90 Years Ago (9th April 1917).

MikeP

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The most worried man in the whole of the 56th Division that morning was 'B' Company's Sergeant-Major Eddie Warren of the Rangers. Knee-deep in icy mud in their jumping-off trench, they were waiting to attack the village of Neuville-Vitasse that lay just over a half a mile ahead. It was not the daylight zero hour of 7.45 am that worried him: the Rangers had gone over in daylight before, at Gommecourt on 1st July 1916. What nagged him was that the barbed wire in front of Pine Lane, a strongly-held German trench, had not been cut. During the night, while the Rangers assembled for the attack, he had met his old pal Charlie Clark, the Sergeant-Major of 'A' Company in the trench to their right; it was Charlie who had told him that the wire was completely uncut. (Extract from: Cheerful Sacrifice, The Battle of Arras 1917 by Jonathan Nicholls.)

At 5.30 am on 9th April 1917, the Battle of Arras commenced with the hugely successful attack of the Canadians on Vimy Ridge to the north. The assault rolled on down the line from north-west to south-east as each jumping-off time was reached.

7.45 am and the Rangers rose from their assault trenches and advanced behind their covering artillery barrage creeping across the ground ahead of them. Enemy counter-assault shells landed in the now empty trenches just vacated by the Rangers.

'A' Company reached the wire in front of Pine Lane and found it impassable. It was here that most of their casualties occurred, all four company officers were wounded.

Sergeant-Major Eddie Warren: "At 7.45 am we went over and executed our attack in perfect order - like a drill in Hyde Park. Our lads were mostly from Paddington and Kilburn and they were smoking and chattering away to each other in great spirits. I expect they thought it was the beginning of the end. Well we got right up to the wire and everyone went quiet.

The machine guns opened up from point-blank range and a dozen or so went down in the first burst. We all got down and a few of the boys ran along the wire looking for the gap but they were shot down. 'A' Company on the right copped it the worst. Some of the boys threw themselves flat into the wire to act as a human bridge but they were shot to bits - it was heartbreaking.

I'd like to know why that attack was not cancelled when the General knew the wire was uncut".


After garrisoning the strong-point known as Flank North Post, 'B' Company pushed on to Pine Lane Trench but as in 'A' Company's case, they found few gaps in the wire and casualties were mounting.

2nd Lieutenant Cunningham of 'B' Company led his platoon through a small gap in the wire that he had found. Fighting through the Pine Lane Trench, they managed to kill the machine gun team that had inflicted heavy casualties on the Rangers.

Now the earlier meeting with the tank officers paid off, for the nearest tank spotting the problems, diverted and drove along the wire trampling it down so that the Rangers could pass over, taking Pine Lane and thirty prisoners.

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(Above: Pine Lane Trench today).

'A' Company Commander, Captain Barrett was the only officer left on his feet and although severely wounded in the head, he gathered fifty men on the enemy side of Pine Lane. It was then found that all sergeants and corporals were down.

Captain Barrett and his composite fifty survivors then pushed on to the second objective, Fork Road Point to Tramway. This objective achieved, Barrett was forced to return to the Regimental Aid Post, leaving Fork Road Point under the command of Lance-Corporal Drew who effectively became the Company Commander!

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(Above: 'Fork Road' post today).

'B' Company meanwhile began the construction of Flank Central Post by those detailed for this work while the remainder pushed on to their second objective, Sunken Road from Fork Road Post.

'C' Company following in support of 'A' Company passed through the gaps in Pine Lane Trench wire and captured some prisoners who had been missed by 'A' Company before pressing on to the third objective, Road Left of Moss Central Point, where they began to dig in.

'D' Company meanwhile had been held up when the 43rd Brigade was in turn held up by the wire in front of them. 'D' Company therefore established a defensive line on the flank until the 43rd was able to press on.

By 9.30 am all the Rangers objectives were taken and Neuville-Vitasse was held by the Kensingtons.

Sergeant-Major Eddie Warren of 'B' Company came through that day without injury. Not so his friend, C.S.M. Charlie Clark of 'A' Company who was found lying dead among the bodies of his men in the tangle of the Pine Lane wire.

