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North Russia intervention

North Russia intervention
Part of Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War

Red Army prisoners in the custody of U.S. Army troops in Arkhangelsk
Date4 March 1918[1] – 12 October 1919[2]
Location
Result Bolshevik victory
Belligerents

Allied Powers:
Russian State
United Kingdom

France
United States
Russian SFSR Germany
White Finns
Commanders and leaders
Edmund Ironside
F.C. Poole
Sir Charles Maynard
George E. Stewart
Wilds P. Richardson
Nikolai Yudenich
Nikolai Tchaikovsky
Evgeny Miller
Jukums Vācietis
Sergey Kamenev
Aleksandr Samoylo
Dmitri Parsky
Dmitry Nadyozhny
Rüdiger von der Goltz
Strength

Total: 32,614

14,378 troops[3]
7,881 troops[4]
4,971 soldiers[4]
1,520 troops[5]
2,000 troops[6]
1,000 field artillerymen[7]
864 troops[8][a]
45,500[4] 55,000-70,000 troops[9]
Casualties and losses
526+ killed[10]
194 dead, 359 wounded[11]
2,150 (Allied estimate)[citation needed] <1,000[citation needed]

The North Russia intervention, also known as the Northern Russian expedition, the Archangel campaign, and the Murman deployment, was part of the Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War after the October Revolution. The intervention brought about the involvement of foreign troops in the Russian Civil War on the side of the White movement. The movement was ultimately defeated, while the British-led Allied forces withdrew from Northern Russia after fighting a number of defensive actions against the Bolsheviks, such as the Battle of Bolshie Ozerki. The campaign lasted from March 1918, during the final months of World War I, to October 1919.

Reasons behind the campaign Edit

 
Arkhangelsk Governorate

In March 1917, Tsar Nicholas II in Russia abdicated and was suceeded by a provisional democratic government. The U.S. government declared war on the German Empire and its allies in April, after learning of the former's attempt to persuade Mexico to join the Central Powers. The Russian Provisional Government, led by Alexander Kerensky, pledged to continue fighting Imperial Germany on the Eastern Front. In return, the U.S. began providing economic and technical support to the Russian provisional government, so they could carry out their military pledge.

The Russian offensive of 18 June 1917 was crushed by a German counteroffensive. The Russian Army was plagued by mutinies and desertions. Allied war materiel still in transit quickly began piling up in warehouses at Arkhangelsk (Archangel) and the ice-free port of Murmansk. Anxious to keep Russia in the war, the Royal Navy established the British North Russia Squadron under Admiral Kemp.

The Bolsheviks, led by Vladimir Lenin, came to power in October 1917 and established the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic. Five months later, they signed the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk with Germany, which formally ended the war on the Eastern Front. This allowed the German army to begin redeploying troops to the Western Front, where the depleted British and French armies had not yet been bolstered by the American Expeditionary Force.

Coincidental with the Treaty, Lenin personally pledged that if the Czechoslovak Legion would stay neutral and leave Russia, they would enjoy safe passage through Siberia on their way to join the Allied forces on the Western Front. However, as the 50,000 members of the Legion made their way along the Trans-Siberian Railroad to Vladivostok, only half had arrived before the agreement broke down and fighting with the Bolsheviks ensued in May 1918. Also worrisome to the Allied Powers was the fact that in April 1918, a division of German troops had landed in Finland, creating fears they might try to capture the Murmansk–Petrograd railroad, the strategic port of Murmansk and possibly even the city of Arkhangelsk. It was also feared that large military stores at Archangelsk might fall into unfriendly hands.[12]

Faced with these events, the leaders of the British and French governments decided the western Allied Powers needed to begin a military intervention in North Russia. They had three objectives: they hoped to prevent the Allied war materiel stockpiles in Arkhangelsk from falling into German or Bolshevik hands; to mount an offensive to rescue the Czechoslovak Legion which was stranded along the Trans-Siberian Railroad, and resurrect the Eastern Front; and by defeating the Bolshevik army with the assistance of the Czechoslovak Legion, to expand anti-communist forces drawn from the local citizenry.

Severely short of troops to spare, the British and French requested that US President Woodrow Wilson provide U.S. troops for what was to be called the North Russia campaign, or the Allied intervention in North Russia. In July 1918, against the advice of the US War Department, Wilson agreed to a limited participation in the campaign by a contingent of U.S. Army soldiers of the 339th Infantry Regiment, that was hastily organized into the American North Russia Expeditionary Force, which came to be nicknamed the Polar Bear Expedition. Under his Aide Memoire, Wilson set the guidelines for American intervention by saying the purpose of American troops in Russia was "to guard military stores which may subsequently be needed by Russian forces and to render such aid as may be acceptable to the Russians in the organization of their own self-defense."[13]

International contingent Edit

 
A Bolshevik soldier shot dead by an American guard, 8 January 1919

Lieutenant General Frederick C. Poole, who had previously spent two years in Russia, was appointed by the British Secretary of State for War, Lord Milner, to lead the expedition to Archangel.[14]

The international force included:

British Empire Edit

Royal Navy:
British Army:
  • 237th Infantry Brigade,[23]
    • "Karelian Regiment" of three "columns" of 3680 locally recruited Karelians.[24]
    • Two "columns" of Serbian troops amounting to 1120 troops.[24]
  • 238th Infantry Brigade,[23]
    • "Finnish Legion" of Red Finns, commanded by British officers.[23]
      • Infantry company from 29th (City of London) Battalion, London Regiment,[23]
      • Two detached sections from 253rd Company, Machine Gun Corps,[23]
      • Two detached sections from 548th (Dundee) Army Troops Company, Royal Engineers,[23]
      • 238th Trench Mortar Battery
Royal Air Force:

1919 reinforcements Edit

In late May 1919, the British North Russia Relief Force (British Army) arrived to cover the withdrawal of British, US and other anti-Bolshevik forces. It was made up primarily of:

United States Edit

 
Letter written by U.S. Army 1LT James E. Kean highlighting his unit's mission in Russia – June 26, 1919
North Russia Expeditionary Force (also known as the Polar Bear Expedition): approximately 5,000 personnel from the US Army,[31] including the:
  • 310th Engineers,
  • 339th Infantry,
  • 337th Field Hospital,
  • and 337th Ambulance Company.
  • Also the 167th and 168th Railroad Companies, which were sent to Murmansk to operate the Murmansk to Petrograd line. US Navy: the cruiser USS Olympia during August and September 1918 (including 53 personnel attached to British naval units)

France Edit

Predominantly the 21st Provisional Colonial Infantry Battalion,[32] a company of ski troops,[33] and engineers. Three artillery batteries (61st, 62nd, 63rd) of the 2nd Colonial Artillery Regiment provided supporting firepower.[34] This was supplemented with a North Russian battalion of the French Foreign Legion composed of anti-Bolshevik Russian volunteers who, like the SBAL, were recruited locally. For their bravery, they were awarded one Distinguished Service Cross (United States)[35] and six Military Medals from the Americans and British respectively.[36]

Italy Edit

1,350 men in the it:Corpo di spedizione italiano in Murmania commanded by Colonel Sifola.

Russia Edit

"White Russian" forces included the Northern Army (previously the army of Alexander Kerensky's provisional Russian government, led by General Evgenii Miller)

Other countries Edit

1,000 Serbian and Polish infantry attached to Admiral Kolchak's forces in the north (as distinct from his Siberian forces, which included the Czechoslovak Legion).
30 Czechoslovak volunteers, part of them serving directly in British Army and part of them detached from the Czechoslovak Legion and attached to British Army.

Opposing forces Edit

Opposing these international forces were the Bolshevik Sixth and Seventh Red Army, combined in the Northern Front (RSFSR), which was poorly prepared for battle in May 1918.

Landing at Murmansk Edit

The First British involvement in the war was the landing in Murmansk in early March 1918. Ironically, the first British landing in Russia came at the request of a local Soviet council. Fearing a German attack on the town, the Murmansk Soviet requested that the Allies landed troops for protection. Leon Trotsky had ordered the soviet to accept Allied aid after the German invasion of Russia in February–March 1918.[12] 170 British troops arrived on 4 March 1918, the day after the signing of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk between Germany and the Bolshevik government.[37][12]

On 2 May, British troops took part in their first military engagement. A party of White Finns who had crossed the border during the Finnish Civil War had captured the Russian town of Pechenga, and it was feared that the Whites would hand over the town to the Germans who would then use the bay as a submarine base. The Germans were the Allies of the White Finns as they had been assisting them militarily during their Civil War. British marines fought alongside Red Guards to capture the area by 10 May with several casualties. In this first engagement, British troops had fought against a White force in support of the Red Army. In the following months, British forces in the area were largely engaged in small battles and skirmishes with White Finns.[37] Command of the British forces in the area was given to Major General Sir Charles Maynard.[38] In late June, 600 British reinforcements arrived. By this time, Soviet–Allied relations were passing from distrust to open hostility. A Bolshevik force was sent to take control of the town up the Murmansk-Petrograd railway, but in a series of skirmishes the Allied forces repelled the attack. This was the first real fighting between the troops of the Allies and the reds.[12] A trainload of Bolshevik troops was also found at Kandalaksha heading north, but Maynard managed to convince them to stop, before Serb reinforcements arrived and took over the train.[39]

In September, the British forces, who had so far mainly only engaged White Finns in small battles and skirmishes, were reinforced by the arrival of a force of 1,200 Italians as well as small Canadian and French battalions. By early Autumn, British forces under Maynard in the Murmansk region were also 6,000 strong.[40] However, on 11 November, the armistice between Germany and the Allies was signed, ending the First World War, meaning that the primary objective of re-establishing the Eastern Front was now irrelevant. However, the British forces did not leave. From this point onwards, the sole objectives of the British were to restore a White government and to remove the Bolsheviks from power.[41]

Landing at Archangelsk Edit

 
Russian Civil War in 1918–19

On 2 August 1918, anti-Bolshevik forces, led by Tsarist Captain Georgi Chaplin, staged a coup against the local Soviet government at Archangelsk. British diplomats had traveled to the city in preparation of the invasion, and General Poole had coordinated the coup with Chaplin.[42] Allied warships sailed into the port from the White Sea.[43] There was some resistance at first and Allied ships were fired on,[44] but 1500 French and British troops soon occupied the city.[45] The Northern Region Government was established by Chaplin and popular revolutionary Nikolai Tchaikovsky; to all intents and purposes, however, General Poole ran Archangelsk, declaring martial law and banning the red flag, despite the decision of the Northern Region Government to fly it.[46]

It was reported in the British press in early August that the Allied Powers had occupied Arkhangelsk, although not officially confirmed by the British authorities at the time.[47] By 17 August it was being reported that the Allies had advanced to the shores of Onega Bay.[48]

The lines of communications south from Arkhangelsk were the Northern Dvina in the east, Vaga River, Arkhangelsk Railway, the Onega River in the west, and the Yomtsa River providing a line of communication between the Vaga River and the railway in the centre.

