Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The Battle of the Somme
- The plan and the first day
- In 1916 the Allies decided to launch
a coordinated attack on the
Germans to break the stalemate.
- The British army now had over 2.5 million men
and Haig was able to plan attacks on a huge
scale.
- Massive German strike against the French
at Verdun meant that the Somme was
mainly a British attack
- First day- 1st July 1916
- Soldiers were ordered to advance at walking
place to prevent panic and were protected by
creeping barrage.
- Overall the British suffered 57,000 casualties
and 19,000 deaths on the first day alone.
- Single worst day in British military history.
- The rest of the battle
- The Germans were eventually
pushed back, but at the cost of
420,000 British and 200,000
French casualties.
- German casualties
ranging between 400,000
and 600,000
- Intended breakthrough did not take place. An
inexperienced British army had begun to
learn to fight a new kind of war.
- munitions had to be
developed, e.g. shells
made more precise.
- Military leaders developed strategies for successfully
coordinating artillery bombardment with infantry advance.
- By this time Lloyd George had
begun to get to grips with the
'shell scandal' of 1915.
- What went wrong?
- Many of the explosives
that had bombed the
German trenches failed.
- The German trenches were very deep and
well constructed, so most were not
destroyed.
- Much of the barbed wire
on no man's land
remained in tact.
- The creeping barrage had
some success although it
lacked precision.
- Only 200 of the 1500
guns fired were heavy
artillery.
- 30% of shells
failed to explode
- The attack was over a wide area
meaning the attack was dispersed.
- The BEF had
30000 casualties
by 8.30am alone.