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Battle of Pozières

Battle of Pozières
Part of the Battle of the Somme during the First World War

Battle of the Somme 1 July – 18 November 1916
Date23 July – 3 September 1916
Location50°01′N 2°48′E / 50.017°N 2.800°E / 50.017; 2.800Coordinates: 50°01′N 2°48′E / 50.017°N 2.800°E / 50.017; 2.800
Result British victory
Belligerents

 British Empire

 German Empire
Commanders and leaders
Douglas Haig
Hubert Gough
William Birdwood
Fritz von Below
Max von Boehn
Strength
12 divisions
Casualties and losses
I Anzac Corps c.  23,000
Pozières
class=notpageimage|
Pozières, a commune in the Somme department of Picardy in northern France

The Battle of Pozières (23 July – 3 September 1916) took place in northern France around the village of Pozières, during the Battle of the Somme. The costly fighting ended with the British in possession of the plateau north and east of the village, in a position to menace the German bastion of Thiepval from the rear. The Australian official historian Charles Bean wrote that Pozières ridge "is more densely sown with Australian sacrifice than any other place on earth".

Prelude

The village of Pozières, on the AlbertBapaume road, lies atop a ridge approximately in the centre of what was the British sector of the Somme battlefield. Close by the village is the highest point on the battlefield.[a] Pozières was an important German defensive position; the fortified village was an outpost to the second defensive trench system, which had become known to the British as the O.G. (Old German) lines. This German second line extended from beyond Mouquet Farm in the north, ran behind Pozières to the east, then south towards the Bazentin ridge and the villages of Bazentin le Petit and Longueval. On 14 July, during the Battle of Bazentin Ridge, this southern section of the German second line was captured by the British Fourth Army of Lieutenant General Sir Henry Rawlinson. The possibility of "rolling up" the German second line by turning north now presented itself if Pozières could be captured.[3]

The British Commander-in-Chief, General Sir Douglas Haig, lacked the ammunition to immediately execute another broad-front attack after 14 July.[4] Believing that Pozières and Thiepval would become untenable for the Germans as the British continued their eastward momentum, Haig ordered Rawlinson to concentrate on the centre between High Wood and Delville Wood as well as the villages of Guillemont and Ginchy. The plan was to maintain the pressure and take Pozières by a "steady, methodical, step-by-step advance".[5] Between 13 and 17 July, the Fourth Army made four small attacks against Pozières with no success and high casualties. In this period the village was subjected to a heavy bombardment and was reduced to rubble. On two occasions the attacking infantry got into the trench that looped around the south and western edge of the village, known as "Pozières trench" but were driven out both times. Attempts to get east of the village by advancing up the O.G. Lines also failed.

Battle

Capture of Pozières

 
The "Gibraltar" bunker, Pozières, in late August. A fatigue party laden with sandbags heads for the fighting at Mouquet Farm.

Rawlinson planned to deliver another attack on a broad front on 18 July, involving six divisions between the Albert–Bapaume road in the north and Guillemont in the south. Haig decided to transfer responsibility for Pozières to the Reserve Army of Lieutenant General Hubert Gough which had been holding the line north of the road since shortly after the opening of the offensive on 1 July. The attack was postponed until the night of 22–23 July. To Gough's army were attached the three Australian divisions of I Anzac Corps, which had begun moving from the Armentières sector. The Australian 1st Division reached Albert on 18 July and despite the postponement of the offensive, Gough, who had a reputation as a "thruster", told the division's commander, Major General Harold Walker, "I want you to go in and attack Pozières tomorrow night". Walker, an experienced English officer who had led the division since Gallipoli, would have none of it and insisted he would attack only after adequate preparation. Consequently, the attack on Pozières once more fell in line with the Fourth Army's attack on the night of 22–23 July.[6]

The plan called for the Australian 1st Division to attack Pozières from the south, advancing in three stages half an hour apart, while north of the Albert–Bapaume road, the 48th (South Midland) Division (X Corps), would attack the German trenches west of the village.[6] The village and surrounding area was defended by elements of the 117th Division. Early on 22 July the Australian 9th Battalion attempted to improve its position by advancing up the O.G. Lines towards the road but was repulsed. The preparation for the attack involved a thorough bombardment of the village and the O.G. Lines lasting several days. The bombardment included phosgene and tear gas. The infantry were scheduled to attack at 12:30 a.m. on 23 July, with the Australian 1st and 3rd Brigades. The infantry crept into no man's land, close behind the bombardment and when it lifted the German trenches were rushed. The first stage took the Pozières trench that ringed the village to the south.[7]