As soon as Archangel had been captured, preparations were made for a push southwards along the Archangel-Vologda railway.[49] An armoured train was commissioned to support the advance, and a battle took place between Allied and Bolshevik armoured trains on 18 August.[49]

In September 1918, the Allied Powers took Obozerskaya, around 100 miles (160 km) south of Archangel. During the attack, the RAF provided air support to the advancing Allied infantry, conducting bombing and strafing runs.[27]

On 4 September 1918 the promised American forces arrived. Three battalions of troops, supported by engineers and under the command of Colonel George Stewart, landed in Archangel. This force numbered 4,500 troops.[50] In early September also an RAF squadron was set up specifically for service at Archangel, equipped with obsolete RE8 reconnaissance-bomber aircraft.[51]

Advance along the Northern Dvina Edit

A British River Force of 11 monitors (HMS M33, HMS Fox and others), minesweepers, and Russian gunboats was formed to use the navigable waters at the juncture of the rivers Vaga and Northern Dvina. Some 30 Bolshevik gunboats, mines, and armed motor launches took their toll on the allied forces.

The Allied troops, led by Lionel Sadleir-Jackson, were soon combined with Poles and White Guard forces. Fighting was heavy along both banks of the Northern Dvina. The River Force outflanked the enemy land positions with amphibious assaults led by Royal Marines, together with coordinated artillery support from land and river. Their Lewis guns proved to be an effective weapon, since both sides were only armed with bolt-action rifles.

The 2/10th Royal Scots cleared the triangle between the Dvina and Vaga and took a number of villages and prisoners. The strongly fortified village of Pless could not be attacked frontally, so 'A' Company, less one platoon, attempted a flanking movement through the marshes. The following morning the company reached Kargonin, behind Pless, and the defenders – thinking themselves cut off by a large force – evacuated both villages. The regimental historian describes this as 'a quite remarkable march by predominantly B1 troops'.[52]

In mid-September, Allied troops were driven out of Seletskoe, and it took three days for the settlement to be retaken.[53] By late September, Royal Marines and 2/10th Royal Scots had reached Nijne-Toimski, which proved too strong for the lightly equipped Allied force. The monitors having withdrawn before the Dvina froze, the force was shelled by Bolshevik gunboats. In early October, the village of Borok was taken but, after a series of Bolshevik attacks were launched on 9 October, the Scots were forced to withdraw from the village.[54] The Scots lost 5 men in their defence of the village.[54] On 27 October, Allied forces were ambushed at Kulika near Topsa, losing at least 27 men killed and dozens wounded, a figure that could have been higher if it had not been for a detachment of Poles who bravely covered the retreat as others panicked.[55] The Allied force withdrew to a defensive line for the winter, first driving off a number of attacks with the help of a Canadian Field Artillery battery, culminating in a very heavy assault on 11 November. An RAF squadron was set up at Bereznik on the bank of the Dvina, equipped with RE8s.[56] Meanwhile, in October fighting between Bolshevik and American and French troops had occurred along the Archangel-Vologda railway.[57] US rail troops worked to repair the trainline so as to allow the advance along the line to continue.[57]

The Allied troops were mainly inactive in the winter of 1918, building blockhouses with only winter patrols sent out.[52]

On the first occasion that White Russian troops were sent into the line of combat during the North Russian campaign, on 11 December 1918, the White Russian troops mutinied. The ringleaders were ordered to be shot by General Ironside.[58]

Increasing conflict with the Bolsheviks and setbacks Edit

 
Konetsgorye, view from the Northern Dvina river

Within four months the Allied Powers' gains had shrunk by 30–50 kilometres (19–31 mi) along the Northern Dvina and Lake Onega Area as Bolshevik attacks became more sustained. The Bolsheviks launched their largest offensive yet on Armistice Day 1918 along the Northern Divina front,[59] and there was heavy fighting on Armistice Day 1918 at the Battle of Tulgas (Toulgas) at the Kurgomin–Tulgas line: the final defensive line in 1919. Trotsky as Commander in Chief of the Red Army personally supervised this task on the orders of Lenin. 1,000 Red troops attacked the village, and the American and Scots defenders were driven back rapidly. The field hospital was captured and the large defensive gun batteries were threatened, but after heavy hand-to-hand fighting, the Red troops were pushed away from the guns. The Bolshevik force lost as many as 650 men killed, wounded or taken prisoner, whilst the Americans lost three men and seventeen Scots were killed.[60] The Allied forces had managed to quell the Bolshevik offensive by 14 November.[59] When the news came through of the Armistice with Germany, many of the British troops in Archangel eagerly anticipated a quick withdrawal from North Russia, but their hopes were soon dashed.[61]

The Bolsheviks had an advantage in artillery in 1919 and renewed their offensive while the Vaga River was hurriedly evacuated. 'A' Company of 2/10th Royal Scots had to be sent to reinforce a heavily pressed force on the Vaga, marching with sledges over 50 miles (80 km) in temperatures 40–60 degrees below freezing.[52] On 27 January 1919, word was received at Archangel that the Bolsheviks had fired poison gas shells at British positions on the Archangel-Vologda railway. The use of poison gas by the Bolsheviks was soon announced in the British press. The Bolsheviks would use poison gas shells against the British on at least two occasions in North Russia, although their effectiveness was limited.[62]

On the Dvina front, Tulgas was attacked by the Reds on 26 January.[63] The Bolsheviks originally drove back the American and Scots defenders but the following morning saw the Allied forces retake the settlement after a determined counter-attack.[63] The Bolsheviks continued to attack for the next three days until the Allies decided to withdraw, setting fire to the settlement as they evacuated four days later.[63] The Allied troops then reoccupied the town soon after.[63] By early 1919 the Bolshevik attacks along the Dvina were becoming more substantial.[63]

The River Force monitors made a final successful engagement with the Bolshevik gunboats in September 1919. However two monitors, HMS M25 and HMS M27, unable to sail downstream when the river's levels dropped, were scuttled on 16 September 1919 to prevent their capture by Bolshevik forces.

In the Murmansk sector, the British decided that the only way to achieve success in ejecting the Bolsheviks from power was by raising, training and equipping a large White Russian Army. However, recruitment and conscription attempts failed to provide a sizable enough force. It was therefore decided to move south to capture more populated areas from which recruits could be conscripted.[21] During February 1919, as the British fought defensively against attacking Bolshevik forces, the British decided to launch an offensive, aiming to capture extra territory from which locals could be conscripted. This would be the first significant action on the Murmansk front between the Allies and the Bolsheviks. With a force of only 600 men, most of whom were Canadians, the attack was launched in mid-February. Met with stiff opposition, the town of Segeja was captured and half the Red Army garrison was killed, wounded or taken prisoner. A Bolshevik train carrying reinforcements was intentionally derailed when the line was cut, and any escaping men were cut down by machine-gun fire. During the February offensive, the British forces pushed the Red Army beyond Soroko and as far south as Olimpi.[64] Despite an attempted Bolshevik counter-attack, by 20 February 3,000 square miles of territory had been taken.[65]

On 22 September, with the Allied withdrawal already ongoing, a British detachment from the Royal Scots was sent by river to Kandalaksha on four fishing boats to stop sabotage operations carried out by Finnish Bolsheviks against the railway there. The British party was ambushed even before landing and suffered heavy casualties, with 13 men killed and 4 wounded. Consequently, the unopposed Bolsheviks destroyed a number of bridges, delaying the evacuation for a time.[66][67] One of the fatalities, a Private from Ormesby, Yorkshire, who succumbed to his injuries on 26 September, was the last British servicemen to die in action in Northern Russia.[67]

The furthest advance south on the northern front in early 1919 was an Allied Mission in Shenkursk on the Vaga River and Nizhnyaya Toyma on the Northern Dvina where the strongest Bolshevik positions were encountered. The strategicly important city of Shenkursk was described by British commander Ironside as 'the most important city in North Russia' after Archangel and he was determined to hold the line.[68] However, British and Allied troops were expelled from Shenkursk after an intense battle on 19–20 January 1919, with the Americans losing seventeen men in the process.[69] One American and White Russian force numbering 450 men drove back a Bolshevik force three or four times its size, but suffered some 50 casualties in the process.[68] The battle for Shenkursk took place in -45 degree Celsius temperatures.[70] Over the following days, RAF aircraft flew several bombing and reconnaissance missions to support the withdrawal from Shenkursk.[71] The battle of Shenkursk was a key turning point in the campaign, and the Allied loss put them very much on the back foot for the next few months along the railway and Dvina fronts.[72] On 8 March the Bolsheviks, determined to push the British from their positions on the Vaga, attacked Kitsa. The Reds went as far as using gas shells to bombard the settlement, but all attacks were repulsed. However, with much of the village being destroyed and the Allied force being outnumbered by the enemy, it was decided to withdraw.[73]

On the railway front south of Archangel, the Allied forces were gradually advancing.[74]On 23 March, British and American troops attacked the village of Bolshie Ozerki, but the first wave of attackers were pushed back. Orders were made to resume the attack the next morning, but some of the British troops protested as they had not had a hot meal for some time.[75] Another assault was repulsed on 2 April.[76] The next day, 500 Bolsheviks attacked Shred Mekhrenga but were eventually repelled, with over 100 Red troops being killed despite the British suffering no fatal casualties.[76] Another Bolshevik attack was launched on Seltskoe, but that attack also failed. In total, the Bolsheviks lost 500 men in one day in the two attacks.[77]

Many of the British and foreign troops often refused to fight, and Bolshevik attacks were launched with the belief that some British troops may even defect to their side once their commanders had been killed. The numerous White mutinies demoralised Allied soldiers and affected morale.[78] The Allied forces were affected by their own mutinies, with the British Yorkshire Regiment and Royal Marines rebelling at points as well as American and Canadian forces.[78] In April, a pre-emptive strike against the Bolsheviks was launched against Urosozero. A French armoured train shelled the town and it was then captured with the loss of 50 Bolshevik troops.[79] A major offensive was then launched in May. On 8 May, Allied positions in Karelskaya came under attack, with 8 men being killed. During the advance on Medvezhyegorsk on 15 May, the stubborn Bolshevik defence was only ended with a bayonet charge. British and Bolshevik armoured trains then traded blows as the British attempted to seize control of more of the local railway. The town was finally seized on 21 May, as Italians and French troops pushed forward with the British.[80] The May offensive never quite carried the Allies as far as the largest town in the region, Petrozavodsk.[81]

After the May offensive, there was a considerable amount of aerial activity around Lake Onega. The British constructed an airfield at Lumbushi, and seaplanes were brought in to add to the force of 6 R.E.8 planes.[82] The seaplanes bombed Bolshevik vessels, sinking four and causing the capture of three, including an armoured destroyer.[83]

In April, public recruiting began at home in Britain for the newly created 'North Russian Relief Force', a voluntary force which had the claimed sole purpose of defending the existing British positions in Russia.[84] By the end of April 3,500 men had enlisted, and they were then sent to North Russia.[84] Public opinion regarding the formation of the force was mixed, with some newspapers being more supportive than others.[85] The relief force eventually arrived in North Russia in late May–June.[86]

