The battle took place in the Ypres
Salient area of the Western
Front, in and around the Belgian town of Passchendaele.
From July until early October 1917, British and Australian soldiers
had attempted to capture the German occupied Belgian coast. By early
October, however, only minimal advances had been made and the Allied
troops were near exhaustion. In the fall of 1917, Canada’s army,
after their great success at Vimy Ridge that April, was sent north to
Belgium.
The Canadian
Corps was tasked with relieving the exhausted II
Anzac Corps, continuing the advance started with the First
Battle of Passchendaele and ultimately capturing the town of
Passchendaele itself.
Ypres was a very difficult place to fight. It was a region largely
made up of flat, low land that was kept dry only with a series of
dykes and drainage ditches. Three years of heavy fighting had
destroyed the drainage systems. The ground, churned up by millions of
artillery shells, turned to sticky mud when wet. In 1917, the autumn
rains came early and turned the battlefield into a sea of mud, the
battlefield was transformed into a quagmire that made movement and
life in general extremely difficult. The mud was to become one of
the defining features of the battle for soldiers on both sides.
Stories of men and horses getting stuck in the mud and slowly sinking
away, never to be seen again, where not uncommon.
On October 26, the Canadian offensive began. Success was made
possible due to acts of great individual heroism to get past spots of
heavy enemy resistance. Advancing through the mud and enemy fire was
slow and there were heavy losses. Despite the adversity, the
Canadians reached the outskirts of Passchendaele by the end of a
second attack on October 30 during a driving rainstorm.
On November 6, the Canadians and British launched the assault to
capture the ruined village of Passchendaele itself. In heavy
fighting, the attack went according to plan. The task of actually
capturing the village fell to the “City of Winnipeg”
27th Battalion and they took it that day. After weathering
fierce enemy counterattacks, the last phase of the battle saw the
Canadians attack on November 10 and clear the Germans from the
eastern edge of Passchendaele Ridge. Canadian soldiers succeeded in
the face of almost unbelievable challenges.
The Second Battle of Passchendaele cost the Canadian Corps 15 654
casualties with over 4 000 dead, in 16 days of fighting. Nine
Victoria Crosses, the highest military decoration for valour awarded to
British and forces, were awarded to Canadians for actions during the battle.
Today several different nations' war cemeteries are found in Passchendaele. The Tyne Cot Cemetery (the largest Commonwealth
cemetery in the world), the New British Cemetery, the Canadian
Memorial, and the New Zealand Forces Memorial.
Wednesday, May 28, 2014
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)