The Capture of the Sugar Refinery
at Courcelette by the Canadians on September 15, 1916, by Fortunio
Matania.
The Battle of the Somme, which began 1 July 1916, typified
the unimaginative tactics of military commanders in the First World
War. British and French forces planned to smash through German defences
near Albert, France. The coordinated assault, however, was badly planned.
British and French commanders chose to attack German lines that lay
opposite the meeting point of the two Allied armies. Unfortunately,
the Germans lines were heavily fortified and deep at this point. The
Allied command was convinced that heavy and repeated artillery barrages,
delivered in the first few days of the battle, would considerably weaken
German defences. Instead, the Germans simply took shelter in their deep
underground bunkers until the barrages ended. Armed with machine guns,
the defenders clambered from their bunkers and tore apart advancing
French and British troops, who discovered too late that the artillery
bombardments had had little effect.
National Archives of Canada (PA-000832, photo by William
Ivor Castle).
Soldiers Returning to the Trenches
during the Battle of the Somme, France, November 1916.
The Canadians saw their first action in the Battle
of the Somme at Flers-Courcelette on September 15th. Two Canadian battalions
captured the town and held it through a German counterattack. The campaign
later included battles at the Sugar Factory, Pozieres Ridge, Fabeck
Graben, and Regina Trench. Although the combat was fierce, the Canadians
ultimately gained most of their objectives.
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The carnage was appalling. Caught in the crossfire at Beaumont
Hamel, the Newfoundland regiment (not then part of the Canadian military)
suffered 233 killed and some 477 wounded or missing in thirty minutes; the
British lost 19,240 men while an additional 37,000 were wounded. All these
losses occurred on the first day. Canadian troops entered the battle in September.
They managed to capture the village of Courcellette, but at the great cost
of 7,230 casualties during the week-long battle. The Canadian divisions withdrew
from the Somme in October and counted 8,000 dead and some 16,000 wounded,
all for a territorial gain of under three kilometres. In total, British and
French troops suffered 600,000 casualties for a gain of 13 kilometres. The
Battle of the Somme epitomized the futility of trench war.
Unremitting Thunder.
The horror of the Battle of the
Somme is captured in this brief passage by Victor W. Wheeler of
the 50th Battalion.
"The 49th at Courcelette, September 15th, 1916," by Lieutenant-Colonel
W.A. Griesbach.