Freepedia
is a series of free encyclopaedias. We currently specialize in history
but we intend to branch out into other areas. This section is about
the Gallipoli Campaign.
On
19th February, 1915, the British attacked the Turkish
forts at the Dardanelles. The assault
started with a long range bombardment followed by heavy fire at closer
range. As a result of the bombardment the outer forts were abandoned
by the Turks. The minesweepers were brought forward and managed to penetrate
six miles inside the straits and clear the area of mines.
Further advance up into the straits was now impossible. The Turkish
forts were too far away to be silenced by the Allied ships. The minesweepers
were sent forward to clear the next section but they were forced to
retreat when they came under heavy fire from the Turkish batteries.
Winston Churchill, First Lord of the Admiralty,
became impatient about the slow progress that Admiral Sackville Carden
was making and demanded to know when the third stage of the plan was
to begin. Admiral Carden found the strain of making this decision extremely
stressful and began to have difficulty sleeping. On 15th March, Carden's
doctor reported that the commander was on the verge of a nervous breakdown.
Carden was sent home and replaced by Vice-Admiral Sir John de Robeck,
who immediately ordered the Allied fleet to advance up the Dardanelles
Straits.
On 18th March eighteen battleships entered the
straits. The fleet included Queen Elizabeth,
Lord Nelson,
Agamemmon,
Inflexible,
Ocean,
Irresistible,
Prince George and
Majestic from
Britain and the Gaulois,
Bouvet and
Suffren from
France. At first they
made good progress until the Bouvet
struck a mine, heeled over, capsized and disappeared
in a cloud of smoke. Soon afterwards two more ships, Irresistible
and Ocean
hit mines. Most of the men in these two ships
were rescued but by the time the Allied fleet retreated, over 700 men
had been killed. Overall, three ships had been sunk and three more had
been severely damaged.
Vice-Admiral Sir John de Robeck
now informed Winston Churchill that he
could not capture the Gallipoli peninsula without the help of the army.
General Ian Hamilton, commander of the
troops on the Greek island of Lemnos, who had watched the failed navy
operation, agreed and plans were now made for full-scale landings at
Gallipoli.
Leaders of the Greek Army informed Kitchener that he would need 150,000
men to take Gallipoli. Lord Kitchener
concluded that only half that number was needed. Kitchener sent the
experienced British 29th Division to join the troops from Australia,
New Zealand and French colonial troops on Lemnos. Information soon reached
the Turkish commander, Liman von Sanders,
about the arrival of the 70,000 troops on the island. Sanders knew an
attack was imminent and he began positioning his 84,000 troops along
the coast where he expected the landings to take place.
The attack that began on the 25th April, 1915 established two beachheads
at Helles and Gaba Tepe. Another major landing took place at Sulva Bay
on 6th August. However, attempts to sweep across the peninsula ended
in failure. By the end of August the Allies had lost over 40,000 men.
General Ian Hamilton asked for 95,000 more men, but although supported
by Winston Churchill, Kitchener was unwilling
to send more troops to the area.
On 14th October, Hamilton was replaced by General Munro. After touring
all three fronts Munro recommended withdrawal. Lord
Kitchener, who arrived two weeks later, agreed that the 105,000
men should be evacuated. The operation began at Sulva Bay on 7th December.
The last of the men left Helles on 9th January, 1916.
About 480,000 Allied troops took part in the Gallipoli campaign. The
British had 205,000 casualties (43,000 killed). There were more than
33,600 ANZAC losses (over one-third killed) and 47,000 French casualties
(5,000 killed). Turkish casualties are estimated at 250,000 (65,000
killed).
/FWWgallip.jpg)
Illustration
from Neil Demarco's The Great War
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Commanders and the First World War
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Gallipoli
Campaign
(1)
After training, Lieutenant Clement Attlee
was sent to Gallipoli.
We
had been expected to be sent to France, but in the late spring we got
orders to equip with tropical kit. I realised that our destination was
either Gallipoli or Mesopotamia. In June, 1915, we sailed from Avonmouth
for the East and had an uneventful voyage through the Mediterranean
to Alexandria.
I had three or four weeks at Helles experiencing the heat and smells
and flies. Like many others, I got dysentery. Eventually I fainted and
was carried down to the beach and embarked for Malta. I thus missed
the big attack at Anzac where our Division had six or seven thousand
casualties, including many of my friends of the South Lancashires.
