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Battle of Passchendaele

Battle of Passchendaele
(Third Battle of Ypres)
Part of the Western Front of the First World War

Australian gunners on a duckboard track in Château Wood, near Hooge, 29 October 1917. Photo by Frank Hurley
Date31 July – 10 November 1917
(3 months, 1 week and 3 days)
Location50°54′1″N 3°1′16″E / 50.90028°N 3.02111°E / 50.90028; 3.02111 (Passendale)Coordinates: 50°54′1″N 3°1′16″E / 50.90028°N 3.02111°E / 50.90028; 3.02111 (Passendale)
Result See Analysis section
Belligerents
 France
Belgium
 Germany
Commanders and leaders
Douglas Haig
Hubert Gough
Herbert Plumer
François Anthoine
Louis Ruquoy
Erich Ludendorff
Rupprecht of Bavaria
Friedrich Sixt von Armin
Strength
50 divisions
6 divisions
77–83 divisions
Casualties and losses
240,000–448,614
(disputed, see Casualties section)
217,000–400,000
including 24,065 prisoners (disputed, see Casualties section)
Passchendaele
class=notpageimage|
Passchendaele (Passendale) a Belgian village in the Zonnebeke municipality of West Flanders province.

The Third Battle of Ypres (German: Dritte Flandernschlacht; French: Troisième Bataille des Flandres; Dutch: Derde Slag om Ieper), also known as the Battle of Passchendaele (/ˈpæʃəndl/), was a campaign of the First World War, fought by the Allies against the German Empire.[a] The battle took place on the Western Front, from July to November 1917, for control of the ridges south and east of the Belgian city of Ypres in West Flanders, as part of a strategy decided by the Allies at conferences in November 1916 and May 1917. Passchendaele lies on the last ridge east of Ypres, 5 mi (8.0 km) from Roulers (now Roeselare), a junction of the Bruges-(Brugge)-to-Kortrijk railway. The station at Roulers was on the main supply route of the German 4th Army. Once Passchendaele Ridge had been captured, the Allied advance was to continue to a line from Thourout (now Torhout) to Couckelaere (Koekelare).

Further operations and a British supporting attack along the Belgian coast from Nieuport (Nieuwpoort), combined with an amphibious landing (Operation Hush), were to have reached Bruges and then the Dutch frontier. Although a general withdrawal had seemed inevitable in early October, the Germans were able to avoid one due to the resistance of the 4th Army, unusually wet weather in August, the beginning of the autumn rains in October and the diversion of British and French resources to Italy. The campaign ended in November, when the Canadian Corps captured Passchendaele, apart from local attacks in December and early in the new year. The Battle of the Lys (Fourth Battle of Ypres) and the Fifth Battle of Ypres of 1918, were fought before the Allies occupied the Belgian coast and reached the Dutch frontier.

A campaign in Flanders was controversial in 1917 and has remained so. The British Prime Minister, David Lloyd George, opposed the offensive, as did General Ferdinand Foch, the Chief of Staff of the French Army. Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig, commander of the British Expeditionary Force (BEF), did not receive approval for the Flanders operation from the War Cabinet until 25 July. Matters of dispute by the participants, writers and historians since 1917 include the wisdom of pursuing an offensive strategy in the wake of the Nivelle Offensive, rather than waiting for the arrival of the American Expeditionary Force (AEF) in France.

Remaining controversial are the choice of Flanders, its climate, the selection of General Hubert Gough and the Fifth Army to conduct the offensive, and debates over the nature of the opening attack and between advocates of shallow and deeper objectives. Also debated are the time between the Battle of Messines (7–14 June) and the first Allied attack (the Battle of Pilckem Ridge, 31 July), the extent to which the French Army mutinies influenced the British, the effect of the exceptional weather, the decision to continue the offensive in October and the human costs of the campaign.

Background

Flanders

1914

Belgium had been recognised in the Treaty of London (1839) as a sovereign and neutral state after the secession of the southern provinces of the Netherlands in 1830. The German invasion of Belgium on 4 August 1914, in violation of Article VII of the treaty, was the British casus belli against Germany.[2] British military operations in Belgium began with the arrival of the British Expeditionary Force (BEF) at Mons on 22 August. Operations in Flanders began during the Race to the Sea, reciprocal attempts by the French and German armies to turn their opponents' northern flank, through Picardy, Artois and Flanders. On 10 October, Lieutenant-General Erich von Falkenhayn, the Chief of Staff of the Oberste Heeresleitung (OHL, supreme army command), ordered an attack towards Dunkirk and Calais, followed by a turn south behind the Allied armies, to gain a decisive victory.[3] On 16 October, the Belgians and some French reinforcements began the defence of western Belgium and the French Channel ports, at the Battle of the Yser. When the German offensive failed, Falkenhayn ordered the capture of Ypres to gain a local advantage. By 18 November, the First Battle of Ypres had also ended in failure, at a cost of 160,000 German casualties.[4] In December, the British Admiralty began discussions with the War Office, for a combined operation to re-occupy the Belgian coast but were obliged to conform to French strategy and participate in offensives further south.[5]

1915

Large British offensive operations in Flanders were not possible in 1915, due to a lack of resources.[6] The Germans conducted their own Flanders offensive at the Second Battle of Ypres (22 April – 15 May 1915), making the Ypres salient more costly to defend.[7] Sir Douglas Haig succeeded Sir John French as Commander-in-Chief of the BEF on 19 December.[8] A week after his appointment, Haig met Vice-Admiral Sir Reginald Bacon, who emphasised the importance of obtaining control of the Belgian coast, to end the threat posed by German U-boats. Haig was sceptical of a coastal operation, believing that a landing from the sea would be far more difficult than anticipated and that an advance along the coast would require so much preparation, that the Germans would have ample warning. Haig preferred an advance from Ypres, to bypass the flooded area around the Yser and the coast, before attempting a coastal attack to clear the coast to the Dutch border.[5]

1916

Minor operations took place in the Ypres salient in 1916, some being German initiatives to distract the Allies from the preparations for the offensive at Verdun and later attempts to divert Allied resources from the Battle of the Somme. Other operations were begun by the British to regain territory or to evict the Germans from ground overlooking their positions. Engagements took place on 12 February at Boesinghe and on 14 February at Hooge and Sanctuary Wood. There were actions from 14 to 15 February and 1 to 4 March at The Bluff, 27 March – 16 April at the St Eloi Craters and the Battle of Mont Sorrel from 2 to 13 June.[9] In January 1917, the Second Army (General Herbert Plumer) with the II Anzac, IX, X and VIII corps, held the Western Front in Flanders from Laventie to Boesinghe, with eleven divisions and up to two in reserve. There was much trench mortaring, mining and raiding by both sides and from January to May, the Second Army had 20,000 casualties. In May, reinforcements began arriving in Flanders from the south; the II Corps headquarters and 17 divisions had arrived by the end of the month.[10]

In January 1916, Plumer began to plan offensives against Messines Ridge, Lille and Houthulst Forest.[11] General Henry Rawlinson was also ordered to plan an attack from the Ypres Salient on 4 February; planning continued but the Battle of Verdun and the Battle of the Somme took up the rest of the year.[12] In November, Haig, the French commander-in-chief Joseph Joffre and the other Allies met at Chantilly. The commanders agreed on a strategy of simultaneous attacks, to overwhelm the Central Powers on the Western, Eastern and Italian fronts, by the first fortnight of February 1917.[13] A meeting in London of the Admiralty and the General Staff urged that the Flanders operation be undertaken in 1917 and Joffre replied on 8 December, agreeing to a Flanders campaign after the spring offensive.[14] The plan for a year of attrition offensives on the Western Front, with the main effort to be made in the summer by the BEF, was scrapped by the new French Commander-in-Chief Robert Nivelle in favour of a return to a strategy of decisive battle.[15]

Allied strategy

Nivelle planned preliminary offensives to pin German reserves by the British at Arras and the French between the Somme and the Oise, then a French breakthrough offensive on the Aisne, followed by pursuit and exploitation. Haig had reservations and on 6 January Nivelle agreed to a proviso that if the first two parts of the operation failed to lead to a breakthrough, the operations would be stopped and the British could move their forces north for the Flanders offensive, which was of great importance to the British government.[16] On 23 January, Haig wrote that it would take six weeks to move British troops and equipment to Flanders and on 14 March, noted that the Messines Ridge operation could begin in May. On 21 March, he wrote to Nivelle that it would take two months to prepare the offensive from Messines to Steenstraat but that the Messines operation could be ready in five or six weeks. The main French attack took place from 9 April to 9 May and failed to achieve a breakthrough. On 16 May, Haig wrote that he had divided the Flanders operation into two parts, one to take Messines Ridge and the main attack several weeks later.[17] British determination to clear the Belgian coast took on more urgency after the Germans resumed unrestricted submarine warfare on 1 February 1917.[18] On 1 May 1917, Haig wrote that the Nivelle Offensive had weakened the German army but that an attempt at a decisive blow would be premature.[19] The wearing-out process would continue on a front where the Germans had no room to retreat. Even limited success would improve the tactical situation in the Ypres salient, reducing the exceptional wastage, even in quiet periods.[20] In early May, Haig set the date for the Flanders offensive, the attack on Messines Ridge to begin on 7 June.[21]

Kerensky offensive

 
The Eastern Front in 1917

The Russian army conducted the Kerensky Offensive in Galicia, to honour the agreement struck with the Allies at the Chantilly meeting of 15 to 16 November 1916. After a brief period of success from 1 to 19 July, the Russian offensive was contained by the German and Austro-Hungarian armies, which counter-attacked and forced the Russian armies to retreat. On the Baltic coast from 1 to 5 September 1917, the Germans attacked with their strategic reserve of six divisions and captured Riga. In Operation Albion (September–October 1917), the Germans took the islands at the mouth of the Gulf of Riga. The British and French commanders on the Western Front had to reckon on the German western army (Westheer) being strengthened by reinforcements from the Ostheer on the Eastern Front by late 1917.[22] Haig wished to exploit the diversion of German forces in Russia for as long as it continued and urged the British War Cabinet to commit the maximum amount of manpower and munitions to the battle in Flanders.[23]

Prelude

Ypres salient

Ypres is overlooked by Kemmel Hill in the south-west and from the east by a line of low hills running south-west to north-east. Wytschaete (Wijtschate) and Hill 60 are to the east of Verbrandenmolen, Hooge, Polygon Wood and Passchendaele (Passendale). The high point of the ridge is at Wytschaete, 7,000 yd (4.0 mi; 6.4 km) from Ypres, while at Hollebeke the ridge is 4,000 yd (2.3 mi; 3.7 km) distant and recedes to 7,000 yd (4.0 mi; 6.4 km) at Polygon Wood. Wytschaete is about 150 ft (46 m) above the plain; on the Ypres–Menin road at Hooge, the elevation is about 100 ft (30 m) and 70 ft (21 m) at Passchendaele. The rises are slight, apart from the vicinity of Zonnebeke, which has a gradient of 1:33. From Hooge and further east, the slope is 1:60 and near Hollebeke, it is 1:75; the heights are subtle and resemble a saucer lip around the city. The main ridge has spurs sloping east and one is particularly noticeable at Wytschaete, which runs 2 mi (3.2 km) south-east to Messines (Mesen) with a gentle slope on the east side and a 1:10 decline westwards. Further south, is the muddy valley of the River Douve, Ploegsteert Wood (Plugstreet to the British) and Hill 63. West of Messines Ridge is the parallel Wulverghem (Spanbroekmolen) Spur and on the east side, the Oosttaverne Spur, which is also parallel to the main ridge. The general aspect south and east of Ypres, is one of low ridges and dips, gradually flattening northwards beyond Passchendaele, into a featureless plain.[24]

Possession of the higher ground to the south and east of Ypres, gives an army ample scope for ground observation, enfilade fire and converging artillery bombardments. An occupier also has the advantage that artillery deployments and the movement of reinforcements, supplies and stores can be screened from view. The ridge had woods from Wytschaete to Zonnebeke giving good cover, some being of notable size, like Polygon Wood and those later named Battle Wood, Shrewsbury Forest and Sanctuary Wood. In 1914, the woods usually had undergrowth but by 1917, artillery bombardments had reduced the woods to tree stumps, shattered tree trunks tangled with barbed wire and more wire festooning the ground, which was full of shell-holes; fields in the gaps between the woods were 800–1,000 yd (730–910 m) wide and devoid of cover. The main road to Ypres from Poperinge to Vlamertinge is in a defile, easily observed from the ridge. Roads in the area were unpaved, except for the main ones from Ypres, with occasional villages and houses dotted along them. The lowland west of the ridge was a mixture of meadows and fields, with high hedgerows dotted with trees, cut by streams and a network of drainage ditches emptying into canals.[25]

Topography

 
The progression of the battle and the general disposition of troops

In Flanders, sands, gravels and marls predominate, covered by silts in places. The coastal strip is sandy but a short way into the hinterland, the ground rises towards the Vale of Ypres, which before 1914 was a flourishing market garden.[26] Ypres is 66 ft (20 m) above sea level; Bixschoote 4 mi (6.4 km) to the north is at 28 ft (8.5 m). To the east the land is at 66–82 ft (20–25 m) for several miles, with the Steenbeek river at 49 ft (15 m) near St Julien. There is a low ridge from Messines, 260 ft (80 m) at its highest point, running north-east past Clapham Junction at the west end of Gheluvelt plateau (2+12 miles from Ypres at 213 ft (65 m) and Gheluvelt, above 160 ft (50 m) to Passchendaele, (5+12 miles from Ypres at 160 ft (50 m) declining from there to a plain further north. Gradients vary from negligible, to 1:60 at Hooge and 1:33 at Zonnebeke.[27]

Underneath the soil is London clay, sand and silt; according to the Commonwealth War Graves Commission categories of sand, sandy soils and well-balanced soils, Messines ridge is well-balanced soil and the ground around Ypres is sandy soil.[28] The ground is drained by many streams, canals and ditches, which need regular maintenance. Since 1914 much of the drainage had been destroyed, though some parts were restored by land drainage companies from England. The British considered the area drier than Loos, Givenchy and Plugstreet Wood further south.[29] A study of weather data recorded at Lille, 16 mi (26 km) from Ypres from 1867–1916, published in 1989, showed that August was more often dry than wet, that there was a trend towards dry autumns (September–November) and that average rainfall in October had decreased since the 1860s.[30]

British plans

Preparations for operations in Flanders began in 1915, with the doubling of the Hazebrouck–Ypres rail line and the building of a new line from Bergues to Proven, which was doubled in early 1917. Progress on roads, rail lines, railheads and spurs in the Second Army zone was continuous and by mid-1917, gave the area the most efficient supply system of the BEF.[31] Several plans and memoranda for a Flanders offensive were produced between January 1916 and May 1917, in which the writers tried to relate the offensive resources available to the terrain and the likely German defence. In early 1916, the importance of the capture of the Gheluvelt plateau for an advance further north was emphasised by Haig and the army commanders.[32] On 14 February 1917, Colonel Norman MacMullen of GHQ proposed that the plateau be taken by a massed tank attack, reducing the need for artillery; in April a reconnaissance by Captain Giffard LeQuesne Martel found that the area was unsuitable for tanks.[33]

On 9 February, Rawlinson, commander of the Fourth Army, suggested that Messines Ridge could be taken in one day and that the capture of the Gheluvelt plateau should be fundamental to the attack further north. He suggested that the southern attack from St Yves to Mont Sorrel should come first and that Mont Sorrel to Steenstraat should be attacked within 48 to 72 hours. After discussions with Rawlinson and Plumer and the incorporation of Haig's changes, Macmullen submitted his memorandum on 14 February. With amendments the memorandum became the GHQ 1917 plan.[34] A week after the Battle of Messines Ridge, Haig gave his objectives to his army commanders, the wearing out of the enemy, securing the Belgian coast and connecting with the Dutch frontier by capturing Passchendaele ridge, followed by an advance on Roulers and Operation Hush, an attack along the coast with a combined amphibious landing. If manpower and artillery were insufficient, only the first part of the plan might be fulfilled. On 30 April, Haig told Gough, the Fifth Army commander, that he would lead the Northern Operation and the coastal force, although Cabinet approval for the offensive was not granted until 21 June.[35][b]

German defences

 
The British front line and the German defences in the area east of Ypres, mid-1917

The 4th Army held a front of 25 mi (40 km) with three Gruppen, composed of a corps headquarters and a varying complement of divisions; Group Staden, based on the headquarters of the Guards Reserve Corps was added later. Group Dixmude held 12 mi (19 km) with four front divisions and two Eingreif divisions, Group Ypres held 6 mi (9.7 km) from Pilckem to Menin Road with three front divisions and two Eingreif divisions and Group Wijtschate held a similar length of front south of the Menin road, with three front divisions and three Eingreif divisions. The Eingreif divisions were stationed behind the Menin and Passchendaele ridges. About 5 mi (8.0 km) further back, were four more Eingreif divisions and 7 mi (11 km) beyond them, another two in OHL reserve.[37]

The Germans were anxious that the British would attempt to exploit the victory of the Battle of Messines, with an advance to the Tower Hamlets spur beyond the north end of Messines Ridge. On 9 June, Crown Prince Rupprecht proposed a withdrawal to the Flandern line east of Messines. Construction of defences began but was terminated after Fritz von Loßberg was appointed Chief of Staff of the 4th Army.[38] Loßberg rejected the proposed withdrawal to the Flandern line and ordered that the front line east of the Oosttaverne line be held rigidly. The Flandernstellung (Flanders Position) along Passchendaele Ridge, in front of the Flandern line, would become Flandern I Stellung and a new position, Flandern II Stellung, would run west of Menin, northwards to Passchendaele. Construction of a Flandern III Stellung east of Menin northwards to Moorslede was also begun. From July 1917, the area east of Ypres was defended by the front position, the Albrechtstellung (second position), Wilhelmstellung (third position), Flandern I Stellung (fourth position), Flandern II Stellung (fifth position) and Flandern III Stellung, the sixth position (incomplete). Between the German defences lay villages such as Zonnebeke and Passchendaele, which were fortified and prepared for all-round defence.[39]

On 25 June, Erich Ludendorff, the First Quartermaster General, suggested to Crown Prince Rupprecht that Group Ypres should withdraw to the Wilhelmstellung, leaving only outposts in the Albrechtstellung. On 30 June, the army group Chief of Staff, General von Kuhl, suggested a withdrawal to the Flandern I Stellung along Passchendaele ridge, meeting the old front line in the north near Langemarck and Armentières in the south. Such a withdrawal would avoid a hasty retreat from Pilckem Ridge and force the British into a time-consuming redeployment. Loßberg disagreed, believing that the British would launch a broad front offensive, that the ground east of the Sehnenstellung was easy to defend and that the Menin road ridge could be held if it was made the Schwerpunkt (point of main effort) of the German defensive system. Pilckem Ridge deprived the British of ground observation over the Steenbeek Valley, while the Germans could see the area from Passchendaele Ridge, allowing German infantry to be supported by observed artillery-fire. Loßberg's judgement was accepted and no withdrawal was made.[40]

Battle of Messines

 
German trench destroyed by a mine explosion

The first stage in the British plan was a preparatory attack on the German positions south of Ypres at Messines Ridge. The Germans on the ridge had observation over Ypres and unless it was captured, observed enfilade artillery-fire could be fired against a British attack from the salient further north.[41] Since mid-1915, the British had been mining under the German positions on the ridge and by June 1917, 21 mines had been filled with nearly 1,000,000 lb (454 t) of explosives.[42] The Germans knew the British were mining and had taken counter-measures but they were surprised at the extent of the British effort.[43] Two of the mines failed to detonate but 19 went off on 7 June, at 3:10 a.m. British Summer Time. The final objectives were largely gained before dark and the British had fewer losses than the expected 50 per cent in the initial attack. As the infantry advanced over the far edge of the ridge, German artillery and machine-guns east of the ridge opened fire and the British artillery was less able to suppress them.[44] The attack removed the Germans from the dominating ground on the southern face of the Ypres salient, which the 4th Army had held since the First Battle of Ypres in 1914.[45]

Battles

July–August

 
British 18-pounder battery taking up new positions near Boesinghe, 31 July

Haig selected Gough to command the offensive on 30 April, and on 10 June Gough and the Fifth Army headquarters took over the Ypres salient north of Messines Ridge. Gough planned an offensive based on the GHQ 1917 plan and the instructions he had received from Haig.[46] Gough held meetings with his corps commanders on 6 and 16 June, where the third objective, which included the Wilhelmstellung (third line), a second-day objective in earlier plans, was added to the two objectives due to be taken on the first day. A fourth objective, the red line was also given for the first day, to be attempted by fresh troops, at the discretion of divisional and corps commanders, in places where the German defence had collapsed.[47] The attack was not planned as a breakthrough operation and Flandern I Stellung, the fourth German defensive position, lay 10,000–12,000 yd (5.7–6.8 mi; 9.1–11.0 km) behind the front line and was not an objective on the first day.[48]