The second stage saw the Australians advance to the edge of the village, amongst what remained of the back gardens of the houses lining the Albert–Bapaume road. The third stage brought the line to the Albert–Bapaume road. The few survivors from the German garrison retreated to the northern edge of the village or into the O.G. Lines to the east. It was also intended that the O.G. Lines would be captured as far as the road but here the Australians failed, partly due to strong resistance from the German defenders in deep dugouts and machine gun nests and partly due to the confusion of a night attack on featureless terrain. The weeks of bombardment had reduced the ridge to a field of craters and it was virtually impossible to distinguish where a trench line had run. The failure to take the O.G. Lines made the eastern end of Pozières vulnerable and so the Australians formed a flank short of their objectives. On the western edge of the village, the Australians captured a German bunker known as "Gibraltar".[b] During 23 July, some Australians went prospecting across the road, captured a number of Germans and with minimal effort occupied more of the village. That night the 8th Battalion of the Australian 2nd Brigade, which had been in reserve, moved up and secured the rest of the village. The attack of the 48th Division on the German trenches west of Pozières achieved some success but the main attack by the Fourth Army between Pozières and Guillemont was a costly failure.

Defence of Pozières

 
Road to Pozières: In the distance the village of Contalmaison is under German shellfire.

Success on the Somme came at a cost which at times seemed to surpass the cost of failure, and for the Australians, Pozières was such a case. As a consequence of being the sole British gain on 23 July, Pozières became a focus of attention for the Germans. As a critical element of their defensive system, the German command ordered that it be retaken at all costs. Three attempts were made on 23 July but each was broken up by the British artillery or swept away by machine gun fire. Communication was as difficult for the Germans as it was for the British, and it was not until 7:00 a.m. 24 July that they discovered that Pozières had been captured. With British activity now declining elsewhere on its front, the German IV Corps opposite Pozières, was able to concentrate most of its artillery against the village and its approaches. Initially the bombardment was methodical and relentless. The western approach to the village, which led from Casualty Corner near the head of Sausage Valley, received such a concentration of shellfire that it was thereafter known as "Dead Man's Road". The German bombardment intensified on 25 July, in preparation for another counter-attack.[9]

The German IX Corps relieved IV Corps and the commander cancelled the planned counter-attack, choosing to concentrate on the defence of the O.G. Lines, which were the next objective of the British. The bombardment reached a climax on 26 July and by 5:00 p.m. the Australians, believing an attack was imminent, appealed for a counter-barrage. The artillery of I Anzac Corps, II Corps and the guns of the two neighbouring British corps replied. This in turn led the Germans to believe the Australians were preparing to attack and so they increased their fire yet again. It was not until midnight that the shelling subsided. At its peak, the German bombardment of Pozières was the equal of anything yet experienced on the Western Front and far surpassed the worst shelling previously endured by an Australian division. The Australian 1st Division suffered 5,285 casualties on its first tour of Pozières. When the survivors were relieved on 27 July, one observer said

They looked like men who had been in Hell... drawn and haggard and so dazed that they appeared to be walking in a dream and their eyes looked glassy and starey.

— E. J. Rule[10]

The O.G. Lines (Old German Lines)

On 24 July, once Pozières had been secured, General Gough pushed for immediate moves against the O.G. Lines north and east of the village. The first task was to take the lines up to the Albert–Bapaume road; the original objectives which had not been captured. Attacking in the dark, only the Australian 5th Battalion found either of the O.G. trenches and it was counter-attacked by the German 18th Reserve Division. Simultaneously on the Australian's right, the British 1st Division made an attempt to capture Munster Alley, the section of the Switch Line where it intersected the O.G. Lines. A tumultuous bomb fight developed but only a small section of trench was held.

Before it was withdrawn, the Australian 1st Division had attempted to prepare a jumping-off line for the assault on the O.G. Lines. The Australian 2nd Division took over the sector on 27 July and General Gough, eager for progress, pressed for an immediate attack. The division's commander, General Gordon Legge, lacked the experience and confidence of General Walker and succumbed to pressure from Gough. On the night of 28–29 July, in conditions far less favourable than those experienced by the 1st Division on the night of 22–23 July, the 2nd Division was expected to attack. The remorseless German bombardment made effective preparations virtually impossible. The dust raised by the shelling prevented the Australian artillery observers from directing their field guns which were tasked with cutting the barbed wire entanglements. An attack by the British 23rd Division on Munster Alley dragged in the Australian 5th Brigade — the ensuing bomb fight saw the British and Australian infantry expend over 15,000 grenades.[11] The main attack went ahead, scheduled to start at 12:15 a.m. on 29 July but the Australian 7th Brigade was late in reaching its start line and its movement was detected by the German defenders; when the attack commenced, the Australians were met by a hail of machine gun fire. South of the road the 5th Brigade remained pinned down, unable to even get started. On their left, north of the road, the 7th Brigade encountered uncut wire. On the northern flank some minor progress was made by the 6th Brigade but everywhere else the attack was a failure. Including the attack and the preceding day of preparation the 2nd Division lost over 3,500 men; the 7th Brigade had to be withdrawn to reserve, so great were its losses.

