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 Le Hamel Offensive.
The
offensive at Le Hamel was planned by John Monash,
commander of the Australian Imperial Force
(AIF) on the Western Front. Launched on
4th July it was carried out by the Australian 4th Division and four
companies of the United States Army. The offensive
was a complete success and demonstrated the effectiveness of Monash's
peaceful penetration tactics. The village
of Le Hamel was secured within two hours and nearly 1,500 prisoners
were taken.
Sir John Monash presenting a decoration
to a soldier in the
Australian Imperial Force after the
Battle of Le Hamel in 1918.
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(1)
Philip
Gibbs was a journalist who reported the war on the Western
Front.
General Monash was another great general without professional training.
He was an Australian Jew - tall, heavily built, big-nosed. It was to
him, and to his acute brain and quick decision, that we owed the surprise
attack by the Australians at Villers Bretonneux which saved Amiens,
and perhaps the Channel ports, after the retreat of 1918, when disaster
was very near and but little stood in the enemy's way that night.
Some years after the war I met General Monash at a luncheon in Guildhall.
We came out together and I walked beside this tall hook-nosed man whose
uniform was dangling with orders and decorations.
"Shall l fetch you a taxi-cab, sir?" I asked.
"No, my boy," he answered. "I shall go on the twopenny
tube. I never waste money on taxis unless I can't help it."