On 25 April a White Russian battalion mutinied, and, after 300 men went over to the Bolsheviks, they turned and attacked the Allied troops at Tulgas.[87] The Canadian defenders had to withdraw six miles to the next village, where attacks were eventually beaten off after heavy casualties. The capture of Tulgas by the Bolsheviks meant that the Reds now held the left bank of the Dvina 10 miles behind the Allied line.[88] On 30 April the Bolshevik flotilla appeared – 29 river craft – and, together with 5,500 troops, attacked the 550 total Allied troops in three area.[87] Only superior artillery saved the Allied forces, with the river flotilla eventually withdrawing. Tulgas was then eventually recaptured.[87]

In May and June, the units of the original British force which had arrived in Archangel in August and September 1918 finally received orders for home.[89] In early June the French troops were withdrawn and the Royal Marines detachment was also sent home, followed by all Canadian troops after it was requested that they be repatriated. All remaining American troops also left for home.[90] The Serbian troops (perhaps Maynard's best infantry fighters) became unreliable as others withdrew around them.[91] By 3 July, the Italian company was on the verge of mutiny as its men were seriously disaffected with their continued presence in Russia so long after the Armistice. In mid July, the two companies of American railway troops were also withdrawn. The Royal Marines unit had been expressing its dissatisfaction with being forced to stay in Russia after the Armistice since February, and had been openly demanding to their commanding officers that they be sent home. Threatening letters were sent to their officers stating that if they were not repatriated, the men would commandeer the first train going to Murmansk. The men became increasingly unwilling to participate in serious military action throughout 1919.[92] The French and American troops stationed in the north were similarly reluctant to fight, and French troops in Archangel refused to take part in any action that was not merely defensive.[93] During June, small naval battles occurred on Lake Onega between Allied and Bolshevik ships. The Bolshevik forces were completely taken by surprise when British seaplanes emerged and attacked. The settlement of Kartashi was captured during the month.[94] Despite being told when volunteering that they were only to be used for defensive purposes, plans were made in June to use the men of the North Russian Relief Force in a new offensive aimed at capturing the key city of Kotlas and linking up with Kolchak's White forces in Siberia.[95] The villages of Topsa and Troitsa were captured in anticipation of this action, with 150 Bolsheviks being killed and 450 being captured.[96] However, with Kolchak's forces being pushed back rapidly, the Kotlas offensive was cancelled.[97]

In early July 1919 another White unit under British command mutinied and killed its British officers, with 100 men then deserting to the Bolsheviks.[98] Another White mutiny was foiled later in the month by Australian troops.[99] On 20 July, 3,000 White troops in the key city of Onega mutinied and handed over the city to the Bolsheviks. The loss of the city was a significant blow to the Allied forces as it was the only overland route available for the transfer of supplies and men between the Murmansk and Arkhangel theatres, a particularly vital line of communication during the months of the year when the White Sea froze over rendering Arkhangel inaccessible to maritime traffic.[100] This event led to the British losing all remaining trust for the Whites and contributed to the desire to withdraw.[100] Attempts were soon made to retake the city, but in a failed attack in late July the British had to force detachments of White forces to land at gunpoint in the city, since they were adamant that they would not take part in any fighting.[101] On one Allied ship, 5 Bolshevik prisoners captured in battle even managed to temporarily subdue the 200 White Russians on board and take control of the ship with little resistance.[102] Despite the Allied setbacks, a battalion of marines, the 6th Royal Marine Light Infantry, was sent to assist the British at the end of July.[103]

Final offensives Edit

The final two months on the Dvina front, August and September 1919, would see some of the fiercest fighting between British and Red Army troops of the Civil War.[104] In August, a major offensive was launched along the Dvina to try and strike a blow at Bolshevik morale and to increase the morale of the White forces before a withdrawal.[104] As part of this, an attack was made on the village of Gorodok. Before the attack began, 6 RAF DH.9s, 5 DH.9As and two Sopwith Snipes dropped three tonnes of bombs on the village in two successful raids, and on 10 August British planes also dropped bombs on other Bolshevik held villages.[105] During the attack, 750 Bolshevik prisoners were taken, and one battery was found to have been manned by German troops.[106] The village of Seltso was also attacked, but a strong Bolshevik defence halted any British progress.[107] However, the villages of Kochamika, Jinta, Lipovets and Zaniskaya were captured with little resistance. In total the offensive led to the deaths of around 700 Reds and was considered a success.[108] There was also action on the railway front south of Archangel at this time, and a raid on the settlement of Alenxandrova took place on 19 August.[109] On 24 August, there was an aerial dogfight between a British RE8 aircraft and two Bolshevik Nieuport fighters over the Pinega River, with the British plane only returning safely when the observer flew 100 miles back to base whilst his pilot lay unconscious.[109] On 10 September, the city of Onega was retaken.[110] The American River Force monitors made a final successful engagement with the Bolshevik gunboats in September 1919. However two monitors, HMS M25 and HMS M27, unable to sail downstream when the river's levels dropped, were scuttled on 16 September 1919 to prevent their capture by Bolshevik forces.

A final offensive on the Murmansk front was launched by the Allied forces in September, aimed at destroying the Bolshevik forces to leave the White forces in a good position after the planned withdrawal.[111] On 28 August 1918 the British 6th Royal Marine Light Infantry Battalion was ordered to seize the village of Koikori (Койкары) from the Bolsheviks as part of a wide offensive into East Karelia to secure the British withdrawal to Murmansk. Serbian forces supported the British as they attempted to push on to the Bolshevik village.[111] The attack on the village was disorganized and resulted in three Marines killed and 18 wounded, including the battalion commander who had ineffectually led the attack himself.[112] A week later, B and C companies, led this time by an army major, made a second attempt to take Koikori, while D company was involved in an attack on the village of Ussuna. The British were again repulsed at Koikori; the army major was killed and both Marine company commanders wounded. D company was also beaten off by Bolshevik forces around Ussuna, with the death of the battalion adjutant, killed by sniper fire.[112]

The next morning, faced with the prospect of another attack on the village, one Marine company refused to obey orders and withdrew themselves to a nearby friendly village. As a result, 93 men from the battalion were court-martialled; 13 were sentenced to death and others received substantial sentences of hard labour. In December 1919, the Government, under pressure from several MPs, revoked the sentence of death and considerably reduced the sentences of all the convicted men.[113]

The Serbs and White Russian forces attacked again on 11 and 14 September, but these attacks also failed.[114] However, the British did manage to reach the Nurmis river by 18 September, with 9,000 troops, including 6,000 White Russians, participating in this final offensive.[114]

On 6 September, the commanding officer of the 2nd Battalion Hampshire Regiment, Lieutenant Colonel Sherwood-Kelly, published an open letter in the Daily Express lambasting the North Russia campaign, stating that the volunteer British troops were being used for offensive actions (despite being told that they wouldn't be) and that the regional White "puppet" government "rested on no basis of public confidence and support".[115] The letter contributed to the British public and soldiers' desire for a withdrawal from North Russia.[116] During September, a couple of Bolshevik attacks were launched on Bolshie Ozerki, and although the first was repelled, 750 Red troops advanced on the village on 15 September and attacked from all sides, inflicting heavy casualties on the British and Allied defenders.[117] On 22 September, with the Allied withdrawal already ongoing, a British detachment from the Royal Scots was sent by river to Kandalaksha on four fishing boats to stop sabotage operations carried out by Finnish Bolsheviks against the railway there. The British party was ambushed even before landing and suffered heavy casualties, with 13 men killed and 4 wounded. Consequently, the unopposed Bolsheviks destroyed a number of bridges, delaying the evacuation for a time.[114][67] One of the fatalities, a Private from Ormesby, Yorkshire, who succumbed to his injuries on 26 September, was the last British servicemen to die in action in Northern Russia.[67]

Withdrawal of British troops Edit

 
Captured British Mark V tank in Arkhangelsk (2006)

An international policy to support the White Russians and, in newly appointed Secretary of State for War Winston Churchill's words, "to strangle at birth the Bolshevik State" became increasingly unpopular in Britain. In January 1919 the Daily Express was echoing public opinion when, paraphrasing Bismarck, it exclaimed, "the frozen plains of Eastern Europe are not worth the bones of a single grenadier".

From April 1919, the inability to hold the flanks and mutinies in the ranks of the White Russian forces caused the Allied Powers to decide to leave. British officers at Shussuga had a lucky escape when their Russian gunners remained loyal. A number of western military advisers were killed by White mutineers who went over to the Bolsheviks.[118] The Bolsheviks had no intention of allowing the British to leave without a fight, and resumed their attacks on the British positions on 6 September.[119] Fighting took place in the villages of Kodema, Ivanovskaya, Puchega and Chudinova, where 81 Reds were killed and 99 taken prisoner.[119] In total, 163 Reds were killed in their offensive compared to one fatality on the side of the British.[120] Over the next week, the Bolsheviks continued attacking the British lines and moved forward very quickly, and there were clashes at Pless and Shushunga. The attackers were subsequently identified as a combined force of civilian partisans and deserters who had mutinied and gone over to the Bolsheviks from the British lines on 7 July.[121] By this point, British troops had started withdrawing to Archangel in order to prepare themselves for the evacuation of North Russia.[122]

The British War Office sent General Henry Rawlinson to North Russia to assume command of the evacuation out of both Archangelsk and Murmansk. General Rawlinson arrived on August 11.

On the morning of September 27, 1919, the last Allied troops departed from Archangelsk, and on October 12, Murmansk was abandoned.

Archangelsk Railway and withdrawal of US troops Edit

Minor operations to keep open a line of withdrawal against the 7th Red Army as far south as Lake Onega and Yomtsa River to the east took place along the Arkhangelsk Railway with an armoured train manned by the Americans. The last major battle fought by the Americans before their departure took place at Bolshie Ozerki from 31 March through 4 April 1919.

The US appointed Brigadier General Wilds P. Richardson as commander of US forces to organize the safe withdrawal from Arkhangelsk. Richardson and his staff arrived in Archangelsk on April 17, 1919. By the end of June, the majority of the US forces was heading home and by September 1919, the last US soldier of the Expedition had also left Northern Russia.

Aftermath Edit

The White Russian Northern Army was left to face the Red Army alone. Poorly disciplined, they were no match for the Red Army, and quickly collapsed when the Bolsheviks launched a counter-offensive in December 1919.

Many soldiers capitulated and the remnants of the Army were evacuated from Arkhangelsk in February 1920. On February 21, 1920, the Bolsheviks entered Arkhangelsk and on March 13, 1920, they took Murmansk.[123] The White Northern Region Government ceased to exist. White Northern Russian commander Eugene Miller held out to the end, fleeing with a number of other White officers – including Grigory Chaplin – in an icebreaker when the Reds entered Archangel. They fled to France, and Miller was later captured by the Bolsheviks and executed in 1939.[124]

Legacy Edit

In 1927, the Constructivist-styled Monument to the Victims of the Intervention was raised in Murmansk, on the tenth anniversary of the Russian Revolution. It is still standing as of 2023.[125]

The campaign in fiction Edit

  • Two fictional television characters fought with the British Expeditionary Force: Jack Ford in When the Boat Comes In (as an intelligence officer in Murmansk) and Albert Steptoe in Steptoe and Son.
  • The campaign features in the Alexander Fullerton novels Look to the Wolves and Bloody Sunset.
  • The 1990 film Archangel is a surrealistic drama set in 1919 Archangel during the war.
  • In John Lawton's novel, Then We Take Berlin (2013), Countess Rada Lyubova mentions (from the novel's present in post-WW II Britain) that she "had turned back at the British lines near Archangel ... 'such folly.'" and "had crossed Siberia with the remnants of the Czech Legion ... 'not many ever saw home again.'"

