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The Story of the Great War, Volume VII (of VIII)

The Story of the Great War, Volume VII (of VIII)

Author: Various
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Chapter 1 THE FRANCO-BRITISH FORCES VICTORIOUS AT YPRES-GERMANS LOSE GROUND AT LENS

Word Count: 4330    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

ainst the Germans north of Frezenberg, and close to the Ypres-Roulers railway. The assault, made through heavy rain that transformed the battle field into a morass

succeeded in driving out the enemy and c

itory to the east of Ypres. In spite of heavy losses they continued to attack at short intervals British positions from the Ypres-Roulers

try they carried out daring attacks on the German aerodromes and on transport and infantry bodies with bombs and machine-gun fire. F

n to 6,122, of whom 132 were officers. The captured material includ

, and from their position it was evident that they were in the act of falling back when struck down. Many had fallen victims to their o

nk of the Meuse there was violent artillery action, the Germans renewing their attacks at 9 o'clock in the evening in the sector of Avocourt Wood. The assaults fa

hed themselves again in St. Julien. North of the Ypres-Roulers railway large bodies of Germans massing for a

st of the positions they had gained during the previous night east of Monchy-

rn Front,

a front of over 1,000 yards, sustaining very small losses in the operation. The majority of the Germans scurried back to Lens, but many were cau

1,000 yards from the center of Lens on the western front. On the south, at Avlon and Leauvitte, Canadian outposts were now about a

s were enabled to complete their work of consolidation. By morning of August 5, 1917,

and at 5 o'clock in the morning launched a heavy attack against Hollebeke and the British post just north of the Ypres-Commines Canal, hoping to regain the positions they had lost in the first day of the Flanders b

ooting in Hollebeke. A spirited counterattack launched by the British drove the enemy out and a number of prisoners were taken. On the left front the British contin

ncourt. At only one point they succeeded in penetrating the French trenches and from this they were quickly ejected. North of

Cité du Moulin and another to the north on the Lens-Lieven road, which runs through the former place. These craters had been held in strong force by the Germans from which they could work great damage to the Canadians by rifle and grenade fire during the night. The Canadians bombed their way

ew attacks made by Prince Rupprecht at Holle

n troops pushed forward 600 yards over a front of about the same depth, a substanti

trenches at sunrise every day. In the morning of August 7, 1917, they directed a heavy machine-gun barrage and artillery fire on a crater recently captured by the Canadians. Under

g severe losses on the enemy and bringing back prisoners. In the Verdun sector the Germans made futile attacks between Avocourt Wood and Hill 304.

d guns. In the early part of this same night the artillery on both sides was active over the Aisne front. Troops of the German Crown Prince attempted to reach the French lines to the east of Vauxaillon and west of the Cal

es filled with explosives which they placed on the site of the battery that had been, or was about to be, withdrawn. These capsules exploded at intervals of about half a minute, and heard at some distance would be mistaken for the reports of a field gun. E

ful stroke was delivered on a front of nearly two miles south of the Ypres-Roulers railway. Every forward position held by the Germans east of the town of Hooge on the fighting front between Frezenberg and the Ypres-Menin road was won. This section had been the scene of some of th

spite the frenzied efforts of the Germans to defend their positions. There was very heavy fighting in Glencorse Wood

n every aerial engagement the British were victorious. Five German machines were destroyed and five others driven out of co

in each offensive were driven off, their ranks shattered, and with heavy losses. The last futile attack was made at 10 o'clock at night, and

morning of August 11, 1917. The British, who had been exposed to heavy fire during the night in Glencorse Wood, were forced t

miles back into the country, began to speak in thunderous tones. The Germans among the shell craters in and about Nun's Wood were moving forward when the British bombardment began. A storm of shells from the 15-inch "heavies" to the small but deadly 6-inch and 4.2s swept over them, around them, and through th

lions had advanced some distance toward the British lines before the British guns got the range. In the storm of fire t

Reserves that had been brought forward to relieve shattered battalions lost their head com

gust 10, 1917, had now risen to 454, including nine o

considerable number of prisoners. In the sector of Noissy Farm and Laffaux Mill French scouting parties penetrated the German lines at a number of points and returned with prisoners. South of Ailles German troops made a determined effort to recover trenches which the French had occupied a few days

and in the Verdun region. The Germans also directed a scattered artillery

sh front. The Germans were desperately anxious to maintain their hold on this va

e continuously harassed too by German snipers hidden among the ruined houses to the north of the Lieven road, and early in the night of Augus

with the débris of shattered buildings the Germans directed a heavy machine-gun fire on the Canadian positions. In the violent artillery duel that raged