The Fifth Army plan was more ambitious than the plans devised by Rawlinson and Plumer, which had involved an advance of 1,000–1,750 yd (910–1,600 m) on the first day, by compressing their first three attacks into one day instead of three.[48] Major-General John Davidson, Director of Operations at GHQ, wrote in a memorandum that there was "ambiguity as to what was meant by a step-by-step attack with limited objectives" and suggested reverting to a 1,750 yd (1,600 m) advance on the first day to increase the concentration of British artillery.[49] Gough stressed the need to plan to exploit opportunities to take ground left temporarily undefended, more likely in the first attack, which would have the benefit of long preparation. This had not been done in earlier battles and vacant ground, there for the taking, had been re-occupied by the Germans. At the end of June, Haig added a division to II Corps (Lieutenant-General Claud Jacob) from the Second Army and next day, after meeting with Gough and General Herbert Plumer, the Second Army commander, Haig endorsed the Fifth Army plan.[50]

Battle of Pilckem Ridge

 
German prisoners and British wounded cross the Yser Canal near Boesinghe, 31 July 1917. (Q5726)

The British attack began at 3:50 a.m. on 31 July; the attack was to commence at dawn but a layer of unbroken low cloud meant that it was still dark when the infantry advanced.[51] The main attack, by II Corps across the Ghelveult Plateau to the south, confronted the principal German defensive concentration of artillery, ground-holding divisions (Stellungsdivisionen) and Eingreif divisions. The attack had most success on the northern flank, on the fronts of XIV Corps and the French First Army, both of which advanced 2,500–3,000 yd (1.4–1.7 mi; 2.3–2.7 km) to the line of the Steenbeek river. In the centre, XVIII Corps and XIX Corps pushed forward to the line of the Steenbeek (black line) to consolidate and sent fresh troops towards the green line and on the XIX Corps front to the red line, for an advance of about 4,000 yd (3,700 m). Group Ypres counter-attacked the flanks of the British break-in, supported by every artillery piece and aircraft within range, around noon. The Germans were able to drive the three British brigades back to the black line with 70 per cent casualties; the German advance was stopped at the black line by mud, artillery and machine-gun fire.[52]

Capture of Westhoek

 
German defensive system, Flanders, mid-1917

After rain delays from 2 August, II Corps attacked again on 10 August, to capture the rest of the black line (second objective) on the Gheluvelt plateau. The infantry advance succeeded but German artillery-fire and infantry counter-attacks isolated the infantry of the 18th (Eastern) Division in Glencorse Wood. At about 7:00 p.m., German infantry attacked behind a smokescreen and recaptured all but the north-west corner of the wood; only the 25th Division gains on Westhoek Ridge to the north were held.[53] Lieutenant-Colonel Albrecht von Thaer, Chief of Staff of Gruppe Wijtschate (Group Wytschaete, the headquarters of the IX Reserve Corps), noted that casualties after 14 days in the line averaged 1,500–2,000 men, compared to 4,000 men on the Somme in 1916 and that German troop morale was higher than the year before.[54]

Battle of Hill 70

Attacks to threaten Lens and Lille were to be made by the First Army in late June near Gavrelle and Oppy, along the Souchez river. The objective was to eliminate a German salient between Avion and the west end of Lens, by taking reservoir Hill (Hill 65) and Hill 70. The attacks were conducted earlier than planned to use heavy and siege artillery before it was transferred to Ypres, the Souchez operation being cut back and the attack on Hill 70 postponed.[55] The Battle of Hill 70, 30 mi (48 km) south of Ypres, eventually took place from 15 to 25 August. The Canadian Corps fought four divisions of the German 6th Army in the operation. The capture of Hill 70 was a costly success in which three Canadian divisions inflicted many casualties on the German divisions opposite and pinned down troops reserved for the relief of tired divisions in Flanders.[56] Hermann von Kuhl, chief of staff of Army Group Crown Prince Rupprecht, wrote later that it was a costly defeat and wrecked the plan for relieving fought-out (exhausted) divisions in Flanders.[57]

Battle of Langemarck

The Battle of Langemarck was fought from 16 to 18 August; the Fifth Army headquarters was influenced by the effect that delay would have on Operation Hush, which needed the high tides due at the end of August or it would have to be postponed for a month. Gough intended that the rest of the green line, just beyond the Wilhelmstellung (German third line), from Polygon Wood to Langemarck, was to be captured and the Steenbeek crossed further north.[58] In the II Corps area, the disappointment of 10 August was repeated, with the infantry managing to advance, then being isolated by German artillery and forced back to their start line by German counter-attacks, except in the 25th Division area near Westhoek. Attempts by the German infantry to advance further were stopped by British artillery-fire with many casualties.[59] The advance further north in the XVIII Corps area retook and held the north end of St Julien and the area south-east of Langemarck, while XIV Corps captured Langemarck and the Wilhelmstellung north of the Ypres–Staden railway, near the Kortebeek stream. The French First Army conformed, pushing up to the Kortebeek and St Jansbeck stream west of the northern stretch of the Wilhelmstellung, where it crossed to the east side of the Kortebeek.[60]

Local attacks

 
British anti-aircraft gun at Morbecque, 29 August 1917

On the higher ground, the Germans continued to inflict many losses on the British divisions beyond Langemarck but on 19 August, after two fine dry days, XVIII Corps conducted a novel infantry, tank, aircraft and artillery operation. German strongpoints and pillboxes along the St Julien–Poelcappelle road in front of the Wilhelmstellung were captured. On 22 August, more ground was gained by XIX and XVIII corps but the tactical disadvantage of being overlooked by the Germans continued.[61] A II Corps attack on the Gheluvelt Plateau from 22 to 24 August, to capture Nonne Bosschen, Glencorse Wood and Inverness Copse, failed in fighting that was costly to both sides.[62] Gough laid down a new infantry formation of skirmish lines to be followed by "worms" on 24 August and Cavan noted that pillboxes should be attacked on a broad front, to engage them simultaneously.[63] Another general offensive intended for 25 August, was delayed by the failure of the preliminary attacks and then postponed due to more bad weather.[64] On 27 August, II Corps tried a combined tank and infantry attack but the tanks bogged, the attack failed and Haig called a halt to operations until the weather improved.[65]

Weather

 
Royal Field Artillery gunners hauling an 18-pounder field gun out of the mud near Zillebeke, 9 August 1917

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

Careful investigation of records of more than eighty years showed that in Flanders the weather broke early each August with the regularity of the Indian monsoon: once the Autumn rains set in difficulties would be greatly enhanced....Unfortunately, there now set in the wettest August for thirty years.

— Charteris[66]

only the first part of which 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".[67] The BEF had set up a Meteorological Section under Ernest Gold in 1915, which by the end of 1917 had 16 officers and 82 men. The section predicted the warm weather and thunderstorms of 7 to 14 June; in a letter to the press of 17 January 1958, Gold wrote that the facts of the Flanders climate contradicted Charteris.[68] In 1989, Philip Griffiths examined August weather in Flanders for the thirty years before 1916 and found that,

...there is no reason to suggest that the weather broke early in the month with any regularity.

— Griffiths[69]

From 1901 to 1916, records from a weather station at Cap Gris Nez showed that 65 per cent of August days were dry and that from 1913 to 1916, there were 26, 23, 23 and 21 rainless days and monthly rainfall of 17, 28, 22 and 96 mm (0.67, 1.10, 0.87 and 3.78 in);

...during the summers preceding the Flanders campaign August days were more often dry than wet.

— Griffiths[70]

There were 127 mm (5.0 in) of rain in August 1917 and 84 mm (3.3 in) of the total fell on 1, 8, 14, 26 and 27 August. The month was overcast and windless, which much reduced evaporation. Divided into two ten-day and an eleven-day period, there were 53.6, 32.4 and 41.3 mm (2.11, 1.28 and 1.63 in) of rain; in the 61 hours before 6:00 p.m. on 31 July, 12.5 mm (0.49 in) fell. From 6:00 p.m. on 31 July to 6:00 p.m. on 4 August, there was another 63 mm (2.5 in) of rain. August 1917 had three dry days and 14 days with less than 1 mm (0.039 in) of rain. Three days were sunless and one had six minutes of sunshine; from 1 to 27 August there were 178.1 hours of sunshine, an average of 6.6 hours per day. Hussey wrote that the wet weather in August 1917 was exceptional, Haig had been justified in expecting little rain, swiftly dried by sunshine and breezes.[71]

Verdun

Petain had committed the French Second Army to an attack at Verdun in mid-July, in support of the Flanders offensive. The attack was delayed, partly due to mutinies in the French army after the failure of the Nivelle Offensive and because of a German attack at Verdun from 28 to 29 June, which captured some of the French jumping-off points. A French counter-attack on 17 July re-captured the ground, the Germans regained it on 1 August, then took ground on the east bank on 16 August.[72] The French attacked on 20 August and by 9 September had taken 10,000 prisoners. Sporadic fighting continued into October, adding to the German difficulties on the Western Front and elsewhere. Ludendorff wrote

On the left bank, close to the Meuse, one division had failed ... and yet both here and in Flanders everything possible had been done to avoid failure ... The French army was once more capable of the offensive. It had quickly overcome its depression.

— Ludendorff: Memoirs[73]

No German counter-attack was possible because the local Eingreif divisions had been transferred to Flanders.[74]

September–October

 
Derelict tank used as the roof of a dug out, Zillebeke, 20 September 1917 (Q6416)

The 4th Army had held on to the Gheluvelt Plateau in August but its casualties worsened the German manpower shortage.[75] Haig transferred the main offensive effort to the Second Army on 25 August and moved the northern boundary of the Second Army closer to the Ypres–Roulers railway. More heavy artillery was sent to Flanders from the armies further south and placed opposite the Gheluvelt Plateau.[76] Plumer continued the tactical evolution of the Fifth Army during its slow and costly progress in August. After a pause of about three weeks, Plumer intended to capture the plateau in four steps, with six-day intervals to bring forward artillery and supplies.[77] The Second Army attacks were to remain limited and infantry brigade tactics were changed to attack the first objective with a battalion each and the final one with two battalions, the opposite of the Fifth Army practice on 31 July, to adapt to the dispersed defences being encountered between the Albrechtstellung and the Wilhelmstellung.[78]

Plumer arranged for the medium and heavy artillery reinforcements reaching Flanders to be added to the creeping bombardment, which had been impossible with the amount of artillery available to the Fifth Army.[78] The tactical changes ensured that more infantry attacked on narrower fronts, to a shallower depth than on 31 July, like the Fifth Army attacks in August. The shorter and quicker advances possible once the ground dried were intended to be consolidated on tactically advantageous ground, especially on any reverse slopes in the area, with the infantry still in contact with the artillery and aircraft, ready to repulse counter-attacks.[76] The faster tempo of operations was intended to add to German difficulties in replacing tired divisions through the railway bottlenecks behind the German front.[79] The pause in British attacks misled some of the German commanders and Albrecht von Thaer, the chief of staff of Gruppe Wijtschate, wrote that it was "almost boring".[54] Kuhl doubted that the offensive had ended but had changed his mind by 13 September; two divisions, thirteen heavy artillery batteries, twelve field batteries, three fighter squadrons and four other units of the Luftstreitkräfte were transferred from the 4th Army.[80]

German tactical changes

After setting objectives 1–2 mi (1.6–3.2 km) distant on 31 July, the British attempted shorter advances of approximately 1,500 yd (1,400 m) in August but were unable to achieve these lesser objectives on the south side of the battlefield, because the rain soaked ground and poor visibility were to the advantage of the defenders. After the dry spell in early September, British advances had been much quicker and the final objective was reached a few hours after dawn, which confounded the German counter-attack divisions. Having crossed 2 mi (3.2 km) of mud, the Eingreif divisions found the British already dug in, with the German forward battle zone and its weak garrison gone beyond recapture.[81] In August, German front-line divisions had two regiments deployed in the front line, with the third regiment in reserve. The front battalions had needed to be relieved much more frequently than expected due to the power of British attacks, constant artillery-fire and the weather. Replacement units became mixed up with ones holding the front and reserve regiments had failed to intervene quickly, leaving front battalions unsupported until Eingreif divisions arrived some hours later.[82]

In July and August, German counter-attack (Eingreif) divisions had conducted an "advance to contact during mobile operations", which had given the Germans several costly defensive successes.[83] After the Battle of the Menin Road Ridge, German tactics were changed.[82] After another defeat on 26 September, the German commanders made more tactical changes to counter the more conservative form of limited attacks adopted by the British.[83] German counter-attacks in September had been "assaults on reinforced field positions", due to the restrained nature of British infantry advances. The fine weather in early September had greatly eased British supply difficulties, especially in ammunition and the British made time to establish a defence in depth on captured ground, protected by standing artillery barrages. The British attacked in dry, clear conditions, with more aircraft over the battlefield for counter-attack reconnaissance, contact patrol and ground-attack operations. Systematic defensive artillery-fire was forfeited by the Germans, due to uncertainty over the position of their infantry, just when the British infantry benefited from the opposite. German counter-attacks were costly failures and on 28 September, Thaer wrote that the experience was "awful" and that he did not know what to do.[84]

Ludendorff ordered the Stellungsdivisionen (ground holding divisions) to reinforce their front garrisons; all machine-guns, including those of the support and reserve battalions were sent into the forward zone, to form a cordon of four to eight guns every 250 yd (230 m).[85] The Stellungsdivisionen were reinforced by the Stoß (shock) regiments of Eingreif divisions, which were moved into the artillery protective line behind the forward battle zone, to counter-attack sooner. The other regiments of the Eingreif divisions were to be held back and used for a methodical counter-attack (Gegenangriff) a day or two after and for spoiling attacks as the British reorganised.[86][c] More tactical changes were ordered on 30 September; operations to increase British infantry losses were to continue and gas bombardments were to be increased, weather permitting. Every effort was to be made to induce the British to reinforce their forward positions with infantry for the German artillery to bombard them.[88] Between 26 September and 3 October, the Germans attacked at least 24 times and Operation High Storm Unternehmen Hohensturm, a Gegenangriff (methodical counter-attack), to recapture the area around Zonnebeke was planned for 4 October.[89]

Battle of the Menin Road Ridge

 
Wounded men at the side of a road after the Battle of Menin Road

The British plan for the battle fought from 20 to 25 September, 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, than behind the original July front line and to engage in more counter-battery fire. The British had 575 heavy and medium and 720 field guns and howitzers, more than double the quantity of artillery available at the Battle of Pilckem Ridge.[90] Aircraft were to be used for systematic air observation of German troop movements, to avoid the failures of previous battles, where too few aircrews had been burdened with too many duties and had flown in bad weather, which made their difficulties worse.[91]

On 20 September, the Allies attacked on a 14,500 yd (8.2 mi; 13.3 km) front and by mid-morning had captured most of their objectives, to a depth of about 1,500 yd (1,400 m).[92] The Germans made many hasty counter-attacks (Gegenstoße), beginning around 3:00 p.m. until early evening, all of which failed to gain ground or made only a temporary penetration of the new British positions. The German defence had failed to stop a well-prepared attack made in good weather.[93] Minor attacks took place after 20 September, as both sides jockeyed for position and reorganised their defences. A mutually-costly attack by the Germans on 25 September, recaptured pillboxes at the south western end of Polygon Wood. Next day, the German positions near the wood were swept away in the Battle of Polygon Wood.[94]

German counter-attack, 25 September

Two regiments of the German 50th Reserve Division attacked on a 1,800 yd (1,600 m) front, either side of the Reutelbeek stream, supported by aircraft and 44 field and 20 heavy batteries of artillery, four times the usual amount for a division. The German infantry managed to advance on the flanks, about 100 yd (91 m) near the Menin road and 600 yd (550 m) north of the Reutelbeek. The infantry were supported by artillery-observation and ground-attack aircraft; a box-barrage was fired behind the British front-line, which isolated the British infantry from reinforcements and ammunition. Return-fire from the 33rd Division and the 15th Australian Brigade of the 5th Australian Division along the southern edge of Polygon Wood to the north, forced the attackers under cover around some of the Wilhelmstellung pillboxes, near Black Watch Corner, at the south-western edge of Polygon Wood. German attempts to reinforce the attacking troops failed, due to British artillery observers isolating the advanced German troops with artillery barrages.[95]

Plumer ordered the attack due on 26 September to go ahead but reduced the objectives of the 33rd Division. The 98th Brigade was to advance and cover the right flank of the 5th Australian Division and the 100th Brigade was to re-capture the lost ground further south. The 5th Australian Division advance the next day began with uncertainty as to the security of its right flank; the attack of the depleted 98th Brigade was delayed and only managed to reach Black Watch Corner, 1,000 yd (910 m) short of its objectives. Reinforcements moved into the 5th Australian Division area and attacked south-westwards at noon as a silent (without artillery support) frontal attack was made from Black Watch Corner, because British troops were known to be holding out in the area. The attack succeeded by 2:00 p.m. and later in the afternoon, the 100th Brigade re-took the ground lost north of the Menin road. Casualties in the 33rd Division were so great that it was relieved on 27 September by the 23rd Division, which had only been withdrawn on the night of 24/25 September.[96]

Battle of Polygon Wood

 
Australian infantry with small box respirator gas masks, Ypres, September 1917

The Second Army altered its Corps frontages soon after the attack of 20 September, for the next effort (26 September – 3 October) so that each attacking division could be concentrated on a 1,000 yd (910 m) front. Roads and light railways were extended to the new front line, to allow artillery and ammunition to be moved forward. The artillery of VIII Corps and IX Corps on the southern flank, simulated preparations for attacks on Zandvoorde and Warneton. At 5.50 a.m. on 26 September, five layers of barrage fired by British artillery and machine-guns began. Dust and smoke thickened the morning mist and the infantry advanced using compass bearings.[97] Each of the three German ground-holding divisions attacked on 26 September had an Eingreif division in support, twice the ratio of 20 September. No ground captured by the British was lost and German counter-attacks managed only to reach ground to which survivors of the front-line divisions had retired.[98]

October–November

German counter-attacks, 30 September – 4 October

At 4:00 a.m. on 30 September, a thick mist covered the ground and at 4:30 a.m. German artillery began a bombardment between the Menin road and the Reutelbeek. At 5:15 a.m., German troops emerged from the mist on an 800 yd (730 m) front.[99] The attack was supported by flame-throwers and German infantry throwing smoke- and hand-grenades. The British replied with small-arms fire and bombs, forcing the Germans to retreat in confusion but a post was lost south of the Menin road, then retaken by an immediate counter-attack. SOS rockets were not seen in the mist and the British artillery remained silent.[100] The Germans were repulsed again at 6:00 a.m. but German artillery-fire continued during the day.[99]

On 1 October, at 5:00 a.m., a German hurricane bombardment began from the Reutelbeek north to Polygon Wood and Black Watch Corner; by coincidence a Second Army practice barrage began at 5:15 a.m. The British front line was cut off and German infantry attacked in three waves at 5:30 a.m.[101] Two determined German attacks were repulsed south of Cameron Covert, then at 7:00 p.m. German troops massed near the Menin road. The German attack was defeated by small-arms fire and the British artillery, whose observers had seen the SOS rockets. The British were forced out of Cameron Covert and counter-attacked but a German attack began at the same time and the British were repulsed. Another German attack failed and the German troops dug in behind some old German barbed wire; after dark, more German attacks around Cameron Covert failed.[102] North of the covert near Polygon Wood, deep mud smothered German shells before they exploded but they still caused many casualties. Communication with the rear was lost and the Germans attacked all day but British SOS rockets remained visible and the attacks took no ground; after dark German attacks were repulsed by another three SOS barrages.[103]

Unternehmen Hohensturm (Operation High Storm) was planned by Gruppe Ypern to recapture the Tokio Spur from Zonnebeke south to Molenaarelsthoek at the eastern edge of Polygon Wood on 3 October.[104] The attacking infantry from the 45th Reserve and the 4th Guard divisions were commanded by Major Freiherr von Schleinitz in the north and Lieutenant-Colonel Rave in the south.[105] After the costly failure of the methodical counter-attack ( Gegenangriff) on 1 October, the attack was put back to 4 October, rehearsals taking place from 2 to 3 October.[106] On the night of 3/4 October, the German commanders had doubts about the attack but decided to proceed with the Gegenangriff, warning the artillery to be ready to commence defensive bombardments.[107] A contact patrol aircraft was arranged to fly over the area at 7:30 a.m.[105]

Battle of Broodseinde

On 4 October, the British began the Battle of Broodseinde to complete the capture of the Gheluvelt Plateau and occupy Broodseinde Ridge. By coincidence, the Germans sought to recapture their defences around Zonnebeke with a Gegenangriff at the same time.[108] The British attacked along a 14,000 yd (8.0 mi; 13 km) front and as the I Anzac Corps divisions began their advance towards Broodseinde Ridge, men were seen rising from shell-holes in no man's land and more German troops were found concealed in shell-craters. Most of the German troops of the 45th Reserve Division were overrun or retreated through the British barrage, then the Australians attacked pillboxes one-by-one and captured the village of Zonnebeke north of the ridge.[109] When the British barrage began on Broodseinde Ridge, the Keiberg Spur and Waterdamhoek, some of the German forward headquarters staffs only realised that they were under attack when British and Australian troops appeared.[110]

As news arrived of the great success of the attack, the head of GHQ Intelligence went to the Second Army headquarters to discuss exploitation. Plumer declined the suggestion, as eight fresh German divisions were behind the battlefield, with another six beyond them.[111] Later in the day, Plumer had second thoughts and ordered I Anzac Corps to push on to the Keiberg spur, with support from the II Anzac Corps. The II Anzac Corps commander wanted to advance north-east towards Passchendaele village but the I Anzac Corps commander preferred to wait until artillery had been brought up and supply routes improved. The X Corps commander proposed an attack northward from In de Ster into the southern flank of the Germans opposite I Anzac Corps. The 7th Division commander objected, due to uncertainty about the situation and the many casualties suffered by the 21st Division on the right flank and Plumer changed his mind again. During the morning, Gough had told the Fifth Army corps commanders to push on but when reports arrived of a repulse at 19 Metre Hill, the order was cancelled.[112]

German defensive changes

 
British soldiers moving forward during the Battle of Broodseinde. Photo by Ernest Brooks.