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(Above: CSM Charlie Clark's grave).

One officer and fifty-seven other ranks of the Rangers died that day. The dead were collected and buried after a short service conducted by the Regimental Chaplain in an old trench beside the Beaurains to Neuville-Vitasse Road, near their jumping-off positions. C.S.M. Clark is buried at the head of his men, nine graves from that of C.S.M. Charlie Clark is 472916 Rifleman Percy R. Prince, my paternal great-uncle. The place is known as London Cemetery and the original simple wooden crosses have since been replaced with headstones.

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(Rifleman P R Prince, in the uniform of the 9th Middlesex when he first enlisted).

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(Percy's grave today).

Of the wounded I can find no quoted figures. One Company had no officers and no N.C.O.'s above the rank of Lance-Corporal left alive or un-wounded by 9.30 am. Taking the average of three to one wounded to killed, this puts the casualties at around the 240 mark, something near a 50% casualty figure. Some of the lightly wounded were patched up in the Regimental Aid Post and returned to the front-line, others required hospitalisation in the rear, some succumbed to their wounds and were buried in other cemeteries away from the immediate area. The 'lucky' ones received 'Blighty Ones', a wound requiring re-patriation and a ticket home, hopefully to make a full recovery.

One of the apparently 'lucky' Rangers was 473513 Rifleman Fred Horner, my maternal great-uncle. Unfortunately uncle Fred's luck ran out on 17th April 1917, just eight days after the battle, when the hospital ship, H.M.T.s Donegal, was torpedoed and sunk by a U-boat between Le Havre and Southampton.

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(Rifleman Fred Horner).

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(Fred is commemorated with the others who died aboard HMTs Donegal at Hollybrook Memorial, Southampton).

********************

All along the Arras front, success followed success. It was tactically one of the most successful days for the British Army since Agust 1914. It showed that 'Kitcheners Army' had truely come of age after the slaughter of the Somme, their professionalism was unquestionable but it had a high price.

The battle itself continued until 4th May 1917, with ever diminishing results and growing casualties but the Rangers took no further part in it. The Battalion had suffered enormous casualties and was withdrawn to rest and draw replacements.

Arras 1917, was a tactical success. The objectives were carried although no successes on the scale of the first day would be repeated. Strategically it was a failure. No major break-out was achieved, the cavalry Brigades waiting to exploit the infantry punching a hole in the enemy lines were either committed piecemeal and despite acts of conspicuous courage, they were either slaughtered by 20th century weapons or never moved out of their assembly positions.

There are several reasons why the Battle of Arras 1917 ultimately failed: The French Army to the south were unable to co-ordinate their attack with the British so that the Germans were able to concentrate their reserves to slow and finally stop the British assault. (In fact the French delayed and re-delayed their own offensive and amid government turmoil, replacement of Nivelle by Petain and a mutiny in the French Army, they never did). The Germans, when they withdrew to the new Hindenburg Line, instituted a new 'elastic' form of defence where the front-line was thinly manned but strong reinforcements stood ready to be thrown forward where needed. Time and time again on the Arras front, the British made relatively easy gains only to be thrown back or stopped by this new defensive tactic.

The Battle of Arras 1917 is almost forgotten in the minds of most. It is overshadowed by evocative names such as the Battle of the Somme (July to November 1916), Ypres or Paschendale, even by Arras 1940, where another generation of British soldiers fought annother generation of Germans in a holding action that allowed time for the retreat to Dunkirk. Arras 1917 has a macabre statistic that alone should make it notable; statistically the daily casualty rate exceeded any other British and Commonwealth action of the Great War.

Somme: 2.943 casualties per day.
Arras: 4,076 casualties per day.
3rd Ypres: 2,323 casualties per day.
 
Nice write up Mike, Arras took some very brave men from us.

The futility of war.

My Grandfather was at Arras as well with the RE - he went over in 1915 and carried on to the end, coming home in 1919 - one of the luckier ones he never really spoke of what he saw or did. We are going over later this year to retrace some of his footsteps. I have a copy of his list of places visited and had wanted to retrace his 3 tours but they come to over 8,000 miles so it will take a few visits.
 
