Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Battle of the Somme
- Field Marshall Haig's Plan
- The British Soldiers would
bombard with a week long
shelling
- Few Germans would be left alive
and those alive would be
captured
- Explosive would easily destroy barbed
wire so running across no mans land
would be easy
- German village would be destroyed and so
would the artillery
- Why it Failed
- Many shells failed to explode
- Germans were protected by their incredibly deep
dugouts, deeper than british ones
- The shells designed to destroy barbed wire were
not affective
- Germans were expecting the British to go over the top as
they usually did this after bombardments
- Machine guns were set up in preparation for Britsh
Soldiers
- Field Marshall Haig
- Leader of British forces at
Battle of the Somme
- He had served for many
other military campaigns
- Misjudged
effectiveness of
bombardments
- Continued to send wave after wave
of men to their deaths after the bombardment
- Many British soldiers that went
over the top were those who had
volunteered in 1914 and 1915 they
had never faced real battle before
- They were faced by fierce
resistance by German troops and
machine guns
- On the first day 60 000 men were captured,
wounded or killed
- The Battle of the Somme was
proceeded by a week long
bombardment of explosives
- The day of the attack
was 1 July 1916
- The British assumed no Germans
could possibly have survived the
bombardment
- The attack went on for 5 months
- Ending in November 1916
- By the end of the battle there were one million
casualties
- New attacks were launched by the British trying
to capture the land they had planned to capture
- The Germans were determined to
capture all lost land
- The result was limited success for
both sides
- The Allies advanced the front line by
only five miles