On 7 October, the 4th Army again dispersed its troops in the front defence zone. Reserve battalions moved back behind the artillery protective line and the Eingreif divisions were organised to intervene as swiftly as possible once an attack commenced, despite the risk of British artillery-fire. Counter-battery fire to suppress the British artillery was to be increased, to protect the Eingreif divisions as they advanced.[113] All of the German divisions holding front zones were relieved and an extra division brought forward, because the British advances had lengthened the front line. Without the divisions necessary for a counter-offensive south of the Gheluvelt Plateau towards Kemmel Hill, Rupprecht began to plan for a slow withdrawal from the Ypres Salient, even at the risk of uncovering German positions further north and on the Belgian coast.[114][d]

Battle of Poelcappelle

The French First Army and British Second and Fifth armies attacked on 9 October, on a 13,500 yd (7.7 mi; 12.3 km) front, from south of Broodseinde to St Jansbeek, to advance half of the distance from Broodseinde ridge to Passchendaele, on the main front, which led to many casualties on both sides. Advances in the north of the attack front were retained by British and French troops but most of the ground taken in front of Passchendaele and on the Becelaere and Gheluvelt spurs was lost to German counter-attacks.[115] General William Birdwood later wrote that the return of heavy rain and mud sloughs was the main cause of the failure to hold captured ground. Kuhl concluded that the fighting strained German fighting power to the limit but that the German forces managed to prevent a breakthrough, although it was becoming much harder to replace losses.[116]

First Battle of Passchendaele

 
Aerial view of Passchendaele village before and after the battle

The First Battle of Passchendaele on 12 October was another Allied attempt to gain ground around Passchendaele. Heavy rain and mud again made movement difficult and little artillery could be brought closer to the front. Allied troops were exhausted and morale had fallen. After a modest British advance, German counter-attacks recovered most of the ground lost opposite Passchendaele, except for an area on the right of the Wallemolen spur. North of Poelcappelle, the XIV Corps of the Fifth Army advanced along the Broembeek some way up the Watervlietbeek and the Stadenrevebeek streams and the Guards Division captured the west end of the Vijwegen spur, gaining observation over the south end of Houthulst Forest.[117] There were 13,000 Allied casualties, including 2,735 New Zealanders, 845 of whom were dead or stranded in the mud of no-man's-land; it was one of the worst days in New Zealand military history.[118]

At a conference on 13 October, Haig and the army commanders agreed that attacks would stop until the weather improved and roads could be extended, to carry more artillery and ammunition forward. The offensive was to continue, to reach a suitable line for the winter and to keep German attention on Flanders, with a French attack due on 23 October and the Third Army operation south of Arras scheduled for mid-November.[119] The battle was also costly for the Germans, who lost more than 1,000 prisoners.[120] The German 195th Division at Passchendaele suffered 3,325 casualties from 9 to 12 October and had to be relieved by the 238th Division.[121] Ludendorff became optimistic that Passchendaele Ridge could be held and ordered the 4th Army to stand fast.[122] On 18 October, Kuhl advocated a retreat as far to the east as possible; Armin and Loßberg wanted to hold on, because the ground beyond the Passchendaele watershed was untenable, even in winter.[123]

Action of 22 October

On 22 October the 18th (Eastern) Division of XVIII Corps attacked the east end of Poelcappelle as XIV Corps to the north attacked with the 34th Division between the Watervlietbeek and Broenbeek streams and the 35th Division northwards into Houthulst Forest. The attack was supported by a regiment of the French 1st Division on the left flank of the 35th Division and was intended to obstruct a possible German counter-attack on the left flank of the Canadian Corps as it attacked Passchendaele and the ridge. The artillery of the Second and Fifth armies conducted a bombardment to simulate a general attack as a deception. Poelcappelle was captured but the attack at the junction between the 34th and 35th divisions was repulsed. German counter-attacks pushed back the 35th Division in the centre but the French attack captured all its objectives. Attacking on ground cut up by bombardments and soaked by rain, the British had struggled to advance in places and lost the ability to move quickly to outflank pillboxes. The 35th Division reached the fringe of Houthulst Forest but was outflanked and pushed back in places. German counter-attacks made after 22 October, were at an equal disadvantage and were costly failures. The German 4th Army was prevented from transferring troops away from the Fifth Army and from concentrating its artillery-fire on the Canadians as they prepared for the Second Battle of Passchendaele (26 October – 10 November 1917).[124]

Battle of La Malmaison

After numerous requests from Haig, Petain began the Battle of La Malmaison, a long-delayed French attack on the Chemin des Dames, by the Sixth Army (General Paul Maistre). The artillery preparation started on 17 October and on 23 October, the German defenders were swiftly defeated and the French advanced up to 3.7 mi (6.0 km), capturing the village and fort of La Malmaison, gaining control of the Chemin des Dames ridge.[125] The Germans lost 38,000 men killed or missing and 12,000 prisoners, along with 200 guns and 720 machine-guns, against 14,000 French casualties, fewer than a third of the German total.[126] The Germans had to withdraw from their remaining positions on the Chemin des Dames to the north of the Ailette Valley early in November. Haig was pleased with the French success but regretted the delay, which had lessened its effect on the Flanders operations.[125]

Second Battle of Passchendaele

 
Terrain through which the Canadian Corps advanced at Passchendaele, in late 1917
 
Terrain at Passchendaele near where the Canadian Corps advanced, spring 2015

The British Fifth Army undertook minor operations from 20 to 22 October, to maintain pressure on the Germans and support the French attack at La Malmaison, while the Canadian Corps prepared for a series of attacks from 26 October to 10 November.[127] The four divisions of the Canadian Corps had been transferred to the Ypres Salient from Lens, to capture Passchendaele and the ridge.[128] The Canadians relieved the II Anzac Corps on 18 October and found that the front line was mostly the same as that occupied by the 1st Canadian Division in April 1915. The Canadian operation was to be three limited attacks, on 26 October 30 October and 6 November.[129] On 26 October, the 3rd Canadian Division captured its objective at Wolf Copse, then swung back its northern flank to link with the adjacent division of the Fifth Army. The 4th Canadian Division captured its objectives but was forced slowly to retire from Decline Copse, against German counter-attacks and communication failures between the Canadian and Australian units to the south.[130]

The second stage began on 30 October, to complete the previous stage and gain a base for the final assault on Passchendaele. The attackers on the southern flank quickly captured Crest Farm and sent patrols beyond the final objective into Passchendaele. The attack on the northern flank again met with exceptional German resistance. The 3rd Canadian Division captured Vapour Farm on the corps boundary, Furst Farm to the west of Meetcheele and the crossroads at Meetcheele but remained short of its objective. During a seven-day pause, the Second Army took over another section of the Fifth Army front adjoining the Canadian Corps. Three rainless days from 3 to 5 November eased preparation for the next stage, which began on the morning of 6 November, with the 1st Canadian Division and the 2nd Canadian Division. In less than three hours, many units reached their final objectives and Passchendaele was captured. The Canadian Corps attacked on 10 November to gain control of the remaining high ground north of the village near Hill 52.[131][e]

December

Night action of 1/2 December 1917

On 18 November the VIII Corps on the right and II Corps on the left (northern) side of the Passchendaele Salient took over from the Canadian Corps. The area was subjected to constant German artillery bombardments and its vulnerability to attack led to a suggestion by Brigadier C. F. Aspinall, that either the British should retire to the west side of the Gheluvelt Plateau or advance to broaden the salient towards Westroosebeke. Expanding the salient would make the troops in it less vulnerable to German artillery-fire and provide a better jumping off line for a resumption of the offensive in the spring of 1918. The British attacked towards Westroozebeke on the night of 1/2 December but the plan to mislead the Germans by not bombarding the German defences until eight minutes after the infantry began their advance came undone. The noise of the British assembly and the difficulty of moving across muddy and waterlogged ground had also alerted the Germans. In the moonlight, the Germans had seen the British troops when they were still 200 yd (180 m) away. Some ground was captured and about 150 prisoners were taken but the attack on the redoubts failed and observation over the heads of the valleys on the east and north sides of the ridge was not achieved.[132]

Action on the Polderhoek Spur

The attack on the Polderhoek Spur on 3 December 1917, was a local operation by the British Fourth Army (renamed from the Second Army on 8 November). Two battalions of the 2nd New Zealand Brigade of the New Zealand Division attacked the low ridge, from which German observers could view the area from Cameron Covert to the north and the Menin road to the south-west. A New Zealand advance of 600 yd (550 m) on a 400 yd (370 m) front, would shield the area north of the Reutelbeek stream from German observers on the Gheluvelt spur. Heavy artillery bombarded the ruins of Polderhoek Château and the pillboxes in the grounds to mislead the defenders and the attack was made in daylight as a ruse to surprise the Germans, who would be under cover sheltering from the routine bombardments. Smoke and gas bombardments on the Gheluvelt and Becelaere spurs on the flanks and the infantry attack began at the same time as the "routine" bombardment. The ruse failed, some British artillery-fire dropped short on the New Zealanders and the Germans engaged the attackers with small-arms fire from Polderhoek Spur and Gheluvelt ridge. A strong west wind ruined the smoke screens and the British artillery failed to suppress the German machine-guns. New Zealand machine-gunners repulsed a counter-attack but the New Zealand infantry were 150 yd (140 m) short of the first objective; another attempt after dark was cancelled because of the full moon and the arrival of German reinforcements.[133]

Aftermath

Analysis

German casualties[134][f]
Date No.
21–31 July 30,000
1–10 Aug 16,000
11–21 Aug 24,000
21–31 Aug 12,500
1–10 Sept 4,000
11–20 Sept 25,000
21–30 Sept 13,500
1–10 Oct 35,000
11–20 Oct 12,000
21–31 Oct 20,500
1–10 Nov 9,500
11–20 Nov 4,000
21–30 Nov 4,500
1–10 Dec 4,000
11–31 Dec 2,500
Total 217,000

In a German General Staff publication, it was written that "Germany had been brought near to certain destruction (sicheren Untergang) by the Flanders battle of 1917".[135] In his Memoirs of 1938, Lloyd George wrote, "Passchendaele was indeed one of the greatest disasters of the war ... No soldier of any intelligence now defends this senseless campaign ...".[136] In 1939, G. C. Wynne wrote that the British had eventually reached Passchendaele Ridge and captured Flandern I Stellung but beyond them were Flandern II Stellung and Flandern III Stellung. The German submarine bases on the coast had not been captured but the objective of diverting the Germans from the French further south, while they recovered from the Nivelle Offensive in April, had succeeded.[137] In 1997, Paddy Griffith wrote that the bite and hold system kept moving until November, because the BEF had developed a workable system of offensive tactics, against which the Germans ultimately had no answer.[138] A decade later, Jack Sheldon wrote that relative casualty figures were irrelevant, because the German army could not afford the losses or to lose the initiative by being compelled to fight another defensive battle on ground of the Allies' choosing. The Third Battle of Ypres had pinned the German army to Flanders and caused unsustainable casualties.[139]

In 2018, Jonathan Boff wrote that after the war the Reichsarchiv official historians, many of whom were former staff officers, wrote of the tactical changes after 26 September and their scrapping after the Battle of Broodseinde on 4 October, as the work of Loßberg. By blaming an individual, the rest of the German commanders were exculpated, which gave a false impression that OHL operated in a rational manner, when Ludendorff imposed another defensive scheme on 7 October. Boff wrote that this narrative was facile and that it avoided the problem faced by the Germans in late 1917. OHL had issued orders to change tactics again days before Loßberg was blamed for giving new orders to the 4th Army. Boff also doubted that all of the divisions in Flanders could act on top-down changes. The 119th Division was in the front line from 11 August to 18 October and replied that new tactics were difficult to implement due to lack of training. The tempo of British attacks and the effect of attrition meant that although six divisions were sent to the 4th Army by 10 October, they were either novice units deficient in training or veteran formations with low morale after earlier defeats; good divisions had been diluted with too many replacements. Boff wrote that the Germans consciously sought tactical changes for an operational dilemma for want of an alternative. On 2 October, Rupprecht had ordered the 4th Army HQ to avoid over-centralising command, only to find that Loßberg had issued an artillery plan detailing the deployment of individual batteries.[140]

At a British conference on 13 October, the Third Army (General Julian Byng) scheme for an attack in mid-November was discussed. Byng wanted the operations at Ypres continued, to hold German troops in Flanders.[119] The Battle of Cambrai began on 20 November and the British breached the first two parts of the Hindenburg Line, in the first successful mass use of tanks in a combined arms operation.[141] The experience of the failure to contain the British attacks at Ypres and the drastic reduction in areas of the western front that could be considered "quiet" after the tank and artillery surprise at Cambrai, left the OHL with little choice but to return to a strategy of decisive victory in 1918.[142] On 24 October, the Austro-German 14th Army (General der Infanterie Otto von Below), attacked the Italian Second Army on the Isonzo at the Battle of Caporetto and in 18 days, inflicted casualties of 650,000 men and 3,000 guns.[143] In fear that Italy might be put out of the war, the French and British governments offered reinforcements.[144] British and French troops were swiftly moved from 10 November to 12 December but the diversion of resources from the BEF forced Haig to conclude the Third Battle of Ypres short of Westrozebeke; the last substantial British attack took place on 10 November.[145]

Casualties

Various casualty figures have been published for the Third Battle of Ypres, sometimes with acrimony; the highest estimates for British and German casualties appear to be discredited but the British claim to have taken 24,065 prisoners has not been disputed.[146] In 1940, C. R. M. F. Cruttwell recorded 300,000 British casualties and 400,000 German.[147] In the History of the Great War volume Military Operations.... published in 1948, James Edmonds put British casualties at 244,897 and wrote that equivalent German figures were not available, estimating German losses at 400,000.[148][g] A. J. P. Taylor wrote in 1972 that no one believed Edmonds' "farcical calculations". Taylor put British wounded and killed at 300,000 and German losses at 200,000, "a proportion slightly better than the Somme".[150] In 2007, Jack Sheldon wrote that although German casualties from 1 June to 10 November were 217,194, a figure available in Volume III of the Sanitätsbericht (Medical Report, 1934), Edmonds may not have included these data as they did not fit his case, using the phrases "creative accounting" and "cavalier handling of the facts". Sheldon wrote that the German casualties could only be brought up to 399,590 by including the 182,396 soldiers who were sick or treated at regimental aid posts for "minor cuts and wounds" but not struck off unit strength; Sheldon wrote "it is hard to see any merit" in doing so.[151]

Leon Wolff, writing in 1958, gave German casualties as 270,713 and British casualties as 448,688.[152] Wolff's British figure was refuted by John Terraine in a 1977 publication. Despite writing that 448,614 British casualties was the BEF total for the second half of 1917, Wolff had neglected to deduct 75,681 casualties for the Battle of Cambrai, given in the Official Statistics from which he quoted or "normal wastage", averaging 35,000 per month in "quiet" periods.[153] In 1959, Cyril Falls estimated 240,000 British, 8,525 French and 260,000 German casualties.[154] In his 1963 biography of Haig, Terraine accepted Edmonds' figure of 244,897 British casualties and agreed that German losses were at least equal to and probably greater than British, owing to the strength of British artillery and the high number of German counterattacks; he did not accept Edmonds' calculation that German losses were as high as 400,000.[149] In his 1977 work, Terraine wrote that the German figure ought to be increased because their statistics were incomplete and because their data omitted some lightly wounded men, who would have been included under British casualty criteria, revising the German figure by twenty per cent, which made German casualties 260,400.[153] Prior and Wilson, in 1997, gave British losses of 275,000 and German casualties at just under 200,000.[155] In 1997, Heinz Hagenlücke gave c. 217,000 German casualties.[54] Gary Sheffield wrote in 2002 that Richard Holmes guessed that both sides suffered 260,000 casualties, which seemed about right to him.[156]

Subsequent operations

Winter 1917–1918

The area to the east and south of the ruins of Passchendaele village was held by posts, those to the east being fairly habitable, unlike the southern ones; from Passchendaele as far back as Potijze, the ground was far worse. Each brigade spent four days in the front line, four in support and four in reserve. The area was quiet apart from artillery-fire and in December the weather turned cold and snowy, which entailed a great effort to prevent trench foot. In January, spells of freezing cold were followed by warmer periods, one beginning on 15 January with torrential rain and gale-force winds, washing away plank roads and duckboard tracks.[157] Conditions in the salient improved with the completion of transport routes and the refurbishment of German pillboxes. Both sides raided and the British used night machine-gun fire and artillery barrages to great effect.[158] On the evening of 3 March 1918, two companies of the 8th Division raided Teal Cottage, supported by a smoke and shrapnel barrage, killed many of the garrison and took six prisoners for one man wounded.[159] A German attack on 11 March was repulsed; after that the Germans made no more attacks, keeping up frequent artillery bombardments and machine-gun fire instead.[160] When the German armies further south began the Spring Offensive on 21 March 1918, "good" divisions in Flanders were sent south; the 29th Division was withdrawn on 9 April and transferred to the Lys.[161]

Retreat, 1918

On 23 March, Haig ordered Plumer to make contingency plans to shorten the line and release troops for the other armies. Worn-out divisions from the south had been sent to Flanders to recuperate closer to the coast. On 11 April, Plumer authorised a withdrawal of the southern flank of the Second Army. On 12 April, the VIII Corps HQ ordered the infantry retirement to begin that night and the 59th Division was replaced by part of the 41st Division and transferred south. The II Corps had begun to withdraw its artillery at the same time as VIII Corps, on the night of 11/12 April and ordered the 36th (Ulster) and 30th divisions to conform to the VIII Corps retirement, which was complete by 13 April, with no German interference.[162] On 13 April, Plumer agreed to a retirement in the south side of the salient to a line from Mt Kemmel to Voormezeele [2.5 mi (4.0 km) south of Ypres], White Château [1 mi (1.6 km) east of Ypres] and Pilckem Ridge.[163] The 4th Army diary recorded that the withdrawal was discovered at 4:40 a.m. Next day, at the Battle of Merckem, the Germans attacked from Houthulst Forest, north-east of Ypres and captured Kippe but were forced out by Belgian counter-attacks, supported by the II Corps artillery. On the afternoon of 27 April, the south end of the Second Army outpost line was driven in near Voormezeele and another British outpost line was established north-east of the village.[164]

Commemoration

 
Tyne Cot Commonwealth War Graves Cemetery and Memorial to the Missing

The Menin Gate Memorial to the Missing commemorates those of all Commonwealth nations (except New Zealand and Newfoundland) who died in the Ypres Salient and have no known grave. In the case of the United Kingdom only casualties before 16 August 1917 are commemorated on the memorial. United Kingdom and New Zealand servicemen who died after that date are named on the memorial at Tyne Cot Cemetery. There is a New Zealand Memorial marking where New Zealand troops fought at Gravenstafel Ridge on 4 October, located on Roeselarestraat.[165] There are numerous tributes and memorials in Australia and New Zealand to Anzac soldiers who died in the battle, including plaques at the Christchurch and Dunedin railway stations. The Canadian Corps' participation in the Second Battle of Passchendaele is commemorated with the Passchendaele Memorial at site of the Crest Farm on the south-west fringe of Passchendaele village.[166]

One of the newest monuments to be dedicated to the fighting contribution of a group is the Celtic Cross memorial, commemorating the Scottish contribution to the fighting in Flanders during the Great War. This memorial is on Frezenberg Ridge where the 9th (Scottish) Division and the 15th (Scottish) Division fought during the Third Battle of Ypres. The monument was dedicated by Linda Fabiani, the Minister for Europe of the Scottish Parliament, during the late summer of 2007, the 90th anniversary of the battle.[167] In July 2017 a two-day event was organised in Ypres to mark the centenary of the battle. Members of the British royal family and Prime Minister Theresa May joined the ceremonies, which started in the evening of 30 July with the service at Menin Gate, followed by ceremonies at the Market Square. On the following day, a ceremony was held at Tyne Cot cemetery, headed by the Prince of Wales.[168][169]

See also

  • Passchendaele, a 2008 Canadian film with the battle as a backdrop.