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ 590 in Murmansk sector, 274 in Archangel sector
  2. ^ The British 6th Battalion Royal Marines Light Infantry (RMLI) was scratched together from a company of the Royal Marine Artillery and companies from each of the three naval port depots. Very few of their officers had seen any land fighting. Their original purpose had been only to deploy to Flensburg to supervise a vote to decide whether northern Schleswig-Holstein should remain German or be given to Denmark. Many of the Marines were less than 19 years old; it would have been unusual to send them overseas. Others were ex-prisoners of war who had only recently returned from Germany and had no home leave. There was outrage when on short notice, the 6th Battalion was shipped to Murmansk, Russia, on the Arctic Ocean, to assist in the withdrawal of British forces. Still not expecting to have to fight, the battalion was ordered forward under army command to hold certain outposts.
  3. ^ Two companies of the 45th Battalion and one of the machine gun companies were composed mainly of Australian volunteers who were veterans of the Western Front: about 200–300 former members of the Australian Imperial Force.

References Edit

  1. ^ Mawdsley, p. 91
  2. ^ Mawdsley, p. 251
  3. ^ Wright 2017, pp. 526–528, 530–535.
  4. ^ a b c House 2019, p. 48.
  5. ^ Wright 2017, p. 528.
  6. ^ House 2019, p. 24.
  7. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 24.
  8. ^ Wright 2017, pp. 528–529, 531.
  9. ^ House 2019, p. 26.
  10. ^ Kinvig, 2006 & p.315.
  11. ^ House 2019, p. 53.
  12. ^ a b c d Mawdsley 2007, p. 91.
  13. ^ "President Wilson's Aide-Memoire on the subject of military intervention in Russia". pbma.grobbel.org. Retrieved 2016-12-06.
  14. ^ Davis, Donald; Trani, Eugene (2002). The First Cold War: The Legacy of Woodrow Wilson in U.S.–Soviet Relations. University of Missouri Press. p. 139. ISBN 9780826213884. Retrieved 12 December 2017. Poole.
  15. ^ a b Wright 2017, p. 526.
  16. ^ Wright 2017, p. 122.
  17. ^ Wright 2017, p. 125.
  18. ^ Wright 2017, p. 29.
  19. ^ Wright 2017, p. 35.
  20. ^ Wright 2017, p. 36.
  21. ^ a b c Wright 2017, p. 38.
  22. ^ Wright 2017, p. 43.
  23. ^ a b c d e f Wright 2017, p. 527.
  24. ^ a b Millman 1998, p. 312.
  25. ^ Wright 2017, p. 143.
  26. ^ "British Military Aviation in 1918 – Part 2". Rafmuseum.org. 1918-06-06. Archived from the original on 2012-06-30. Retrieved 2012-04-28.
  27. ^ a b Bowyer, Chaz (1988). RAF Operations 1918–1938. London: William Kimber. p. 38. ISBN 0718306716.
  28. ^ a b Wright 2017, p. 530.
  29. ^ Wright 2017, p. 535.
  30. ^ Wright 2017, p. 532.
  31. ^ Robert L. Willett, "Russian Sideshow" (Washington, D.C., Brassey's Inc., 2003), p. 267
  32. ^ Wright 2017, p. 28.
  33. ^ Wright 2017, p. 47.
  34. ^ Munt 2015, pp. 21–24.
  35. ^ "Le Bataillon de la Légion Etrangère de Russie du Nord" (in French). Amicale des Anciens de la Légion Etrangère de Paris. Retrieved 18 November 2018.
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  42. ^ Kinvig, p. 29
  43. ^ David S. Foglesong (2014), "Fighting, But Not At War", America's Secret War Against Bolshevism: U.S. Intervention in the Russian Civil War 1917–1920, UNC Press Books, ISBN 978-1469611136
  44. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 34.
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  46. ^ Kinvig, p. 38
  47. ^ "Occupation of Archangel". Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners' Advocate. 6 August 1918. Retrieved 12 December 2017.
  48. ^ "Allied Troops at Archangel". The Border Morning Mail and Riverina Times. 17 August 1918. Retrieved 12 December 2017.
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  50. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 40.
  51. ^ Wright 2017, p. 151.
  52. ^ a b c A. Michael Brander, Famous Regiments Series: The Royal Scots (The Royal Regiment), London: Leo Cooper, 1976, ISBN 0850521831, pp. 75–78.
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  56. ^ Wright 2017, p. 153.
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  66. ^ Kinvig, p. 265
  67. ^ a b c d Wright 2017, p. 131.
  68. ^ a b Wright 2017, p. 190.
  69. ^ Kinvig 2006, pp. 125–126.
  70. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 125.
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  72. ^ Wright 2017, p. 215.
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  74. ^ Wright 2017, p. 165.
  75. ^ Wright 2017, pp. 166–167.
  76. ^ a b Wright 2017, p. 167.
  77. ^ Wright 2017, p. 168.
  78. ^ a b Balbirnie 2016, p. 130.
  79. ^ Wright 2017, pp. 51–56.
  80. ^ Wright 2017, pp. 62–66.
  81. ^ Mawdsley 2007, p. 257.
  82. ^ Kinvig 2006, pp. 173–174.
  83. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 124.
  84. ^ a b Kinvig 2006, pp. 180–181.
  85. ^ Wright 2017, p. 218.
  86. ^ Wright 2017, pp. 223–225.
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  89. ^ Wright 2017, p. 217.
  90. ^ Wright 2017, p. 229.
  91. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 178.
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  93. ^ Wright 2017, p. 129.
  94. ^ Wright 2017, pp. 77–79.
  95. ^ Kinvig 2006, pp. 191–192.
  96. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 193.
  97. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 198.
  98. ^ Balbirnie 2016, p. 136.
  99. ^ Wright 2017, p. 174.
  100. ^ a b Balbirnie 2016, p. 142.
  101. ^ Wright 2017, p. 170.
  102. ^ Wright 2017, p. 171.
  103. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 255.
  104. ^ a b Wright 2017, p. 253.
  105. ^ Wright 2017, pp. 256–257.
  106. ^ Kinvig 2006, pp. 241–242.
  107. ^ Wright 2017, p. 264.
  108. ^ Wright 2017, p. 278.
  109. ^ a b Wright 2017, p. 177.
  110. ^ Kinvig 2006, p. 247.
  111. ^ a b Kinvig 2006, pp. 258–259.
  112. ^ a b Kinvig, pp. 259–262
  113. ^ Obituary: Brigadier Roy Smith-Hill, The Times, August 21, 1996
  114. ^ a b c Kinvig 2006, p. 265.
  115. ^ Wright 2017, pp. 178–179.
  116. ^ Wright 2017, pp. 178–180.
  117. ^ Wright 2017, pp. 188–189.
  118. ^ Grey, Jeffery (1999). A Military History of Australia (Second ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 12–17. ISBN 0521644836.
  119. ^ a b Wright 2017, p. 286.
  120. ^ Wright 2017, p. 287.
  121. ^ Wright 2017, p. 288.
  122. ^ Wright 2017, pp. 291–292.
  123. ^ Mawdsley 2007, p. 255.
  124. ^ Wright 2017, p. 295.
  125. ^ Nikitin, Vadim (30 November 2017). "Diary". London Review of Books. 39 (23). Retrieved 2 December 2017.

Bibliography Edit

  • Balbirnie, Steven (2016-07-02). "'A Bad Business': British Responses to Mutinies Among Local Forces in Northern Russia". Revolutionary Russia. 29 (2): 129–148. doi:10.1080/09546545.2016.1243613. ISSN 0954-6545. S2CID 152050937.
  • Baron, Nick (2007). The King of Karelia: Col. P.J. Woods and the British intervention in North Russia 1918-1919 a history and memoir. London: Francis Boutle Publishers. ISBN 978-1-90-342732-3.
  • Beevor, Antony (2022). Russia: Revolution and Civil War, 1917—1921. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 978-1-474-61014-8.
  • Brough, Ray (1991). White Russian awards to British & Commonwealth servicemen during the Allied intervention in Russia 1918-1920. London: Tom Donovan. ISBN 978-1-87-108508-2.
  • Bujak, Philip (2008). Undefeated, The Extraordinary Life & Death of Lt. Col Jack Sherwood Kelly VC, DSO, CMG. Forster Books.
  • Droulin, Laurent (2016) [2012]. Corps expéditionnaire français en Russie du Nord, 1918-1919 (ePUB) (in French). Auto-Édition. ISBN 978-2-9542358-0-6 – via Fnac.
  • House, John  M., et al. The Russian Expeditions 1917-1920. 1st ed., vol. 10 10, Center of Military History, 2019.
  • Jackson, Robert (1972). At War With The Bolsheviks. London.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Kinvig, Clifford (2006). Churchill's Crusade: The British Invasion of Russia 1918–1920. London: Hambledon Continuum. ISBN 1-85285-477-4.
  • Mawdsley, Evan (2007). The Russian Civil War. Pegasus Books. ISBN 978-1-933648-15-6.
  • Millman, Brock (1998). "The Problem with Generals: Military Observers and the Origins of the Intervention in Russia and Persia, 1917-18". Journal of Contemporary History. 33 (2): 291–320. doi:10.1177/002200949803300207. S2CID 154104534 – via Sage Publications.
  • Munt, Franck (2015). Historique du 2e Régiment d'Artillerie Coloniale (PDF) (in French). Tapuscrit Ecole de l’Artillerie – Transcription intégrale – Association des officiers de réserve des Pyrénées-Orientales – via tableaudhonneur.free.fr.
  • Quinlivian, Peter (2006). Forgotten Valour: The Story of Arthur Sullivan (VC). Sydney.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Willett Jr., Robert L (2005). Russian Sideshow: America's Undeclared War, 1918–1920. Potomac Books. ISBN 1-57488-706-8.
  • Wright, Damien (2017). Churchill's Secret War with Lenin: British and Commonwealth Military Intervention in the Russian Civil War, 1918-20. Solihull: Helion. ISBN 978-1-911512-10-3.

