Part of a memorial window dedicated to the
36th (Ulster) Division
which can be seen in Belfast's City Hall
The
36th (Ulster) Division...
The Battle of the Somme 1st July
1916
Across the battlefields of France
(header and footer is the actual battlefield) on 1st July 1916 dawn broke early, for, even during the night at that
time of year, there was little darkness. In the area of the River Somme
the arrival of the first pale glimmerings of light brought with it a
little drizzly rain. However, this was soon to pass, and the battle of
this tragic, harrowing day was destined to be fought under a blue,
cloudless sky, and a hot pitiless sun.
At the beginning of' 1916 the
Great War had reached a stalemate. The movement of the war's early
weeks was replaced by static lines of trenches, and the lives of the
soldiers who occupied them were totally governed by the terrible
ascendancy of machine guns and artillery.
In August and September 1914, the
German armies had, in a few weeks, swiftly conquered most of Belgium
and overrun large tracts of northern and north eastern France. For the
duration of the War - apart from a small area in the Vosges - the
Allied Armies never fought in or near Germany itself. This fact was to
determine much of the strategy and tactics in the future conduct of the
War. The French, especially, would never contemplate giving up another
yard of their Country - even to obtain a tactical advantage. On the
other hand and since it was not their homeland, the German High Command
could, and did, make alterations to its line when there was a local
superiority or benefit to be gained.
On the Somme in 1916, for the
whole length of the line, British soldiers would have to attack uphill,
very often cross open land, and into the teeth of very well planned
German defensive positions of trenches, redoubts, and fortified
villages. Also, since the British positions were everywhere overlooked,
the Germans had plenty of time to range their artillery and site their
machine gun emplacements to the most deadly advantage.
When
war had broken out in
August 1914 the British Army was a small force of well-trained and,
professional, regular , soldiers, supplemented by Territorial
regiments. It was thought then that the War would be short-lasting -
perhaps for a few weeks or months. It was planned that the Regular Army
would fight in France and, if necessary, be supported by the
Territorials. However, as the War dragged on, the Regulars and then
many of the Territorials were lost in such battles as Mons; the Marne;
1st Ypres (1914) and 2nd Ypres (1915); and Loos in 1915.
Towards the end of 1914, Lord
Kitchener - the Minister of War, foresaw that the War would not soon
end. Faced with this fact and with so many Regular and Territorial
soldiers already in France, he decided on a new and bold remedy. He
would build a "New Army" composed of civilian volunteers raised from
all areas of the British Isles. While it was being trained the Regulars
and Territorials would hold the enemy in France. Thus it came about
that the New Army of "Kitchener's Men" was created. By the end of the
year nearly 1,200,000 men had enlisted and one of the new divisions so
made was the 36th (Ulster) Division - known to many English Soldiers as
''Carson's Army''. It was these Volunteers who formed a very extensive
part or the army which fought at the Somme. Large numbers saw no
fighting before the battle and many died within minutes of it starting.
Both the German and British
Generals considered that, because of the short time involved, the men
of the New Army were insufficiently trained in the soldiers' skills of
warfare. Consequently, the battle tactics which they were ordered to
follow by their commanders were more strict and regimented than those
which would normally have been issued to men of the Regular Army. This
was to have a serious effect upon the outcome of the battle.
In December 1915 Sir Douglas Haig
was appointed Commander-in-Chief of the British armies in France and he
found himself responsible for an army greater in size than any other
British General had ever led. He had to decide how to make use of them.
With the closing down of the Dardanelles campaign it was agreed amongst
the British Generals that the War could only be brought to victory
through success in battle on the Western Front. Consequently, in early
1916, it was decided to make an attack during the summer in the region
of the Somme.
This district seems to have been
chosen by default. Other areas on the British Front had been tried
unsuccessfully before - so why not, this time, seek victory at the
Somme? However, before plans could be finalised, the Germans played
with fate and on 21st February 1916 they attacked the French at Verdun
- about 150 miles to the south east. The attack was massive and
destined to continue its bloody course until nearly the end of the
year. The Germans had intended it to be overwhelming and hoped either
for a breakthrough there or to inflict so many casualties on the French
that their will to continue the War would be broken. In the end the
breakthrough did not materialise, and, although severely tested, the
French will did not break. Verdun developed into a battle of attrition,
and, by December, each side had suffered about 350,000 casualties.