Notes

  1. ^ Passchendaele is the common English title. The British Battles Nomenclature Committee Report of 1922 called the Flanders Offensive of 1917 "The Battle of Messines 1917" (7–14 June) and "The Battles of Ypres 1917" (31 July – 10 November). The battles are known to the British as the Battle of Messines 1917 (7–14 June), the Battle of Pilckem Ridge (31 July – 2 August), the Battle of Langemarck (16–18 August), the Battle of Menin Road Ridge (20–25 September), the Battle of Polygon Wood (26 September – 3 October) the Battle of Broodseinde (4 October), the Battle of Poelcappelle (9 October), the First Battle of Passchendaele (12 October) and the Second Battle of Passchendaele (26 October – 10 November). In German works it is the (Kampf um den Wijtschatebogen) (The Battle of the Wijtschate Salient) and the (Flandernschlacht) (Battle of Flanders) in five periods, First Battle of Flanders (31 July – 9 August), Second Battle of Flanders (9–25 August), Third Battle of Flanders (20 September – 8 October) Fourth Battle of Flanders (9–21 October) and the Fifth Battle of Flanders (22 October – 5 December).[1]
  2. ^ After mutinies had begun in the French armies, the British cabinet felt compelled to endorse the Flanders offensive, in the hope that more refusals to fight could be "averted by a great [military] success". Haig wrote that if the Allies could win the war in 1917, "the chief people to suffer would be the socialists".[36]
  3. ^ The 4th Guard Division, 4th Bavarian Division, 6th Bavarian Division, 10th Ersatz Division, 16th Division, 19th Reserve Division, 20th Division, 187th Division, 195th Division and 45th Reserve Division took part in the battle.[87]
  4. ^ 195th, 16th, 4th Bavarian, 18th, 227th, 240th, 187th and 22nd Reserve divisions).[87]
  5. ^ German troops engaged were from the 239th, 39th, 4th, 44th Reserve, 7th, 11th, 11th Bavarian, 238th, 199th, 27th, 185th, 111th and 40th divisions.[87]
  6. ^ German casualties were counted in ten-day periods. A discrepancy of 27,000 fewer casualties recorded in the Sanitätsbericht could not be explained by the Reichsarchiv historians.[134]
  7. ^ For British losses, Edmonds used data based on figures submitted by the Adjutant-General's Department to the Allied Supreme War Council on 25 February 1918; Edmonds also showed weekly returns to GHQ, giving a slightly lower total of 238,313. Edmonds wrote that whereas the true figure for British casualties on the Somme had been approximately 420,000, the Germans had announced that the British had suffered 600,000 casualties, which was close to what Edmonds believed to be the "true" number for German Somme casualties (582,919). The Bavarian Official History had put British casualties at the Third Battle of Ypres at 400,000, which Edmonds believed raised "suspicion" that this was the number of German casualties. Edmonds wrote that the German Official Account (Der Weltkrieg) put German 4th Army casualties (21 July – 31 December) at approximately 217,000. Edmonds considered that 30 per cent needed to be added to German figures, to make them comparable to British casualty recording criteria, which would amount to 289,000 casualties. Edmonds wrote that this did not include units which served only briefly in the 4th Army or units that were not part of it. Edmonds wrote that German divisions had an average strength of 12,000 men and tended to be relieved after suffering about 4,000 casualties. As Crown Prince Rupprecht recorded 88 German divisions fighting in the battle and after deducting 15,000 German casualties from 15 June to 30 July, the Germans must have suffered around 337,000 casualties. The average German battalion strength dropped to 640 men despite "allowing 100 men reinforcements per battalion", suggesting 364,320 casualties. Edmonds wrote "there seems every probability that the Germans lost about 400,000".[149][148]

Footnotes

  1. ^ Edmonds 1991, p. iii; Sheldon 2007, p. xiv.
  2. ^ Albertini 2005, pp. 414, 504.
  3. ^ Foley 2007, p. 102.
  4. ^ Foley 2007, p. 104.
  5. ^ a b Edmonds 1993, p. 2.
  6. ^ Doughty 2005, p. 137.
  7. ^ Edmonds 1993, p. 1.
  8. ^ Terraine 1977, pp. 12–13.
  9. ^ Edmonds 1993, pp. 163–245.
  10. ^ Falls 1992, pp. 533–534.
  11. ^ Edmonds 1993, p. 31.
  12. ^ Terraine 1977, pp. 14–15.
  13. ^ Hart & Steel 2001, p. 30.
  14. ^ Falls 1992, p. 21.
  15. ^ Falls 1992, pp. 38–39.
  16. ^ Edmonds & Wynne 2010, p. 14.
  17. ^ Terraine 1977, pp. 31, 55, 94.
  18. ^ Terraine 1999, p. 15.
  19. ^ Powell 2004, p. 169.
  20. ^ Terraine 1977, p. 84.
  21. ^ Edmonds 1991, p. 24.
  22. ^ Edmonds 1991, p. 234.
  23. ^ Terraine 1977, pp. 290–297.
  24. ^ Edmonds 1925, pp. 128–129.
  25. ^ Edmonds 1925, pp. 129–131.
  26. ^ Liddle 1997, pp. 140–158.
  27. ^ Liddle 1997, p. 141.
  28. ^ Liddle 1997, p. 142.
  29. ^ Edmonds 1991, p. 125.
  30. ^ Liddle 1997, pp. 147–148.
  31. ^ Henniker 2009, p. 273.
  32. ^ Edmonds 1991, pp. 3–4.
  33. ^ Edmonds 1991, p. 25.
  34. ^ Edmonds 1991, pp. 17–19.
  35. ^ Sheffield 2011, pp. 227–231.
  36. ^ Millman 2001, p. 61; French 1995, pp. 119–122, 92–93, 146.
  37. ^ Wynne 1976, pp. 297–298.
  38. ^ Wynne 1976, pp. 282–283.
  39. ^ Wynne 1976, p. 284.
  40. ^ Wynne 1976, pp. 286–287.
  41. ^ Sheldon 2007, p. 1.
  42. ^ Hart & Steel 2001, pp. 41–44.
  43. ^ Sheldon 2007, p. 23.
  44. ^ Hart & Steel 2001, p. 55.
  45. ^ Edmonds 1991, p. 87.
  46. ^ Edmonds 1991, p. 127.
  47. ^ Edmonds 1991, pp. 126–127, 431–432.
  48. ^ a b Prior & Wilson 1996, pp. 72–75.
  49. ^ Davidson 2010, p. 29.
  50. ^ Edmonds 1991, p. 440.
  51. ^ Prior & Wilson 1996, p. 89.
  52. ^ Prior & Wilson 1996, pp. 90–95.
  53. ^ Edmonds 1991, pp. 185–187.
  54. ^ a b c Liddle 1997, pp. 45–58.
  55. ^ Edmonds 1991, pp. 112–113.
  56. ^ Edmonds 1991, pp. 219–230.
  57. ^ Terraine 1977, p. 234.
  58. ^ Edmonds 1991, pp. 189–202.
  59. ^ Edmonds 1991, p. 194.
  60. ^ Edmonds 1991, p. 201.
  61. ^ Edmonds 1991, p. 203.
  62. ^ Edmonds 1991, pp. 202–205.
  63. ^ Simpson 2001, pp. 130–134.
  64. ^ Rogers 2010, pp. 162–167.
  65. ^ Edmonds 1991, p. 208.
  66. ^ Charteris 1929, pp. 272–273.
  67. ^ Hussey 1997, p. 155.
  68. ^ Hussey 1997, p. 153.
  69. ^ Hussey 1997, pp. 147–148.
  70. ^ Hussey 1997, p. 148.
  71. ^ Hussey 1997, pp. 149–151.
  72. ^ Doughty 2005, pp. 380–383.
  73. ^ Terraine 1977, p. 235.
  74. ^ Edmonds 1991, p. 230.
  75. ^ Sheldon 2007, pp. 119–120.
  76. ^ a b Nicholson 1964, p. 308.
  77. ^ Edmonds 1991, p. 237.
  78. ^ a b Marble 2003, App 22.
  79. ^ Edmonds 1991, pp. 236–242.
  80. ^ Terraine 1977, p. 257.
  81. ^ Wynne 1976, p. 303.
  82. ^ a b Rogers 2010, p. 168.
  83. ^ a b Sheldon 2007, p. 184.
  84. ^ Edmonds 1991, pp. 294–295; Liddle 1997, pp. 45–58.
  85. ^ Wynne 1976, pp. 307–308.
  86. ^ Sheldon 2007, pp. 190–191; Wynne 1976, p. 307.
  87. ^ a b c USWD 1920.
  88. ^ Sheldon 2007, pp. 184–186.
  89. ^ Terraine 1977, p. 278; Prior & Wilson 1996, p. 135.
  90. ^ Edmonds 1991, pp. 238–239.
  91. ^ Jones 2002, p. 181.
  92. ^ Terraine 1977, p. 261.
  93. ^ Harris 2008, p. 366.
  94. ^ Sheldon 2007, p. 165.
  95. ^ Edmonds 1991, pp. 282–284.
  96. ^ Edmonds 1991, pp. 286–287.
  97. ^ Edmonds 1991, p. 284.
  98. ^ Edmonds 1991, p. 293.
  99. ^ a b Sandilands 2003, pp. 198–199.
  100. ^ Edmonds 1991, pp. 301, 302.
  101. ^ Bean 1941, p. 837.
  102. ^ Sandilands 2003, pp. 200–204.
  103. ^ Atkinson 2009, pp. 410–412.
  104. ^ Bean 1941, p. 846.
  105. ^ a b Bean 1941, p. 847.
  106. ^ Edmonds 1991, pp. 303–304.
  107. ^ Bean 1941, p. 858.
  108. ^ Prior & Wilson 1996, p. 135.
  109. ^ Bean 1941, pp. 837, 847; Edmonds 1991, pp. 304–307.
  110. ^ Bean 1941, pp. 858–859.
  111. ^ Edmonds 1991, p. 316.
  112. ^ Edmonds 1991, pp. 315–317.
  113. ^ Wynne 1976, p. 309.
  114. ^ Sheldon 2007, pp. 228–229.
  115. ^ Bean 1941, p. 887.
  116. ^ Terraine 1977, pp. 287–288.
  117. ^ Edmonds 1991, pp. 341–344.
  118. ^ Liddle 1997, p. 285.
  119. ^ a b Edmonds 1991, pp. 345–346.
  120. ^ Boraston 1920, p. 130.
  121. ^ Sheldon 2007, p. 236.
  122. ^ Sheldon 2007, p. 233.
  123. ^ Terraine 1977, p. 305.
  124. ^ Perry 2014, pp. 475–486.
  125. ^ a b Terraine 1977, p. 307.
  126. ^ Philpott 2014, p. 279.
  127. ^ Bean 1941, p. 930; Edmonds 1991, p. 347.
  128. ^ Bean 1941, p. 929.
  129. ^ Nicholson 1964, pp. 312, 314.
  130. ^ Nicholson 1964, p. 320.
  131. ^ Nicholson 1964, pp. 320–325; Sheldon 2007, pp. 311–312.
  132. ^ LoCicero 2011, pp. 155–338.
  133. ^ Stewart 2014, pp. 304–314.
  134. ^ a b Foerster 1956, p. 96.
  135. ^ Edmonds 1991, p. xiii.
  136. ^ Terraine 1977, pp. xix–xx.
  137. ^ Wynne 1976, pp. 214–215.
  138. ^ Liddle 1997, p. 71.
  139. ^ Sheldon 2007, pp. 313–317.
  140. ^ Boff 2018, pp. 181–182.
  141. ^ Harris 1995, pp. 124–125.
  142. ^ Sheldon 2009, p. 312.
  143. ^ Miles 1991, p. 15.
  144. ^ Bean 1941, pp. 935–936.
  145. ^ Bean 1941, p. 936.
  146. ^ McRandle & Quirk 2006, pp. 667–701; Boraston 1920, p. 133.
  147. ^ Cruttwell 1982, p. 442.
  148. ^ a b Edmonds 1991, pp. 360–365.
  149. ^ a b Terraine 2005, p. 372.
  150. ^ Taylor 1972, pp. 181–182.
  151. ^ Sheldon 2007, pp. 313–315, 319.
  152. ^ Wolff 1958, p. 259.
  153. ^ a b Terraine 1977, pp. 344–345.
  154. ^ Falls 1959, p. 303.
  155. ^ Prior & Wilson 1996, p. 195.
  156. ^ Sheffield 2002, p. 216.
  157. ^ Boraston & Bax 1999, pp. 167–168.
  158. ^ Seton Hutchinson 2005, pp. 79–80.
  159. ^ Boraston & Bax 1999, p. 171.
  160. ^ Gillon 2002, pp. 180–183.
  161. ^ Seton Hutchinson 2005, p. 80; Gillon 2002, p. 186.
  162. ^ Edmonds, Davies & Maxwell-Hyslop 1995, pp. 113–114, 245, 275.
  163. ^ Edmonds, Davies & Maxwell-Hyslop 1995, pp. 299–300, 319, 316, 326.
  164. ^ Edmonds, Davies & Maxwell-Hyslop 1995, pp. 337–338, 342, 443.
  165. ^ NZG nd.
  166. ^ Vance 1997, p. 66.
  167. ^ SG 2007.
  168. ^ DT 2017.
  169. ^ DT 2017a.

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  • Prior, R.; Wilson, T. (1996). Passchendaele: The Untold Story. Cumberland: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-07227-3.
  • Rogers, D., ed. (2010). Landrecies to Cambrai: Case Studies of German Offensive and Defensive Operations on the Western Front 1914–17. Solihull: Helion. ISBN 978-1-906033-76-7.
  • Sandilands, H. R. (2003) [1925]. The 23rd Division 1914–1919 (Naval & Military Press ed.). Edinburgh: Wm. Blackwood. ISBN 978-1-84342-641-7.
  • Seton Hutchinson, G. (2005) [1921]. The Thirty-Third Division in France and Flanders 1915–1919 (Naval & Military Press, Uckfield ed.). London: Waterlow & Sons. ISBN 978-1-84342-995-1.
  • Sheffield, G. (2002) [2001]. Forgotten Victory: The First World War: Myths and Realities (reprint ed.). London: Headline Book Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7472-7157-4.
  • Sheffield, G. (2011). The Chief: Douglas Haig and the British Army. London: Aurum Press. ISBN 978-1-84513-691-8.
  • Sheldon, J. (2007). The German Army at Passchendaele. Barnsley: Pen and Sword Books. ISBN 978-1-84415-564-4.
  • Sheldon, J. (2009). The German Army at Cambrai. Barnsley: Pen & Sword. ISBN 978-1-84415-944-4.
  • Stewart, H. (2014) [1921]. The New Zealand Division 1916–1919: A Popular History Based on Official Records. Auckland: Whitcombe and Tombs. ISBN 978-1-84342-408-6. Retrieved 20 July 2017.
  • Taylor, A. J. P. (1972). The First World War. An Illustrated History. New York: Perigee Trade. ISBN 978-0-399-50260-6 – via Archive Foundation.
  • Terraine, J. (1977). The Road to Passchendaele: The Flanders Offensive 1917, A Study in Inevitability. London: Leo Cooper. ISBN 978-0-436-51732-7.
  • Terraine, J. (1999). Business in Great Waters. Ware: Wordsworth Editions. ISBN 978-1-84022-201-2.
  • Terraine, J. (2005) [1963]. Douglas Haig: The Educated Soldier (2nd repr. ed.). London: Cassell. ISBN 978-0-304-35319-4.
  • Vance, J. F. (1997). Death So Noble: Memory, Meaning and the First World War. Vancouver: UBC Press. ISBN 978-0-7748-0600-8.
  • Wolff, L. (1958). In Flanders Fields: The 1917 Campaign. New York: Viking. ISBN 978-0-14-014662-2 – via Archive Foundation.
  • Wynne, G. C. (1976) [1939]. If Germany Attacks: The Battle in Depth in the West (Greenwood Press, Westport, CT ed.). Cambridge: Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-8371-5029-1.

Journals

  • McRandle, J. H.; Quirk, J. (3 July 2006). "The Blood Test Revisited: A New Look at German Casualty Counts in World War I". The Journal of Military History. Lexington, VA. 70 (3): 667–701. doi:10.1353/jmh.2006.0180. ISSN 0899-3718. S2CID 159930725.

Newspapers

  • "Duke of Cambridge leads Commemorations on 100th Anniversary of the Battle of Passchendaele". The Telegraph. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
  • "Battle of Passchendaele Centenary: Prince Charles Honours 'Courage and Bravery' of British Soldiers". The Telegraph. Retrieved 10 August 2019.

Theses

  • LoCicero, M. S. (2011). A Moonlight Massacre: The Night Operation on the Passchendaele Ridge, 2nd December 1917. etheses.bham.ac.uk (PhD thesis). Birmingham: University of Birmingham. OCLC 784568126. EThOS uk.bl.ethos.545631. Retrieved 20 July 2017.  
  • Marble, S. (2003) [1998]. The Infantry cannot do with a Gun Less: The Place of the Artillery in the BEF, 1914–1918. British Library e Theses Online Service (PhD). New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-50219-1. EThOS uk.bl.ethos.391793. Retrieved 10 August 2019.  
  • Simpson, A. (2001). The Operational Role of British Corps Command on the Western Front 1914–18. British Library e Theses Online Service (PhD). London: London University. OCLC 557496951. EThOS uk.bl.ethos.367588. Retrieved 16 January 2017.  

Websites

  • "New Zealand Memorial (Gravenstafel ridge)". New Zealand First World War Trails. 20 June 2016. Retrieved 10 August 2019.
  • "Tribute to Scots Soldiers at Passchendaele". The Scottish Government. 24 August 2007. Archived from the original on 3 February 2013. Retrieved 22 December 2014.

Further reading

  • Charteris, J. (1931). At G. H. Q. (pbk. facs. repr. Gyan Books, New Delhi ed.). Cassell. ISBN 4-00-003314-X.
  • Connelly, M.; Goebel, S. (2018). Ypres. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-1987-1337-1.
  • Davies, C. B.; Edmonds, J. E.; Maxwell-Hyslop, R. G. B. (1995) [1937]. Military Operations France and Belgium, 1918: March – April: Continuation of the German Offensives. History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence. Vol. II (Imperial War Museum and Battery Press ed.). London: HMSO. ISBN 978-0-89839-223-4.
  • Edmonds, J. E.; Maxwell-Hyslop, R. G. B. (1993) [1947]. Military Operations France and Belgium, 1918: 26th September–11th November The Advance to Victory. History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence. Vol. V (Imperial War Museum and Battery Press ed.). London: HMSO. ISBN 978-0-89839-192-3.
  • Harington, C. (2017) [1935]. Plumer of Messines (pbk. facs. repr. Gyan Books, New Delhi ed.). London: John Murray. ISBN 978-4-00-608977-1.
  • Lloyd, N. (2017). Passchendaele: A New History. London: Viking. ISBN 978-0-241-00436-4.
  • Simpson, Andy (2006). Directing Operations: British Corps Command on the Western Front 1914–18. Stroud: Spellmount. ISBN 978-1-86227-292-7.
  • Winter, D. (1992) [1991]. Haig's Command: A Reassessment (pbk. repr. Penguin, London ed.). New York: Viking. ISBN 978-0-14-007144-3.

