1st Battalion in the Battle of Cambrai (1917): Difference between revisions

m
one link updated
m (Text replacement - "sniping" to "sniping")
m (one link updated)
 
Line 32:
{{quote-left}}the situation was most precarious and indefinite this morning, heavy gun-fire could be heard on our immediate flanks but not very heavy on our own front. Received word from Brigade that the enemy broke through yesterday and captured Gouzeaucourt, also La Vacquerie and Les Rues Vertes, but larger reinforcements had come up to counter-attack and the Guards retook Gouzeaucourt. Received message that the 86th Brigade will probably evacuate Masnières this evening and the Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers consequently refuse their right flank to conform to this. O.C. ‘B’ Company (Lieutenant Johnston) therefore was ordered to carry out a reconnaissance of a possible support defensive line behind the Fusiliers, and this he did with great success. At 4pm a message was received from the Brigadier that the enemy was in possession of the E. side of Les Rues Vertes and that he (the Brigadier) was holding the bridges, but was in a very bad way and would probably be driven back. Lieutenant Johnston was therefore directed to be ready to at once occupy his defensive flank through the Ammunition Pits. At 6.30 a message came through from the Brigade giving details of the arrangements for the withdrawal of the 86th Brigade from Masnières, and this withdrawal was successfully accomplished during the night, without interference by the enemy, to the trenches at Marcoing.{{quote-right}} <ref>{{Wylly|pageno=160-161}}</ref>
 
There was further enemy activity by way of aeroplanes, which amounted to as many as 37 during the [[30 November]] and 1st December alone. This was cause for concern as the figure was counted in one go, flying together as low as 150 feet; [[Allied]] guns having little luck in bringing them down. German excellence kept their flying machines in the air and managed to avoid what could have been a serious threat to their attacking force. The 1st Battalion were, on the [[3 December]], relieved from the front line where they marched to Ribécourt via Marcoing. It was here that the Hindenburg Support lines were located. By the time the men arrived they were physically exhausted. The previous two weeks brought on a gradual strain and tiredness that needed to be addressed. The continual efforts of fighting the enemy and fighting to stay alive simply because they did not have the proper winter clothing to keep them warmer on those bitter days and nights open to the elements were showing their signs and the men were fatigued to the point that they were no longer a fighting force. It would have been a slaughter to send them out again without the right provisions to sustain them so for the duration of the 4th they ‘stood to’ but were still on alert, ready to move out if needed. The men were in dire need of [[greatcoatsgreatcoat]]s and blankets, something that was not forthcoming.
 
It was possible that at any time the men could have been called for to move out at a moments notice and defend whatever part of the stretched-thin British front line they would have been sent to. Fortunately, the same night the entire 29th Division was relieved by the 36th, which meant, as it was usually hoped, that better surroundings would be upon them shortly. The men of the 1st Border Regiment moved out and retired to Grand Rullecourt, taking them via Sorrel, Etricourt and Mondicourt to accommodation that was comfortable and thoroughly appreciated. This is hardly surprising considering the conditions they had just endured and so the most was made of the [[billet|billets]] they had now found themselves in; warmer than outside and a great deal more comfortable than the cold and hard ground they had to defend.