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Battle of the Canal du Nord

Battle of Canal du Nord
Part of the Hundred Days Offensive of the First World War

Canadian engineers building a bridge across the Canal du Nord, September 1918
DateSeptember 27 - October 1, 1918
Location50°17′N 3°07′E / 50.283°N 3.117°E / 50.283; 3.117
Result Allied victory
Belligerents

 United Kingdom

 German Empire
Commanders and leaders
Henry Horne
Julian Byng
Otto von Below
Georg von der Marwitz
Strength
13 divisions
Casualties and losses
30,000 36,500 POW
380 guns
Canal du Nord
Sensée Canal
Arleux
Rue du Bias, Arleux
Malderez Canal
Palluel Lock
Rue d'en Haut, Palluel
Rue des Stations, Sauchy-Cauchy
A26 autoroute
Port of Marquion
Route National (D939)
Marquion Lock
Rue du Sains, Sains-lès-Marquion
Sains-lès-Marquion Lock
Rue du Sains-lès-Marquion
Inchy-en-Artois Lock
Rue d'en Haut, Mœuvres
Mœuvres Lock
Route de Cuquiche, Mœuvres
Route de Bapaume (D930)
Lock #xxx
Lock #xxx
Rue d'Hermies
Ruyaulcourt Tunnel
Ruyaulcourt
A2 autoroute
Chaussee Brunehaut (D58), Étricourt-Manancourt
Grand Rue, Étricourt-Manancourt
Rue de la Taille, Manancourt
Side Wharf
Rue Canal, Moislains
Rue Garre, Moislains
Moislains Public Quay
Moislains Lock
xx Lock
Allaines Lock
Route d'Allaines, Allaines
Rue d'Arras (D1017), Feuillaucourt
Feuillaucourt Lock
Route d'Albert (D938)
Halles Lock
River Somme
Junction with the Somme Canal
Port de Plaisance, Péronne
Faubourg de Paris (D1017), Péronne
La Chalelette Lock
Chaussee Brunehaut (D1029), Brie
Saint-Christ-Briost Wharf
Saint-Christ-Briost Bridge
A29 autoroute
Épénancourt Lock
Pargny Bridge
Béthencourt-sur-Somme Bridge
Junction with the Somme Canal
Route de Rouy, Rouy-le-Petit
Railway Bridge
Route de Nesle (D930)
Languevoisin-Quiquery Lock
Grand Rue, Languevoisin-Quiquery
Languevoisin-Quiquery Public Port
Rue du Coquis, Breuil
Buverchy Bridge
Lannoy Wharf
Lannoy Bridge
Libermont Bridge
Panneterie Tunnel
Rue de la Gare, Frétoy-le-Château
Campagne Lock
Campagne Bridge
Rue de Catingy, Catigny
Rue de Genets, Béhencourt
Rue de l'Eglise, Haudival
Haudival Lock
Rue de Beaurains, Beaurains-lès-Noyon
D934
unidentified port facility
Route de Montdidier (D938), Noyon
Noyon Lock
Avenue Jean Jaures (D145e), Noyon
D1032
Pont-l'Évêque Lock
Rue du Mont Renaud
Railway bridge
Pont-l'Évêque public wharf
Oise Lateral Canal

The Battle of Canal du Nord was part of the Hundred Days Offensive of the First World War by the Allies against German positions on the Western Front. The battle took place in the Nord-Pas-de-Calais region of France, along an incomplete portion of the Canal du Nord and on the outskirts of Cambrai between 27 September and 1 October 1918. To prevent the Germans from sending reinforcements against one attack, the assault along the Canal du Nord was part of a sequence of Allied attacks at along the Western Front. The attack began the day after the Meuse-Argonne Offensive commenced, a day before an offensive in Belgian Flanders and two days before the Battle of St. Quentin Canal.[1]

The attack took place along the boundary between the British First Army and Third Army, which were to continue the advance started with the Battle of the Drocourt-Quéant Line, Battle of Havrincourt and Battle of Epehy. The First Army was to lead the crossing of the Canal du Nord and secure the northern flank of the British Third Army as both armies advanced towards Cambrai. The Third Army was also to capture the Escaut (Scheldt) Canal, to support the Fourth Army during the Battle of St. Quentin Canal.