General Haig was disparaging of the division's failure, telling Lieutenant General William Birdwood, the I Anzac Corps commander, "You're not fighting Bashi-Bazouks now." General Legge and the I Anzac staff resolved to do the job properly. To avoid the confusion of a night advance, the plan was to attack at 9:15 p.m. just before dark at which time the crest of the ridge and the mound of the Pozières windmill would still be discernible. However, to attack at dusk meant assembling by day which was only possible to do in the protection of trenches. Therefore, a system of approach and assembly trenches had to be dug at night. Whenever the Germans detected digging parties, they mistook them for troops assembling to attack and called down a barrage. Originally the attack was to be made at dusk on 2 August but the trenches were as yet incomplete, the digging either being disrupted or the completed trenches demolished by shellfire. The attack was first postponed to 3 August and then to 4 August when the trenches were finally deemed ready. This careful planning and preparation delivered success and when the 2nd Division went in, both O.G. Lines were captured. South of and astride the Albert–Bapaume Road the O.G. Lines had been so thoroughly obliterated by prolonged shelling that the Australians ended up advancing beyond their objectives. From their vantage in the O.G. Lines on the eastern edge of the Pozières ridge, the Australians now looked over green countryside, the village of Courcelette close by and the woods around Bapaume 5 miles (8.0 km) distant. The German commander ordered "At any price Hill 160 Pozières ridge must be recovered."

Final counter-attack

By 5 August the brigades of the 2nd Australian Division were exhausted and were to be relieved by the 4th Australian Division. While the relief was underway on the night of 5–6 August the Australians were subjected to an extreme bombardment, because the salient they occupied could be shelled by the Germans from all directions, including from Thiepval which lay to the rear. On the morning of 6 August, a German counter-attack tried to approach the O.G. Lines but was met by machine gun fire and forced to dig in. The bombardment continued through the day, by the end of which most of the 2nd Division had been relieved. From its twelve days in the line, the division had suffered 6,848 casualties. At 4:00 a.m. on 7 August, shortly before dawn, the Germans launched their final counter-attack. On a front of 400 yards (370 m) they overran the thinly occupied O.G. Lines, catching most of the Australians in shelters in the old German dugouts and advanced towards Pozières. For the Australians, the crisis had arrived. At this moment, Lieutenant Albert Jacka, who had won the Victoria Cross at Gallipoli, emerged from a dugout where he and seven men of his platoon had been isolated, and charged the German line from the rear. His example inspired other Australians scattered across the plateau to join the action and a fierce, hand-to-hand fight developed. Jacka was badly wounded but as support arrived from the flanks, the Australians gained the advantage and most of the surviving Germans were captured. No more attempts to retake Pozières were made.

Aftermath

Analysis

 
The view from Centre Way trench towards Mouquet Farm, August.
 
The hill of the windmill.

Since taking over the Pozières sector, Gough had planned to drive a wedge behind (east of) the German fortress of Thiepval. Having secured Pozières and the neighbouring section of the O.G. Lines, the Reserve Army attacked northwards along the ridge towards the German strong point of Mouquet Farm which protected the rear of Thiepval. I Anzac Corps would carry the advance along the ridge and II Corps would keep in line on the left, systematically reducing the Thiepval salient. Initially the task fell to the 4th Australian Division, which had already suffered 1,000 casualties resisting the final German counter-attack. When the Australian ordeal on Pozières ridge was over in September, they were replaced by the Canadian Corps who held the sector for the remainder of the battle. The O.G. Lines east of the village became the Canadian start line for the Battle of Flers–Courcelette.

After the battle it became apparent that General Birdwood had lost much of his Gallipoli popularity through his failure to oppose Gough's impetuous desire for "quick results" and his "lack of thought" at Pozières. Soon after, Australian troops rejected his appeal to vote in favour in the 1916 Australian conscription referendum largely because of their reluctance to see additional men subjected to the horrors of piecemeal attacks.[12] The Australians had suffered as many casualties in the Battle of Pozières in six weeks as they had in eight months during the Gallipoli campaign.[13] Wilfrid Miles, the official historian, praised the initiative shown by small units of men in clearing the Germans from positions in the village but attributed much of the casualties to Australian inexperience and their "reckless daring".[14]

Casualties

In the fighting around Pozières the 48th Division suffered 2,700 casualties from 16–28 July and 2,505 more from 13 August.[15] The 1st Australian Division lost 7,700 men, the 2nd Australian Division had 8,100 casualties and the 4th Australian Division lost 7,100 men.[16] From 27 July – 13 August the 12th Division had 2,717 casualties.

