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LTC Stephen F.
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Thanks SGT John " Mac " McConnell for reminding us about the Battle of Amiens, which started on August 8th, 1918
Images:1918-08 Canadian troops at Amiens crowding around a Mark I tank.; Canadian commanded British First World War tank painted with 'Toronto' and a Maple Leaf passing 8th Field Ambulance, Hangard; 1918-08 The Battle of Amiens Map; 1918 German tank with soldiers on top - Copyright-Bundesarchiv_Bild_183-P1013-316_Westfront_deutscher_Panzer_in_Roye.
background on the battle:
"Tanks at Amiens 1918
The great German offensives of the spring and summer of 1918, launched in the hope of a decisive victory before the build-up of American forces tilted the odds against them, had succeeded in gaining some ground. But, just as the Allies had learned from
such bitter experience before them, the impetus of their attacks ran down because of
lack of mobility and transportation. After being stopped short of Amiens by the British,
they turned their attention farther to the south, against the French. On July 15th, they
launched their last big attack, on either side of Rheims. The French front line was only
lightly held and swung back, enabling the Germans to make their nearest advance to
Paris. Then three days later the French, in the only mass assault by tanks that they
7/9/2017 Tanks at Amiens 1918 I | Weapons and Warfare
https://weaponsandwarfare.com/2016/04/21/tanks-at-amiens-1918-i/ 4/9
made during the war, using over 200 medium heavy and 150 light tanks, counter
attacked the enemy’s exposed flank. The Germans fell back four miles across the
Marne before they managed to reform their line. But now they found themselves in a
dangerously exposed salient, facing the British to the north from Ypres to Amiens, the
French in the centre as far as the River Aisne, and the Americans from the Aisne to
Verdun. The Allies began to plan for a major offensive in September which, by
attacking at the southern and northern ends of the line while the French kept up a
steady pressure in the centre, would encircle the entire German army. It was a
reasonable strategy. But victory was to come about in a different way.
Although the German advance towards Amiens had been halted and Hamel and
Villers-Bretonneux retaken, Haig was concerned that the enemy still held the
important railways east of Amiens which linked through the French lines with Paris.
When at a conference towards the end of July the Allied Commander-in-Chief,
General Foch, asked the British, French and American Armies to undertake a series of
limited local offensives, Haig put forward the idea of an operation east and south-east
of Amiens to disengage the town and the vital railway link. This meant an advance to a
maximum of seven miles on the Albert to Montdidier front, held mainly by
Rawlinson’s Fourth Army. The plan was agreed by Foch, while the French and
American armies were given the role of freeing other strategic railways farther to the
south and east. But these attacks would depend largely on the progress made by the
British, whose offensive was the most important and considered more likely to achieve
the best results. If successful, the advance could be continued in a second attack
towards the St Quentin-Cambrai line and the elaborate Hindenburg defenses which
had brie
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SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL
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SGT John " Mac " McConnell good day my friend, what a great share of the most informative this morning!
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SGT John " Mac " McConnell
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Maj Marty Hogan
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Morning SGT John " Mac " McConnell great WWI share brother
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