Excellent and well documented post.:thumb

You've no idea what some of these brave men went through until you read an article such as this.:o
 
Great post thanks.
Found a distant relatives grave in a military cemetary close to Arras last Summer. He died on the 25th March 1918 and his grave has our correctly spelt surname of Bolder...at some point between then and now, a U has been inserted??? Have no idea why.
 
Interesting post.

I often think about the area and events that unfurled there as I trundle down the motorway towards Cambrai.
 
Clive, as things are going it might be the only trip I can make this year. I've been doing further research on the Arras battle so I should be able to reprise my "battle-field tour guide bit" with more conviction. ;)
 
its all scary the stories that came from the whole region..

the most unbelievable statistic was at menin gate ypres, the 250.000 names of soldiers who have no known grave carved all over it.

what amazed me was the soldiers from all over the british empire who gave their lives.. i never realised so many indian regiments had sufferd.

for those who are thinking of visiting the ww1 sites go do it , its very sobering to read the details and see where so many gave for our future.


ps
the mash valley b&b at la boissele is a great place to stay, and fairly central for all the somme region, the front line goes through his front garden..
 
Thanks for the post. After visiting Ypres & the Somme last year I remember being struck by seeing all of the headstones with regimental badges for regiments that no longer exist. I confess I've not come across the Rangers before so will seek out 'Cheerful Sacrifice' asap.

Clive, thanks for the tip about the Vimy Ridge Memorial being unveiled. I visited it last year whilst it was still covered up so I want to go back and see it as it should be seen.

For accomodation on the Somme we stayed at the Bernafay Wood B&B - nice and quiet if a little remote.
For accomodation in Ypres we stayed with Andre at the the Hortensia B&B in the south of the town - nice, quiet and I'd happily stay there again.

All being well I'm off to Holland in June to visit some of the Operation Market Garden sites. We're starting at Joe's Bridge south of Eindhoven and making our way along as much of XXX Corps route as we can. Stay the night in Nijmegen and then the following night in Arnhem before heading back to the Tunnel via Guy Gibson's grave.

Cheers chaps
 
Mike

I've read in several places that the battle of the Somme in 1916 had 65,000 casualties on the first day! :confused:
True.

However, apart from the losses in the first days, which were as you say extreme, the Somme battle itself lasted from July to November 1916.

The losses after the first few days obviously were not anywhere near that scale.

I think that the reason why the Somme is so fixed as the yardstick by which the Great War is so often measured are those first day losses by some battalions.

There is a lot of revisionism going on these days, some of it is unwelcome (the matter of Haig as butcher or not is probably the most contentious). Some battalions took their Somme first day objectives with relatively few casualties, others were completely devastated.

Of course the Kitchener "Pals" battalions is another emotive factor.

The thing that cannot be revised is the fact that these huge assaults should have been shelved as soon as they failed to achieve their immediate objectives, from any objective military perspective.

The trouble was, there was a massive pressure to break the stalemate and the General Staffs were like a gambler who keeps trying one more roll of the dice.

The 1917 Battle of Arras was significant, it very nearly achieved the break-out, the Canadian Corps actually took Vimy Ridge against the odds but more significantly perhaps, it showed that the Territorial and Kitchener battalions were by now very professional.

Possibly more significant however was the fact that successful advances were very costly. Even with American involvement and their additional millions eventually in the field, the Chiefs of Staff realised after Arras that victory only lay in the collapse of Germany itself. They planned on the war ending in late 1919 at the earliest. The fact that the Germans risked one last roll of the dice with their Spring 1918 offensive that failed and exhausted Germany sooner, was unforeseen.
 
Great post. Great tribute.

I've led school trips to the battlefields on several occasions. Would you mind if I used some of the details here on my next trip?
 
I've led school trips to the battlefields on several occasions. Would you mind if I used some of the details here on my next trip?
If you PM me with your email address, I can send a word doc that I have written. It's a bit more detailed than the bit above, it includes several pages from the War Diary.

The above is an except from it.
 