Background edit

Construction of the Canal du Nord began in 1913 to link the Oise River to the Dunkirk–Scheldt Canal. When the First World War began, work stopped with the canal in varying stages of completion.[2] During their retreat, the Germans made the area along the canal north of Sains-lès-Marquion virtually impassable by destroying bridges and flooding the already swampy ground surrounding the canal.[3] [4] The only passable ground was to the south, where a small 4,000 yd (2.3 mi; 3.7 km) section of the canal between Sains-lès-Marquion and Mœuvres remained largely dry, on account of its incomplete state.[5] Even in a partially excavated state, the dry section of the canal was still a serious obstacle. The canal was approximately 40 yd (37 m) wide, with a western bank that was between 10 and 15 ft (3.0 and 4.6 m) high and an eastern bank about 5 ft (1.5 m) high.[3] The British First Army (General Henry Horne) was forced to stop its offensive until a route was secured across the canal.[6]

The British assault on the Drocourt-Quéant Line on 2 September 1918 resulted in the Germans being overrun along a 7,000 yd (4.0 mi; 6.4 km) front.[7] Several formations in the German forward line quickly yielded to the British advance but then the British met more resolute opposition from regiments of the German 1st Guards Reserve Division, 2nd Guards Reserve Division and the 3rd Reserve Division.[7] To gain observation of all bridges over the Sensée River and the Canal du Nord, the British attack was supposed to continue the following day but the Germans forestalled the British by withdrawing along a wide front.[7]

Oberste Heeresleitung (OHL, the German army high command) had ordered the 17th Army to retreat behind the Sensée River and the Canal du Nord on the night of 2 September and the 2nd Army to withdraw to the Hindenburg Line the following night.[8] Further to the south, the 18th and 9th Armies were to follow in succession, resulting in the abandonment of the salient gained during the Spring Offensive by 9 September.[8] In the north the 4th and 6th Armies retreated between Lens and Ypres, abandoning the Lys salient and the gains made during the Battle of the Lys.[8]

British air patrols on the morning of 3 September reported seeing no Germans between the Dury Ridge and the Canal du Nord.[7] The Third Army was able to occupy the towns of Quéant and Pronville unopposed and saw that the Germans were withdrawing on a wide front.[7] As the British advanced to the new German front line they reported that the east bank of the Canal du Nord was strongly held and that the canal crossings had been destroyed except at Palluel, where the Germans held a bridgehead on the western side of the canal.[8][6]

Tactical plan and preparations edit

 
Battle planning map detailing the brigade boundaries and objectives of the Canadian Corps.

On 3 September Supreme Commander of the Allied Armies Généralissime Ferdinand Foch outlined the future course of the Allied offensive campaign along the Western Front.[9] To avoid the risk of having extensive German reserves massed against a single Allied attack, Foch devised a plan for a general offensive between Verdun and the Belgian coast.[10] The plan called for Allied attacks at four separate points in the German line, to be launched on four successive days.[11] Army Group Flanders under King Albert I of Belgium would conduct the most northern operation and attack German positions in Flanders and move towards Ghent and Bruges.[2] The British First and Third Armies would attack and cross the Canal du Nord, move across the northern extension of the Hindenburg Line and capture the city of Cambrai, a crucial German communications and supply centre.[12] The British Fourth Army and French First Army would attack the Germans along the Saint-Quentin Canal in an effort to breach the Hindenburg Line between Holnon and Vendhuile.[13] To the south, the First United States Army and French Fourth Army would mount the Meuse-Argonne Offensive between Reims and Verdun, moving along the Meuse River and through the Argonne Forest.[2]

The Canal du Nord defensive system was the Germans' last major prepared defensive position opposite the British First Army.[12] It was a significant obstacle as the Germans had taken measures to incorporate the unfinished canal into their defensive system.[3] Beyond the damage done to make crossing the canal as difficult as possible, north of Mœuvres a lesser arm of the Hindenburg Support Line, the Canal du Nord Line, ran directly behind the east side of the canal.[3] The greater arm of the Hindenburg Support Line crossed the canal at Mœuvres and thus remained well established on the eastern side of the canal south of Mœuvres. This was supplemented by the Marquion-Cantaing Line which ran along a north–south axis one mile east of the canal and the Marcoing Line located just west of Cambrai.[3][14] The attack on the Canal du Nord was to begin on 27 September 1918, a day after the Meuse-Argonne Offensive, one day before the offensive in Flanders and two days before the Battle of St. Quentin Canal.[1]