External links Edit

  • American Polar Bears, the American Expeditionary Force, North Russia
  • Polar Bear Memorial Association
  • Russian Bolshevik Navy 1919_files
  • North Russian Expeditionary Force 1919, The Journal and Photographs of Yeoman of Signals George Smith, Royal Navy
  • The History of the American Expedition Fighting the Bolsheviki Campaigning in North Russia 1918–1919
  • The Evacuation of Northern Russia, 1919 (1920)
  • Polar Bear Expedition Digital Collections Housed at the Bentley Historical Library. More than 50 individual collections of primary source material, including diaries, maps, correspondence, photos, ephemera, printed materials, and a film.
  • Original movie clip of US Army Allied War in Russia, 1918-22

north, russia, intervention, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources North Russia intervention news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message North Russia interventionPart of Allied intervention in the Russian Civil WarRed Army prisoners in the custody of U S Army troops in ArkhangelskDate4 March 1918 1 12 October 1919 2 LocationNorth RussiaResultBolshevik victoryBelligerentsAllied Powers Russian State United Kingdom France United StatesRussian SFSRGermany White FinnsCommanders and leadersEdmund Ironside F C Poole Sir Charles Maynard George E Stewart Wilds P Richardson Nikolai Yudenich Nikolai Tchaikovsky Evgeny MillerJukums Vacietis Sergey Kamenev Aleksandr Samoylo Dmitri Parsky Dmitry NadyozhnyRudiger von der GoltzStrengthTotal 32 614 14 378 troops 3 7 881 troops 4 4 971 soldiers 4 1 520 troops 5 2 000 troops 6 1 000 field artillerymen 7 864 troops 8 a 45 500 4 55 000 70 000 troops 9 Casualties and losses526 killed 10 194 dead 359 wounded 11 2 150 Allied estimate citation needed lt 1 000 citation needed The North Russia intervention also known as the Northern Russian expedition the Archangel campaign and the Murman deployment was part of the Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War after the October Revolution The intervention brought about the involvement of foreign troops in the Russian Civil War on the side of the White movement The movement was ultimately defeated while the British led Allied forces withdrew from Northern Russia after fighting a number of defensive actions against the Bolsheviks such as the Battle of Bolshie Ozerki The campaign lasted from March 1918 during the final months of World War I to October 1919 Contents 1 Reasons behind the campaign 2 International contingent 2 1 British Empire 2 1 1 1919 reinforcements 2 2 United States 2 3 France 2 4 Italy 2 5 Russia 2 6 Other countries 3 Opposing forces 4 Landing at Murmansk 5 Landing at Archangelsk 6 Advance along the Northern Dvina 7 Increasing conflict with the Bolsheviks and setbacks 8 Final offensives 9 Withdrawal of British troops 10 Archangelsk Railway and withdrawal of US troops 11 Aftermath 12 Legacy 13 The campaign in fiction 14 See also 15 Notes 16 References 17 Bibliography 18 External linksReasons behind the campaign Edit nbsp Arkhangelsk GovernorateIn March 1917 Tsar Nicholas II in Russia abdicated and was suceeded by a provisional democratic government The U S government declared war on the German Empire and its allies in April after learning of the former s attempt to persuade Mexico to join the Central Powers The Russian Provisional Government led by Alexander Kerensky pledged to continue fighting Imperial Germany on the Eastern Front In return the U S began providing economic and technical support to the Russian provisional government so they could carry out their military pledge The Russian offensive of 18 June 1917 was crushed by a German counteroffensive The Russian Army was plagued by mutinies and desertions Allied war materiel still in transit quickly began piling up in warehouses at Arkhangelsk Archangel and the ice free port of Murmansk Anxious to keep Russia in the war the Royal Navy established the British North Russia Squadron under Admiral Kemp The Bolsheviks led by Vladimir Lenin came to power in October 1917 and established the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic Five months later they signed the Treaty of Brest Litovsk with Germany which formally ended the war on the Eastern Front This allowed the German army to begin redeploying troops to the Western Front where the depleted British and French armies had not yet been bolstered by the American Expeditionary Force Coincidental with the Treaty Lenin personally pledged that if the Czechoslovak Legion would stay neutral and leave Russia they would enjoy safe passage through Siberia on their way to join the Allied forces on the Western Front However as the 50 000 members of the Legion made their way along the Trans Siberian Railroad to Vladivostok only half had arrived before the agreement broke down and fighting with the Bolsheviks ensued in May 1918 Also worrisome to the Allied Powers was the fact that in April 1918 a division of German troops had landed in Finland creating fears they might try to capture the Murmansk Petrograd railroad the strategic port of Murmansk and possibly even the city of Arkhangelsk It was also feared that large military stores at Archangelsk might fall into unfriendly hands 12 Faced with these events the leaders of the British and French governments decided the western Allied Powers needed to begin a military intervention in North Russia They had three objectives they hoped to prevent the Allied war materiel stockpiles in Arkhangelsk from falling into German or Bolshevik hands to mount an offensive to rescue the Czechoslovak Legion which was stranded along the Trans Siberian Railroad and resurrect the Eastern Front and by defeating the Bolshevik army with the assistance of the Czechoslovak Legion to expand anti communist forces drawn from the local citizenry Severely short of troops to spare the British and French requested that US President Woodrow Wilson provide U S troops for what was to be called the North Russia campaign or the Allied intervention in North Russia In July 1918 against the advice of the US War Department Wilson agreed to a limited participation in the campaign by a contingent of U S Army soldiers of the 339th Infantry Regiment that was hastily organized into the American North Russia Expeditionary Force which came to be nicknamed the Polar Bear Expedition Under his Aide Memoire Wilson set the guidelines for American intervention by saying the purpose of American troops in Russia was to guard military stores which may subsequently be needed by Russian forces and to render such aid as may be acceptable to the Russians in the organization of their own self defense 13 International contingent Edit nbsp A Bolshevik soldier shot dead by an American guard 8 January 1919Lieutenant General Frederick C Poole who had previously spent two years in Russia was appointed by the British Secretary of State for War Lord Milner to lead the expedition to Archangel 14 The international force included British Empire Edit Royal Navy a flotilla of over 20 ships including the seaplane carriers HMS Pegasus and HMS Nairana 6th Battalion Royal Marine Light Infantry RMLI b British Army Headquarters elements 15 2 10th Cyclist Battalion Royal Scots 16 2 7th Battalion Durham Light Infantry 17 548th Dundee Army Troops Company Royal Engineers 18 253rd Company Machine Gun Corps Canadian Malamute company of experienced sled dogmen 19 236th Infantry Brigade 15 17th Service Battalion 1st City King s Liverpool Regiment 20 6th Service Battalion Green Howards 21 13th Service Battalion Green Howards 21 11th Service Battalion 1st South Down Royal Sussex Regiment 22 237th Infantry Brigade 23 Karelian Regiment of three columns of 3680 locally recruited Karelians 24 Two columns of Serbian troops amounting to 1120 troops 24 238th Infantry Brigade 23 Finnish Legion of Red Finns commanded by British officers 23 Infantry company from 29th City of London Battalion London Regiment 23 Two detached sections from 253rd Company Machine Gun Corps 23 Two detached sections from 548th Dundee Army Troops Company Royal Engineers 23 238th Trench Mortar Battery52nd Battalion Manchester Regiment citation needed and elements of the Royal Dublin Fusiliers citation needed Slavo British Allied Legion SBAL a British trained and led contingent composed mostly of anti Bolshevik Russian volunteers including Dyer s Battalion Canadian Field Artillery 67th and 68th Batteries of the 16th Brigade Canadian Field Artillery 25 Royal Air Force contingent comprising Airco DH 4 bombers Fairey Campania and Sopwith Baby seaplanes along with a single Sopwith Camel fighter 26 27 1919 reinforcements Edit In late May 1919 the British North Russia Relief Force British Army arrived to cover the withdrawal of British US and other anti Bolshevik forces It was made up primarily of the 45th Battalion and 46th Battalions Royal Fusiliers c 2nd Battalion Hampshire Regiment 28 1st Battalion Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry 28 two companies of the 201st Battalion Machine Gun Corps an armed company of the Chinese Labour Corps 29 55th Battery Royal Garrison Artillery 240th Light Trench Mortar Battery 241st Light Trench Mortar Battery 250th Signal Company Royal Engineers and the 385th Field Company Royal Engineers 30 United States Edit nbsp Letter written by U S Army 1LT James E Kean highlighting his unit s mission in Russia June 26 1919North Russia Expeditionary Force also known as the Polar Bear Expedition approximately 5 000 personnel from the US Army 31 including the 310th Engineers 339th Infantry 337th Field Hospital and 337th Ambulance Company Also the 167th and 168th Railroad Companies which were sent to Murmansk to operate the Murmansk to Petrograd line US Navy the cruiser USS Olympia during August and September 1918 including 53 personnel attached to British naval units France Edit Predominantly the 21st Provisional Colonial Infantry Battalion 32 a company of ski troops 33 and engineers Three artillery batteries 61st 62nd 63rd of the 2nd Colonial Artillery Regiment provided supporting firepower 34 This was supplemented with a North Russian battalion of the French Foreign Legion composed of anti Bolshevik Russian volunteers who like the SBAL were recruited locally For their bravery they were awarded one Distinguished Service Cross United States 35 and six Military Medals from the Americans and British respectively 36 Italy Edit 1 350 men in the it Corpo di spedizione italiano in Murmania commanded by Colonel Sifola Russia Edit White Russian forces included the Northern Army previously the army of Alexander Kerensky s provisional Russian government led by General Evgenii Miller Other countries Edit 1 000 Serbian and Polish infantry attached to Admiral Kolchak s forces in the north as distinct from his Siberian forces which included the Czechoslovak Legion 30 Czechoslovak volunteers part of them serving directly in British Army and part of them detached from the Czechoslovak Legion and attached to British Army Opposing forces EditOpposing these international forces were the Bolshevik Sixth and Seventh Red Army combined in the Northern Front RSFSR which was poorly prepared for battle in May 1918 Landing at Murmansk EditThe First British involvement in the war was the landing in Murmansk in early March 1918 Ironically the first British landing in Russia came at the request of a local Soviet council Fearing a German attack on the town the Murmansk Soviet requested that the Allies landed troops for protection Leon Trotsky had ordered the soviet to accept Allied aid after the German invasion of Russia in February March 1918 12 170 British troops arrived on 4 March 1918 the day after the signing of the Treaty of Brest Litovsk between Germany and the Bolshevik government 37 12 On 2 May British troops took part in their first military engagement A party of White Finns who had crossed the border during the Finnish Civil War had captured the Russian town of Pechenga and it was feared that the Whites would hand over the town to the Germans who would then use the bay as a submarine base The Germans were the Allies of the White Finns as they had been assisting them militarily during their Civil War British marines fought alongside Red Guards to capture the area by 10 May with several casualties In this first engagement British troops had fought against a White force in support of the Red Army In the following months British forces in the area were largely engaged in small battles and skirmishes with White Finns 37 Command of the British forces in the area was given to Major General