By June the French were in a
desperate situation. As a result they pressed the British strongly to
attack on the Somme by the end of the month and help relieve the
pressure at Verdun. The British agreed and Haig and Sir Henry Rawlinson
(the British Commander of the battle itself) laid their plans.
In its original form the plan had
been for a joint Anglo-French attack in which the French would play a
major part on the southern flank around the area of the River Somme
itself. But, many French troops had been drafted from the Somme to give
aid to their comrades at Verdun and the role of those left had
necessarily to be very much reduced. In the end the French 6th Army did
attack with their allies and it made some of the greatest gains on that
fateful day. However, the battle, when it was fought, was a mainly
British affair.
As we have seen, one of the main
purposes, if not the principal one, was to relieve the French at
Verdun. Beyond this it is difficult to find any real strategic
planning. If the British did break through the German lines where would
they go and which objectives would they seek? Neither of these
questions was truly answered. The plan that finally emerged seems to
have had only more limited goals and these may be divided into three
parts: one, a massive artillery barrage to kill German soldiers and
destroy their trenches and fortified positions; two, the advance and
capture by British soldiers of these positions; and three, a grand
charge through these positions by Haig's beloved cavalry under the
command of General Gough. The Cavalry were to sweep northwards
attacking the remaining German positions and "roll them up" from the
south. It should be said that each of these parts depended upon the
successful completion of the one before it. In the event the cavalry
sweep never look place.
Haig and Rawlinson especially had
considerable doubts about the professional skills of the soldiers of
the New Army, and, since they had not been tried on a large scale in
battle, also about their courage. As a result they felt that the attack
had to be made "easy" for them by preparing the way with a huge
artillery bombardment so that when the soldiers went "over the top"
they would only have to stroll across no- man's-land and occupy the
enemy positions. The attack was set for 29th June and, for about three
weeks before this, every available British gun was brought to the Front
so that finally there was one gun for every seventeen yards of enemy
front line.
On 24th June the bombardment
opened, and to those at the Front it seemed that nothing could survive
this onslaught. However, in reality from the British point of view,
there were several, very serious , but as yet undiscovered
imperfections in the barrage. There were not enough heavy guns to
destroy the very deep German dug-outs; because of mass production at
least one third of all the shells failed to explode; and, most
seriously of all, the eighteen-pounders which were supposed to destroy
German barbed wire were having only a limited and haphazard success.
This final failure was to have awful consequences.
For the assault itself new
tactics were to be used. Instead of the previous methods of lightly
laden men taking advantage of any shelter and then rushing in bursts
towards the enemy, Rawlinson decided that, because of the rawness of
his soldiers, they were to advance in orderly and regular lines - like
regimented ninepins. Because it was believed that the German positions
would be completely destroyed by the artillery, the soldiers were
heavily laden with equipment (about 60 to 70 lbs per man), and ordered
to walk across no-man's-land, company by company in line abreast (with
about five yards between each man), and with rifles held at the slope
across the chest and pointing skywards. (A pack of 60 lbs or so was
half a man's weight; pack mules of the time were only expected to carry
a third of their body weight). A typical distance over no-man's-land
was roughly 500 yards which meant that, at the walking speed ordered, a
soldier would he in the open for about five to six minutes. At Thiepval
Wood where the Ulster Division attacked the distance to the first line
of German trenches was about 500 yards with a further 400 to the
notorious Schwaben Redoubt.
From the intensity of the
bombardment, their own observations, and lapses in British security,
the Germans knew not only that an attack was coming, but also the exact
date and time when it was to start. However, the shelling did have its
effect on them; but, rather than reply, they sweated it out secure in
their dug-outs grimly waiting to respond from their superior positions
when the attack finally went in.
On
26th and 27th June there
was a series of heavy showers which continued into the 28th.
Afterwards, although the sun came out, the land was still very wet and
some trenches waterlogged. Consequently, the infantry attack was
postponed until 7.30 a.m. on July 1st. Many awkward rearrangements had
to be made and men already keyed up became more edgy and nervous.
However, the soldiers of the Ulster Division were pleased - July 1st
was the original date of the Battle of the Boyne.
At 7.20 a.m. on the day of the
Battle a huge mine was detonated under part of the German lines; eight
minutes later nine others were exploded. At 7.30 the bombardment
stopped and an eerie silence fell across the Front. A few seconds later
bugles and whistles sounded and the first of the 120,000 soldiers rose
from their trenches and went over the top - Rawlinson's plan was to be
put to the test.