British gun within range poured a steady stream of fire on the German positions. The battle scene was wrapped in pink-tinted clouds, shot with streaks of crimson fire. Just when the time arrived for the Canadians to strike, and when a protecting barrage was dropped before their trenches, the clouds parted and a pale-yellow moon poured its mild rays over the scene. It was by this light that the Canadians advanced to attack. They mounted the famous Hill 70, where so muc

cements. It was through this stronghold that the Canadians had to force their way. The tremendous bombardment that preceded the attack had quite unnerved the Germans, and numbers were seen to desert their posts and flee to the rear, but in many parts of the outer defenses north and west of the

the British had taken and lost two years before, for the hill commanded a wide territory

left drove the Germans from the tongue of land between the Yser Canal and the Martjevaart and won the bridgehead at Dreigrachten. Langemarck, which had been strongly held by the Germans since the Allied attack early in the month, was captured by Haig's troops, who s

ght officers and a number of guns, were captur

lost heavily. A Canadian machine-gun officer stated that his men had killed more Germans than they had ever seen together at any one time since fighting began here, having had as a target for an hour and a quarter enemy reenforcements coming up in columns of fours for use in counterattacks. The

dren. A large number of boys, not over seventeen were in the thick of the

war, in houses that were repeatedly shelled and often wrecked. Death stalked them day and night. Yet they continued their peaceful vocations in cellars, their children being protected by gas masks going to school. When the

s a large concrete and steel structure strongly armed with machine guns. It was impregnable against infantry attacks, and it was only when the French brought heavy guns to bear on the stronghold that the German garrison surrendered. Mondovi Farm, the other redoubt, lay in an angle formed by the S

rnoon of the 17th the first great attack was made, a fierce and determined onslaught accompanied by a storm of flaming projectiles and gas shells. The Canadians met the attack with cold steel, and the

Canadians in hand-to-hand conflicts of the fiercest description. The latter held their ground, though sorely beset by superior numbers. The Germans were loath to give ground, clinging to every foot, but were slowly forced back, their ranks shattered, le

allen within the enemy lines. On this day, and during the night of August 17-18, 1917, French aviators shot down seven German airplanes and a captive balloon and forced down eight other machines, which, badly damaged, fell in the German lines. A bombing raid in which 111 Fr

s operation the British advanced their lines 500 yards on a like front, winning all their objectives, including a series of strongly fortified farms. Southeast of Epihy a successful local operatio

ll holes along the front, cunningly concealed from aviators. These stretched back from the first lines to a considerable depth. Along the front strong outposts were established at some distance apart, backed by fortified craters and connected by tunnels and often with dugouts. Back of these shell-hole nests were gun emplacements commanding the openings between the shell holes. Thus when enemy attackers had forced their way through the fortified shell craters they were met with torrents of ma