The British First Army was operating in a framework whereby its main task was to secure the northern flank of the British Third Army. The British Third Army was tasked with securing the Escaut (Scheldt) Canal so as to be in a position to support the British Fourth Army during the Battle of St. Quentin Canal. On the British First Army front, the Canadian Corps would lead the attack under the direction of Arthur Currie, crossing the largely dry canal on a front of only 2,700 yards (2,500 m) between Sains-lès-Marquion and Mœuvres.[5] Once over the canal the corps was to capture the Marquion Line, the villages of Marquion and Bourlon, Bourlon Woods and lastly secure a general line running from Fontaine-Notre-Dame to Sauchy-Lestrée.[5] Currie separated the Canadian Corps' objectives into two phases; the first to take Canal du Nord and Bourlon Wood, the second taking the bridges at Canal de l'Escaut and "high ground near Cambrai".[15]

In an attempt to make the Germans second guess or question the location of the main assault, XXII Corps was instructed to engage German positions along the Canal du Nord between Sauchy-Lestrée and Palluel.[5] Likewise, VII Corps and the remainder of XXII Corps were instructed to carry out minor attacks north of the Scarpe River to prevent the Germans from moving units from that area to the location of the main attack.[5] If the Canadian Corps was successful in its advance the intention was to immediately and quickly exploit the territorial gain with the support of the British Third Army's XVII, VI and IV Corps.

Battle edit

Over the next week, Currie and Byng prepared for the engagement. Two divisions were sent south, to cross the canal at a weaker point, while Canadian combat engineers worked to construct the wooden bridges for the assault.[16] The bridges were necessary because where the Canadians were crossing the Canal du Nord was flooded and the only locations that had no flooding were being guarded by the German defences.[15] Currie had the Canadians cross mostly through a flooded area but included a "narrow strip" of the unflooded area to hit the German flank.[15]

At 5:20 on the morning of 27 September, all four divisions attacked under total darkness, taking the German defenders of the 1st Prussian Guards Reserve Division and the 3rd German Naval Division by absolute surprise.[17] By mid-morning, all defenders had retreated or been captured. Stiffening resistance east of the canal proved that only a surprise attack had the possibility of ending in victory.

The Canadian Corps had the important objective of capturing Bourlon Woods, the German army used the high ground of the woods for their guns.[15] The objectives of the Canadian Corps were reached by the end of the day, including the Red, Green and Blue lines.[15]

The British attack was supported to the south by the French First Army during the Battle of Saint Quentin (French: Bataille de Saint-Quentin). (However, this attack was a secondary attack, and did not start until after the Canadian Corps had penetrated the German defences along the canal.)

Because of Canal du Nord's capture, the final road to Cambrai was open.

Aftermath edit

The battle penetrated a majority of the defenses of the Hindenburg Line and allowed the next attack (the Battle of Cambrai (1918)) to complete the penetration and begin the advance beyond the Hindenburg Line.

Twelve Victoria Crosses, the highest military decoration for valour awarded to British and Commonwealth forces, were awarded for actions during the battle, with 8 surviving the war;

Commemoration edit

The Canadian participation in the Battle of the Canal du Nord is commemorated at the Canadian Bourlon Wood Memorial, located southeast of the town of Bourlon. The memorial is located on high ground beside the Bourlon Woods, giving a view of the town.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Tucker 1996, pp. 421–422.
  2. ^ a b c Nicholson 1962, p. 442.
  3. ^ a b c d e Farr 2007, p. 211.
  4. ^ "Canal du Nord 27 September to 1st October 1918". Government of Canada. 22 November 2021. Retrieved 15 August 2022.
  5. ^ a b c d e Farr 2007, p. 212.
  6. ^ a b Farr 2007, p. 207.
  7. ^ a b c d e Nicholson 1962, p. 438.
  8. ^ a b c d Nicholson 1962, p. 440.
  9. ^ Nicholson 1962, p. 441.
  10. ^ Nicholson 1962, pp. 441–442.
  11. ^ Nicholson 1962, p. 441-442.
  12. ^ a b Farr 2007, p. 209.
  13. ^ Monash 1920, Chapter 13.
  14. ^ Edmonds 1947, p. 46.
  15. ^ a b c d e Borys, David (2011). "Crossing the Canal: Combined Arms Operations at the Canal Du Nord, Sept - Oct 1918". Canadian Military History. 20: 4.
  16. ^ Berton, Pierre, Marching as to War, Berton Books, 2001
  17. ^ Livesay, John Frederick Bligh (1919). Canada's Hundred Days: With the Canadian Corps from Amiens to Mons, Aug. 8—Nov. 11, 1918. Toronto: Thomas Allen. p.217