For their attack the Ulster
Division was composed of ten battalions with about 730 men per
battalion. The soldiers were fortunate because they had assembled in
Thiepval Wood and a large number were thus hidden, at first, from the
vigilant enemy. Also, just beyond their Front Line, and at the edge of
no-man's-land, was a sunken road where others could lie concealed and
prepare for the advance. Myth has it that the Ulstermen were now in a
state of patriotic fervour, and that many of those who belonged to the
Orange Order donned their treasured sashes over their cumbersome
equipment. Prayers were said, hymns were sung and the Ulster Division
was ready for battle. At the signal the Ulstermen rose and in few hours
performed acts of courage, valour, and heroism which were unsurpassed
anywhere during that long, savage day.
At first all went well for the
Ulstermen. The German wire had been cut in many places, and in their
eagerness, the soldiers forgot their orders to attack in ordered waves,
but rushed up the hill to the first line of enemy trenches which was
taken after a short, fierce struggle. Fired with success they rushed on
towards the formidable Schwaben Redoubt - a heavily fortified area on
top of the hill criss-crossed with wire, trenches, and underground
dug-outs. The leading battalions fought furiously to capture the
Redoubt. But now things started to go wrong. The 32nd Division to the
right had been unable to capture Thiepval village and the machine guns
which they should have silenced started to fire from the side and into
the attacking Ulstermen. At the same time the German artillery - having
had weeks to sort out their ranges - started to fire onto the following
-up ranks of the four Belfast battalions. No-man's-land became a death
trap. Some men started to waver, but, according to legend, roared on by
cries of "No Surrender!" they gained new strength and reached the
Redoubt and joined their comrades. There were now men from eight
battalions engaged there. The fighting was at close quarters and
vicious, but by mid-morning it was over and the Redoubt was in British
hands. Many officers had been killed in the assault and the soldiers
were uncoordinated and lacked central command. Patrols were sent out
towards Thiepval and could perhaps have captured it from the rear, but
this manoeuvre had not been rehearsed and the men had to return. Two
small parties went on towards the second German line and the Stuff
Redoubt. But, as nowhere else in the whole battlefield, they were ahead
of schedule and shells from the British artillery started to fall on
them and, although there were few Germans about, the Ulstermen had to
retreat back to the Schwaben.
The Ulster Division of the New
Army had no regular battalions attached to it to act as " stiffeners"
yet it had advanced further than any other Division. For four miles on
either side of them there was no advance to distract the German machine
guns and artillery, and the enemy was able to gather its reserves and
prepare its counter-attacks. The glorious advance was over.
The whole Front was "L" shaped
and stretched from just above the River Somme itself at the village of
Montauban to the village of Gommécourt in the north. In
total the Front was about fourteen miles long. Apart from the Ulster
Division's advance the only other gains made that day were in the south
- along the foot of the "L". Here, with a mixture of luck, courage, and
dash, a few hundred yards of ground were taken.
Everywhere casualties were
fearful. At Gommécourt the assault had been planned only as
a diversion to take the enemy's mind off the attack further south. One
of the two divisions which made the attack here was the 56th (London)
Division. Of the seven battalions involved (a little over 5,000 men);
1,700 were killed , 2,300 were wounded, and 200 (mainly wounded) were
made prisoners.
Located
just inside the
German lines and just north of the bend in the "L" stood the hamlet of
La Boisselle. Although small, it held an important tactical position on
the road between the towns of Albert and Bapaume. It was hoped that
here the cavalry would charge through. The Tyneside Irish Brigade had
been allocated the task of capturing the village and the heavily
fortified defences near to it. Exactly on time the 3,000 men of the
Brigade rose and advanced the 3,000 yards to the enemy trenches. They
were cut down like autumn wheat and finally, when they reached their
objective, they had been reduced to only fifty effective men.
As the day wore on no-man's-land
which, before the assault, had been generally untouched by shelling,
became, first of all an area of death to many who tried to cross it,
and then, later on, as German shells pounded in, a haven of isolated
shelters for the wounded. The shell holes became places of refuge for
the injured and graves for the dead. Injured men who lay in the open
had to lie completely still or risk being shot again by German rifles
and machine guns which continued their deadly work all day.
Because of the savagery of the
German defence, further British attacks faltered and died away. Local
commanders were reluctant to send more men forward to die in places
where their comrades had already fallen. Gaps in both the British and
German barbed wire became places of even greater danger. Enemy machine
guns had ranged in onto these spaces and they soon became areas where
wounded, dying, and dead lay in great heaps.