Sir Charles Maynard 38 In late June 600 British reinforcements arrived By this time Soviet Allied relations were passing from distrust to open hostility A Bolshevik force was sent to take control of the town up the Murmansk Petrograd railway but in a series of skirmishes the Allied forces repelled the attack This was the first real fighting between the troops of the Allies and the reds 12 A trainload of Bolshevik troops was also found at Kandalaksha heading north but Maynard managed to convince them to stop before Serb reinforcements arrived and took over the train 39 In September the British forces who had so far mainly only engaged White Finns in small battles and skirmishes were reinforced by the arrival of a force of 1 200 Italians as well as small Canadian and French battalions By early Autumn British forces under Maynard in the Murmansk region were also 6 000 strong 40 However on 11 November the armistice between Germany and the Allies was signed ending the First World War meaning that the primary objective of re establishing the Eastern Front was now irrelevant However the British forces did not leave From this point onwards the sole objectives of the British were to restore a White government and to remove the Bolsheviks from power 41 Landing at Archangelsk Edit nbsp Russian Civil War in 1918 19On 2 August 1918 anti Bolshevik forces led by Tsarist Captain Georgi Chaplin staged a coup against the local Soviet government at Archangelsk British diplomats had traveled to the city in preparation of the invasion and General Poole had coordinated the coup with Chaplin 42 Allied warships sailed into the port from the White Sea 43 There was some resistance at first and Allied ships were fired on 44 but 1500 French and British troops soon occupied the city 45 The Northern Region Government was established by Chaplin and popular revolutionary Nikolai Tchaikovsky to all intents and purposes however General Poole ran Archangelsk declaring martial law and banning the red flag despite the decision of the Northern Region Government to fly it 46 It was reported in the British press in early August that the Allied Powers had occupied Arkhangelsk although not officially confirmed by the British authorities at the time 47 By 17 August it was being reported that the Allies had advanced to the shores of Onega Bay 48 The lines of communications south from Arkhangelsk were the Northern Dvina in the east Vaga River Arkhangelsk Railway the Onega River in the west and the Yomtsa River providing a line of communication between the Vaga River and the railway in the centre As soon as Archangel had been captured preparations were made for a push southwards along the Archangel Vologda railway 49 An armoured train was commissioned to support the advance and a battle took place between Allied and Bolshevik armoured trains on 18 August 49 In September 1918 the Allied Powers took Obozerskaya around 100 miles 160 km south of Archangel During the attack the RAF provided air support to the advancing Allied infantry conducting bombing and strafing runs 27 On 4 September 1918 the promised American forces arrived Three battalions of troops supported by engineers and under the command of Colonel George Stewart landed in Archangel This force numbered 4 500 troops 50 In early September also an RAF squadron was set up specifically for service at Archangel equipped with obsolete RE8 reconnaissance bomber aircraft 51 Advance along the Northern Dvina EditA British River Force of 11 monitors HMS M33 HMS Fox and others minesweepers and Russian gunboats was formed to use the navigable waters at the juncture of the rivers Vaga and Northern Dvina Some 30 Bolshevik gunboats mines and armed motor launches took their toll on the allied forces The Allied troops led by Lionel Sadleir Jackson were soon combined with Poles and White Guard forces Fighting was heavy along both banks of the Northern Dvina The River Force outflanked the enemy land positions with amphibious assaults led by Royal Marines together with coordinated artillery support from land and river Their Lewis guns proved to be an effective weapon since both sides were only armed with bolt action rifles The 2 10th Royal Scots cleared the triangle between the Dvina and Vaga and took a number of villages and prisoners The strongly fortified village of Pless could not be attacked frontally so A Company less one platoon attempted a flanking movement through the marshes The following morning the company reached Kargonin behind Pless and the defenders thinking themselves cut off by a large force evacuated both villages The regimental historian describes this as a quite remarkable march by predominantly B1 troops 52 In mid September Allied troops were driven out of Seletskoe and it took three days for the settlement to be retaken 53 By late September Royal Marines and 2 10th Royal Scots had reached Nijne Toimski which proved too strong for the lightly equipped Allied force The monitors having withdrawn before the Dvina froze the force was shelled by Bolshevik gunboats In early October the village of Borok was taken but after a series of Bolshevik attacks were launched on 9 October the Scots were forced to withdraw from the village 54 The Scots lost 5 men in their defence of the village 54 On 27 October Allied forces were ambushed at Kulika near Topsa losing at least 27 men killed and dozens wounded a figure that could have been higher if it had not been for a detachment of Poles who bravely covered the retreat as others panicked 55 The Allied force withdrew to a defensive line for the winter first driving off a number of attacks with the help of a Canadian Field Artillery battery culminating in a very heavy assault on 11 November An RAF squadron was set up at Bereznik on the bank of the Dvina equipped with RE8s 56 Meanwhile in October fighting between Bolshevik and American and French troops had occurred along the Archangel Vologda railway 57 US rail troops worked to repair the trainline so as to allow the advance along the line to continue 57 The Allied troops were mainly inactive in the winter of 1918 building blockhouses with only winter patrols sent out 52 On the first occasion that White Russian troops were sent into the line of combat during the North Russian campaign on 11 December 1918 the White Russian troops mutinied The ringleaders were ordered to be shot by General Ironside 58 Increasing conflict with the Bolsheviks and setbacks Edit nbsp Konetsgorye view from the Northern Dvina riverWithin four months the Allied Powers gains had shrunk by 30 50 kilometres 19 31 mi along the Northern Dvina and Lake Onega Area as Bolshevik attacks became more sustained The Bolsheviks launched their largest offensive yet on Armistice Day 1918 along the Northern Divina front 59 and there was heavy fighting on Armistice Day 1918 at the Battle of Tulgas Toulgas at the Kurgomin Tulgas line the final defensive line in 1919 Trotsky as Commander in Chief of the Red Army personally supervised this task on the orders of Lenin 1 000 Red troops attacked the village and the American and Scots defenders were driven back rapidly The field hospital was captured and the large defensive gun batteries were threatened but after heavy hand to hand fighting the Red troops were pushed away from the guns The Bolshevik force lost as many as 650 men killed wounded or taken prisoner whilst the Americans lost three men and seventeen Scots were killed 60 The Allied forces had managed to quell the Bolshevik offensive by 14 November 59 When the news came through of the Armistice with Germany many of the British troops in Archangel eagerly anticipated a quick withdrawal from North Russia but their hopes were soon dashed 61 The Bolsheviks had an advantage in artillery in 1919 and renewed their offensive while the Vaga River was hurriedly evacuated A Company of 2 10th Royal Scots had to be sent to reinforce a heavily pressed force on the Vaga marching with sledges over 50 miles 80 km in temperatures 40 60 degrees below freezing 52 On 27 January 1919 word was received at Archangel that the Bolsheviks had fired poison gas shells at British positions on the Archangel Vologda railway The use of poison gas by the Bolsheviks was soon announced in the British press The Bolsheviks would use poison gas shells against the British on at least two occasions in North Russia although their effectiveness was limited 62 On the Dvina front Tulgas was attacked by the Reds on 26 January 63 The Bolsheviks originally drove back the American and Scots defenders but the following morning saw the Allied forces retake the settlement after a determined counter attack 63 The Bolsheviks continued to attack for the next three days until the Allies decided to withdraw setting fire to the settlement as they evacuated four days later 63 The Allied troops then reoccupied the town soon after 63 By early 1919 the Bolshevik attacks along the Dvina were becoming more substantial 63 The River Force monitors made a final successful engagement with the Bolshevik gunboats in September 1919 However two monitors HMS M25 and HMS M27 unable to sail downstream when the river s levels dropped were scuttled on 16 September 1919 to prevent their capture by Bolshevik forces In the Murmansk sector the British decided that the only way to achieve success in ejecting the Bolsheviks from power was by raising training and equipping a large White Russian Army However recruitment and conscription attempts failed to provide a sizable enough force It was therefore decided to move south to capture more populated areas from which recruits could be conscripted 21 During February 1919 as the British fought defensively against attacking Bolshevik forces the British decided to launch an offensive aiming to capture extra territory from which locals could be conscripted This would be the first significant action on the Murmansk front between the Allies and the Bolsheviks With a force of only 600 men most of whom were Canadians the attack was launched in mid February Met with stiff opposition the town of Segeja was captured and half the Red Army garrison was killed wounded or taken prisoner A Bolshevik train carrying reinforcements was intentionally derailed when the line was cut and any escaping men were cut down by machine gun fire During the February offensive the British forces pushed the Red Army beyond Soroko and as far south as Olimpi 64 Despite an attempted Bolshevik counter attack by 20 February 3 000 square miles of territory had been taken 65 On 22 September with the Allied withdrawal already ongoing a British detachment from the Royal Scots was sent by river to Kandalaksha on four fishing boats to stop sabotage operations carried out by Finnish Bolsheviks against the railway there The British party was ambushed even before landing and suffered heavy casualties with 13 men killed and 4 wounded Consequently the unopposed Bolsheviks destroyed a number of bridges delaying the evacuation for a time 66 67 One of the fatalities a Private from Ormesby Yorkshire who succumbed to his injuries on 26 September was the last British servicemen to die in action in Northern Russia 67 The furthest advance south on the northern front in early 1919 was an Allied Mission in Shenkursk on the Vaga River and Nizhnyaya Toyma on the Northern Dvina where the strongest Bolshevik positions were encountered The strategicly important city of Shenkursk was described by British commander Ironside as the most important city in North Russia after Archangel and he was determined to hold the line 68 However British and Allied troops were expelled from Shenkursk after an intense battle on 19 20 January 1919 with the Americans losing seventeen men in the process 69 One American and White Russian force numbering 450 men drove back a Bolshevik force three or four times its size but suffered some 50 casualties in the process 68 The battle for Shenkursk took place in 45 degree Celsius temperatures 70 Over the following days RAF aircraft flew several bombing and reconnaissance missions to support the withdrawal from Shenkursk 71 The battle of Shenkursk was a key turning point in the campaign and the Allied loss put them very much on the back foot for the next few months along the railway and Dvina fronts 72 On 8 March the Bolsheviks determined to push the British from their positions on the Vaga attacked Kitsa The Reds went as far as using gas shells to bombard the settlement but all attacks were repulsed However with much of the village being destroyed and the Allied force being outnumbered by the enemy it was decided to withdraw 