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1 Chapter 1 THE FRANCO-BRITISH FORCES VICTORIOUS AT YPRES-GERMANS LOSE GROUND AT LENS2 Chapter 2 THE FRENCH BREAK THE GERMAN LINES AT VERDUN-CANADIANS GAIN AT LENS3 Chapter 3 LENS IN RUINS-BRITISH ADVANCE NEAR YPRES4 Chapter 4 HAIG STRIKES AGAIN AT YPRES-THE FRENCH BREAK THE GERMAN LINES ON THE AISNE5 Chapter 5 GERMAN RETREAT FROM CHEMIN-DES-DAMES-THE BRITISH ADVANCE TOWARD CAMBRAI6 Chapter 6 GERMANS GAIN IN THE CAMBRAI AREA-COLD WEATHER HALTS IMPORTANT OPERATIONS7 Chapter 7 THE NEW ALLY IN COUNCIL8 Chapter 8 ON THE LORRAINE FRONT9 Chapter 9 POPE AND PRESIDENT10 Chapter 10 AMERICA'S WAR AIMS11 Chapter 11 MOVING THE MILITARY MACHINE12 Chapter 12 FLEETS IN THE MAKING13 Chapter 13 FOOD AS A WAR FACTOR14 Chapter 14 TRANSPORTATION AND FUEL15 Chapter 15 THE LAST DAYS OF KERENSKY16 Chapter 16 THE BOLSHEVIST REVOLUTION17 Chapter 17 THE SIEGE OF THE WINTER PALACE18 Chapter 18 THE BOLSHEVIKI AND THEIR LEADERS19 Chapter 19 FIRST BOLSHEVIKI PEACE MOVE20 Chapter 20 THE PEACE PARLEYS BEGIN21 Chapter 21 PUBLICATION OF SECRET TREATIES22 Chapter 22 THE PEACE NEGOTIATIONS23 Chapter 23 AN ATTEMPTED COUNTER-REVOLUTION24 Chapter 24 LEGISLATION BY DECREES25 Chapter 25 THE CAPTURE OF MONTE SANTO26 Chapter 26 THE STRUGGLE ON THE ISONZO FRONT27 Chapter 27 THE AUSTRO-GERMAN OFFENSIVE IN ITALY28 Chapter 28 THE ITALIANS AT BAY ON THE PIAVE29 Chapter 29 THE PALESTINE CAMPAIGN30 Chapter 30 THE FALL OF JERUSALEM31 Chapter 31 PALESTINE-ARABIA-MESOPOTAMIA32 Chapter 32 THE BALKANS-GREECE AND MACEDONIA33 Chapter 33 RUMANIA34 Chapter 34 ON THE SEA35 Chapter 35 THE WAR IN THE AIR36 Chapter 36 PREPARING FOR THE GREAT OFFENSIVE-THE ATTACK MARCH 21-FIRST PHASE OF THE BATTLE37 Chapter 37 THE SECOND PHASE OF THE GREAT GERMAN OFFENSIVE38 Chapter 38 THE GERMAN OFFENSIVE RENEWED-YPRES THREATENED-THE ALLIES' HEAVY LOSSES39 Chapter 39 DAYS FOR THE ALLIES-THE GERMAN OFFENSIVE DECLINES-FRENCH GAIN IN THE RHEIMS REGION-BRITISH VICTORY AT HAMEL40 Chapter 40 THE NEW GERMAN DRIVE AROUND RHEIMS-THE NEW BATTLE OF THE MARNE-THE ALLIES LAUNCH A GREAT OFFENSIVE MOVEMENT41 Chapter 41 FORCE TO THE UTMOST42 Chapter 42 THE AMERICAN LEGIONS43 Chapter 43 RAIDING THE NEW FOE44 Chapter 44 AMERICA OVER THE TOP45 Chapter 45 AT SEICHEPREY AND XIVRAY46 Chapter 46 ON THE CHEMIN-DES-DAMES47 Chapter 47 BEFORE AMIENS48 Chapter 48 CANTIGNY49 Chapter 49 AROUND CHTEAU-THIERRY50 Chapter 50 A DRIVE BY THE MARINES51 Chapter 51 BELLEAU WOOD52 Chapter 52 THEIR PRESENCE FELT53 Chapter 53 VAUX AND HAMEL54 Chapter 54 ACROSS THE MARNE AND BACK55 Chapter 55 FORWARD WITH FOCH56 Chapter 56 FIGHTING THROUGH FORESTS57 Chapter 57 SERGY AND SERINGES58 Chapter 58 THE PEACE WITHOUT TREATY59 Chapter 59 THE GERMANS RENEW HOSTILITIES WITH RUSSIA60 Chapter 60 THE PEACE TREATY THAT WAS SIGNED61 Chapter 61 CONTINUED GERMAN AGGRESSION62 Chapter 62 JAPANESE TAKE ACTION IN THE EAST63 Chapter 63 GERMAN POLICY OF AGGRESSION64 Chapter 64 GERMANY'S APPEAL TO CLASS HATREDS65 Chapter 65 ASSASSINATION OF THE GERMAN AMBASSADOR66 Chapter 66 THE MARCH OF THE CZECHO-SLOVAKS THROUGH SIBERIA67 Chapter 67 EXECUTION OF EX-CZAR NICHOLAS68 Chapter 68 ITALY REVIVES69 Chapter 69 NAVAL WARFARE70 Chapter 70 BOMBING AND RECONNOISSANCE