Victoria Cross

See also

Notes

  1. ^ This high point was known to the Australians as "Hill 160" or "The Windmill". The Germans called it Die Windmühle after a seventeenth-century windmill that had existed on the site.[1] While the Somme terrain is only gently undulating, any slight elevation aids observation for artillery.[2]
  2. ^ The "Gibraltar Bunker" was known as Das Blockhaus by the German forces and was the only structure in the area remaining after the bombardment.[8]

Footnotes

  1. ^ Middlebrook 1971, p. 351.
  2. ^ Bean 1941, pp. 455, 465.
  3. ^ Bean 1941, p. 454.
  4. ^ Bean 1941, p. 486.
  5. ^ Bean 1941, p. 465.
  6. ^ a b Keegan 1998, p. 319.
  7. ^ Liddle 2001, pp. 78–79.
  8. ^ Miles 1992, p. 146.
  9. ^ Liddle 2001, p. 78.
  10. ^ Bean 1941, p. 599.
  11. ^ Bean 1941, p. 613.
  12. ^ Liddell Hart 1973, p. 327.
  13. ^ Cave & Barker 2004, p. 43.
  14. ^ Jones 2006, p. 153.
  15. ^ Miles 1992, pp. 155, 226.
  16. ^ Bean 1941, p. 862.
  17. ^ Bean 1941, p. 575.
  18. ^ a b Miles 1992, p. 143.
  19. ^ Miles 1992, p. 154.

References

  • Bean, C. E. W. (1941) [1929]. The Australian Imperial Force in France: 1916. Official History of Australia in the War of 1914–1918. Vol. III (12th ed.). OCLC 271462387. Retrieved 5 August 2013.
  • Cave, N.; Barker, M. (2004). Thiepval Exhibition Centre Guidebook (1st ed.). London: Frank Sanderson Publishing. OCLC 819812656.
  • Jones, H. A. (2006) [1928]. The War in the Air: Being the Story of the Part played in the Great War by the Royal Air Force. Vol. II (Naval & Military Press ed.). Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 1-84734-205-1.
  • Keegan, J. (1998). The First World War. London: Random House. ISBN 0-09-180178-8.
  • Liddell Hart, B. H. (1973) [1970]. History of the First World War (3rd ed.). London: Book Club Associates. OCLC 819218074.
  • Liddle, P. H. (2001). The 1916 Battle of the Somme: A Reappraisal. Hertfordshire: Wordsworth. ISBN 1-84022-240-9 – via Archive Foundation.
  • Middlebrook, M. (1971). The First Day on the Somme (2nd ed.). London: Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-139071-9.
  • Miles, W. (1992) [1938]. Military Operations France and Belgium, 1916: 2nd July 1916 to the End of the Battles of the Somme. History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence. Vol. II (Imperial War Museum & Battery Press ed.). London: Macmillan. ISBN 0-901627-76-3.

Further reading

  • Bean, C. E. W. (1946). Anzac to Amiens: A Shorter History of the Australian Fighting Services in the First World War. Canberra: Australian War Memorial. OCLC 816503198.
  • Beckett, I. F. W. (2007). The Great War, 1914–1918 (2nd ed.). Harlow: Pearson Education. ISBN 978-1-4058-1252-8.
  • Gough, H. de la P. (1968) [1931]. The Fifth Army (repr. Cedric Chivers ed.). London: Hodder & Stoughton. OCLC 59766599.
  • Hampton, M. E. (2014). 1st Anzac Corps and the Battle of Pozières Ridge, 1916 (PDF) (PhD thesis). School of History and Politics, University of Adelaide. OCLC 964934243. Retrieved 16 August 2017.
  • Hart, P. (2006). The Somme. London: Cassell. ISBN 978-0-304-36735-1.
  • Histories of Two Hundred and Fifty-One Divisions of the German Army which Participated in the War (1914–1918) (online ed.). Washington: United States Army, American Expeditionary Forces, Intelligence Section. 1920. ISBN 978-5-87296-917-4. Retrieved 12 July 2013.
  • Lossberg, Fritz von (2017). Lossberg's War: The World War I Memoirs of a German Chief of Staff. Foreign Military Studies. Translated by Zabecki, D. T.; Biedekarken, D. J. Lexington, KY: University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 978-0-8131-6980-4. Translation of Meine Tätigkeit im Weltkriege 1914–1918 (Berlin, Verlag Ernst Siegfried Mittler und Sohn 1939)
  • Philpott, W. (2009). Bloody Victory: The Sacrifice on the Somme and the Making of the Twentieth Century (1st ed.). London: Little, Brown. ISBN 978-1-4087-0108-9.
  • Prior, R.; Wilson, T. (2005). The Somme (1st ed.). New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-10694-7 – via Archive Foundation.
  • Renz, I.; Krumeich, G.; Hirschfeld, G. (2006). Die Deutschen an der Somme 1914–1918. Krieg, Besatzung, Verbrannte Erde [Scorched Earth: The Germans on the Somme 1914–18] (in German) (Pen & Sword ed.). Berlin: Klartext-Verlagsges. ISBN 978-1-84415-973-4.
  • Sheldon, J. (2006) [2005]. The German Army on the Somme 1914–1916 (Pen & Sword Military ed.). London: Leo Cooper. ISBN 978-1-84415-269-8.
  • Sheldon, J. (2017). Fighting the Somme: German Challenges, Dilemmas & Solutions. Barnsley: Pen & Sword Military. ISBN 978-1-47388-199-0.