73 On the railway front south of Archangel the Allied forces were gradually advancing 74 On 23 March British and American troops attacked the village of Bolshie Ozerki but the first wave of attackers were pushed back Orders were made to resume the attack the next morning but some of the British troops protested as they had not had a hot meal for some time 75 Another assault was repulsed on 2 April 76 The next day 500 Bolsheviks attacked Shred Mekhrenga but were eventually repelled with over 100 Red troops being killed despite the British suffering no fatal casualties 76 Another Bolshevik attack was launched on Seltskoe but that attack also failed In total the Bolsheviks lost 500 men in one day in the two attacks 77 Many of the British and foreign troops often refused to fight and Bolshevik attacks were launched with the belief that some British troops may even defect to their side once their commanders had been killed The numerous White mutinies demoralised Allied soldiers and affected morale 78 The Allied forces were affected by their own mutinies with the British Yorkshire Regiment and Royal Marines rebelling at points as well as American and Canadian forces 78 In April a pre emptive strike against the Bolsheviks was launched against Urosozero A French armoured train shelled the town and it was then captured with the loss of 50 Bolshevik troops 79 A major offensive was then launched in May On 8 May Allied positions in Karelskaya came under attack with 8 men being killed During the advance on Medvezhyegorsk on 15 May the stubborn Bolshevik defence was only ended with a bayonet charge British and Bolshevik armoured trains then traded blows as the British attempted to seize control of more of the local railway The town was finally seized on 21 May as Italians and French troops pushed forward with the British 80 The May offensive never quite carried the Allies as far as the largest town in the region Petrozavodsk 81 After the May offensive there was a considerable amount of aerial activity around Lake Onega The British constructed an airfield at Lumbushi and seaplanes were brought in to add to the force of 6 R E 8 planes 82 The seaplanes bombed Bolshevik vessels sinking four and causing the capture of three including an armoured destroyer 83 In April public recruiting began at home in Britain for the newly created North Russian Relief Force a voluntary force which had the claimed sole purpose of defending the existing British positions in Russia 84 By the end of April 3 500 men had enlisted and they were then sent to North Russia 84 Public opinion regarding the formation of the force was mixed with some newspapers being more supportive than others 85 The relief force eventually arrived in North Russia in late May June 86 On 25 April a White Russian battalion mutinied and after 300 men went over to the Bolsheviks they turned and attacked the Allied troops at Tulgas 87 The Canadian defenders had to withdraw six miles to the next village where attacks were eventually beaten off after heavy casualties The capture of Tulgas by the Bolsheviks meant that the Reds now held the left bank of the Dvina 10 miles behind the Allied line 88 On 30 April the Bolshevik flotilla appeared 29 river craft and together with 5 500 troops attacked the 550 total Allied troops in three area 87 Only superior artillery saved the Allied forces with the river flotilla eventually withdrawing Tulgas was then eventually recaptured 87 In May and June the units of the original British force which had arrived in Archangel in August and September 1918 finally received orders for home 89 In early June the French troops were withdrawn and the Royal Marines detachment was also sent home followed by all Canadian troops after it was requested that they be repatriated All remaining American troops also left for home 90 The Serbian troops perhaps Maynard s best infantry fighters became unreliable as others withdrew around them 91 By 3 July the Italian company was on the verge of mutiny as its men were seriously disaffected with their continued presence in Russia so long after the Armistice In mid July the two companies of American railway troops were also withdrawn The Royal Marines unit had been expressing its dissatisfaction with being forced to stay in Russia after the Armistice since February and had been openly demanding to their commanding officers that they be sent home Threatening letters were sent to their officers stating that if they were not repatriated the men would commandeer the first train going to Murmansk The men became increasingly unwilling to participate in serious military action throughout 1919 92 The French and American troops stationed in the north were similarly reluctant to fight and French troops in Archangel refused to take part in any action that was not merely defensive 93 During June small naval battles occurred on Lake Onega between Allied and Bolshevik ships The Bolshevik forces were completely taken by surprise when British seaplanes emerged and attacked The settlement of Kartashi was captured during the month 94 Despite being told when volunteering that they were only to be used for defensive purposes plans were made in June to use the men of the North Russian Relief Force in a new offensive aimed at capturing the key city of Kotlas and linking up with Kolchak s White forces in Siberia 95 The villages of Topsa and Troitsa were captured in anticipation of this action with 150 Bolsheviks being killed and 450 being captured 96 However with Kolchak s forces being pushed back rapidly the Kotlas offensive was cancelled 97 In early July 1919 another White unit under British command mutinied and killed its British officers with 100 men then deserting to the Bolsheviks 98 Another White mutiny was foiled later in the month by Australian troops 99 On 20 July 3 000 White troops in the key city of Onega mutinied and handed over the city to the Bolsheviks The loss of the city was a significant blow to the Allied forces as it was the only overland route available for the transfer of supplies and men between the Murmansk and Arkhangel theatres a particularly vital line of communication during the months of the year when the White Sea froze over rendering Arkhangel inaccessible to maritime traffic 100 This event led to the British losing all remaining trust for the Whites and contributed to the desire to withdraw 100 Attempts were soon made to retake the city but in a failed attack in late July the British had to force detachments of White forces to land at gunpoint in the city since they were adamant that they would not take part in any fighting 101 On one Allied ship 5 Bolshevik prisoners captured in battle even managed to temporarily subdue the 200 White Russians on board and take control of the ship with little resistance 102 Despite the Allied setbacks a battalion of marines the 6th Royal Marine Light Infantry was sent to assist the British at the end of July 103 Final offensives EditThe final two months on the Dvina front August and September 1919 would see some of the fiercest fighting between British and Red Army troops of the Civil War 104 In August a major offensive was launched along the Dvina to try and strike a blow at Bolshevik morale and to increase the morale of the White forces before a withdrawal 104 As part of this an attack was made on the village of Gorodok Before the attack began 6 RAF DH 9s 5 DH 9As and two Sopwith Snipes dropped three tonnes of bombs on the village in two successful raids and on 10 August British planes also dropped bombs on other Bolshevik held villages 105 During the attack 750 Bolshevik prisoners were taken and one battery was found to have been manned by German troops 106 The village of Seltso was also attacked but a strong Bolshevik defence halted any British progress 107 However the villages of Kochamika Jinta Lipovets and Zaniskaya were captured with little resistance In total the offensive led to the deaths of around 700 Reds and was considered a success 108 There was also action on the railway front south of Archangel at this time and a raid on the settlement of Alenxandrova took place on 19 August 109 On 24 August there was an aerial dogfight between a British RE8 aircraft and two Bolshevik Nieuport fighters over the Pinega River with the British plane only returning safely when the observer flew 100 miles back to base whilst his pilot lay unconscious 109 On 10 September the city of Onega was retaken 110 The American River Force monitors made a final successful engagement with the Bolshevik gunboats in September 1919 However two monitors HMS M25 and HMS M27 unable to sail downstream when the river s levels dropped were scuttled on 16 September 1919 to prevent their capture by Bolshevik forces A final offensive on the Murmansk front was launched by the Allied forces in September aimed at destroying the Bolshevik forces to leave the White forces in a good position after the planned withdrawal 111 On 28 August 1918 the British 6th Royal Marine Light Infantry Battalion was ordered to seize the village of Koikori Kojkary from the Bolsheviks as part of a wide offensive into East Karelia to secure the British withdrawal to Murmansk Serbian forces supported the British as they attempted to push on to the Bolshevik village 111 The attack on the village was disorganized and resulted in three Marines killed and 18 wounded including the battalion commander who had ineffectually led the attack himself 112 A week later B and C companies led this time by an army major made a second attempt to take Koikori while D company was involved in an attack on the village of Ussuna The British were again repulsed at Koikori the army major was killed and both Marine company commanders wounded D company was also beaten off by Bolshevik forces around Ussuna with the death of the battalion adjutant killed by sniper fire 112 The next morning faced with the prospect of another attack on the village one Marine company refused to obey orders and withdrew themselves to a nearby friendly village As a result 93 men from the battalion were court martialled 13 were sentenced to death and others received substantial sentences of hard labour In December 1919 the Government under pressure from several MPs revoked the sentence of death and considerably reduced the sentences of all the convicted men 113 The Serbs and White Russian forces attacked again on 11 and 14 September but these attacks also failed 114 However the British did manage to reach the Nurmis river by 18 September with 9 000 troops including 6 000 White Russians participating in this final offensive 114 On 6 September the commanding officer of the 2nd Battalion Hampshire Regiment Lieutenant Colonel Sherwood Kelly published an open letter in the Daily Express lambasting the North Russia campaign stating that the volunteer British troops were being used for offensive actions despite being told that they wouldn t be and that the regional White puppet government rested on no basis of public confidence and support 115 The letter contributed to the British public and soldiers desire for a withdrawal from North Russia 116 During September a couple of Bolshevik attacks were launched on Bolshie Ozerki and although the first was repelled 750 Red troops advanced on the village on 15 September and attacked from all sides inflicting heavy casualties on the British and Allied defenders 117 On 22 September with the Allied withdrawal already ongoing a British detachment from the Royal Scots was sent by river to Kandalaksha on four fishing boats to stop sabotage operations carried out by Finnish Bolsheviks against the railway there The British party was ambushed even before landing and suffered heavy casualties with 13 men killed and 4 wounded Consequently the unopposed Bolsheviks destroyed a number of bridges delaying the evacuation for a time 114 67 One of the fatalities a Private from Ormesby Yorkshire who succumbed to his injuries on 26 September was the last British servicemen to die in action in Northern Russia 67 Withdrawal of British troops Edit nbsp Captured British Mark V tank in Arkhangelsk 2006 An international policy to support the White Russians and in newly appointed Secretary of State for War Winston Churchill s words to strangle at birth the Bolshevik State became increasingly unpopular in Britain In January 1919 the Daily Express was echoing public opinion when paraphrasing Bismarck it exclaimed the frozen plains of Eastern Europe are not worth the bones of a single grenadier From April 1919 the inability to hold the flanks and mutinies in the