At a rough estimate, by midday
50,000 British soldiers had been killed or wounded.
At the Schwaben Redoubt the
situation of the Ulstermen became increasingly perilous. Reinforcements
could not cross no-man's-land, ammunition was running low, machine guns
still fired on them from Thiepval, shells fell on them, and the Germans
were counter-attacking with determined ferocity. Relentlessly more and
more men became casualties and, when after fourteen hours of fighting,
darkness started to fall, the few survivors retreated back to their
trenches from which they had attacked so valiantly in the morning. As
they retired they passed the apprehensive troops of the West Riding
Territorials who had arrived too late to give relief at the Schwaben
Redoubt. The West Yorks. could only advance as far as the first line of
German trenches which had been captured soon after the start of the
Battle.
At no time while they had fought
did the soldiers from the old Province of Ulster receive help from the
Divisions of either flank. Over 2,000 of them died at Thiepval and over
2,700 were wounded. As an indication of the fierceness of the combat
only 165 were taken prisoner.
Of the nine Victoria
Crosses which were awarded for outstanding bravery on that day, four
were won by men of the Ulster Division:
Captain E N F Bell, 9th Royal
Inniskilling Fusiliers; killed on 1st July and who has no
known grave.
Lieutenant G S Cather, 9th Royal
Irish Fusiliers; killed on 2nd July and who has no known
grave.
Private W F McFadzean, 14th Royal
Irish Rifles; killed on 1st July and who has no know grave.
Private R Quigg, 12th Royal
Irish Rifles who died in 1955.
All along the British trenches
chaos was the master.. They were filled with the wounded and the dead,
fresh soldiers who had come up to continue the battle but who could go
no further forward, and with the shattered remnants of the troops who
had attacked but who had now retreated back to supposed safety.
With
darkness the cries of
the wounded and frightened continued. Men walked, crawled, or were
carried back to their own lines. Stretcher bearers who had laboured
heroically under fire through the day continued with their errands of
mercy during the night.
To the Generals some miles behind
the Front it was thought, at first, that the day had been more of a
set-back rather than the greatest disaster ever to befall the British
Army. The extent of the tragedy was not immediately apparent. At home,
to start with, the newspapers printed vaguely hopeful stories about the
attack; but gradually as news and reports filtered back the truth was
realised. The General Staff and politicians - ever keen to keep up
civilian moral - tried to understate the defeat which had been
inflicted. But with the delivery of the dreaded War Office telegrams
and the return of the wounded, the public learned the truth.
Whole towns such as Belfast went
into mourning. Few families in the land were not touched by the injury
and death suffered by the men of the Somme. On 12th July all business
and traffic halted in Belfast and the whole City fell silent for five
minutes.
The Battle ground on for several
more months and finally ended 140 days later on 14th November. Exact
and accurate figures are hard to find, but it is certain that for an
advance, finally, of six miles at most, the British had suffered
400,000 casualties. Total casualties of the three countries involved -
British, French, and German - came to over 1,300,000 which were almost
equally divided between the Germans and the Allies. What had been
planned as the "Big Push" which might end the War had turned into a
horrifying battle of attrition.
Even while the Battle was being
fought the Germans had started to build a new defensive position - the
Hindenburg Line - same ten miles behind their Front. In February 1917
they made a move which the French and British Generals could never have
countenanced and withdrew to this new Line giving up about 1,000 square
miles of territory - ten times greater than the Allies had captured in
1916.

The
battle went disastorously wrong for several reasons
1. The
plan drawn up by the Generals was seriously flawed in its conception.
Haig wished for a breakthrough of the German lines. Joffre (the French
commander) and Rawlinson hoped to win by fighting a battle of
attrition. Rawlinson paid only superficial regard to Haig's wishes and
his plan of attack (e.g. with all the troops attacking in equal
strength all along the Line) indicates that he intended to fight in
this way. Haig cannot be excused from blame, for, as
Commander-in-Chief, he should have insisted that the Battle be fought
according to his ideas.
Because the plan was basically
unsound, and so that no one dare point out its limitations, a spirit of
unfounded confidence was generated in it. It became almost like treason
for officers to warn of its shortcomings and consequently some attacks
were made in impossible situations. Self-delusion had replaced reality.
