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the Second Battle of Arras.
In
December 1916 Robert Nivelle replaced Joseph
Joffre as Commander-in-Chief of Allied forces on the Western
Front. Nivelle immediately began to plan a major offensive on the
German front-line. An essential part
of what became known as the Nivelle Offensive,
was an attempt to capture Vimy Ridge. As the
ridge was 60 metres high, Nivelle argued that if Allied forces could
control this area, they would have a commanding view of the German activities
behind the front line.
On the evening of 8th April, 1917, 30,000 members of the Canadian
Corps began to move to the front line. At 5.30 the next morning,
2,800 allied guns began pounding the German trenches and soon afterwards
the Canadian infantry went over the top into No-Mans-Land.
Supported by a creeping-barrage, the 1st
Division, led by Major-General A. W. Currie, captured the Zwolfer Graben
trench system within 30 minutes. After another hour had passed, the
intermediate line south-east of Thelus was also under Canadian control.
Major-General L. J. Lipsett and the 3rd Division took the huge Schwaben
Tunnel. However, several concrete Machine Gun
Posts had survived, and these were causing heavy casualties. The
Canadian 4th Division was especially badly hit. One battalion, the 87th,
incurred losses of over 50% in less than a few minutes.
General Edmund Allenby and the British
Third Army attacked on either side of Arras and the Scarpe and managed
to advance 3km on the first day. However, progress was much slower south
of the river and the Germans were able to hold the village strongpoint
of Monch-le-Preux, against repeated British attacks.
In an attempt to stretch German defences, General Hubert
Gough and the British Fifth Army launched an attack further south.
Even though Gough used tanks in the attack, it was repulsed by the Germans
at Bullecourt. The Australians, also
took part in this operation and suffered its worst day's losses on the
Western Front.
The Canadians was still making good progress
and by 12th April they were firmly in control of Vimy
Ridge. Forced to the bottom of the hill, the Germans were unable
to launch a successful counterattack. That night, under the cover of
darkness, the Germans withdrew from the area.
On 14th April, Sir Douglas Haig called a halt
to British attacks to await news of the French Aisne
Offensive. When this ended in failure, the First and Third Armies
were ordered to try and move forward again. After two days heavy fighting
another 2km was gained.
By the time the offensive was halted at the end of May, the British
had suffered heavy losses: First Army: 46,826; Third Army: 87,226; Fifth
Army: 24,608. The Canadian Corps lost a
total of 11,297 men killed, missing or wounded.
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2nd
Battle of Arras
(1)
William
Beach Thomas reported the offensive at Arras
in the Daily Mail (10th April, 1917)
Near
Arras our troops leapt to the attack in the midst of such artillery
fire as the world has never seen. It was accompanied by an onslaught
of strange engines of war, while overhead, as soon as the clouds allowed,
our aeroplanes, moving at 130 miles an hour, rushed to tackle any German
machines they could find.
From this vantage-point, where the full panorama from Vimy to Tilloy
was etched in flames, I write immediately after watching the first storming.
It is too early to give more than partial news, but the famous divisions
directly in front of me, both of which I had before seen throw themselves
on an entrenched and buttressed enemy, went straight through to their
goal.
(2)
The Times (10th April 1917)
I have just
returned to the telegraph base from seeing as much as the opening phase
of the battle as it is possible to see of the action on a wide front.
Details of the progress of the fighting after our first assault are
yet lacking, but we know that we have broken the German lines everywhere
and the prisoners in good numbers are already coming in.
It was like the days of the beginning of the Battle of the Somme again,
and the Battle of Arras, if that is what it is to be called may prove
no less disastrous to the Germans. Such a battle as has begun this morning
cannot be fought without heavy casualties. We must be reconciled to
that in advance. But the enemy will suffer more than we, and we shall
break him here as we broke him on the Somme.