References edit

  • Edmonds, J. E. (1947), Military Operations France and Belgium 1918, 26 September – 11 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 1993 ed.), Nashville, TN: HMSO, ISBN 0-89839-192-X
  • Farr, Don (2007), The Silent General: A Biography of Haig's Trusted Great War Comrade-in-Arms, Solihull: Helion & Company Limited, ISBN 978-1-874622-99-4
  • Monash, John (1920). Overton, Ned (ed.). The Australian Victories in France in 1918 (2003 eBook ed.). Project Gutenberg. OCLC 609167193.
  • Nicholson, Gerald W. L. (1962), (PDF), Official History of the Canadian Army in the First World War, Ottawa: Queen's Printer and Controller of Stationery, archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-08-26, retrieved 2011-06-27
  • Travers, Timothy (1992). How the War Was Won Command and Technology in the British Army on the Western Front: 1917–1918. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-07628-5.
  • Tucker, Spencer, ed. (1996), The European powers in the First World War: an encyclopedia, New York: Garland Publishing, ISBN 0-8153-0399-8
  • Zuehlke, Mark (2006). Canadian Military Atlas: Four Centuries of Conflict from New France to Kosovo. Toronto: Douglas & McIntyre Publishers. ISBN 1-55365-209-6.

External links edit

Commonwealth War Graves Commission: https://www.cwgc.org/find-a-cemetery/cemetery/65904/BOURLON%20WOOD%20CEMETERY