External links

  • Passchendaele – Canada's Other Vimy Ridge, Norman Leach, Canadian Military Journal
  • Passchendaele, original reports from The Times
  • Battles: The Third Battle of Ypres, 1917

battle, passchendaele, other, uses, passchendaele, disambiguation, third, battle, ypres, part, western, front, first, world, waraustralian, gunners, duckboard, track, château, wood, near, hooge, october, 1917, photo, frank, hurleydate31, july, november, 1917, . For other uses see Passchendaele disambiguation Battle of Passchendaele Third Battle of Ypres Part of the Western Front of the First World WarAustralian gunners on a duckboard track in Chateau Wood near Hooge 29 October 1917 Photo by Frank HurleyDate31 July 10 November 1917 3 months 1 week and 3 days LocationPasschendaele Ypres Salient Belgium50 54 1 N 3 1 16 E 50 90028 N 3 02111 E 50 90028 3 02111 Passendale Coordinates 50 54 1 N 3 1 16 E 50 90028 N 3 02111 E 50 90028 3 02111 Passendale ResultSee Analysis sectionBelligerents British Empire United Kingdom Canada Australia New Zealand South Africa India NewfoundlandRhodesia France Belgium GermanyCommanders and leadersDouglas Haig Hubert GoughHerbert Plumer Francois Anthoine Louis RuquoyErich LudendorffRupprecht of BavariaFriedrich Sixt von ArminStrength50 divisions 6 divisions77 83 divisionsCasualties and losses240 000 448 614 disputed see Casualties section 217 000 400 000including 24 065 prisoners disputed see Casualties section Passchendaeleclass notpageimage Passchendaele Passendale a Belgian village in the Zonnebeke municipality of West Flanders province The Third Battle of Ypres German Dritte Flandernschlacht French Troisieme Bataille des Flandres Dutch Derde Slag om Ieper also known as the Battle of Passchendaele ˈ p ae ʃ en d eɪ l was a campaign of the First World War fought by the Allies against the German Empire a The battle took place on the Western Front from July to November 1917 for control of the ridges south and east of the Belgian city of Ypres in West Flanders as part of a strategy decided by the Allies at conferences in November 1916 and May 1917 Passchendaele lies on the last ridge east of Ypres 5 mi 8 0 km from Roulers now Roeselare a junction of the Bruges Brugge to Kortrijk railway The station at Roulers was on the main supply route of the German 4th Army Once Passchendaele Ridge had been captured the Allied advance was to continue to a line from Thourout now Torhout to Couckelaere Koekelare Further operations and a British supporting attack along the Belgian coast from Nieuport Nieuwpoort combined with an amphibious landing Operation Hush were to have reached Bruges and then the Dutch frontier Although a general withdrawal had seemed inevitable in early October the Germans were able to avoid one due to the resistance of the 4th Army unusually wet weather in August the beginning of the autumn rains in October and the diversion of British and French resources to Italy The campaign ended in November when the Canadian Corps captured Passchendaele apart from local attacks in December and early in the new year The Battle of the Lys Fourth Battle of Ypres and the Fifth Battle of Ypres of 1918 were fought before the Allies occupied the Belgian coast and reached the Dutch frontier A campaign in Flanders was controversial in 1917 and has remained so The British Prime Minister David Lloyd George opposed the offensive as did General Ferdinand Foch the Chief of Staff of the French Army Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haig commander of the British Expeditionary Force BEF did not receive approval for the Flanders operation from the War Cabinet until 25 July Matters of dispute by the participants writers and historians since 1917 include the wisdom of pursuing an offensive strategy in the wake of the Nivelle Offensive rather than waiting for the arrival of the American Expeditionary Force AEF in France Remaining controversial are the choice of Flanders its climate the selection of General Hubert Gough and the Fifth Army to conduct the offensive and debates over the nature of the opening attack and between advocates of shallow and deeper objectives Also debated are the time between the Battle of Messines 7 14 June and the first Allied attack the Battle of Pilckem Ridge 31 July the extent to which the French Army mutinies influenced the British the effect of the exceptional weather the decision to continue the offensive in October and the human costs of the campaign Contents 1 Background 1 1 Flanders 1 1 1 1914 1 1 2 1915 1 1 3 1916 1 2 Allied strategy 1 3 Kerensky offensive 2 Prelude 2 1 Ypres salient 2 2 Topography 2 3 British plans 2 4 German defences 2 5 Battle of Messines 3 Battles 3 1 July August 3 1 1 Battle of Pilckem Ridge 3 1 2 Capture of Westhoek 3 1 3 Battle of Hill 70 3 1 4 Battle of Langemarck 3 1 5 Local attacks 3 1 6 Weather 3 1 7 Verdun 3 2 September October 3 2 1 German tactical changes 3 2 2 Battle of the Menin Road Ridge 3 2 3 German counter attack 25 September 3 2 4 Battle of Polygon Wood 3 3 October November 3 3 1 German counter attacks 30 September 4 October 3 3 2 Battle of Broodseinde 3 3 3 German defensive changes 3 3 4 Battle of Poelcappelle 3 3 5 First Battle of Passchendaele 3 3 6 Action of 22 October 3 3 7 Battle of La Malmaison 3 3 8 Second Battle of Passchendaele 3 4 December 3 4 1 Night action of 1 2 December 1917 3 4 2 Action on the Polderhoek Spur 4 Aftermath 4 1 Analysis 4 2 Casualties 4 3 Subsequent operations 4 3 1 Winter 1917 1918 4 3 2 Retreat 1918 4 4 Commemoration 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Footnotes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksBackground EditFlanders Edit 1914 Edit Further information Belgian neutrality Belgium had been recognised in the Treaty of London 1839 as a sovereign and neutral state after the secession of the southern provinces of the Netherlands in 1830 The German invasion of Belgium on 4 August 1914 in violation of Article VII of the treaty was the British casus belli against Germany 2 British military operations in Belgium began with the arrival of the British Expeditionary Force BEF at Mons on 22 August Operations in Flanders began during the Race to the Sea reciprocal attempts by the French and German armies to turn their opponents northern flank through Picardy Artois and Flanders On 10 October Lieutenant General Erich von Falkenhayn the Chief of Staff of the Oberste Heeresleitung OHL supreme army command ordered an attack towards Dunkirk and Calais followed by a turn south behind the Allied armies to gain a decisive victory 3 On 16 October the Belgians and some French reinforcements began the defence of western Belgium and the French Channel ports at the Battle of the Yser When the German offensive failed Falkenhayn ordered the capture of Ypres to gain a local advantage By 18 November the First Battle of Ypres had also ended in failure at a cost of 160 000 German casualties 4 In December the British Admiralty began discussions with the War Office for a combined operation to re occupy the Belgian coast but were obliged to conform to French strategy and participate in offensives further south 5 1915 Edit Large British offensive operations in Flanders were not possible in 1915 due to a lack of resources 6 The Germans conducted their own Flanders offensive at the Second Battle of Ypres 22 April 15 May 1915 making the Ypres salient more costly to defend 7 Sir Douglas Haig succeeded Sir John French as Commander in Chief of the BEF on 19 December 8 A week after his appointment Haig met Vice Admiral Sir Reginald Bacon who emphasised the importance of obtaining control of the Belgian coast to end the threat posed by German U boats Haig was sceptical of a coastal operation believing that a landing from the sea would be far more difficult than anticipated and that an advance along the coast would require so much preparation that the Germans would have ample warning Haig preferred an advance from Ypres to bypass the flooded area around the Yser and the coast before attempting a coastal attack to clear the coast to the Dutch border 5 1916 Edit Main articles Battle of Verdun and Battle of the Somme Minor operations took place in the Ypres salient in 1916 some being German initiatives to distract the Allies from the preparations for the offensive at Verdun and later attempts to divert Allied resources from the Battle of the Somme Other operations were begun by the British to regain territory or to evict the Germans from ground overlooking their positions Engagements took place on 12 February at Boesinghe and on 14 February at Hooge and Sanctuary Wood There were actions from 14 to 15 February and 1 to 4 March at The Bluff 27 March 16 April at the St Eloi Craters and the Battle of Mont Sorrel from 2 to 13 June 9 In January 1917 the Second Army General Herbert Plumer with the II Anzac IX X and VIII corps held the Western Front in Flanders from Laventie to Boesinghe with eleven divisions and up to two in reserve There was much trench mortaring mining and raiding by both sides and from January to May the Second Army had 20 000 casualties In May reinforcements began arriving in Flanders from the south the II Corps headquarters and 17 divisions had arrived by the end of the month 10 In January 1916 Plumer began to plan offensives against Messines Ridge Lille and Houthulst Forest 11 General Henry Rawlinson was also ordered to plan an attack from the Ypres Salient on 4 February planning continued but the Battle of Verdun and the Battle of the Somme took up the rest of the year 12 In November Haig the French commander in chief Joseph Joffre and the other Allies met at Chantilly The commanders agreed on a strategy of simultaneous attacks to overwhelm the Central Powers on the Western Eastern and Italian fronts by the first fortnight of February 1917 13 A meeting in London of the Admiralty and the General Staff urged that the Flanders operation be undertaken in 1917 and Joffre replied on 8 December agreeing to a Flanders campaign after the spring offensive 14 The plan for a year of attrition offensives on the Western Front with the main effort to be made in the summer by the BEF was scrapped by the new French Commander in Chief Robert Nivelle in favour of a return to a strategy of decisive battle 15 Allied strategy Edit See also Western Front World War I and Nivelle Offensive Nivelle planned preliminary offensives to pin German reserves by the British at Arras and the French between the Somme and the Oise then a French breakthrough offensive on the Aisne followed by pursuit and exploitation Haig had reservations and on 6 January Nivelle agreed to a proviso that if the first two parts of the operation failed to lead to a breakthrough the operations would be stopped and the British could move their forces north for the Flanders offensive which was of great importance to the British government 16 On 23 January Haig wrote that it would take six weeks to move British troops and equipment to Flanders and on 14 March noted that the Messines Ridge operation could begin in May On 21 March he wrote to Nivelle that it would take two months to prepare the offensive from Messines to Steenstraat but that the Messines operation could be ready in five or six weeks The main French attack took place from 9 April to 9 May and failed to achieve a breakthrough On 16 May Haig wrote that he had divided the Flanders operation into two parts one to take Messines Ridge and the main attack several weeks later 17 British determination to clear the Belgian coast took on more urgency after the Germans resumed unrestricted submarine warfare on 1 February 1917 18 On 1 May 1917 Haig wrote that the Nivelle Offensive had weakened the German army but that an attempt at a decisive blow would be premature 19 The wearing out process would continue on a front where the Germans had no room to retreat Even limited success would improve the tactical situation in the Ypres salient reducing the exceptional wastage even in quiet periods 20 In early May Haig set the date for the Flanders offensive the attack on Messines Ridge to begin on 7 June 21 Kerensky offensive Edit Main articles Eastern Front World War I and Kerensky Offensive The Eastern Front in 1917 The Russian army conducted the Kerensky Offensive in Galicia to honour the agreement struck with the Allies at the Chantilly meeting of 15 to 16 November 1916 After a brief period of success from 1 to 19 July the Russian offensive was contained by the German and Austro Hungarian armies which counter attacked and forced the Russian armies to retreat On the Baltic coast from 1 to 5 September 1917 the Germans attacked with their strategic reserve of six divisions and captured Riga In Operation Albion September October 1917 the Germans took the islands at the mouth of the Gulf of Riga The British and French commanders on the Western Front had to reckon on the German western army Westheer being strengthened by reinforcements from the Ostheer on the Eastern Front by late 1917 22 Haig wished to exploit the diversion of German forces in Russia for as long as it continued and urged the British War Cabinet to commit the maximum amount of manpower and munitions to the battle in Flanders 23 Prelude EditYpres salient Edit Ypres is overlooked by Kemmel Hill in the south west and from the east by a line of low hills running south west to north east Wytschaete Wijtschate and Hill 60 are to the east of Verbrandenmolen Hooge Polygon Wood and Passchendaele Passendale The high point of the ridge is at Wytschaete 7 000 yd 4 0 mi 6 4 km from Ypres while at Hollebeke the ridge is 4 000 yd 2 3 mi 3 7 km distant and recedes to 7 000 yd 4 0 mi 6 4 km at Polygon Wood Wytschaete is about 150 ft 46 m above the plain on the Ypres Menin road at Hooge the elevation is about 100 ft 30 m and 70 ft 21 m at Passchendaele The rises are slight apart from the vicinity of Zonnebeke which has a gradient of 1 33 From Hooge and further east the slope is 1 60 and near Hollebeke it is 1 75 the heights are subtle and resemble a saucer lip around the city The main ridge has spurs sloping east and one is particularly noticeable at Wytschaete which runs 2 mi 3 2 km south east to Messines Mesen with a gentle slope on the east side and a 1 10 decline westwards Further south is the muddy valley of the River Douve Ploegsteert Wood Plugstreet to the British and Hill 63 West of Messines Ridge is the parallel Wulverghem Spanbroekmolen Spur and on the east side the Oosttaverne Spur which is also parallel to the main ridge The general aspect south and east of Ypres is one of low ridges and dips gradually flattening northwards beyond Passchendaele into a featureless plain 24 Possession of the higher ground to the south and east of Ypres gives an army ample scope for ground observation enfilade fire and converging artillery bombardments An occupier also has the advantage that artillery deployments and the movement of reinforcements supplies and stores can be screened from view The ridge had woods from Wytschaete to Zonnebeke giving good cover some being of notable size like Polygon Wood and those later named Battle Wood Shrewsbury Forest and Sanctuary Wood In 1914 the woods usually had undergrowth but by 1917 artillery bombardments had reduced the woods to tree stumps shattered tree trunks tangled with barbed wire and more wire festooning the ground which was full of shell holes fields in the gaps between the woods were 800 1 000 yd 730 910 m wide and devoid of cover The main road to Ypres from Poperinge to Vlamertinge is in a defile easily observed from the ridge Roads in the area were unpaved except for the main ones from Ypres with occasional villages and houses dotted along them The lowland west of the ridge was a mixture of meadows and fields with high hedgerows dotted with trees cut by streams and a network of drainage ditches emptying into canals 25 Topography Edit The progression of the battle and the general disposition of troops In Flanders sands gravels and marls predominate covered by silts in places The coastal strip is sandy but a short way into the hinterland the ground rises towards the Vale of Ypres which before 1914 was a flourishing market garden 26 Ypres is 66 ft 20 m above sea level Bixschoote 4 mi 6 4 km to the north is at 28 ft 8 5 m To the east the land is at 66 82 ft 20 25 m for several miles with the Steenbeek river at 49 ft 15 m near St Julien There is a low ridge from Messines 260 ft 80 m at its highest point running north east past Clapham Junction at the west end of Gheluvelt plateau 2 1 2 miles from Ypres at 213 ft 65 m and Gheluvelt above 160 ft 50 m to Passchendaele 5 1 2 miles from Ypres at 160 ft 50 m declining from there to a plain further north Gradients vary from negligible to 1 60 at Hooge and 1 33 at Zonnebeke 27 Underneath the soil is London clay sand and silt according to the Commonwealth War Graves Commission categories of sand sandy soils and well balanced soils Messines ridge is well balanced soil and the ground around Ypres is sandy soil 28 The ground is drained by many streams canals and ditches which need regular maintenance Since 1914 much of the drainage had been destroyed though some parts were restored by land drainage companies from England The British considered the area drier than Loos Givenchy and Plugstreet Wood further south 29 A study of weather data recorded at Lille 16 mi 26 km from Ypres from 1867 1916 published in 1989 showed that August was more often dry than wet that there was a trend towards dry autumns September November and that average rainfall in October had decreased since the 1860s 30 British plans Edit Preparations for operations in Flanders began in 1915 with the doubling of the Hazebrouck Ypres rail line and the building of a new line from Bergues to Proven which was doubled in early 1917 Progress on roads rail lines railheads and spurs in the Second Army zone was continuous and by mid 1917 gave the area the most efficient supply system of the BEF 31 Several plans and memoranda for a Flanders offensive were produced between January 1916 and May 1917 in which the writers tried to relate the offensive resources available to the terrain and the likely German defence In early 1916 the importance of the capture of the Gheluvelt plateau for an advance further north was emphasised by Haig and the army commanders 32 On 14 February 1917 Colonel Norman MacMullen of GHQ proposed that the plateau be taken by a massed tank attack reducing the need for artillery in April a reconnaissance by Captain Giffard LeQuesne Martel found that the area was unsuitable for tanks 33 On 9 February Rawlinson commander of the Fourth Army suggested that Messines Ridge could be taken in one day and that the capture of the Gheluvelt plateau should be fundamental to the attack further north He suggested that the southern attack from St Yves to Mont Sorrel should come first and that Mont Sorrel to Steenstraat should be attacked within 48 to 72 hours After discussions with Rawlinson and Plumer and the incorporation of Haig s changes Macmullen submitted his memorandum on 14 February With amendments the memorandum became the GHQ 1917 plan 34 A week after the Battle of Messines Ridge Haig gave his objectives to his army commanders the wearing out of the enemy securing the Belgian coast and connecting with the Dutch frontier by capturing Passchendaele ridge followed by an advance on Roulers and Operation Hush an attack along the coast with a combined amphibious landing If manpower and artillery were insufficient only the first part of the plan might be fulfilled On 30 April Haig told Gough the Fifth Army commander that he would lead the Northern Operation and the coastal force although Cabinet approval for the offensive was not granted until 21 June 35 b German defences Edit Main article German defensive preparations June July 1917 The British front line and the German defences in the area east of Ypres mid 1917 The 4th Army held a front of 25 mi 40 km with three Gruppen composed of a corps headquarters and a varying complement of divisions Group Staden based on the headquarters of the Guards Reserve Corps was added later Group Dixmude held 12 mi 19 km with four front divisions and two Eingreif divisions Group Ypres held 6 mi 9 7 km from Pilckem to Menin Road with three front divisions and two Eingreif divisions and Group Wijtschate held a similar length of front south of the Menin road with three front divisions and three Eingreif divisions The Eingreif divisions were stationed behind the Menin and Passchendaele ridges About 5 mi 8 0 km further back were four more Eingreif divisions and 7 mi 11 km beyond them another two in OHL reserve 37 The Germans were anxious that the British would attempt to exploit the victory of the Battle of Messines with an advance to the Tower Hamlets spur beyond the north end of Messines Ridge On 9 June Crown Prince Rupprecht proposed a withdrawal to the Flandern line east of Messines Construction of defences began but was terminated after Fritz von Lossberg was appointed Chief of Staff of the 4th Army 38 Lossberg rejected the proposed withdrawal to the Flandern line and ordered that the front line east of the Oosttaverne line be held rigidly The Flandernstellung Flanders Position along Passchendaele Ridge in front of the Flandern line would become Flandern I Stellung and a new position Flandern II Stellung would run west of Menin northwards to Passchendaele Construction of a Flandern III Stellung east of Menin northwards to Moorslede was also begun From July 1917 the area east of Ypres was defended by the front position the Albrechtstellung second position Wilhelmstellung third position Flandern I Stellung fourth position Flandern II Stellung fifth position and Flandern III Stellung the sixth position incomplete Between the German defences lay villages such as Zonnebeke and Passchendaele which were fortified and prepared for all round defence 39 On 25 June Erich Ludendorff the First Quartermaster General suggested to Crown Prince Rupprecht that Group Ypres should withdraw to the Wilhelmstellung leaving only outposts in the Albrechtstellung On 30 June the army group Chief of Staff General von Kuhl suggested a withdrawal to the Flandern I Stellung along Passchendaele ridge meeting the old front line in the north near Langemarck and Armentieres in the south Such a withdrawal would avoid a hasty retreat from Pilckem Ridge and force the British into a time consuming redeployment Lossberg disagreed believing that the British would launch a broad front offensive that the ground east of the Sehnenstellung was easy to defend and that the Menin road ridge could be held if it was made the Schwerpunkt point of main effort of the German defensive system Pilckem Ridge deprived the British of ground observation over the Steenbeek Valley while the Germans could see the area from Passchendaele Ridge allowing German infantry to be supported by observed artillery fire Lossberg s judgement was accepted and no withdrawal was made 40 Battle of Messines Edit Main article Battle of Messines 1917 German trench destroyed by a mine explosion The first stage in the British plan was a preparatory attack on the German positions south of Ypres at Messines Ridge The Germans on the ridge had observation over Ypres and unless it was captured observed enfilade artillery fire could be fired against a British attack from the salient further north 41 Since mid 1915 the British had been mining under the German positions on the ridge and by June 1917 21 mines had been filled with nearly 1 000 000 lb 454 t of explosives 