(2)
E. Ashmead-Bartlett, Daily Mail (22nd
February, 1915)
The
great venture has at last been launched, and the entire fleet of warships
and transports is now steaming slowly towards the shores of Gallipoli.
As the huge liners steamed through the fleet, their decks yellow with
khaki, the crews of the warships cheered them on to victory, while the
bands played them out with an unending variety of popular airs. The
soldiers in the transports answered the last salutation from the Navy
with deafening cheers, and no more inspiring spectacle has ever been
seen than this, of the last crusade setting forth for better or worse.
(3)
In 1916 Charles Masterman, head of Britain's
War Propaganda Bureau, recruited John
Masefield to write a pamphlet on the Gallipoli campaign.
No such gathering of fine ships has ever been seen upon this earth,
and the beauty and the exultation of the youth upon them made them seem
like sacred things as they moved away. All that they felt was a gladness
of exultation that their young courage was to be used. They went like
Kings in a pageant to their imminent death.
The campaign came, more than once, very near to triumph, achieved the
impossible many times, and failed, in the end from something which had
nothing to do with arms nor with the men who bore them.
(4)
In his book, As it Happened, Clement
Attlee commented on the Gallipoli Campaign.
The Gallipoli campaign will always remain
a vivid memory. I have always held that the strategic conception was
sound. The trouble was that it was never adequately supported. Unfortunately,
the military authorities were Western Front minded. Reinforcements were
always sent too late. For an enterprise such as this the right leaders
were not chosen. Elderly and hidebound generals were not the men to
push through an adventure of this kind. Had we had at Sulva generals
like Maude, who came out later, we should, I think, have pushed through
to victory.
(5) Vere
Harmsworth, letter to Vyvyan
Harmsworth
while at Gallipoli (17th July, 1915)
We
have spent four days in the fire trench. We had only a few casualties.
We were put there just after a big attack which had partially failed
and the ground between our trench and the Turks were strewn with bodies.
It strikes me that they will be there for a long time. In this heat
the body and face turn quite black in less than 24 hours and the smell
is terrific. The flies - which are myriad - also add to the general
discomfort.
(6)
Sir Ian
Hamilton, official report of the Gallipoli landings that took place
on 25th April (May, 1915)
The enemy's machine-guns were too scientifically posted. Generally speaking
the coast is precipitous, and good landing-places are few. In most of
these landing-places the trenches and lines of wire entanglements are
plainly visible from on board ship.
Throughout the afternoon and all through the night the Turks made assault
after assault upon the British line. They threw bombs into the trenches.
The British repeatedly counter-charged with the bayonet and always drove
off the enemy for the moment, but the Turks were in a vast superiority
and fresh troops took the place of those who temporary fell back. By
7 a.m. on the first day after the landing, only about half remained
to man the entrenchment made for four times their number.
Up to the very last moment it appeared as if the landing was to be unopposed.
But a tornado of fire swept over the beach, the incoming boats, and
the collier. The Dublin Fusiliers and the naval boats' crews suffered
exceedingly heavy losses while still in the boats. About 1,000 men left
the collier, and of these nearly half had been killed or wounded before
they could reach the cover afforded by the steep, sandy bank at the
top of the beach.
(7)
H. W. Nevinson, accompanied the expedition
to the Dardanelles in April 1915. He
also was there to observe the withdrawal in December, 1915. However,
his account in the The Manchester Guardian
was held up by the censor and was not published until 14th April, 1916.
After the strain of carefully organised preparations, the excitement
of the final hours was extreme, but no signs of anxiety were shown.
Would the sea remain calm? Would the moon remain veiled in a thin cloud?
Would the brigades keep time and place? Our own guns continued firing
duly till the moment for withdrawal came. Our rifles kept up an intermittent
fire, and sometimes came sudden outbursts from the Turks.
Mules neighed, chains rattled, steamers hooted low, and sailor men shouted
into megaphones language strong enough to carry a hundred miles. Still
the enemy showed no sign of life or hearing, though he lay almost visible
in the moonlight across the familiar scene of bay and plain and hills
to which British soldiers have given such unaccustomed names.
So the critical hours went by slowly, and yet giving so little time
for all to be done. At last the final bands of silent defenders began
to come in from the nearest lines. Sappers began to come in, cutting
all telephone wires and signals on their way.