battle, canal, nord, battle, canal, nordpart, hundred, days, offensive, first, world, warcanadian, engineers, building, bridge, across, canal, nord, september, 1918dateseptember, october, 1918locationcanal, nord50, 117resultallied, victorybelligerents, united,. Battle of Canal du NordPart of the Hundred Days Offensive of the First World WarCanadian engineers building a bridge across the Canal du Nord September 1918DateSeptember 27 October 1 1918LocationCanal du Nord50 17 N 3 07 E 50 283 N 3 117 E 50 283 3 117ResultAllied victoryBelligerents United Kingdom Canada New Zealand German EmpireCommanders and leadersHenry Horne Julian ByngOtto von Below Georg von der MarwitzStrength13 divisionsCasualties and losses30 00036 500 POW380 guns vteCanal du Nord Legend Sensee Canal Arleux Rue du Bias Arleux Malderez Canal Palluel Lock Rue d en Haut Palluel Rue des Stations Sauchy Cauchy A26 autoroute Port of Marquion Route National D939 Marquion Lock Rue du Sains Sains les Marquion Sains les Marquion Lock Rue du Sains les Marquion Inchy en Artois Lock Rue d en Haut Mœuvres Mœuvres Lock Route de Cuquiche Mœuvres Route de Bapaume D930 Lock xxx Lock xxx Rue d Hermies Ruyaulcourt Tunnel Ruyaulcourt A2 autoroute Chaussee Brunehaut D58 Etricourt Manancourt Grand Rue Etricourt Manancourt Rue de la Taille Manancourt Side Wharf Rue Canal Moislains Rue Garre Moislains Moislains Public Quay Moislains Lock xx Lock Allaines Lock Route d Allaines Allaines Rue d Arras D1017 Feuillaucourt Feuillaucourt Lock Route d Albert D938 Halles Lock River Somme Junction with the Somme Canal Port de Plaisance Peronne Faubourg de Paris D1017 Peronne La Chalelette Lock Chaussee Brunehaut D1029 Brie Saint Christ Briost Wharf Saint Christ Briost Bridge A29 autoroute Epenancourt Lock Pargny Bridge Bethencourt sur Somme Bridge Junction with the Somme Canal Route de Rouy Rouy le Petit Railway Bridge Route de Nesle D930 Languevoisin Quiquery Lock Grand Rue Languevoisin Quiquery Languevoisin Quiquery Public Port Rue du Coquis Breuil Buverchy Bridge Lannoy Wharf Lannoy Bridge Libermont Bridge Panneterie Tunnel Rue de la Gare Fretoy le Chateau Campagne Lock Campagne Bridge Rue de Catingy Catigny Rue de Genets Behencourt Rue de l Eglise Haudival Haudival Lock Rue de Beaurains Beaurains les Noyon D934 unidentified port facility Route de Montdidier D938 Noyon Noyon Lock Avenue Jean Jaures D145e Noyon D1032 Pont l Eveque Lock Rue du Mont Renaud Railway bridge Pont l Eveque public wharf Oise Lateral Canal The Battle of Canal du Nord was part of the Hundred Days Offensive of the First World War by the Allies against German positions on the Western Front The battle took place in the Nord Pas de Calais region of France along an incomplete portion of the Canal du Nord and on the outskirts of Cambrai between 27 September and 1 October 1918 To prevent the Germans from sending reinforcements against one attack the assault along the Canal du Nord was part of a sequence of Allied attacks at along the Western Front The attack began the day after the Meuse Argonne Offensive commenced a day before an offensive in Belgian Flanders and two days before the Battle of St Quentin Canal 1 The attack took place along the boundary between the British First Army and Third Army which were to continue the advance started with the Battle of the Drocourt Queant Line Battle of Havrincourt and Battle of Epehy The First Army was to lead the crossing of the Canal du Nord and secure the northern flank of the British Third Army as both armies advanced towards Cambrai The Third Army was also to capture the Escaut Scheldt Canal to support the Fourth Army during the Battle of St Quentin Canal Contents 1 Background 2 Tactical plan and preparations 3 Battle 4 Aftermath 5 Commemoration 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksBackground editConstruction of the Canal du Nord began in 1913 to link the Oise River to the Dunkirk Scheldt Canal When the First World War began work stopped with the canal in varying stages of completion 2 During their retreat the Germans made the area along the canal north of Sains les Marquion virtually impassable by destroying bridges and flooding the already swampy ground surrounding the canal 3 4 The only passable ground was to the south where a small 4 000 yd 2 3 mi 3 7 km section of the canal between Sains les Marquion and Mœuvres remained largely dry on account of its incomplete state 5 Even in a partially excavated state the dry section of the canal was still a serious obstacle The canal was approximately 40 yd 37 m wide with a western bank that was between 10 and 15 ft 3 0 and 4 6 m high and an eastern bank about 5 ft 1 5 m high 3 The British First Army General Henry Horne was forced to stop its offensive until a route was secured across the canal 6 The British assault on the Drocourt Queant Line on 2 September 1918 resulted in the Germans being overrun along a 7 000 yd 4 0 mi 6 4 km front 7 Several formations in the German forward line quickly yielded to the British advance but then the British met more resolute opposition from regiments of the German 1st Guards Reserve Division 2nd Guards Reserve Division and the 3rd Reserve Division 7 To gain observation of all bridges over the Sensee River and