2. The
deficiencies in the plan led to a lack of concentration in the
artillery bombardment. Although greater than ever used before by the
British, the barrage was too light when spread out evenly. It would
have been of much greater benefit if the guns could have concentrated
on the "weaker" areas in the German defences. The comparative thinness
of the bombardment was further compounded by the inadequacies of the
guns themselves and the very poor quality of the ammunition which they
fired. Ultimately many of the German dug-outs, trenches and machine gun
positions; and much of their barbed wire was untouched and undamaged.
It was of the utmost blindness for the Generals to claim that the
Germans would be completely annihilated by the bombardment and that
their own soldiers would simply stroll over and occupy the enemy
positions.
Compounding these failings were
the strict firing orders which the artillery had to obey once the
attack had started. It was instructed to fire ahead of the advancing
soldiers at a set and unchangeable rate. Consequently, when the advance
slowed and then stopped, the guns continued to increase their ranges,
ineffectually getting further in front of the pinned-down infantry. The
gunners were not permitted to change their targets and range in, for
example, on murderous machine gun positions. On the other hand, it was
the duty of the German artillery to fire at targets of opportunity -
and this they did with dreadful efficiency.
3. Throughout
the history of warfare one of the most important methods of securing an
often winning advantage in battle has been the calculated use of
surprise. For the reasons already mentioned, this element was absent at
the Somme. The Germans had ample warning and they used this time well
in preparing counters to it. Even so, for the first five days,
Falkenhayn the German commander, could not believe that the Somme
offensive was not a diversion from the real attack which he felt sure
would fall further north. [See addendum at the end]
Not only had the Enemy ample
warning of the attack in general, but the start of the assault was
arranged for too late in the morning. At 7.30 it was broad daylight and
the Germans could see clearly all that was going on below them. If the
troops had been ordered to go over the top at dawn they would have had
the advantage of the dim light at that hour and cover from the mists
which shrouded the battlefield then.
The request for the half past
seven start had been made by the French. They stated that they needed
the first two hours of light to complete their artillery bombardment.
This was true and they used this time to very good effect. However,
they were only attacking on a short front and they had proportionally
more, heavier, and more effective guns than the British. Their guns did
destroy German defences and consequently, the French troops who
attacked achieved significant success. But, when the British assault
stopped, the French called their attack to a halt also. Rawlinson and
Haig were both aware of the problems which the 7.30 start might have -
but they acceded to the request from their more senior allies.
4. Everywhere
along the Line the Germans, from their higher positions, overlooked the
British. Not only did this mean that concealment was difficult, but
also, when the advance came, heavily burdened infantry had all the
disadvantages of attacking uphill. The order to attack in regimented
lines only made matters worse, and nowhere during the whole day did any
Division of British soldiers who followed these instructions make any
real headway.
These are the main reasons for
the failure. If any one of them had been absent the attack could have
succeeded, for the Men that day fought like lions. As it was, each
defect compounded the others and together they combined to turn the day
into terrible disaster.
In no war, before or since, on
the opening day of a battle, did the British lose so many men as they
did on the first day of the Somme. At Waterloo casualties suffered were
about 8,500 men. During D-Day, in the Second War, there were only about
4,000 British and Canadian casualties. On 1st July 1917 British men
killed and wounded exceeded all the casualties of the Korean, Boer, and
Crimean wars combined.
On
3rd January 1917 General
Sir Douglas Haig was promoted to the rank of Field-Marshal. After the
War, in 1919, Haig was created an earl and given a grant
£100,000 from public funds. Rawlinson was made a baron and
received £30,000. The ordinary soldiers who had suffered the
terror and endured the privations of war for one shilling per day, went
home to a less certain and happy future. Many of' the wounded would
carry the effects of their injuries for the rest at their lives. Many
who survived unwounded or made good recoveries found their original
jobs taken by others and became unemployed. All who fought in the
trenches would never forget the horror there nor their comrades who had
died.
In 1921 most of Ireland became
the Irish Free State. Ulster - less the counties of Cavan, Donegal, and
Monaghan - remained part of the Union with the United Kingdom. The
decision was to no small extent earned by the sacrifices of the Ulster
Division - many of those men had been members of the Ulster Volunteer
Force before war had broken out. The UVF had been established to
preserve the Union, and the devotion to duty of those who fought and
died at the Somme eventually achieved this aim as their reward. Because
so many of its members had belonged to the illegal Force, there was,
for some years, a darkly held suspicion that the Ulster Division had
been assigned the task of assaulting the strongest part of the German
Line at Thiepval. The suspicion also held, that, because of the
numerous casualties inflicted, the task of dealing with the Ulster
Volunteer Force after the War would be made much easier. However, with
many years of hindsight and the fact that so many other divisions
suffered grievously as well, this theory is hardly supported by fact.