42 The Germans knew the British were mining and had taken counter measures but they were surprised at the extent of the British effort 43 Two of the mines failed to detonate but 19 went off on 7 June at 3 10 a m British Summer Time The final objectives were largely gained before dark and the British had fewer losses than the expected 50 per cent in the initial attack As the infantry advanced over the far edge of the ridge German artillery and machine guns east of the ridge opened fire and the British artillery was less able to suppress them 44 The attack removed the Germans from the dominating ground on the southern face of the Ypres salient which the 4th Army had held since the First Battle of Ypres in 1914 45 Battles EditJuly August Edit Main article The British set piece attack in mid 1917 British 18 pounder battery taking up new positions near Boesinghe 31 July Haig selected Gough to command the offensive on 30 April and on 10 June Gough and the Fifth Army headquarters took over the Ypres salient north of Messines Ridge Gough planned an offensive based on the GHQ 1917 plan and the instructions he had received from Haig 46 Gough held meetings with his corps commanders on 6 and 16 June where the third objective which included the Wilhelmstellung third line a second day objective in earlier plans was added to the two objectives due to be taken on the first day A fourth objective the red line was also given for the first day to be attempted by fresh troops at the discretion of divisional and corps commanders in places where the German defence had collapsed 47 The attack was not planned as a breakthrough operation and Flandern I Stellung the fourth German defensive position lay 10 000 12 000 yd 5 7 6 8 mi 9 1 11 0 km behind the front line and was not an objective on the first day 48 The Fifth Army plan was more ambitious than the plans devised by Rawlinson and Plumer which had involved an advance of 1 000 1 750 yd 910 1 600 m on the first day by compressing their first three attacks into one day instead of three 48 Major General John Davidson Director of Operations at GHQ wrote in a memorandum that there was ambiguity as to what was meant by a step by step attack with limited objectives and suggested reverting to a 1 750 yd 1 600 m advance on the first day to increase the concentration of British artillery 49 Gough stressed the need to plan to exploit opportunities to take ground left temporarily undefended more likely in the first attack which would have the benefit of long preparation This had not been done in earlier battles and vacant ground there for the taking had been re occupied by the Germans At the end of June Haig added a division to II Corps Lieutenant General Claud Jacob from the Second Army and next day after meeting with Gough and General Herbert Plumer the Second Army commander Haig endorsed the Fifth Army plan 50 Battle of Pilckem Ridge Edit Main article Battle of Pilckem Ridge German prisoners and British wounded cross the Yser Canal near Boesinghe 31 July 1917 Q5726 The British attack began at 3 50 a m on 31 July the attack was to commence at dawn but a layer of unbroken low cloud meant that it was still dark when the infantry advanced 51 The main attack by II Corps across the Ghelveult Plateau to the south confronted the principal German defensive concentration of artillery ground holding divisions Stellungsdivisionen and Eingreif divisions The attack had most success on the northern flank on the fronts of XIV Corps and the French First Army both of which advanced 2 500 3 000 yd 1 4 1 7 mi 2 3 2 7 km to the line of the Steenbeek river In the centre XVIII Corps and XIX Corps pushed forward to the line of the Steenbeek black line to consolidate and sent fresh troops towards the green line and on the XIX Corps front to the red line for an advance of about 4 000 yd 3 700 m Group Ypres counter attacked the flanks of the British break in supported by every artillery piece and aircraft within range around noon The Germans were able to drive the three British brigades back to the black line with 70 per cent casualties the German advance was stopped at the black line by mud artillery and machine gun fire 52 Capture of Westhoek Edit Main article Capture of Westhoek German defensive system Flanders mid 1917 After rain delays from 2 August II Corps attacked again on 10 August to capture the rest of the black line second objective on the Gheluvelt plateau The infantry advance succeeded but German artillery fire and infantry counter attacks isolated the infantry of the 18th Eastern Division in Glencorse Wood At about 7 00 p m German infantry attacked behind a smokescreen and recaptured all but the north west corner of the wood only the 25th Division gains on Westhoek Ridge to the north were held 53 Lieutenant Colonel Albrecht von Thaer Chief of Staff of Gruppe Wijtschate Group Wytschaete the headquarters of the IX Reserve Corps noted that casualties after 14 days in the line averaged 1 500 2 000 men compared to 4 000 men on the Somme in 1916 and that German troop morale was higher than the year before 54 Battle of Hill 70 Edit Main articles Capture of Oppy Wood and Battle of Hill 70 Attacks to threaten Lens and Lille were to be made by the First Army in late June near Gavrelle and Oppy along the Souchez river The objective was to eliminate a German salient between Avion and the west end of Lens by taking reservoir Hill Hill 65 and Hill 70 The attacks were conducted earlier than planned to use heavy and siege artillery before it was transferred to Ypres the Souchez operation being cut back and the attack on Hill 70 postponed 55 The Battle of Hill 70 30 mi 48 km south of Ypres eventually took place from 15 to 25 August The Canadian Corps fought four divisions of the German 6th Army in the operation The capture of Hill 70 was a costly success in which three Canadian divisions inflicted many casualties on the German divisions opposite and pinned down troops reserved for the relief of tired divisions in Flanders 56 Hermann von Kuhl chief of staff of Army Group Crown Prince Rupprecht wrote later that it was a costly defeat and wrecked the plan for relieving fought out exhausted divisions in Flanders 57 Battle of Langemarck Edit Main articles Battle of Langemarck 1917 and Operation Hush The Battle of Langemarck was fought from 16 to 18 August the Fifth Army headquarters was influenced by the effect that delay would have on Operation Hush which needed the high tides due at the end of August or it would have to be postponed for a month Gough intended that the rest of the green line just beyond the Wilhelmstellung German third line from Polygon Wood to Langemarck was to be captured and the Steenbeek crossed further north 58 In the II Corps area the disappointment of 10 August was repeated with the infantry managing to advance then being isolated by German artillery and forced back to their start line by German counter attacks except in the 25th Division area near Westhoek Attempts by the German infantry to advance further were stopped by British artillery fire with many casualties 59 The advance further north in the XVIII Corps area retook and held the north end of St Julien and the area south east of Langemarck while XIV Corps captured Langemarck and the Wilhelmstellung north of the Ypres Staden railway near the Kortebeek stream The French First Army conformed pushing up to the Kortebeek and St Jansbeck stream west of the northern stretch of the Wilhelmstellung where it crossed to the east side of the Kortebeek 60 Local attacks Edit See also Gheluvelt Plateau Action of the Cockcroft and Action of 22 August 1917 British anti aircraft gun at Morbecque 29 August 1917 On the higher ground the Germans continued to inflict many losses on the British divisions beyond Langemarck but on 19 August after two fine dry days XVIII Corps conducted a novel infantry tank aircraft and artillery operation German strongpoints and pillboxes along the St Julien Poelcappelle road in front of the Wilhelmstellung were captured On 22 August more ground was gained by XIX and XVIII corps but the tactical disadvantage of being overlooked by the Germans continued 61 A II Corps attack on the Gheluvelt Plateau from 22 to 24 August to capture Nonne Bosschen Glencorse Wood and Inverness Copse failed in fighting that was costly to both sides 62 Gough laid down a new infantry formation of skirmish lines to be followed by worms on 24 August and Cavan noted that pillboxes should be attacked on a broad front to engage them simultaneously 63 Another general offensive intended for 25 August was delayed by the failure of the preliminary attacks and then postponed due to more bad weather 64 On 27 August II Corps tried a combined tank and infantry attack but the tanks bogged the attack failed and Haig called a halt to operations until the weather improved 65 Weather Edit Royal Field Artillery gunners hauling an 18 pounder field gun out of the mud near Zillebeke 9 August 1917 In Field Marshal Earl Haig 1929 Brigadier General John Charteris the BEF Chief of Intelligence from 1915 to 1918 wrote that Careful investigation of records of more than eighty years showed that in Flanders the weather broke early each August with the regularity of the Indian monsoon once the Autumn rains set in difficulties would be greatly enhanced Unfortunately there now set in the wettest August for thirty years Charteris 66 only the first part of which 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 67 The BEF had set up a Meteorological Section under Ernest Gold in 1915 which by the end of 1917 had 16 officers and 82 men The section predicted the warm weather and thunderstorms of 7 to 14 June in a letter to the press of 17 January 1958 Gold wrote that the facts of the Flanders climate contradicted Charteris 68 In 1989 Philip Griffiths examined August weather in Flanders for the thirty years before 1916 and found that there is no reason to suggest that the weather broke early in the month with any regularity Griffiths 69 From 1901 to 1916 records from a weather station at Cap Gris Nez showed that 65 per cent of August days were dry and that from 1913 to 1916 there were 26 23 23 and 21 rainless days and monthly rainfall of 17 28 22 and 96 mm 0 67 1 10 0 87 and 3 78 in during the summers preceding the Flanders campaign August days were more often dry than wet Griffiths 70 There were 127 mm 5 0 in of rain in August 1917 and 84 mm 3 3 in of the total fell on 1 8 14 26 and 27 August The month was overcast and windless which much reduced evaporation Divided into two ten day and an eleven day period there were 53 6 32 4 and 41 3 mm 2 11 1 28 and 1 63 in of rain in the 61 hours before 6 00 p m on 31 July 12 5 mm 0 49 in fell From 6 00 p m on 31 July to 6 00 p m on 4 August there was another 63 mm 2 5 in of rain August 1917 had three dry days and 14 days with less than 1 mm 0 039 in of rain Three days were sunless and one had six minutes of sunshine from 1 to 27 August there were 178 1 hours of sunshine an average of 6 6 hours per day Hussey wrote that the wet weather in August 1917 was exceptional Haig had been justified in expecting little rain swiftly dried by sunshine and breezes 71 Verdun Edit Main article Verdun August 1917 Petain had committed the French Second Army to an attack at Verdun in mid July in support of the Flanders offensive The attack was delayed partly due to mutinies in the French army after the failure of the Nivelle Offensive and because of a German attack at Verdun from 28 to 29 June which captured some of the French jumping off points A French counter attack on 17 July re captured the ground the Germans regained it on 1 August then took ground on the east bank on 16 August 72 The French attacked on 20 August and by 9 September had taken 10 000 prisoners Sporadic fighting continued into October adding to the German difficulties on the Western Front and elsewhere Ludendorff wrote On the left bank close to the Meuse one division had failed and yet both here and in Flanders everything possible had been done to avoid failure The French army was once more capable of the offensive It had quickly overcome its depression Ludendorff Memoirs 73 No German counter attack was possible because the local Eingreif divisions had been transferred to Flanders 74 September October Edit Main article The British set piece attack in late 1917 Derelict tank used as the roof of a dug out Zillebeke 20 September 1917 Q6416 The 4th Army had held on to the Gheluvelt Plateau in August but its casualties worsened the German manpower shortage 75 Haig transferred the main offensive effort to the Second Army on 25 August and moved the northern boundary of the Second Army closer to the Ypres Roulers railway More heavy artillery was sent to Flanders from the armies further south and placed opposite the Gheluvelt Plateau 76 Plumer continued the tactical evolution of the Fifth Army during its slow and costly progress in August After a pause of about three weeks Plumer intended to capture the plateau in four steps with six day intervals to bring forward artillery and supplies 77 The Second Army attacks were to remain limited and infantry brigade tactics were changed to attack the first objective with a battalion each and the final one with two battalions the opposite of the Fifth Army practice on 31 July to adapt to the dispersed defences being encountered between the Albrechtstellung and the Wilhelmstellung 78 Plumer arranged for the medium and heavy artillery reinforcements reaching Flanders to be added to the creeping bombardment which had been impossible with the amount of artillery available to the Fifth Army 78 The tactical changes ensured that more infantry attacked on narrower fronts to a shallower depth than on 31 July like the Fifth Army attacks in August The shorter and quicker advances possible once the ground dried were intended to be consolidated on tactically advantageous ground especially on any reverse slopes in the area with the infantry still in contact with the artillery and aircraft ready to repulse counter attacks 76 The faster tempo of operations was intended to add to German difficulties in replacing tired divisions through the railway bottlenecks behind the German front 79 The pause in British attacks misled some of the German commanders and Albrecht von Thaer the chief of staff of Gruppe Wijtschate wrote that it was almost boring 54 Kuhl doubted that the offensive had ended but had changed his mind by 13 September two divisions thirteen heavy artillery batteries twelve field batteries three fighter squadrons and four other units of the Luftstreitkrafte were transferred from the 4th Army 80 German tactical changes Edit Main article German defensive changes late 1917 After setting objectives 1 2 mi 1 6 3 2 km distant on 31 July the British attempted shorter advances of approximately 1 500 yd 1 400 m in August but were unable to achieve these lesser objectives on the south side of the battlefield because the rain soaked ground and poor visibility were to the advantage of the defenders After the dry spell in early September British advances had been much quicker and the final objective was reached a few hours after dawn which confounded the German counter attack divisions Having crossed 2 mi 3 2 km of mud the Eingreif divisions found the British already dug in with the German forward battle zone and its weak garrison gone beyond recapture 81 In August German front line divisions had two regiments deployed in the front line with the third regiment in reserve The front battalions had needed to be relieved much more frequently than expected due to the power of British attacks constant artillery fire and the weather Replacement units became mixed up with ones holding the front and reserve regiments had failed to intervene quickly leaving front battalions unsupported until Eingreif divisions arrived some hours later 82 In July and August German counter attack Eingreif divisions had conducted an advance to contact during mobile operations which had given the Germans several costly defensive successes 83 After the Battle of the Menin Road Ridge German tactics were changed 82 After another defeat on 26 September the German commanders made more tactical changes to counter the more conservative form of limited attacks adopted by the British 83 German counter attacks in September had been assaults on reinforced field positions due to the restrained nature of British infantry advances The fine weather in early September had greatly eased British supply difficulties especially in ammunition and the British made time to establish a defence in depth on captured ground protected by standing artillery barrages The British attacked in dry clear conditions with more aircraft over the battlefield for counter attack reconnaissance contact patrol and ground attack operations Systematic defensive artillery fire was forfeited by the Germans due to uncertainty over the position of their infantry just when the British infantry benefited from the opposite German counter attacks were costly failures and on 28 September Thaer wrote that the experience was awful and that he did not know what to do 84 Ludendorff ordered the Stellungsdivisionen ground holding divisions to reinforce their front garrisons all machine guns including those of the support and reserve battalions were sent into the forward zone to form a cordon of four to eight guns every 250 yd 230 m 85 The Stellungsdivisionen were reinforced by the Stoss shock regiments of Eingreif divisions which were moved into the artillery protective line behind the forward battle zone to counter attack sooner The other regiments of the Eingreif divisions were to be held back and used for a methodical counter attack Gegenangriff a day or two after and for spoiling attacks as the British reorganised 86 c More tactical changes were ordered on 30 September operations to increase British infantry losses were to continue and gas bombardments were to be increased weather permitting Every effort was to be made to induce the British to reinforce their forward positions with infantry for the German artillery to bombard them 88 Between 26 September and 3 October the Germans attacked at least 24 times and Operation High Storm Unternehmen Hohensturm a Gegenangriff methodical counter attack to recapture the area around Zonnebeke was planned for 4 October 89 Battle of the Menin Road Ridge Edit Main article Battle of the Menin Road Ridge Wounded men at the side of a road after the Battle of Menin Road The British plan for the battle fought from 20 to 25 September 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 than behind the original July front line and to engage in more counter battery fire The British had 575 heavy and medium and 720 field guns and howitzers more than double the quantity of artillery available at the Battle of Pilckem Ridge 90 Aircraft were to be used for systematic air observation of German troop movements to avoid the failures of previous battles where too few aircrews had been burdened with too many duties and had flown in bad weather which made their difficulties worse 91 On 20 September the Allies attacked on a 14 500 yd 8 2 mi 13 3 km front and by mid morning had captured most of their objectives to a depth of about 1 500 yd 1 400 m 92 The Germans made many hasty counter attacks Gegenstosse beginning around 3 00 p m until early evening all of which failed to gain ground or made only a temporary penetration of the new British positions The German defence had failed to stop a well prepared attack made in good weather 93 Minor attacks took place after 20 September as both sides jockeyed for position and reorganised their defences A mutually costly attack by the Germans on 25 September recaptured pillboxes at the south western end of Polygon Wood Next day the German positions near the wood were swept away in the Battle of Polygon Wood 94 German counter attack 25 September Edit Main article Action of 25 September 1917 Two regiments of the German 50th Reserve Division attacked on a 1 800 yd 1 600 m front either side of the Reutelbeek stream supported by aircraft and 44 field and 20 heavy batteries of artillery four times the usual amount for a division The German infantry managed to advance on the flanks about 100 yd 91 m near the Menin road and 600 yd 550 m north of the Reutelbeek The infantry were supported by artillery observation and ground attack aircraft a box barrage was fired behind the British front line which isolated the British infantry from reinforcements and ammunition Return fire from the 33rd Division and the 15th Australian Brigade of the 5th Australian Division along the southern edge of Polygon Wood to the north forced the attackers under cover around some of the Wilhelmstellung pillboxes near Black Watch Corner at the south western edge of Polygon Wood German attempts to reinforce the attacking troops failed due to British artillery observers isolating the advanced German troops with artillery barrages 95 Plumer ordered the attack due on 26 September to go ahead but reduced the objectives of the 33rd Division The 98th Brigade was to advance and cover the right flank of the 5th Australian Division and the 100th Brigade was to re capture the lost ground further south The 5th Australian Division advance the next day began with uncertainty as to the security of its right flank the attack of the depleted 98th Brigade was delayed and only managed to reach Black Watch Corner 1 000 yd 910 m short of its objectives Reinforcements moved into the 5th Australian Division area and attacked south westwards at noon as a silent without artillery support frontal attack was made from Black Watch Corner because British troops were known to be holding out in the area The attack succeeded by 2 00 p m and later in the afternoon the 100th Brigade re took the ground lost north of the Menin road Casualties in the 33rd Division were so great that it was relieved on 27 September by the 23rd Division which had only been withdrawn on the night of 24 25 September 96 Battle of Polygon Wood Edit Main article Battle of Polygon Wood Australian infantry with small box respirator gas masks Ypres September 1917 The Second Army altered its Corps frontages soon after the attack of 20 September for the next effort 26 September 3 October so that each attacking division could be concentrated on a 1 000 yd 910 m front Roads and light railways were extended to the new front line to allow artillery and ammunition to be moved forward The artillery of VIII Corps and IX Corps on the southern flank simulated preparations for attacks on Zandvoorde and Warneton At 5 50 a m on 26 September five layers of barrage fired by British artillery and machine guns began Dust and smoke thickened the morning mist and the infantry advanced using compass bearings 97 Each of the three German ground holding divisions attacked on 26 September had an Eingreif division in support twice the ratio of 20 September No ground captured by the British was lost and German counter attacks managed only to reach ground to which survivors of the front line divisions had retired 98 October November Edit German counter attacks 30 September 4 October Edit Main article Actions of 30 September 4 October 1917 At 4 00 a m on 30 September a thick mist covered the ground and at 4 30 a m German artillery began a bombardment between the Menin road and the Reutelbeek At 5 15 a m German troops emerged from the mist on an 800 yd 730 m front 99 The attack was supported by flame throwers and German infantry