the Canal du Nord the British attack was supposed to continue the following day but the Germans forestalled the British by withdrawing along a wide front 7 Oberste Heeresleitung OHL the German army high command had ordered the 17th Army to retreat behind the Sensee River and the Canal du Nord on the night of 2 September and the 2nd Army to withdraw to the Hindenburg Line the following night 8 Further to the south the 18th and 9th Armies were to follow in succession resulting in the abandonment of the salient gained during the Spring Offensive by 9 September 8 In the north the 4th and 6th Armies retreated between Lens and Ypres abandoning the Lys salient and the gains made during the Battle of the Lys 8 British air patrols on the morning of 3 September reported seeing no Germans between the Dury Ridge and the Canal du Nord 7 The Third Army was able to occupy the towns of Queant and Pronville unopposed and saw that the Germans were withdrawing on a wide front 7 As the British advanced to the new German front line they reported that the east bank of the Canal du Nord was strongly held and that the canal crossings had been destroyed except at Palluel where the Germans held a bridgehead on the western side of the canal 8 6 Tactical plan and preparations edit nbsp Battle planning map detailing the brigade boundaries and objectives of the Canadian Corps On 3 September Supreme Commander of the Allied Armies Generalissime Ferdinand Foch outlined the future course of the Allied offensive campaign along the Western Front 9 To avoid the risk of having extensive German reserves massed against a single Allied attack Foch devised a plan for a general offensive between Verdun and the Belgian coast 10 The plan called for Allied attacks at four separate points in the German line to be launched on four successive days 11 Army Group Flanders under King Albert I of Belgium would conduct the most northern operation and attack German positions in Flanders and move towards Ghent and Bruges 2 The British First and Third Armies would attack and cross the Canal du Nord move across the northern extension of the Hindenburg Line and capture the city of Cambrai a crucial German communications and supply centre 12 The British Fourth Army and French First Army would attack the Germans along the Saint Quentin Canal in an effort to breach the Hindenburg Line between Holnon and Vendhuile 13 To the south the First United States Army and French Fourth Army would mount the Meuse Argonne Offensive between Reims and Verdun moving along the Meuse River and through the Argonne Forest 2 The Canal du Nord defensive system was the Germans last major prepared defensive position opposite the British First Army 12 It was a significant obstacle as the Germans had taken measures to incorporate the unfinished canal into their defensive system 3 Beyond the damage done to make crossing the canal as difficult as possible north of Mœuvres a lesser arm of the Hindenburg Support Line the Canal du Nord Line ran directly behind the east side of the canal 3 The greater arm of the Hindenburg Support Line crossed the canal at Mœuvres and thus remained well established on the eastern side of the canal south of Mœuvres This was supplemented by the Marquion Cantaing Line which ran along a north south axis one mile east of the canal and the Marcoing Line located just west of Cambrai 3 14 The attack on the Canal du Nord was to begin on 27 September 1918 a day after the Meuse Argonne Offensive one day before the offensive in Flanders and two days before the Battle of St Quentin Canal 1 The British First Army was operating in a framework whereby its main task was to secure the northern flank of the British Third Army The British Third Army was tasked with securing the Escaut Scheldt Canal so as to be in a position to support the British Fourth Army during the Battle of St Quentin Canal On the British First Army front the Canadian Corps would lead the attack under the direction of Arthur Currie crossing the largely dry canal on a front of only 2 700 yards 2 500 m between Sains les Marquion and Mœuvres 5 Once over the canal the corps was to capture the Marquion Line the villages of Marquion and Bourlon Bourlon Woods and lastly secure a general line running from Fontaine Notre Dame to Sauchy Lestree 5 Currie separated the Canadian Corps objectives into two phases the first to take Canal du Nord and Bourlon Wood the second taking the bridges at Canal de l Escaut and high ground near Cambrai 15 In an attempt to make the Germans second guess or question the location of the main assault XXII Corps was instructed to engage German positions along the Canal du Nord between Sauchy Lestree and Palluel 5 Likewise VII Corps and the remainder of XXII Corps were instructed to carry out minor attacks north of the Scarpe River to prevent the Germans from moving units from that area to the location of the main attack 5 If the Canadian Corps was successful in its advance the intention was to immediately and quickly exploit the territorial gain with the support of the British Third Army s XVII VI and IV Corps Battle editOver the next week Currie and Byng prepared for the engagement Two divisions were sent south to cross the canal at a