ranks of the White Russian forces caused the Allied Powers to decide to leave British officers at Shussuga had a lucky escape when their Russian gunners remained loyal A number of western military advisers were killed by White mutineers who went over to the Bolsheviks 118 The Bolsheviks had no intention of allowing the British to leave without a fight and resumed their attacks on the British positions on 6 September 119 Fighting took place in the villages of Kodema Ivanovskaya Puchega and Chudinova where 81 Reds were killed and 99 taken prisoner 119 In total 163 Reds were killed in their offensive compared to one fatality on the side of the British 120 Over the next week the Bolsheviks continued attacking the British lines and moved forward very quickly and there were clashes at Pless and Shushunga The attackers were subsequently identified as a combined force of civilian partisans and deserters who had mutinied and gone over to the Bolsheviks from the British lines on 7 July 121 By this point British troops had started withdrawing to Archangel in order to prepare themselves for the evacuation of North Russia 122 The British War Office sent General Henry Rawlinson to North Russia to assume command of the evacuation out of both Archangelsk and Murmansk General Rawlinson arrived on August 11 On the morning of September 27 1919 the last Allied troops departed from Archangelsk and on October 12 Murmansk was abandoned Archangelsk Railway and withdrawal of US troops EditMinor operations to keep open a line of withdrawal against the 7th Red Army as far south as Lake Onega and Yomtsa River to the east took place along the Arkhangelsk Railway with an armoured train manned by the Americans The last major battle fought by the Americans before their departure took place at Bolshie Ozerki from 31 March through 4 April 1919 The US appointed Brigadier General Wilds P Richardson as commander of US forces to organize the safe withdrawal from Arkhangelsk Richardson and his staff arrived in Archangelsk on April 17 1919 By the end of June the majority of the US forces was heading home and by September 1919 the last US soldier of the Expedition had also left Northern Russia Aftermath EditThe White Russian Northern Army was left to face the Red Army alone Poorly disciplined they were no match for the Red Army and quickly collapsed when the Bolsheviks launched a counter offensive in December 1919 Many soldiers capitulated and the remnants of the Army were evacuated from Arkhangelsk in February 1920 On February 21 1920 the Bolsheviks entered Arkhangelsk and on March 13 1920 they took Murmansk 123 The White Northern Region Government ceased to exist White Northern Russian commander Eugene Miller held out to the end fleeing with a number of other White officers including Grigory Chaplin in an icebreaker when the Reds entered Archangel They fled to France and Miller was later captured by the Bolsheviks and executed in 1939 124 Legacy EditIn 1927 the Constructivist styled Monument to the Victims of the Intervention was raised in Murmansk on the tenth anniversary of the Russian Revolution It is still standing as of 2023 125 The campaign in fiction EditTwo fictional television characters fought with the British Expeditionary Force Jack Ford in When the Boat Comes In as an intelligence officer in Murmansk and Albert Steptoe in Steptoe and Son The campaign features in the Alexander Fullerton novels Look to the Wolves and Bloody Sunset The 1990 film Archangel is a surrealistic drama set in 1919 Archangel during the war In John Lawton s novel Then We Take Berlin 2013 Countess Rada Lyubova mentions from the novel s present in post WW II Britain that she had turned back at the British lines near Archangel such folly and had crossed Siberia with the remnants of the Czech Legion not many ever saw home again See also EditAmerican Expeditionary Force Siberia Aunus expedition Australian contribution to the Allied Intervention in Russia 1918 1919 British campaign in the Baltic 1918 1919 Estonian War of Independence Murmansk Legion Siberian intervention Southern Russia intervention Viena expeditionNotes Edit 590 in Murmansk sector 274 in Archangel sector The British 6th Battalion Royal Marines Light Infantry RMLI was scratched together from a company of the Royal Marine Artillery and companies from each of the three naval port depots Very few of their officers had seen any land fighting Their original purpose had been only to deploy to Flensburg to supervise a vote to decide whether northern Schleswig Holstein should remain German or be given to Denmark Many of the Marines were less than 19 years old it would have been unusual to send them overseas Others were ex prisoners of war who had only recently returned from Germany and had no home leave There was outrage when on short notice the 6th Battalion was shipped to Murmansk Russia on the Arctic Ocean to assist in the withdrawal of British forces Still not expecting to have to fight the battalion was ordered forward under army command to hold certain outposts Two companies of the 45th Battalion and one of the machine gun companies were composed mainly of Australian volunteers who were veterans of the Western Front about 200 300 former members of the Australian Imperial Force References Edit Mawdsley p 91 Mawdsley p 251 Wright 2017 pp 526 528 530 535 a b c House 2019 p 48 sfn error no target CITEREFHouse2019 help Wright 2017 p 528 House 2019 p 24 sfn error no target CITEREFHouse2019 help Kinvig 2006 p 24 Wright 2017 pp 528 529 531 House 2019 p 26 sfn error no target CITEREFHouse2019 help Kinvig 2006 amp p 315 sfn error no target CITEREFKinvig2006p 315 help House 2019 p 53 sfn error no target CITEREFHouse2019 help a b c d Mawdsley 2007 p 91 President Wilson s Aide Memoire on the subject of military intervention in Russia pbma grobbel org Retrieved 2016 12 06 Davis Donald Trani Eugene 2002 The First Cold War The Legacy of Woodrow Wilson in U S Soviet Relations University of Missouri Press p 139 ISBN 9780826213884 Retrieved 12 December 2017 Poole a b Wright 2017 p 526 Wright 2017 p 122 Wright 2017 p 125 Wright 2017 p 29 Wright 2017 p 35 Wright 2017 p 36 a b c Wright 2017 p 38 Wright 2017 p 43 a b c d e f Wright 2017 p 527 a b Millman 1998 p 312 Wright 2017 p 143 British Military Aviation in 1918 Part 2 Rafmuseum org 1918 06 06 Archived from the original on 2012 06 30 Retrieved 2012 04 28 a b Bowyer Chaz 1988 RAF Operations 1918 1938 London William Kimber p 38 ISBN 0718306716 a b Wright 2017 p 530 Wright 2017 p 535 Wright 2017 p 532 Robert L Willett Russian Sideshow Washington D C Brassey s Inc 2003 p 267 Wright 2017 p 28 Wright 2017 p 47 Munt 2015 pp 21 24 Le Bataillon de la Legion Etrangere de Russie du Nord in French Amicale des Anciens de la Legion Etrangere de Paris Retrieved 18 November 2018 Williamson Howard J 2018 The Military Medal Awarded to The Allied Armies by The British Government privately published by Anne Williamson ISBN 978 1999672713 a b Wright 2017 p page needed Kinvig 2006 p 22 Kinvig 2006 p 26 Kinvig 2006 p 115 Wright 2017 p 37 Kinvig p 29 David S Foglesong 2014 Fighting But Not At War America s Secret War Against Bolshevism U S Intervention in the Russian Civil War 1917 1920 UNC Press Books ISBN 978 1469611136 Kinvig 2006 p 34 Kinvig 2006 p 35 Kinvig p 38 Occupation of Archangel Newcastle Morning Herald and Miners Advocate 6 August 1918 Retrieved 12 December 2017 Allied Troops at Archangel The Border Morning Mail and Riverina Times 17 August 1918 Retrieved 12 December 2017 a b Wright 2017 p 158 Kinvig 2006 p 40 Wright 2017 p 151 a b c A Michael Brander Famous Regiments Series The Royal Scots The Royal Regiment London Leo Cooper 1976 ISBN 0850521831 pp 75 78 Kinvig 2006 p 42 a b Wright 2017 p 145 Wright 2017 p 147 Wright 2017 p 153 a b Wright 2017 p 160 Balbirnie 2016 pp 131 132 a b Kinvig 2006 p 123 Wright 2017 p 148 Wright 2017 p 149 Wright 2017 p 213 a b c d e Wright 2017 p 214 Kinvig 2006 p 121 Wright 2017 pp 43 50 Kinvig p 265 a b c d Wright 2017 p 131 a b Wright 2017 p 190 Kinvig 2006 pp 125 126 Kinvig 2006 p 125 Wright 2017 pp 193 194 Wright 2017 p 215 Wright 2017 p 196 Wright 2017 p 165 Wright 2017 pp 166 167 a b Wright 2017 p 167 Wright 2017 p 168 a b Balbirnie 2016 p 130 Wright 2017 pp 51 56 Wright 2017 pp 62 66 Mawdsley 2007 p 257 Kinvig 2006 pp 173 174 Kinvig 2006 p 124 a b Kinvig 2006 pp 180 181 Wright 2017 p 218 Wright 2017 pp 223 225 a b c Kinvig 2006 p 185 Wright 2017 p 216 Wright 2017 p 217 Wright 2017 p 229 Kinvig 2006 p 178 Wright 2017 pp 67 70 Wright 2017 p 129 Wright 2017 pp 77 79 Kinvig 2006 pp 191 192 Kinvig 2006 p 193 Kinvig 2006 p 198 Balbirnie 2016 p 136 Wright 2017 p 174 a b Balbirnie 2016 p 142 Wright 2017 p 170 Wright 2017 p 171 Kinvig 2006 p 255 a b Wright 2017 p 253 Wright 2017 pp 256 257 Kinvig 2006 pp 241 242 Wright 2017 p 264 Wright 2017 p 278 a b Wright 2017 p 177 Kinvig 2006 p 247 a b Kinvig 2006 pp 258 259 a b Kinvig pp 259 262 Obituary Brigadier Roy Smith Hill The Times August 21 1996 a b c Kinvig 2006 p 265 Wright 2017 pp 178 179 Wright 2017 pp 178 180 Wright 2017 pp 188 189 Grey Jeffery 1999 A Military History of Australia Second ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 12 17 ISBN 0521644836 a b Wright 2017 p 286 Wright 2017 p 287 Wright 2017 p 288 Wright 2017 pp 291 292 Mawdsley 2007 p 255 Wright 2017 p 295 Nikitin Vadim 30 November 2017 Diary London Review of Books 39 23 Retrieved 2 December 2017 Bibliography EditBalbirnie Steven 2016 07 02 A Bad Business British Responses to Mutinies Among Local Forces in Northern Russia Revolutionary Russia 29 2 129 148 doi 10 1080 09546545 2016 1243613 ISSN 0954 6545 S2CID 152050937 Baron Nick 2007 The King of Karelia Col P J Woods and the British intervention in North Russia 1918 1919 a history and memoir London Francis Boutle Publishers ISBN 978 1 90 342732 3 Beevor Antony 2022 Russia Revolution and Civil War 1917 1921 London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson ISBN 978 1 474 61014 8 Brough Ray 1991 White Russian awards to British amp Commonwealth servicemen during the Allied intervention in Russia 1918 1920 London Tom Donovan ISBN 978 1 87 108508 2 Bujak Philip 2008 Undefeated The Extraordinary Life amp Death of Lt Col Jack Sherwood Kelly VC DSO CMG Forster Books Droulin Laurent 2016 2012 Corps expeditionnaire francais en Russie du Nord 1918 1919 ePUB in French Auto Edition ISBN 978 2 9542358 0 6 via Fnac House John M et al The Russian Expeditions 1917 1920 1st ed vol 10 10 Center of Military History 2019 Jackson Robert 1972 At War With The Bolsheviks London a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Kinvig Clifford 2006 Churchill s Crusade The British Invasion of Russia 1918 1920 London Hambledon Continuum ISBN 1 85285 477 4 Mawdsley Evan 2007 The Russian Civil War Pegasus Books ISBN 978 1 933648 15 6 Millman Brock 1998 The Problem with Generals Military Observers and the Origins of the Intervention in Russia and Persia 1917 18 Journal of Contemporary History 33 2 291 320 doi 10 1177 002200949803300207 S2CID 154104534 via Sage Publications Munt Franck 2015 Historique du 2e Regiment d Artillerie Coloniale PDF in French Tapuscrit Ecole de l Artillerie Transcription integrale Association des officiers de reserve des Pyrenees Orientales via tableaudhonneur free fr Quinlivian Peter 2006 Forgotten Valour The Story of Arthur Sullivan VC Sydney a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Willett Jr Robert L 2005 Russian Sideshow America s Undeclared War 1918 1920 Potomac Books ISBN 1 57488 706 8 Wright Damien 2017 Churchill s Secret War with Lenin British and Commonwealth Military Intervention in the Russian Civil War 1918 20 Solihull Helion ISBN 978 1 911512 10 3 External links EditAmerican Polar Bears the American Expeditionary Force North Russia Polar Bear Memorial Association An account of a Royal Navy trip to North Russia on a hospital ship June October 1919 Foreign Command of US Forces 1900 1993 Russian Bolshevik Navy 1919 files North Russian Expeditionary Force 1919 The Journal and Photographs of Yeoman of Signals George Smith Royal Navy The History of the American Expedition Fighting the Bolsheviki Campaigning in North Russia 1918 1919 The Evacuation of Northern Russia 1919 1920 Polar Bear Expedition Digital Collections Housed at the Bentley Historical Library More than 50 individual collections of primary source material including diaries maps correspondence photos ephemera printed materials and a film Original movie clip of US Army Allied War in Russia 1918 22 Retrieved from https en 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