Just wanted to add to this thread, i Located my great grandfathers grave in northen france last year, rode over there with my wife to visit the cemetery, once i had located his grave which took some time due to the amount of boys resting there, i was struck by a huge wave of emotion, never thought it would affect me in such a way. He was 29 when he died of gas and wounds at the very end of the war he had also been at gallipoli, He was a corporal in the Royal Army Medical Corp(Welsh Division). I was also the first member of my family to visit in all those years, I will return this year and plant some Daffs. Cheers.
 
Just wanted to add to this thread, i Located my great grandfathers grave in northen france last year, rode over there with my wife to visit the cemetery, once i had located his grave which took some time due to the amount of boys resting there, i was struck by a huge wave of emotion, never thought it would affect me in such a way.
Odd isn't it?

My father never knew his uncle Percy. My grand-father was a regular at the outbreak of the Great War, landed at Gallipoli on the first day and (obviously) survived the whole show.

I had only some vague oral history of Percy from my father.

I knew I was the first of my family to visit because for some reason none of them knew he had a marked grave.

My first visit was alone in November 2005, then Clive came with me last year when we were gallivanting about.

In 2005, when I 'found' Percy, for some unaccountable reason I wept like a babe. By the time I found his grave, I was over twice his age. I was struck by what I have been able to do in that time and the obvious fact that he never got to do any of the things that he might reasonably have expected to do. Even any dreams of a future were snuffed out.

Coming home I was even more gobsmacked to find out from my mother that she too had an uncle lost in the Great War. Something that she'd never mentioned (again an uncle she had never known). When I started looking for Fred it was truly spooky to find out that he had been in the same battalion as Percy and had been wounded on the same day. (At first I didn't believe the coincidence and it took a fair bit of research to confirm it).

I know I'm not the last member of my family to visit Percy. My nephew who is a member of this forum went with his better-half last year. I'm sure Ryan will return at some stage too.

Probably as moving was this photo Ryan sent me. It's of his girlfriend having found some wild flowers, placing them at Percy's grave. Not something that ever occurred to me, and she's not even related!

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If you can, take some time and try and find out about the action in which your great-grandfather died. If you do, it helps put his death into some context.
 
Just wanted to add to this thread, i Located my great grandfathers grave in northen france last year, rode over there with my wife to visit the cemetery, once i had located his grave which took some time due to the amount of boys resting there, i was struck by a huge wave of emotion, never thought it would affect me in such a way.

My father never knew his uncle Percy. My grand-father was a regular at the outbreak of the Great War, landed at Gallipoli on the first day and (obviously) survived the whole show.

I had only some vague oral history of Percy from my father.


In 2005, when I 'found' Percy, for some unaccountable reason I wept like a babe. By the time I found his grave, I was over twice his age. I was struck by what I have been able to do in that time and the obvious fact that he never got to do any of the things that he might reasonably have expected to do. Even any dreams of a future were snuffed out.

I know I'm not the last member of my family to visit Percy. My nephew who is a member of this forum went with his better-half last year. I'm sure Ryan will return at some stage too.


Mike

Even though I’ve read the story of Uncle Percy before and I’m fairy familiar with it, it’s still great to read again! Especially today.

I’m most certain that if Grandad had been around today to read it he’d have been most proud of your hard work and effort into bringing this truly amazing story to us all. I have no doubt that would have been another 90 years before anyone else had discovered it, if at all!

I too had found it very moving when I visited Uncle Percy, Just An hour before we arrived at the London Cemetery, I read the surname “PRINCE” on another headstone in the Duisans British Cemetery (1917-20) with no connection to our family I had no other feeling than the feeling you get from seeing all the named and un-named headstones, but when I Was faced with uncle Percy’s name it really struck something inside of me.

I will return one day, now we know he’s over there I think it’s an important of our family history to keep alive.

To Percy and Fred :beerjug:
 
Excellent write up.

A scale that could not be understood today; I was on top of Hampstead Heath at the weekend explaining to my somewhat disbelieving girfriend that from where we were stood we would have been able to hear the guns of the front line.

www.pals.org.uk

2 of my forefathers killed; one 3 weeks before the end of the war.
 


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