weaker point while Canadian combat engineers worked to construct the wooden bridges for the assault 16 The bridges were necessary because where the Canadians were crossing the Canal du Nord was flooded and the only locations that had no flooding were being guarded by the German defences 15 Currie had the Canadians cross mostly through a flooded area but included a narrow strip of the unflooded area to hit the German flank 15 At 5 20 on the morning of 27 September all four divisions attacked under total darkness taking the German defenders of the 1st Prussian Guards Reserve Division and the 3rd German Naval Division by absolute surprise 17 By mid morning all defenders had retreated or been captured Stiffening resistance east of the canal proved that only a surprise attack had the possibility of ending in victory The Canadian Corps had the important objective of capturing Bourlon Woods the German army used the high ground of the woods for their guns 15 The objectives of the Canadian Corps were reached by the end of the day including the Red Green and Blue lines 15 The British attack was supported to the south by the French First Army during the Battle of Saint Quentin French Bataille de Saint Quentin However this attack was a secondary attack and did not start until after the Canadian Corps had penetrated the German defences along the canal Because of Canal du Nord s capture the final road to Cambrai was open Aftermath editThe battle penetrated a majority of the defenses of the Hindenburg Line and allowed the next attack the Battle of Cambrai 1918 to complete the penetration and begin the advance beyond the Hindenburg Line Twelve Victoria Crosses the highest military decoration for valour awarded to British and Commonwealth forces were awarded for actions during the battle with 8 surviving the war Acting Lieutenant Colonel John Vereker 6th Viscount Gort of the 1st Battalion Grenadier Guards Captain John MacGregor 2nd Battalion Canadian Mounted Rifles Captain Cyril Hubert Frisby 1st Battalion Coldstream Guards Lieutenant Graham Thomson Lyall 102nd North British Columbia Battalion CEF Lieutenant Samuel Lewis Honey 78th Battalion Winnipeg Grenadiers CEF KIA Lieutenant George Fraser Kerr 3rd Battalion Toronto Regiment CEF Lieutenant Milton Fowler Gregg Royal Canadian Regiment Sergeant William Merrifield 4th Central Ontario Battalion CEF Sergeant Frederick Charles Riggs 6th Battalion York and Lancaster Regiment KIA Corporal Thomas Neely 8th Battalion The King s Own Royal Regiment Lancaster KIA Lance Corporal Thomas Norman Jackson 1st Battalion Coldstream Guards KIA Private Henry Tandey 5th Battalion Duke of Wellington s Regiment West Riding Commemoration editThe Canadian participation in the Battle of the Canal du Nord is commemorated at the Canadian Bourlon Wood Memorial located southeast of the town of Bourlon The memorial is located on high ground beside the Bourlon Woods giving a view of the town Notes edit a b Tucker 1996 pp 421 422 a b c Nicholson 1962 p 442 a b c d e Farr 2007 p 211 Canal du Nord 27 September to 1st October 1918 Government of Canada 22 November 2021 Retrieved 15 August 2022 a b c d e Farr 2007 p 212 a b Farr 2007 p 207 a b c d e Nicholson 1962 p 438 a b c d Nicholson 1962 p 440 Nicholson 1962 p 441 Nicholson 1962 pp 441 442 Nicholson 1962 p 441 442 a b Farr 2007 p 209 Monash 1920 Chapter 13 Edmonds 1947 p 46 a b c d e Borys David 2011 Crossing the Canal Combined Arms Operations at the Canal Du Nord Sept Oct 1918 Canadian Military History 20 4 Berton Pierre Marching as to War Berton Books 2001 Livesay John Frederick Bligh 1919 Canada s Hundred Days With the Canadian Corps from Amiens to Mons Aug 8 Nov 11 1918 Toronto Thomas Allen p 217References editEdmonds J E 1947 Military Operations France and Belgium 1918 26 September 11 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 1993 ed Nashville TN HMSO ISBN 0 89839 192 X Farr Don 2007 The Silent General A Biography of Haig s Trusted Great War Comrade in Arms Solihull Helion amp Company Limited ISBN 978 1 874622 99 4 Monash John 1920 Overton Ned ed The Australian Victories in France in 1918 2003 eBook ed Project Gutenberg OCLC 609167193 Nicholson Gerald W L 1962 Canadian Expeditionary Force 1914 1919 PDF Official History of the Canadian Army in the First World War Ottawa Queen s Printer and Controller of Stationery archived from the original PDF on 2011 08 26 retrieved 2011 06 27 Travers Timothy 1992 How the War Was Won Command and Technology in the British Army on the Western Front 1917 1918 London Routledge ISBN 0 415 07628 5 Tucker Spencer ed 1996 The European powers in the First World War an encyclopedia New York Garland Publishing ISBN 0 8153 0399 8 Zuehlke Mark 2006 Canadian Military Atlas Four Centuries of Conflict from New France to Kosovo Toronto Douglas amp McIntyre Publishers ISBN 1 55365 209 6 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of the Canal du Nord Commonwealth War Graves Commission https www cwgc org find a cemetery cemetery 65904 BOURLON 20WOOD 20CEMETERY Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of the Canal du Nord amp oldid 1209771316, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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