External links

  • Documentary film on the Battle of Pozières on australianscreen online

battle, pozières, part, battle, somme, during, first, world, warbattle, somme, july, november, 1916date23, july, september, 1916locationpozières, somme, france50, coordinates, 800resultbritish, victorybelligerents, british, empire, australia, united, kingdom, . Battle of PozieresPart of the Battle of the Somme during the First World WarBattle of the Somme 1 July 18 November 1916Date23 July 3 September 1916LocationPozieres Somme France50 01 N 2 48 E 50 017 N 2 800 E 50 017 2 800 Coordinates 50 01 N 2 48 E 50 017 N 2 800 E 50 017 2 800ResultBritish victoryBelligerents British Empire Australia United Kingdom German EmpireCommanders and leadersDouglas Haig Hubert Gough William BirdwoodFritz von Below Max von BoehnStrength12 divisionsCasualties and lossesI Anzac Corps c 23 000Pozieresclass notpageimage Pozieres a commune in the Somme department of Picardy in northern France The Battle of Pozieres 23 July 3 September 1916 took place in northern France around the village of Pozieres during the Battle of the Somme The costly fighting ended with the British in possession of the plateau north and east of the village in a position to menace the German bastion of Thiepval from the rear The Australian official historian Charles Bean wrote that Pozieres ridge is more densely sown with Australian sacrifice than any other place on earth Contents 1 Prelude 2 Battle 2 1 Capture of Pozieres 2 2 Defence of Pozieres 2 3 The O G Lines Old German Lines 2 4 Final counter attack 3 Aftermath 3 1 Analysis 3 2 Casualties 4 Victoria Cross 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Footnotes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksPrelude EditThe village of Pozieres on the Albert Bapaume road lies atop a ridge approximately in the centre of what was the British sector of the Somme battlefield Close by the village is the highest point on the battlefield a Pozieres was an important German defensive position the fortified village was an outpost to the second defensive trench system which had become known to the British as the O G Old German lines This German second line extended from beyond Mouquet Farm in the north ran behind Pozieres to the east then south towards the Bazentin ridge and the villages of Bazentin le Petit and Longueval On 14 July during the Battle of Bazentin Ridge this southern section of the German second line was captured by the British Fourth Army of Lieutenant General Sir Henry Rawlinson The possibility of rolling up the German second line by turning north now presented itself if Pozieres could be captured 3 The British Commander in Chief General Sir Douglas Haig lacked the ammunition to immediately execute another broad front attack after 14 July 4 Believing that Pozieres and Thiepval would become untenable for the Germans as the British continued their eastward momentum Haig ordered Rawlinson to concentrate on the centre between High Wood and Delville Wood as well as the villages of Guillemont and Ginchy The plan was to maintain the pressure and take Pozieres by a steady methodical step by step advance 5 Between 13 and 17 July the Fourth Army made four small attacks against Pozieres with no success and high casualties In this period the village was subjected to a heavy bombardment and was reduced to rubble On two occasions the attacking infantry got into the trench that looped around the south and western edge of the village known as Pozieres trench but were driven out both times Attempts to get east of the village by advancing up the O G Lines also failed Battle EditCapture of Pozieres Edit The Gibraltar bunker Pozieres in late August A fatigue party laden with sandbags heads for the fighting at Mouquet Farm Rawlinson planned to deliver another attack on a broad front on 18 July involving six divisions between the Albert Bapaume road in the north and Guillemont in the south Haig decided to transfer responsibility for Pozieres to the Reserve Army of Lieutenant General Hubert Gough which had been holding the line north of the road since shortly after the opening of the offensive on 1 July The attack was postponed until the night of 22 23 July To Gough s army were attached the three Australian divisions of I Anzac Corps which had begun moving from the Armentieres sector The Australian 1st Division reached Albert on 18 July and despite the postponement of the offensive Gough who had a reputation as a thruster told the division s commander Major General Harold Walker I want you to go in and attack Pozieres tomorrow night Walker an experienced English officer who had led the division since Gallipoli would have none of it and insisted he would attack only after adequate preparation Consequently the attack on Pozieres once more fell in line with the Fourth Army s attack on the night of 22 23 July 6 The plan called for the Australian 1st Division to attack Pozieres from the south advancing in three stages half an hour apart while north of the Albert Bapaume road the 48th South Midland Division X Corps would attack the German trenches west of the village 6 The village and surrounding area was defended by elements of the 117th Division Early on 22 July the Australian 9th Battalion attempted to improve its position by advancing up the O G Lines towards the road but was repulsed The preparation for the attack involved a thorough bombardment of the village and the O G Lines lasting several days The bombardment included phosgene and tear gas The infantry were scheduled to attack at 12 30 a m on 23 