throwing smoke and hand grenades The British replied with small arms fire and bombs forcing the Germans to retreat in confusion but a post was lost south of the Menin road then retaken by an immediate counter attack SOS rockets were not seen in the mist and the British artillery remained silent 100 The Germans were repulsed again at 6 00 a m but German artillery fire continued during the day 99 On 1 October at 5 00 a m a German hurricane bombardment began from the Reutelbeek north to Polygon Wood and Black Watch Corner by coincidence a Second Army practice barrage began at 5 15 a m The British front line was cut off and German infantry attacked in three waves at 5 30 a m 101 Two determined German attacks were repulsed south of Cameron Covert then at 7 00 p m German troops massed near the Menin road The German attack was defeated by small arms fire and the British artillery whose observers had seen the SOS rockets The British were forced out of Cameron Covert and counter attacked but a German attack began at the same time and the British were repulsed Another German attack failed and the German troops dug in behind some old German barbed wire after dark more German attacks around Cameron Covert failed 102 North of the covert near Polygon Wood deep mud smothered German shells before they exploded but they still caused many casualties Communication with the rear was lost and the Germans attacked all day but British SOS rockets remained visible and the attacks took no ground after dark German attacks were repulsed by another three SOS barrages 103 Unternehmen Hohensturm Operation High Storm was planned by Gruppe Ypern to recapture the Tokio Spur from Zonnebeke south to Molenaarelsthoek at the eastern edge of Polygon Wood on 3 October 104 The attacking infantry from the 45th Reserve and the 4th Guard divisions were commanded by Major Freiherr von Schleinitz in the north and Lieutenant Colonel Rave in the south 105 After the costly failure of the methodical counter attack Gegenangriff on 1 October the attack was put back to 4 October rehearsals taking place from 2 to 3 October 106 On the night of 3 4 October the German commanders had doubts about the attack but decided to proceed with the Gegenangriff warning the artillery to be ready to commence defensive bombardments 107 A contact patrol aircraft was arranged to fly over the area at 7 30 a m 105 Battle of Broodseinde Edit Main article Battle of Broodseinde On 4 October the British began the Battle of Broodseinde to complete the capture of the Gheluvelt Plateau and occupy Broodseinde Ridge By coincidence the Germans sought to recapture their defences around Zonnebeke with a Gegenangriff at the same time 108 The British attacked along a 14 000 yd 8 0 mi 13 km front and as the I Anzac Corps divisions began their advance towards Broodseinde Ridge men were seen rising from shell holes in no man s land and more German troops were found concealed in shell craters Most of the German troops of the 45th Reserve Division were overrun or retreated through the British barrage then the Australians attacked pillboxes one by one and captured the village of Zonnebeke north of the ridge 109 When the British barrage began on Broodseinde Ridge the Keiberg Spur and Waterdamhoek some of the German forward headquarters staffs only realised that they were under attack when British and Australian troops appeared 110 As news arrived of the great success of the attack the head of GHQ Intelligence went to the Second Army headquarters to discuss exploitation Plumer declined the suggestion as eight fresh German divisions were behind the battlefield with another six beyond them 111 Later in the day Plumer had second thoughts and ordered I Anzac Corps to push on to the Keiberg spur with support from the II Anzac Corps The II Anzac Corps commander wanted to advance north east towards Passchendaele village but the I Anzac Corps commander preferred to wait until artillery had been brought up and supply routes improved The X Corps commander proposed an attack northward from In de Ster into the southern flank of the Germans opposite I Anzac Corps The 7th Division commander objected due to uncertainty about the situation and the many casualties suffered by the 21st Division on the right flank and Plumer changed his mind again During the morning Gough had told the Fifth Army corps commanders to push on but when reports arrived of a repulse at 19 Metre Hill the order was cancelled 112 German defensive changes Edit Main article German defensive changes late 1917 British soldiers moving forward during the Battle of Broodseinde Photo by Ernest Brooks On 7 October the 4th Army again dispersed its troops in the front defence zone Reserve battalions moved back behind the artillery protective line and the Eingreif divisions were organised to intervene as swiftly as possible once an attack commenced despite the risk of British artillery fire Counter battery fire to suppress the British artillery was to be increased to protect the Eingreif divisions as they advanced 113 All of the German divisions holding front zones were relieved and an extra division brought forward because the British advances had lengthened the front line Without the divisions necessary for a counter offensive south of the Gheluvelt Plateau towards Kemmel Hill Rupprecht began to plan for a slow withdrawal from the Ypres Salient even at the risk of uncovering German positions further north and on the Belgian coast 114 d Battle of Poelcappelle Edit Main article Battle of Poelcappelle The French First Army and British Second and Fifth armies attacked on 9 October on a 13 500 yd 7 7 mi 12 3 km front from south of Broodseinde to St Jansbeek to advance half of the distance from Broodseinde ridge to Passchendaele on the main front which led to many casualties on both sides Advances in the north of the attack front were retained by British and French troops but most of the ground taken in front of Passchendaele and on the Becelaere and Gheluvelt spurs was lost to German counter attacks 115 General William Birdwood later wrote that the return of heavy rain and mud sloughs was the main cause of the failure to hold captured ground Kuhl concluded that the fighting strained German fighting power to the limit but that the German forces managed to prevent a breakthrough although it was becoming much harder to replace losses 116 First Battle of Passchendaele Edit Main article First Battle of Passchendaele Aerial view of Passchendaele village before and after the battle The First Battle of Passchendaele on 12 October was another Allied attempt to gain ground around Passchendaele Heavy rain and mud again made movement difficult and little artillery could be brought closer to the front Allied troops were exhausted and morale had fallen After a modest British advance German counter attacks recovered most of the ground lost opposite Passchendaele except for an area on the right of the Wallemolen spur North of Poelcappelle the XIV Corps of the Fifth Army advanced along the Broembeek some way up the Watervlietbeek and the Stadenrevebeek streams and the Guards Division captured the west end of the Vijwegen spur gaining observation over the south end of Houthulst Forest 117 There were 13 000 Allied casualties including 2 735 New Zealanders 845 of whom were dead or stranded in the mud of no man s land it was one of the worst days in New Zealand military history 118 At a conference on 13 October Haig and the army commanders agreed that attacks would stop until the weather improved and roads could be extended to carry more artillery and ammunition forward The offensive was to continue to reach a suitable line for the winter and to keep German attention on Flanders with a French attack due on 23 October and the Third Army operation south of Arras scheduled for mid November 119 The battle was also costly for the Germans who lost more than 1 000 prisoners 120 The German 195th Division at Passchendaele suffered 3 325 casualties from 9 to 12 October and had to be relieved by the 238th Division 121 Ludendorff became optimistic that Passchendaele Ridge could be held and ordered the 4th Army to stand fast 122 On 18 October Kuhl advocated a retreat as far to the east as possible Armin and Lossberg wanted to hold on because the ground beyond the Passchendaele watershed was untenable even in winter 123 Action of 22 October Edit Main article Action of 22 October 1917 On 22 October the 18th Eastern Division of XVIII Corps attacked the east end of Poelcappelle as XIV Corps to the north attacked with the 34th Division between the Watervlietbeek and Broenbeek streams and the 35th Division northwards into Houthulst Forest The attack was supported by a regiment of the French 1st Division on the left flank of the 35th Division and was intended to obstruct a possible German counter attack on the left flank of the Canadian Corps as it attacked Passchendaele and the ridge The artillery of the Second and Fifth armies conducted a bombardment to simulate a general attack as a deception Poelcappelle was captured but the attack at the junction between the 34th and 35th divisions was repulsed German counter attacks pushed back the 35th Division in the centre but the French attack captured all its objectives Attacking on ground cut up by bombardments and soaked by rain the British had struggled to advance in places and lost the ability to move quickly to outflank pillboxes The 35th Division reached the fringe of Houthulst Forest but was outflanked and pushed back in places German counter attacks made after 22 October were at an equal disadvantage and were costly failures The German 4th Army was prevented from transferring troops away from the Fifth Army and from concentrating its artillery fire on the Canadians as they prepared for the Second Battle of Passchendaele 26 October 10 November 1917 124 Battle of La Malmaison Edit Main article Battle of La Malmaison After numerous requests from Haig Petain began the Battle of La Malmaison a long delayed French attack on the Chemin des Dames by the Sixth Army General Paul Maistre The artillery preparation started on 17 October and on 23 October the German defenders were swiftly defeated and the French advanced up to 3 7 mi 6 0 km capturing the village and fort of La Malmaison gaining control of the Chemin des Dames ridge 125 The Germans lost 38 000 men killed or missing and 12 000 prisoners along with 200 guns and 720 machine guns against 14 000 French casualties fewer than a third of the German total 126 The Germans had to withdraw from their remaining positions on the Chemin des Dames to the north of the Ailette Valley early in November Haig was pleased with the French success but regretted the delay which had lessened its effect on the Flanders operations 125 Second Battle of Passchendaele Edit Main article Second Battle of Passchendaele Terrain through which the Canadian Corps advanced at Passchendaele in late 1917 Terrain at Passchendaele near where the Canadian Corps advanced spring 2015 The British Fifth Army undertook minor operations from 20 to 22 October to maintain pressure on the Germans and support the French attack at La Malmaison while the Canadian Corps prepared for a series of attacks from 26 October to 10 November 127 The four divisions of the Canadian Corps had been transferred to the Ypres Salient from Lens to capture Passchendaele and the ridge 128 The Canadians relieved the II Anzac Corps on 18 October and found that the front line was mostly the same as that occupied by the 1st Canadian Division in April 1915 The Canadian operation was to be three limited attacks on 26 October 30 October and 6 November 129 On 26 October the 3rd Canadian Division captured its objective at Wolf Copse then swung back its northern flank to link with the adjacent division of the Fifth Army The 4th Canadian Division captured its objectives but was forced slowly to retire from Decline Copse against German counter attacks and communication failures between the Canadian and Australian units to the south 130 The second stage began on 30 October to complete the previous stage and gain a base for the final assault on Passchendaele The attackers on the southern flank quickly captured Crest Farm and sent patrols beyond the final objective into Passchendaele The attack on the northern flank again met with exceptional German resistance The 3rd Canadian Division captured Vapour Farm on the corps boundary Furst Farm to the west of Meetcheele and the crossroads at Meetcheele but remained short of its objective During a seven day pause the Second Army took over another section of the Fifth Army front adjoining the Canadian Corps Three rainless days from 3 to 5 November eased preparation for the next stage which began on the morning of 6 November with the 1st Canadian Division and the 2nd Canadian Division In less than three hours many units reached their final objectives and Passchendaele was captured The Canadian Corps attacked on 10 November to gain control of the remaining high ground north of the village near Hill 52 131 e December Edit Night action of 1 2 December 1917 Edit Main article Night action of 1 2 December 1917 On 18 November the VIII Corps on the right and II Corps on the left northern side of the Passchendaele Salient took over from the Canadian Corps The area was subjected to constant German artillery bombardments and its vulnerability to attack led to a suggestion by Brigadier C F Aspinall that either the British should retire to the west side of the Gheluvelt Plateau or advance to broaden the salient towards Westroosebeke Expanding the salient would make the troops in it less vulnerable to German artillery fire and provide a better jumping off line for a resumption of the offensive in the spring of 1918 The British attacked towards Westroozebeke on the night of 1 2 December but the plan to mislead the Germans by not bombarding the German defences until eight minutes after the infantry began their advance came undone The noise of the British assembly and the difficulty of moving across muddy and waterlogged ground had also alerted the Germans In the moonlight the Germans had seen the British troops when they were still 200 yd 180 m away Some ground was captured and about 150 prisoners were taken but the attack on the redoubts failed and observation over the heads of the valleys on the east and north sides of the ridge was not achieved 132 Action on the Polderhoek Spur Edit Main article Action on the Polderhoek Spur The attack on the Polderhoek Spur on 3 December 1917 was a local operation by the British Fourth Army renamed from the Second Army on 8 November Two battalions of the 2nd New Zealand Brigade of the New Zealand Division attacked the low ridge from which German observers could view the area from Cameron Covert to the north and the Menin road to the south west A New Zealand advance of 600 yd 550 m on a 400 yd 370 m front would shield the area north of the Reutelbeek stream from German observers on the Gheluvelt spur Heavy artillery bombarded the ruins of Polderhoek Chateau and the pillboxes in the grounds to mislead the defenders and the attack was made in daylight as a ruse to surprise the Germans who would be under cover sheltering from the routine bombardments Smoke and gas bombardments on the Gheluvelt and Becelaere spurs on the flanks and the infantry attack began at the same time as the routine bombardment The ruse failed some British artillery fire dropped short on the New Zealanders and the Germans engaged the attackers with small arms fire from Polderhoek Spur and Gheluvelt ridge A strong west wind ruined the smoke screens and the British artillery failed to suppress the German machine guns New Zealand machine gunners repulsed a counter attack but the New Zealand infantry were 150 yd 140 m short of the first objective another attempt after dark was cancelled because of the full moon and the arrival of German reinforcements 133 Aftermath EditAnalysis Edit German casualties 134 f Date No 21 31 July 30 0001 10 Aug 16 00011 21 Aug 24 00021 31 Aug 12 5001 10 Sept 4 00011 20 Sept 25 00021 30 Sept 13 5001 10 Oct 35 00011 20 Oct 12 00021 31 Oct 20 5001 10 Nov 9 50011 20 Nov 4 00021 30 Nov 4 5001 10 Dec 4 00011 31 Dec 2 500Total 217 000In a German General Staff publication it was written that Germany had been brought near to certain destruction sicheren Untergang by the Flanders battle of 1917 135 In his Memoirs of 1938 Lloyd George wrote Passchendaele was indeed one of the greatest disasters of the war No soldier of any intelligence now defends this senseless campaign 136 In 1939 G C Wynne wrote that the British had eventually reached Passchendaele Ridge and captured Flandern I Stellung but beyond them were Flandern II Stellung and Flandern III Stellung The German submarine bases on the coast had not been captured but the objective of diverting the Germans from the French further south while they recovered from the Nivelle Offensive in April had succeeded 137 In 1997 Paddy Griffith wrote that the bite and hold system kept moving until November because the BEF had developed a workable system of offensive tactics against which the Germans ultimately had no answer 138 A decade later Jack Sheldon wrote that relative casualty figures were irrelevant because the German army could not afford the losses or to lose the initiative by being compelled to fight another defensive battle on ground of the Allies choosing The Third Battle of Ypres had pinned the German army to Flanders and caused unsustainable casualties 139 In 2018 Jonathan Boff wrote that after the war the Reichsarchiv official historians many of whom were former staff officers wrote of the tactical changes after 26 September and their scrapping after the Battle of Broodseinde on 4 October as the work of Lossberg By blaming an individual the rest of the German commanders were exculpated which gave a false impression that OHL operated in a rational manner when Ludendorff imposed another defensive scheme on 7 October Boff wrote that this narrative was facile and that it avoided the problem faced by the Germans in late 1917 OHL had issued orders to change tactics again days before Lossberg was blamed for giving new orders to the 4th Army Boff also doubted that all of the divisions in Flanders could act on top down changes The 119th Division was in the front line from 11 August to 18 October and replied that new tactics were difficult to implement due to lack of training The tempo of British attacks and the effect of attrition meant that although six divisions were sent to the 4th Army by 10 October they were either novice units deficient in training or veteran formations with low morale after earlier defeats good divisions had been diluted with too many replacements Boff wrote that the Germans consciously sought tactical changes for an operational dilemma for want of an alternative On 2 October Rupprecht had ordered the 4th Army HQ to avoid over centralising command only to find that Lossberg had issued an artillery plan detailing the deployment of individual batteries 140 At a British conference on 13 October the Third Army General Julian Byng scheme for an attack in mid November was discussed Byng wanted the operations at Ypres continued to hold German troops in Flanders 119 The Battle of Cambrai began on 20 November and the British breached the first two parts of the Hindenburg Line in the first successful mass use of tanks in a combined arms operation 141 The experience of the failure to contain the British attacks at Ypres and the drastic reduction in areas of the western front that could be considered quiet after the tank and artillery surprise at Cambrai left the OHL with little choice but to return to a strategy of decisive victory in 1918 142 On 24 October the Austro German 14th Army General der Infanterie Otto von Below attacked the Italian Second Army on the Isonzo at the Battle of Caporetto and in 18 days inflicted casualties of 650 000 men and 3 000 guns 143 In fear that Italy might be put out of the war the French and British governments offered reinforcements 144 British and French troops were swiftly moved from 10 November to 12 December but the diversion of resources from the BEF forced Haig to conclude the Third Battle of Ypres short of Westrozebeke the last substantial British attack took place on 10 November 145 Casualties Edit Various casualty figures have been published for the Third Battle of Ypres sometimes with acrimony the highest estimates for British and German casualties appear to be discredited but the British claim to have taken 24 065 prisoners has not been disputed 146 In 1940 C R M F Cruttwell recorded 300 000 British casualties and 400 000 German 147 In the History of the Great War volume Military Operations published in 1948 James Edmonds put British casualties at 244 897 and wrote that equivalent German figures were not available estimating German losses at 400 000 148 g A J P Taylor wrote in 1972 that no one believed Edmonds farcical calculations Taylor put British wounded and killed at 300 000 and German losses at 200 000 a proportion slightly better than the Somme 150 In 2007 Jack Sheldon wrote that although German casualties from 1 June to 10 November were 217 194 a figure available in Volume III of the Sanitatsbericht Medical Report 1934 Edmonds may not have included these data as they did not fit his case using the phrases creative accounting and cavalier handling of the facts Sheldon wrote that the German casualties could only be brought up to 399 590 by including the 182 396 soldiers who were sick or treated at regimental aid posts for minor cuts and wounds but not struck off unit strength Sheldon wrote it is hard to see any merit in doing so 151 Leon Wolff writing in 1958 gave German casualties as 270 713 and British casualties as 448 688 152 Wolff s British figure was refuted by John Terraine in a 1977 publication Despite writing that 448 614 British casualties was the BEF total for the second half of 1917 Wolff had neglected to deduct 75 681 casualties for the Battle of Cambrai given in the Official Statistics from which he quoted or normal wastage averaging 35 000 per month in quiet periods 153 In 1959 Cyril Falls estimated 240 000 British 8 525 French and 260 000 German casualties 154 In his 1963 biography of Haig Terraine accepted Edmonds figure of 244 897 British casualties and agreed that German losses were at least equal to and probably greater than British owing to the strength of British artillery and the high number of German counterattacks he did not accept Edmonds calculation that German losses were as high as 400 000 149 In his 1977 work Terraine wrote that the German figure ought to be increased because their statistics were incomplete and because their data omitted some lightly wounded men who would have been included under British casualty criteria revising the German figure by twenty per cent which made German casualties 260 400 153 Prior and Wilson in 1997 gave British losses of 275 000 and German casualties at just under 200 000 155 In 1997 Heinz Hagenlucke gave c 217 000 German casualties 54 Gary Sheffield wrote in 2002 that Richard Holmes guessed that both sides suffered 260 000 casualties which seemed about right to him 156 Subsequent operations Edit Winter 1917 1918 Edit The area to the east and south of the ruins of Passchendaele village was held by posts those to the east being fairly habitable unlike the southern ones from Passchendaele as far back as Potijze the ground was far worse Each brigade spent four days in