Today the battlefield has
reverted to the quiet countryside of rural Picardy. Crops grow in the
fields and tall trees in woods have replaced the shattered stumps of
eighty years ago. Trenches have been filled in and the barbed wire has
gone. The land is at peace.
Dotted here and there are the
beautifully kept cemeteries looked after by the devoted men of the
Commonwealth War Graves Commission who tend the graves with love and
care. Unfeeling is the person who can walk amongst the long rows of
white headstones and not feel a tightening in the throat or a tear come
to the eye. A visitor feels an intruder and walks with steps of
reverence for the cemeteries have about them an atmosphere of
tranquillity and peace.
Many
of the Ulster dead are
buried at the edge of Thiepval Wood in the Connaught Cemetery. A short
distance away to the north, across the sunken road and up the hill are
Mill Road Cemetery, and the 36th (Ulster) Division's Memorial. This is
the Ulster Tower, built as an almost exact replica of Helen's Tower in
Clandeboye Estate near Bangor in County Down where many of the soldiers
of the Ulster Division trained. The Ulster Tower and Mill Road Cemetery
are very near to the site of the Schwaben Redoubt, and both command a
panoramic view of the surrounding countryside and former battlefield. A
few hundred yards to the south-east, and visible for miles around, is
Sir Edwin Lutyens' imposing Memorial to the Missing, standing now on
the site of the ruined Thiepval Chateau. It is built from bricks which
have stone facing on which are inscribed the names of over 73,000 men
who died on the Somme in 1916 and 1917 and who have no known graves.
The men - or perhaps, more
accurately, the boys - who fought in the Great War were not supermen,
but ordinary citizens who were caught up in a war they did not really
comprehend, but who, nevertheless, fought and died for a cause in which
they truly believed - their Country.

Addendum
Falkenhayn fell from supreme
command in the autumn of 1916 and was replaced by his rivals Hindenburg
and Ludendorff. The accepted reasons for this are the catastrophe
suffered by the Germans at Verdun, and his miss-reading of the
situation during the opening stages of the Battle of the Somme. While
the former is certainly true, it has been argued by some historians in
recent years that he may have been at least partly correct in his
assessment of the battle.
Denis Winter in his book, "Haig's
Command" (published by Viking in 1991), maintains that from the moment
Haig took over command of the British armies on the Western Front his
eyes were always set firmly on an attack through Belgium from the Ypres
Salient. According to Winter, Haig wished to try this in the late
summer of 1916 but, before he could make this attempt, he had to try to
draw some of the German forces away from that area first of all. On
page 50 of his book he writes:
"The paper [written by Haig in
December, 1915] went on to suggest that 'The main lesson of the battle
of Loos as of all previous attacks is that, given adequate artillery
preparations or some form of surprise like chlorine gas, there is no
insuperable difficulty in overwhelming the enemy's troops in front and
support lines but there is the greatest difficulty in defeating his
reserves who are not subject to the strain of a long bombardment and
come up in good order to meet our troops at a time when they are
exhausted, in confusion and out of hand'. The solution was obvious.
'The basic principles of the battlefield, which are unaltered' meant
that the enemy's reserves had first to be worn down before a decisive
attack could be delivered at another point.
The deficiency in guns, divisions
and communications suggests that the Somme had been planned as Haig's
wearing-out battle. Where then did he propose to launch his
breakthrough battle? His correspondence leaves no doubt.
On 30 December 1915, the new
Commander in Chief visited Plumer, who commanded the 2nd Army, in the
Ypres Salient and gave orders to continue preparations for a 'serious
attack' in 1916. A fortnight later, he was more specific. The big
attack was to be at Ypres and directed at the key rail junction of
Roulers via the Houlthulst Forest with diversionary thrusts against
Lille and the Messines Ridge. In other words, Haig was prepared to
fight the battle of Passchendale a year earlier that it was actually
fought and hoping to make the job easier by a feint on the Somme which
would pull German reserves away from Flanders in the north."
That the attack on the Somme was
a diversion to take German soldiers away from the Salient is certainly
not a majority view. However, if it does have validity, then this would
go some way in explaining why there does not seem to be any clearly
defined strategic plan on the British side behind the Battle of the
Somme. Doubtless, the argument will still continue undiminished for
many years yet.

The actual battlefield as it is today, the Ulster tower is in the copse on the right at the top of the hill.

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