July with the Australian 1st and 3rd Brigades The infantry crept into no man s land close behind the bombardment and when it lifted the German trenches were rushed The first stage took the Pozieres trench that ringed the village to the south 7 The second stage saw the Australians advance to the edge of the village amongst what remained of the back gardens of the houses lining the Albert Bapaume road The third stage brought the line to the Albert Bapaume road The few survivors from the German garrison retreated to the northern edge of the village or into the O G Lines to the east It was also intended that the O G Lines would be captured as far as the road but here the Australians failed partly due to strong resistance from the German defenders in deep dugouts and machine gun nests and partly due to the confusion of a night attack on featureless terrain The weeks of bombardment had reduced the ridge to a field of craters and it was virtually impossible to distinguish where a trench line had run The failure to take the O G Lines made the eastern end of Pozieres vulnerable and so the Australians formed a flank short of their objectives On the western edge of the village the Australians captured a German bunker known as Gibraltar b During 23 July some Australians went prospecting across the road captured a number of Germans and with minimal effort occupied more of the village That night the 8th Battalion of the Australian 2nd Brigade which had been in reserve moved up and secured the rest of the village The attack of the 48th Division on the German trenches west of Pozieres achieved some success but the main attack by the Fourth Army between Pozieres and Guillemont was a costly failure Defence of Pozieres Edit Road to Pozieres In the distance the village of Contalmaison is under German shellfire Success on the Somme came at a cost which at times seemed to surpass the cost of failure and for the Australians Pozieres was such a case As a consequence of being the sole British gain on 23 July Pozieres became a focus of attention for the Germans As a critical element of their defensive system the German command ordered that it be retaken at all costs Three attempts were made on 23 July but each was broken up by the British artillery or swept away by machine gun fire Communication was as difficult for the Germans as it was for the British and it was not until 7 00 a m 24 July that they discovered that Pozieres had been captured With British activity now declining elsewhere on its front the German IV Corps opposite Pozieres was able to concentrate most of its artillery against the village and its approaches Initially the bombardment was methodical and relentless The western approach to the village which led from Casualty Corner near the head of Sausage Valley received such a concentration of shellfire that it was thereafter known as Dead Man s Road The German bombardment intensified on 25 July in preparation for another counter attack 9 The German IX Corps relieved IV Corps and the commander cancelled the planned counter attack choosing to concentrate on the defence of the O G Lines which were the next objective of the British The bombardment reached a climax on 26 July and by 5 00 p m the Australians believing an attack was imminent appealed for a counter barrage The artillery of I Anzac Corps II Corps and the guns of the two neighbouring British corps replied This in turn led the Germans to believe the Australians were preparing to attack and so they increased their fire yet again It was not until midnight that the shelling subsided At its peak the German bombardment of Pozieres was the equal of anything yet experienced on the Western Front and far surpassed the worst shelling previously endured by an Australian division The Australian 1st Division suffered 5 285 casualties on its first tour of Pozieres When the survivors were relieved on 27 July one observer said They looked like men who had been in Hell drawn and haggard and so dazed that they appeared to be walking in a dream and their eyes looked glassy and starey E J Rule 10 The O G Lines Old German Lines Edit On 24 July once Pozieres had been secured General Gough pushed for immediate moves against the O G Lines north and east of the village The first task was to take the lines up to the Albert Bapaume road the original objectives which had not been captured Attacking in the dark only the Australian 5th Battalion found either of the O G trenches and it was counter attacked by the German 18th Reserve Division Simultaneously on the Australian s right the British 1st Division made an attempt to capture Munster Alley the section of the Switch Line where it intersected the O G Lines A tumultuous bomb fight developed but only a small section of trench was held Before it was withdrawn the Australian 1st Division had attempted to prepare a jumping off line for the assault on the O G Lines The Australian 2nd Division took over the sector on 27 July and General Gough eager for progress pressed for an immediate attack The division s commander General Gordon Legge lacked the experience and confidence of General Walker and succumbed to pressure from Gough On the night of 28 29 July in conditions far less favourable than those experienced by the 1st Division on the night of 22 23 July the 2nd Division was expected to attack The remorseless German bombardment made effective preparations virtually impossible The dust raised by the shelling prevented the Australian artillery observers from directing their field guns which were tasked with cutting the barbed