Commonwealth War Graves Commission Retrieved 10 March 2017 CWGC 2013 Edmonds amp Wynne 1995 p 132 a b Edmonds amp Wynne 1995 p 140 Edmonds amp Wynne 1995 p 141 a b Edmonds amp Wynne 1995 p 145 Edmonds amp Wynne 1995 p 133 Edmonds amp Wynne 1995 p 143 Edmonds amp Wynne 1995 p 94 Edmonds amp Wynne 1995 p 134 References EditBooks Edit Boff J 2018 Haig s Enemy Crown Prince Rupprecht and Germany s War on the Western Front 1st ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 967046 8 Cassar G 2004 Kitchener s War British Strategy from 1914 to 1916 Washington Brassey s ISBN 978 1 57488 708 2 Clark A 1961 The Donkeys a Study of the Western Front in 1915 London Hutchinson OCLC 271257350 Dickson Paul Douglas 2007 A Thoroughly Canadian General A Biography of General H D G Crerar Toronto University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 0802 2 Edmonds J E Wynne G C 1995 1927 Military Operations France and Belgium 1915 Winter 1914 15 Battle of Neuve Chapelle Battles of Ypres History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence Vol I facs repr Imperial War Museum Department of Printed Books and Battery Press ed London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 89839 218 0 Farndale M 1986 Western Front 1914 18 History of the Royal Regiment of Artillery London Royal Artillery Institution ISBN 978 1 870114 00 4 Gliddon Gerald 2015 For Valour Canadians and the Victoria Cross in the Great War Dundurn ISBN 978 1 4597 2849 3 Griffith P 1996 Battle Tactics of the Western Front The British Army s Art of Attack 1916 1918 London Yale ISBN 978 0 300 06663 0 Humphries M O Maker J 2010 Germany s Western Front 1915 Translations from the German Official History of the Great War Vol II Waterloo Ont Wilfrid Laurier University Press ISBN 978 1 55458 259 4 Sheffield G 2011 The Chief Douglas Haig and the British Army London Aurum Press ISBN 978 1 84513 691 8 Sheldon J 2012 The German Army on the Western Front 1915 Barnsley Pen and Sword ISBN 978 1 84884 466 7 Squadron Leader pseud 1927 Basic Principles of Air Warfare the Influence of Air Power on Sea and Land Strategy Aldershot Gale amp Polden OCLC 500116605 Strachan H 2003 The First World War To Arms Vol I Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 303518 3 Websites Edit London Gazette The London Gazette London HMSO 29146 27 April 1915 ISSN 0374 3721 Retrieved 7 September 2013 Neuve Chapelle Memorial Commonwealth War Graves Commission website CWGC 13 August 2013 Retrieved 7 September 2013 Further reading EditNicholson G W L 1964 1962 Canadian Expeditionary Force 1914 1919 PDF Official History of the Canadian Army in the First World War 2nd corr online ed Ottawa Queen s Printer and Controller of Stationery OCLC 557523890 Archived from the original PDF on 26 October 2017 Retrieved 7 January 2018 Stanistreet B 1988 Brave Railwaymen Token Greyshot ISBN 978 1 870192 03 3 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of Neuve Chapelle German Official History situation map 10 March 1915 OOLB Indian and Chinese cemetery Ayette Indian Corps at the Battle of Neuve Chapelle The Indian Memorial at Neuve Chapelle World War I Document Archive The Battle of Neuve Chapelle by Count Charles de Souza World War One Battlefields Neuve Chapelle Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Neuve Chapelle amp oldid 1152152359, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.