the front line four in support and four in reserve The area was quiet apart from artillery fire and in December the weather turned cold and snowy which entailed a great effort to prevent trench foot In January spells of freezing cold were followed by warmer periods one beginning on 15 January with torrential rain and gale force winds washing away plank roads and duckboard tracks 157 Conditions in the salient improved with the completion of transport routes and the refurbishment of German pillboxes Both sides raided and the British used night machine gun fire and artillery barrages to great effect 158 On the evening of 3 March 1918 two companies of the 8th Division raided Teal Cottage supported by a smoke and shrapnel barrage killed many of the garrison and took six prisoners for one man wounded 159 A German attack on 11 March was repulsed after that the Germans made no more attacks keeping up frequent artillery bombardments and machine gun fire instead 160 When the German armies further south began the Spring Offensive on 21 March 1918 good divisions in Flanders were sent south the 29th Division was withdrawn on 9 April and transferred to the Lys 161 Retreat 1918 Edit See also German Spring Offensive Operation Michael and Battle of the Lys 1918 On 23 March Haig ordered Plumer to make contingency plans to shorten the line and release troops for the other armies Worn out divisions from the south had been sent to Flanders to recuperate closer to the coast On 11 April Plumer authorised a withdrawal of the southern flank of the Second Army On 12 April the VIII Corps HQ ordered the infantry retirement to begin that night and the 59th Division was replaced by part of the 41st Division and transferred south The II Corps had begun to withdraw its artillery at the same time as VIII Corps on the night of 11 12 April and ordered the 36th Ulster and 30th divisions to conform to the VIII Corps retirement which was complete by 13 April with no German interference 162 On 13 April Plumer agreed to a retirement in the south side of the salient to a line from Mt Kemmel to Voormezeele 2 5 mi 4 0 km south of Ypres White Chateau 1 mi 1 6 km east of Ypres and Pilckem Ridge 163 The 4th Army diary recorded that the withdrawal was discovered at 4 40 a m Next day at the Battle of Merckem the Germans attacked from Houthulst Forest north east of Ypres and captured Kippe but were forced out by Belgian counter attacks supported by the II Corps artillery On the afternoon of 27 April the south end of the Second Army outpost line was driven in near Voormezeele and another British outpost line was established north east of the village 164 Commemoration Edit Tyne Cot Commonwealth War Graves Cemetery and Memorial to the Missing The Menin Gate Memorial to the Missing commemorates those of all Commonwealth nations except New Zealand and Newfoundland who died in the Ypres Salient and have no known grave In the case of the United Kingdom only casualties before 16 August 1917 are commemorated on the memorial United Kingdom and New Zealand servicemen who died after that date are named on the memorial at Tyne Cot Cemetery There is a New Zealand Memorial marking where New Zealand troops fought at Gravenstafel Ridge on 4 October located on Roeselarestraat 165 There are numerous tributes and memorials in Australia and New Zealand to Anzac soldiers who died in the battle including plaques at the Christchurch and Dunedin railway stations The Canadian Corps participation in the Second Battle of Passchendaele is commemorated with the Passchendaele Memorial at site of the Crest Farm on the south west fringe of Passchendaele village 166 One of the newest monuments to be dedicated to the fighting contribution of a group is the Celtic Cross memorial commemorating the Scottish contribution to the fighting in Flanders during the Great War This memorial is on Frezenberg Ridge where the 9th Scottish Division and the 15th Scottish Division fought during the Third Battle of Ypres The monument was dedicated by Linda Fabiani the Minister for Europe of the Scottish Parliament during the late summer of 2007 the 90th anniversary of the battle 167 In July 2017 a two day event was organised in Ypres to mark the centenary of the battle Members of the British royal family and Prime Minister Theresa May joined the ceremonies which started in the evening of 30 July with the service at Menin Gate followed by ceremonies at the Market Square On the following day a ceremony was held at Tyne Cot cemetery headed by the Prince of Wales 168 169 See also Edit World War I portalPasschendaele a 2008 Canadian film with the battle as a backdrop Notes Edit Passchendaele is the common English title The British Battles Nomenclature Committee Report of 1922 called the Flanders Offensive of 1917 The Battle of Messines 1917 7 14 June and The Battles of Ypres 1917 31 July 10 November The battles are known to the British as the Battle of Messines 1917 7 14 June the Battle of Pilckem Ridge 31 July 2 August the Battle of Langemarck 16 18 August the Battle of Menin Road Ridge 20 25 September the Battle of Polygon Wood 26 September 3 October the Battle of Broodseinde 4 October the Battle of Poelcappelle 9 October the First Battle of Passchendaele 12 October and the Second Battle of Passchendaele 26 October 10 November In German works it is the Kampf um den Wijtschatebogen The Battle of the Wijtschate Salient and the Flandernschlacht Battle of Flanders in five periods First Battle of Flanders 31 July 9 August Second Battle of Flanders 9 25 August Third Battle of Flanders 20 September 8 October Fourth Battle of Flanders 9 21 October and the Fifth Battle of Flanders 22 October 5 December 1 After mutinies had begun in the French armies the British cabinet felt compelled to endorse the Flanders offensive in the hope that more refusals to fight could be averted by a great military success Haig wrote that if the Allies could win the war in 1917 the chief people to suffer would be the socialists 36 The 4th Guard Division 4th Bavarian Division 6th Bavarian Division 10th Ersatz Division 16th Division 19th Reserve Division 20th Division 187th Division 195th Division and 45th Reserve Division took part in the battle 87 195th 16th 4th Bavarian 18th 227th 240th 187th and 22nd Reserve divisions 87 German troops engaged were from the 239th 39th 4th 44th Reserve 7th 11th 11th Bavarian 238th 199th 27th 185th 111th and 40th divisions 87 German casualties were counted in ten day periods A discrepancy of 27 000 fewer casualties recorded in the Sanitatsbericht could not be explained by the Reichsarchiv historians 134 For British losses Edmonds used data based on figures submitted by the Adjutant General s Department to the Allied Supreme War Council on 25 February 1918 Edmonds also showed weekly returns to GHQ giving a slightly lower total of 238 313 Edmonds wrote that whereas the true figure for British casualties on the Somme had been approximately 420 000 the Germans had announced that the British had suffered 600 000 casualties which was close to what Edmonds believed to be the true number for German Somme casualties 582 919 The Bavarian Official History had put British casualties at the Third Battle of Ypres at 400 000 which Edmonds believed raised suspicion that this was the number of German casualties Edmonds wrote that the German Official Account Der Weltkrieg put German 4th Army casualties 21 July 31 December at approximately 217 000 Edmonds considered that 30 per cent needed to be added to German figures to make them comparable to British casualty recording criteria which would amount to 289 000 casualties Edmonds wrote that this did not include units which served only briefly in the 4th Army or units that were not part of it Edmonds wrote that German divisions had an average strength of 12 000 men and tended to be relieved after suffering about 4 000 casualties As Crown Prince Rupprecht recorded 88 German divisions fighting in the battle and after deducting 15 000 German casualties from 15 June to 30 July the Germans must have suffered around 337 000 casualties The average German battalion strength dropped to 640 men despite allowing 100 men reinforcements per battalion suggesting 364 320 casualties Edmonds wrote there seems every probability that the Germans lost about 400 000 149 148 Footnotes Edit Edmonds 1991 p iii Sheldon 2007 p xiv Albertini 2005 pp 414 504 Foley 2007 p 102 Foley 2007 p 104 a b Edmonds 1993 p 2 Doughty 2005 p 137 Edmonds 1993 p 1 Terraine 1977 pp 12 13 Edmonds 1993 pp 163 245 Falls 1992 pp 533 534 Edmonds 1993 p 31 Terraine 1977 pp 14 15 Hart amp Steel 2001 p 30 Falls 1992 p 21 Falls 1992 pp 38 39 Edmonds amp Wynne 2010 p 14 Terraine 1977 pp 31 55 94 Terraine 1999 p 15 Powell 2004 p 169 Terraine 1977 p 84 Edmonds 1991 p 24 Edmonds 1991 p 234 Terraine 1977 pp 290 297 Edmonds 1925 pp 128 129 Edmonds 1925 pp 129 131 Liddle 1997 pp 140 158 Liddle 1997 p 141 Liddle 1997 p 142 Edmonds 1991 p 125 Liddle 1997 pp 147 148 Henniker 2009 p 273 Edmonds 1991 pp 3 4 Edmonds 1991 p 25 Edmonds 1991 pp 17 19 Sheffield 2011 pp 227 231 Millman 2001 p 61 French 1995 pp 119 122 92 93 146 Wynne 1976 pp 297 298 Wynne 1976 pp 282 283 Wynne 1976 p 284 Wynne 1976 pp 286 287 Sheldon 2007 p 1 Hart amp Steel 2001 pp 41 44 Sheldon 2007 p 23 Hart amp Steel 2001 p 55 Edmonds 1991 p 87 Edmonds 1991 p 127 Edmonds 1991 pp 126 127 431 432 a b Prior amp Wilson 1996 pp 72 75 Davidson 2010 p 29 Edmonds 1991 p 440 Prior amp Wilson 1996 p 89 Prior amp Wilson 1996 pp 90 95 Edmonds 1991 pp 185 187 a b c Liddle 1997 pp 45 58 Edmonds 1991 pp 112 113 Edmonds 1991 pp 219 230 Terraine 1977 p 234 Edmonds 1991 pp 189 202 Edmonds 1991 p 194 Edmonds 1991 p 201 Edmonds 1991 p 203 Edmonds 1991 pp 202 205 Simpson 2001 pp 130 134 Rogers 2010 pp 162 167 Edmonds 1991 p 208 Charteris 1929 pp 272 273 Hussey 1997 p 155 Hussey 1997 p 153 Hussey 1997 pp 147 148 Hussey 1997 p 148 Hussey 1997 pp 149 151 Doughty 2005 pp 380 383 Terraine 1977 p 235 Edmonds 1991 p 230 Sheldon 2007 pp 119 120 a b Nicholson 1964 p 308 Edmonds 1991 p 237 a b Marble 2003 App 22 Edmonds 1991 pp 236 242 Terraine 1977 p 257 Wynne 1976 p 303 a b Rogers 2010 p 168 a b Sheldon 2007 p 184 Edmonds 1991 pp 294 295 Liddle 1997 pp 45 58 Wynne 1976 pp 307 308 Sheldon 2007 pp 190 191 Wynne 1976 p 307 a b c USWD 1920 Sheldon 2007 pp 184 186 Terraine 1977 p 278 Prior amp Wilson 1996 p 135 Edmonds 1991 pp 238 239 Jones 2002 p 181 Terraine 1977 p 261 Harris 2008 p 366 Sheldon 2007 p 165 Edmonds 1991 pp 282 284 Edmonds 1991 pp 286 287 Edmonds 1991 p 284 Edmonds 1991 p 293 a b Sandilands 2003 pp 198 199 Edmonds 1991 pp 301 302 Bean 1941 p 837 Sandilands 2003 pp 200 204 Atkinson 2009 pp 410 412 Bean 1941 p 846 a b Bean 1941 p 847 Edmonds 1991 pp 303 304 Bean 1941 p 858 Prior amp Wilson 1996 p 135 Bean 1941 pp 837 847 Edmonds 1991 pp 304 307 Bean 1941 pp 858 859 Edmonds 1991 p 316 Edmonds 1991 pp 315 317 Wynne 1976 p 309 Sheldon 2007 pp 228 229 Bean 1941 p 887 Terraine 1977 pp 287 288 Edmonds 1991 pp 341 344 Liddle 1997 p 285 a b Edmonds 1991 pp 345 346 Boraston 1920 p 130 Sheldon 2007 p 236 Sheldon 2007 p 233 Terraine 1977 p 305 Perry 2014 pp 475 486 a b Terraine 1977 p 307 Philpott 2014 p 279 Bean 1941 p 930 Edmonds 1991 p 347 Bean 1941 p 929 Nicholson 1964 pp 312 314 Nicholson 1964 p 320 Nicholson 1964 pp 320 325 Sheldon 2007 pp 311 312 LoCicero 2011 pp 155 338 Stewart 2014 pp 304 314 a b Foerster 1956 p 96 Edmonds 1991 p xiii Terraine 1977 pp xix xx Wynne 1976 pp 214 215 Liddle 1997 p 71 Sheldon 2007 pp 313 317 Boff 2018 pp 181 182 Harris 1995 pp 124 125 Sheldon 2009 p 312 Miles 1991 p 15 Bean 1941 pp 935 936 Bean 1941 p 936 McRandle amp Quirk 2006 pp 667 701 Boraston 1920 p 133 Cruttwell 1982 p 442 a b Edmonds 1991 pp 360 365 a b Terraine 2005 p 372 Taylor 1972 pp 181 182 Sheldon 2007 pp 313 315 319 Wolff 1958 p 259 a b Terraine 1977 pp 344 345 Falls 1959 p 303 Prior amp Wilson 1996 p 195 Sheffield 2002 p 216 Boraston amp Bax 1999 pp 167 168 Seton Hutchinson 2005 pp 79 80 Boraston amp Bax 1999 p 171 Gillon 2002 pp 180 183 Seton Hutchinson 2005 p 80 Gillon 2002 p 186 Edmonds Davies amp Maxwell Hyslop 1995 pp 113 114 245 275 Edmonds Davies amp Maxwell Hyslop 1995 pp 299 300 319 316 326 Edmonds Davies amp Maxwell Hyslop 1995 pp 337 338 342 443 NZG nd Vance 1997 p 66 SG 2007 DT 2017 DT 2017a References EditBooks Albertini L 2005 1952 The Origins of the War of 1914 Vol III repr ed New York Enigma Books ISBN 978 1 929631 33 9 Atkinson C T 2009 1927 The Seventh Division 1914 1918 Naval amp Military Press ed London John Murray ISBN 978 1 84342 119 1 Bean C E W 1941 1933 The Australian Imperial Force in France 1917 Official History of Australia in the War of 1914 1918 Vol IV online scan ed Canberra Australian War Memorial ISBN 978 0 7022 1710 4 Retrieved 21 July 2017 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 Boraston J H 1920 1919 Sir Douglas Haig s Despatches 2nd ed London Dent OCLC 633614212 Boraston J H Bax C E O 1999 1926 Eighth Division in War 1914 1918 repr Naval amp Military Press Uckfield ed London Medici Society ISBN 978 1 897632 67 3 Charteris J 1929 Field Marshal Earl Haig London Cassell OCLC 874765434 via Archive Foundation Cruttwell C R M F 1982 1940 A History of the Great War 1914 1918 repr ed London Granada ISBN 978 0 586 08398 7 via Archive Foundation Davidson Sir J 2010 1953 Haig Master of the Field repr Pen amp Sword ed London Peter Nevill ISBN 978 1 84884 362 2 Doughty R A 2005 Pyrrhic victory French Strategy and Operations in the Great War Cambridge MS Belknap Harvard ISBN 978 0 674 01880 8 Edmonds J E 1925 Military Operations France and Belgium 1914 Antwerp La Bassee Armentieres Messines and Ypres October November 1914 History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence Vol II London Macmillan OCLC 220044986 Edmonds J E 1993 1932 Military Operations France and Belgium 1916 Sir Douglas Haig s Command to the 1st July Battle of the Somme History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence Vol I Imperial War Museum and Battery Press ed London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 89839 185 5 Edmonds J E Wynne G C 2010 1940 Military Operations France and Belgium 1917 Appendices History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence Imperial War Museum and Battery Press ed London Macmillan ISBN 978 1 84574 733 6 Edmonds J E 1991 1948 Military Operations France and Belgium 1917 7 June 10 November Messines and Third Ypres Passchendaele History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence Vol II Imperial War Museum and Battery Press ed London HMSO ISBN 978 0 89839 166 4 Edmonds J E Davies C B Maxwell Hyslop R G B 1995 1937 Military Operations France and Belgium 1918 March April Continuation of the German Offensives History of the Great War Based on Official Documents Vol II Imperial War Museum and Battery Press ed London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 89839 223 4 Falls C 1959 The Great War 1914 1918 London Perigee ISBN 978 0 399 50100 5 Falls C 1992 1940 Military Operations France and Belgium 1917 The German Retreat to the Hindenburg Line and the Battles of Arras History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence Vol I Imperial War Museum and Battery Press ed London HMSO ISBN 978 0 89839 180 0 Foerster Wolfgang ed 1956 1942 Der Weltkrieg 1914 bis 1918 Militarischen Operationen zu Lande Dreizehnter Band Die Kriegfuhrung im Sommer und Herbst 1917 The World War 1914 to 1918 Military Land Operations Volume Thirteen The Warfare in the Summer and Autumn of 1917 in German Vol XIII online scan ed Berlin Mittler OCLC 257129831 Retrieved 29 June 2021 via Oberosterreichische Landesbibliothek Foley R T 2007 2005 German Strategy and the Path to Verdun Erich von Falkenhayn and the Development of Attrition 1870 1916 pbk ed Cambridge CUP ISBN 978 0 521 04436 3 French D 1995 The Strategy of the Lloyd George Coalition Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 820559 3 Gillon S 2002 1925 The Story of 29th Division A Record of Gallant Deeds Naval amp Military Press Uckfield ed London Thos Nelson amp Sons ISBN 978 1 84342 265 5 Harris J P 1995 Men Ideas and Tanks British Military Thought and Armoured Forces 1903 1939 Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 4814 2 Harris J P 2008 Douglas Haig and the First World War Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 89802 7 Hart P Steel N 2001 Passchendaele the Sacrificial Ground London Cassell ISBN 978 0 304 35975 2 via Archive Foundation Henniker A M 2009 1937 Transportation on the Western Front 1914 1918 History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence Imperial War Museum and Battery Press ed London HMSO ISBN 978 1 84574 765 7 Histories of Two Hundred and Fifty one Divisions of the German Army which Participated in the War 1914 1918 Document United States War Department No 905 Washington D C United States Army American Expeditionary Forces Intelligence Section 1920 OCLC 565067054 Retrieved 22 July 2017 via Archive Foundation Hussey John 1997 The Flanders Battleground and the Weather in 1917 In Liddle P H ed Passchendaele in Perspective The Third Battle of Ypres London Leo Cooper pp 140 158 ISBN 978 0 85052 588 5 Jones H A 2002 1934 The War in the Air Being the Part played in the Great War by the Royal Air Force Vol IV pbk facs repr Imperial War Museum Department of Printed Books and Battery Press Uckfield ed London Clarendon Press ISBN 978 1 84342 415 4 Liddle P H 1997 Passchendaele in Perspective The Third Battle of Ypres Barnsley Pen amp Sword ISBN 978 0 85052 588 5 Miles W 1991 1948 Military Operations France and Belgium 1917 The Battle of Cambrai History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence Vol III Imperial War Museum and Battery Press ed London HMSO ISBN 978 0 89839 162 6 Millman B 2001 Pessimism and British War Policy 1916 1918 London Frank Cass ISBN 978 0 7146 5079 1 Nicholson G W L 1964 1962 Canadian Expeditionary Force 1914 1919 Official History of the Canadian Army in the First World War 2nd corr online scan ed Ottawa Queen s Printer and Controller of Stationery OCLC 59609928 Retrieved 21 October 2022 Perry R A 2014 To Play a Giant s Part The Role of the British Army at Passchendaele Uckfield Naval amp Military Press ISBN 978 1 78331 146 0 Philpott W 2014 Attrition Fighting the First World War London Little Brown ISBN 978 1 4087 0355 7 Powell G 2004 1993 Plumer The Soldier s General Leo Cooper ed Barnsley Pen amp Sword ISBN 978 1 84415 039 7 Prior R Wilson T 1996 Passchendaele The Untold Story Cumberland Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 07227 3 Rogers D ed 2010 Landrecies to Cambrai Case Studies of German Offensive and Defensive Operations on the Western Front 1914 17 Solihull Helion ISBN 978 1 906033 76 7 Sandilands H R 2003 1925 The 23rd Division 1914 1919 Naval amp Military Press ed Edinburgh Wm Blackwood ISBN 978 1 84342 641 7 Seton Hutchinson G 2005 1921 The Thirty Third Division in France and Flanders 1915 1919 Naval amp Military Press Uckfield ed London Waterlow amp Sons ISBN 978 1 84342 995 1 Sheffield G 2002 2001 Forgotten Victory The First World War Myths and Realities reprint ed London Headline Book Publishing ISBN 978 0 7472 7157 4 Sheffield G 2011 The Chief Douglas Haig and the British Army London Aurum Press ISBN 978 1 84513 691 8 Sheldon J 2007 The German Army at Passchendaele Barnsley Pen and Sword Books ISBN 978 1 84415 564 4 Sheldon J 2009 The German Army at Cambrai Barnsley Pen amp Sword ISBN 978 1 84415 944 4 Stewart H 2014 1921 The New Zealand Division 1916 1919 A Popular History Based on Official Records Auckland Whitcombe and Tombs ISBN 978 1 84342 408 6 Retrieved 20 July 2017 Taylor A J P 1972 The First World War An Illustrated History New York Perigee Trade ISBN 978 0 399 50260 6 via Archive Foundation Terraine J 1977 The Road to Passchendaele The Flanders Offensive 1917 A Study in Inevitability London Leo Cooper ISBN 978 0 436 51732 7 Terraine J 1999 Business in Great Waters Ware Wordsworth Editions ISBN 978 1 84022 201 2 Terraine J 2005 1963 Douglas Haig The Educated Soldier 2nd repr ed London Cassell ISBN 978 0 304 35319 4 Vance J F 1997 Death So Noble Memory Meaning and the First World War Vancouver UBC Press ISBN 978 0 7748 0600 8 Wolff L 1958 In Flanders Fields The 1917 Campaign New York Viking ISBN 978 0 14 014662 2 via Archive Foundation Wynne G C 1976 1939 If Germany Attacks The Battle in Depth in the West Greenwood Press Westport CT ed Cambridge Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 8371 5029 1 Journals McRandle J H Quirk J 3 July 2006 The Blood Test Revisited A New Look at German Casualty Counts in World War I The Journal of Military History Lexington VA 70 3 667 701 doi 10 1353 jmh 2006 0180 ISSN 0899 3718 S2CID 159930725 Newspapers Duke of Cambridge leads Commemorations on 100th Anniversary of the Battle of Passchendaele The Telegraph Retrieved 10 August 2019 Battle of Passchendaele Centenary Prince Charles Honours Courage and Bravery of British Soldiers The Telegraph Retrieved 10 August 2019 Theses LoCicero M S 2011 A Moonlight Massacre The Night Operation on the Passchendaele Ridge 2nd December 1917 etheses bham ac uk PhD thesis Birmingham University of Birmingham OCLC 784568126 EThOS uk bl ethos 545631 Retrieved 20 July 2017 Marble S 2003 1998 The Infantry cannot do with a Gun Less The Place of the Artillery in the BEF 1914 1918 British Library e Theses Online Service PhD New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 50219 1 EThOS uk bl ethos 391793 Retrieved 10 August 2019 Simpson A 2001 The Operational Role of British Corps Command on the Western Front 1914 18 British Library e Theses Online Service PhD London London University OCLC 557496951 EThOS uk bl ethos 367588 Retrieved 16 January 2017 Websites New Zealand Memorial Gravenstafel ridge New Zealand First World War Trails 20 June 2016 Retrieved 10 August 2019 Tribute to Scots Soldiers at Passchendaele The Scottish Government 24 August 2007 Archived from the original on 3 February 2013 Retrieved 22 December 2014 Further reading EditCharteris J 1931 At G H Q pbk facs repr Gyan Books New Delhi ed Cassell ISBN 4 00 003314 X Connelly M Goebel S 2018 Ypres Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 1987 1337 1 Davies C B Edmonds J E Maxwell Hyslop R G B 1995 1937 Military Operations France and Belgium 1918 March April Continuation of the German Offensives History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence Vol II Imperial War Museum and Battery Press ed London HMSO ISBN 978 0 89839 223 4 Edmonds J E Maxwell Hyslop R G B 1993 1947 Military Operations France and Belgium 1918 26th September 11th November The Advance to Victory History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence Vol V Imperial War Museum and Battery Press ed London HMSO ISBN 978 0 89839 192 3 Harington C 2017 1935 Plumer of Messines pbk facs repr Gyan Books New Delhi ed London John Murray ISBN 978 4 00 608977 1 Lloyd N 2017 Passchendaele A New History London Viking ISBN 978 0 241 00436 4 Simpson Andy 2006 Directing Operations British Corps Command on the Western Front 1914 18 Stroud Spellmount ISBN 978 1 86227 292 7 Winter D 1992 1991 Haig s Command A Reassessment pbk repr Penguin London ed New York Viking ISBN 978 0 14 007144 3 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Third Battle of Ypres Passchendaele Canada s Other Vimy Ridge Norman Leach Canadian Military Journal Passchendaele original reports from The Times Battles The Third Battle of Ypres 1917 Retrieved from https en 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