wire entanglements An attack by the British 23rd Division on Munster Alley dragged in the Australian 5th Brigade the ensuing bomb fight saw the British and Australian infantry expend over 15 000 grenades 11 The main attack went ahead scheduled to start at 12 15 a m on 29 July but the Australian 7th Brigade was late in reaching its start line and its movement was detected by the German defenders when the attack commenced the Australians were met by a hail of machine gun fire South of the road the 5th Brigade remained pinned down unable to even get started On their left north of the road the 7th Brigade encountered uncut wire On the northern flank some minor progress was made by the 6th Brigade but everywhere else the attack was a failure Including the attack and the preceding day of preparation the 2nd Division lost over 3 500 men the 7th Brigade had to be withdrawn to reserve so great were its losses General Haig was disparaging of the division s failure telling Lieutenant General William Birdwood the I Anzac Corps commander You re not fighting Bashi Bazouks now General Legge and the I Anzac staff resolved to do the job properly To avoid the confusion of a night advance the plan was to attack at 9 15 p m just before dark at which time the crest of the ridge and the mound of the Pozieres windmill would still be discernible However to attack at dusk meant assembling by day which was only possible to do in the protection of trenches Therefore a system of approach and assembly trenches had to be dug at night Whenever the Germans detected digging parties they mistook them for troops assembling to attack and called down a barrage Originally the attack was to be made at dusk on 2 August but the trenches were as yet incomplete the digging either being disrupted or the completed trenches demolished by shellfire The attack was first postponed to 3 August and then to 4 August when the trenches were finally deemed ready This careful planning and preparation delivered success and when the 2nd Division went in both O G Lines were captured South of and astride the Albert Bapaume Road the O G Lines had been so thoroughly obliterated by prolonged shelling that the Australians ended up advancing beyond their objectives From their vantage in the O G Lines on the eastern edge of the Pozieres ridge the Australians now looked over green countryside the village of Courcelette close by and the woods around Bapaume 5 miles 8 0 km distant The German commander ordered At any price Hill 160 Pozieres ridge must be recovered Final counter attack Edit By 5 August the brigades of the 2nd Australian Division were exhausted and were to be relieved by the 4th Australian Division While the relief was underway on the night of 5 6 August the Australians were subjected to an extreme bombardment because the salient they occupied could be shelled by the Germans from all directions including from Thiepval which lay to the rear On the morning of 6 August a German counter attack tried to approach the O G Lines but was met by machine gun fire and forced to dig in The bombardment continued through the day by the end of which most of the 2nd Division had been relieved From its twelve days in the line the division had suffered 6 848 casualties At 4 00 a m on 7 August shortly before dawn the Germans launched their final counter attack On a front of 400 yards 370 m they overran the thinly occupied O G Lines catching most of the Australians in shelters in the old German dugouts and advanced towards Pozieres For the Australians the crisis had arrived At this moment Lieutenant Albert Jacka who had won the Victoria Cross at Gallipoli emerged from a dugout where he and seven men of his platoon had been isolated and charged the German line from the rear His example inspired other Australians scattered across the plateau to join the action and a fierce hand to hand fight developed Jacka was badly wounded but as support arrived from the flanks the Australians gained the advantage and most of the surviving Germans were captured No more attempts to retake Pozieres were made Aftermath EditAnalysis Edit The view from Centre Way trench towards Mouquet Farm August The hill of the windmill Since taking over the Pozieres sector Gough had planned to drive a wedge behind east of the German fortress of Thiepval Having secured Pozieres and the neighbouring section of the O G Lines the Reserve Army attacked northwards along the ridge towards the German strong point of Mouquet Farm which protected the rear of Thiepval I Anzac Corps would carry the advance along the ridge and II Corps would keep in line on the left systematically reducing the Thiepval salient Initially the task fell to the 4th Australian Division which had already suffered 1 000 casualties resisting the final German counter attack When the Australian ordeal on Pozieres ridge was over in September they were replaced by the Canadian Corps who held the sector for the remainder of the battle The O G Lines east of the village became the Canadian start line for the Battle of Flers Courcelette After the battle it became apparent that General Birdwood had lost much of his Gallipoli popularity through his failure to oppose Gough s impetuous desire for quick results and his lack of thought at Pozieres Soon after Australian troops rejected his appeal to vote in favour in the 1916 Australian conscription referendum largely because of their reluctance to see additional men subjected to the horrors of piecemeal attacks 12 The Australians had suffered as many casualties in the Battle of Pozieres in six