Trench Warfare on the Western Front 1914-18 (3) - General Haig Special Edition Flashcards

1
Q

Who was initially in charge of the BEF and why did he resign?

A
  • Initially Sir John French was in charge
  • Received criticism after the Battle of Loos Sept 1915
  • This forced him to resign and Sir Douglas Haig took charge
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2
Q

What are the two opposing quotes that summarise the split view of historians on Haig as commander in chief?

A
  • “Butcher of the Somme”
  • “Man who won the war”
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3
Q

What was Haigs role before being a commander and how did this affect his attacks?

A
  • He was a former cavalry man and believed in attack
  • His army was not as well trained due to being volunteers so Haig believed he needed detailed orders to keep the attacks flowing
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4
Q

When did a conference agree on joint attacks with the French? Why did this not happen in 1916?

A

Conference in November 1915 agreed that the British would attack in joint offences with the French
- This did not happen as the French got caught up in Verdun due to attritional attacks from the Germans through 1916
- Haig wanted to relieve them from this with a major offensive

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5
Q

What was the growth in infantry divisions in Haigs army by June 1916 and why was this?

A

4 —> 56
- This is because the government had brought in compulsory military service (conscription)

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6
Q

How many of Haig’s commanders had previously commanded a division?

A

Only 2

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7
Q

How many did the French lose at Verdun?

A

More than 300,000 killed and wounded

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8
Q

What was Haigs plan at the Battle of the Somme?

A

June 1916
- Haig faced strong German defences but believed with enough artillery they could launch an offensive

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9
Q

What did the Battle of the Somme begin with after a week of?

A
  • A week long bombardment from 2,200 British guns which fired 1.7 million shells
  • Artillery did not have enough heavy guns or right shells to do the job, it failed to cut German barbed wire and deep dugouts
  • Shells that did detonate made no mans land hard to cross, 1/3 did not even detonate
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10
Q

How many casualties did the British amount on the first day of the Battle of the Somme compared to Haig’s prediction?

A
  • They lost 58,000 and 20,000 of these were dead
  • Haig had expected 40,000 in the first three days
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11
Q

How many casualties in total did the British, French and Germans lose a the Battle of the Somme?

A
  • 420,000 British
  • 194,000 French
  • 500,000 Germans
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12
Q

What three lessons were learnt at the Battle of the Somme?

A
  • Germans were too well entrenched
  • British had insufficient big guns and 1/3 shells dd not explode
  • German troops survived the barrage and were full of fight
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13
Q

What was Haig’s ‘Active Front Theory’?

A
  • A mix of attrition and offensive in his attempt to achieve a breakthrough
  • He believed trench warfare could make his army passive so he ordered frequent raids on smaller German lines
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14
Q

What things had changed by Passchendaele (Third Battle at Ypres) in 1917?

A
  • Russia was lost as an ally due to the October Revolution
  • America had joined as an ally bringing new resources
  • Germany were losing strength due to industrial output falling below 60%
  • French commander Robert Nivelles ambitious offensives had failed in April 1917 so he was replaced by Pétain
  • French army had many mutinies
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15
Q

Why did Haig launch an ambitious plan to exhaust the Germans in 3 months at Passchendaele?

A
  • Optimism based on a report by the American Relief Committee
  • Suggested that German Morale was low, they knew they were beaten
  • There as detonation in uniform, equipment, rations and rolling wagons
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16
Q

What did the Battle of Passchendaele begin with and why did this slow down so quickly?

A
  • Began with the use of tunnel mines successfully to blow up German defences on Messines Ridge
  • Quickly slowed as German artillery was better than expected
  • Heavy rain had turned the ground into deep mud, ‘porridge of mud’
17
Q

What was a result of the deep mud at Passchendaele?

A
  • General Gough’s Fifth Army had become bogged down
  • Haig had to replace Gough with Plumer who advocated for ‘Bite and Hold’
18
Q

What was the ‘bite and hold tactic’?

A
  • The infantry only advanced as far as artillery fire could reach
  • They would hold what they have and move forward for another ‘bite’
19
Q

How many casualties were amassed on both sides at Passchendaele?

A

Quarter of a million on each side

20
Q

Despite the horror show at Passchendaele what did the Times report?

A

‘GERMAN DEFENCED BROKEN’ and Haig claimed 135/137 divisions had been pushed back and Germany would run out of fit men by June 1918

21
Q

How did PM Lloyd George criticise Haig’s performance as a commander at Passchendaele?

A
  • He said Haig could not follow the plans of others as he believed they were inferior to his own
  • Haig’s army was overstretched
22
Q

What was evidence of Haig not listening to the French at Passchendaele?

A
  • The French wanted to wait for the build up of American strength but Haig kept encouraging unnecessary offences on a massive scale
23
Q

When did Haig first send our tanks and what was the result of this?

A

15th September 1916
- He sent out 49 tanks to battle
- Only 3 made it further than a mile off the start line
- Winston Churchill (munitions officer) had criticised saying he gave up the element of surprise for a few villages

24
Q

Mark V Tanks were slow, at walking pace, what impact did they have on the Germans?

A

A large psychological impact

25
Q

How did Haig use tanks at the Battle of Cambrai 1917?

A
  • Used more than 400 tanks
  • Only gained 5 miles
26
Q

What had Lurderndorff planned for the Hundred Days Offensive?

A
  • Planned one great last attack from Germany
  • This involved 1.6 million men and 16,000 guns
  • Wanted to attack before US reinforcements arrived
27
Q

Who was Haig working with during the Hundred Days offensive which whom he worked better?

A

Marshall Foch, the new French General

28
Q

How did Haig use innovation at the Battle of Amiens?

A
  • Deployed 500 tanks in secret
  • Used aircraft to drown out the noise of the tanks engines
  • Haigs RFC now outnumbers German planes
29
Q

How did Haigs use of aerial photography come of use at Amiens in 1918?

A

95% of German guns were identified and hit by artillery

30
Q

How did Haig make sure his army was well equipped with guns and howitzers?

A

6,500 —> 10,700 in 1918

31
Q

How did Haig make sure his army was well equipped with gas shells?

A

4,000 —> 65,000 tons of gas shells in 1918

32
Q

How did Haig make sure his army was well equipped with machine guns and trench mortars?

A
  • Each battalion had 30 machine guns compared to the previous 4
  • Each battalion had 8 trench mortars instead of 1 or 2
33
Q

How many casualties were on each side by the end of the Hundred Days Offensive?

A
  • Over a million each side
34
Q

How many overseas divisions did Haig receive during the Hundred Days Offensive?

A
  • 5 from Australia
  • 4 from Canada
  • 1 from New Zealand
35
Q

What two tactics did Haig use at the Hundred Days offensive that were highly effective?

A
  • Flash Spotting: observing muzzle flash from guns
  • Sound Ranging: Using microphones to detect ripples in the air caused by gunfire