weeks as they had in eight months during the Gallipoli campaign 13 Wilfrid Miles the official historian praised the initiative shown by small units of men in clearing the Germans from positions in the village but attributed much of the casualties to Australian inexperience and their reckless daring 14 Casualties Edit In the fighting around Pozieres the 48th Division suffered 2 700 casualties from 16 28 July and 2 505 more from 13 August 15 The 1st Australian Division lost 7 700 men the 2nd Australian Division had 8 100 casualties and the 4th Australian Division lost 7 100 men 16 From 27 July 13 August the 12th Division had 2 717 casualties Victoria Cross EditPrivate Thomas Cooke 8th Battalion 2nd Brigade 1st Australian Division 17 Private John Leak 9th Battalion 3rd Brigade 1st Australian Division 18 Lieutenant Arthur Blackburn 10th Battalion 3rd Brigade 1st Australian Division 18 Sergeant Claud Castleton 5th Machine Gun Company 5th Brigade 2nd Australian Division 19 See also Edit World War I portalOrder of battle for the Battle of the Somme Pozieres Memorial not a memorial to the battle but incorporating a Commonwealth War Graves Commission cemetery containing a number of those killed during it including Claud Castleton VC Notes Edit This high point was known to the Australians as Hill 160 or The Windmill The Germans called it Die Windmuhle after a seventeenth century windmill that had existed on the site 1 While the Somme terrain is only gently undulating any slight elevation aids observation for artillery 2 The Gibraltar Bunker was known as Das Blockhaus by the German forces and was the only structure in the area remaining after the bombardment 8 Footnotes Edit Middlebrook 1971 p 351 Bean 1941 pp 455 465 Bean 1941 p 454 Bean 1941 p 486 Bean 1941 p 465 a b Keegan 1998 p 319 Liddle 2001 pp 78 79 Miles 1992 p 146 Liddle 2001 p 78 Bean 1941 p 599 Bean 1941 p 613 Liddell Hart 1973 p 327 Cave amp Barker 2004 p 43 Jones 2006 p 153 Miles 1992 pp 155 226 Bean 1941 p 862 Bean 1941 p 575 a b Miles 1992 p 143 Miles 1992 p 154 References EditBean C E W 1941 1929 The Australian Imperial Force in France 1916 Official History of Australia in the War of 1914 1918 Vol III 12th ed OCLC 271462387 Retrieved 5 August 2013 Cave N Barker M 2004 Thiepval Exhibition Centre Guidebook 1st ed London Frank Sanderson Publishing OCLC 819812656 Jones H A 2006 1928 The War in the Air Being the Story of the Part played in the Great War by the Royal Air Force Vol II Naval amp Military Press ed Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 1 84734 205 1 Keegan J 1998 The First World War London Random House ISBN 0 09 180178 8 Liddell Hart B H 1973 1970 History of the First World War 3rd ed London Book Club Associates OCLC 819218074 Liddle P H 2001 The 1916 Battle of the Somme A Reappraisal Hertfordshire Wordsworth ISBN 1 84022 240 9 via Archive Foundation Middlebrook M 1971 The First Day on the Somme 2nd ed London Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 139071 9 Miles W 1992 1938 Military Operations France and Belgium 1916 2nd July 1916 to the End of the Battles of the Somme History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence Vol II Imperial War Museum amp Battery Press ed London Macmillan ISBN 0 901627 76 3 Further reading EditBean C E W 1946 Anzac to Amiens A Shorter History of the Australian Fighting Services in the First World War Canberra Australian War Memorial OCLC 816503198 Beckett I F W 2007 The Great War 1914 1918 2nd ed Harlow Pearson Education ISBN 978 1 4058 1252 8 Gough H de la P 1968 1931 The Fifth Army repr Cedric Chivers ed London Hodder amp Stoughton OCLC 59766599 Hampton M E 2014 1st Anzac Corps and the Battle of Pozieres Ridge 1916 PDF PhD thesis School of History and Politics University of Adelaide OCLC 964934243 Retrieved 16 August 2017 Hart P 2006 The Somme London Cassell ISBN 978 0 304 36735 1 Histories of Two Hundred and Fifty One Divisions of the German Army which Participated in the War 1914 1918 online ed Washington United States Army American Expeditionary Forces Intelligence Section 1920 ISBN 978 5 87296 917 4 Retrieved 12 July 2013 Lossberg Fritz von 2017 Lossberg s War The World War I Memoirs of a German Chief of Staff Foreign Military Studies Translated by Zabecki D T Biedekarken D J Lexington KY University Press of Kentucky ISBN 978 0 8131 6980 4 Translation of Meine Tatigkeit im Weltkriege 1914 1918 Berlin Verlag Ernst Siegfried Mittler und Sohn 1939 Philpott W 2009 Bloody Victory The Sacrifice on the Somme and the Making of the Twentieth Century 1st ed London Little Brown ISBN 978 1 4087 0108 9 Prior R Wilson T 2005 The Somme 1st ed New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 10694 7 via Archive Foundation Renz I Krumeich G Hirschfeld G 2006 Die Deutschen an der Somme 1914 1918 Krieg Besatzung Verbrannte Erde Scorched Earth The Germans on the Somme 1914 18 in German Pen amp Sword ed Berlin Klartext Verlagsges ISBN 978 1 84415 973 4 Sheldon J 2006 2005 The German Army on the Somme 1914 1916 Pen amp Sword Military ed London Leo Cooper ISBN 978 1 84415 269 8 Sheldon J 2017 Fighting the Somme German Challenges Dilemmas amp Solutions Barnsley Pen amp Sword Military ISBN 978 1 47388 199 0 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of Pozieres Documentary film on the Battle of Pozieres on australianscreen online Australian Official History chapters XIV XX Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Pozieres amp oldid 1141788740, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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